|    Login    |    Register

When Good Kids Kill

(Hardback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

When Good Kids Kill

Contributors:
ISBN:

9780275964108

Publisher:

Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

Imprint:

Praeger Publishers Inc

Publication Date:

19th November 1998

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

Tertiary Education

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Other Subjects:

Juvenile offenders
Causes and prevention of crime
Child, developmental and lifespan psychology
Age groups: children
Age groups: adolescents

Dewey:

364.36

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Hardback

Number of Pages:

208

Description

In recent years, the incidence of violent crime committed by teenagers has escalated, a fact that has hardly escaped the news media. When faced with the challenge of understanding and explaining such occurences in the headlines, one is tempted to rely upon the truism: There are good kids and there are bad kids. Michael D. Kelleher, noted expert on the subject of violence, asserts in When Good Kids Kill that this belief is outdated, oversimplified, and fundamentally wrong. He states that some of the most atrocious murders are, in fact, committed by good kids who have never given a prior indication of violence. Kelleher's book is the first to focus exclusively on homicides committed by previously nonviolent teens, exploring many of the prominent criminal cases covered by the media in recent years. Although individual killings are hard to predict, Kelleher's important new work demonstrates that there are categories of crime that can be attributed to good kids who kill; his work shows for the first time that the young perpetrators of murders that fall into these categories share similar backgrounds and experience. While such crimes as teen mothers disposing of their newborns, sons and daughters murdering their parents, members of cults slaying friends or strangers, and young people murdering the objects of their sexual obsessions are almost always surprising and baffling, Kelleher points out that the killers often exhibit warning signs before erupting into violence. By recognizing these warnings and understanding patterns of experience that can motivate these tragic crimes, the author believes that parents, counselors, and education and law enforcement professionals can begin to address the challenge of increasing teenage violence and ensure a less violent society for our children.

Reviews

Kelleher writes clearly and explains complex issues coherently. If the book is difficult to read, it is because of the troubling content. These kids make murder seem whimsical and random....Satisfactory answers are not forthcoming, but the direct and lucid presenation of the problem may serve to stimulate more rigorous research.-Publishers Weekly
Recommended for collections in criminal justice, child welfare, and social work.-Library Journal
"Recommended for collections in criminal justice, child welfare, and social work."-Library Journal
"Kelleher writes clearly and explains complex issues coherently. If the book is difficult to read, it is because of the troubling content. These kids make murder seem whimsical and random....Satisfactory answers are not forthcoming, but the direct and lucid presenation of the problem may serve to stimulate more rigorous research."-Publishers Weekly

Author Bio

MICHAEL D. KELLEHER, who has written widely on the subject of violence, specializes in threat assessment, strategic management, and human resources management for organizations in the private and public sectors. He is the author of Murder Most Rare (1998), Profiling the Lethal Employee, Flash Point: The American Mass Murderer (1997), and New Arenas for Violence (1996), all published by Praeger.

See all

Other titles by Michael D. Kelleher

See all

Other titles from Bloomsbury Publishing PLC