Rachel Corbett is the author of You Must Change Your Life, which won the Marfield Prize, the National Award for Arts Writing. A features writer at New York magazine, her writing has also appeared in the New Yorker, New York Times Magazine, and Atlantic. She lives in Brooklyn, New York.
Corbett [is] a gifted storyteller ... A highly readable, endlessly revealing primer on the homicidal mind.--Kirkus Reviews (starred review) In The Monsters We Make, Rachel Corbett goes on an odyssey to show how society identifies the 'manifestations of evil, ' and how they change over time. Using her fabulous investigative talents and a tenacity for research she delves into the science of behavioral forensics and writes a road map to understanding the minds of both criminals and profilers--Robert K. Wittman, founder of the FBI Art Crime Team and New York Times best-selling author of Priceless and The Devil's Diary In her gripping and illuminating The Monsters We Make, Rachel Corbett takes us on an effortless journey through the allure and perils of trying to grasp the criminal mind.--Benjamin Wallace, New York Times best-selling author of The Billionaire's Vinegar and The Mysterious Mr. Nakamoto [The Monsters We Make] combines riveting accounts of such infamous murderers as Jack the Ripper and Ted Bundy with sharp insights about the rise of the public's fascination with criminal psychology. ... Such evenhandedness permeates the account, elevating it above pulpy indulgence. Readers of true crime will be fascinated.-- ""Publishers Weekly"" The Monsters We Make is a compelling, page-turning book. Part suspenseful true-crime drama, part insightful intellectual history, and part searing memoir--and, thanks to Rachel Corbett's affecting, elegantly crafted narrative, always a gripping story filled with an intriguing parade of deeply-reported characters.--Howard Blum, New York Times best-selling author of When the Night Comes Falling Serial killers have spawned hundreds of books, but none like this. With a daughter's heart and a reporter's keen gaze, Rachel Corbett turns the stories inside out. She profiles the profilers--their methods, their hubris, and the evils they unwittingly commit. An expertly titrated mix of history, true crime, and memoir, The Monsters We Make is the most intriguing crime book I've read in quite some time.--Mary Roach, New York Times best-selling author of Fuzz, Gulp, and Stiff