Pincus’s riveting treatise on violent crime is configured into 12 chapters; a detail-laden, clinically directed appendix (pertaining to neurological diagnostic tools); and copious, annotated research notes, which may delight the research-minded reader. Pincus takes on the formidable task of developing a theory to explain violent crime in doughty, thoughtful, meticulous fashion. In search of the correct answer to the enigmatic question of why some people act in a criminally violent manner, Pincus capably and carefully guides the reader along a fascinating, hard-to-follow path, strewn with tantalizing bits and pieces of information proffered by an expansive array of subjects. These include abuse-drenched living environments, brain damage, paranoia, aberrant behavior and social pathology, genes, frontal lobotomy, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, mania, toxic encephalopathy, and dissociative identity disorder.