Title: Confessions of a Sociopath: A Life Spent Hidden in Plain Sight
Author: M.E. Thomas
Genre: Autobiography
Thingummies: 3
Synopsis: A self-described sociopath talks about her life and what it's like to basically not have a moral sense.
Thoughts: While Thomas had a fairly tragic childhood (self-absorbed, neglectful parents with bouts of verbal and physical abuse), this is actually fairly low drama for what it is. Thomas is a fairly functional sociopath--she has a good career, she has friends, she does seem to care about her siblings and their children, she hasn't murdered anyone or really committed any crimes at all. She points out that she's not stupid--she figured out relatively early on that, even if she doesn't feel guilty, generally following social rules means that her life is easier and more pleasant.
So there are no strangled puppies or anything here. (Which is just as well--if the jacket flap had implied strangled puppies, I wouldn't have read the book.) What there is is an in-depth description by an intelligent and self-aware woman of how the mind of a sociopath works. It's pretty interesting stuff, actually--it's a skewed perspective on the world. She's clearly come to value "normal" people, who she calls "empaths", despite finding them as baffling as we find her.
Author: M.E. Thomas
Genre: Autobiography
Thingummies: 3
Synopsis: A self-described sociopath talks about her life and what it's like to basically not have a moral sense.
Thoughts: While Thomas had a fairly tragic childhood (self-absorbed, neglectful parents with bouts of verbal and physical abuse), this is actually fairly low drama for what it is. Thomas is a fairly functional sociopath--she has a good career, she has friends, she does seem to care about her siblings and their children, she hasn't murdered anyone or really committed any crimes at all. She points out that she's not stupid--she figured out relatively early on that, even if she doesn't feel guilty, generally following social rules means that her life is easier and more pleasant.
So there are no strangled puppies or anything here. (Which is just as well--if the jacket flap had implied strangled puppies, I wouldn't have read the book.) What there is is an in-depth description by an intelligent and self-aware woman of how the mind of a sociopath works. It's pretty interesting stuff, actually--it's a skewed perspective on the world. She's clearly come to value "normal" people, who she calls "empaths", despite finding them as baffling as we find her.
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Date: 2013-05-24 02:37 pm (UTC)From: