![]() ![]() Jones simply lists anything she has managed to dig up about this case. The best way I can compare my reading experience of this book is with watching a particularly bad Lifetime movie. Having never read anything by Jones, I had high hopes (especially after I heard her being interviewed on NPR for her newest book "Red Zone"). I bought this book because I was interested in the Shanda Sharer murder. Once more Jones manages to write a bad book about a very intruiging real-life murder case. This book was an amazing look into the psyche of the greatly disturbed teenage girl. And each of them feels pain every single day. The four murderers will serve their sentences. And I fully believe that all the girls got what they deserved. I found myself feeling great compassion for the girls who committed the murder as well as Shanda who was the victim. They have every right to be angry at the girls who killed their daughter, but absolutely no right to blame it on the fact that some of the girls are lesbians. What also angers me is how Shanda's parents put a lot of the blame on "the girl who persuaded her to enter a lesbian relationship". But when I hear people telling Melinda to "Rot in Hell" I am completely shocked. ![]() It was horrible, absolutely horrible what they did to Shanda. ![]() It was definitely clear how she became this way. I liked how Jones explained the torment Loveless and Tackett went through in their homes, especially Loveless. This book delves into the minds of the seriously disturbed teenage girl. ![]()
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