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The Devil You Know: Encounters in Forensic Psychiatry Kindle Edition
THE SUNDAY TIMES BESTSELLER
From the 2024 BBC Reith Lecturer
'Compassionate and fascinating.' GUARDIAN
'Extraordinary.' THE TIMES
'Recalibrated my empathy dial.' NEW STATESMAN
'Fascinating.' SUNDAY TIMES
'Deeply humane.' IRISH TIMES
'Exceptional.' VAL McDERMID
'Extraordinary.' SEBASTIAN FAULKS
'Enlightening.' PHILIPPE SANDS
'Beautifully written.' CHRISTIE WATSON
A perspective-shattering work into the minds of violent criminals that reveals profound consequences for human nature and society at large.
Dr Gwen Adshead is one of Britain's leading forensic psychiatrists. She treats serial killers, arsonists, stalkers, gang members and other individuals who are usually labelled 'monsters'. Whatever their crime, she listens to their stories and helps them to better understand their terrible acts of violence. Here Adshead invites the reader to step with her into the room to meet twelve patients and discover how minds can change. These men and women are revealed in all their complexity and shared humanity. Their stories make a powerful case for rehabilitation over revenge, compassion over condemnation. The Devil You Know will challenge everything you thought you knew about human nature.
Readers are saying:
'Remarkable and humane . . . compassionate and full of wisdom.' ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
'Empathy and understanding shine through . . . not just informative but also deeply moving.' ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
'Shows us how to be human, how to be empathetic in the most challenging of circumstances . . . essential reading.' ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
'Can't really think of a downside at the moment . . . a gem of a read.' ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
'I was gripped . . . I am left full of admiration.' ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
'Thoughtful, thought-provoking and challenging . . . I really enjoyed this.' ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
'Personal and candid . . . This will stay with me for a long time.' ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
Gwen Adshead and Eileen Horne's book The Devil You Know was a Sunday Times Bestseller w/c 02-07-2022
Gwen Adshead and Eileen Horne's book The Devil You Know was a Sunday Times Bestseller w/c 09-07-2022
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From the Publisher




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Review
From one of the most distinguished and brilliant minds in psychiatry, The Devil You Know is an illuminating page-turner. I kept reading not out of a morbid or macabre fascination in these stories of extreme cruelty, but to understand the darker side of what it means to be human. Meticulous, elegant, provoking, this book is a profound act of social service. -- Marina Cantacuzino ― author and founder of THE FORGIVENESS PROJECT
Clear-eyed and compassionate . . . a captivating journey through the corridors of Broadmoor hospital and beyond, into the prison system, the community and the consultation room . . . it is [Adshead's] constant and reassuring voice, a voice not hesitant to admit to its own occasional missteps and misjudgments, that makes the book so valuable and absorbing . . . Adshead's words are effortlessly readable and deeply moving . . . the most overwhelming feeling I had on finishing this book was of hope, not only for the patients but for the readers. Over the last 12 months we have all seen too much and therefore, perhaps, become blinded. This insightful, compassionate and fascinating book will help us to move away from our blindness and misconceptions and shine a light on the stories beyond the headlines - stories that desperately need to be heard. -- Joanna Cannon ― Guardian
On killing and other crimes - a forensic, gripping, extraordinary and ultimately enlightening insider's account of how and why it happens. -- Philippe Sands
Laudably sagacious and temperate . . . brilliant . . . The book is a powerful myth buster. Name a stereotype about violent offenders and Adshead upends it. -- Rosamund Urwin ― Sunday Times
A fascinating, erudite and beautifully written deep-dive into the nature of evil. The Devil You Know makes the case for radical empathy and reminds us that all human beings are capable of darkness, and of light. -- Christie Watson
Challenging but really important. -- Alastair Campbell
An extraordinary tour through the psyches of the criminally disturbed, every bit as discomfiting as it is fascinating . . . It is the humanity in the stories that makes [this] book so extraordinary. -- Rosie Kinchen ― Sunday Times
Given the nature of the crimes, Adshead's compassion is almost as shocking as the offences themselves. But it gives her distance and extraordinary insight - not least into the nature of therapy, and of punishment. -- James McConnachie ― The Times (Books of the Year)
Adshead's new book - The Devil You Know: Stories of Human Cruelty and Compassion, a memoir comprised of chilling case notes - leaves the reader with a nuanced, subtle understanding of "evil" . . . Adshead has a literary soul . . . This affinity for language explains Adshead's gift as a psychiatrist. -- Neil Mackay ― The Herald
An extraordinary book. Shocking, sad and absolutely fascinating. -- Sebastian Faulks
Literature lovers like me are fond of saying that reading promotes empathy; it feels true, though you might struggle to prove it. However, The Devil You Know by the forensic psychiatrist Gwen Adshead with Eileen Horne has permanently recalibrated my empathy dial. As she helps offenders understand and take responsibility for their actions in the wake of terrible crimes, Adshead quietly, humanely shows us that people remain people, despite their actions. -- Melissa Harrison ― New Statesman (Books of the Year)
Finding light in the deepest darkness, this book makes an invaluable and urgent case for improved mental health care and could forever change the way we think about violence and those who perpetrate it. -- David Lammy
This is a mythbuster of a book - crammed with compelling, constructive, candid and compassionate insights into the criminal mind. -- Val McDermid
Adshead's warm intelligence, curiosity and nuanced understanding of her work inspire trust in what turns out to be an unmissable book . . . it is precisely her gift for empathy that offsets the desolation of much of what she describes . . . The Devil You Know is not a book of excuses. It persuades us that it is only through understanding why horrific crimes happen that mental health services and the judicial system can have any chance of being improved. This revelatory book encourages us to see that it is our responsibility to consider the worst of humanity - and of ourselves. And while we are at it, it urges us to hang on to Adshead's most powerful imperative: "the duty of hope". -- Kate Kellaway ― Observer (Book of the Week)
About the Author
Dr. Gwen Adshead is one of the UK's leading forensic psychiatrists and psychotherapists. She has spent thirty years working in Broadmoor, England's largest secure psychiatric hospital, with groups and individual patients convicted of serious violent offences, as well as with people in prisons and in the community. Gwen has a Master's degree in medical law and ethics and has published several academic books and over one hundred papers and commissioned articles on forensic psychotherapy, moral reasoning and ethics, and attachment theory. She is a founder member of the International Association for Forensic Psychotherapy and has been a visiting professor at Yale University and Gresham College in the UK.
Product details
- ASIN : B08G5YV7GD
- Publisher : Faber & Faber (1 Jun. 2021)
- Language : English
- File size : 1.9 MB
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Print length : 388 pages
- Best Sellers Rank: 9,911 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- Customer reviews:
About the authors
Before dedicating herself to writing, Eileen Horne worked for twenty years as an independent TV drama producer under her former surname of QUINN. During that time, she founded her own production company in London, developed and made over a hundred hours of primetime network drama for the UK and international market, and in 2004, she collaborated with a fellow producer on her first book, THE PITCH, an engaging “how to” book about selling creative ideas.
Eileen went on to gain an MA in Creative and Life Writing from Goldsmiths College, where she pursued her interest in recounting stories of people who have been forgotten or marginalized. In 2015, she published her second book ZOLA AND THE VICTORIANS, a narrative non-fiction account of a draconian censorship trial in Britain.
She has since authored and adapted numerous BBC radio dramas, and is currently contributing to THIS THING OF DARKNESS, a drama series and podcast for BBC Radio 4 which she co-created, featuring the adventures of a fictional female forensic psychiatrist.
Formerly based in England, Eileen now lives between California and Italy. She is married with one daughter.
Dr Gwen Adshead has worked as a forensic psychiatrist and psychotherapist in the NHS for nearly three decades. She spent most of her career as a consultant at Broadmoor Hospital, a high-security psychiatric facility in the south of England, where she treated people referred to by the media as "the violent insane,” but whom she described as "not mad or bad, but sad.”
Understanding and treating the psychological mechanisms that give rise to violence and life-threatening behavior towards others has been the focus of Gwen’s career. It is her guiding belief as a practitioner, writer and advocate that the most vilified and socially rejected members of society need and deserve psychiatric care and rehabilitation.
Since qualifying in medicine in 1983, Gwen trained in general psychiatry, then in forensic psychiatry and psychotherapy. She is a qualified member of the Institute for Group Analysis and has also gained two Masters Degrees and an honorary doctorate. She regularly gives lectures, both nationally and internationally, including recent professorships at the Yale School of Law and Psychiatry and at Gresham College. In 2013, she was honored with the President’s Medial by the Royal College of Psychiatry.
Gwen was the castaway on Desert Island Discs on 1 July 2010, and has been a guest on several other BBC Radio 4 programmes including Start the Week, In Our Time and The Life Scientific. Born in Christchurch, New Zealand, Gwen now lives near London.
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Customers find this book well-written and thought-provoking, with helpful reading lists at the end. They describe it as a compelling collection of short stories and appreciate its compassionate approach to treating patients with dignity.
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Customers find the book highly readable, describing it as a brilliant and enthralling gem of a read, with helpful reading lists at the end. One customer notes it's essential reading for aspiring psychotherapists.
"...In this remarkable and humane book, Dr Adshead is a psychiatrist who specialises in psychotherapy, gives 12 case studies of people that she has..." Read more
"...removes a degree of ignorance for the stories being told.. extremely interesting read. 👌..." Read more
"Absolutely superb journey through some of the significant forensic cases that Dr Gwen Adshead has handled in her distinguished career...." Read more
"...Notwithstanding the above, it was an intriguing read and an insight for me into what goes on in trying to find the best way to deal with people who..." Read more
Customers find the book insightful and thought-provoking, with one customer highlighting its fascinating case studies and another noting its detailed look at counseling sessions.
"...The author is so compassionate and full of wisdom in how she helps these people. -..." Read more
"...The author is fantastic, and throughly explains exactly those questions that pop into your head as your reading.. if psychology interests you this..." Read more
"...Each story is a fascinating glimpse into the complexities of forensic psychiatry, providing insight into both the minds of the patients and the..." Read more
"...What this collection of fascinating case studies provide is a different narrative about how but for the inoculating social factors of secure early..." Read more
Customers find the book extremely well written and easy to read.
"...The author is fantastic, and throughly explains exactly those questions that pop into your head as your reading.. if psychology interests you this..." Read more
"...Doh, that will teach me! But I did found it well written and readable, which is what you'd expect from someone who has spent a lifetime carefully..." Read more
"What can I say a wonder, brilliantly written book, definitely caused debate in our home, for me after working with those at risk of offending years..." Read more
"I was gripped by this book. Extremely readable, not full of ‘jargon’, informative and mind boggling at times...." Read more
Customers find the book suspenseful, describing it as a compelling collection of short stories with fascinating life narratives. One customer notes how the understanding shines through in every narrative, while another mentions the mind-blowing twists and turns.
"...There is a fascinating story about Lydia who is a stalker who eventually managed to persuade everybody that she is quite reasonable and rational but..." Read more
"...Overall, "The Devil You Know" is a captivating and thought-provoking read that offers a rare look into the world of forensic psychiatry with..." Read more
"...No matter the offence committed by any of her clients she shows us how to be human, how to be empathetic in the most challenging of circumstances,..." Read more
"...Inspirational on many a level. Thank you for taking us behind the scenes and showing us what we all need and need to see and hear." Read more
Customers appreciate the compassionate and humane approach of the book, with one customer noting how the author treats each patient with dignity.
"...In this remarkable and humane book, Dr Adshead is a psychiatrist who specialises in psychotherapy, gives 12 case studies of people that she has..." Read more
"...She treats each patient with dignity, highlighting the human side of those often stigmatised by society...." Read more
"...clients she shows us how to be human, how to be empathetic in the most challenging of circumstances, and how to view perpetrators as victims too...." Read more
"...A compassionate work, the author succeeds in the difficult task of making the reader feel some empathy with the array of offending characters...." Read more
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Top reviews from United Kingdom
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- Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 24 January 2022Carl Jung once said that “thinking is hard which is why we judge instead”. This book, ‘the Devil you know: stories of human cruelty and compassion’, will help you think more about people who have done horrific things and hopefully, not go straight to judging. In this remarkable and humane book, Dr Adshead is a psychiatrist who specialises in psychotherapy, gives 12 case studies of people that she has tried to help and support in Broadmoor and other settings of people who have done something wrong and how she has helped them to confront a tragedy and hopefully move on.
- When we plant a seed no matter how special it might be if it's not put in the right soil, receives the right amount of sunshine and water, the best nutrients, it isn’t going to grow to be a beautiful orchid or whatever flower the seed would become. Instead, it will grow up broken rather than beautiful. The author believes that a lot of early trauma and family disruption can lead to great harm as an adult.
- Our brains are often layered and sometimes we might feel numb, other times depressed, joyful and angry. Trying to be in a way that these different layers evolve in the thought processes of our mind can be difficult.
- One of the things that is interesting about psychotherapy is it's always looking at the reason for the cause has been something to do with the past and particularly childhood and children trauma and whilst I believe that much of this may well be the case I also work with a lot of young people who do erratic and irrational things, not because something terrible happened to them when young but because of how brain structure occurred, for example those with autism which isn't due to a cause in your past but some part of your brain chemistry doesn't quite work like others or processes the world in a very different way. It's really important when looking at causes and I do believe that early childhood trauma can impact on people but isn’t the only route to why people might develop into different selves.
- Most people who suffer mental health are often harmless to society and are at greater risk of harm from others than the rest of society. The author is so compassionate and full of wisdom in how she helps these people.
- There is a fascinating story about Lydia who is a stalker who eventually managed to persuade everybody that she is quite reasonable and rational but then in one of the discussions with the psychiatrist, it turns out that she is so far from reality and still so intent on causing harm to the person she was stalking, that I thought about it for days.
- In another case where a young girl is thought to be causing harm to her baby, that's an interesting observation that many of these people will often say ‘I just thought something was wrong’ and will then go to lengths for others to find that something is wrong when often nothing is wrong. That feeling then overwhelms and takes over them and all their rationality (Munchhausen syndrome by proxy). Note: Munchausen syndrome by proxy (MSBP) is a mental health problem in which a caregiver makes up or causes an illness or injury in a person under his or her care, such as a child, an elderly adult, or a person who has a disability.
- The author relates many of the stories as survivors of disaster movies where the perpetrators are the disaster. It's an interesting analogy to describe how these people have become damaged, many of them through the early trauma to become the person that they eventually became and the authors attempt to reconcile and understand with compassion and care.
- The story about Sam is interesting to know how many of his difficulties relate to moments of clarity and understanding and then despair as a person with schizophrenia. On occasions having a psychotic break where he trashed and destroyed his sister's bedroom looking for something that he assumes stolen and then being mortified of what he has done - and yet not aware of his actions at the time, only afterwards.
- If someone has cerebral palsy (a disorder of the brain that manifests itself in reducing movements of the body that can be spastic or athotoid and that means for some they can’t walk or talk) we understand the brain can impact on movement, its sad that we can’t see that the brain could also effect behaviour and personality in similar ways and we need compassion and understanding. Those with mental health issues can have problems that manifest in many different levels of intensity and in how they manage these difficulties.
- It's interesting to note that there is not much in the way of long-term care in a hostel for people with mental health problems nowadays, in fact the average length of stay in a secure unit is three weeks.
- The author also notes that though there is care for patients, there exists little in the way of care for their carers and family members who can often be in as much fear and concern as their child or partner who has a mental health problem. They deserve care also.
- And perhaps the one thing the author is trying to give these individuals is the opportunity to have ‘hope’, the strongest of emotions in a world of pain and something that the author is always driving to give these patients to tell their dark stories.
- Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 28 September 2023If your considering getting this book,don't hesitate just do it ! It's the best book I've read in while, its also made me want to get into psychology. The author is fantastic, and throughly explains exactly those questions that pop into your head as your reading.. if psychology interests you this is a must read!.. insightful, removes a degree of ignorance for the stories being told.. extremely interesting read. 👌
- Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 9 April 2025Purchased for my mrs
- Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 27 February 2025This book made a profound impact on me in the way I perceive violent criminals and the existance of Evil.
At times an uncomfortable read, Phyciatrist Dr Adshead speaks about her lengthy experience working with mentally unstable, disturbed and violent criminals mostly at high security prisons or hospitals.
Each offender embarking on their own redemption journey in an attempt to reconcile what their hands reaped, all the while gaining a better understanding of themselves and deciphering the complex ecosystem of their mind.
Dr Adshead’s humanity really shines though!
To summarise, as quoted in the book: "Evil is unspectacular and always human, and shares our bed and eats at our own table".
- Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 5 July 2024I thoroughly enjoyed reading "The Devil You Know: Encounters in Forensic Psychiatry." The book offers a compelling collection of short stories by a psychiatrist, detailing her experiences with various patients. Each story is a fascinating glimpse into the complexities of forensic psychiatry, providing insight into both the minds of the patients and the professional who works with them.
What truly stands out is the author's humane and respectful approach. Her empathy and understanding shine through in every narrative, making the book not just informative but also deeply moving. She treats each patient with dignity, highlighting the human side of those often stigmatised by society.
Overall, "The Devil You Know" is a captivating and thought-provoking read that offers a rare look into the world of forensic psychiatry with compassion and respect. Highly recommended for anyone interested in psychology, psychiatry, or simply well-told human stories.
- Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 28 September 2023Absolutely superb journey through some of the significant forensic cases that Dr Gwen Adshead has handled in her distinguished career. No matter the offence committed by any of her clients she shows us how to be human, how to be empathetic in the most challenging of circumstances, and how to view perpetrators as victims too. The book is at times horrifying, but always moving. She shows us how to question ourselves, our assumptions and what we can learn from the misfortune of others. Essential reading.
- Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 13 November 2022We are all too ready to accept the tabloid view that murderers, sex offenders and the violent are all evil - often born so. Indeed this is a much more comforting premise than the reality starkly painted here that such offenders are actually little different to us and the product of the same rational society we purport to be a part of.
What this collection of fascinating case studies provide is a different narrative about how but for the inoculating social factors of secure early attachments, a life free from trauma and adverse experience - we all possess the potential in the wrong circumstances to act in an in humane way.
A compassionate work, the author succeeds in the difficult task of making the reader feel some empathy with the array of offending characters.The power of group therapy to assist in the rehabilitation of some is uplifting and an important message to populist politicians who like to be seen to be hard on criminals by incarcerating ever larger numbers of the mentally ill, depressed, abused and disadvantaged.
Another key call of this important work is to treat mental health on a par with physical health. Only then will we be able to reduce ‘evil’ in society.
Top reviews from other countries
- Great fanReviewed in Australia on 5 April 2025
5.0 out of 5 stars Amazing
Amazing
- Amazon CustomerReviewed in the United States on 3 May 2025
5.0 out of 5 stars A hope
A wonderful book that raises so many questions for a society. I often look at the Scandinavian models healthcare & incarceration to provide a balance & achievable equity in a society.
- Susie Alfaro FournierReviewed in the United States on 11 November 2022
5.0 out of 5 stars PRISONS SHOULD NOT BE GARBAGE DUMPS FOR DEPOSITING PEOPLE
It is very sad to survive the consequences of a criminal act. But the approach that we as a society should take to criminal acts is that of prevention, not only focusing on the punitive part. This book is very revealing, because it does not justify or exempt violent people from responsibility, but it allows those of us who suffer its consequences to have a notion of the origin of this violence. We will never have a why. It does not exist. But it does show that it is important to prevent the generation of broken adults, rather than trying to put them back together, because many times this is not achieved. It is through the compassionate look of this doctor, but without being a pimp, because she does not justify, but she put some light on these existences to understand how these distortions were generated, which have generated so much pain and suffering in their own and others. Realistic, objective and very human.
- marythereaderReviewed in the United States on 23 January 2025
4.0 out of 5 stars mental health
Mental illness is as vast as the ocean. This delved into just a teaspoon full. A very interesting and varied career span.
- john b maxwell iiiReviewed in the United States on 8 April 2025
5.0 out of 5 stars window
I am always amazed how riveting it can be to peer into the minds of people we know exist but are happy to think of in the abstract. That is certainly not true of everyone's experience and you feel for the victims while wringing your hands over what we might consider nature and nurtures' unfair baggage. To be human and know people that have harmed others were made or twisted by others at a young age but have done things that cannot be undone is not easy.
Seeing correction and even healing for some makes you sit up but then one realizes the reality of an overcrowded world with other priorities and out of sight out of mind preference.
Some people simply are too ingrained or far gone in development and or conditioning but that's not easy to determine. What is apparent is that the complexity of the mind, its range of capacity to sink or rebound to a more balanced station is not an easy problem. The biggest obstacle is the human mind itself. We have one and must have one but choose to take it as seriously in its frailties as a ailing set of lungs or a heart.