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Gosnell: The Untold Story of America's Most Prolific Serial Killer Hardcover – January 24, 2017

4.6 4.6 out of 5 stars 1,538 ratings

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He is America’s most prolific serial killer. And yet Kermit Gosnell was no obvious criminal. The abortion doctor was a pillar of his community, an advocate for women’s “reproductive health,” and a respected member of Philadelphia’s professional elite. His Women’s Medical Society Clinic looked like admirable community outreach by a brave doctor committed to upholding women’s rights. Meanwhile, inside the filthy building, Gosnell was casually murdering born-alive infants, butchering women, and making a macabre collection of severed babies’ feet. His accomplices in crime were a staff of dropouts, drug addicts, and unlicensed medical professionals posing as doctors. But even more important to his decades-long crime spree were his enablers in the outside world—from the state bureaucrats who had copious evidence that Gosnell was breaking the law but did nothing to the politicians whose fervent support for abortion rights kept health inspectors away. The “pro-choice” political, bureaucratic, and media establishment smiled on Gosnell—and gave him carte blanche to kill. Even law enforcement seemed to not care. Philadelphia Police Homicide Unit received a complaint about Gosnell years before he was caught, gave it a cursory look, and ignored the evidence. Two women and hundreds of babies died after they closed the case. Luckily, Detective Jim Wood—a narcotics detective—opened a drug case against Gosnell. What he found when he served his warrant left even the most grizzled members of the police force stunned. Now Ann McElhinney and Phelim McAleer, the veteran investigative journalists and filmmakers behind FrackNation, dig into Gosnell’s crimes. A record-breaking crowdfunding campaign financed their Gosnell movie starring young Superman Dean Cain, but in the research for the film, McElhinney and McAleer uncovered fascinating and previously unreported revelations that couldn’t be included in the film. Gosnell: The Untold Story of America’s Most Prolific Serial Killer contains the full results of their investigation.

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Editorial Reviews

About the Author

Phelim McAleer and Ann McElhinney are investigative journalists, filmmakers and screenwriters. McAleer has worked as a journalist in Belfast covering the Northern Ireland conflict for The Irish News. He was a crime correspondent for the UK Sunday Times and based in Romania he was a foreign correspondent for the Financial Times and The Economist magazine. He is a regular columnist for the Irish Times and the New York Post.

Ann McElhinney has written for the
Irish Times, the UK Sunday Times and produced documentaries for the BBC, CBC (Canada) and RTE (Ireland). they produced and directed the documentary FrackNation (2013).

McAleer and McElhinney are originally from Ireland and are now living in Los Angeles. They produced and co-wrote
Gosnell, a feature film starring Dean Cain (Lois & Clark) to be released in 2017. They are married.

Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Regnery Publishing; First Edition (January 24, 2017)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Hardcover ‏ : ‎ 256 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 1621574555
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1621574552
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 1.25 pounds
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 6 x 1.3 x 9 inches
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.6 4.6 out of 5 stars 1,538 ratings

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Customer reviews

4.6 out of 5 stars
1,538 global ratings

Customers say

Customers find the book enlightening, excellent, and researched without bias. They also describe the reading experience as good, easy, and worth every penny. Readers praise the writing quality as well-written, straightforward, and accurate. However, some find the emotional content difficult to read and nauseating. Opinions differ on the horror, with some finding it fascinating and others saying it's horrifying.

AI-generated from the text of customer reviews

157 customers mention "Writing quality"114 positive43 negative

Customers find the book well written, brutal, and powerful. They also say it gives an accurate and ugly picture of what abortion entails.

"This book is a well-written account of Dr. Gosnell, who murdered babies in his abortion clinic...." Read more

"...time with non-fictional stories that have many characters but this book read smoothly and in a way that you know each and every person involved..." Read more

"This book was well-written and eye-opening. I agree with the comment that this should be required reading for everyone...." Read more

"...Leave the mechanics of the writing at that. The subject matter is difficult to read because of the monstrosity of the actions and conditions..." Read more

133 customers mention "Content"114 positive19 negative

Customers find the book enlightening, detailed, and educational. They say it educates them on the abortion industry and the ineptitude of the government. Readers also say it's researched without bias.

"...It is an excellent treatise on the ineptitude of government and how far some people will go to support a political agenda...." Read more

"This book was well-written and eye-opening. I agree with the comment that this should be required reading for everyone...." Read more

"...Its a must read not only for its detailed, brutally honest journalistic style, but for its historical and ethical importance...." Read more

"...The book is detailed, it's facts substantiated, and, I believe, it's claims are accurate...." Read more

119 customers mention "Reading experience"119 positive0 negative

Customers find the book a good read, well done, and worth every penny. They also say the book is chronologically very short and an easy read.

"Disturbing. Disgusting. Devastating.Amazing. Exhilarating. Awakening...." Read more

"...I think the word "process" is apropos. The book is chronologically very short - it is objectively an easy read...." Read more

"...I found it to be a good read, well written and a page turner, albeit a difficult one due to the subject...." Read more

"...My profound respect and gratitude to the authors of this very fine book and to all involved in the exposure of this nightmare." Read more

146 customers mention "Horror"84 positive62 negative

Customers are mixed about the horror in the book. Some find it fascinating, grim, and tragic, while others say it's horrible, disturbing, and anger-inducing.

"Disturbing. Disgusting. Devastating.Amazing. Exhilarating. Awakening...." Read more

"...The clinic's two surgical procedure rooms were filthy and unsanitary. DEA agent Dougherty would later compare them to 'a bad gas station restroom.'..." Read more

"...also did an amazing job putting together a very intricate and difficult story with so many characters but did so in a way that allows the reader to..." Read more

"...Well written. It's horrifying though. It's the name everyone SHOULD know, but doesn't...." Read more

20 customers mention "Difficulty level"8 positive12 negative

Customers are mixed about the difficulty level of the book. Some find it easy to follow, intricate, and difficult to put down. They also say it's meticulously arranged in orderly chapters. However, some customers find the book difficult to read, heartbreaking, and repetitive.

"...It was a VERY difficult and disturbing story that only becomes more real when you realize that this isn't a fictional book; it is a very accurate..." Read more

"...The book is chronologically very short - it is objectively an easy read...." Read more

"...The facts and details were so heavy and so difficult to imagine and process that I had to walk away from it at times...." Read more

"...The author also did an amazing job putting together a very intricate and difficult story with so many characters but did so in a way that allows the..." Read more

58 customers mention "Emotional content"17 positive41 negative

Customers find the book difficult to read, depressing, disturbing, and devastating. They also say the pure evil in the book makes them nauseated.

"...I experience simultaneously anger, revulsion, profound sadness and even a sense of guilt...." Read more

"...It was a VERY difficult and disturbing story that only becomes more real when you realize that this isn't a fictional book; it is a very accurate..." Read more

"...account of events is straightforward and factual, devoid of sentimentality and embellishment...." Read more

"...I must warn that it is shocking, disturbing, anger inducing, and overall sad/tragic." Read more

Life has value, so does this book.
5 out of 5 stars
Life has value, so does this book.
I just finished this book. I don't usually go for nonfiction as it doesn't often grip me but this was written in such a way that I was drawn through it in about a week. Well written. It's horrifying though. It's the name everyone SHOULD know, but doesn't. He does not even need the 3 name serial killer cliche, one is enough to leave your blood chilled. Whether you are pro-life or pro-choice, the story of this man and the innumerable people (from infant to adult) he killed is a cautionary tale to us all. This is what happens when we devalue life and humanity. Protecting the most blameless and vulnerable of us should be our top priority as a people. Mother and child. Why isn't it? I submit that we sacrifice this at the altar of self. The altar of our own convenience, greed, laziness, and ego. How can we proclaim to uphold life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness when we treat life with so little respect? When it is not worth oversight, accountability, and protection? Without life, how do you even get to the liberty and pursuit of happiness? It's not for binge reading, but I encourage ALL, no matter your beliefs to get familiar with this story. It is food for thought and I think that many times our thoughts are starving, so give it a chance.
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Top reviews from the United States

Reviewed in the United States on March 3, 2017
Disturbing. Disgusting. Devastating.
Amazing. Exhilarating. Awakening.

First and foremost this is a book about manner and means in which (i) Dr. Kermit Gosnell engaged in his long history murder; (ii) the number of persons who aided him in his gruesome acts, whether motivated by greed or callous disregard for human life; (iii) State medical agencies that had multiple opportunities to intervene over decades but failed to do so either from incompetence, laziness, or an outright determination to coverup Dr. Gosnell's heinous crimes because his crimes only affected forgettable poor black and brown girls; and (iv) when Dr. Gosnell was final arrested and brought forth to trial, the reasons why the "main stream press" chose ignore the story.

Many will argue that this book and the Gosnell case is an indictment on abortion, but it is a shortsighted argument. The Gosnell case really asks whether the lives of black and brown women and the live fetuses Dr. Gosnell delivered ALIVE then decapitated truly matter. Simply stated, women from the urban community in Philadelphia were the main clientele of Dr. Gosnell's abortion practice. His office was disgusting. My stomach turns and my heart breaks for any woman desperate enough to utilize his office to have such an emotional and physically invasive procedure performed. I will leave the details for those who choose to read the book but you will truly understand the "house of horrors" phrase once you get through with the passage. Needless to say, for those women who make it through the front waiting room, the procedure room is worse. If you were lucky, you did not wake up during your abortion. If you did wake up, Dr. Gosnell might punch you in the hip, the stomach, the legs, or the face. If you were really unlucky, you did not wake up at all. Worse yet, you woke up sort of and were sent home with an infection brewing; you died a couple of days later--usually because Dr. Gosnell left a piece of your dead fetus in your womb. No worries, he'll get that when you come back for your next abortion.

But what was worse - ungodly worse - were the abortions themselves. Dr. Gosnell, though a licensed medical doctor, was not a certified abortionist. Nonetheless, he held himself out as an abortionist for over 30yrs, specializing in late term abortions (at least in Pennsylvania where late term could occur no later than 23 weeks and 6 days). Dr. Gosnell, however, in his office with broken and defective equipment, jury-rigged ultrasounds--faking the results so that women whose pregnancy had far exceeded the 23wk6d deadline would show a fetus within the permissible allowance. [Without going into the story, Gosnell's fake facts are his undoing. It is some pretty snazzy detective and legal work.] Court records show that Dr. Gosnell performed late term abortions on fetuses as late as 29.5wks and 34wks. But it was the method of the abortion that qualified as murder in the State of Pennsylvania. Over a three day period, Dr. Gosnell would induce the woman's labor, deliver the fetus alive (which at this point she was in her sixth -seventh month of pregnancy), then turn the fetus on its stomach take surgical scissors and stab them into the fetus' neck between the brain and spinal cord; thereby killing the fetus. It is described in the book as basically a decapitation.

The prosecutor stated in his closing argument made a compelling analogy that when we, as Americans, take our dying animals to the vet, the vet puts two drugs into our beloved animal. The first IV drip is to put our pet to sleep, and the second IV drip is to stop our pet's heart. We leave our pet at the vet for proper "waste management" of our pet's remains, and when we come back we pick up a discrete package. We know our pet was taken care of by professionals with care. We give our pets more care and respect than Dr. Gosnell gave to the Black and Brown women who sought his abortion services. We definitely give our pets more care and respect to than Dr. Gosnell gave to the Black and Brown fetuses he was entrusted to legally abort but chose instead to deliver--allow to breath, to cry, to kick, to live, a baby outside of its mother--and then heinously kill. Oh, and Dr. Gosnell did not contract with an outside waste management company for these fetuses. He stored them in milk jugs, gatorade bottles, any other bottles he had lying around and put them in the break room freezer and the basement freezer. And, when necessary he had the office staff flush fetus parts down the toilet until the toilet backed up, and ran the fetus parts down the garbage disposal. Yep, the garbage disposal.

We as women are so much better than what we have offered the world thus far. We divide ourselves with gender and identity politics, organizational agendas, and a need for protectionist laws that once enacted largely go unenforced to our own peril. After reading this book, my "lesson learned," at least when it comes to abortion, is that perhaps it is time to reframe the discussion. Rather than starting the abortion "argument" or "debate" as one of a right of privacy or woman's heath care or one of "Pro-Choice" v. "Pro-Live", it should be the following:

Abortion is state sanctioned murder of a fetus until the _______ week of the pregnancy because the state and the people of the state agree that a woman has a right to choose not to be a mother. As such, the woman has a right to quality medical care in the State, which means she has the right to seek and obtain the services of a licensed abortionist.

The point is that it is time to agree what abortion is and why a woman seeks to obtain the services. She does not owe any one an excuse or an apology, yet she is not going to the dentist either. As one learns from the licensed abortionist who gives testimony in the Gosnell case, regardless of one's stance on the issue, that fetus' heart is beating and even very early in the gestation of the pregnancy it is likely that it could be delivered and survive outside the mother. So, it isn't simply a mass of cells. That fetus is alive. We, as a community, are agreeing to State sanctioned murder, and for a limited period of time, that's okay. It is important to come to this community wide consensus. It is a means of accepting responsibility, sharing guilt, and absolution. It is what is missing in current laws, so there is a misplaced anger and resentment. I say we as a community must own it, embrace it, mourn it, then let go.

Likewise, Dr. Gosnell's case may or may not be the exception. There may be other state health agencies elsewhere failing to properly oversee and regulate abortion clinics. If so, how many other poor Black and Brown (hell, even poor white-privileged women) are suffering at the hands of unregulated abortionists and their untrained unlicensed staff. We just don't know. The sad truth is that the purpose of Roe v. Wade was to ensure that women were not relegated to unlawful "backroom abortions" or "coat hanger" abortions, but if state health agencies are not actually regulating these abortion facilities and the industry is not self regulating as it claims it is, then the vulnerable, the poor, the most marginalized are at the greatest risk of experiencing the horrors that Roe v. Wade was meant of prevent. But it looks like we might be headed back to the nasty beginning. So to protect theses women it is imperative that states pass laws requiring abortion clinics and the abortions have hospital privileges. It is not about setting road blocks to women getting legal abortions or making it more expensive for abortion doctors stay in practice. For the love of all thing right in this world, it is about making sure that when a woman seeks the services of an abortionist, the facility is clean, the equipment works, the instruments are sterilized, the staff is licensed to perform the tasked they are undertaking, and the doctor knows what he is doing. I would not want any woman to have Dr. Gosnell REUSE the same $1.29 disposable uterus scraper on her that he used on the last 4 women. YUK! If we as woman are going to fight for legislation, can we not fight for laws that say that our abortionists must have hospital privileges, must be insured with at least $10,000,000 in malpractice insurance for the doc and staff (regardless if staff is employed by doc or contracted from staffing agency), and whatever other requirements we as women think are necessary to make sure our health and vaginas are medically sound when the procedure is over.

Otherwise, we might was well have DIY abortion videos on youtube or pintrest. The results would probably be more successful, more hygienic, and the recovery would be easier on the women. Oh, and more than likely, no laws would be broken.
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Reviewed in the United States on February 6, 2017
Not since Hannah Arendt’s portrait of Adolf Eichmann has there been a more provocative analysis of evil as that provided in Ann McElhinney and Phelim McAleer’s work detailing the crimes, trial, and personality of Dr. Kermit Gosnell, “America’s Most Prolific Serial Killer.”

“Banality” was the word Arendt chose for Eichmann’s bureaucratic officiousness in the Third Reich’s Ministry of Death. That term, however, hardly fits the acts of a self-assured abortionist who regularly snipped the spinal cords of babies born alive, kept infants’ feet as trophies, ran an illegal prescription drug mill, and hired assistants who were totally unqualified to perform medical duties in a filthy, ramshackle facility. What’s surprising about Gosnell, however, is that his greed and macabre callousness existed alongside an often cheerful disposition that accompanied various acts of charity. Consequently, Gosnell had a good reputation among most of the poor community he both served and exploited.

Additionally, the authors’ prison interview with Gosnell gives the impression of a self-confident individual with at least moderate intellectual and artistic talent -- a man with a positive outlook on the future who enjoyed traveling abroad, namedropping (a friend of slain late-term abortionist, George Tiller), and playing Chopin on the piano. Nevertheless, Gosnell clearly overestimated his professional and intellectual abilities as indicated by his desire to represent himself in the trial at which he was ultimately found guilty on three counts of murder and sentenced to life in prison -- a sentence the doctor is confident will one day be overturned.

The term “banality” does comport, however, with the lassitude and indifference displayed by Pennsylvania’s abortion-oversight bureaucracy -- whose officials were all too willing to forego inspections, let gross violations slide, and dismiss even complaints associated with the deaths of two women Gosnell treated. Pennsylvania’s pro-choice Republican governor, Tom Ridge, comes in for special criticism by the authors for his “hands-off” policy vis-à-vis facility inspections -- though they also note that the state’s bureaucratic malfeasance extended well beyond Ridge’s tenure.

Accordingly, Gosnell’s late-term abortion house of horrors was exposed not by folks charged with the responsibility of making abortions “safe,” but rather by a cop investigating the source of some illegal prescription drugs. The unsanitary conditions in Gosnell’s Women’s Medical Society
clinic -- e.g. cat feces, urine stench, milk jugs stuffed with aborted baby parts -- raised enough concerns to begin a probe of Gosnell’s “official” practice.

The death of another patient opened additional investigatory doors. This immigrant from Bhutan (mislabeled “the Indian woman” by Gosnell) had the misfortune of being heavily anesthetized by one of Gosnell’s unqualified assistants who took orders over the phone from the absent doctor. Lies told by Gosnell and his staff about the treatment of Karnamaya Mongar didn’t deflect Detective Jim Wood and district attorneys from finally attempting to determine how far Gosnell had gone beyond the illegal distribution of prescription drugs.

Eventually the prosecution brought seven murder charges against Gosnell for killing live babies plus another charge for Mongar’s death. Though the practice of “snipping” the spinal cords of late-term babies was common at Gosnell’s clinic, the prosecution required clear evidence that infants long since deceased had actually been alive before being murdered. However, since there was no other logical reason for utilizing this unusual procedure on aborted fetuses, the authors estimate that Gosnell, who specialized in late-term abortions, killed “hundreds” and possibly “thousands” of live babies over the decades.

McElhinney and McAleer’s work provides an extensive account of Gosnell’s defense, presented by one of the state’s premier attorneys, Jack McMahon. McMahon’s cross examination of a prosecution witness who occasionally performed legal abortions at a prestigious hospital contains some of the most damning testimony in the book. The defense lawyer argued skillfully that there is precious little difference between what Gosnell is accused of doing to live babies at his poor community facility and the legal approach to a live fetus (i.e. baby) after an attempted abortion in an upscale hospital. In the halting words of a respected female physician, they would “just keep it warm you know. It will eventually pass.”

The book also highlights other legal absurdities. In Pennsylvania, for example, it is legal to abort a fetus at 23 weeks and 6 days, even a minute before day 7, but it is a crime to carry out the same abortion a minute later -- a distinction akin to legally sucking the brain out of a baby a few inches before it exits the womb or illegally snipping its spinal cord moments later. Ironically, Gosnell, who regularly manipulated ultrasound data to fit abortions within the state’s legal limit, appears to have believed Pennsylvania permitted abortions up to 24 and a half weeks, as his incomplete and often inaccurate records regularly noted the age of late-term fetuses as 24.5 weeks.

Given the brutal nature of late-term abortions, it’s hardly surprising that our pro-choice national press devoted minimal time to Gosnell’s trial. After all, wall-to-wall coverage would doubtless raise profound questions about the morality of abortion and especially late-term abortions -- as it did with Gosnell’s pro-choice jury and the book’s once pro-choice author, Ann McElhinney. Only a prominent USA Today editorial penned by The Daily Beast’s Kirsten Powers prodded mainstream journalists into providing slightly more coverage.

This gripping and detailed book about Gosnell is a further attempt by McElhinny and McAleer to remedy that widespread media blackout. In the near future the same husband-wife team will release a feature-length film to further publicize the largely suppressed truth about “America’s Most Prolific Serial Killer.”

When one considers what this book reveals about the gruesome details, moral incoherence, and institutional trappings surrounding late-term abortions, it becomes easier to see how an arrogant, controlling doctor like Kermit Gosnell could continue for decades cheerfully snipping live babies’ spinal cords and committing medical malpractice on a grand scale. After all, Gosnell is precisely the type of person who would be drawn to such a macabre specialty, all the while deeming his den of depravity a service to the community.
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Reviewed in the United States on September 13, 2019
This is the true story about a Philadelphia abortionist who performed many, many abortions, and when confronted with near full-term fetus, killed the fetus by slicing through its cervical spine.

Pathetically, this physician - and he was an MD - felt that he was doing the pregnant women favors when he relieved them of their unwanted pregnancies. (He charged for his services - I use the word "relieved" loosely to describe his activities).

Dr Gosnell performed abortions in a veritable House of Horrors - indescribable conditions, filthy equipment and a collection of frozen fetus showing the cervical slicing Dr Gosnell had used to kill them.

Ultimately, Dr Gosnell was prosecuted, tried and convicted of his many crimes and is serving extended time in prison.

The book does not condone abortions or condemn them. That is not the point. The book reveals the horrible story of a physician for whom the Hippocratic Oath " First, do no harm " clearly did not apply. Perhaps the abortions were a blessing for the women who sought and received them, but for the viable fetuses, it was murder.
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Top reviews from other countries

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Diego
5.0 out of 5 stars Muy buena pelicula! Vale la pena verla.
Reviewed in Mexico on June 14, 2021
Muy interesante el tema. Excelente película.
Kindle Customer
5.0 out of 5 stars Abortion vs murderer
Reviewed in Canada on July 7, 2019
I read the book with such revulsion as it brings out very well how someone can get away with murder in our society, not be held to responsibility, inspection and compliance. The lines between life and murder are so murky that it enables those whose intensions might be so called good. The market is so lucerative that if you were greedy
nothing would stop you and this is at the expense of very vulnerable people. The storey is very well written and I'm not surprised it's not front page stuff. Too many would be implicated.
2 people found this helpful
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Romain
2.0 out of 5 stars Not a good read
Reviewed in France on March 27, 2020
That's just not a good read. Confusing, goes one way, another, comes back, re-says what has already been said,...
Plus the lie about "the most prolific serial killer". He killed at most 4 persons, 3 being the result of abortion. If you consider those abortions murders, how come the mothers aren't in jail for paying and ordering an execution?
Every single book about killers love to pretend it's "the most prolific", but it just isn't.
I won't even bother finishing this bad book.
paula
5.0 out of 5 stars Ottimo film
Reviewed in Italy on November 21, 2019
Ottimo
jh
5.0 out of 5 stars A glance behind the curtain one I won't forget in a hurry
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on October 26, 2018
Truly horrifying it's about time the world knew how the abortion clinics murder and dispose of babies. If there is a heartbeat the child lives and they stop those beating hearts in the most vilest way
3 people found this helpful
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