The subject matter of this book is so shocking, it would be impossible not to convey the sensational nature of the crime, the events before and after - the whole multifaceted clusterbomb of a tragedy - without dramatic language. Yet the author treats this story and everyone affected by it - including the murderer - with a remarkable sensitivity.
A sixteen-year-old Satanist murdering his seven-year-old neighbour and crucifying the corpse is the kind of story that should have made the front pages of the tabloids for years. Especially in a quiet suburb of Dublin, Ireland, in 1973. Yet it got just a few paragraphs on an inside page of one Irish newspaper and one Canadian paper (there was no apparent link with Canada).
The facts that the murderer was a minor and pleaded guilty wouldn't explain why the story wasn't screaming from the newsstands; murders of children by children are so rare that they receive massive coverage.
This book should have been a bestseller when it came out, but I had never heard of it until I came across it by chance (thanks to Amazon's algorithm). (To put this in context: I'm a former tabloid reporter living in Dublin and I read a lot of true crime.)
As a piece of investigative journalism this book is very impressive; Malone has done extensive research including old-school legwork, and he asks all the important questions - not least "why" and "how": How did this boy from a respectable, deeply Catholic family get introduced to Satanism? Who corrupted him? Why were the red flags not spotted?
While the author attempts to fill in the gaps with a lot of (legitimate)speculation, he relies on facts - hard, painstakingly researched, checked and double-checked, analysed and counter-analysed pieces of information.
The author explains the ethics behind his decision not to reveal Lorcan Bale's last-known location, but provides enough information for anyone to guess. A cursory online search reveals plenty of information including Bale's email address, recent photo and even his blog on the topic of Jesus! Having served just seven years for the murder of a seven-year-old boy, and having acquired a university degree in prison, he's by all accounts leading a respectable life in a nice part of London, working as a civil servant and enthusiastically volunteering in an Anglican church (he's even smiling out at us from a parish newsletter).
Christian forgiveness makes an exception for anyone who harms "little ones" ("...better that a millstone be cast around their neck...") but no doubt there are people, Christian and otherwise, who genuinely believe Bale is really rehabilitated. These good people will attempt to persuade the cynics to forgive and forget. Regardless, the fact that Lorcan Bale is not exactly scuttering into the shadows - he hasn't even bothered to change his name! - suggests he believes he has been forgiven.