My Son, The Killer is a bit of a mess as it only asks more questions than what it answers and makes the case of Magnotta more sensationalised as if it needed any more. There are parts of the book that deal with the crime and a mother’s justification of herself as she deals with her son’s life choices.
On one hand, we have a book, assumingly written by Brian Whitney who tries to shed a light with a subject matter whose stories are not consistent. We also have the victim Jun Lin who is but a footnote in the book. This seems quite ridiculous and considering Brian Whitney is a crime writer, you think he would have done a little bit of research beyond the typical media fact sheet on Lin. A couple of paragraphs about a person who was murdered seems a bit lazy.
Looking through his back catalogue, he seems to enjoy sensationalising his subject matter without delving too deep. His past output was letters from Arthur Shawcross. I grew up with Arthur Shawcross and know his family as I am from the same small town and although I haven’t read the book, saying that you are going to look into the mind of someone who thinks they are deep but are shallow and lacks a lot of intelligence, shows you were this book, in particular, is probably going.
My Son, The Killer, Whitney says that he has access to Magnotta and then we get the same sound bites that have been radiating out of this case since it exploded on the public due to a slow news day. Magnotta although trying to sound deep and meaningful, really doesn’t come out with anything beyond the normal conspiracy theories and not wanting to discuss the case at all. We are left with nothing really further which considering the author claims to have personal contact with his subject, we are left with pretty much nothing beyond the normal website or news that has already been reported.
Most of the book is taken up by the mother, Anna Yourkin about her son Luka. We have the classic story of a woman in an abusive relationship with her husband. It does seem odd that we have an abusive father who physically and mentally abuses his wife and children and they feel that home schooling is the best way forward when raising your children. For whatever the reasons, we are left with a flimsy reasoning behind this and justification that the other children are well balanced. When the mother leaves the husband, we have well balanced children entering society except for Luka who was apparently bullied and only got on with children who had physical or mental handicaps. I am not sure what is trying to be betrayed here and it is an odd justification to be thrown in the mix.
The mother than states that she finds herself in another abusive relationship to herself and her children and she chooses the man over her son. Again, I am not quite sure if this is to justify why Luka would become the person he became or to shed some sympathy onto Luka as a boy. The story then shifts from Luka becoming an apparent model, pornography, rent boy, etc and the mother seems to approve of these life choices due to gifts and holidays Luka is able to dispense among the family. The couple of times that Luka does get in trouble with the law it is always someone elses fault and Luka is the innocent party.
Once Luka murders Jun Lin, we now have an apparent close knit family who turn their back on Luka because it is too much for them to handle. They do not want the press or media involved in their lives and show no support for their son who becomes a murderer and uses the internet to publicise his crimes. This is a total contradiction to what is written about how close and supportive they are with each other.
The cloud settles and now we have a mother who wants to get back in touch with her boy. This time she seems to have a supportive boyfriend in tow though his name is not mentioned and starts building a relationship with her now famous son. Through the various chapters, we have a mother who seems to be quite self-involved and it was extremely difficult to have empathy for her.
The reasoning for writing a book does not really shed any light on the crime that Luka Magnotta neither committed nor shed light on the family structure. Everything has been heavily documented and publicised before. This in fact seems to be one of those crime books that is released to capitalise on making money. I read the book and was compelled to read to the end though my eyes rolled at quite a few passages. The editor should be sued because the facts playing against each other, dates and years are jumble and there are so many contradictions within the pages it is hard to figure out what the main purpose of this was. The passage where she tells her son that she has written a book is a rather odd one because apparently she had already written it and it is going to the publisher but we have a chapter where she is telling her son about it.
Overall, the book is an over sensationalised inconsistent crime that seems to settle between fiction and non fiction. Luka Magnotta comes across as a hard killer and facts don’t really line up. If this was to shed a light on who Luka is, it doesn’t really do this. I found him to be sad, pathetic and terribly lonely figure who had mental issues due to family who left him out to dry. If he maybe had the support and love that a person should have had, maybe things would not have lead up to what they became. His mother is looking for pity and justification due to her bad life choices and this book is about her coming across as a victim although it portrays her as a conspirator to what her son had become. The book comes across as non apologetic and feels like a get rich scheme.
Maybe one day, Luka Magnotta will open up and let the world see the real person but you are not going to find this person within these pages. You have an apparent crime writer who doesn’t do any research beyond Wikipedia and a mother who makes everything about her. She exploited her son for financial means when he was a pornography actor and rent boy and she continues to exploit him now that he has become a famous killer. There is a probably a decent book to be had with the right editor and the right people involved but this is not that book. As for Luka Magnotta, a man of great promise when born came out a by product of bad parenting and someone forced to live in society’s underbelly.