Defending Jacob
discussion
Was Jacob guilty - What would you do if it was your child?

Jacob clearly seemed incapable of empathy, but Andy's the one who made me angry. That he never told his wife his own family history was more than hiding or denial, it meant he didn't fully sympathize with his wife's right to know about it. He lacked empathy and consideration for her too. The way he described her as time went on and he saw the changes in her physically. Sometimes his descriptions of her were cruelly accurate. Is that how you would describe anyone you loved? He did not talk about her in ways that seemed loving to me. It seemed more like he was comparing the wear and tear on her as if she were a favorite car, or some sort of possession.
And near the end, the lack of compassion for Jacob's girlfriend was just as shocking. It didn't even seem to register with him.
From the moment he hid the knife (I couldn't believe he'd actually done that), it was clear that he no longer worried about others. He says he was covering for Jacob, but wasn't he also afraid that his history would be exposed too? He wasn't just covering for his son. He would have reacted more the way his wife did if that was just it. Clearly she was tortured and fully understood things from how others felt it; but I never got the sense that Andy was haunted. Trapped, angry maybe or strategic but not emotionally compromised.
The longer you listened to Andy the more you realized that he had learned to pass as a "normal" person, learned what to do, how to act and avoid thinking about unpleasant things. He even learned to be a husband to his wife, but didn't he say a couple of times that he wasn't sure about what she wanted? Her emotional needs seemed something of a puzzle to him.
Father and son both lacked empathy, or whatever you want to call it that allows you to consider and sympathize and conceive of others and their feelings. What a nightmare.
Great book. Just pulls you right in. At one point while reading, I caught myself wondering (just for a second) when I'd hear the next report on the news about the case... :) Thought about it for days afterwards.

The book does force us to think about the very complex relationship between inherited (genetic) tendencies, environmental/parental influences, and personal free will. Andy had the mutation but didn't kill, but did the coping mechanism he used (denial) to protect himself from being like his father actually make it impossible for him to help his son find a way to be strong?

I'm not sure the grandfather wanted to "protect" his grandson. I think he had other motives to do it including seeing his son (he hadn't seen him since Andy was a kid) and I think he just wanted to jack the family around. In no way do I think the grandfather was trying to help anyone other than his own motives.

I think Andy's stubborn refusal to admit that there was anything wrong was what caused Laurie to take drastic measures to prevent Jacob from harming anyone else.

My guess would be that he did in fact kill the girl but maybe not Ben. Doing one doesn't necessarily mean the other has to be true. And I have to look back and find it, but I thought somewhere in the beginning narrative Andy gives it away by saying something the the effect of "in the end it doesn't matter and it was in fact Patz who was guilty" but of course in a more obscure way. I was about to return the book to the library but now I might go get it and try to find that quote.
Love a book that keep you thinking long after its done!


In terms of Jacob being guilty yes he was. I think most of us never would have doubted except for Andy the narrator making comments around putz. It was natural to assume that t hese comments were because of Andy's after the fact knowledge. When of course they were all just part of Andy's blindness. Don't know how I feel about the use of the narrator in this way.


The book grabbed your interest from the start and kept you reading. I agree that the child abuser angle was an unnecessary distraction but otherwise the book was good and definitely worth reading.



Most people will think Jacob murdered both people and I acknowledge this. It creates, though, a VERY DISTURBING situation for me. A kid is born into a loving, caring family and by 14 he is killing people. The implication is that he was born with the gene and that is the main reason he is now killing people. True, the family might have missed some signs but all the info in the book says those signs were minimal (no teacher red flags, just disruptive at very early age, and withdrawn lately). That is such a disturbing result: so deterministic, we-are-what-are-genes-say-we-are, so negligent of free will, that I just can't go with that. That is so disturbing to think my kids could have that propensity.
I thought this book was phenomenal so while I realize the above, a small part of me chooses to believe Jacob had mental problems and just happened to be at the wrong place at the wrong time TWO TIMES. yeah, crazy. But then the book is not as disturbing. Instead of having monsters born from genes, we have bizarre events blending together to create a pressure-packed situation and a new monster: Laurie, a mother who would actually kill her own kid.
I can't believe some people were so sympathetic to her on this message board. From the start, she was selfish. It was her selfishness that led to the last act. She did not kill Jacob to protect others; reread the book, she killed her kid because it was a black eye on her. She was SELFISH and that is what her last act was, not moral. How can a mother kill her child? That last part was heart-wrenching to me, no matter if Jacob was guilty or not.



I wouldn't blame Andy for his wife's actions. She clearly had many other options than the one she took. I think the mother's actions showed how poorly developed the mom's coping mechanisms were.
I do think Jacob was guilty and the two diverse parental reactions were very intriguing. It showed the range from total denial to self blame both relatable by most parents.
I love it when a book can surprise me which this book did! Great read!

I wouldn't b..."
That's the crux of it: do you feel responsible to your child (to protect him) or do you feel responsible for your child (to society). My prayer is "please protect my child from harm and from doing harm."

If he truly was a sociopath, which it really does seem like he is - all the therapy in the world would not have helped. You can't grow a conscience if you are born without one. So the murder gene theory may or may not be accurate - because a sociopath can just pop up anywhere without any heredity involved.


Yes! As the mother of a 14 year old son (who collects knives!) I was very anxious reading this book! Chilling ...





No, I would never want to kill my own child, I would have gotten him the proper help.




I really did enjoy this book, but the father was in such obvious denial that I wanted to scream at him most of the time, "Look at the facts! What would you think if this was not your child? Would you not see signs that something is wrong?"


I was not happy with the ending. I do believe the author wants you to know that Jacob was guilty. But it could have gone a couple of different ways. Either parent because of bulling and maybe the girl really did just drown. I know I am probably thinking way to deep and too much. LOL... but it was certainly worth the read.


"And what did Lojiudice want Andy to say that would indict Laurie when he said "What happened to your son?" My take was that the 'on-the-ground' literal answer would be that he wanted Andy to fess up, finally come out his deep denial; for reasons of his, (Loguidice's) own. He needed this great win for his political career. The figurative or philosophical answer is again to question the reader in what they thought.
That was just my take.



And even given the fact that Jacob had his chance to start anew after he was acquitted of the Rifkin murder and no less than 1 year (not sure of the exact timeline) he murders Hope while on vacation with his parents exemplifies his utter and total lack of redemption.
It also shows the escalation of his crimes and evolution of Jacob as a murderer. Not to justify the Rifkin death but there is a difference and slight understanding of how he could have been capable of murdering his classmate and bully, versus the killing of his vacation girlfriend whom he knew for no more than a week! The methodology may be different but the bottom line is the same... Jacob could not have been saved. He would have only kept killing.

Andy felt he did free (save) himself, so he night have held hope for his son to do the same.
Anabelle wrote: "after he was acquitted"
It was the intervention of his "criminal" grandfather that got Jacob acquitted. Would Jacob have fared better had he been convicted?

I think we see this when Jacob murders that girl. (In my view, he was guilty of that one for sure. For one thing, if he wasn't, why would Landay have put the girl in the book? But I realize not everyone on here agrees with me.) Afterwards, he hangs out with his parents with bloodstains on his clothes. I see this as something a killer growing overconfident would do. He'd kill again, I believe.





And why did Laurie kill her son? Because she didn't want him to kill anymore or what? And for everyone who thinks he killed the girl...I;m confused (I listened to it on audiobook) so I don't remember anything about the girl having any wounds (they decided she drowned with a crushed windpipe which wouldn't cause bleeding).
I think the most wonderful thing about this book is proven in all the comments....everyone here likes to say there is nothing therapy etc could do for a sociopath and by introducing the "murder gene" in the trial and putting it into your mind (like they wanted to do to the jury) it was inside him and he would kill again there was NO redemption and the jury whether there was evidence or not would have been forced to find him guilty! So I think Landay did a great job because if you can take a step back you look at how you feel about what you were told during the trial and see how you would have voted....but then remember that feeling/thought what if he really is innocent?


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I'm not a parent but I do know that no matter how strongly I felt that my son was guilty, I would not be able to take his life. Throughout the whole story, I feel like Laurie was TOO ready to say her son was guilty, it was as if she didnt even want to give him a chance. Andy on the other hand, tried to keep a clear head and have faith in his son, even if it meant being wrong in the end. As soon as Laurie found out about the "murder gene", Jacob was guilty in her eyes. And Andy was left trying to be the parent and get his son through the trial.