![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() I think the mother must feel some responsibility and guilt when he kills his classmates. They’re both cold and judge mental people who show kindness to each other only when mood strikes them. It’s amazing how you can see that the little psychopath is definitely his mother’s child, even as she’s horrified of him. How would you turn out if your mother and caretaker faked loving you? & I think there’s a genetic component as well. Then again, I’d say it’s definitely partly her fault. She should have taken him to a shrink early on. His disturbing behavior increases as he gets older and he ends up locking his classmates into school and shooting them (after killing his father and sister) ![]() He quickly becomes disturbingly manipulative and has the father eating out of the palm of his hand while he secretly torments the mother. It is written from the first person perspective of the teenage killer's mother, Eva Khatchadourian, and documents her attempt to come to terms with her psychopathic son Kevin and the murders he. The mother doesn’t want a child, but makes an attempt to love her son -who senses from the beginning that she doesn’t love him and reacts with hostility. We Need to Talk About Kevin is a 2003 novel by Lionel Shriver, published by Serpent's Tail, about a fictional school massacre. Of course, there are movies like Rosemary’s Baby and the Omen -but this is a much more realistic account of what happens when your child turns out to be the devil. ![]()
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