I think that what drives the American public, which is like a huge, lumbering beast, is anger; and the other thing that drives it is self–interest. What I'm trying to do in my books is different from other people writing about child abuse. I'm not trying to engender sympathy so much as to say to the public, 'Today's victim is tomorrow's predator.' The things that you fear have a genesis, and the price of being safe in this world is early intervention. It costs you something to look away, not just in moral terms, but in practical terms.


Crime Times, Nov./Dec. 1988


I think that what drives the American public, which is like a huge, lumbering beast, is anger; and the other thing that drives it is self–interest. ...

I think that what drives the American public, which is like a huge, lumbering beast, is anger; and the other thing that drives it is self–interest. ...

I think that what drives the American public, which is like a huge, lumbering beast, is anger; and the other thing that drives it is self–interest. ...

I think that what drives the American public, which is like a huge, lumbering beast, is anger; and the other thing that drives it is self–interest. ...