cover image Boys Enter the House: The Victims of John Wayne Gacy and the Lives They Left Behind

Boys Enter the House: The Victims of John Wayne Gacy and the Lives They Left Behind

David B. Nelson. Chicago Review, $28.99 (336p) ISBN 978-1-64160-486-4

Journalist Nelson debuts with a moving and meticulously researched account of the lives of the victims of serial killer John Wayne Gacy, who brutalized and murdered 33 boys and young men between January 1972 and December 1978, burying most of them beneath his house on the outskirts of Chicago. Drawing on interviews with family, friends, and lovers, Nelson portrays each of the victims in full. Some had criminal records, some were gay sex workers, and many were regular kids. Gacy’s first victim, 16-year-old Timothy McCoy, came from an extended family and was taking the bus home from visiting cousins in Michigan when he accepted a ride from Gacy at a Chicago bus station. Nineteen-year-old Billy Kindred had a girlfriend, who to this day still wears his promise ring. And 15-year-old Rob Piest, a theater tech and gymnast, was described as shy and sweet by his co-workers at the Des Plaines, Ill., pharmacy where he met Gacy and became his final victim. (The efforts of the Piest family to find out what happened to Rob helped lead to Gacy’s arrest.) Gacy, who confessed to multiple murders, was executed in 1994. Nelson succeeds in giving Gacy’s victims a voice. This is a must for true crime fans. (Oct 5.)