Reviewed by Joyce Alexander, RNP (Retired)
Dr. Barbara Oakley is the author of Evil Genes—Why Rome Fell, Hitler Rose, Enron Failed, and My Sister Stole My Mother’s Boyfriend. Oakley’s resume reads like something out of a spy novel: She worked as a translator on Russian fishing trawlers during the Cold War, went from a private to an officer in the military, met her husband while working as a radio operator at the South Pole, and is now a professor of bio-engineering.
About this book, Gavin DeBecker writes, “Whatever you might believe about the role of genetics versus environment, Evil Genes will take you somewhere you haven’t been. Barbara Oakley brilliantly reveals the falseness of one of the ego’s little lies: That all our behavior is decided by us.”
Psychology Today writes “The author is successful at intertwining science with her family’s history ”¦ Oakley’s explanations are lucid, making Evil Genes and easy read even for those who need a refresher course on chromosomes, seratonin, and the amygdalae ”¦ From infamous dictators to conniving sisters, Machiavellians come in many shapes and sizes. Now we have some insight into what makes them tick.”
Like the previous book of Dr. Oakley’s that I reviewed, Cold-Blooded Kindness, this book was so interesting that I could hardly put it down, and I wore out another yellow highlighter marking especially interesting passages I wanted to review again.
Dr. Oakley’s sister, Carolyn, actually did steal her mother’s boyfriend, and was highly Machiavellian, probably psychopathic. Dr. Oakley personally and professionally “gets it” about toxic people. She focuses her book on the genetics plus the environments that make people with personality disorders “successful” or not so “successful,” by looking at various people, including her sister, Carolyn, as well as Mao, Stalin, the CEO of Enron, and Hitler. She looks at how their genetic tendencies and family histories folded together with environments that placed them at a juncture where they could blossom into the abusers on either a personal scale or a worldwide scale.
She looks at the way in which genes, and their variations, affect not only how we look, but how we react and think, how self-serving we are, or how altruistic we may be. She takes the very subjects that are discussed daily here at LoveFraud and puts them into scientific jargon, but in such a way that even if you had trouble in Mrs. Smith’s seventh-grade science class, you can still understand what she is talking about.
Dr. Oakley doesn’t just focus on the psychopaths, but on the personality disorders in general and the fact that “borderline,” “narcissistic,” “histrionic” and “antisocial” personality disorders overlap in such a way that they are more likely to be different points on a continuum rather than separate entities. She refers to the “total” personality disordered as the “successfully sinister” or “Machiavellian.” About trying to tell someone who has not been targeted by one, she says it is like:
trying to explain color to a blind person ”¦ People simply aren’t generally raised and educated to understand the small percentages of the population—some of whom are outwardly very successful—are quite capable of masking deeply disturbed personalities. Sometimes, sadly, the devastating reality of these “unfixable” personalities becomes clear only after marriage and children. (As relationship expert Russell Friedman once quipped: “You can’t love someone into mental health.”)
“I can’t believe there might be some kind of scientific explanation for this,” the have-dealt-withs tell me time after time, “I never even talk about it because no one would believe me.” Without knowledge of recent studies, people have little way of figuring out that their seemingly isolated experience was far more common than they’d realized.
There are few books that I have ever found as interesting as I have Dr. Barbara Oakley’s two books, and I am anxiously awaiting her latest book which is due to be published in August. Don’t let her “subtitle” to Evil Genes of “Why Rome fell, Hitler Rose, Enron Failed, and My Sister Stole My Mother’s Boyfriend” put you off or fool you. This is well researched and documented information about the “successfully sinister.” The book adds to the growing knowledge available to the public (not just the professionals) about the “psychopaths among us,” that will hopefully help educate the general public about how to spot toxic personalities and realize that they truly are “unfixable.
Like Gavin DeBecker, who had a mother who was personality disordered, Dr. Oakley had a sister who was personality disordered. She, like DeBecker, not only “gets it,” but knows how to present it so that others can “get it” from her writings. I highly recommend this work.
Evil Genes—Why Rome Fell, Hitler Rose, Enron Failed, and My Sister Stole My Mother’s Boyfriendis available on Amazon.com.
Wow, I read up on the Wiki page for this book a long time ago. It sounded pretty good. I think I was reading up on personality disorders when I saw the link to it.
What is the difference between Sociopathic and Machiavellian? Looks like I need to do some research. :/
Anway, sounds great! I might get it, as I just finished Robert Hare’s books and need some stuff to read.
Machiavelli was a man who wrote a book centuries ago about basically how evil people work/think/act…and so an evil person who has ulterior motives is labeled Machiavellian. Here is a link to a better description http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Machavellian
Anyway, Dr. Oakley refers to psychopaths not only as “psychopaths” but also as “successfully sinister” and as “Machiavellian” pretty much interchangeably. She shows how that though these people are EVIL and sinister to the max, they also have charm and in some cases smarts and guile and history has placed some of them in a spot that they can take advantage of their Machiavellian traits and put them in a position to take advantage of this to let their EVIL aspects prosper to the maximum, such as Hitler, Mao, and Stalin leading to the misery of tens of millions and the deaths of even more millions.
While her sister, Carolyn, was Machiavellian and sinister in a more personal and intimate way, only with those closest to her, rather than like Mao, whose evil spread to hundreds of millions in one way or another, there are still things in common between Carolyn and Mao. Both Carolyn and Mao were blessed at birth with the genetic possibility to become Machiavellian, and something in their environment pushed them in that direction. Not to say that neither Carolyn or Mao was FORCED or had no FREE WILL, but because the gasoline of genetics and the fire of environment came together, they both became toxic people without the ability to love, without empathy for others, and at that point there was no “going back” No Fixing them.
Ox Drover: Ohhhhh! I’ll read up on it. I think I saw some author on here write something too, involving a dark triad and some such. I remember now!
I also wanted to thank you again, Ox Drover. For teaching me. I’ll check Wiki more from now on, but I still like your opinion on stuff. I know I can’t trust everything I read online, but I think I can here. 😛
I read somewhere online that George Bush jr. may have been a sociopath. He would fit into the sociopath with power category if so. In fact, I think most politicians in power may all be shady and not to be trusted. I know that sounds paranoid, but I still feel this way about cops, politicians, judges and the like.
So no fixing them, huh. If they miss out on the ability to love early on. I remember Liane Leedom’s site about this ability and children. They have choices, but influences from their genetics are pushing on them, like gravity. I get it now. Nice post.
Ox,
Didn’t you mention this book before on another thread when you were in the middle of reading it saying you were going to do a review on it?
I’m excited about this book. It seems intriguing!
LL
Dear LL, Yep, I sure did. After I read her first book that I got I got so excited about it that I ordered this one, and she has another one coming out in August and I can’t wait!!!! This woman writes so WELL and she is so SMART and SHE GETS IT! Her sister Carolyn (dead now) was definitely an evil woman…..and part of Oakley’s desire to learn about Psychopaths and evil people is to learn about what made her sister the way she was.
Oakley is a bioengineer and she takes information from several different experts, from DNA experts to psychologists etc and weaves it all together so that there comes out a tapestry that we can see a picture of the “evil people” (whatever you want to call them.)
In this book she looks at Borderline Personality Disorder as well, which seems to be more the “diagnosis” of females than psychopathy, but looks at ALL the personality disorders as points on a continuum rather than separate types of “animals’—like they may all be “canines” and some are lap dogs and wiener dogs and some are wolves and everything in between, but they are ALL canines so there are some things in common that they all have.
Her two books have been some of the most interesting reading on personality disordered people that I have read…and I’ve got about 10+ feet of shelf space just in my office now. She makes it where anyone can understand what she is saying. I do recommend this woman’s writing.
Hey, I just noticed that Donna put me up as a “love fraud author” and listed most of my articles! WOW! I am honored! If you wanna see my pix and a pix of my favorite ox “Jim” (before you ask, he is a Scottish Highland steer and that pix was made at a Scottish Festival where I took him for “show and tell.”)
Ox Drover: Congrats on becoming an author! You’re definitely the most active person here, it seems. Jim is HUGE! Ah, I’ll stick to my small Beagles. 😛
Yea, Jim was my baby, and yes he was HUGE…he got even bigger than that! I only have 3 old “pet cows” now and one heifer that is not a “pet” just hasn’t gone to the butcher yet, but I enjoy looking at them, they are beautiful.
Oxy,
You wrote a great reply under “After the sociopath” and I feel like this post is a crossover, belongs there and here.
I read all I could about this book. It sound like exactly a great read for me, needing to step back from being so empathetic. Never thought about it, always thought of empathy as my gift to connect with my humanity. But, maybe I am TOO connected and a little distance and perspective will be of GREAT benefit to me. Maybe my empathy is in the way of my success??
Do you buy these books and decide to write a review? I just wondered how you found them. B/c you are VERY good and if your review isn’t listed on Amazon, it should be. Your wisdom would be such an asset for general public just as long as you don’t call them into LF!! (Boy if there is a place for trolls, they are in the reviews on Amazon.)
Anyhoo, thanks for the review, You have convinced me to read this book and maybe I will have another life epiphany!!
ps I see your name and list of articles but where is the pic of Jim?
I’ve never really considered oxen “cute” before ( given, I don’t think I’ve ever seen one up close in real life, except maybe at the zoo? which is probably unlikely since oxen aren’t really kept in zoos), but that’s a cute ox, Oxy! haha. What a beautiful coat he has.