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.
Sky… So sorry to hear that you’re still experiencing your allergy symptoms. I am saying prayers that you will have tons of relief, very soon! E
Louise,
Yes, you must read them. I am also wanting to read one that LL has been telling me to read, from day one, here. It is called “Women Who Love Psychopaths”, I believe. I think this could be very profound for me, personally. ….Much Love, Eden
Hi Eden! Glad to hear you are feeling better and that
you are so busy!! Keep up the good work!! 😀
Thanks, Supah Chic! How are you doing? Hope all is going great! I still think about how fun it would be to go line dancing out your way, sometime. I would really love to. I learned when I emulated Pee Wee Herman, and went on a trip to see the Alamo in Texas, on a whim, with my little red napsack, and all. But that was about 20 some odd years ago, so I would definitely deed to do some brushing up, I’m sure… HEE HEE… Well, I am off to ZZZZZZ land.
So glad to run into you, here! Much love to you! E
Hi superchic and Eden,
how are you. I am doing much better now. thanks for all your caring advice.
we will survive and not lets these deceivers win.
petite
Ox,
With all the stories of the farm, that is the MOST appropriate pic. Jim? LOL! You have such cute names for your “pets”. Don’t you have a couple of donkeys too with hysterical names?
I love the pic!
LL
The donkeys are Fat Ass and Hairy Ass….Jim was named because for some reason my grandfather named all his bulls “Jim” if he had more than one they might be Big Jim and Little Jim , or Red Jim and Black Jim,m but always “Jim”—so I named every bull (all registered) born on this place some form of “Jim” but this steer (Neutered-male) was just plain “Jim.” He was half of the first pair of young steers I trained as oxen. The other half, “Red Jim” got the bad habit of kicking, and that got him sent to the slaughter house because “I ain’t having nuttin” bigger AND meaner than I am that is trying to hurt me on this farm. So since Jim didn’t have a yoke mate (it is difficult to work a single oxen) he kind of ended up a big pet and I took him to the Scottish Festivals for “show and tell” til he got too big for even that.
Good morning LF
Ox
ROFLOL!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! I knew it was something hilarious!! LOL!
Do you still have Jim? Are the cows or oxen you have left, permanent pets or are they slaughter house bound eventually too?
do you name your duckies too?
LL
Hey Lizzy!
How ya feelin this morning?
LL