In the heart of rural Wisconsin, beneath the quiet hum of small-town life, lived a man whose darkness would haunt the world for generations.
Ed Gein-a farmer, a son, and a killer-became the blueprint for some of Hollywood's most terrifying creations: Psycho's Norman Bates, The Texas Chainsaw Massacre's Leatherface, and Silence of the Lambs' Buffalo Bill.
But who was he really?
Inside the Monster peels back the legend to reveal the truth behind the myth - a chilling, meticulously researched narrative that explores the real-life horrors that inspired Netflix's Monster: The Ed Gein Story.
Told with the precision of investigative journalism and the tension of a psychological thriller, Kevin George reconstructs Gein's world:
His suffocating devotion to his domineering mother, Augusta.
The suspicious death of his brother, Henry.
The shocking discovery that turned Plainfield into America's most macabre crime scene.
And the decades of obsession that turned one man's grief into a national nightmare.
Through rare documents, firsthand accounts, and reconstructed dialogues drawn from case files, Inside the Monster invites readers deep inside the mind of America's most infamous killer - and forces them to ask the hardest question of all:
Are monsters born... or made?
Perfect for readers of Erik Larson, Ann Rule, and true crime documentaries, this book goes beyond headlines and horror to reveal the humanity - and the horror - that live side by side in the American heartland.