Wednesday, May 30, 2018

Shakespeare References in Killing For Company

Killing For Company: The Case Of Dennis Nilsen, a non-fiction crime book written by Brian Masters, contains a couple of references to Hamlet. The first comes in a passage written by the murderer Dennis Nilsen himself (author Brian Masters had access to Nilsen’s writing): “It may be the perverted overkill of my need to help people – victims who I decide to release quickly from the slings and arrows of their outrageous fortune, pain and suffering” (p. 215). In those lines, he refers, of course, to Hamlet’s most famous soliloquy. The second reference comes in the book’s final chapter, titled “Answers.” Masters writes: “Allied to the schizoid capacity to misinterpret the feelings and thoughts of others is a desperate, obsessive need that everyone should bend his energies to noticing and understanding the miscreant himself. ‘Report me and my cause aright,’ said Hamlet; this might be Nilsen’s leitmotiv, expressing his desire that at last some attention might be afforded him” (p. 257). The line quoted is spoken to Horatio just before Hamlet dies.

Killing For Company: The Case Of Dennis Nilsen was published in 1985. The edition I read was the Coronet edition, fourteenth impression (from 1992).

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