Review- The Babysitter: My Summers with a Serial Killer
You’ve heard the
title Don’t Tell Mom the Babysitter’s Dead. An
alt-title to the subject of this review could be Do Tell Mom the
Babysitter’s a Psycho. The Babysitter: My
Summers with a Serial Killer by Liza Rodman and Jennifer Jordan
is a riveting True Crime tale that is half Liza’s childhood memoir and half
narrative non-fiction, documenting Tony Costa’s metamorphosis into the Cape Cod
Vampire of late 1960s.
The
story alternates between a first-person account of Liza’s early life and a
third-person narrative of Tony Costa’s journey from charming boy to brutal
killer. The reader first hears of nightmares plaguing Liza, where she finds
herself in a hotel, harassed by a familiar face. It is only when she wakes up
and thinks back to her early days, when she strolled the halls of the Royal
Coachmen in Provincetown, that she knows the face belongs to her childhood
friend and babysitter Tony Costa. Liza realizes how lucky she is to not have
been one of Tony’s victims. Her tale is one of abuse and poignancy, often
filled with scenes of her philandering mother verbally and physically abusing
her. The reader sympathizes for Liza and her younger sister Louisa, both of
them in grade school, as they struggle with their volatile mother, after their
father abandons them, only to return haphazardly years later, but never setting
foot inside their mother’s house.
Liza’s
and Louisa’s mother is a schoolteacher on the mainland, but in summer the girls
are taken to Provincetown, so they and their mother get to spend time with a
family friend, Aunt Joan. Aunt Joan owns the Royal Coachman, a popular seasonal
hotel, where a Tony Costa performs odd jobs. Wanting to carouse town for
wealthy suitors, Liza’s mother lets her two children accompany Tony on his
job-related errands, including runs to the dump, to the store, or just for
entertaining the two for a couple hours, getting ice cream or popsicles at the
local drug store and observing eccentric inhabitants of a town known for its
budding bohemian society, gay community, hippie enclaves, and aloof tourists.
During
summers together, Liza notices Tony’s kindness towards her and Louisa, but also
oddities in his personality and how he always hangs out with younger crowds and
likes to take people to his wooded hideaway. It is not until Tony stops hanging
around the two sisters that Liza hears of his arrest for multiple homicides of
young women. This news reminds Liza of the irony of their relationship. Where
Tony made her feel loved and wanted, an apathetic self-absorbed mother failed
to heed the slightest warning signs.
Narrative
portions of the book follow the life and unraveling of Tony Costa. Born to a
loving mother and father, Tony grows up with inner turmoil. His father ends up
dying, serving in WWII, and his stepfather is not the best replacement. Tony
fixates on his real father, the war hero, while also facing trauma of being
raped by an older high-school age acquaintance. Despite these burdens, Tony
falls in love with his high-school sweetheart, Avis, and the two get married,
have two children, and settle in Provincetown. Tony’s and Avis’s relationship
is quickly strained when he struggles to hold down steady work and gets into
drugs, hanging out with young hippies.
Besides
odd jobs and drugs, Tony enjoys painting. He builds a studio room in the
basement with two padlocks on the door. Not until later are the grotesque “art
pieces” discovered inside that locked room. Avis and Tony eventually split and
a handful of young women he woes begin disappearing. It isn’t until two women
from Rhode Island vacation to the Cape where Tony makes mistakes that have him
cornered by law enforcement, victims’ families, and psychiatrists. This young
odd-jobber, hip with the bohemian Provincetown community, becomes spotlighted
on the front page of the Cape Cod papers for anything but summer fun.
Rodman
and Jordan write compellingly and sensually. The reader is intrigued by the
research and detail of the time period and unfolding of events in the babysitter’s
and Liza’s lives. The 1960s island atmosphere is evinced with its small-town
feel, influx of free-loving hippies, successful and experimental artists like
John Waters, and city-folk looking to unwind on sandy, breezy beaches. However,
Liza’s story is a bit redundant in its morosity. The reader is inundated with
her mother’s lack of concern, verbal assaults, and backhand slaps. To reconcile
this superfluity, the reader is immersed in a fascinating decade, with an
engrossing account of how drugs were plentiful, youth were reckless, some
children were raised offhand, and amidst the chaotic social and cultural
zeitgeist, a killer and babysitter could walk hand in hand with a child,
innocent of the times.
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