
THE CUTTER: It’s Been Fun, But I Really Have To Run
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THE CUTTER: It’s Been Fun, But I Really Have To Run
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About
Born just west of the Bayou in Lafourche Parish in south Louisiana, Amos Jonah Garrison suffered abuse and neglect throughout his childhood. By the time he was eighteen, he had endured harsh beatings from his stepfather and emotional neglect from his mother, herself a victim of her husband’s anger.
A.J. can no longer tolerate the abuse he, his siblings, and his mother suffered, and he brutally kills his stepfather. On this notable day in his life, he also hears, for the first time, the voice of Cutter, a controlling alter-personality speaking to him, directing and guiding him in future killings and the collection of prized Tattoo Trophies.
Over the next three decades, A.J. moves from Army Base to Base, and then numerous communities where he works as a butcher. A.J. is now a serial killer, and Cutter continues to use and manipulate him to flay tattoo trophies from his victims, eventually killing over fifty individuals, all mutilated and their tattoos flayed. No bodies are found, and there is no trail of evidence unless Cutter, the now tenacious second personality of A.J., wants the bodies to be found.
A.J. faces an internal struggle with right and wrong, constantly asking, “Why don’t I feel guilt about what I do?” Eventually, A.J. settles in Sarasota, Florida, leading what appears to be a normal life. He owns a home, he works as a meat cutter in the Farmer’s Market, and he walks among the residents of Sarasota every day, and none have any idea their local butcher is a serial killer. Sarasota Sheriff’s Department detectives, CSI forensic pathologists and the new Medical Examiner attempt to apprehend Garrison without success.
As you turn the pages of the novel Cutter, the rationale behind why serial killers collect trophies and the theory that they are made, not born, is explored.
The reader will question in their own mind, as the complexities of A.J. Garrison’s multiple personalities are peeled back, “What’s real and what’s fiction in the book? Can you purchase tanned tattoos on the Internet? Are individuals who were once labeled Psychopaths or Sociopaths now diagnosed under the much more current and softer diagnosis of Antisocial Personality?
You, the reader, will decide what is true and what is fiction!


