BKARININ.RVW 20030721 "The Art of Investigative Interviewing", Charles L. Yeschke, 2003, 0=7506-7595-0, U$39.99 %A Charles L. Yeschke %C 225 Wildwood Street, Woburn, MA 01801 %D 2003 %G 0=7506-7595-0 %I Butterworth-Heinemann/CRC Press %O U$39.99 225 1-800-366-BOOK, fax: 800-446-6520 dp-catalog@bh.com %O http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0750675950/robsladesinterne http://www.amazon.co.uk/exec/obidos/ASIN/0750675950/robsladesinte-21 %O http://www.amazon.ca/exec/obidos/ASIN/0750675950/robsladesin03-20 %P 244 p. %T "The Art of Investigative Interviewing" This book could have been very important. Interviewing, if done properly, is a highly technical field, and the author is obviously familiar with the Reid techniques. Unfortunately, the work lacks structure, a focus on practical methods, and clarity of writing. Chapter one addresses ethical standards and practices, but mostly consists of fuzzy opining on ethics in general. Although codes of conduct for related professions are listed, very little of the text is directly related to interviewing. Lists of motivations and drives that may interfere with interviewing are given in chapter two. Except for verbal clues to deception, the material is vague and not very helpful. Preparation, in chapter three, is mostly about the interviewer's attitude. Chapter four discusses the legal rules for interrogation, primarily in terms of the US Miranda decision. "Public and Private Interviewing," in chapter five, does not have any clear point. There is a lot of nebulous philosophizing about rapport and active listening in chapter six, although it does end with a few good tips in regard to body language, facial expression, and so forth. Chapter seven examines abuse of authority, but the content on neutrality basically repeats the earlier material on active listening. The argument that expectations can be self-fulfilling, in chapter eight, repeats prior ideas, and is rather confused. Chapter nine presents an extremely detailed and complex, but useful, outline of the structure and stages of an interview. The framework will help you to plan and anticipate what could happen. An inexplicit deliberation on setting and "intensity" is in chapter ten. Different types of questions are described in chapter eleven, and it has some helpful points. Three "case studies" are provided in chapter twelve: one demonstrates the interview process and may be helfpul, the others are mere transcripts. In the absence of better guides, this book does contain a number of useful tips, but it is very difficult to extract the techniques from the opinions and verbiage. copyright Robert M. Slade, 2003 BKARININ.RVW 20030721