About the Author

Christian Barth is an author, attorney, screenwriter, and photographer originally from New Jersey. The Midwest Book Review lauded his first book, THE ORIGINS OF INFAMY, as “a very recommended read for true crime aficionados." Recognized as the foremost civilian authority on the unsolved 1969 Garden State Parkway murders, he resides with his family in Connecticut. His latest book, THE GARDEN STATE PARKWAY MURDERS: A COLD CASE MYSTERY, published by WildBlue Press in January 2020, was described as “One of, if not THE, best true crime books of 2020” by co-host Nic Edwards of the hit podcast True Crime Garage. Barth was recently featured on the series premiere of “Violent Minds: Killers on Tape” on the Oxygen True Crime Network.

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I never set out to become a writer. When I graduated from college I was a directionless and unmarketable young man with a political science degree. Fresh off two stage productions, for a brief time I entertained delusional fantasies of moving to Hollywood and becoming an actor, but for the next two years what theatrical aspirations I’d secretly harbored were subsumed by the ebb and flow of what we do before we discover what we want to do with the rest of our lives.

My first job out of college was as an insurance adjuster. My duties were non- descript for the most part, and my brief stint at the company was largely unremarkable but for a chance conversation I’d had sometime during my first few days in the office with a fellow employee named Paul Serio.

The first thing I noticed about Paul was the conspicuous array of pewter rings that adorned each of his fingers, elaborately etched with symbols and designs you might see upon the gnarled hands of a fortune-teller or purveyor of the occult, not a portly middle-aged man wearing a shirt and tie. He was bespectacled, with longish black hair that flowed just atop his shirt collar. Though a tad eccentric in appearance, Paul had an engaging demeanor and spoke much like a career man, extolling the virtues of our company after introducing himself, even offering to help organize my burgeoning file load as he took a seat at my desk the day we met. He continued to greet me each time he passed by on his way to the coffee maker, asking how my day was going and making small talk. His sporadic presence—he was rarely in the office, and always seemed in a hurry to be elsewhere—spawned rampant gossip about his personal life. He’d had eight wives, rumor had it, and his weekends were spent jousting with knights at local Renaissance Fairs, which explained the eclectic jewelry.

Two years later I left the company, and that was the last I saw of Paul Serio. It wasn’t until about the summer of 1993, during a particularly dark period of my life two years before law school, that I learned two interesting pieces of information that were instrumental in charting a new journey and steering my life on a more fateful course. One day, while staying in the Jersey Shore town of Avalon, New Jersey, I received a call from a former officer worker and friend who informed me that Serio had appeared on the television show America’s Most Wanted, as someone from our office had turned him in to Florida authorities. The same medieval swordsman who offered to help me was in fact a contract killer who’d strangled a Ft. Lauderdale housewife with a telephone chord and plunged a knife in her chest seven years before I’d met him. He died in prison several years later while serving a life term.

That same summer in Avalon I was fascinated to read where serial murderer Ted Bundy had attended Temple University in the spring of 1969, and had intimated his involvement in the murders of college friends Susan Davis and Elizabeth Perry near Ocean City, New Jersey on Memorial Day 1969. The Philadelphia Inquirer article immediately brought to mind a trip home from the Jersey Shore when I was a boy and had overheard my parents talk about the unsolved case as we passed the location along the parkway near where the coeds had been slain.

I didn’t draw any correlation between these two sociopaths or attach any meaningful significance to these memories until sometime after I graduated from law school, and felt a burgeoning desire to resurrect the muse that had spoken to me on the college stage. I sensed a creative void that needed fulfillment and decided to indulge my creative aspirations once more, albeit in an entirely different creative endeavor. I’d always been an avid book reader, but never felt compelled to try my hand at fiction writing until after I’d devoured two literary masterpieces, The Confessions of Nat Turner by William Styron and Rabbit at Rest by John Updike. In short order I consumed everything these two literary legends had written, and sought out authors with similar styles. I also read The Prince of Tides and The Lords of Discipline by Pat Conroy, trying amateurishly to emulate his evocatively lyrical southern prose. Through a process of distillation I eventually discovered my own voice.

I began to research the 1969 coed murders in earnest in 2000, while looking for ideas for a short story I was to submit as part of an assignment for a summer fiction writing class at Rutgers University. In 2009 I published my first book, THE ORIGINS OF INFAMY a reimagination of the slayings written entirely from Ted Bundy’s perspective. The generally positive reception that followed didn’t serve as a final chapter to the saga, however. The real story about the Memorial Day slayings needed to be told, I thought, but this time without embellishment.

So I set off on my next journey, exploring the case further, interviewing witnesses, retired police detectives, placing calls to the victims’ friends. I was obsessed with finding Susan and Elizabeth’s killer, logging hundreds of miles in my car, visiting Somers Point and Ocean City, New Jersey dozens of times. I spent entire afternoons in restaurant bars frequented by off-shift construction workers ands salty bar flies, seeking out anybody who knew remembered the 1969 coed murders and was willing to talk about them. In further researching Ted Bundy, who seemed like a natural launching point for THE GARDEN STATE PARKWAY MURDERS: A COLD CASE MYSTERY, I learned everything there was to know about his early boyhood in order to better understand what sinister forces gave rise to the inestimable carnage he wrought during his twenties. I’d already been to Seattle and visited his old haunts and crime scenes while researching for THE ORIGINS OF INFAMY, but hadn’t spoken with those closest to him. By interviewing Bundy’s family members, what I learned about his formative years in Philadelphia was markedly different than just about everything that had been written about him. As I investigated several other persons of interest in the 1969 parkway slayings, I noticed a bizarre interconnectedness between these men and Ted Bundy that was oddly reminiscent of the small-world theory that served as the inspiration for John Guare’s play The Six Degrees of Separation. Every suspect and person of interest seemed related to him, and one another, in ways I never imagined possible. 

I hope that THE GARDEN STATE PARKWAY MURDERS: A COLD CASE MYSTERY offers New Jersey State Police detectives some fresh leads and new names to consider, and inspires their Major Crime Unit to give a second look at persons of interest they might have previously overlooked or disregarded.

On a personal note, though I reside with my family in Connecticut, I practice law exclusively in New Jersey and visit Ocean City each summer.

Hopefully what zealous passion and energy I’ve devoted to this cold case shall carry forth to my next book.