Through the Lens of a Monster
A Serial Killer on Death Row, an Unsolved Murder List, and an Inmate’s Deadly Play for Redemption
By William A. Noguera
Genre: Memoir | True Crime
Genre: Memoir | True Crime
The only man he trusted was a killer too.
On death row at San Quentin, artist and inmate William Noguera formed an unlikely bond with the notorious serial killer Joseph Naso. Over years of disturbing conversations—and at great personal risk—Noguera gained his trust. What he revealed was far worse than anyone imagined.
Behind prison walls, Naso described his brutal crimes in chilling detail, disclosing evidence that had eluded investigators for decades and exposing the darkness that drove him. Now, for the first time, Noguera lays bare those confessions and the psychological games behind them—offering long-overdue answers for grieving families and fresh leads in cases gone cold.
Through the Lens of a Monster is both a window into the twisted mind of a predator and a haunting memoir of a man seeking redemption for his own violent past.
The inspiration for the Oxygen True Crime original documentary series Death Row Confidential, produced by Dick Wolf, Vanity Fair Studios, and Universal Television. Also available on Peacock.
“Nothing prepared me for this extraordinary book. My dad, an ex-con from San Quentin, taught me that violent men are beyond redemption, but he never met William Noguera. His spirit, artistic talent, and desire to redeem himself brought tears to my eyes. The confessions he drew from serial killer Joseph Naso gave closure to several families who had no idea who killed their loved ones. The way he did it speaks volumes about Noguera’s character—and the stories he dug out of this monster will make your hair curl. This fascinating page-turning story will stay with me for a long time. What will stay with me longer is how he turned his life around in circumstances that would have crushed most of us.”—David Crow, award-winning author of The Pale-Faced Lie
William A. Noguera is a pioneering expert on serial killers with a unique perspective, having spent forty-two years on San Quentin’s death row before his release in 2025. READ MORE