Bruce McArthur and The Serial Murders That Shook Toronto's Gay VillageBetween 2010 and 2017, Bruce McArthur, a seemingly harmless Toronto landscaper, murdered eight men from the city's Gay Village, burying their dismembered remains in the garden planters of clients' homes. This comprehensive examination reveals how a serial killer exploited the intersecting vulnerabilities of racialized, immigrant, and closeted gay men while institutional failures allowed him to kill for over seven years despite multiple warning signs. The book chronicles the victims' lives, the investigation's catastrophic missteps including the premature closure of Project Houston and the release of McArthur after a 2016 choking incident, and the survivors who narrowly escaped death. Drawing on court records, the Epstein Inquiry findings, and community testimony, it exposes systemic discrimination in missing persons investigations and documents the LGBTQ community's fight for accountability and reform. This is both a gripping true crime narrative and a profound examination of whose lives society deems worthy of protection, offering critical lessons about vulnerability, institutional bias, and the necessity of community-centered policing in protecting marginalized populations.