With a decent editor, this book could have easily chopped out about 100 pages and would have been the better for it. This is an interesting case in which a woman named Laren spends her entire life going around stealing from people, ends up marrying a semi-well-off lawyer named Larry, bleeds him dry, then gets her 'best friend' to help her kill him. That is, of course, the quick summary. While I do like lengthy novels and backstory, this one just simply had too much repetitive backstory and uninteresting details to keep the pace going.
Laren/Elisa is an interesting killer because she's so engrained in Larry's life. Before Larry marries her, it is actually revealed to him that she has skimmed around $140,000 out of a legal account he maintains for cases. That is not chump change! Rather than become furious, fire her, have her sent to jail, and try to get that money back he... marries her? Honestly, I don't know how all of the terrible women out there get away with this type of crap AND get married to the guy AND then continue to destroy their life. In fairness, this was wife #5 for Larry, so clearly Larry has his issues. Eventually, the legal practice is getting ground into the dirt (again, the stealing money could be part of this problem, duh) and suddenly Larry and Elisa are in the horse showing business. It is an expensive business (ask my horses who are expensive and are retired from doing anything other than being cute) and again, suddenly there are all kinds of hints that Elisa is stealing from Larry. He does nothing.
Then, Larry goes missing on September 11, 2011. I know, a lot was going on that day, so maybe Larry really did just take off to go "join a cult." Alright, when you plan to murder someone and your excuse is they just left... maybe make it more plausible. He left to retire to the Bahamas. He left because he was enraged about the terrorist attacks and said he was going to help in New York. He decided to take up sailing around the world. Very, very low on that list of "possibly believable" things is... "he said he was going to join a cult." That's just... oddly specific in a way that seems false. Anyhoo... no one is surprised when Larry's body is later found semi-buried (great job ladies, not) in a vineyard. It isn't hard to get both Sara (Elisa's 'best friend') and Elisa talking.
Phew. This one is a roller coaster that could have been told in far fewer pages and still been entertaining.
I do think that Smith is a good writer, in the sense that the parts she nails, she nails well. However, about halfway through the book you start to see a lot of repetition entering the chapters. You end up seeing a lot of speculation. It just loses steam and its really, really hard to get into the story.
After reading this, I did a quick internet search for more information (since this case was not familiar to me) and found that there is more coverage of this story on shows like Dateline and such, and they do a swifter job of summarizing everything.
Would definitely give this author another chance. Just found that this book had some unnecessary filler that bogged up the pleasurable true-crime reading adventure I was on.