This book has been on my radar for a while, but I wasn't sure when I'd get to it. I decided to push it up my tbr when I saw Susan Ray Schmidt in a documentary on ID several months ago. I think (but don't quote me on that) it was a documentary about the blood attonement murders and she was featured in it. And I was like wait, where have I heard her name before? And then it clicked.
I picked up the audiobook which is 22 hours long. The reason why I mention the length is that I tend to listen to audios at around 2.5x speed so I can comfortably finish an 8 hour audio in a day. This one however I felt the urge to savour a bit, while also wanting to know what happened next.
So what happened is that I listened to the first half from 1.5x speed to 1.8x and then increased to 2x for the second half. And then I didn't increase the speed anymore, I just enjoyed the experience.
Today I listened to around 7 hours of it, mostly in one go which just shows how engrossed I was in the story.
The narator (also named Susan) brought the story to life. I don't think I've ever heard a nonfiction narrator put in so much soul and effort into a performance? First time for everything.
The whole book, I feel, is written almost like fiction, as in it's so interesting that you can hardly stop reading. This works in its favour, and I'm convinced that's partially why the narrator did such a good job with it.
I also really like the writing style, because through it I was able to be in the moment with Susan and experience everything she was feeling, from love to anger to sadness.
The way Susan writes about Verlan is almost sweet at the start, until you remember that she's 14, and he's a grown man. And to think I thought he'd be better than Ervil...
Well, I guess Verlan was better in some ways, but he still married and courted underage girls so, the bar is so low it's in hell.
The point is, I was able to see what Susan saw in him and why she fell in love with him through the story, which not many people can accomplish.
Then they got married and things of course changed. I can only partially imagine how hard that must've been for Susan, thanks to this book.
But yeah, Favorite Wife was amazing, I always love learning new things about polygamous sects and this book delivered.
I would kind of recommend watching a documentary first though, before diving into this book because there are A LOT of important people, and A LOTTT of names to remember, so that might make it easier.
At the end we also got updates about how her family that's still in the cult is doing, and some other books on the subject to read which were already on my tbr, but you guessed it, they're getting bumped up.
I only wish that we got more about her life after her escape, but maybe that can go in another memoir?
That's it for now, and I honestly can't wait to reread this.