Special thanks to NetGalley and the publisher for a free, electronic ARC of this novel received in exchange for an honest review.
Expected publication date: March 7, 2023
Chris Thomas is a writer, publicist and communications specialist, who served as one of the PR representatives for the Smart family during the Elizabeth Smart abduction. Thomas is also an active member of the Church of Latter Day Saints, commonly known as Mormons, and he describes the Mormon religion in detail, and how it attributed to the behaviours and the attitudes the Smart family held before, and after, the kidnapping.
This novel is not specifically separated as such but it has three parts to it; one, Thomas during his time as the PR rep with the Smart family during Elizabeth’s abduction; two, Thomas’ upbringing and family life and three, a breakdown and examination of the Mormon religion, including its prejudices, stereotypes and misunderstandings by society at large. Thomas does his best to tie all three of these together into a well-packaged story, and he manages this, for the most part.
“Unexpected: The Backstory of Finding Elizabeth Smart and Growing Up in the Culture of an American Religion” has a foreword by Smart, so you can assume Thomas received her full approval to go ahead with his pseudo-memoir. That being said, Elizabeth herself is rarely in Thomas’ book, as he came into play after she was abducted. Thomas does provide details on what went on behind-the-scenes, including the family tensions with each other and with the police and other cutthroat journalists that took place as a result. (Thomas does all of this respectfully of course).
(For those who are looking for Elizabeth’s experience, I recommend Smart’s own book, “My Story”)
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I did not know much about Latter Day Saints before reading this novel, and Thomas provided an interesting perspective, being a life-long member. He highlights the religion in a positive note, obliterating the “polygamous” and “cult-like” monikers the religion has received over the years. Like most religions, it has its negative parts as well, but Thomas’ focus is exclusively on the religions’ sense of community and commitment.
“Unexpected” is part true crime, part memoir. The behind-the-scenes look at the experiences of the Smart family was emotional and raw, but it was also the most interesting part for me. I don’t know Thomas well enough to have a stake in his background or life history, and I am too cynical to look at any religion in an overly positive way. “Unexpected” should not be read by anyone looking for Elizabeth’s story, but does provide an honest look at the life of a public relations agent faced with the immediate pressure of being thrust into the spotlight with a young girls’ life at stake.