The Stranger She Loved: A Mormon Doctor, His Beautiful Wife, and an Almost Perfect Murder
The Stranger She Loved: A Mormon Doctor, His Beautiful Wife, and an Almost Perfect Murder book cover

The Stranger She Loved: A Mormon Doctor, His Beautiful Wife, and an Almost Perfect Murder

Hardcover – March 31, 2015

Price
$27.32
Format
Hardcover
Pages
336
Publisher
St. Martin's Press
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-1250057501
Dimensions
6.38 x 1.15 x 9.5 inches
Weight
1.23 pounds

Description

“ Picture Perfect is almost perfect. . . . It isn't often that a true crime book reads like a Patricia Highsmith novel, with shades of Ruth Rendell passing across the pages as the story of lives converge toward what the reader knows is a horrifying conclusion. . . . Hogan has established herself as a skilled writer of suspense, whose future books are likely to just keep getting better.” ― Janice Harper, Huffington Post “A riveting read that paints a vivid picture of this unfortunate couple who illustrate so clearly what happens when an obsessive relationship goes horribly awry.” ― Bookreporter.com “With its detailed research, front row narrative, and no-fluff presentation, Shanna Hogan turned a book into an addiction. . . . Picture Perfect is one of the best true crime books of 2013. Don't be the only one who hasn't read it!” ― True Crime Zone SHANNA HOGAN is a journalist and New York Times bestselling author of two previous true-crime books. She has written for numerous publications for nearly a decade and has received more than twenty awards for her feature writing and investigative reporting. Shanna was named Journalist of the Year by the Arizona Press Club in 2010 and again in 2011 by the Arizona Newspaper Association. She has appeared on The View , Dateline , 20/20 , CNN, HLN, Fox News, Oprah Winfrey's Oxygen, and Investigation Discovery. Shanna lives in Phoenix, Arizona, with her husband, Matt LaRussa, and their three dogs. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. The Stranger She Loved A Mormon Doctor, His Beautiful Wife, and an Almost Perfect Murder By Shanna Hogan St. Martin's Press Copyright © 2015 Shanna HoganAll rights reserved.ISBN: 978-1-250-05750-1 CHAPTER 1 APRIL 11, 2007 A stray drop of water fell from the faucet and trickled across her cold, pallid skin. Her body lay crumpled inside the drained bathtub, a long-sleeved black shirt clinging to her wet torso. She was tilted on her side, her nude lower half curled against the tub's slick porcelain wall. The woman's ashen face—beautiful even in death—was marred by sutured incisions across her eyelids and around her scalp. Blood from the ruptured stitches wept into damp blond hair. Hovering over the bathtub, a slim man with a tanned face and gray hair was wailing. "I need help! Help!" From the doorway of the master bathroom, Kristi Daniels gaped wide-eyed at her next-door neighbors—Martin and Michele MacNeill. "I'll call nine-one-one," Kristi said, spinning away. "I've already called nine-one-one!" Martin howled. "I need help getting her out of the tub." But Kristi had already fled the bathroom, dashing down the hallway and out of the house. On the front porch she brushed past a little girl dressed in a khaki skirt, white-collared blouse, and blue blazer—a school uniform. She was the youngest of the MacNeills' adopted daughters, Ada. Just moments earlier the doe-eyed six-year-old had knocked on Kristi's front door. "My dad needs some help." Kristi had followed Ada back toward the MacNeills' open front door. By the time she was halfway across the driveway, she had heard Martin's screams and had taken off running, leaving Ada outside. Following the cries down the hallway and into the bathroom off the master bedroom, Kristi had discovered Martin and his dead wife. Her first thought was that she and Martin would not be able to lift Michele out of the tub by themselves. So Kristi—a petite blond flight attendant—had run to find help. Crossing the shared driveway separating their properties, Kristi rushed back into her house and found her neighbor Angie Aguilar crouching in the foyer, tying her own daughter's shoes. A half hour earlier—around 11:20 A.M.—Angie and her daughter had stopped by the Danielses' house to drop off Kristi's son, as part of the neighborhood carpool. Following a brief visit, Angie was preparing to leave when Kristi burst back through the front door, her face contorted with panic. "What's wrong?" Angie asked. "I need you to come with me!" Kristi gasped. From a table in the front room, Kristi grabbed her cell phone and pressed a button to speed-dial her husband, Doug Daniels, who was just a few houses away, assisting another neighbor with a basement renovation. "Martin needs help. Martin needs help," she said breathlessly. "Hurry, come fast ..." "Where are you?" Doug interrupted. "The MacNeills'!" Doug emerged from his neighbor's house, catching a glimpse of his wife and Angie slipping through the MacNeills' front door. He chased after them, sprinting through the gated subdivision of Creekside in Pleasant Grove, Utah. The usually peaceful community about thirty-five miles south of Salt Lake City is nestled in the foothills of the snowcapped mountains of the Wasatch Range. The MacNeills' one-story home with its brick facade sat on a grassy lot dotted with hedges. The MacNeills, with their eight children, had one of the largest families in the neighborhood. Martin was a fifty-one-year-old practicing physician, law school graduate, and a former Mormon bishop. Fifty-year-old Michele was a stay-at-home mom who spent her days carting her youngest daughters to school and ballet practice. Although Kristi and Doug had lived next door to the MacNeills for more than a year, the families didn't associate beyond exchanging the occasional pleasantries. Up until this day, Kristi hadn't even been inside their house. Stepping into the master bathroom, Kristi and Angie found Martin kneeling beside the tub, cradling his wife's head in his hands. The sleeves of his lab coat were drenched. He had just reached into the basin to drain the murky brown bathwater in which Michele had been immersed. The raised Jacuzzi tub in the center of the bathroom was inset in an elevated travertine tile deck. Sunlight streamed through a window next to the shower, illuminating a vase of lavender flowers on the tub's ledge. Michele was clothed only in a long-sleeved black shirt worn over a white Mormon undergarment and bra, with no pants or underwear. Thick, cloudy mucus glazed her face, oozing from her nose and mouth onto her cheeks and onto the gaping gashes across her hairline. "Angie and I are here," Kristi told Martin. Martin craned his neck and shook his head. "I need a man's help to get her out of the tub." "I called Doug," Kristi said. Seconds later Doug burst into the bathroom. At a glance he knew the situation was dire. Instinctively he passed to the far end of the tub, near Michele's feet. "Let's get her out!" Martin shouted. Doug scooped up Michele's legs under the knees, Martin grabbed his wife under her arms, and together they lifted. As Martin lifted her torso, Michele's shirts and bra were pulled up to her neck, exposing her breasts. The two men gently placed her on the floor beside the tub. Michele's arms splayed at her sides. Beneath her, a puddle of water began to spread across the taupe tile floor. Martin's eyes darted around the bathroom, horror etched across his face. "Oh my God! Oh my God!" he choked. Shaken, Angie ran her fingers through her long dark hair, then clapped both her hands over her mouth and backed away from the body, into the bathroom closet. "I know CPR," Kristi said to Martin. "I'll do the compressions if you do mouth-to-mouth." Martin nodded in agreement. Doug grabbed a rag and passed it to Martin to wipe the mucus from Michele's face. Because Michele was naked from the waist down, Angie found a pink towel and draped it lengthwise to cover the exposed lower region. Kneeling and placing one palm on top of the other, Kristi pumped on Michele's bare, damp chest in succinct compressions, silently counting to herself, attempting to keep a pace of one hundred beats per minute. When she paused, Martin sank down, pinched his wife's nose, and placed his lips over hers, blowing twice into her mouth. After one round of compressions, Doug tapped on Kristi's shoulder. "I can do that. Go outside and wait for the ambulance so they can find us." Nodding, Kristi stood, stepped over Michele's body, and left the bathroom. Outside she found Ada MacNeill and escorted the girl into the Danielses' house, to be supervised by another friend who had also been visiting. "You can go stay at my house for a while," Kristi told Ada. In the bathroom, Doug bent his burly frame over Michele and—on Martin's command—resumed pumping on her torso. Mindful that his neighbor was a physician and experienced with life-saving procedures, Doug deferred to him for instructions. "Stop," Martin told Doug after several beats. Once again he put his lips over Michele's, passing two breaths. Kneeling lower, Martin tilted his head and placed his ear on her chest. There was no heartbeat. Michele wasn't breathing. "Oh my God. Oh my God. Oh my God," Martin mumbled to himself. He sat up and touched his face. "She shouldn't have done this." Sighing heavily, he directed Doug to continue. As they performed CPR, Martin alternated between moments of fear and fury, calmly puffing air into his wife's mouth, then exploding, "Why, why? All for a stupid surgery!" "His demeanor would change, which we thought was a little bit different," Doug Daniels later recalled. "He was very analytical sometimes, telling us what to do, and then would tell us to stop, and then he would have a bit of an outburst over the situation." When Martin once again breathed into his wife's mouth, Doug noticed that Michele's chest did not rise or fall. CPR was not being performed properly. Strangely, the doctor didn't seem to notice. Another round of compressions: Doug pumped on Michele's chest. Martin gave rescue breaths and then paused to check her heartbeat, but again found none. "Why? Why? Why would you do this?" Martin threw his arms into the air. Martin suddenly slammed his fist on Michele's chest. "All because of a stupid surgery?" Perplexed, Doug looked closer at Michele's face. Her cheeks were swollen, her jawline bruised. The bloody stitches were obviously the result of a recent face-lift. How did she end up unconscious in the bathtub? Doug wondered. Examining Michele, Doug noticed something else strange. Greenish mucus still coated Michele's face. But none of it had transferred to Martin as he performed mouth-to-mouth. Minutes passed. The two men continued their efforts to revive Michele. More chest compressions and rescue breaths. Michele remained motionless, her pale skin growing increasingly cold. Once again, Martin put his ear to his wife's chest, checking for a heartbeat. Recoiling, he slammed his palm on her sternum with a sharp clap. "Why?" Martin roared. "Why did you have to have the surgery? I told you not to do it!" Peering up, Martin and Doug saw two uniformed Utah police officers standing in the doorway of the bathroom. * * * Pleasant Grove police officer Ray Ormond was midway through an uneventful Wednesday patrol shift when the call came in at 11:48 A.M. that a woman had been found unresponsive in her bathroom and had possibly drowned in the tub. Tall and brawny, with a shaved head and goatee, Ormond was dispatched to the scene. Flicking on his car's lights and sirens, he sped toward the home. Turning down Millcreek Road, Ormond pulled next to the curb outside a house addressed 3058 and parked behind another cruiser, its red and blue revolving lights still flashing. Ormond's partner, Joshua Motsinger, had arrived just seconds ahead of him in a separate car. From the trunk of his cruiser, Ormond grabbed a handheld masked ventilator—known as an Ambu bag—and followed Motsinger up the natural-rock steps and across the grassy front yard. Kristi Daniels met them on the driveway, guiding the officers into the residence and toward the bathroom. "It's back here." As the two officers entered the bathroom, Ormond's view was briefly obscured by his partner's broad build. Once Motsinger stepped aside, Ormond saw the woman on the wet tile floor. Ormond's gaze fell to Martin MacNeill, who had just whacked his wife's chest. Exchanging a glance, Ormond and Motsinger darted to the woman's side. "I'm her husband. I found her in the bathtub," Martin blurted to the officers. "She just had surgery. She had a face-lift. She was on a lot of medication." "Okay," Motsinger said, taking over compressions for Doug. "We got this from here." At the officers' request, Doug and Angie exited the room and left the house. Martin stayed, looming over his wife's body. "Why, God? Why?" he cried. As Ormond placed the Ambu bag over Michele's mouth, he noticed her lips were blue. He began hand-pumping the ventilator and heard a gurgling noise emanating from her chest—an indication of water churning in her lungs or stomach. Because the bathroom was narrow, the officers decided to move Michele's body. Together they carried her into the master bedroom and laid her on the carpet. The bedroom was tidy and elegantly decorated with large wooden dressers and an armoire holding a flat-screen TV. A couch was centered in front of the bay window. A dozen decorative pillows were neatly arranged atop the king-size bed, which sat next to a narrow hospital-style bed bordered with railings. To create space in the room, Ormond pushed aside a rollaway nightstand, making note of a pink container filled with eight to ten orange pill bottles. The name on the prescriptions: Michele MacNeill. In the bedroom, the officers switched positions around Michele. Ormond took over compressions and Motsinger delivered rescue breaths. After several rounds of CPR, Michele's skin regained a pinkish hue. Blood gushed from the incisions on her face—a result of the CPR manually stimulating her circulatory system. Meanwhile, Martin paced nervously from the bedroom to the bathroom, shaking his head. "Why? Why?" he shouted, jerking his arms. "I told her not to do it!" Minutes passed. The guttural gurgling noises emitting from Michele grew louder. Motsinger removed the mask from her face and tipped Michele on her side. Her head fell next to Motsinger's lap, her cheek near his left leg. Michele suddenly spewed several cups of clear liquid, dousing Motsinger's arms and pants. The water dribbled down from his arms into his latex gloves and from his pant legs into his boots. The officers resumed CPR. Moments later, Michele regurgitated more fluid. Leaning over her body, Motsinger removed the mask and Ormond turned her head toward his right knee. This time the vomit spilled onto Ormond. The expulsion was frothy, thick, and tinged with blood. Mixing with the blood on Michele's face, the fluid dripped onto the carpet. Nearby, Martin continued pacing, his voice growing louder. He turned to Michele. "Why did you do it? Why'd you have the surgery?" He stormed out of the room, down the hallway, and out of the house. Around noon—fourteen minutes after the first 911 call was placed—the ambulance arrived. From the porch, Martin waved his arms to alert medics to his location. Around the same time, the fire captain pulled up to the house, parking his emergency vehicle along the curb. As the captain grabbed his equipment from the back of his car, Martin yelled from the porch, "What's taking so long? Get inside!" Firefighters and paramedics soon swarmed the property, police cruisers and fire trucks lining the block. Inside the bedroom the paramedics, police, and firefighters crowded around the prone woman. Assessing her condition, the medics determined that she was in full cardiac arrest. An intubation tube was inserted down her throat. One paramedic cut off her shirt, bra, and undergarment top, while another applied padded sensors to her chest to check for signs of life. No activity registered—Michele was flat-lined. Stomping back into the bedroom, Martin looked up at the ceiling and cursed God. "After all I've done for you? After all the time I've spent in church? Why have you done this to me?" he ranted. "I've been a bishop. I paid tithing and this is the way you repay me? This is what I get for it?" Desperation transformed to wrath as Martin circled around his wife's body. "Why did you take all those medications?" He glared down, hissing, "Look what it did to you!" Martin's increasingly aggressive outbursts drew the attention of the medics. Struck by the man's animosity, Ormond tensed, wondering if he might have to restrain Martin or defend himself. Others—distracted from the woman—asked for Martin to be removed from the bedroom. It was beyond the typical reaction of an anguished spouse and unlike anything most of them had encountered during a rescue. "He was very angry," Ormond remembered years later. "It was uncomfortable, honestly, to have him come back and forth into the room yelling at us." Pleasant Grove fire chief Marc Sanderson pulled Martin aside. "Can you come with me so we can gather more information?" The slim firefighting veteran escorted Martin out to the front porch. As they spoke, Martin offered various explanations for what might have happened to his wife, saying he believed she may have slipped, tripped, or fallen in the tub and hit her head. Martin claimed he had only been gone about ten to fifteen minutes, and when he returned, Michele was bent over the tub's ledge, submerged facedown in a pool of bloody water. It was not the position the neighbors had found Michele in. "Did she take any medication?" Sanderson asked Martin. "She was ... she was taking a lot of medications!" he stammered, adding that Michele may have overdosed on pain pills. Meanwhile, in the bedroom, resuscitation efforts continued. Paramedics inserted an IV in her arm and administered emergency drugs—epinephrine, atropine, and sodium bicarbonate—in an attempt to restart her heart. (Continues...) Excerpted from The Stranger She Loved by Shanna Hogan . Copyright © 2015 Shanna Hogan. Excerpted by permission of St. Martin's Press. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • In 2007, Dr. Martin MacNeill―a doctor, lawyer, and Mormon bishop―discovered his wife of 30 years dead in the bathtub of their Pleasant Grove, Utah home, her face bearing the scars of a facelift he persuaded her to undergo just a week prior.
  • At first the death of 50-year-old Michele MacNeill, a former beauty queen and mother of eight, appeared natural. But days after the funeral when Dr. MacNeill moved his much younger mistress into the family home, his children grew suspicious. Conducting their own investigation into their mother's death, the MacNeill's daughters uncovered their father's multiple marital affairs, past criminal record, and falsified college transcripts he used to con his way into medical school.
  • It would take six long years to solve the mystery of Michele's murder and secure a first-degree murder conviction against the once prominent doctor.
  • New York Times
  • bestselling author Shanna Hogan delves into the high-profile case, unmasking the monster beneath the doctor's carefully concocted façade.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(267)
★★★★
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★★★
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★★
7%
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23%
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Most Helpful Reviews

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Gripping and Absorbing

This is a gripping and fascinating true story. Well written and researched. Hogan provides a richly detailed account of the shocking death of Michele MacNeill and the subsequent investigation of her doctor husband, when her family begins to suspect him of murder. This book succeeds because the background information is so comprehensive and interesting. Martin MacNeill has the illusion of success and prosperity, but beneath his carefully constructed facade, there is a dark mind with an apparently limitless capacity for evil. Psychopathy is so difficult to fathom, the idea that someone can exist without a conscience and still masquerade with any degree of normalcy is utterly chilling. I am intrigued by the number of people who were able to sense MacNeill's darkness early on and by those who never saw it. What makes some people aware of evil, while others remain oblivious? Psychopathy is so incomprehensible, and yet people throughout MacNeill's life were given glimpses of his true nature. Still, it is the totality of his deeds that remains so horrifying.
For those who are riveted by the true crime genre, this one does not disappoint.
It is a fast, intelligent read that's difficult to put down.
21 people found this helpful
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This book was certainly intelligently written, telling the tragic story of the MacNeil ...

This book was certainly intelligently written, telling the tragic story of the MacNeil family in a way that wasn't overly-dramatic or cheesy. It had solid research, decent background information, and moved along at a fair pace. It was interesting reading, although not riveting, but the story was competently told. I don't think we got a truly universal look at the victim, Michele MacNeil, but more of what her family and friends thought of her - which seemed shallow at times (for example, when discussing the adopted Ukrainian child Noelle - that was promptly given back - and Giselle, who was abused by Martin and seemingly hushed up by Michele when the child reported the sexual assault to her). That part was a bit confusing to me, as it portrayed Michele in a very poor light and in turn, it was never really clarified (as to her potential internal motivations or conflicts in treating her adopted daughters so badly).
The reason I gave this book three stars was that, although effectively told, it wasn't riveting. It wasn't on any level as good as "Fatal Vision", which I feel is a true crime book that truly deserves a very high price. If this book had been $7.99, I would've given it four stars. But at $16, the value just wasn't there. It was a fairly short book, straight-forward, not overly-dramatized. It was just...a decently-told true crime book. And that's it. Interesting story and since there isn't anything else out there to choose from (no other books about this particular crime), perhaps it's worth paying a bit more for it. Just not quite THIS much.
16 people found this helpful
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He was not a stranger to her

While reading this book, I looked up other information on the case and Gypsy Willis. As I read (or watched on Dr. Phil), I thought, that sounds exactly like what is written in this book. This book is mostly comprised of what the author took, sometimes word for word, from other sources, which she admits in her Author's Note: "The quotes used to compile the narrative were taken from trial testimony, court documents, personal interviews, television programs, and newspaper articles." She does not quote the sources, however. But if you Google anything, there it is, already in existence, before this book was written. In the Acknowledgments, the author writes: "Although not all of the subjects involved in this case granted my interview requests, I would like to thank each one who took the time to personally share their stories with me." I wonder who they were, Maybe Michele's sister? It does not appear that any of the daughters spoke with her.

Anyway, you could find pretty much everything in this book (except maybe the author's opinion of what happened) on the internet.

Michele MacNeill was not a sympathetic character at all. She knew Martin very well. He was NOT a stranger to her. He went to prison right after they married for forgery,theft and fraud! No way she missed that. Her family told her he was bad news! She knew he couldn't have his medical license because he wasn't in the Mexican medical school long enough to get it. Her adopted daughter Giselle was treated like Cinderella because she didn't want to convert to Mormonism. Giselle told her MOTHER, Michele, that Martin had molested her, but Michele wasn't bothered by it. She "told her not to speak of it again. "You can't actually have this conversation with him right now," Michele told Giselle. "He's under a lot of stress."'

Great mom. Don't worry about the molested child, be concerned about the husband who supports you and your beautiful house.

They got rid of one adopted child because they "couldn't deal with her." After Michele was murdered, Martin told his daughter Alexis, to take Giselle to the Ukraine and dump her off, but keep her passport. Alexis followed his orders. Martin wanted to use Giselle's identity for his mistress, Gypsy. If you watch the Dr. Phil show with Gypsy, you will see how totally phony she is. Dr. Phil even acts sympathetic toward her. The producers must have told him not to rip into her. She says the right words, but I could see her conniving little mind working, "How is this statement going to come across? Will it make me look trusting and innocent?" Nobody is fooled, Gypsy. Especially not your own family. "Gypsy owned an Italian greyhound, and that summer she had temporarily placed it in her parents' care while she searched for a rescue organization. She drove to Wyoming to take custody of the dog, but when she arrived, her mother refused to return the animal. They argued, and the squabble turned violent. Gypsy pounced on Vicki, biting her."

Gypsy wants to take the dog away from her mother, because she has found a rescue organization that will take the dog? Is that the reason? If her mother wants the dog, why not let her keep the dog? Couldn't this have been handled with a phone call? Her parents were responsible enough to keep the dog temporarily, but not responsible enough to keep it permanently? What was that incident about, except Gypsy not getting her way?

Alexis wants custody of her three youngest sisters (one is really her niece, daughter of her outcast sister, Vanessa). But she doesn't care anything about Giselle. She is never mentioned. Maybe that's why Alexis didn't want to speak to the author, because the author does point this out: that Giselle was left in the Ukraine, abandoned by her adoptive family, with no passport because Alexis took it from her, and living in poverty.

Martin sexually assaults Alexis twice, both times claiming he thought she was Michele, and justifying himself by saying he has desires that need to be met. Since Alexis and Gypsy resemble each other, I wonder if he really thought she was Gypsy? If his mind was that messed up and it seems that it was. Clearly it didn't bother him, but I'm sure it was devastating for Alexis. But she still should have made sure Giselle was taken care of!

Michele was well aware that Martin had cheated on her and was still cheating on her. He looked at pornography and as angry as she got, he wouldn't stop. Why didn't she leave? Because then she would have to admit her perfect family was a big fake. The drug addicted unwed mother (Vanessa) was banned and that was okay with Michele. Michele preferred to "go along" with whatever her fake doctor husband wanted. Because if she didn't, her life might change and she would have to do some mental and emotional work on herself. Not to mention actually getting a paying job.

Michele told Alexis, "If anything happens to me, make sure it wasn't your father." If you suspect your husband MIGHT kill you, why would you stay with that person? Why would you even want to be with him when he doesn't want you? When Michele wanted to delay the face lift Martin wanted her to have, he said, "If you don't get the surgery now, you're not getting it." Well, okay! She didn't want to have it anyway. But nope, she has the surgery.

According to daughter Alexis, she 'believed that if Michele had understood the lengths of her father's deception, she would not have stayed in the marriage. "If she would have known who my father was, she would have been gone in a minute," Alexis commented. "She would have wanted to protect her children and she would not have stayed if she would have known what was going on."'

Really? In a minute? But she DID know and she HAD known. And she allowed Giselle to be molested. And she stayed. And Alexis allowed Giselle to be abandoned in Ukraine, for good, until Michele's niece went and got her!

I think it was just too much trouble for Michele to change her lifestyle and her mindset. Because if Martin was immoral, so was she for staying with him, and tolerating it. If she left, she'd have to face that fact. She would rather live (and die) in denial. Martin was tired of Michele and simply decided to rid himself of her. He was such an egomaniac he thought he would get away with it. There isn't much about "mistakes" he might have made in his medical practices or in-depth reasons he was fired from places. That would be interesting, but I'm sure those places don't want to get sued, so they are keeping it to themselves.

I would think this book was better than two stars, except I know that it was mostly swiped from other sources, who did the actual work of interviewing and writing the original articles. Since the book is based on others' work, it is not really satisfactory true crime.
14 people found this helpful
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Well Done

This is an excellent true crime book about a truly evil man. It's hard to believe someone as strange as the killer described in this book could get away with what he did his whole life. The writing is excellent and the story is compelling. It's hard to believe that two people so different could end up together and of course the good one ends up dead. The way the daughters in this story fought for their dead mother is heartening and tragic at the same time. Recommended.
2 people found this helpful
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Good read!

I was hooked from the first page to the very end , the author was very descriptive and captivating. Good read!!!
2 people found this helpful
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Great True-Crime Tale

This is an amazing true-crime story from start to finish! And best of all it's incredibly well written. Many true-crime books seem thrown together quickly and the writing is either simple like a news article or way too flowery with horrid metaphors. This is written as a suspenseful narrative, like a novel! If the author maintains this quality she will be as big as Ann Rule!
2 people found this helpful
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True Crime Champ!

Very, very good book. Well written and interesting! I loved it!
1 people found this helpful
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Family life isn't always what it appears.

I remember this case on the news.A lot of information wasn't reported in the media. Some of the children had mental problems, drug abuse.Very sad for them all. Michelle was a beautiful woman and mother.
1 people found this helpful
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Another great read by a wonderful author!

A great book by a great author! Shana Hogan is a great writer, and she keeps the reader turning the pages by her intriguing stories. Keep up the great work!
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Great, Informative Read. Highly Recommended

Couldn't put the book down, love it from start to finish.
1 people found this helpful