I've wanted to read Sharyn McCrumb's books for a long time. I was disappointed with this one. So much research became too much to put into a novel versus a non-fiction account of the real story of Frankie Silver's sad story. I get that families were interconnected in those days, but did we really have to be given every link to every member of every family, when 98% of them never had any relevance to Frankie Silver's case? It became so mind-numbing that I skimmed through or skipped over an increasing amount of backstories and sidebars that led nowhere. The cousins 30 times removed. The families with slim blood connections to the main characters. No wonder this book was so long.
The modern-day plot could have been completely cut out without losing anything. Anti-climactic, and all I really got out of it was that the sheriff felt guilty about the outcome of his first murder case as a hot-shot young deputy, and since he was at home recovering from being shot, he chose to review everything he could find from his own case and the one so long ago.
Toward the end of the book, yet another murder case is thrown into the mix, as though two weren't already enough. The sheriff is kept so much in the dark about it, when he finally hears (and so do readers) some actual details about it, there aren't enough pages left to explore any part of it except, oh, well, it's been solved. It wasn't needed, and should have been edited out.
I gave this 3 stars because of the extended research. The actual storylines deserved 2 stars.
Even the quote from one of the murderers of the Clutter family left me wondering why it was included. The husband, wife and children were slaughtered by two career criminals.
Frankie Silver either killed her drunk husband to defend herself and her child, if we are to believe Sharyn McCrumb's interpretation of the story, or she killed him in a fit of rage. We will never know, because she apparently decided not to speak on her own behalf at any time. I can't see how her case ties into the ruminations of Perry Smith, who knew the possible consequences of his actions before he and his co-conspirator broke into the Clutter home.
Thank goodness women speak up for themselves these days. Perhaps a better parallel fictitious story should have centered around a modern-day woman in similar circumstances who did choose to defend herself.