This is not "The True Story of The Girl in the Box by the DA who prosecuted her captor" as it purports to be. Rather, it is more accurately "The True Story of the DA who prosecuted the captor of "the Girl in the Box." Colleen's story at times feels more like a sideline to Christine McGuire's story.
There is too much focus on the attorney and her personal life and it is not at all pertinent to Colleen's ordeal, or to the book as a whole. I didn't need to know details about her family background, or her three marriages, or her frozen yogurt eating habits, or her vacation with his husband. I do not need to read how hard the case was on her personal life, or many of the mentions or anecdotes about her daughter. I think I read three or four different times about her pulling pictures of her daughter out and showing them to other people while working on the case.
The fact that she seemed to come close to throwing a temper tantrum to get her husband to give her the case was not only unnecessary information, it really showed how self absorbed McGuire seems to be, and how intent she was was on telling her side of the story. It's one of those odd stories where it seems she is trying to come off as being the wounded party (because she was known to try sex offenders, and they just gave the case to a man because it was such a big case!), when she actually comes across more as a sulky child benefiting from nepotism. It's these kind of details that really distract from the overall story, and make it feel less about Colleen and more about Christine.
I was disgusted upon reading a review here to find out that Colleen was in no way compensated for this book. I understand that the writer has technically done all the work in compiling information and writing the book, but without Colleen's story and the pain and torture she went through, there would be no book. In most true crime books the victim tends to have been murdered, so there usually is not an issue when it comes to direct compensation, but the fact that nothing was offered to Colleen, by a person who had a front row seat to how she was affected by everything that occurred, is awful.
Although I haven't read it, there is apparently a book written by Colleen called 'The Simple Gifts of Life' that was released a few years ago that tells the story from her point of view. From what I've read about it, I would suggest reading that before you pick up 'Perfect Victim'.