Don't read it for the scintillating prose--there isn't any. This book is written by journalists and the text is repetitive, choppy, and devoid of any novel niceties. What we're left with is a very matter-of-fact account chronicling Elizabeth's kidnapping, the investigation to find her kidnapper, and her kidnappers' capture. In an added bonus, the reporters delve into the earlier lives of Brian David Mitchell and Wanda Barzee, which goes a long way toward showing how these two spiraled into madness. What is fascinating is how they both fell apart in front of everyone's eyes and yet no one ever suspected them of being more than harmless crazies.
The book is pieced together accounts of eyewitness interviews, periperhal family interviews with the Smart family, interviews with members of the Mitchell and Barzee families, law enforcement interviews, court documents, and media accounts, which probably explains the choppy nature. But it's fun to go back over the investigation and see where Salt Lake police probably erred, how America's Most Wanted Host John Walsh saved the day, and speculate why Elizabeth Smart fought so hard against revealing who she was when the police finally found her.