Secrets of a Marine's wife A true story of marriage, obsession, and murder

Shanna Hogan

Book - 2019

"In Secrets of a Marine's Wife, award-winning journalist and New York Times bestselling author Shanna Hogan tells the true story of a young Marine wife whose illicit affair ended in tragedy. In June 2014, 19-year-old Erin Corwin was living a quiet life in Twentynine Palms, California, expecting her first child with her husband, U.S. Marine Corporal Jon Corwin--until the day she drove off into the desert and never returned. As temperatures climbed into the hundreds, friends and family teamed up with local law enforcement in a grueling search of Joshua Tree National Park. Nearly two months after her disappearance, Corwin's body was found at the bottom of an abandoned mine shaft, a homemade garrote wrapped around her throat. Sus...picions mounted within the tight-knit Marine community as residents questioned if the killer was one of their own. Fellow Marine Christopher Lee and his wife lived next door to the Corwins, and the two young couples had leaned on each other for support. But detectives soon discovered that Chris and Erin's relationship had developed into a whirlwind romance that consumed them both and called the paternity of Corwin's baby into question. Lee told investigators he'd gone out hunting the day of Corwin's disappearance, but his claims of innocence soon began to crumble. And while Corwin was researching baby names, Lee was reportedly searching the internet for ways to dispose of a human body. Through interviews, court records, and extensive research, bestselling true-crime author Shanna Hogan constructs a chilling story of betrayal, deception, and tragedy."--

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Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Bestseller Hogan (The Stranger She Loved: A Mormon Doctor, His Beautiful Wife, and an Almost Perfect Murder) delivers another pageturner, though her methods, which include reconstructed conversations and vague sourcing, will give some readers pause. In 2014, 19yearold Erin Corwin, the pregnant wife of Marine corporal Jon Corwin, disappeared from her home in the military town of Twentynine Palms, Calif. During the eightweek search for her, the police learned that she was having an affair with a married neighbor, Marine corporal Chris Lee. Circumstantial evidence against Chris began to accumulate, including his initial lies about the nature of his relationship with Erin and his admission that he had researched how to dispose of a body. After Erin's badly decomposed remains were found in a mine shaft in the Mojave Desert, Chris was charged with firstdegree murder and convicted following a trial in which he claimed that he killed Erin in a blind rage after she confessed to sexually abusing his sixyearold daughter. Hogan's penchant for foreboding chapter endings ("No one could know how truly disturbed Chris had become") and heavyhanded prose will put off some. Hogan supplies no footnotes or endnotes for quotes, and admits in an author note: "Conversations portrayed in the book have been reconstructed." Still, this sad, essentially tragic story will move many. Agent: Sharlene Martin, Martin Literary Management. (Feb.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

A true-crime tale with all the classic ingredients: adultery, murder, and lies.The title may be off-putting to Marines, who dislike being called soldiers, but Marines are at the center of this story, set on and near the military reservation at Twentynine Palms, California. There in 2014, a young Marine wife, 19 and pregnant, disappeared. Phoenix-based crime writer Hogan (The Stranger She Loved: A Mormon Doctor, His Beautiful Wife, and an Almost Perfect Murder, 2015, etc.) begins at the endat one end, anyway, with the discovery of Erin Corwin's body at the bottom of a mine shaft tucked away in the Joshua tree-studded mountains near the base. That end was not pretty, and the author lays it on thick: "Gawking at the body, it was almost impossible for Wheaton to imagine the ghastly cadaver was once a beautiful, living person." The cadaver was ghastly because it was there long enough to decompose, the search having taken many weeks. Then, the clues began to mount, and the trails finally led to a next-door neighbor who just happened to have had an affair with the young woman intimate enough that the paternity was in doubt. Still, while Erin's forgiving husband was searching the internet for inspiration on baby names, the neighbor was conducting his own searches for ways to make corpses disappearas, clearly, he didn't succeed in doing. He finally confessed and is now imprisoned. For all its devastating effects, the case was ordinary enough that Hogan's by-the-numbers narrative barely stands up to book length. It lacks the context and depth of Deanne Stillman's much superior books Twentynine Palms and Desert Reckoning, and the writing is consistently lackluster: "Both Chris and Erin were infatuated with the excitement of the new relationship"; "Still, somehow the verdict seemed hollow. It didn't change anything. Erin was still dead."A tragic, deeply unpleasant story in need of more nuanced treatment to distinguish it from all the other nastiness afloat in the world. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.