Perhaps you bought it and read it to enable such a review? Perhaps there are those who purchased it and read it who formed an entirely different perspective.
I think the value of the book may lie in the presentation of an unbiased assessment of what is known of Madeleine McCann's case for those who have little knowledge of it.
No need to buy the book. A combination of the PJ files and some hack journalism will have the same outcome. That a reader who has little knowledge of the case may come to a different perspective than myself is hardly surprising considering the selective nature of the author's musings.
Of course Summers has form for this kind of junk journalism. Tom Mangold, a fellow journalist says as much in his article for the Independent about Summers published 'conspiracy theory' articles regarding the death of Stephen Ward.
http://www.independent.co.uk/voices/comment/stephen-ward-wasnt-murdered-i-was-there-8990737.html'Summers has lent his reputation to a conspiracy theory – please don't giggle – which has an MI5 contract killer hiding in the Chelsea flat all night, then waking the drowsy Ward every few hours and inciting him to take ever increasing overdoses of the sleeping tablets which eventually killed him. The alleged killer is now conveniently dead but allegedly told a gabby friend on his deathbed…
Summers's interviews on this well publicised theory, published by two reputable national newspapers last week, brim with weasel words. "The story ends with a question mark," says Summers darkly. No it doesn't.
It is junk journalism at its very worst, complete piffle, a disgrace to our trade. Believe it if you believe Lord Lucan and Elvis are living under pseudonyms in a mud hut in Uganda. We are in so many ways the first and often the last draft of history; newspaper records and their on-line spill-over really do matter. Lies and rotten journalism go viral in seconds. We really do have a clear compact with our readers, listeners and viewers to get it right.
Mangold also collaborated on a book with Summers which made the case for the escape of Her Imperial Highness the Tsarina Alexandra and her four daughters from the blood soaked cellar of 'the house of special purpose' in Ekaterinberg and their continued survival thereafter. Of course we now know that all the family did indeed perish that July night and their bodies lay just a few miles away from the site of their deaths.