Cohen's book, "Murder in the Dollhouse: The Jennifer Dulos Story," will be released May 20, four days before the sixth anniversary of her disappearance. Although the book is being billed as a "true crime" novel, the author said it's more of an analysis of the factors that led Jennifer Farber, an intelligent but reserved writer and New York socialite, to marry Fotis Dulos, a handsome and brash businessman she first met when the two attended Brown University years earlier.
New information Cohen highlights in the book include a paragraph on how a New Canaan town employee believed that a Chevrolet Suburban, the type of vehicle driven by Fotis and Jennifer Dulos, was seen driving near the town's mulch pile "to dump something" on the day she went missing. Other intimate details revealed that Fotis Dulos once threw a chair at Jennifer's father during a disagreement.
Cohen also mentions that speculation has risen about a man from Greece who may have flown here to help Fotis Dulos kill his estranged wife and hide her body before quickly leaving the United States…
He also reviewed court documents from the divorce and the arrest and search warrants in her disappearance and conducted interviews from her past, including friends, acquaintances, other parents and professionals such as Dr. Stephen Herman, who conducted a psychological examination of the Dulos family for the divorce proceedings.
Herman did not specifically address the psychological examination, which remains sealed by the family court. But in general, Herman said, it's never a good sign for a marriage if the parents don't agree on names for the children or which religion the children will be raised.