Saturday, July 25, 2020
The Real People (And Their Books) Behind The People v. O.J. Simpson
The Real People (And Their Books) Behind The People v. O.J. Simpson Iâve been glued to the FX series American Crime Story: The People v. O.J. Simpsonâ"not only because of the [largely] excellent acting and unfolding drama, but because of the question, âWait, did that really happen?â I was in high school when my social studies teacher wheeled a big old tube TV into the classroom and basically had us watch the O.J. trial for an hour a day, week in and week out. But once I started watching the series, I realized how little I rememberedâ"or maybe ever knew to begin withâ"about the crime and trial âof the century.â I canât go an episode without stopping at least three time to Googleâ"whether O.J. really left a suicide note claiming that âat times [he] felt like a battered husbandâ (he did); or if Robert Shapiro really tried on that glove in court (he didnât). Did Marcia Clark spend a weekend with Christopher Darden in Oakland? Yes! Did Robert Kardashian really beg O.J. not to kill himself in Kimâs bedroom? Yes! Did he subsequently take his children out to lunch on Fatherâs Day and give them that rousing âFame is fleetingâ speech? Nope. (But could David Schwimmer smell the Emmy nomination on that one when he read the script? I think we all know the answer to that.) Anyway, the show is candy for someone like me who enjoys reading both thrillers and true crime, but in the end I find myself wanting to know the real stories, unembellished by screenwriters, actors, and directors, and told in the playersâ own words. So I started looking for books written by the real people involved, and there are a LOT of them. Like, hundredsâ"from tabloid-style âI helped O.J. get away with murderâ and exploitative âtrueâ tales of hangers-on in the O.J./Nicole circle, to critically panned books by Johnnie Cochran and Robert Shapiro that donât seem to cast any new or relevant light on what I already know. After my deep dive into O.J.-land, these are the four Iâm interested in reading, and that might paint a clearer picture of all the facts . . . or not. The Run of His Life: The People v. O.J. Simpson by Jeffrey Toobin This is the book on which the series is based. Toobin himself is a credited consultant on the show, though he has acknowledged that the TV show âis not a documentary.â Now Iâm curious to read the book and get just the facts, maam, from Toobinâs relentlessly reported, widely praised ânonfiction masterpiece.â Without a Doubt by Marcia Clark with Teresa Carpenter Part memoir and part exhaustive case study, Marcia Clarkâs #1 New York Times bestselling book about trying (and surviving) âThe Trial of the Centuryâ is the only account by a female attorney in the courtroom. (The other female attorney was Shawn Chapman Holley on the defense team. She has not written a book about the trial, but she did go on to be Lindsay Lohans defense lawyer. These are the things we learn when writing for Book Riot, people.) When the case was being tried, race and celebrity were the flashpoints on which most of the argumentsâ"and public opinionâ"were built. But the FX series has zeroed in quite forcefully on the sexism that was also at play in the courtroom, and Clark is the only one to give voice to that bizarre and undignified angle of the story. In Contempt by Christopher Darden with Jess Walter Another #1 New York Times bestseller, Dardenâs book is a behind-the-scenes look at not only the trial itself, but his personal role as foil to Johnnie Cochran. Though Marcia Clark was the lead prosecutor, all eyes were on the two African-American lawyers, battling it out on two sides of the table over the fate of an African-American defendant. Darden was accused of being an âUncle Tomâ on the O.J. case, but famously and consistently put justice ahead of all other issues, including race. (P.S. according to Wikipedia, the co-writer is that Jess Walter!) If I Did It: Confessions of the Killer by O.J. Simpson, with contributions from Fred Goldman and Kim Goldman Oh, what a tangled web we weave: When first we practice to deceive. . . In what is one of, if not THE most f*cked up publishing story of the century, HarperCollins commissioned O.J. Simpsonâs own account of how he would have committed the murders if he had committed the murders. What the what?!? Harper eventually thought better of it and cancelled the book (and fired notorious publisher Judith Regan over the whole fiasco), but the Goldman family, who viewed the manuscript as a clear, nonfiction confession, fought to have it made available to the public. A judge awarded them all rights to the manuscript, which they published in full (all of O.J.âs words were approved by the Juice himself), along with additional essays and commentary by the Goldmans. But tellingly, the bookâs cover now prints the word âIfâ in minuscule font, inside the âI.â Go on, see if you can find it. (And if you want to go further down this particular rabbit hole, this E online feature on the facts v. fictions of the FX series is my new favorite link.)
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