
Written in 1954, as she approached the height of her fame, this heart-wrenching unfinished autobiography. This book lays open Marilyn's death and in the process also tries to expose the third gunman in the pantry who fired the fatal bullet to the back of RFK's head - and the third gunman's female accomplice who, until now, has only been known to the LAPD and the FBI as "the girl in the polka-dot dress. Now, at last, Marilyns real story can be told. It is a collection of anecdotes, rambling thoughts, and Marilyn Monroes own take on specific events up to the year 1954. Implicating Bobby Kennedy in the commission of Monroe's alleged murder, this is the first book to name the LAPD officers who accompanied the attorney general to her home, provide details about how the Kennedys allegedly used bribes to silence an ambulance driver, and show how the alleged cover-up was aided by a noted pathologist's lies. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any. Written at the height of her fame, but not published until over a decade after her death, this autobiography of actress. At the same time, they use eyewitness testimony to describe what took place inside her Los Angeles home. First Taylor Trade Publishing edition 2007 All right: reserved.



Renowned Marilyn expert Jay Margolis and New York Times best-selling author Richard Buskin dispel decades of speculation and misguided assertions by actually naming the screen goddess's alleged killer. This film is based on the 2000 novel Blonde by Joyce Carol Oates, which is a fictionalized account inspired by the life of Marilyn Monroe, not an actual. Marilyn Monroe died under suspicious circumstances on the night of August 4, 1962.
