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- <text id=89TT0517>
- <title>
- Feb. 20, 1989: Out To Make Killings
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Feb. 20, 1989 Betrayal:Marine Spy Scandal
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BOOKS, Page 98
- Out to Make Killings
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Crime pays, at least for the many authors who write about it
- </p>
- <p>By Stefan Kanfer
- </p>
- <p> Criminal trials used to have four main components:
- defendant, attorneys, judge and jury. Now they have a fifth:
- writers, eager to make a killing of their own. The more
- notorious the case nowadays, the longer seems the line of
- authors in and around the courtroom, armed with notebooks and
- contracts. Last year's "preppie murder" trial of Robert
- Chambers for strangling Jennifer Levin in New York City's
- Central Park, for example, will soon yield Wasted, a book by
- Linda Wolfe (The Professor and the Prostitute). The Tawana
- Brawley affair has inspired a team of six New York Times
- reporters and an editor to collaborate on a volume projected for
- release in late 1989. Politics and sex were the surefire
- ingredients of the fraud, bribery and conspiracy trial of former
- Miss America Bess Myerson, and, sure enough, they are soon to
- be clothbound in a book by Shana Alexander, whose previous
- titles chronicled the murders of a diet doctor and a Utah
- millionaire.
- </p>
- <p> The Joel Steinberg case, decided two weeks ago, dwarfs them
- all. The Manhattan lawyer was accused of brutalizing his lover
- Hedda Nussbaum and was convicted of manslaughter in the death of
- their illegally adopted daughter Lisa. Here was every ingredient
- of the true-crime blockbuster: cocaine, an S-M relationship, a
- beautiful six-year-old and a battered woman, all set against the
- background of Greenwich Village. Most important, in a city
- afflicted with racial malaise, it starred what Tom Wolfe
- identified in The Bonfire of the Vanities as the Great White
- Defendant.
- </p>
- <p> From the trial's opening statements, aspiring authors
- jockeyed for space on courtroom benches. Joyce Johnson, a
- contributing editor for Vanity Fair, began work on What Lisa
- Knew. Free-lance writer Maury Terry launched into The Dark Side
- of 10th Street. Sam Erlich, a fellow free lance, undertook
- Lisa, Hedda, Joel. Marie Winn, author of a television critique,
- The Plug-In Drug, jotted notes for an untitled book of her own.
- </p>
- <p> Winner of the race to print is Susan Brownmiller, whose
- novel Waverly Place (Grove; $18.95), published this week, was
- completed long before the verdict came in. In this fictive
- version of events leading to Lisa's death, Nussbaum (thinly
- masked as Judith Winograd) is programmed for catastrophe. Her
- childhood begins with abuse: "Whack. Where were you? Whack. Ma, I
- got lost. Whack. I told you . . . always to come straight home.
- Whack."
- </p>
- <p> Once she moves in with Barry Kantor (Steinberg), himself a
- victim of childhood beatings, sadomasochism reigns supreme: "He
- didn't mean to bang my head against the wall . . . This is a man
- who cares so deeply, who feels so much pain."
- </p>
- <p> Brownmiller attempts a novelist's overview, tracing the
- domestic tyrannies that slowly escalate to mutilation and death.
- But her squabbling adults have little more personality than
- Punch and Judy, and their maltreated daughter is a mere shadow.
- Waverly Place takes 294 pages to express what W.H. Auden did in
- a quatrain: "I and the public know/ What all schoolchildren
- learn,/ Those to whom evil is done/ Do evil in return."
- </p>
- <p> Today that evil is worth millions in hard-cover and
- paperback sales. "More crime books are being written for larger
- advances than ever before," says Daphne Merkin, an editor at
- Harcourt Brace Jovanovich. Merkin cites the $200,000 she paid to
- Newsday reporter Steve Wick, who had never written a book
- before, for Bad Company, an anatomy of the 1983 Hollywood
- murder of producer Roy Radin. John Baker, editor of Publishers
- Weekly, estimates that 10% of all nonfiction best sellers are
- chronicles of true crime. "The number has possibly doubled over
- the past decade," he claims.
- </p>
- <p> So popular have these books become that two studies of the
- same crime were selected last year as Literary Guild
- alternates: Daddy's Girl by Clifford Irving, and Cold Kill by
- Jack Olsen. Both focused on a teenage Texan who hired a
- boyfriend to kill her parents. This kind of multiple offering
- is not unusual. In 1985 two works also focused on a single
- crime: the murder of Franklin Bradshaw, engineered by his
- socialite daughter and carried out by her son. Both Alexander's
- Nutcracker and Jonathan Coleman's At Mother's Request became
- best sellers; both were made into separate network mini-series.
- There have been five books about the executed serial killer Ted
- Bundy.
- </p>
- <p> Analyses of the true-crime phenomenon range from the cosmic
- to the cruel. Publishers Weekly columnist Paul Nathan believes
- that readers feel "surrounded by the possibilities of violence
- and the threat of some kind of nuclear or biological or
- chemical warfare. So in a way it's a kind of relief to channel
- your apprehensiveness into something as specific and neatly
- rounded as a crime story." Michael Korda, editor in chief of
- Simon & Schuster, has a chillier view: "We're in an age of
- intimate crime. Back in the '70s it would have seemed almost
- inappropriate to write about a rapist who kills his victim in
- Utah, when we had people offing the most important figures in
- the land."
- </p>
- <p> Whatever the reasons for their success, the authors
- generally have elaborate rationales for their exploitation of
- human misery. Linda Wolfe uses the Emma Bovary defense: "Many of
- the writers I admired had treated themselves to the inspiration
- of current events. Flaubert had been told by a friend about a
- doctor's dissatisfied wife who had killed herself after having
- a series of lovers, and invented Madame Bovary . . . It's not
- a new phenomenon." Olsen takes the educational approach: books
- about psychopaths, he asserts, make it easier for people to
- identify them: "The date rapist can be spotted even before he
- tries to hold your hand, and any book on that subject should
- help elucidate that." Says Brownmiller: "I hope for a subversive
- effect, reaching people who would not read a 400-page nonfiction
- history of a crime and theoretical discussion of child abuse."
- Alexander deals with the true-crime genre by denying its
- existence. "I don't recognize it," she says. "I think there are
- two categories -- fiction and non. And I am unable to do one,
- so I do the other."
- </p>
- <p> Not all writers and critics are receptive to these
- arguments. Olsen admits that "there's no field more prone to
- charlatanism than nonfiction crime writing. There is more crap
- being written under that guise than any other genre because
- there are no checks and balances." And Nathan has deep moral
- concerns. "There's something rather ghoulish about seeing a
- number of people getting together competitively, each with a
- project based on somebody's death," he says. Steinberg's is a
- case in point: "It's hard to know where to draw the line
- between simple sensationalism and something that is socially
- valid." That line grows a little dimmer every time a new
- defendant gets measured for a dust jacket.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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