True Story: Murder, Memoir, Mea Culpa

True Story: Murder, Memoir, Mea Culpa

by Michael Finkel (Author)

Synopsis

Michael Finkel was a top New York Times Magazine journalist publicly fired and disgraced for making up a composite character for a big investigative news piece about Africa. This book is about how this brilliant, hardliving, high achieving journalist found himself at that point in his life; but in parallel it's also about Christian Longo, a man accused of the multiple murder of his own wife and 3 children (their bodies were found in Oregon waterways, the smallest in a suitcase), who then passed himself off as Michael Finkel, NY journalist, while on the run in Mexico. These two weird stories come together as Finkel in turn becomes fascinated (obsessed, even) with Longo the accused murderer, who while in prison would talk only to Finkel. Who is using whom...? It's all about truth and lies, and where journalistic truth deviates from reality; and about lives that take a wrong turning. It's very well written, disturbing in many ways and utterly gripping. There is an acknowledged moral ambiguity about the whole venture which makes it problematic but even more interesting...And in April 2003 Longo, who had pleaded guilty only to 2 counts of murder, was sentenced to death for all 4. Finkel visited and talked to him throughout the trial.

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 256
Publisher: Chatto & Windus
Published: 12 May 2005

ISBN 10: 0701176881
ISBN 13: 9780701176884
Book Overview: Brilliant journalism meets true crime in the heart of America - in a bizarre, gripping and thought-provoking story with the same edgy intelligence and ambiguities as contemporary classics like Mailer's The Executioner's Song and Berendt's Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil

Media Reviews
Combines crime and intellectual heft...[True Story] could well become a classic of the genre.--Washington Post Book World
Author Bio
Ayoung journalist in his mid-thirties who raises achickens and grows hay in his native Montana. He had a highflying job on the New York Times Magazine until he was publicly fired in February 2002. He is getting married at the end of July 2004.