In a mesmerizing account of the trial and of her complicated life before she entered O.
J. -- Los Angeles Times. -- San Francisco Chronicle Without a Doubt pulses with life and conviction. -- The Boston Globe Clark provides one of the liveliest and often most humorous versions of the case to date.
Hell.
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A mesmerizing account of the trial and of her complicatedlife before she entered O.
In a case that tore America apart, and that continues to haunt us as few events in our recent history have, Marcia Clark emerges as the one true heroine, because she stood for justice, fought the good fight, and fought it well.
She also takes on her critics, the armchair warriors who scapegoated her after the verdict, and tells us why they were wrong.
Sparing no one in this unflinching account -- least of all herself -- Clark speaks frankly about the mesmerizing and controversial personalities in the Simpson case: Lance Ito, Kato Kaelin, Johnnie Cochran, Mark Fuhrman, and Christopher Darden, among others.
How did she do it, day after day? What was it like, orchestrating the most controversial case of her career in the face of the media\'s relentless klieg lights? How did she fight her personal battles -- those of a working mother balancing a crushing workload and a painful, very public divorce? Who stood by her and who abandoned her? As Clark shares the secrets of her own life, we understand for the first time why she identified so closely with Nicole Brown Simpson, in a way no man ever could.
She tells us how a woman, when caught up in an event that galvanized an entire country, rose to that occasion with singular integrity, drive, honesty, and grace.
Her voice is raw, disarming, unmistakable.
Marcia Clark takes us inside her head and her heart with a story that is both sweeping and deeply personal -- and shocking in its honesty.
It\'s a book about a woman.
The most recognized female attorney in America opens up about life during -- and after -- the trial of the century Without a Doubt is not just a book about a trial. of photos.
Hell (The Boston Globe), Marcia Clark takes readers inside her head and her heart to tell a story that is both sweeping and deeply personal--and shocking in its honesty.
In a mesmerizing account of the trial and of her complicated life before she entered O.
J