OJ Simpson to write a novel about his relationship with Nicole
Even if I was interested in what he has to say (which I am NOT), I still wouldn't buy this book because I would not want to give this man one penny of my hard-earned money.
Source: derekhall.com
OJ Simpson plans to release a novel where he describes the details of his relationship with Nicole Simpson - the full story, including her murder, but he insists the murder descriptions are merely hypothetical. According to MSNBC,
The early part of the book tells how Simpson fell in love with Nicole and how the marriage collapsed, reports the tab. He goes on, according to the article, to describe in gruesome detail the killing of his ex-wife and Goldman; he stipulates that the murder scenes are “hypothetical.” But, notes the tab, the descriptions are “so detailed and so chillingly realistic” that readers are left with little doubt as to what really happened.
OJ Simpson must have defined hypothetically wrong. He actually means, “Really.”
I don't know if this is actually true or I just think it should be true, but people aren't allowed to collect profits on these kinds of books. They can write them and donate the proceeds to charity, which is what I think OJ should do.
I know it applies to accusers, but I don't know if it applies to defendants.
^I was thinking that too. Imagine how they suffer each day for losing their children, and for OJ to do this must be torturing those two families even more....
Fox plans to broadcast a two-part interview with O.J. Simpson in which the former football star discusses the slayings of his former wife and her friend, for which he was acquitted.
The interview, titled "If I Did It, Here's How It Happened," will air Nov. 27 and Nov. 29, according to the network's Web site.
Simpson, who now lives in Florida, was acquitted in a criminal trial of the 1994 killings of his ex-wife, Nicole Brown Simpson, and her friend Ronald Goldman. Simpson was later found liable in 1997 in a wrongful death lawsuit filed by the Goldman family.
Messages left with Simpson and his attorney Yale Galanter were not immediately returned.