This biography of Marilyn Monroe is truly outstanding. It doesn't just focus on her, but also delves into the lives of those around her, starting from her grandparents, parents, relatives, husbands, boyfriends, friends, foes, associates, and doctors. This comprehensive approach provides a more complete picture of who she was and what she endured.
The author, Mr. Spoto, debunks the myths and falsehoods that have surrounded Marilyn's life and death with real facts and receipts. He humanizes her, revealing her inner self and showing that she was much more than a sex symbol. He doesn't speculate like other authors, but knows what he's talking about, having done extensive research.
The first 200 pages may be a bit slow and detailed, but the pace quickly picks up and becomes more intriguing. The most shocking part is the account of how Marilyn was allegedly killed by her doctor and assistant. Mr. Spoto focuses on the psychiatrist (Greenson) and the housekeeper (Murray), and how they allegedly covered up their crime. He also includes a bonus chapter to debunk the theory that she was killed by Bobby Kennedy.
Overall, this is the best biography ever written on Marilyn Monroe. It portrays her true self, without fabrications or sensationalism. It provides many psychological hypotheses and insights into Hollywood's dysfunctional system. If you want to understand the real woman, not the myth, this is the definitive biography to read.
She told us more than once, ‘Hollywood will never forgive me—not for leaving, not for fighting the system—but for winning, which I'm going to do.’ -Susan Strasberg
"A sex symbol becomes a thing, and I hate to be a thing. You're always running people's unconscious. It's nice to be included in people's fantasies, but you also like to be accepted for your own sake. I don't look on myself as a commodity, but I'm sure a lot of people have, including one corporation in particular which shall be nameless. If I'm sounding 'picked on,' I think I have been." -Marilyn Monroe
"I want to be an artist and an actress with integrity. As I said once before, I don't care about the money. I just want to be wonderful." -Marilyn Monroe
"I always felt that she had become an investment to people like him---an investment not only financially, in caring for her, but even in the fabrication of her illness. It had become a need for him and others that she be considered sick, dependent and needy. There was something sinister about Ralph Greenson. It was well known that he exerted enormous influence over her."
"Susan Strasberg agreed: his [Ralph Greenson] close involvement with Marilyn was an open secret no one really discussed."
"An impressive reminder of the tough, triumphalist Norma Jeane...for once she has a biographer worthy of her." -Julie Burchill