Bluegill
Graduate Poster
- Joined
- Oct 17, 2002
- Messages
- 1,243
I apologize right off the bat for everyone who reads this and is sick to death of the story. But, hey, I put the name in the thread title, so you were warned.
I’ll post this question here since here is where books are discussed, although this isn’t literature.
Ever since O.J. first tried to publish that “If I Did It” book, and I read a brief description of it, I’ve wondered why the book would be written the way it was.
OK: I know, the point was to make money. And now the book rights are owned by the Goldmans, and they have sort of turned it around and are making money from it themselves.
My basic question, though, is why would O.J. write a book that contained a chapter that would hypothetically describe how he would have committed the crime he says he did not commit? I cannot fathom it at all.
If he is innocent and wants people to believe he is innocent, then such a chapter would be unfathomably stupid.
If he is guilty and wants people to believe he is innocent, then such a chapter would be unfathomably stupid.*
Yet, there it is. Somehow, it seems to go beyond stupid to simply unfathomable. Can anyone rationalize such behaviors?
*As I typed this I realized for the first time that maybe he actually wants people to know his guilt, but I still can’t fathom that.
I’ll post this question here since here is where books are discussed, although this isn’t literature.
Ever since O.J. first tried to publish that “If I Did It” book, and I read a brief description of it, I’ve wondered why the book would be written the way it was.
OK: I know, the point was to make money. And now the book rights are owned by the Goldmans, and they have sort of turned it around and are making money from it themselves.
My basic question, though, is why would O.J. write a book that contained a chapter that would hypothetically describe how he would have committed the crime he says he did not commit? I cannot fathom it at all.
If he is innocent and wants people to believe he is innocent, then such a chapter would be unfathomably stupid.
If he is guilty and wants people to believe he is innocent, then such a chapter would be unfathomably stupid.*
Yet, there it is. Somehow, it seems to go beyond stupid to simply unfathomable. Can anyone rationalize such behaviors?
*As I typed this I realized for the first time that maybe he actually wants people to know his guilt, but I still can’t fathom that.