I usually ignore the odd typo that gets through in a book, but the Kindle version of this is so riddled with errors it ruins the text. Marla Maples is referred to as Maria Maples, sometimes the name "Al" is written as "A1" (like the steak sauce). In at least one instance, there was a period tossed randomly in the middle of a sentence, like a warning to readers to halt, already!
Making it worse (to me) is that Walls started as a journalist! I was a print journalist, too, starting as a reporter and moving on to copy editing/page design. I know it's damn near impossible to find every error, even when the work is checked by others. But this degree of errors is beyond belief. In printing a book, you don't just edit it yourself before sending it off to the publisher/editor to give their edits, you read it all again when the others have done their thing - you may find something that was missed all along, or a new error that was inserted by others. I feel sure the "Maria" Maples mess happened when someone else went through and did a find-and-replace with the name Marla.
The information here was a mildly interesting look at celebrity gossip and the history of how it became a part of mainstream media. It's let down by the errors, and I have to wonder what other errors made it into text that I didn't recognize. Incorrect names, dates, facts? It can't be trusted, which is a shame, because I'm sure Walls invested a vast amount of research into this work.