While pumping out six or more fictional novels with various co-authors each year, James Patterson tends to sneak in one or two non-fiction books (with co-authors too of course). He’s written about John Lennon, Princess Dina and her two sons, Tiger Woods, and even his own memoirs. This year he is taking on Marilyn Monroe, which coincides with her on hundredth birthday in June, 2026.
For those who are avid Marilyn fans, they might few some new tidbits of information that add to her magnetic persona and legacy. For others, the promotion of this book as being “A True Crime Thriller” will more than likely be left disappointed and a bit misled. Let me elaborate by focusing on what this book is and what it is not.
What this book is:
This is her biography starting with Marilyn’s troubled life as a teenager, her early arranged marriage to Jim Dougherty, her introductions to modeling and acting, struggling to build her career, her breakthrough and skyrocketing career, marriages to baseball star, Joe DiMaggio, and award winning playwright, Arthur Miller, her struggles with alcohol and drugs, and how those struggles led to damaging her in Hollywood.
course, it wouldn’t be a real Marilyn biography without exploring her destructive relationships with the Kennedy brothers - Jack (U.S. President) and Bobby (U.S. Attorney General) – as well as her personal relationships with Frank Sinatra and Peter Lawford. That’s where the juice is found in this one.
But let’s be honest, this is a biography that focuses more on her day-to-day activities, rise and fall of her career, and personal struggles. This part is an interesting read that provides a personal view behind the public curtain of her troubled life. I appreciated learning about her movies, the writing of the scripts, production filming, and being behind the scenes for some of her most iconic move, modeling, and interview moments.
However, what this book is not:
Let’s be completely honest. While this was an account of Marilyn’s life, career, and personal relationships, it is NOT a true crime thriller. NOT even close.
With that title I was expecting the authors to share more information and speculation about Marilyn’s death, and there just wasn’t. Truthe be told, this was neither a true crime story nor a thriller. The only part of the book dealing with
The book teases you with the exploration of her death, but that is only a tease. The first four short chapters take place the morning her body’s discovered. Then we immediately move into her biography. At the end of the book, we get one last chapter and an epilogue following her death, but it lacks any real theories, evidence, or even closure to the cause of her death one way or another. What we get is a lot of buildup with no answers in the end, much like when Geraldo Rivera opened Al Capone’s vault on national television to find only dirt and empty bottles. The result is a disappointment.
I wouldn’t have such a problem with the ending if the book cover and description hadn’t been so falsely misleading. To be honest, I expected better from James Patterson. It did not spend any time exploring and discussing the conflicting information surrounding her death. Nothing that shed new light or presented new constructive or circumstantial evidence. For example, did she overdose? Did the Kennedy’s have something to do with her death to protect themselves? I didn’t expect any aggressive theories about it, but Patterson played it very safe. Yes, he insinuated some things about the Kennedy’s, but he stayed safe from a lawsuit perspective. Otherwise, there was nothing new or different to present or explore.
So why even promote this book in such a titillating manner and fail to deliver on the promotion its based on? I am left feeling it is only to tantalize us into buying it. That’s a shame. They would have better to be honest in promoting this book as a biography and using a different title.
In addition, the ending was not only empty, it felt rushed and provided a real lack of closure to the end of her life.
My overall thought is this. If you’re looking for a biography or a memoir of Marilyn Monroe’s rise to fame, her personal relationships, and struggles with addiction, this may provide an interesting read for you. I just cannot estimate how much new information you will gain if you are already a hardcore fan of hers and already are familiar with her life. If you’re looking for “A True Crime Thriller” view of her last days, this I can tell you with confidence. You will be sorely disappointed with this example of false advertising.