I have a large collection of OJ books, but realized the other day at the library that I had never read Faye Resnick's follow up book, Shattered. So I'll dual review this and "Nicole Brown Simpson: The Private Diary of a Life Interrupted". It's easy to dismiss this as exploitation, I thought as much at the time. Everyone in it came off as some version of vain, shallow, just-plain-dumb, promiscuous, social climbing trash. But I do think there is a core of sincerity here, certainly Faye spends a great deal of the next book talking about how much scorn she received after this book was published, and justifying telling the stories she told (I'm sure she was coaxed for "dirt" by the publisher) She also believed without hesitation from the start that OJ was guilty, and she did have a front row seat for his relationship with Nicole. In "Shattered" she very simply debunks of lot of the defense's version of events, some points I would have liked to have seen made many more times. (Another big mistake the prosecution made was determining by their own standards who was "good enough" to testify. They should have put on everyone, warts and all.) And for gosh sake, so many people have no idea that there was a reason that Nicole was so angry at OJ at the that dance recital, which was the trigger for the whole thing, and that was that he was trying to get her in hot water with the IRS, which meant she quickly had to pull up stakes and move, in spite of the kids being uprooted as well.
So yeah, this is trashy for sure, but a valid contribution to the OJ "canon", if we can call it that.