In the spring of 1972, T.V. LoCicero finished a book-length manuscript entitled Joann D'Ark and the Prince Of Detroit and eventually gave his only remaining copy to a University of Michigan professor who had encouraged him to write it. Soon thereafter the author lost touch with his friend the professor, and the manuscript was lost to him for more than 30 years. Why give away the last copy of a manuscript that covered the most intense, frustrating and perhaps defining period in his life? And why make no concerted effort to recover it for more than three decades?
The answers are contained in this compelling non-fiction narrative that contains the original manuscript, plus a new Author's Note and Epilogue. Included are the story of LoCicero's experience in researching and writing Murder in the Synagogue, a true crime account of the assassination of Rabbi Morris Adler on Lincoln's Birthday, 1966; the details of its publication by Prentice-Hall, Inc., that guaranteed the book would fail; and the information LoCicero received from a remarkable young woman who came forward to tell the author that Max Fisher, a wealthy and powerful confidant and supporter of Richard Nixon, had arranged with the publisher to "squelch" his book.
True in every detail, this is a tale of deceit, betrayal and criminality involving a major American publisher who, in 1974, four years after it sabotaged Murder in the Synagogue, did the same thing to another of its books, Du Pont: Behind the Nylon Curtain. The story of what Prentice-Hall did to the Du Pont book, and why, was first told on January 21, 1975, in the New York Times. It was told again more recently by Gerard Colby, the author of the Du Pont book, in "The Price of Liberty," one of several essays about suppression in the media collected in a book entitled Into the Buzzsaw. The story of what happened to Murder in the Synagogue has never been told...until now.
This is a measured yet compelling account of a young writer's sudden plunge into the wiles of publishing and his unexpected and at times unpleasant lessons in how the world works. Its epilogue explains how the original manuscript of Joann D'Ark and the Prince Of Detroit finally came back to its author after more than 30 years, recounts the passing of Max Fisher in 2005 at the age of 96 and brings the story up to date.
In the process, many will note that while the details of this tale are decades old, the lessons they contain about corporate manipulation and the power and influence of wealth and political connection remain deeply important in our world today.
The answers are contained in this compelling non-fiction narrative that contains the original manuscript, plus a new Author's Note and Epilogue. Included are the story of LoCicero's experience in researching and writing Murder in the Synagogue, a true crime account of the assassination of Rabbi Morris Adler on Lincoln's Birthday, 1966; the details of its publication by Prentice-Hall, Inc., that guaranteed the book would fail; and the information LoCicero received from a remarkable young woman who came forward to tell the author that Max Fisher, a wealthy and powerful confidant and supporter of Richard Nixon, had arranged with the publisher to "squelch" his book.
True in every detail, this is a tale of deceit, betrayal and criminality involving a major American publisher who, in 1974, four years after it sabotaged Murder in the Synagogue, did the same thing to another of its books, Du Pont: Behind the Nylon Curtain. The story of what Prentice-Hall did to the Du Pont book, and why, was first told on January 21, 1975, in the New York Times. It was told again more recently by Gerard Colby, the author of the Du Pont book, in "The Price of Liberty," one of several essays about suppression in the media collected in a book entitled Into the Buzzsaw. The story of what happened to Murder in the Synagogue has never been told...until now.
This is a measured yet compelling account of a young writer's sudden plunge into the wiles of publishing and his unexpected and at times unpleasant lessons in how the world works. Its epilogue explains how the original manuscript of Joann D'Ark and the Prince Of Detroit finally came back to its author after more than 30 years, recounts the passing of Max Fisher in 2005 at the age of 96 and brings the story up to date.
In the process, many will note that while the details of this tale are decades old, the lessons they contain about corporate manipulation and the power and influence of wealth and political connection remain deeply important in our world today.
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