The DD Group: An Online Investigation Into the Death of Marilyn Monroe

Summary
I am told that the first two names I recognized as a child were President Eisenhower and Marilyn Monroe. Hopefully, for my parents' sake, this was after I understood who Mama and Daddy were. To be truthful, I'm not at all certain. By the time the newsman interrupted my cartoons on Sunday morning, August 5, 1962, to tell me that Marilyn Monroe had been found dead of an overdose at the age of 36, she had become such a natural part of my daily life that I could not quite grasp the concept of a world where she was not still out there going about her surely incredible life. To even begin to attempt to understand that someone as big as Marilyn Monroe could actually die threw my seven-year-old brain into serious philosophical doubt. I kept a close watch on my parents, my teachers, even my close friends. The way I saw it, if Marilyn Monroe could die, everyone was up for grabs.-author David Marshall, from the introduction to The DD An Online Investigation Into the Death of Marilyn Monroe
Similar Books
-
The Dancer Upstairs
by Nicholas Shakespeare
-
The Walrus Was Paul: The Great Beatle Death Clues
by R. Gary Patterson
-
The Fugitive Game: Online with Kevin Mitnick
by Jonathan Littman
-
Cobra Trap
by Peter O'Donnell
-
Got Your Back: Protecting Tupac in the World of Gangsta Rap
by Frank Alexander
-
Marilyn's Last Words: Her Secret Tapes and Mysterious Death
by Matthew Smith
-
Shapeshifter
by J.F. Gonzalez
-
A Mind for Murder: the Real-Life Files of a Psychic Investigator
by Noreen Renier
-
All the Centurions
by Robert Leuci
-
Dream of Shadows
by Seressia Glass
-
Detectives Psiquicos
by Peter A. Hough
-
10-8: A Cop's Honest Look at Life on the Street
by Officer X
-
-
A License to Steal
by Walter T. Shaw
-
Murder - A Multidisciplinary Anthology of Readings
by Joseph G. Weis
-
The Heinous Truth! about Utah!
by C.L. Crosby
-
-
Man Hunt - The Eric Rudolph Story
by Kathleen Walls
-
The Life of Stuff
by Simon Donald
-
If Tomorrow Never Comes: Poetic Justice The Unsung Story
by Robert Cota