The acclaimed author of The Real Lolita tells the story of how a convicted murderer manipulated his way out of death row and into the spotlight.
In 1957, Edgar Smith was sentenced to die for the murder of a 15-year-old girl. A decade later, he published a book proclaiming his innocence. That book, Brief Against Death, won the admiration of Truman Capote and William F. Buckley, a friend he made while in jail. Seeking to understand how Smith managed to hoodwink intellectuals as well as the women he claimed to love, Weinman, who writes the crime column for the New York Times Book Review, investigates his life and the crimes that brought him notoriety. She examines his life-changing friendship that developed in 1962 when Buckley, who had read of Smith’s fondness for the National Review in a newspaper article, personally offered him a permanent subscription. For the next nine years, the two men exchanged more than 1,500 pages of correspondence in which the wily convict showcased his charm and writing ability and revealed his intent to write a book demonstrating that the case against him was “riddled with holes.” Buckley believed Smith and later introduced him to a female editor who was similarly captivated by Smith’s “sweet-talking” letters. After the publication of his book, the now-famous convict kindled romantic connections, including “torrid epistolary affair[s]” with two other women. By 1971, Smith was not only a free man; he was a famous writer thanks to his friendship with Buckley. However, by 1976, after the celebrity had dissipated, Smith was finally sentenced for a kidnapping that nearly ended in the death of a second woman. Weinman’s book is not only a disturbing study in how “brilliant people” and the institutions they serve can be successfully conned. It is also a reminder of how society has always used talent as a way to excuse male acts of aggression and violence against women.
Wholly compelling reading from an author well versed in the true-crime genre.