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Janet Malcolm



         


Janet Malcolm is an American author and journalist on the staff of The New Yorker magazine. Her prickly, highly intelligent pen is usually found skewering something still alive.

She was born in Prague, one of two daughters born to a psychiatrist father, but has lived in the United States ever since her family emigrated from Czechoslovakia in 1939. She was educated at the University of Michigan. Janet Malcolm lives in New York with her second husband, Gardner Botsford.

Her works include:

Conversely, her "The Journalist and the Murderer" triggered outrage from her peers. They line up to flog her for her statement that "Every journalist knows that what he does is morally indefensible." Malcolm's example was popular author Joe McGuiness (The Selling of the President), who ingratiated himself into the bosom of the defense team of former Green Beret doctor Jeffrey MacDonald, then on trial for the 1970 murder of his wife and two daughters. McGuiness's "Fatal Vision" concluded that MacDonald was a psychopath hopped up on amphetimines when he killed his family; however, McGuiness's "morally indefensible" act was to pretend that he thought MacDonald innocent even after he became convinced of his guilt and to thereby remain privy to defense team strategies. According to Bost and Palmer's rebuke of "Fatal Vision," called "Fatal Justice," Janet Malcolm was the only journalist who showed any interest in the matter of MacDonald v. McGuiness, after MacDonald won an out-of-court settlement against McGuiness for fraud.





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