Crime of Sheila McGough, The

Crime of Sheila McGough, The
by Janet Malcolm

Crime of Sheila McGough, The
List Price: $22.00
Our Price: $0.59
You Save: $21.41 (97%)
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Buy Used: from $0.55 (click here)
Category: Book
See more book details and other editions


(Click here)
Buy this book at online book store in your country
Canada | UK | Germany | France

Book Summary Information

Author: Janet Malcolm
Edition: Hardcover
Published: 1999-01-19
ISBN: 0375405089
Number of pages: 161
Publisher: Knopf

Book Reviews of Crime of Sheila McGough, The

Book Review: A Frustrating Book
Summary: 2 Stars

There was a good book in here somewhere, but I found the author's point of view toward the main charachter frustrating. Either offer more analysis of her poor decisions or tell us some more facts to make the reader more sympathetic to the lawyer. But the way the author left it, I felt the lawyer seemed unsympathetic and some of her actions without enough explanaton/justification/analysis to give teh reader some perspective.

The story is somewhat interesting, which manages to carry the book, but the writing left me wanting more.

Summary of Crime of Sheila McGough, The

In the winter of 1996, Janet Malcolm received a letter from a stranger--a disbarred lawyer named Sheila McGough, who had recently been released from prison, and who wrote that she had been convicted of crimes she had not committed. Malcolm decided to look into the case, and this book--a dazzling work
of journalism as well as a searching meditation on character, on the law, and on the incompatibility of narrative with truth--is the product of her growing belief that a miscarriage of justice had taken place.

Sheila McGough was prosecuted and convicted because the government (and then the jury) interpreted her zealous representation of a con-man client named Bob Bailes as collaboration in his fraud. Malcolm's close readings of court records and her interviews with lawyers and businessmen connected with the case give
a picture of American law and American cupidity that is startling in its pitiless specificity. And her portrait of Sheila McGough--"a woman of almost preternatural honesty and decency," as well as maddening literal-mindedness and discursiveness--brings an unconventional new heroine into vivid being.
The inimitable Janet Malcolm has previously probed the soft white underbellies of psychiatry, journalism, literary biography, and a half-dozen other disciplines. In The Crime of Sheila McGough, she takes on the legal profession. At first glance this may seem like a ludicrously easy target: who doesn't have his doubts about the vast army of ambulance chasers, shysters, and corporate sharks? But as always, Malcolm has more complicated fish to fry. What fascinates her about the legal system is the endless, agonizing clash of contending narratives. "The transcripts of trials at law--even of routine criminal prosecutions and tiresome civil disputes--are exciting to read," she notes. "They record contests of wit and will that have the stylized structure and dire aura of duels before dawn."

To prove her point, Malcolm has chosen one particular prosecution--or, as the facts seem to indicate, persecution. In 1986 a Virginia attorney named Sheila McGough took on the case of a con artist named Bob Bailes. First she defended this charming chiseler against a charge of bank fraud, and lost; then, two years later, she went to bat for him when he was indicted for a bizarre, insurance-related bunco game. Again she lost, and Bailes--whose tale-spinning amounted to a kind of artistry--remained in the slammer. At this point, most advocates would have moved on. Not McGough: "After her client went to prison, she continued defending him as if nothing had happened.... She remained at his side and fought for him as if he were Alfred Dreyfus, instead of the small-time con man, with an unfortunate medical history and an interesting imagination, that he was." Nothing, it turns out, clogs the machinery of the judicial system more thoroughly than an honest--okay, pathologically honest--attorney.

As McGough continued to fight for her client, she aroused the wrath, and eventually the suspicion, of the court. Surely this nutty crusade must have some hidden agenda. Malcolm makes a strong argument for her subject's innocence: "Veracity was her defining characteristic, like the color of an orange. Her behavior may have been odd, deviant, maddening, but her devotion to the truth--almost like a disease in its helpless literalness--was an inspiriting given." The court, however, thought otherwise. In 1990 McGough was found guilty of 14 counts of felony (most of which made her an accessory to Bailes's depredations) and sentenced to 3 years in prison. Only after her release in 1996 did she enlist the author on her behalf. Unlike previous objects of Malcolm's scrutiny, McGough made little effort to finesse the narrative. All the more remarkable, then, that the most sublime cross-examiner in American letters found her innocent.

The Crime of Sheila McGough is, needless to say, a stinging critique of the legal system. "Without the thinner of common sense," the author insists, "the law is a toxic substance." (Malcolm, who's gotten a liberal serving of legal toxins during the 1980s and 1990s, is surely speaking from experience.) Yet her book is an equally brilliant brief on human behavior (and misbehavior). And as she plunges deeper into the legal labyrinth, her quest for the truth and nothing but the truth leads her to some superb insights about that other form of imaginative advocacy--writing. "The truth," she offers, "does not make a good story; that's why we have art." But in The Crime of Sheila McGough, Malcolm has it both ways. Deliciously witty and almost supernaturally aware, her book is a true crime story in every sense of the phrase. --James Marcus

Legal Books

Book Subjects
Most talked about in Legal Books
The Unwanted Gaze: The Destruction of Privacy in America ImageThe Unwanted Gaze: The Destruction of Privacy in America
by Jeffrey Rosen
Random House; Published: 2000-05-30; Hardcover; Book
Best price: $1.13
Price in other shops: $24.95
Contempt: How the Right Is Wronging American Justice ImageContempt: How the Right Is Wronging American Justice
by Catherine Crier
Rugged Land; Published: 2005-09-13; Hardcover; Book
Best price: $2.50
Price in other shops: $27.95
Damages ImageDamages
by Barry Werth
Simon & Schuster; Published: 1998-02-10; Hardcover; Book
Best price: $10.90
Price in other shops: $25.00
The Trouble with Principle ImageThe Trouble with Principle
by Stanley Fish
Harvard University Press; Published: 2001-03-02; Paperback; Book
Best price: $12.50
Price in other shops: $16.95
No Contest: Corporate Lawyers and the Perversion of Justice in America ImageNo Contest: Corporate Lawyers and the Perversion of Justice in America
by Ralph Nader, Wesley J. Smith
Random House; Published: 1998-12-22; Paperback; Book
Best price: $12.00
Price in other shops: $23.00
Under Investigation: The Inside Story of the Florida Attorney General's Investigation of Wilhelmina Scouting Network, the Largest Model and Talent Scam in America ImageUnder Investigation: The Inside Story of the Florida Attorney General's Investigation of Wilhelmina Scouting Network, the Largest Model and Talent Scam in America
by Les Henderson
Coyote Ridge Publishing; Published: 2006-09-12; Paperback; Book
Best price: $19.65
Price in other shops: $29.95
Outrage: The Five Reasons Why O.J. Simpson Got Away With Murder ImageOutrage: The Five Reasons Why O.J. Simpson Got Away With Murder
by Vincent Bugliosi
Island Books; Published: 1997-03-10; Mass Market Paperback; Book
Best price: $12.99
The Success of Open Source ImageThe Success of Open Source
by Steven Weber
Harvard University Press; Published: 2005-10-31; Paperback; Book
Best price: $14.96
Price in other shops: $17.50
Devil's Knot : The True Story of the West Memphis Three ImageDevil's Knot : The True Story of the West Memphis Three
by Mara Leveritt
Atria; Published: 2002-10-08; Hardcover; Book
Best price: $18.95
Price in other shops: $24.00
Justice: Crimes, Trials, and Punishments ImageJustice: Crimes, Trials, and Punishments
by Dominick Dunne
Three Rivers Press; Published: 2002-05-14; Paperback; Book
Best price: $2.49
Price in other shops: $14.95
Similar Books and other products
Exit Ghost ImageExit Ghost
by Philip Roth
Houghton Mifflin; Published: 2007-10-01; Hardcover; Book
Best price: $4.15
Price in other shops: $26.00
Diana and Nikon: Essays on Photography ImageDiana and Nikon: Essays on Photography
by Janet Malcolm
Aperture; Published: 1997-09-30; Hardcover; Book
Best price: $59.21
Eat What You Kill: The Fall of a Wall Street Lawyer ImageEat What You Kill: The Fall of a Wall Street Lawyer
by Milton C Regan
University of Michigan Press; Published: 2005-12-22; Paperback; Book
Best price: $19.80
Price in other shops: $22.95
Psychoanalysis ImagePsychoanalysis
by Janet Malcolm
Vintage; Published: 1982-09-12; Paperback; Book
Best price: $7.43
Price in other shops: $15.00
The Purloined Clinic: Selected Writings ImageThe Purloined Clinic: Selected Writings
by Janet Malcolm
Vintage; Published: 1993-11-02; Paperback; Book
Best price: $6.95
Price in other shops: $19.00
Reading Chekhov: A Critical Journey ImageReading Chekhov: A Critical Journey
by Janet Malcolm
Random House Trade Paperbacks; Published: 2002-11-12; Paperback; Book
Best price: $4.99
Price in other shops: $13.95
The Silent Woman: Sylvia Plath and Ted Hughes ImageThe Silent Woman: Sylvia Plath and Ted Hughes
by Janet Malcolm
Vintage; Published: 1995-03-28; Paperback; Book
Best price: $8.25
Price in other shops: $14.00
Two Lives: Gertrude and Alice ImageTwo Lives: Gertrude and Alice
by Janet Malcolm
Yale University Press; Published: 2007-09-27; Hardcover; Book
Best price: $9.37
Price in other shops: $25.00
In the Freud Archives (New York Review Books Classics) ImageIn the Freud Archives (New York Review Books Classics)
NYRB Classics; Published: 2002-11-30; Paperback; Book
Best price: $6.49
Price in other shops: $14.95
The Journalist and the Murderer ImageThe Journalist and the Murderer
by Janet Malcolm
Vintage; Published: 1990-10-31; Paperback; Book
Best price: $6.00
Price in other shops: $13.95
Book store. Illustrated catalog of books on different categories