The News-Times

That glowing Harvey Weinstein autobiogra­phy on Amazon probably wasn’t written by him

-

Disgraced film producer Harvey Weinstein has been busy in jail allegedly telling his life story to fellow inmates.

The convicted sex offender is the subject of a new memoir, “Harvey Weinstein: My Story,” that was independen­tly published on Amazon in various formats on May 10. The book was available for purchase on Amazon until Friday, when the listing page was abruptly taken down.

While it appeared to be written by Weinstein and was billed as “an autobiogra­phy told with remarkable candor,” Newsweek reported Friday that the book was written by two of his fellow inmates and put out by Dennis Sobin, director of the nonprofit Prisons Foundation, which publishes the works of convicts.

“As an author, he is unafraid to face his detractors with a full and honest account of what he did. You be the judge,” read the “About the Author” section of the listing. (The L.A. Times reviewed the book’s Amazon page before it was removed.)

The 203-page tome, whose cover features a black-and-white photo of a young Weinstein, boasts about the former mogul’s Oscar-winning career before his downfall in 2017. Helping to ignite the #MeToo movement, the New York Times and the New Yorker published damning, Pulitzer-winning investigat­ions that year about his pattern of sexual misconduct and inappropri­ate behavior.

Was any of that mentioned in the autobiogra­phy’s descriptio­n? Nope.

Here’s the book’s jaw-dropping take on the 70-year-old’s legacy:

“Many people in the movie field are lucky if they get a single Academy Awards nomination. Do you know how many of them Weinstein received? Not three, not 35, but 350. And do you know how many Oscars? A total of 80 in virtually every category. Eighty first-place wins. In this book, Weinstein not only tells of his unconventi­onal (some say ‘inappropri­ate’) methods but of the accusation­s that inevitably followed his success.” It gets worse.

The “About the Author” also branded the former Miramax power broker “an icon synonymous with the modern American movie industry.”

“He took chances in his profession­al and personal life. He weighed the odds and moved forward without hesitation. The results were astounding,” it said.

Astounding, indeed. Weinstein is serving a 23-year sentence after being convicted in New York in February 2020 of committing a criminal sexual act and third-degree rape. He has been accused of sexual assault, misconduct and harassment by more than 80 women in the U.S. and the United Kingdom. Weinstein has vehemently denied any wrongdoing.

Newsweek obtained an excerpt from the book’s introducti­on that explained its unusual backstory.

“At this point, I must point out in the interest of full disclosure that our receiving this autobiogra­phy came in a circuitous way,” the book passage said. “It was mailed to us from the Twin Towers Correction­al Facility, the prison in California housing Weinstein. But it was not mailed to us by Weinstein himself.”

The manuscript reportedly came by way of two inmates who said they had befriended Weinstein in confinemen­t, and he relayed his story to them. Weinstein reportedly told the inmates that his lawyers won’t allow him to tell his story directly - now or previously during his New York trial.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States