Gail Sheehy: Difference between revisions
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She married publisher [[Clay Felker]] in 1984. |
She married publisher [[Clay Felker]] in 1984. |
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==Plagiarism Lawsuit == |
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Her book, "Passages" turned into a national bestseller. But Sheehy had to deal with a plagiarism lawsuit brought by Roger Gould, a psychiatrist at the University of California at Los Angeles, who accused her of stealing from his work.<ref name=ccfp/> |
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The suit was settled out of court, with Gould receiving $10,000 and 10% of Sheehy's royalties.<ref name=ccfp>[http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1109471/posts] Bluey, Robert B., "Error-Prone Author Gail Sheehy Headlines New MoveOn.org Book", ''[[Free Republic]]'', [[March 31]], [[2004]]</ref><ref name=cctm>[http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,946984,00.html] "Passages II: Advice for the demon-worn", ''[[Time Magazine]]'', [[Aug. 14]], [[1978]]</ref> |
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==2004 9/11 Commission Controversy == |
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The Art Science Research Laboratory, a New York-based group that examines news articles for factual accuracy, released a 65-page report based on an article Gail Sheehy published in The New York Observer on Feb. 16, 2004 critical of the 9/11 Commission. |
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"To publicly accuse parties of potential criminal wrongdoing is serious and damaging. That the accusations were based on facts that were only later checked and proven wrong is especially egregious," Shearer wrote in the report. "The 9/11 Commission and specifically [Executive Director] Philip Zelikow were defamed."<ref name=ccnt><ref name=ccne>[http://www.sept112001.org/news_gail_intro.jsp] Shearer, Rhonda R.,"Reporter's charge of 9/11 commission censorship proven false", ''[[September Eventh History Magazine]]</ref> |
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<ref name=ccnt>[http://asrlab.org/press/AccusedPlagiaristSlammed.php] Bluey, Robert B., "Accused Plagiarist Slammed Again for Article on 9/11 Commission, ''[[CNSNews]]'', [[April 29]], [[2004]]</ref> |
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==1992 ''Vanity Fair'' article on Hillary Clinton== |
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Sheehy's 1992 article on Hillary Clinton created a stir by quoting the First Lady mentioning rumors of an affair between President H. W. Bush and a woman named "Jennifer". Sheehy reported that Clinton complained that the media had made much about the Gennifer Flowers affair with Bill Clinton but didn't look into the Bush transgression. Clinton considered that portion of the interview off the record, but Sheehy later said she did not. Fact checkers for ''Vanity Fair'' alerted editor [[Tina Brown]] to the potential problem, based on their review of the transcript of the interview, but Brown declined to take the quote out of the story and the quote was prominent in ''[[Vanity Fair|Vanity Fair's]]'' news release about the interview, and the interview received wide coverage in the press, including front-page treatment in ''[[The New York Post]]'' and the ''[[New York Daily News]]'' tabloids.<ref name=ccvv>[http://www.villagevoice.com/news/9950,cotts,11034,6.html]Cotts, Cynthia, "Press Clips" column titled "Sheehy’s Choice: New Bio of Hillary Clinton Bends the Facts", ''[[The Village Voice]]'', December 15 - 21, 1999, accessed [[July 29]], [[2007]]</ref> |
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Cynthia Cotts, one of the fact checkers, later wrote about the matter in the "Press Clips" column in ''[[The Village Voice]]''. "After reviewing the transcript, we saw that Hillary had clearly gone off-the-record before she talked about the "Jennifer" rumors."<ref name=ccvv/> |
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Clinton later said Sheehy's reporting was "a garbled version of a private conversation." Sheehy responded: "I don't think you tell a journalist about a private conversation if you don't want to have it printed."<ref name=ccvv/> |
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Sheehy sent a written response to Cotts in which Sheehy at one point stated the entire interview was on-the-record, but then wrote, "I never agreed to keeping that outburst off-the-record."<ref name=ccvv/> |
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==Biography of Hillary Clinton== |
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''Hillary's Choice'', Sheehy's 1999 biography of Hillary Clinton, was praised by ''[[The New York Observer]]'', given a damned-with-faint-praise review in ''[[The New York Times Book Review]]'' and attacked in ''[[The New Yorker]]'', ''[[Slate (magazine)|Slate]]'' online magazine and by Cynthia Cotts in the "Press Clips" column of ''[[The Village Voice]]''.<ref name=ccvv/> |
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Howard Wolfson, the press secretary for Clinton's U.S. Senate campaign, pointed to factual errors in the book. Contrary to what the biography asserted, Clinton's father did attend her graduation from Wellesley College, Wolfson said.<ref name=ccvv/> |
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Some people quoted in the book said Sheehy represented their words inaccurately or changed the meaning of their words by taking them out of context: |
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* [[Garry Wills]] said he had described Clinton with the words "as charming as ever," but Sheehy changed that to "as Hillary as ever." Sheehy disputes that.<ref name=ccvv/> |
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* [[Betsey Wright]] told ''The New York Observer'' that Sheehy took quotes out of context. In response, Sheehy offered to make the Wright transcripts available to journalists.<ref name=ccvv/> |
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* [[Tony Podesta]] said that, contrary to what the book says in a footnote, he was never interviewed for the book by Sheehy. Sheehy later said one of her researchers interviewed Podesta.)<ref name=ccvv/> |
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Critics said Sheehy's book was inaccurate on these other small points: |
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* [[Al Haig]] didn't say he was in charge after Nixon's resignation.<ref name=ccvv/> (He did make a similar statement just after President Reagan was shot) |
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* [[Mack McLarty|Mack McLarty's]] marriage didn't collapse.<ref name=ccvv/> |
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* [[Gene Lyons]] was not a "well-known Arkansas novelist".<ref name=ccvv/> |
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Sheehy blamed some of the criticism of her book on the Clinton "attack machine".<ref name=ccvv/> |
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Ben Smith, in his blog at the Web site of ''[[The Politico]]'', pointed out that "almost everything attempting to take a personal look at Hillary seems to go back to Sheehy," and "it may not be your sort of book but, for all its flaws, it does seem to be holding up."<ref name=politico>[http://www.politico.com/blogs/bensmith/0707/Rereading_Sheehy.html]Smith, Ben, "Re-reading Sheehy" post at his blog titled "Ben Smith: A running conversation about the Democratic Party's choice for president in 2008", ''[[The Politico]]'' Web site, dated [[July 29]], [[2007]], accessed same day</ref> |
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[[Carl Bernstein]] in his biography of Hillary Clinton, relied on some of Sheehy's reporting (on her interview with Clinton's mother and on some letters she sent to an old high school friend while in college). A front-page story in ''[[The New York Times]]'' on Sunday, [[July 29]], [[2007]], was based on the same letters.<ref name=politico/> |
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==Notes== |
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<references/> |
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==External links== |
==External links== |
Revision as of 17:51, 24 February 2008
Gail Sheehy (b. November 27, 1937) is an American writer and lecturer, most notable for her books on life and the life cycle. She is also a contributor to Vanity Fair (magazine).
Her fifth book, Passages, has been called "a road map of adult life". Several of her books continue the theme of passages through life's stages, including menopause and what she calls "Second Adulthood", including Pathfinders, Spirit of Survival, and Menopause: The Silent Passage. Her latest book, Sex and the Seasoned Woman, reveals a hidden cultural phenomenon - a surge of vitality in women's sex and love lives after fifty. She has also authored a biography of Hillary Rodham Clinton titled Hillary's Choice, and her novel Middletown, America is currently being adapted as a TV miniseries.
Sheehy attended the University of Vermont where she was a member of Alpha Chi Omega sorority and received a graduate degree in journalism from Columbia University.
She married publisher Clay Felker in 1984.