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Sep 5, 2008
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The Hoax Files: The Truth Isn't Out There

Literary Hoaxes

From Misha Defonseca to JT Leroy

by Mark Hughes, Liz Olson, and Beth Rowen
Misha: A Memoire of the Holocaust Years

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Misha Defonseca

A Belgium writer has admitted that her World War II era memoir is fantasy. In the memoir, Misha: A Memoire of the Holocaust Years, Misha Defonseca (1937- ), also known as Monique De Wael, described the adventures of a 4-year-old Jewish girl left alone during the Holocaust when the Nazis deported her parents for being resistance fighters. In the story, the child killed a German soldier in self-defense, escaped from the Warsaw Ghetto, was rescued by a pack of wolves that then protected her from the Nazis, and traveled 1,900 miles across Europe to find her parents. None of it was true. A Belgium historian, Maxime Steinberg, was researching the registry archive of Jewish families from that period and discovered that there were no Jewish families by the name of Defonseca or De Wael. In fact, Monique De Wael is not Jewish, she was never in the Warsaw Ghetto, she did not kill a German soldier, and there was not a pack of wolves. In a 2008 statement, she acknowledged that the story was fantasy and that she never fled her home in Brussels to find her parents. The book, Misha: A Memoire of the Holocaust Years, has been translated into 18 languages as well as being made into a French film called Survivre avec les Loups (“Surviving With Wolves”).

A Million Little Pieces

James Frey

James Frey acknowledged in 2006 that he had fabricated and embellished parts of his 2003 memoir, A Million Little Pieces, a story of personal redemption that sold about 3.5 million copies. His publisher, Doubleday, justified Frey's liberties, saying the memoir is a subjective genre. The controversy led to a discussion about the increasingly blurred line between fact and fiction and the public's acceptance of altered reality as truth. Oprah Winfrey chose the memoir as a selection in her book club and initially came to Frey's defense. She later withdrew her support for him, saying she “felt duped.”

Love and Consequences

Margaret B. Jones

In 2008, Riverhead Books published Love and Consequences by Margaret B. Jones—a memoir based on her childhood as a half white, half Native American foster child who grew up running drugs for the Bloods gang in South Los Angeles. In her highly praised memoir, Jones describes her African-American foster mother, who raised Margaret and four grandchildren, and a foster bother, who was shot and killed by the Crips outside their home. In reality, Margaret B. Jones is actually Margaret Seltzer, a white girl who was raised by biological parents in the San Fernando Valley and graduated from a private high school in North Hollywood. After seeing a photograph of Seltzer and her daughter in the New York Times, Seltzer's older sister, Cynthia Hoffman, reported that Love and Consequences was a fabricated story. Riverhead Books recalled all copies of Love and Consequences and canceled the author's book tour.

The Heart Is Deceitful Above All Things

JT Leroy

Writer JT Leroy was exposed as a fake during the winter. Leroy's critically acclaimed semi-autobiographical books, The Heart Is Deceitful Above All Things and Sarah, chronicled the life of a repeatedly abused West Virginia teenager who travels to San Francisco, becomes a prostitute and drug addict, and gets infected with HIV. Leroy's hardscrabble life and redemption as a writer attracted the attention and affection of celebrities. Laura Albert and Geoffrey Knoop, a couple from San Francisco, said they rescued the boy and encouraged him to write. Leroy's agent, however, confirmed in 2006 that the person who has claimed to be Leroy is actually Savannah Knoop, Geoffrey's half sister. Many people believe that Albert created the Leroy character and wrote the books and articles credited to Leroy.


Information Please® Database, © 2007 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved.

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