
Marilyn's ambition was to write a book on how she made it in and out of fame alive. In the end, this information was used against her character, depicting her as a good candidate for suicide, which was a far cry from what really happened.

Marilyn also sought treatment with psychiatry, and had difficulties with the many drugs they prescribed. Growing up with a manic-depressive mother and sharing this illness herself, Marilyn sought solace with her friend, Judy Garland, who understood the relentless pressures of the Hollywood studio system.

Sam Giancana was part of her fascination with the mob underworld, and she talks about her affair with him, what it was like to be 'the girl of a gangster,' and his knowledge of the danger she was in at the end of her life and what he and Frank Sinatra tried to do about it. She also discloses her relationship with Bobby Kennedy and the role he played in her death. Kennedy and how he lived to see a prediction a New York psychic had forecasted, that their lives were in danger. She discusses her friendship with John F. In telling her story, Marilyn's greatest wish was for her beloved Joe DiMaggio to know how she truly felt about him, and to be freed of the horrendous guilt he'd lived with every day since her passing. Kennedy, Bobby Kennedy, Frank Sinatra and Sam Giancana.

She also reveals the true nature of her relationships with Joe DiMaggio, John F. A resounding truth echoes in this story as Marilyn Monroe describes the fight for her life while she watched the cover-up from her still-conscious soul.
