This report is based upon the book In Contempt,
written by Christopher A. Darden with
Jess Walter. This book is published by Regan Books an
imprint of Harper Collins Publishers
and is
copyrighted 1996 by Christopher A. Darden.
Introduction of
the Author
The book In Contempt was written by Christopher
A. Darden. Chris Darden is famous for
being one of the prosecuting attorneys in the court case, The People vs.
Simpson. He has worked hard his whole
life to reach the status he has now achieved.
He proved to America that even though he wasn't a high-priced private
lawyer that he could present a well-thought out and planned case under
tremendous pressure he and the other prosecutors had to endure during the
Simpson case.
Summary
I found this book to be very well thought out
and well written. Most people would
assume that this book was written with the intentions of making a quick-buck
off the misfortune of Nicole Brown Simpson and Ronald Goldman. I, however, do not believe this to be
true. The way that he speaks of the
victims in the book, and the way he spoke of them before and after the trial
shows that he really cared about the lives of these people that he didn't even
know. He even went as far as to say in
the book that this was the first case that affected him personally and
emotionally. As one may expect the
majority of this book is taken up with the Simpson case but, chapters two
through six detail his life from birth, his childhood in a working class
district of Richmond, California, and becoming a district attorney of Los
Angeles in 1981. Chapters two and three
mostly consist of stories of him and his brother, Michael, stealing from local
stores or his brothers drug deals. When
Michael hit his mid-teens he started selling marijuana off the front porch of
the house and Chris was his lookout. In
return, he was told that he would be cut in on the action (but never was). No matter what, Michael always told Chris
never to use drugs. Throughout the book
Chris Darden refers to his brother as a good role model for him no matter what
he did.
I feel the purpose of Chris Darden writing this
book is to try to show the hardships he had to go through as a black man trying
to become a lawyer. Also I feel that he
is trying to reveal the truth behind what was happening in the Simpson case.
Body of the
Review
This book is funny and at other times the mood
is more serious. The few chapters in
the beginning were the funny ones. In these chapters he writes about his
childhood and works his way forward to when he starts to work in the District
Attorney's Office. Specifically he tells
about how he was caught stealing a Hostess Fruit pie at the corner store,
sneaking crackers from his house pantry, and being teased about having false
teeth as a child. As he writes and talks
about when he gets older the mood changes and gets more serious. He writes a lot about his brother who was a
big influence on him when he was young.
Darden retells stories of how he and his brother, Michael, would salvage
old, broken radios from the trash and repair them and then sit on Saturday
nights listening to the local R and B station.
His brother would always comment on how the Temptations were the best
band ever. Also, he tells of the time
when his brother was smoking a joint in their bedroom when their father came
bursting into the room. Thinking
quickly, Chris' brother swallowed the still lit joint. His father smelled the marijuana but never
found any evidence of the joint. As he
tells about his childhood, he remembers how his grandmother would ask him what
he wanted to be when he grew up and as far back as he could remember he would
say that he wanted to be a lawyer.
Christopher Darden grew up like a lot of black families of that time
period, poor. They did have enough money
to buy a $30,000 house and they always had a pantry full of food. Not many people from his neighborhood ever
made much of themselves but he always believed in himself and his grandmother
always believed that he could do anything that he put his mind to. She was the only person that believed he
could be a lawyer and always introduced him as a future lawyer. In high school Chris followed in his brother's
footsteps and joined the track team.
This would be his ticket to a scholarship at Berkeley University, and
the start to his law career. After
completing college, he applied for a job in the District Attorney's Office, and
surprisingly got the job at the Los Angeles District Attorney's Office in
1981. Through the years, he worked his
way up through the ranks of the D. A. s' Office ans became a very prominent
lawyer. He worked for 14 years before
the Simpson case was brought before him.
He never expected to work the case but sometimes strange things
happen. He worked hard to prove that
Simpson was guilty but justice was never found.
Out of the 20 murder cases that Darden had
worked, the Simpson case was the only one he lost. After he lost, he vowed never to work in law
again.
Conclusion
I didn't find this book particularly useful,
but it was a very good book to read and it gave me more insight as to what has
happened in Chris Darden's life and what he went through during the Simpson
case. When I got the book I approached
it like most students do when they have a book report to write. I didn't want to read the book but had to in
order to get a good grade. As I started
to read the first chapter, which was about the Simpson case I realized that the
book wasn't just the boring drivel you would expect from a lawyer. It was intelligently written and had amusing
stories from his childhood and fraternity days.
Although I didn't want to read it' it wasn't as bad as I had expected,
and I found it to be enjoyable and informative.
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