LOS ANGELES, Nov. 16, 2006

Judith Regan, Back In The Spotlight

Outrage Over OJ Book Is Hardly Her First Brush With Notoriety

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    • Outrage is old news for Judith Regan, who has been labeled the “enfant terrible of American publishing. Photo

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      O.J. Simpson will discuss how he would have killed his ex-wife and her friend if he had committed the crime in a two-part television interview that will air Nov. 27 and Nov. 29, 2006.  (GETTY)

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(AP)  At a recent lunch on Park Avenue, O.J. Simpson publisher Judith Regan rose and offered a toast to novelist Jess Walter, a finalist for the National Book Awards. Regan spoke of her friendship with the 41-year-old author, dating back to a phone conversation a decade ago when Walter, she joked, still had "not reached puberty."

Only half-true, responded Walter. If he had yet to come of age before knowing Regan, their first chat made him into a man.

Regan has been on the receiving end of a torrent of criticism for interviewing Simpson for a Fox Broadcasting program and publishing a book in which the former football star and celebrity endorser says how he would have killed his ex-wife and a waiter - if he did it - which he's denied.

Controversy is nothing new for Regan, one of the most well-known publishers in the U.S.

"She's just a total publisher, very aggressive about signing authors and then promoting them. And she has the best Rolodex in the business,” says Laurence J. Kirshbaum, a literary agent and the former head of Warner Books.

"I'm not saying she's not a terrific publisher. She is, but she's slimy,” says Otto Penzler, who publishes his own crime books imprint for Harcourt.

Regan was not immediately available for comment, but she did talk briefly on Wednesday to The Associated Press about the Simpson book, “If I Did It,” saying, “This is an historic case, and I consider this his confession.” The book has been climbing steadily, but not rapidly, on the best-seller list of Amazon.com, reaching No. 30 as of Thursday night.

Outrage is old news for Regan. The latest Simpson go-around not only brings back memories of a shocking celebrity trial, but adds yet another installment to the ongoing serial of the book world's most shocking publisher.

Labeled a “foul-mouthed tyrant” and the “enfant terrible of American publishing,” Regan has long stood out in an industry that still values — or attempts to value — propriety over profit. Ridiculed for her taste, envied for her success, she's a scrapper and a survivor whose life would make a most fascinating movie, if only Joan Crawford were alive to star in it.

Born in 1953, Regan is an alumna of Bay Shore High School on New York's Long Island who went to Vassar College, resented her wealthier classmates and, after graduating, became rich on her own. She began her publishing career as a reporter for the National Enquirer. In the 1980s, she showed her tabloid touch at Simon & Schuster by backing celebrity hits by Drew Barrymore among others. Her decision to publish Howard Stern, she says, brought accusations of bad taste, death threats, and, of course, plenty of sales.

“What she does very well is connect a personality with an audience, someone with a fan base whom she can deliver a book to,” says Simon & Schuster CEO Jack Romanos.

Over the past decade, running the ReganBooks imprint at HarperCollins, she has proved a moneymaking fit with the Murdoch empire, consistently on best-seller lists with such smashes as Jose Canseco's “Juiced” and Jenna Jameson's “How to Make Love Like a Porn Star.” She has also been a name in the gossip columns through numerous travails, including a prolonged divorce trial and her reported affair with former New York City police commissioner Bernard Kerik.

She is the rare publisher to put her own face — and not a whole lot of clothing — on the cover of one of her catalogs. She is enough of a character that one former Regan employee, Bridie Clark, has fictionalized her experiences in the upcoming novel “Because She Can,” which features a maniacal publisher with her own imprint at a major publishing house.

Regan often points out that she doesn't only publish pulp, with Wally Lamb and Douglas Coupland among her authors. Walter is an Edgar Award-winning crime writer whose latest novel, “The Zero,” was the first Regan book to gain a National Book Award nomination and the rare Sept. 11 story to receive literary approval.

“My experience has been great,” Walter says. “They've published all of my books, and my editor, Cal Morgan, is a great, old-fashioned editor. I don't think a house's other books really affect an author. Certainly, readers don't know the difference.”

But just as this week brought together the high and the low of the Regan experience, with news of the Simpson project coming out on the eve of the National Book Awards ceremony, so Walter's career leads back to a few folks from the wild side, like Kerik — and Simpson.

Research for “The Zero,” a densely narrated tale of city police after a terrorist attack, was based on firsthand observations of Kerik, with whom Walter spent time at ground zero. Walter also collaborated with Christopher Darden on “In Contempt,” in which the Simpson prosecutor tells his side, the losing side, of the murder trial.

Some passages from “In Contempt” might seem familiar: Darden addresses Simpson directly, finds him guilty as charged and imagines how he committed the crime.

©MMVI, The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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Add a Comment
by drew30319-2009 November 17, 2006 12:50 AM PST
All we can do is not watch the show and not buy the book. Send a message that a killer shouldn't be allowed to profit from his crimes.

He's never paid a dime on the civil suit he lost for being found guilty of murdering Ronald Goldman. And now he's pimping his crime to us. Flaunting his guilt.

I expect as much from a killer but shame on Fox. Shame on Regan. And shame on anybody that contributes to this travesty.

Drew Crecente, Director
Jennifer Ann's Group
http://www.JenniferAnn.org
Reply to this comment
by juliehg-2009 November 17, 2006 1:31 AM PST
Why would anyone think this is newsworthy? Putting it in print or on the air is nothing more than free advertising. If it were ignored, there would be no controversy and a huge message would be sent to Fox News, Judith Regan, and O.J. Simpson.

Sometimes less is more...
Reply to this comment
by jhindson1 November 17, 2006 1:46 AM PST
DO NOT WATCH THE SHOW AND DO NOT BUY THE BOOK

Best way to stop this total disgrace, is to boycott both
Reply to this comment
by blueanthony November 17, 2006 2:13 AM PST
Ok, so OJ is psycho, we all knew that. The one who disgusts me is Judith Regan, who is empowering and enriching him. For anyone concerned: There's a groundswell of us who are planning to hit Harper Collins where it hurts:

(1) We will not only boycott OJ's book, but if we see it displayed in any bookstore, we will inform the manager directly that we will buying all our books online this Christmas season.

(2) We will be encouraging bloggers and hackers to post a synopsis of the book's content on the net somewhere and spread the word. That way if anyone can't help themselves, they can find out what the book says without having to buy it. (The best way to ruin a movie is to spread the word about how it ends). LET'S NOT LINE JUDITH REGAN'S POCKETS

(3) Continue emailing Harper Collins and Fox.
feedback2@harpercollins.com

JOIN THE OUTRAGE!
Reply to this comment
by blueanthony November 17, 2006 2:16 AM PST
Sorry didn't mean to post so many times!
Reply to this comment
by tkenny2 November 17, 2006 10:49 AM PST
What did O.J. say when they found "HIS" bloody glove behind "HIS" house?

WE GOT A PROBLEM....

What a freaking LOOSER!!!!!!!!!!!
Reply to this comment
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