An Assassin's Diary

An Assassin's Diary (ISBN 0-06-120470-6) is a book written by Arthur Bremer and Harding Lemay. It was released in 1973 which was based on part of the diary of Bremer, the would-be assassin of Alabama Governor George Wallace. Bremer shot Wallace at the Laurel Shopping Center in Laurel, Maryland, while Wallace was making his third campaign for President on May 15, 1972.

An Assassin's Diary
First edition
AuthorsArthur Bremer and Harding Lemay
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
SubjectUnited States, Assassins
Published1973 (Harper's Magazine Press)
Media typePrint
ISBN0-06-120470-6
OCLC590731
976.1060924
LC ClassE840.8.B73

In the book, Bremer says that he was not particularly opposed to Wallace's political agenda, which many had branded as white supremacist, but his primary motive was to become famous, and that he had also stalked President Richard Nixon.

Paul Schrader was partly inspired by Bremer's diary when he wrote the screenplay for the 1976 film Taxi Driver, directed by Martin Scorsese. Peter Gabriel's 1980 song "Family Snapshot," from Peter Gabriel (III) was inspired by An Assassin's Diary.[1]

Reviews

In the essay "The Art and Arts of E. Howard Hunt", Gore Vidal assesses Bremer's writing style and notes the apparent contradiction between Bremer's lucid prose and his characterization as a person with a mediocre intellect.[2]

gollark: For legal reasons.
gollark: Calls are nontransitive.
gollark: Do ++tel status?
gollark: Oh no.
gollark: Yes, hi again, o wearer of monocles.

References

  1. Music Review: Peter Gabriel – Melt (1980)
  2. Vidal, Gore (December 19, 1973). "The Art and Arts of E. Howard Hunt" (PDF). The New York Review. New York. Retrieved May 9, 2015.
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