Behind the carefully orchestrated smiles that made the covers of magazines, Marilyn was a woman living in a storm. The silence of her own home was the most dangerous time, a void where the memories of foster homes and the stinging rejections of her past would creep back to haunt her. Chronic insomnia became her most intimate companion, dragging her through nights that stretched toward infinity, until the only escape from her own racing thoughts was the numbing release of prescription medication.
She began a desperate, cycle-driven search for doctors who could provide not just medicine, but validation—someone who could see past the blonde hair and the breathy voice to the woman who was drowning. Her life had become a series of jagged highs and terrifying lows, a roller-coaster existence where the heights of fame only served to make the inevitable crashes more devastating. She was, in every sense, a prisoner to the very celebrity that was supposed to have set her free.