Author
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Topic: Good News! 1995 Information about Linda
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Mele Newflake Posts: 0 From: Hot Springs, AR Registered: Sep 2009
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posted May 01, 2002 02:00 PM
I thought I had lost it, but found it when cleaning out my shed the other day. What a surprise!! Here it is! by People’s Magazine 11/27/95 LOST IN THE STARS Linda Goodman lived guided by astrology and haunted by death For millions of Americans the Age of Aquarius arrived with Linda Goodman. Armed with heavenly charts and a down-to-earth writing style, the popular astrologer brought the ancient beliefs that the stars could forecast the future out of the realm of exotica and onto the bestseller lists. Her 1968 book Sun Signs sold more than 5 million copies and spawned the top-selling sequels Love Signs and Star Signs. Celebrities including Steve McQueen, Princess Grace and Sonny and Cher sought her counsel. “She got astrology on the map,” says friend Rob Dorgan. Adds Goodman’s daughter Jill, 38: “She paved the way to New Age thinking.” But while Goodman, who died Oct. 21 at age 70 of complications from diabetes, helped others find their answers in the stars, she seemed woefully unable to come to terms with the mysteries of her own life. The 1973 suicide of her 21-year-old daughter Sally haunted Goodman for decades. One of five children (three of whom died in infancy) born to Goodman and the first of her two husbands, writer William Snyder, Sally was an aspiring actress when she overdosed on Demerol in her New York City apartment. Linda’s second husband, Sam Goodman, a radio announcer, identified his stepdaughter and had her body cremated. But despite her husband’s testimony, a previous suicide attempt by Sally and a rambling note at the scene, Goodman refused to believe her daughter was dead. A week after the cremation, Goodman, who had moved to the remote mining town of Cripple Creek, Colo., in 1970 to write, flew to New York to search for her “missing” child. She argued that autopsy photos showed the dead woman’s skin - brown from days of decaying in a warm apartment - was darker than Sally’s and that Sally’s astrological charts indicated she was alive. While there, Goodman spent 10 days sleeping outside St. Patrick’s Cathedral in Manhattan to call attention to what she believed was an official cover-up of her daughter’s fate. “She couldn’t’ let it go,” says friend Bob Slate. “She contacted the FBI and the CIA. At one point she told me the government was behind the whole thing.” When Goodman’s fortunes increased - the paperback rights for her second book, Love Signs, were sold for a then-record $2.25 million in 1978 - she spent more than $400,000 on private detectives to keep up the search. Investigator Anthony Pellicano (who later would work for Michael Jackson) concluded that Sally had committed suicide shortly after talking to her mother on the phone, but Goodman rejected his findings. “She was a wonderful woman,” Pellicano says, “but she obviously had serious guilt problems about the death of her daughter.” Long before Sally’s suicide, Goodman had been obsessively single-minded in her pursuits. Born Mary Alice Kemery in Parkersburg where she also married her first husband, Synder. Later she took a job as a radio announcer in Pittsburgh, where she adopted the name Linda and met second husband, Goodman. (They married in 1955.) Although her family says Goodman always had a very spiritual side, her interest in astrology didn’t blossom until she moved to New York City in 1963. there she sometimes spent 20 hours a day in a nightgown doing charts and poring over a coffee-table book on astrology as she wrote Sun Signs. “She was very determined,” says Jill, an artist and one of two children (son Michael, 35, is an aspiring writer) from the Goodman marriage (Sam died in 1983). Goodman’s intensity and generosity drew friends to her: She frequently thanked acquaintances for favors with gifts of cars or expensive jewelry, a habit that led her into bankruptcy in the late 1980’s. But they were often driven away by her demands and her temper - a reaction Goodman never seemed to understand. Years after lover Robert Brewer, a 26-year-old marine biologist, left her in 1972, Goodman continued to set a place for him at her dinner table in expectation of his return. In time, not only did Goodman stop believing in death (she eventually claimed that Marilyn Monroe, Howard Hughes and Elvis Presley were all still alive but in hiding), but “age was an illusion to her,” says son Michael. When diagnosed with diabetes in the mid-1980s, Goodman, who distrusted traditional medicine, sometimes refused treatment and later had to have first a toe, then part of her leg amputated. Afterward, she became a virtual recluse in her Cripple Creek home, “She wanted to suffer alone,” says longtime friend Terry Moore, the actress and widow of Hughes. Even then, Goodman continued to look to the stars. Linda Goodman’s Love Signs Relationship Report, a personalized analysis of couples’ astrological compatibility, which she finished before her death, will soon hit the Internet. “Linda really did believe in love,” says Dorgan, “and she lived her life for it.” “My mom just wanted to write and make people happy,” says Michael (at Goodman’s memorial). Goodman “would never accept the death of anyone,” says friend Terry Moore. IP: Logged |
Caileah unregistered
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posted May 01, 2002 02:42 PM
Mele~ wOw .. thank you for posting that ------------------ . * + . + * . Caileah . * + . + * . The Knowflake formerly known as Princess IP: Logged |
Enrique unregistered
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posted May 01, 2002 04:29 PM
Thanks Mele...
+BE+ IP: Logged |
YIVY unregistered
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posted May 02, 2002 12:41 AM
Mele...thanks so much for sharing that. I found it utterly fascinating.And wasn't Terry Moore's statement at the end interesting. And she was a part of the Howard Hughes group. ------------------
@~>~~ YIVY "Witchy Woman" IP: Logged |
adwen unregistered
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posted May 02, 2002 01:33 AM
Mele, Thanks so much! Linda had such a big heart. She was generous to a fault, just like Billie Holliday (who was also an Aries). I wonder sometimes, what did really happen to Sally? Mabye someone (YIVY could lexigram her name or a phrase with her name and uncover some secrets. AdwenIP: Logged |
Randall Webmaster Posts: 83078 From: From a galaxy, far, far away... Registered: Apr 2009
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posted May 02, 2002 08:48 AM
------------------ "It is never too late to become what you might have been." George Eliot IP: Logged |
Soma Newflake Posts: 0 From: Usa Registered: Mar 2012
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posted May 02, 2002 12:35 PM
It's amazing that someone who was in so much pain could give so much love.....but thats just what happens sometimes. Its all about love thats why we are here........ ~Soma~ ------------------ ~Life if Beautiful~ IP: Logged |
Georgia unregistered
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posted May 02, 2002 03:19 PM
Mele ; I cannot find the words to express my gratitude to you for the posting of the article about dear Linda . That happened during the years my husband was so desperatly and terminally ill --'A time in space". Then one day recently I overheard someone in the book store talking about her crossing over. I could not find out anything else and the grief I have been experiencing is just overwhelming .I am deeply grateful to you for posting the article. May the Lord pour Blessings upon you. Georgia IP: Logged |
gooberlily unregistered
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posted May 02, 2002 11:17 PM
Thank you so much Mele for typing that up for us. You are an angel I've never seen any articles about Linda from a magazine before, that I can recall.Welcome Georgia, in case I haven't welcomed you yet! IP: Logged |
seraph unregistered
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posted May 03, 2002 03:56 AM
heya! sorry i have been away for so long but you just get stuck in a rut, thanks mele that was fantastic! IP: Logged |
Randall Webmaster Posts: 83078 From: From a galaxy, far, far away... Registered: Apr 2009
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posted May 04, 2002 08:22 AM
I just found out more Linda info. Check out the new thread I am about to post in this Forum. ------------------ "It is never too late to become what you might have been." George Eliot IP: Logged |
Randall Webmaster Posts: 83078 From: From a galaxy, far, far away... Registered: Apr 2009
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posted May 12, 2002 06:18 AM
While this article was illuminating in many ways (like showing Linda's quick temper), I do not like the way it portrayed Linda's feelings about Sally's disappearance. It left out many facts concerning the spider line scar, Time Twins, and the CIA connection. ------------------ "It is never too late to become what you might have been." George Eliot IP: Logged |
Pegesus unregistered
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posted May 13, 2002 02:45 PM
Yes, Randal, I agree with you. While I want any little crumb of info I can get on Linda, I did not like the "tone" of the article.But really... What do you expect.... Oh, I almost forget... Thanks to Linda we can Expect a Miracle!!! I hope that the "Miracle" is that one day soon all the info about Sally comes to light and that Linda will be "validated" by all those who brushed her feelings aside. IP: Logged |
Randall Webmaster Posts: 83078 From: From a galaxy, far, far away... Registered: Apr 2009
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posted May 13, 2002 06:33 PM
------------------ "It is never too late to become what you might have been." George Eliot IP: Logged |
Randall Webmaster Posts: 83078 From: From a galaxy, far, far away... Registered: Apr 2009
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posted May 14, 2002 08:35 AM
I get the feeling Linda no longer cares about being validated. Whether in this Life or the hereafter, I feel Linda and Sally are back together again. ------------------ "It is never too late to become what you might have been." George Eliot IP: Logged |
trillian Knowflake Posts: 53 From: Registered: Apr 2009
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posted June 21, 2004 03:50 PM
To the top, for those who are interested. It's a fascinating article.IP: Logged |
Yang unregistered
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posted June 22, 2004 06:51 PM
Interesting piece of article
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26taurus unregistered
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posted June 24, 2004 04:31 PM
Yes, interesting.IP: Logged |
Special unregistered
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posted June 25, 2004 12:28 PM
An eye opener ------------------ "In the province of the mind, what one believes to be true either is true or becomes true." John Lilly IP: Logged |
paras unregistered
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posted June 25, 2004 03:57 PM
Thank you, Mele. I was glad to read this.And it made me feel sad all over inside, for poor Linda -- what a life she lived. IP: Logged |
vinita unregistered
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posted October 02, 2004 02:29 PM
even after all that happened to shatter her belief and love life she always signed... love and magic linda goodman. two things she loved her life for i like the titile of the article also.... sorta haunting long live linda... i love you...IP: Logged |
aqua Newflake Posts: 0 From: Registered: Oct 2009
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posted October 10, 2004 03:57 PM
now i know why cleaning is so good!IP: Logged |
angel_of_hope unregistered
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posted June 29, 2005 06:01 PM
bump, bump, bump! For all the new knowflakes who havent read this ... Randall, which was the thread you spoke of concerning "New Linda Info" ... lol, if ya can remember! ang- IP: Logged |
sugarlightning unregistered
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posted July 03, 2005 11:11 AM
A good read!! One question though, did Robert Brewer ever return?IP: Logged |
Randall Webmaster Posts: 83078 From: From a galaxy, far, far away... Registered: Apr 2009
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posted July 03, 2005 01:13 PM
No. Linda's belief in Love and the ceaseless pining away for him is what contributed to her unhappiness. ------------------ "There is no use trying," said Alice; "one can't believe impossible things." "I dare say you haven't had much practice," said the Queen. "When I was your age, I always did it for half an hour a day. Why, sometimes I've believed as many as six impossible things before breakfast." Lewis Carroll IP: Logged | |