

Ignoring Malcolm X's wishes to publish his travel diary as a separate book, someone spliced important segments of it into "The Autobiography of Malcolm X."ĭespite assertions to the contrary, letters between Haley and the editors clearly reveal that they kept drafting and editing the book after Malcolm X's assassination. Afraid of being sued for libel, they dispatched drafted chapters to lawyers at a prestigious firm, whose attorneys persuaded Haley to scrub dozens of passages that they deemed too inflammatory. They spurred Haley to eliminate African American Vernacular English.

Researching copious primary documents in five archival sites, I discovered, to the contrary, that the book's editors intervened significantly to shape the text.

Although Malcolm X's friends, his family memers, reporters and biographers all question the accuracy of "The Autobiography of Malcolm X," they all claim or assume that Malcolm X wrote it (allongside his collaborator Alex Haley).
