The Howard Hughes literary hoax
In 1971, US publishers were rocked by one of the biggest hoaxes in literary history – a fake autobiography of the reclusive billionaire Howard Hughes by conman Clifford Irving.
In 1971, the publishing world was rocked by one of the biggest hoaxes in literary history – a fake autobiography of the reclusive billionaire Howard Hughes.
Hughes was an aerospace engineer, film producer, record-breaking aviator and business tycoon, who’d built a $2 billion fortune to become one of the richest people in the world.
But for years he’d been living as a recluse, reportedly so terrified of catching a disease that he had almost no contact with the outside world.
That's why the publishers, McGraw Hill, were delighted when Clifford Irving, an American author, persuaded the billionaire talk. They paid him a $750,000 advance.
But Irving had faked the entire manuscript, and after his scam was discovered, he was sentenced to jail. Jane Wilkinson has been through the ÃÛÑ¿´«Ã½ archives to find out how it happened.
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(Photo: Howard Hughes, 1947. Credit: Bettmann/Getty Images)
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