
She moved on, back in 1998, to the topic of age: "I turn 50 October 22nd. He was more supportive than competitive and so enthusiastic that it was fun to go to class with him and anyone like him." "I think he was funnier in high school than on TV although some of what I saw on SNL of him was excellent….we took drama together for 18 months or 2 years and we had fun. "I have somewhere my junior high school yearbooks with Phil's writings and a little cartoon surfer he drew," she wrote.

Lynette said she had read reports of the murder-suicide in the National Enquirer and The Star, and did not believe the level of detail they provided. She wrote, "I wonder if he had any notion that such was possible or did he not believe her – or did she not say." Hartman had been murdered, shot to death by his wife who then killed herself. I had asked her about the murder of comedian Phil Hartman because, I knew from reading her biography, that the former Saturday Night Live comic and Lynette went to the same high school and were close friends (yes, truth is stranger than fiction). Can we decide not to? I don't know if life can go on without the animal competition for territory, food, sex." In September, 1998, came her longest missive and somewhere in the middle, she wrote: "I miss real life….I suppose that I could see myself here specifically for the purpose of understanding people, but I'd hate to think I'd have to give myself over to people as entirely as Manson has and does because they – we? – humanity – will do what humanity has always done – until it decides not to. "synopsis" may belong to another edition of this title.Her next two letters were handwritten.
This book also contains previously unpublished material from Charles Manson, Sandra Good, Mary, Cappy, Brenda, Ruth, Gypsy, Clem, and Katie. From Venice Beach, to the redwoods around Mendocino, to San Francisco s Haight-Ashbury, to Topanga Canyon and the Spiral Staircase and Condemned Houses, to Dennis Wilson s Sunset Drive mansion, to Spahn s Movie Ranch in Chatsworth, and finally to the Myers and Barker Ranches in Goler Wash in the Mojave Desert everything is here in Fromme's reflexion on her extensive travels and experiences with Manson and the like people around them who were "preparing to survive either a revolution, or the static institutions that were systematically trading all of our vital necessities for money."

In nearly 500 pages Fromme vividly chronicles her life with Charles Manson from the time she met him in May of 1967 to the final arrest of the so-called Manson Family in Death Valley in October of 1969. The Peasenhall Press proudly announces the publication of Reflexion, by Lynette Fromme.
