I have read so many books about Hollywood I feel I'm beginning to become a bit of an expert myself. This book came out in 2004. I don't know how I missed it!Although I knew of many of the stories told here, there is a wealth of new facts in "The Fixers' where the complete story is investigated and, in many cases, finally solved. Although I thought it started out a bit slow as Mr. Fleming laid the foundation of the Fixers, it almost immediately perked up and grabbed my attention once we got into the types of things Mannix and Strickland had to deal with during their long careers at MGM Studios. At this point I couldn't put it down. What has been passed off in other books as mere gossip, in this book they are turned into fully-realized morality tales and a testament to the enormous pressures studios were under to keep their stars' reputation pristine.Mannix was recently immortalized in the film "Hail Caesar," played by Josh Brolin, a humorous attempt to show the things he was called upon to clean up. The characters are all familiar from other books, but not in the way they are written here. You really feel you get the whole story in "The Fixers."Some reviewers have faulted it for what they see as focusing too much on the "closeted" actors, but there were stories from both sides of the fence, one more deliciously tawdry than the next. The story of Nelson Eddie and Jeanette MacDonald was hysterical. I didn't know much about them but the whole thing reads like a Greek Tragedy in Beverly Hills.Great read. Five Stars!