In 1994, Nelson's book ''
Defending the Devil: My Story as Ted Bundy's Last Lawyer'' was published by
William Morrow & Company. In addition to a detailed description of the appeals, motions, and other legal maneuvers that were employed in the attempt to save her client from the electric chair, Nelson describes her own intellectual and emotional development during that three-year period. There is also a summary of the efforts made by Bundy and various psychiatrists to explain why he did what he did. Nelson's account later received harsh criticism from Michael Mello, the CCR attorney who originally sought outside help in filing Bundy's appeals, who wrote that "sending Bundy's case from CCR was one of the worst decisions I've made as a deathworker". In 1995, Nelson filed suit in the
U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia against novelist
John Grisham and his publisher
Doubleday for copyright infringement. She alleged that Grisham's book
The Chamber "blatantly appropriated central themes, plot twists, characters and descriptive details" from
Defending the Devil. In 1996, Judge
Royce Lamberth dismissed the suit, calling the charges "meritless". A year later, the
U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit unanimously dismissed Nelson's appeal, noting that it "does not warrant an opinion". Nelson was ordered to pay attorneys' fees for both parties. ==References==