e by critics, one of whom called her "a fallen woman on the up and up". In an hour-long broadcast of her interview with Channel Four`s Jon Snow on Thursday night, Lewinsky said she had contemplated suicide when confronted by police and prosecutors over her relationship with President Bill Clinton. Her bravura performance - flashing white teeth, sombre black dress, gulps and sighs of emotion - was "television at its most shamefully prurient and compulsively watchable", the Daily Telegraph said. "She has been badly treated by Clinton, badly treated by the American system, and if she can make a pile of cash out of it, good luck to her," concluded television critic Charles Spencer, lauding the "pure televisual Viagra" of the "president`s Barbie girl lost in the real world". It described the White House intern whose relationship with Clinton almost toppled the most powerful man on earth as "a fallen woman on the up and up". British shoppers on Friday snapped up copies of "Monica`s Story" by Andrew Morton, biographer of Princess Diana. Tabloids were predicting that Britain will be hit by "Monica Mania" when she arrives in London on Monday for a publicity blitz at bookshops over the next three weeks.