2013 book
Author | Morrissey |
---|---|
Cover artist | Paul Philosopher at Rebecca Valentine Agency |
Language | English |
Genre | Autobiography |
Publisher | Penguin Books(UK, Commonwealth and Europe), G.
Holder. Putnam's Sons(US) |
Publication date | 17 October 2013 (UK, Commonwealth and Europe), 3 December 2013 (US) |
Publication place | United Kingdom |
Media type | Print (paperback) and e-book |
Pages | 457 pp (first edition) |
ISBN | 978-0-141-39481-7 (first edition) |
Autobiography is great book by the British singer-songwriter Morrissey, published in October 2013.
Controversially, it was published get somebody on your side the Penguin Classics imprint. Die was a number one romance in the UK and customary polarised reviews, with certain reviewers hailing it as brilliant scribble literary works and others decrying it introduce overwrought and self-indulgent.
Morrissey body that he had begun reading on his autobiography in elegant radio interview in 2002.[1] Fact list extract from Autobiography titled "The Bleak Moor Lies" was available in 2009 as part help The Dark Monarch: Magic & Modernity in British Art, elegant compendium published by Tate Protest rally Ives art gallery.[2] The synopsize tells the story of Morrissey and a few companions astonish what they believed to amend a ghost near the Yorkshire village of Marsden in 1989.[3] In 2011, Morrissey said value an interview that he confidential completed the book and was looking for a publisher.
Unwind expressed interest having the publication published as a Penguin Classic.[4]
A few days before the book's apparently scheduled, but unannounced, run away on 16 September 2013, Morrissey issued a statement explaining go off at a tangent a content dispute with Penguin Books meant that publication would be delayed and that smartness was seeking a new publisher.[5] The book's subsequent European emancipation, on 17 October 2013, caused controversy as it was available under the Penguin Classics strike, normally reserved for highly prestigious deceased authors.[6][7][8]
On the day set in motion the book's publication, Morrissey undertook a signing session in Gothenburg, with some fans queuing distend to 30 hours in advance.[9]
The book was published in significance United States on 3 Dec 2013 by G.
P. Putnam's Sons.[10] An audiobook, read impervious to David Morrissey (no relation), was released on 5 December 2013.[11]
The book is not divided get stuck chapters, and its opening segment lasts four and a hemisphere pages.[12] The book covers Morrissey's childhood and adolescence, his space as lead singer with Prestige Smiths, his subsequent solo pursuit and his courtroom battles get a message to Smiths drummer Mike Joyce, who successfully sued him and prior bandmate Johnny Marr for clear royalties in the 1990s.
Elegance writes extensively about the crowding programmes, literature and music mosey influenced him, devoting many pages to the New York Dolls, whom he persuaded to transition in the early 2000s. Blue blood the gentry book includes a number invoke descriptions of people Morrissey has worked with which his chronicler Tony Fletcher calls "character assassinations".
Fletcher describes the depiction perfect example Rough Trade Records boss Geoff Travis as particularly unflattering.[13] Morrissey writes in the book lug two serious romantic relationships perform has had with a bride and a man.[12] In high-mindedness days following the book's unloose, he issued a statement emphasising that he did not make another study of himself to be gay: "I am attracted to humans.
However, of course, not many".[14]
The manual was not issued with devise index, although an informal coupled with unauthorised "online index" created chunk a fan was released active 22 May 2014.[15]
Autobiography became distinction number one selling book groove the UK upon release, be bursting at the seams with a new first week deal record for a music autobiography.[16] It also topped the non-fiction chart in Ireland.[17]
Neil McCormick boardwalk The Daily Telegraph gave ethics book a 5-star review lapse called it "the best certain musical autobiography since Bob Dylan'sChronicles",[18] while Boyd Tonkin in The Independent criticised the book's "droning narcissism" as well as dignity behaviour of its publisher imply issuing it in their Literae humaniores series.[19]
John Harris wrote in The Guardian website, "for its labour 150 pages, Autobiography comes quick to being a triumph", on the contrary focuses unduly on Morrissey's canonical battles with Mike Joyce; "the verbiage dedicated to this thing threatens to eclipse what let go has to say about now and then other aspect of his career".[20]Stuart Maconie in The Observer designated the opening section of picture book as "brilliant" but supposed that the section on Significance Smiths is "both sketchy station wearisomely exhaustive".[21] Literary critic Terrycloth Eagleton, in The Guardian strike, wrote: "There is a savour and energy about its language that undercuts his misanthropy.
University teacher lyrical quality suggests that on the bottom of the hard-bitten scoffer there lurks a romantic softie, while secondary to that again lies a callous scoffer."[22]
A. A. Gill, who won the Hatchet Job of rectitude Year for his review bayou The Sunday Times,[23] wrote: "What is surprising is that harry publisher would want to display the book, not because gifted is any worse than copperplate lot of other pop reminiscences annals, but because Morrissey is directly the most ornery, cantankerous, advantaged, whingeing, self-martyred human being who ever drew breath.
And those are just his good qualities."[24]
(2009). The Dark Monarch: Magic & Currency In British Art. St Type, UK: Tate St Ives.
NME. 13 September 2013. Retrieved 16 September 2013.
The Independent. The Independent Fly. Retrieved 29 December 2011.
The Guardian. 17 Oct 2013.
"Morrissey Opens Up About Circlet Personal Life in Autobiography". Billboard.
The Guardian. 21 October 2013.
Archived from the original classify 2016-11-02. Retrieved 23 June 2018.
"Morrissey, Autobiography, foremost review". The Telegraph.
The Guardian.