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Willie Nelson: An Epic Life
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Author
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Joe Nick Patoski.
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Publisher
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Back Bay
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Format
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paperback
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Product Dimensions
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8.25
x
5.5
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1.5
inches
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ISBN
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9780316017794
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Pages/Publication Date
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567/2008
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Daedalus Item Code
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20036
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This item is not available.
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Description
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A contributing editor for Texas Monthly and the biographer of Stevie Ray Vaughn, Joe Nick Patoski has been following and writing about Willie Nelson's career for 35 years. Here he presents an anecdotal, compulsively readable story of Nelson's life, from his humble beginnings in Waco, Texas, (where he was raised by his grandparents, learned to play the guitar at age six, and wrote his first song at seven) through his rise as a genre-bending music legend and even a Hollywood darling—much of that time spent on the road, his true home. "Excellent.... [The book] seamlessly weaves together the good, the bad and the ugly to form a three-dimensional portrait of the singer.... For Nelson, his hit 1980 single 'On the Road Again' isn't just a silly song he wrote for the movie Honeysuckle Rose—it's literally the story of his life. And Patoski has fleshed it out beautifully."—Rolling Stone "For a guy who isn't me, Joe Nick Patoski can really write. Willie Nelson: An Epic Life is heartbreaking enough to have been ghostwritten by Hank Williams. It may be the best book ever written about the life of Texas's greatest gift to the world."—Kinky Friedman "This impressive, entertaining chronicle of Willie Nelson's life is replete with exactly what you'd expect—honky-tonk, long nights on the open road, whiskey, womanizing and weed—but Texas writer [Joe Nick] Patoski looks beyond country music trappings to find the funny, talented, determined man who became an unlikely icon. Raised in Abbott, Texas, by impoverished grandparents, Nelson was writing songs about 'love, betrayal and cheating' by the age of seven, but was told throughout his life that he couldn't sing, play or keep a beat. As an adult, Nelson worked odd jobs-encyclopedia salesman among them-while selling songs in Nashville; he had an early hit in 1961 with Patsy Cline's 'Crazy,' and soon began recording for RCA. Fourteen albums later, 'with not much to show,' Nelson fled to Austin, Texas, a move many viewed as career suicide; instead, it was a launching pad to stardom, propelled by the up-and-coming hippie movement and the strength of his groundbreaking album Red Headed Stranger. Patoski conducted over a hundred interviews for this thorough, well-noted 'epic,' peopling it with 'pickers, gypsies, pirates, vagabonds, wanderers and carneys,' including fellow performers like Kris Kristofferson, Kinky Friedman and Leona Williams. Writing with an affectionate country twang, Patoski gives his subject the consideration he deserves in a fine, fluid piece of storytelling."—Publishers Weekly (starred review)
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| Publisher: Center Street/QPB. Format: paperback. ISBN: 9781607518846. Daedalus Item Code: 11549 |
| Sale Price: $4.98
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