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- 336 páginas
- 12 horas de lectura
A songwriting memoir from bestselling author and folk-rock icon, Frank Turner
Frank M. Turner fue un distinguido historiador intelectual que forjó toda su carrera en Yale, dejando una marca distintiva como erudito, profesor y mentor. Su trabajo profundizó en la profunda evolución de las ideas a lo largo de la historia, enriqueciendo la academia y a sus estudiantes con nuevas perspectivas. El legado de Turner reside en su dedicación a la educación y la exploración del pasado.





A songwriting memoir from bestselling author and folk-rock icon, Frank Turner
The Personal Testimony of America's First Evangelical Anchorman
The narrative unfolds Frank Turner's harrowing experiences of abandonment, sexual abuse, and drug addiction, detailing his battle through three near-fatal cocaine overdoses. His journey not only highlights personal recovery but also offers intriguing perspectives on his ties to the Nation of Islam, particularly his relationship with Louis Farrakhan as a former son-in-law. This personal account serves as both a testament to resilience and a candid exploration of the complexities of his life.
Turner's lectures "distilled modern European history from the Enlightenment to the dawn of twentieth century and conveyed the turbulence of a rapidly changing era in European history through its ideas and leading figures."--Jacket.
*The Sunday Times Bestseller* *Featuring an exclusive new chapter* On 23 September, 2005, at the Joiners Arms in Southampton, Frank Turner played his last gig with his hardcore band, Million Dead. On the laminates that listed the tour dates, the entry for 24 September simply read: 'Get a job.' Deflated, jaded and hungover, Frank returned to his hometown of Winchester without a plan for the future. All he knew was that he wanted to keep playing music. Cut to 13 April 2012, over a thousand shows later (show 1,216 to be precise), and he was headlining a sold-out gig at Wembley Arena with his band The Sleeping Souls. Told through his tour reminiscences, this is the blisteringly honest story of Frank's career from drug-fuelled house parties and the grimy club scene to filling out arenas, fans roaring every word back at him. But more than that, it is an intimate account of what it's like to spend your life constantly on the road, sleeping on floors, invariably jetlagged, all for the love of playing live music.
On 23 September, 2005, at the Joiners Arms in Southampton, Frank Turner played his last gig with his hardcore band, Million Dead. On the laminates that listed the tour dates, the entry for 24 September simply read: 'Get a job.' Deflated, jaded and hungover, Frank returned to his hometown of Winchester without a plan for the future. All he knew was that he wanted to keep playing music. Cut to 13 April 2012, over a thousand shows later (show 1,216 to be precise), and he was headlining a sold-out gig at Wembley Arena with his band The Sleeping Souls. Told through his tour reminiscences, this is the blisteringly honest story of Frank's career from drug-fuelled house parties and the grimy club scene to filling out arenas, fans roaring every word back at him. But more than that, it is an intimate account of what it's like to spend your life constantly on the road, sleeping on floors, invariably jetlagged, all for the love of playing live music.