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Tag: memoir

  • The new Steve Jobs book is free to download now — here’s where to get it 

    The new Steve Jobs book is free to download now — here’s where to get it 

    Apple founder Steve Jobs has continued to inspire even after his death in 2011. Just this week, in fact, Tim Cook — Apple’s AAPL current CEO and chief operating officer for a decade-plus under Jobs — mused in a GQ interview on life lessons imparted by his predecessor. 

    And now anyone who wants to get an intimate glimpse into Jobs’s wisdom and reflections on his life, which was cut short at just 56, can download a curated collection of personal correspondence, speeches and interviews — for free.

    “Make…

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  • Prince Harry Announces Special Discussion of His Memoir Spare with Dr. Gabor Maté

    Prince Harry Announces Special Discussion of His Memoir Spare with Dr. Gabor Maté

    Prince Harry will once again discuss the contents of his memoir Spare, this time with a special guest.

    The Duke of Sussex’s publisher Penguin Random House announced exclusively to People that the royal will be sitting down on Saturday with Dr. Gabor Maté for an international livestream event on Vimeo. Maté is a world-renowned speaker and self-help expert specializing in trauma, addiction, and stress, as well as the author of The Myth of Normal: Trauma, Illness, and Healing in a Toxic Culture. During their talk, the pair will discuss the difficulties of living with loss, as well as the importance of personal healing before going on to take pre-submitted questions from the audience.

    Harry’s memoir has caused much controversy since its release at the beginning of last month, particularly amongst his own family, leading to questions of whether or not the Duke and his wife Meghan Markle will attend his father King Charles‘s coronation in May. But even though there’s been fallout from the publication, Harry told People in January that it was incredibly important to him to share his life story. “My hope has been to turn my pain into purpose, so if sharing my experience makes a positive difference in someone’s life, well, I can’t think of anything more rewarding than that,” he said. “This book and its truths are in many ways a continuation of my own mental health journey. It’s a raw account of my life—the good, the bad and everything in between.”

    He went on to explain that since stepping down as a senior royal in January 2020 and moving his family to California, he’s found an all-new purpose in life. “A husband and a father–first and foremost–as well as a veteran, environmentalist, and mental health advocate,” he said. “I know that I want to live my life in service of others and that I want to live by example for my kids.” And when it comes to what’s in store for their future, he revealed, “I’m looking ahead and am optimistic for what’s to come. I have a beautiful and blessed life—one that comes with a platform, and with it responsibility that Meghan and I plan to use wisely. I feel I am exactly where I am meant to be and exactly where we [my family] are meant to be. I don’t think I could have written this book otherwise.”


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    Emily Kirkpatrick

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  • Pamela Anderson’s New Netflix Documentary Reveals Some Surprising Secrets

    Pamela Anderson’s New Netflix Documentary Reveals Some Surprising Secrets

    Pamela Anderson was once one of the biggest stars in America, earning up to $300,000 an episode for her star turn on the TV series Baywatch alone. But the actress and Playboy centerfold has fallen out of the spotlight and into financial woes over the years.

    To the surprise of many, she was mostly silent last year when Hulu aired the popular miniseries Pam & Tommy, which chronicled her tumultuous relationship with rocker Tommy Lee.

    Now Anderson is back, and she has a lot to say.

    In her upcoming memoir, “Love, Pamela, and Netflix documentary, “Pamela, a love story,” which both drop on January 31, Anderson opens up about a number of shocking incidents from her topsy-turvy life, including revelations about actors Tim Allen and Sylvester Stallone, and a disturbing story of revenge on an abusive babysitter.

    Related: Former Disney Actress Says She Makes 10 Times More Money Doing Porn: ‘I Am Having So Much More Fun.’

    She tried to kill her babysitter

    In the documentary, Anderson reveals that she tried to kill a female babysitter after years of being molested by her.

    Growing up in Ladysmith, Canada, Anderson said an unnamed babysitter abused her and her brother for years.

    “She always told me not to tell my parents. I tried to protect my brother from her,” Anderson said.

    She admits to trying to kill her one day. “I tried to stab her in the heart with a candy cane pen.”

    Although she was unsuccessful in her attempted murder, Anderson told her she wanted her to die.

    “She died in a car accident the next day,” she says. “I thought I’d killed her with my magical mind, and I couldn’t tell anybody. I was sure that I did it, that I’d wished her dead and she died,” continues Anderson. “I lived with that the whole of my young life.”

    She says Tim Allen exposed himself to her

    Anderson recalls having a disturbing encounter with Home Improvement star Tim Allen in her memoir.

    One of Anderson’s first roles was as Lisa the Tool Girl on the show.

    “On the first day of filming, I walked out of my dressing room, and Tim was in the hallway in his robe,” she writes in an excerpt from her memoir “Love, Pamela,” which Variety obtained ahead of the book’s release. “He opened his robe and flashed me quickly — completely naked underneath.”

    Allen denied the incident in a statement to CNN.

    “No, it never happened,” he said. “I would never do such a thing.”

    Sylvester Stallone tried to buy her off the market

    Early in her career, Anderson says Rocky star Sly Stallone approached her with a proposal he didn’t think she’d refuse.

    “He offered me a condo and a Porsche to be his ‘No. 1 girl,’ ” says Anderson in her Netflix documentary. “And I was like, ‘Does that mean there’s No. 2? Uh-uh.’”

    Taken back, Stallone told her to think twice before rejecting him.

    “He goes ‘That’s the best offer you’re gonna get, honey. You’re in Hollywood now,’ ” Anderson says.

    Representatives for Stallone told The New York Post the incident didn’t happen.

    “The statement from Pamela Anderson attributed to my client is false and fabricated,” said a spokesperson for Stallone. “Mr. Stallone confirms that he never made any portion of that statement.”

    Jonathan Small

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  • Why Insiders Say Prince Harry May Have Crossed a Palace Red Line with Latest Interview

    Why Insiders Say Prince Harry May Have Crossed a Palace Red Line with Latest Interview

    Prince Harry said he is “100 percent” confident he can reconcile with his family, despite launching a fresh wave of attacks on King CharlesQueen Consort CamillaPrince William and Princess Kate in an explosive 90-minute interview with ITV’s Tom Bradby that aired Sunday.

    Claiming that his family and the British media drove him and Meghan Markle out of Britain, Harry said that some members of his family chose to “get into bed with the devil” to tarnish his and Meghan’s reputation in order to improve their own. While he claimed he wants to make peace, he said his family have “shown no willingness to reconcile.” 

    During the sit-down interview to promote his autobiography Spare (due out Tuesday) that aired on ITV, Harry read excerpts from the book, specifically passages that covered parts of his childhood, his school years and the traumatic impact Princess Diana’s death had on him. Harry described he and William as being “on different paths” since they were young boys, saying they dealt with their mother’s death in “different ways.”

    He also revealed a deep sibling rivalry that dated back to their school days, however, he insisted “I’ve always loved my brother.” When asked whether there was any chance of a reconciliation between them, Harry said he “genuinely believes” there can be a resolution, saying, “I hope there can be a constructive conversation” but he insisted that they needed to keep “the antagonists” as he referred to the British tabloid press, out. 

    It was a matter Harry was pressed on by Bradby, an old friend who has interviewed the prince on numerous occasions over the years. When asked about the tirade of very public criticism he has leveled at his family, Harry blamed the British press for creating conflict and a culture war in the UK and said, “Silence only allows the abuser to abuse, I don’t see how silence can make things better.”

    In his memoir, Harry writes that William feels he has been brainwashed by therapy, however, Harry told Bradby he was in a good place and happier than he has ever been. 

    Harry’s approach in promoting the blockbuster book has, unsurprisingly, irked the royals and those close to them, sources say. As one tells Vanity Fair, Harry “totally fails to see the irony and hypocrisy in what he says. When there have been private family conversations, it has been Harry who has leaked them to the press.” 

    On Saturday, sources close to the royal family expressed their shock at Harry’s book and interview saying, “He is on a path of self-destruction. There is so much vengeance. The late Queen would have been absolutely devastated.” They added that any reconciliation appears unlikely in the short term.

    Before the interview aired, former Buckingham Palace communications advisor Dickie Arbiter told Vanity Fair he thought Harry would ultimately regret speaking out and that the Palace was unlikely to comment as the saga continues to escalate. 

    “If Harry wants to engage he has to eat humble pie and he doesn’t show any signs of doing that,” he said. “From my perspective, the institution did a lot to help Harry but he got to a point where he stopped taking the advice. Harry’s always been stubborn. He was always going to go his own way and do his own thing. As for his book, I think he’ll regret not having pulled it. It’s done now. He can’t undo this.” 

    Among the revelations to emerge from the Bradby interview are Harry’s claims that William and Kate made Meghan feel unwelcome from the start of their relationship, buying into the stereotyping of Meghan as a famous American actress, who was a divorcée and mixed race. Revealing that William and Kate were fans of Suits, the American legal drama in which Meghan starred, he said they were wary of his future wife from the outset. 

    Katie Nicholl

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  • Prince Harry “Never” Thought He’d Lose Palace Security After Prince Andrew Kept It

    Prince Harry “Never” Thought He’d Lose Palace Security After Prince Andrew Kept It

    Prince Harry never imagined he’d be left to fend for himself when it came to a security detail for his family, especially after his uncle Prince Andrew was permitted to keep his despite being in the midst of a sexual assault scandal, he reportedly writes in his new book.

    In a portion of his forthcoming memoir, Spare, obtained by Us Weekly, the Duke of Sussex recalls that when he and his wife, Meghan Markle, decided to move to America after stepping down from their positions as senior royals in 2020, she expressed fears that they would be left unprotected, and he reassured her, “Never. Not in this climate of hate. Not after what happened to my mother [Princess Diana]. Also, not in the wake of my Uncle Andrew.” He goes on to say in the excerpt that his uncle “was embroiled in a shameful scandal, accused of the sexual assault of a young woman and no one had so much suggested that he lose his security. Whatever grievances people had against us, sex crimes weren’t on the list.” Following the move, however, Harry and Meghan did lose their royal security detail, which, in the prince’s opinion, was a refusal by the palace to perform “its implicit promise” and “obligation” to them.

    In January 2022, Prince Andrew was stripped of his military affiliations and royal patronages over accusations of sexual assault involving a then 17-year-old Virginia Giuffre, who was a victim in Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell’s sex trafficking ring. The Duke of York has vehemently denied any wrongdoing, and Giuffre’s lawsuit against him was settled out of court in February 2022.

    The same month that Andrew was stripped of his titles, Harry issued a statement regarding the palace’s decision to remove his security detail. “Prince Harry inherited a security risk at birth, for life. He remains sixth in line to the throne, served two tours of combat duty in Afghanistan, and in recent years his family has been subjected to well-documented neo-Nazi and extremist threats,” the statement read. “While his role within the Institution has changed, his profile as a member of the royal family has not. Nor has the threat to him and his family.” He added that he and his wife’s personally funded security team could not “replicate the necessary police protection needed whilst in the UK.”

    To compound matters, Harry also shares in his new book that he suffers from agoraphobia and panic attacks, which made the public duties of royal life all the more difficult and terrifying, something he says his brother, Prince William, once mocked him for, according to the excerpt from Us Weekly. “I was an agoraphobe. Which was nearly impossible given my public role. After one speech, which couldn’t be avoided or canceled, and during which I’d nearly fainted, Willy came up to me backstage. Laughing,” the duke writes. “Him of all people. He’d been present for my very first panic attack. With [Princess] Kate. We were driving out to a polo match in Gloucestershire, in their Range Rover. I was in the back and Willy peered at me in the rearview. He saw me sweating, red-faced…. He’d told me that day or soon after that I needed help. And now he was teasing me? I couldn’t imagine how he could be so insensitive.”


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    Emily Kirkpatrick

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  • Aaron Carter’s Memoir Publisher Postpones Release ‘Out Of Respect For The Carter Family’

    Aaron Carter’s Memoir Publisher Postpones Release ‘Out Of Respect For The Carter Family’

    By Miguel A. Melendez, ETOnline.com.

    The publisher behind Aaron Carter‘s memoir has decided not to move forward with publishing the book “out of respect for the Carter family.”

    In a statement to ET, attorney Scott Atherton, founder of Atherton Galardi Mullen & Reeder PLLC and who represents Ballast Books and author Andy Symonds, says despite the late singer wanting his story “with all its beauty and rawness” told, they’ve decided to put the book on hold for the time being.

    “Out of respect for the Carter family, my client has decided to defer the further release of the book at this time,” the statement read. “Mr. Carter was not just a celebrity but also a father, a brother, a son, and a friend to many still grieving for him.”

    Atherton said “public attention has recently focused on a small number of interactions during Mr. Carter’s early years.” He added that “the more important story is about Mr. Carter’s life and what people can learn from his professional success, personal struggles, and tragic passing.”

    The decision comes just one day after Hilary Duff blasted Ballast Books for its decision to move forward with the release of Carter’s unfinished memoir, calling the move “sad” and a reckless attempt to “capitalize” on the late singer’s tragedy.

    In a statement to ET, the “Lizzie McGuire” alum and Carter’s ex-girlfriend said it’s “really sad that within a week of Aaron’s death, there’s a publisher that seems to be recklessly pushing a book out to capitalize on this tragedy without taking appropriate time or care to fact check the validity of his work.”

    The book, titled Aaron Carter: An Incomplete Story of an Incomplete Life was supposed to drop Nov. 15, a mere 10 days after Carter was found dead in his Lancaster, California, home.

    Carter, the younger brother of Backstreet Boys singer Nick Carter, was 34.

    MORE FROM ET:

    Hilary Duff Slams Publisher Over Aaron Carter Memoir

    Aaron Carter Had a Welfare Check Weeks Before His Death

    Aaron Carter’s Ex Melanie Calls Him ‘a Wonderful Man’ After His Death

    Brent Furdyk

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  • This Is When Prince Harry’s Memoir Is Due Out (And What To Expect)

    This Is When Prince Harry’s Memoir Is Due Out (And What To Expect)

    The publication date for Prince Harry’s long-anticipated memoir has been revealed – but sadly, you won’t be able to add it to your Christmas list.

    The memoir – which was originally pencilled in for autumn 2022 – was delayed following the death of the Queen in September. It is now due for publication on January 10, 2023.

    Now, the publisher Penguin Random House has revealed the title of the book, Spare, and the cover, which shows an up-close image of the Duke of Sussex.

    “With its raw, unflinching honesty, Spare is a landmark publication full of insight, revelation, self-examination, and hard-won wisdom about the eternal power of love over grief,” the newly-launched website for the book reads.

    Harry is described as “a husband, father, humanitarian, military veteran, mental wellness advocate, and environmentalist.”

    “He resides in Santa Barbara, California, with his family and three dogs,” his author bio adds.

    There’s been wild speculation about what the book will include, with a recent article from the Daily Mail predicting it will voice “bombshell after bombshell”. Here’s what else we know so far.

    What can we expect from the book?

    The memoir was first announced by publisher Penguin Random House last summer, who described it as “an intimate and heartfelt memoir from one of the most fascinating and influential global figures of our time”.

    “Prince Harry will share, for the very first time, the definitive account of the experiences, adventures, losses, and life lessons that have helped shape him,” they said in a press release at the time.

    “Covering his lifetime in the public eye from childhood to the present day, including his dedication to service, the military duty that twice took him to the frontlines of Afghanistan, and the joy he has found in being a husband and father, Prince Harry will offer an honest and captivating personal portrait, one that shows readers that behind everything they think they know lies an inspiring, courageous, and uplifting human story.”

    At the time, Harry said he was writing the book “not as the prince I was born but as the man I have become”.

    “I’ve worn many hats over the years, both literally and figuratively, and my hope is that in telling my story—the highs and lows, the mistakes, the lessons learned—I can help show that no matter where we come from, we have more in common than we think,” he added.

    “I’m deeply grateful for the opportunity to share what I’ve learned over the course of my life so far and excited for people to read a firsthand account of my life that’s accurate and wholly truthful.”

    It’s been widely speculated that the publication of the memoir was delayed due to the death of the Queen on September 8. It’s thought the memoir will now include extra writing where Harry reflects more specifically on the life and legacy of his grandmother.

    Readers can also expect him to discuss how his wife, Meghan Markle, has been treated by the media – a subject he has not shied away from in previous interviews.

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  • Prue Leith Reveals She ‘Drowned Some Kittens’ In A Bag As A Child

    Prue Leith Reveals She ‘Drowned Some Kittens’ In A Bag As A Child

    Prue Leith has shared an unsettling story from her youth. The Great British Bake Off” judge wrote about a time she drowned a litter of kittens in her new memoir “I’ll Try Anything Once.”

    According to an excerpt published in HuffPost UK and London Broadcasting Co., Leith was 11 years old when her mother instructed her to kill the hours-old kittens.

    “My mother and I, then 11, had just drowned some kittens… and for weeks I imagined those poor dead creatures,” the South African restaurateur wrote.

    “Too many kittens was a frequent occurrence and there had come a day when my mother, unable to find homes for yet another litter, decided to drown the latest batch.”

    Leith wrote in her book that she tried to talk her mom out of it, but the protests were ultimately “met with a firm ‘darling, it has to be done. They are only a few hours old. They will hardly know it’s happening.’”

    In a haunting description, Leith noted that the tiny animals “fought like the devil for life.”

    “I held the bag under the water until the last kitten had stopped mewing,” she wrote.

    Leith explained to HuffPost why she decided to include this story in her new memoir.

    “This happened in the early 1940′s, when I was 11 years old, being brought up on a farm in South Africa,” she wrote in an emailed statement. “I wrote about it honestly in my book, as an 11 year old it was an extremely traumatic experience, not one I would forget, however it is what happened 70 years ago.”

    She also advocated neutering and spaying pets.

    “Thankfully today in the UK we have the choice of neutering our cats and have more options to home kittens, although sadly in some parts of the world it is still an issue.”

    Humane Society International stresses the importance of spay and neuter initiatives for stray animals, noting those who are not “are often euthanized, neglected or die of disease.”

    “When effectively delivered and combined with vaccinations, spay/neuter provides a humane and effective way to reduce the number of animals living on the streets, and improves the health of those remaining,” the society says on its website. “Sterilizing community dogs and returning them to their territories on the streets allows for a natural reduction in their population over time and leaves the most socialized dogs on the streets.”

    The organization also noted that neutered animals are viewed “more favorably” by the general public.

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  • New Memoir Catalogs the Personal Exodus of a Young Cuban Boy

    New Memoir Catalogs the Personal Exodus of a Young Cuban Boy

    Press Release


    Nov 9, 2021

    The powerful story of a young Cuban boy and his family, their experiences during the Cuban revolution and their exodus to the U.S. makes “A Time to Look Back”, the recently published memoir by Anthony Timiraos, meaningful, educational, and relevant for today.

    At the age of 5 in 1959, when most boys were playing cowboys and watching “Lassie,” the author paints a picture of the conditions in La Habana, Cuba, when his family was forced to adapt to Fidel Castro’s revolution. He talks about experiencing his parent’s crushing disappointment when a revolt by a Cuban exile group, supported by the CIA to return democracy to Cuba, failed during the Bay of Pigs invasion. He then goes on to recount his experience when a military raid of his home by government militias turned all their personal belongings upside down and details the look on his mother’s face when they took his father to prison without cause.

    A new curriculum in all schools, including private schools now nationalized, taught that capitalism was evil, and everyone had to learn to live in a socialistic/communistic society. The combinations of educational indoctrinations plus the constant parade of military vehicles, political assassination attempts, bombing, and gunfire in his neighborhood now became the norm and convinced his family to leave Cuba for a better life. 

    At the age of 8, he was sent with his brother, 3 years older, to the U.S. in 1962 as part of Operation Pedro Pan, the largest exodus of children in the western hemisphere, to escape the forced education of communism and live in a free democratic country in hopes that the rest of the family could soon follow. The boys were welcomed to their new homeland by a network of generous religious organizations, corporations, private citizens, and a country that had empathy for families seeking asylum from oppressive and dangerous societies.

    During the separation from their parents, the boys lived in numerous locations, including a regretful stay in an orphanage for troubled young boys from broken families, and watched helplessly the terrifying close encounter with nuclear war.

    This new memoir is a remarkable journey in search of freedom. The author’s life experiences during the Cuban Revolution, the consequences of government policies and political events, and his reflections when he returned to Cuba 60 years later – all rolled into one story – it is now “A Time to Look Back”.  Available at most domestic and international online book stores.  For more information, go to www.atimetolookback.com.

    CONTACT: Anthony Timiraos

    Phone:  954-529-0664

    Email : anthony.timiraos@gmail.com          tony@atimetolookback.com

    Website: www.atimetolookback.com

    Facebook: @atimetolookback 

    Author’s Bio at www.atimetolookback.com

    Source: Anthony Timiraos, Author

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