Learning to Sing

Learning to Sing: Hearing the Music in Your Life is a memoir written by Clay Aiken with Allison Glock. Published by Random House on November 16, 2004, Learning to Sing debuted at number two on the New York Times Hardcover Nonfiction best-seller list in the December 5 issue, and remained on that list for the remainder of the year.[1][2][3]

Learning to Sing: Hearing the Music in Your Life
AuthorClay Aiken
Allison Glock
Cover artistDesign: Richard Rossiter
Photograph: Eric Ogden
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
SubjectMemoir
PublisherRandom House
New York City, NY
Publication date
November 16, 2004
Media typePrint / audio
Hardcover, paperback, CD, eBook
Pages258
ISBN1-4000-6392-2
OCLC56413034
782.42164/092 B 22
LC ClassML420.A385 A3 2004

Synopsis

The book focuses on the people who have been most influential in Aiken's life. He narrates his many conflicts with his birth father and stepfather, and the bullying that he had to endure as a child, then reveals how he eventually learned to accept himself as he was, rather than try to conform to other people's expectations. Not merely a tale of overcoming adversity, Learning to Sing also speaks of ways in which he was positively shaped as he recounts experiences with his mother, grandparents, siblings, teachers, friends, and religion. Along the way, Aiken demonstrates his facility as a storyteller, regaling the reader with tales both humorous and heart-breaking. Contrary to expectations, American Idol is barely mentioned in the book.

Reviews

In a Newsweek review (November 22, 2004), David Gates said: "If Aiken were an opera character, he'd be Wagner's Parsifal: the naïf 'made wise by compassion' and armored in his own innocence. He and his co-writer, journalist Allison Glock, have effectively snark-proofed the book by making it totally unguarded...."[4]

Entertainment Weekly reviewer Kristen Baldwin said (November 19, 2004), "Clay Aiken is far more interesting a person than a popstar and, God bless him, he's smart enough to know it. ...Behind the polite narration emerges a complex guy with a folksy sense of humor ('I was teased by other kids like it was their job') and an endearing ambivalence about his own insta-celebrity."[5]

Later editions

The book was republished in paperback edition on November 29, 2005. ISBN 978-0-8129-7410-2 (0-8129-7410-7). An abridged version is also available in audio form read by Aiken himself.[1] There are minor differences between the audio version and the hardcover edition. There is also an unabridged audio version read by Kirby Heyborne. A short excerpt from the audio book is available on Amazon.com. An eBook edition is also available for down load from Random House. ISBN 978-1-58836-453-1.

References

  1. Random House, Inc. Learning to Sing, November 16, 2004, Retrieved 2009-06-18
  2. Dehnarat, Andy. "Clay’s book debuts at #2 on bestseller list, holiday album debuts strong; Fantasia at #8." Reality Blurred, December 2, 2004. Retrieved 2009-06-18.
  3. The New York Times, BEST SELLERS: January 2, 2005. Retrieved 2009-06-18.
  4. Gates, David. Duet of the Divas; Clay Aiken and Renee Fleming would like to teach the world to sing. A tale of two memoirs.(Book Review) Newsweek (November 22, 2004). Retrieved 2009-09-26
  5. Baldwin, Kristen. Book Capsule Review Learning to Sing (2004) Entertainment Weekly (November 22, 2004). Retrieved 2009-09-26.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.