Book
Store



 Location:  Home» Books » Subjects » Madonna  
Books Home

  • Movie Store
  • Music Store
  • Game Store
  • Software Store
  • Tool Store
  • Shopping Mall
  • Categories
    Books
    Magazines
    Subcategories
    Arts & Photography
    Biographies & Memoirs
    Business & Investing
    Children's Books
    Comics & Graphic Novels
    Computers & Internet
    Cooking, Food & Wine
    Entertainment
    Gay & Lesbian
    Health, Mind & Body
    History
    Home & Garden
    Law
    Literature & Fiction
    Medicine
    Mystery & Thrillers
    Nonfiction
    Outdoors & Nature
    Parenting & Families
    Professional & Technical
    Reference
    Religion & Spirituality
    Romance
    Science
    Science Fiction & Fantasy
    Sports
    Teens
    Travel
    Related Categories
    • Subjects
    Books
    • Hardcover
    Binding (binding)
    Refinements
    Books
    • Printed Books
    Format (feature_browse-bin)
    Refinements
    Books

    Madonna

    Madonna
    Author: Andrew Morton
    Publisher: St Martin's Press
    Category: Book

    Buy New: $5.50



    New (3) Used (7) Collectible (1) from $3.87

    Rating: 3.0 out of 5 stars 29 reviews
    Sales Rank: 884081

    Format: Bargain Price
    Media: Hardcover
    Pages: 256
    Number Of Items: 1
    Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.3
    Dimensions (in): 9 x 6.2 x 1.1

    ASIN: B00007CWGV

    Publication Date: October 31, 2001
    Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
    Shipping: Expedited shipping available
    Shipping: International shipping available
    Condition: This biography of the popular singer includes 48 pages of photos.

    Also Available In:

      • Hardcover - Madonna
      • Unbound - Madonna
      • Mass Market Paperback - Madonna
      • Audio Cassette - Madonna
      • Audio Cassette - Madonna
      • Audio Download - Madonna (Unabridged)
      • Unbound - Madonna
      • Audio CD - Madonna
      • Audio CD - Madonna
      • Paperback - Madonna
      • Audio Cassette - Madonna (Nova Audio Books) (Nova Audio Books)

    Similar Items:

      • Tom Cruise: An Unauthorized Biography
      • Life with My Sister Madonna
      • Madonna: An Intimate Biography
      • Madonna Talking: Madonna in Her Own Words
      • Madonna - Truth or Dare

    Editorial Reviews:

    Product Description
    The explosive New York Times bestseller-- Madonna

    From motherless child to wife and mother, from "boy toy" to fiercely independent diva, Madonna is one of the most remarkable women of our time. With a career that spans two decades and ranges from the scandalous to the transcendent, she is a bigger phenomenon than ever. But who is the private woman behind the public image?

    Andrew Morton, whose #1 New York Times bestsellers about Princess Diana and Monica Lewinsky have proven his ability to gain access to insiders who won't talk to anyone else, answers that question in this decidedly unauthorized new biography. Morton's extensive, in-depth interviews with members of Madonna's inner circle-- lovers, friends, and business connection, many of whom have never spoken out before-- allow him to go beyond the carefully constructed myths to unmask the real Madonna. Andrew Morton is able to make startling revelations, among them the real story of Madonna's family background; the events behind the violent attack that changed her views on sex and men; her relationships with Michael Jackson, Prince, John F. Kennedy Jr., Vanilla Ice, and other rock and Hollywood stars; the mystery man she wanted to marry; and the darkest days of her career when she threatened to quit show business. In this fascinating, richly detailed biography, Andrew Morton reveals Madonna in an entirely new light.

    With 16 pages of photographs



    Customer Reviews:   Read 24 more reviews...

    4 out of 5 stars Nostalic for the 80s?   July 11, 2008
    M. Nichols (San Francisco, CA United States)
    1 out of 1 found this review helpful

    I quite enjoyed Andrew Morton's take on the life and career of Madonna. From her modest Italian-American upbringing, to her days as a dance major in Ann Arbor (who knew?), to her early days in New York (which sound like something out of "Rent"), the book's first half reads like a Horatio Alger success story. Once a recording contract and MTV come calling, her career trajectory is pure nostalgia for any kid of the '80s. You'll remember where you were when you first saw the video for "Lucky Star," first heard about (or saw) the MTV video music awards performance of "Like A Virgin," and recall the monstrosity of her marriage to Sean Penn. Most likely you didn't see her movies... I know I didn't... but her music will act as a soundtrack to her life and yours.

    What's not to love? Although I am not a particular fan of Madonna (Ray of Light and Confessions on the Dance Floor are two exceptions), her career is certainly interesting. And, like any icon, her life is connected to your life. That is what makes these bios fun.



    5 out of 5 stars Saintly Songbird   December 26, 2007
    Conan the Librarian (Incognito CA)
    Andrew Morton's fascinating biography of Madonna is well researched and elegantly written. Her life has been thoroughly chronicled in several lesser biographies, but Mr Morton, during a candid interview with the Archbishop of Dublin, was given unprecedented access to a previously unpublished letter that related to the star's earliest attempt to unsuccessfully adopt from Ireland. Handwritten on parchment and in immaculate Gaelic script, it is a literary light illuminating Madonna's sincere desire to embrace not only the concept of adoption but also the selfless act itself. It is in stark contrast to the raunchy, erotically-energized Madonna seen in explicit videos and heard in steamy lyrics, and for the first time we are able to glean the 'real' Madonna; not the vixen of popular culture but a vulnerable woman in search of fulfilment. Morton himself describes the letter as 'a celebration of this saintly songbird's empathy and passion.' The poignant document, quoted on page 78, reads:

    'National Council for Adoption
    26 Kildare Street
    Dublin 2
    Ireland
    October 27 2003

    Dear Ms Madonna

    The National Council for Adoption would like to thank you for your recent enquiry expressing interest in adopting.

    Unfortunately, there are no 25-year-old Irish males registered with our organisation, and even if there were, we would be slightly hesitant to supply the '157 strong-shouldered, six-packed, sun-tanned, slow-loving, shamrock-shaking sugar-studs' that you so generously offered to nurture.

    To mitigate your undoubted disappointment, the Council has arranged for the Eveready Company to send you a truckload of AAAs and a download of Enya singing 'Batteries Are A Girl's Best Friend'.

    Yours sincerely

    Phil O'Pastry

    CEO National Council for Adoption
    Dublin'

    The pathos embodied in this unique correspondence brought a lump to my throat and a stye to my eye.



    5 out of 5 stars Beware - this just might inspire a teenage girl to run to New York   April 5, 2006
    M. R. Estante (North America)
    2 out of 4 found this review helpful

    Fiona Apple once sang "everybody wants to be Madonna but no one wants to pay the price". And the price Madonna/Madge PAID - Oh dear! Since her 1981/2 club hit "Everybody" to the very first video "Burning Up" ... no other female singer has been able to eclipse Madonna. Not Britney, Jessica, Pink, Alannis, J.Lo, etc... They have come close but Madonna is the genuine article for which no replica is possible. Madonna is the Patron Saint of Ambition. Nothing less. Her numerous incarnations and transformations keep us getting and intrigued.

    The teenage Madonna ate the whole Big Apple before becoming the Queen of the Pop World. And she inspired alot of fresh faced girls just out of high school to say YES to their dreams and have the courage of heart to jump on a plane to big cities all around the world, never looking back!

    When the 17 year old Madonna Ciccone ran off to New York in the summer of 1977 ... a cab driver dropped her off at Times Square, the center of everything. Now she remains in pop culture the epicentre of what it means to be cultural icon. She inspired the Spice Girls (based on various versions of herself), Sex and the City, and many other attempts to be versions of her.

    Madonna was once called the Gold Standard of Timeless Blonde Ambition. And it's obvious why. The material girl is still strong over 20 years later! She was born under one hell of a lucky star!



    5 out of 5 stars Couldn't Put It Down   November 30, 2005
    Dottie Randazzo (Woodland Hills, CA USA)
    0 out of 1 found this review helpful

    I really liked this book. I thought that the book was well written without a slant either way. It was really insightful
    to the ambition involved with achieving a goal.



    2 out of 5 stars Lackluster "Madonna"   April 5, 2005
    E. A Solinas (MD USA)
    4 out of 5 found this review helpful

    Andrew Morton will always be known as the guy who wrote a groundbreaking biography of Princess Di. And he will be known for nothing else, apparently. At least, he won't be remembered for "Madonna," a quickie biography that covers no new ground and -- horrors! -- makes a once-controversial pop icon... boring.

    Madonna Louisa Ciccone started off as a motherless child, whose mom (also called Madonna) died of breast cancer. But she rapidly turned from pitiful to outrageous, travelling to NYC to become a dancer. Instead, she became a blossoming singer, an aspiring actress, and one of the first big stars to grace MTV.

    But more than her music was the controversy that surrounded her: Madonna dated men such as Michael Jackson, JFK Jr., Prince, and then-hot rapper Vanilla Ice, and married actor Sean Penn, while still pursuing relationships with other men and women. After their tumultuous union fell apart, she created the then-shocking book "Sex," the peak of her sexually-charged career. But then her life took a more domestic turn, with children, marriage and religion (in about that order).

    It's not hard to have an opinion on Madonna -- either you love her or hate her. But if the only exposure to Madonna was through this book, it would be difficult to decide which. Morton paints Madonna in bland hues, describing her exploits, affairs and then-shocking concerts in the most uninspired prose imaginable. However, not once does he reveal anything new -- despite input from lovers and friends, Morton can only add detail to what people already knew.

    There are some interesting facets of her rise to stardom, particularly how she and her pals changed the NYC club life, and the odd details of her first recordings. For example, she wasn't pictured on her first album, in the hopes that she would be thought to be black. But once we get back to Madonna's personal life, things get dull.

    Morton himself seems to presume too much on his knowledge of Madonna: he constantly claims that she was miserable, depressed, et cetera. Apparently he disapproves of her wild past. Entertainingly, he claims that Madonna is just a "Catholic girl who wants to get married." If that is how "just Catholic girls" live, then I want to know why I'm not having that much fun.

    Yet, at the same time, he glosses over most of her present, peaceful, monogamous life -- when she gets involved with Guy Ritchie and has her second child, he loses interest and crams the last several years into a matter of pages. One would think that her first solid relationship and her children would be worthy of a little more attention.

    Nobody expected Pulitzer-worthy journalism in "Madonna." But surely Andrew Morton could have done better than a tepid recounting of what her fans already knew.



    Proud member of the Celebrity Pro Network. Make sure you check out these other great JimmyKat network sites:

    Lyrics Database   Celebrity Blog   Celebrity Thing   Celebrity PC   Latest Celebrity Photos   Web Portal   Travel Photos   Quotes   Flash Games


    Is there a better
    price available?


    Find out: