The classic authorized biography that told it all. When Little Richard
burst onto the scene in the early 1950s, he sounded like nothing on
earth. Drenched in sweat, screaming, hollering and pumping his piano,
his stage act was so explosive that for years people assumed the real
man could never match the flamboyant public image. Then came Charles
White's sensational book exposing the even more astonishing life and
times of Richard Wayne Penniman from Georgia.
Little Richard made himself a star through sheer force of personality,
breaking racial and sexual taboos on his way to becoming the primal
force of Fifties rock 'n' roll. Elvis Presley called him 'the greatest'.
Otis Redding called him his 'inspiration' and James Brown called him his
idol. Charles White is the only author to have captured the true energy
of Little Richard. Using Richard's own words, White chronicles a
staggering career that spanned the very rules of rock 'n' roll, the rise
of The Beatles, tussles with God and The Devil and an erratic series of
comebacks. Illustrated with pictures from Little Richard's own archive
and including a comprehensive discography.