Cedella Marley Booker was an established performer and composer
whose albums included Redemption Songs and Smilin’ Island of Song.
She died in 2008.
Jamaican novelist Anthony C. Winkler, author of The Great Yacht
Race and The Lunatic, lives in Atlanta, Georgia.
Lots has been said, sung, and written about music icon Bob Marley.
But perhaps the most definitive account of the famed reggae star's
life comes from the woman who knew him best: his mother.
*News Journal*
This poignant memoir offers readers one of the most revealing
portraits of Bob Marley ever published.
*Blackmen*
A sentimental biography of the reggae superstar.
*Booklist*
There are many books about Marley. But none communicate with the
level of intimacy, sentiment and understanding that this book is
able to attain. Told by Marley’s mother, Cedella Marley Booker,
it’s a tale of triumph and tragedy, told through a parent’s loving
eyes. Cedella was just 16, when she gave birth. The father, Captain
Marley, was a white man in his 50s. Bob barely knew him. Despite
this and the Jamaican environment of poverty, Bob found positive
paths. All he received from his father were two copper pennies and
the first name Nesta, which means “Messenger.” But he inherited his
mother’s spirituality and indomitability. His charismatic nature
was evident even in childhood. And by his teens, his gift for music
shone forth. Cedella delivers a full portrait of her son, including
the Rastafarianism, the ganja, the array of women, the global
reggae superstardom, the social impact. She reveals the light that
poured through him and his music, and, ultimately, the cancer that
extinguished it far too early. She nursed him through those final,
painful months. He died in 1981, at age 36. But his music - classic
songs like “Get Up, Stand Up,” “Buffalo Soldier,” “No Woman, No
Cry,” Stir It Up,” and “One Love” - continue to uplift the world.
And his devoted mother has given us a deeper knowledge of this
extraordinary man.
*Pop Culture Classics*
Bob Marley is among those rare few artists whose music has
transcended time and place, remaining influential, timeless, and
vital. Yet, to his mother Cedella and his siblings, he was ‘Nesta,’
her eldest son, a troubled youth who found his own voice through
music. This is their story—a fascinating, insightful, and moving
account that only a mother could tell.
*John Einarson, author of Neil Young: Don't Be Denied, and For What
It’s Worth: The Story of Buffalo Springfield*
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