That voice,
those eyes, that hair, the cars, the girls . . .
Elvis Presley revolutionized American
pop culture when, at the age of twenty-one, he became the world’s
first modern superstar. A Memphis Beau Brummel even before he
found fame, Elvis had a personal style that, like his music,
had such a direct impact on his audience that it continues to
influence us to this day. Elvis Presley: The Man, the Life,
the Legend compellingly examines Elvis’ life and style
to reveal the generous, complex, spiritual man behind the fourteen-carat-gold
sunglasses and answers the question, “Why does Elvis matter?”
“Elvis Presley is the greatest
cultural force in the twentieth century,” proclaimed Leonard
Bernstein. By any measure, Presley’s life was remarkable.
From his modest beginnings in a two-room house to his meteoric
rise to international fame, everything about his life—his
outsized talent to his car collection—clamored for attention.
And he got it; even today, Elvis continues to fascinate.
Written with the assistance of
Elvis Presley Enterprises, Pamela Clarke Keogh’s biography
draws on extensive research and interviews with Presley friends
and family, among them Priscilla Presley, Joe Esposito, Jerry
Schilling, Larry Geller, Bernard Lansky, famed Hollywood photographer
Bob Willoughby, and designer Bill Belew. Offered access to the
Graceland archives, the author considered thousands of images,
selecting more than one hundred color and black-and-white photographs
for this book, many of them rarely seen before.
Both a significant biography
of the King of Rock and Roll and a timely, provocative celebration
of what Presley means to America today, Elvis Presley: The Man,
the Life, the Legend introduces the man behind the myth, a very
human superstar beloved by millions.