Mr Moonlight
Brian Epstein and the Making of The Beatles
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- Pedido anticipado
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- Se espera: 18 jun 2026
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- USD 18.99
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- Pedido anticipado
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- USD 18.99
Descripción editorial
The definitive biography of Brian Epstein – the man who made the Beatles – by leading Beatles biographer Philip Norman.
Brian Epstein didn’t just manage the Beatles – he transformed them into the most famous band the world has ever known. A young record-shop owner from Liverpool, he took four relatively unknown musicians and set out to make them ‘bigger than Elvis’, changing pop music, celebrity and British culture forever. Only a few years older than John, Paul, George and Ringo, he called them ‘the Boys’, guiding, protecting and relentlessly believing in them as no one else did. Without Brian Epstein, there would have been no Beatles as we know them.
Brian’s achievement in a profession in which he had no experience remains astonishing. A passionate devotee of classical music, he was nevertheless instrumental in shaping a new kind of pop that would revolutionise its sound, its business and Britain’s image around the world. Yet for all his achievements, he received no public honour – and scarcely any thanks.
Drawing on a remarkable cache of exclusive interviews with those closest to him, Philip Norman delivers the most intimate and revealing portrait yet of this complex, conflicted and ultimately tragic figure. Mr Moonlight reveals the depths of Brian’s many trials and tribulations – how he almost lost the Beatles to organised crime; the antisemitism and homophobia he endured even at the height of his success; his intense and fraught relationship with John Lennon; and the haunting circumstances of his lonely death during the so-called Summer of Love.
At once revelatory and deeply moving, Mr Moonlight restores Brian Epstein to his rightful place at the heart of the Beatles’ story.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
This captivating biography of Beatles manager Brian Epstein proves that Norman (Shout!), one of the band's most prolific chroniclers, still has plenty left in the tank. It begins with a jaw-dropper about Swinging London gangster Reggie Kray's scheme to blackmail Epstein by releasing sexual photos of him with another man, payment being control of the Beatles (Epstein died before the plan could be carried out). The narrative doesn't sustain that level of drama, but Norman still tells a great story by focusing on what made Epstein a crucial partner to the Beatles at a vulnerable time, tracing how the quiet, charming scion of a Jewish Liverpool retail family offered to manage the band after being enthralled by their scorching performances at the Cavern in 1961. (He forgot "even his painful self-consciousness... and long somehow to be a part of them.") Epstein began managing the band in 1962 and became a canny negotiator right as Beatlemania exploded, harnessing his meticulous attention to detail and his talent for managing personalities to set them up for fame. The author also doesn't stint on the complications of success, including how Epstein's insecurity pushed him toward risky behavior, from dangerous sexual encounters to the drug use that eventually caused his 1967 death. The result is a rip-roaring yet empathetic rock history.