Puneet Varma (Editor)

My Son Marshall, My Son Eminem

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Language
  
English

Publication date
  
2008

ISBN
  
1-59777-596-7

Author
  
Deborah R. Nelson-Mathers

Subject
  
Autobiography

3.7/5
Goodreads

Country
  
United States

Publisher
  
Phoenix Books

Media type
  
Print (hardcover)

Originally published
  
2007

Genre
  
Non-fiction

Editor
  
Annette Witheridge

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The Way I Am, Angry Blonde, The Dark Story of Eminem, Whatever You Say I Am: The, From Mother and Daughter

My Son Marshall, My Son Eminem is a 2008 autobiography by Debbie Nelson, the mother of American rapper Marshall Mathers a.k.a. Eminem. The British author Annette Witheridge helped her with the book. It was reported in September 2008 that the book sold over 100,000 copies in the United Kingdom.

Contents

Description

It includes all of Nelson's life, and includes her troubles with Eminem growing up and dealing with fame. According to her, Eminem's side of the story is full of lies he made to become a successful rapper. Despite all of this, she says that she is not mad at her son. She also says in her book that she sued her son in 2000 for defamation to stop the foreclosure on her house.

Nelson's aim in writing the book was to show her side of the story about her trouble with Eminem. She stated that she "regrets keeping quiet as Em cultivated his public persona of a trailer dweller with a crazy welfare mom."

The book has photographs of Nelson with Eminem, and poems and lyrics written by Eminem that were rarely or never seen before.

Nelson was sued a week before the book was released in the United States. According to the man who sued Nelson, Neal Alpert, he helped her with the book, and pursuant to a 2005 contract with Nelson, he should have received 25 percent of the profit.

Reception

Nathan Rabin of The A.V. Club said that her book "is almost perversely devoid of the irony, humor and self-deprecation that pervades her son's music." A Publishers Weekly review says that "[t]hough readers may find it hard to reconcile Debbie's claim never to have exploited her son in the pages of a tell-all about him", Nelson's portrait of her son is tense but sympathetic.

Mike Sweeney of New Statesman listed the book among five of the most controversial memoirs.

References

My Son Marshall, My Son Eminem Wikipedia