From This Moment On

From This Moment On

by ShaniaTwain (Author)

Synopsis

Born Eilleen Regina Edwards in 1965 in rural Canada, Shania Twain has lived a life rife with triumph and tragedy. Aged two, her parents had divorced, and by early childhood, her family of seven was often without food, at times living in a filthy one bedroom apartment. Her stepfather's abuse forced her mother to move with five children into a homeless shelter, and when she wasn't working in McDonald's to support her family, she was out chopping wood. But when her mother and stepfather were tragically killed in an automobile accident when she was 22, Shania knew that the only way to lift her family out of poverty was to use her singing talent and become a full-time performer. At an age when most young people have only themselves to think about, Shania moved her entire family to a nearby resort where she began performing, supporting her brothers and sisters. Shania takes the reader back to these pivotal moments of her hardscrabble childhood, revealing in stark detail the difficulties she and her family faced. Shania writes of being discovered her time performing in Nashville and her sudden, dramatic rise to stardom. Shania will spare no details about her recent personal struggles and heartbreaks subjects about which she's never spoken publicly. This remarkable book is the story of a brave, honest, and genuine woman who faced odds and downfalls most people never experience, yet has succeeded beyond anyone's expectations.

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Quantity

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 448
Publisher: Atria Books
Published: 12 May 2011

ISBN 10: 1451620748
ISBN 13: 9781451620740

Media Reviews
Unlike many celebrity memoirs, Twain's autobiography (which was written with the intent of serving as a historical record for her son) is a painfully honest recollection that exposes her deepest vulnerabilities to a worldwide audience. --Hartford Examiner
Moving and revealing...to immerse oneself in Twain's book is to meet an immensely likable person; her voice doesn't leap off the page, it infuses it warmly, like molasses. --Publishers Weekly