Little Girl Blue
The Life of Karen Carpenter
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Narrated by:
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Cheryl Bentyne
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By:
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Randy L. Schmidt
About this listen
Little Girl Blue is an intimate profile of Karen Carpenter, a girl from a modest Connecticut upbringing who became a Southern California superstar.
Karen was the instantly recognizable lead singer of the Carpenters. The top-selling American musical act of the 1970's, they delivered the love songs that defined a generation. Little Girl Blue reveals Karen's heartbreaking struggles with her mother, brother, and husband; the intimate disclosures she made to her closest friends; her love for playing drums and her frustrated quest for solo stardom; and the ups and downs of her treatment for anorexia nervosa. After her shocking death at 32 years of age in 1983, she became the proverbial poster child for that disorder; but the other causes of her decline are laid bare for the first time in this moving account.
Little Girl Blue is Karen Carpenter's definitive biography, based on exclusive interviews with her innermost circle of girlfriends and nearly 100 others, including childhood friends, professional associates, and lovers.
©2010 Randy L. Schmidt (P)2013 Randy L. SchmidtWhat listeners say about Little Girl Blue
Average customer ratingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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- JWP
- 12-07-15
Super Star
A well written Bio of a true Super Star, lives have been enriched and is sadly missed artist RIP Karen ! 10/10
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1 person found this helpful
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- Chris N.
- 22-03-23
Don't read this if your heart breaks easily.
If this is true, then those Carpenters were one nutty crowd. No doubts there!
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- polonius
- 21-05-21
fantastic read
this was a great book and narrator was very easy to follow recommend this and listen to her songs with a renewed respective
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- Rebecca Thornqvist
- 08-07-23
Sweet Angel Karen Carpenter
Beautiful but extremely sad book. Karen carpenter will be forever missed.. beautiful sweet Angel Karen
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- Kindle Customer
- 15-03-22
Great book
Loved it . Found it a bit strange to begin with but later on was all about Karen
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- angela munro
- 13-09-24
There was so much I didn't know.
I am a huge fan of The Carpenters, and have watched and read a lot on them. this book shared information I was unaware of. Karen's life was even more tragic than I had realised, and her mother was even worse than I expected.
Excellent book.
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- Colin
- 27-07-15
A heartbreaking tale of a dysfunctional family...
Prior to starting this book I had just finished the excellent “Rise and Fall of The Third Reich” and thought that a story about the Carpenters, all ‘Mom’s Apple Pie’ and Church On Sunday, would be an interesting change of pace after 3 months in the company of Hitler, Goering, et al.
Boy, was I ever wrong…
The book paints a picture of a very dysfunctional family, presided over by a controlling, manipulative mother, Agnes Carpenter, who lives vicariously through her son Richard, and who is endlessly suspicious of all outsiders to the detriment of everyone else around, including her husband and their daughter, Karen. Agnes moves the family west from Connecticut to California in order to give Richard all the opportunities for his talent to blossom, and she talks only of Richard and how he is a musical genius. She even tells Karen, ‘Without Richard, there would be no Karen. Your brother is a genius and you must do everything to support him’
But as awful as Agnes most definitely is, equal villain of this sad story is Richard Carpenter, who allowed and often supported his mother’s bullying just so he could remain the centre of attention. And woe betide anyone who upsets that particular apple cart, as Neil Sedaka finds after he consistently brings the house down as the opening act for the duo during an engagement in Las Vegas, for which he finds himself fired by Richard. Sedaka, always the consummate professional, just sighs and quips “That’s the first time I got fired for playing well!”
The bullying and the familial manipulation continues when the band are on the road, and the book details a number of occasions where people who got in the way of the Carpenters juggernaut were simply thrown away, with no thought for who got hurt in the process. Friendships, Relationships, even Family; everything and everybody is sacrificed for the sake of Richard’s career.
But most people will buy this book to try and understand just what happened with Karen, and her losing battle with Anorexia. The erosion of her self-confidence by years of constantly being told she was second-best are undoubtedly a driving factor. And as Karen feels she has no control over her personal and professional life (and she really doesn’t, to an astounding degree), she exercises the only control she feels she still has, that being what she eats. Consequently years of dangerous dieting, strenuous touring schedules (over 150 shows a year on average), and mental bullying by the people she trusted finally came to a head, and her body just gave up. Such a tragic loss…
There’s a lovely section near the end of the book where Karen embarks on a solo recording project whilst Richard is recovering from ill-health and exhaustion. She flies to New York and teams up with producer Phil Ramone, who then introduces her to Billy Joel’s touring band, known to be one of the hardest working bands of the day. Over the ensuing weeks of recording Karen finds a whole new way of working that is exciting and fresh, as the band members and fellow artists Billy Joel and Paul Simon welcome her into their circle, enabling her to relax and have fun. She discovers a totally different approach to recording and really blossoms in the studio away from Richard’s control.
Narration by Cheryl Bentyne is first class, and keeps the listener engaged throughout
A highly recommended book, but be warned; you will never listen to the Carpenters music in the same way ever again.
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9 people found this helpful
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- Jamickle
- 20-10-18
Learnt some more
Heart breaking story. Information about her life garnered from close intimates and friends. From various television documentaries watched have heard same stories rehashed so good to learn Info from more reliable sources. Would recommend.
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- M. Wilson
- 12-08-22
Good Read!
Enjoyed it more than i thought i would. A good, very researched book. A very accurate account, detailing the good and the bad, in an informative way! I enjoyed it.
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- Corduroy Angel (Abby)
- 18-11-21
Almost there
After scrutinising as much information about the Carpenters and their lives as I could get my hands on, and absorbing the inferences made by various people close to them, it seems to me that the truth is still out there and being censored.
The Richard and Karen relationship, and the constantly orbiting Agnes, creates a deeply disturbing narrative that is never fully analysed in any of the authorised accounts.
This is an interesting book, but will we ever be allowed to know the un-redacted story?
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