My Remarkable Journey
Larry King, , with Cal Fussman. . Weinstein, $27.95 (294pp) ISBN 978-1-60286-086-5
In this humorous, anecdotal account, King at 75-plus marvels good-naturedly at his staying power for a half-century as a talk-show host for radio and TV. Born in Brooklyn in 1933 to Jewish immigrant parents, young Larry Zeiger was profoundly influenced at age nine by the untimely heart-attack death of his father and by the medium of radio. Rejected by the army for bad eyesight and uninterested in going to college, he got his break filling in for a deejay at a radio station in Miami, where he took the name King in a pinch. His early scrapes are hilarious, especially with women (he married eight times), and he had an uncanny ability to snag famous personalities like Jackie Gleason, Frank Sinatra and Richard Nixon to be interviewed on air. By simply being curious and unassuming, King could make anyone seem fascinating, from a plumber to the famously laconic Robert Mitchum. Despite being fired in 1971 for financial shenanigans, King swept back on the air in Washington, D.C., before being hired to host a show for Ted Turner's fledgling CNN in 1985, where he has been following current affairs for the past 25 years. King, writing with Fussman (
Reviewed on: 03/30/2009
Genre: Nonfiction
Compact Disc - 978-1-59777-228-0
Hardcover - 336 pages - 978-0-670-06393-2
Paperback - 304 pages - 978-0-14-317356-4
Paperback - 360 pages - 978-986-6272-23-3
Pre-Recorded Audio Player - 978-1-61574-530-2