
Facing the Music and Living to Talk About It
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Narrated by:
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Ted Evans
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By:
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Nick Carter
This audiobook is Nick Carter's autobiography and self-help hybrid, in which he chronicles his struggles with a dysfunctional family and the unimaginable rigors of becoming an internationally successful pop-star at the age of 12. From his battle with addiction to serious health complications and the pain of his younger sister's tragic death, Nick leaves nothing to the imagination and offers true and heartfelt advice to help listeners overcome obstacles in their own lives.
©2013 Bird Street Books, Inc. (P)2013 Bird Street Books, Inc.Listeners also enjoyed...




















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The only things that bothered me are that this book is kind of really disorganized and repetitive. I think it needed to have been edited a couple more times
In terms of narration, I actually really liked the narrator. Personally, I’m really picky about narrators, but this guy had a really nice voice. It would’ve been cool to have Nick read it all himself though
Nick isn’t a writer but I still enjoyed this
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Powerful book
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Would you listen to Facing the Music and Living to Talk About It again? Why?
I'm not that much of a Nick Carter fan but a friend recommended this book to me and I got it, and boy am I glad that I did. Not since hearing Jack Welch: Straight from the Gut narrated by Mike Barnicle have I heard such a good interpretation of the author's own voice and intent. As I really felt Mike Barnicle perfectly channelling Welch, so does Ted Evans channel Nick Carter through his voice. I can't wait to hear Evans' next book - hopefully it's for a more substantive story.Would you ever listen to anything by Nick Carter again?
Carter lost me at "Chapter 3: Til Death Do We Party."Have you listened to any of Ted Evans’s other performances before? How does this one compare?
This is the first I've heard of Ted Evans's audiobooks but I'm looking forward to hearing more.What insight do you think you’ll apply from Facing the Music and Living to Talk About It?
I think of all of the biographies I've read or listened to, this one made me feel the most secure with not being a celebrity.Any additional comments?
Get this on audiobook, not on paperback - it's a great listen.The narrator nails it.
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such a great book very inspiring and helpful
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insightful
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Bravo, Nick Carter! Bravo!
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inspiring story
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This book was partly inspired by the death of a family member, and partly by Nick's own struggles with sobriety and other issues. He means well, trying to use his story as a motivator for people who may be dealing with the same issues.
One of the problems is Nick uses almost every self-help cliché phrase out there. That, along with the book being narrated by someone else, makes a lot of the book fall flat. Since this isn't a traditional memoir, a lot of the positive aspects of his life get left out also, which also makes him clarify ad nauseum "I'm not complaining. I've been very lucky".
The book is easy to get through, although the narrator doesn't pause enough between the sub-chapters to allow you to find smooth stopping points. I suspect, due to the casual tone of the book, that Nick also didn't use a ghost writer.
You won't find too much juicy gossip here, but you will find an earnest and sincere attempt to help others. I hope he decides to write a second memoir, one with more positive stories about life with Backstreet Boys, and life as a husband and father of three.
A Memoir/Self-Help Hybrid
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Great Insight for All
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Great book!
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