Heart, life, music

Kenny Chesney

Book - 2025

"In college, [Country Music Hall of Fame member] Kenny Chesney found himself on a barstool with a guitar and an unexpected connection between people, life, and songs. His heart caught fire. With Nashville's vibrant creative scene, characters, legends, and places now long gone from the city he encountered in those early days, Chesney explores the quest to find himself as an artist and a man, as well as a sense of home anywhere there's an ocean. These are the stories of the unlikely game changer who became the sound of coming of age in the 21st century, made friends with his heroes, rocked stadiums, and founded a No Shoes Nation." --

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Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

In this down-to-earth memoir, Chesney traces his ascent from small-town Tennessee to country music stardom. He describes an all-American childhood dominated by "school, church, sports, and family" and music that reflected community values ("It was about life, hard work, falling in love to last, and throwing down on the weekends"). While studying advertising at East Tennessee State University, he began playing music with students in the school's bluegrass program. Chesney was not a natural talent--he was nicknamed "timing," for his lack of it--but he was determined to improve and moved to Nashville after graduation, where he played at bars until he landed a songwriting job. He debuted with 1994's In My Wildest Dreams, embarking on a career of stadium tour after stadium tour, and was inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame in 2025. Chesney takes care to honor his roots throughout, giving due to the industry professionals and "road family" who helped him succeed and interspersing uplifting if predictable musings on how music brings people together ("I know no matter what football stadium or amphitheater, the teams they love are different, who they voted for isn't the same.... But the songs, that feeling they give us, they connect us"). Country music fans will be satisfied. (Nov.)

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

The country star delivers an amiable rags-to-riches memoir. Chesney, writing with country music journalist Gleason, opens with his boyhood in a small town along the Clinch River at enough distance from Knoxville, Tennessee, for the night skies to be dark--an idyllic theme that Chesney explores at points throughout his memoir. There he heard "follow-the-bouncing-ball" church hymns, but also fell under the spell (and who doesn't?) of George Jones, Merle Haggard, and Conway Twitty. It was seeing the last, "standing there in blue pants and a hot pink shirt," that settled a young Chesney on a musical career, though he listens on every page with receptive ears to whatever music is playing: Tom Petty, reggae, Jimmy Buffett, bluegrass, Van Halen, Joe Walsh, the list goes on. A young Chesney arrives in Nashville, playing the tip-jar bar circuit and learning through painful trial and error just what goes into making a song: "The job is to take a slice of life, write all about it, slice it down to what matters, then cut that feeling wide open." In time, he also learns the business behind the business, from cultivating personal persistence to having enough merch on hand to fuel the bus. From there to headlining is a big step, but there the merch comes in, too; says one promoter, "T-shirts! That's how we measure passion." Chesney is passionate about the music, to be sure, and refreshingly open to experimentation, as when he paired up with folk-rocker Grace Potter. He is modest and circumspect about other aspects of his life, keeping mum about his most tabloid-famous relationship. There's good humor here, too, as when he writes about the black cowboy hat that he calls Darth Vader "because it transforms the guy from East Tennessee into a country star." A plainspoken, pleasing success story from a hardworking artist. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.