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Lady Blue Eyes: My Life with Frank Paperback – Illustrated, Feb. 28 2012
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For more than two decades, Barbara was always by Frank Sinatra's side, traveling the globe and hosting glittering events for their famous friends, including presidents, kings, queens, Hollywood royalty, and musical legends. Among them were Sammy Davis, Jr., Princess Grace of Monaco, Bob Dylan, and Ronald Reagan. Each night, as Frank publicly wooed his bride with love songs from a concert stage, she’d fall in love with him all over again.
From her own humble beginnings in a small town in Missouri to her time as a fashion model and her marriage to Zeppo Marx, Barbara Sinatra reveals a life lived with passion, conviction, and grace. A founder of the Miss Universe pageant and a onetime Vegas showgirl, she raised her only son almost single-handedly in often dire circumstances until, after five years of tempestuous courtship, she and Frank committed to each other wholeheartedly. In stories that leap off the page, she takes us behind the scenes of her iconic husband’s legendary career and paints an intimate portrait of a man who was variously generous, jealous, witty, and wicked. Coupled with revealing insights about many of Frank’s celebrated songs, this is much more than the story of a showbiz marriage. It is a story of passion and of a deep and lifelong love.
- Print length416 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherCrown
- Publication dateFeb. 28 2012
- Dimensions13.21 x 2.29 x 20.32 cm
- ISBN-100307382346
- ISBN-13978-0307382344
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Product details
- Publisher : Crown; Illustrated edition (Feb. 28 2012)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 416 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0307382346
- ISBN-13 : 978-0307382344
- Item weight : 340 g
- Dimensions : 13.21 x 2.29 x 20.32 cm
- Customer Reviews:
About the authors

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Wendy Holden (aka Taylor Holden) is a novelist, non-fiction author, historical biographer and ghostwriter as well as a former journalist for the London Daily Telegraph. Her books have sold two million copies, have been adapted for television and radio, and some have been adopted into the schools curriculum. Two of her titles are about to be made into major Hollywood films.
Since leaving newspapers in 1996, Wendy has written more than forty books, including sixteen international bestsellers and the acclaimed novel The Sense of Paper, published by Random House, New York, now available as an ebook. Her bestselling title is Born Survivors, the true story of three young mothers who hid their pregnancies from the Nazis and gave birth in the camps. This has now been published in 22 countries and translated into 16 languages and was released in a special VE Day 75 edition in 2020. She also wrote the memoir Tomorrow Will Be A Good Day and his Life Lessons with Captain Sir Tom Moore, both of which became top ten bestsellers and remained in the charts for over eight months.
A reporter for eighteen years, Wendy covered news events at home and abroad, including conflicts in the Middle East, Communist Europe, and Northern Ireland. Her non-fiction titles have chiefly been the autobiographies of remarkable women, many with wartime experiences such as Zuzana Ruzickova, who survived three concentration camps and slave labour to become one of the world's leading musicians (now an award winning documentary), and Edna Adan Ismail, an inspirational midwife, First Lady, civil war survivor, and builder of hospitals. Wendy also wrote Tomorrow to be Brave, about the only woman in the French Foreign Legion during World War II (soon to be a film). Her book Behind Enemy Lines was about a young Jewish woman who repeatedly crossed German lines as a spy (now an award winning animation); and Til the Sun Grows Cold tells of a British mother whose daughter was killed in troubled Sudan. She also wrote Lady Blue Eyes, the memoir of Frank Sinatra's widow Barbara, A Lotus Grows in the Mud, the best-selling autobiography of Hollywood actress Goldie Hawn, and Memories Are Made of This, a biography of Dean Martin as seen through the eyes of his daughter Deana.
She penned Ten Mindful Minutes with Goldie Hawn, an international bestseller on mindfulness for parents, and she wrote an ebook for children and adults entitled Mr. Scraps about a dog caught up in the London Blitz. In 2012 she conceived and wrote the bestselling memoir of Uggie, the dog from the Oscar winning movie The Artist, published in 12 countries, and she also wrote Haatchi & Little B, the remarkable story of the relationship between a disabled boy and his three legged-dog, which was a number 1 bestseller in the UK, Portugal, and the US as it melted hearts around the world.
Other works have included the bestselling novelisations of the films The Full Monty and Waking Ned, as well as an Antarctic travel guide with comedian Billy Connolly. She wrote Smile Though Your Heart Is Breaking with Pauline Prescott, and Heaven and Hell with Don Felder, co-founder of The Eagles. Her book Shell Shock, a searing investigation into the trauma of conflict from the World War One to the Gulf War, was published in conjunction with a four-part television documentary.
Several of her books have been serialised in national newspapers and magazines around the globe, selected for audio extracts on BBC Radio's Book of the Week and elsewhere, adopted for the curriculum in schools and colleges and transferred to both commercial television and radio drama. Four of her books have been optioned for film. She also writes screenplays, is an international public speaker, literary festival chair, and teaches creative writing online and at exclusive venues in Italy, Dubai, and around the UK.
Wendy divides her time between the UK, US and Italy but lives mostly in Suffolk, England, with her husband and dogs where she likes to relax in her award-winning garden. She also writes occasional articles for newspapers and magazines, including The Guardian, Daily Mail and The Lady. Follow her on Twitter @wendholden, on Instagram @wendyholdenbestsellingauthor, via her website www.wendyholden.com, or her Facebook fan page (https://www.facebook.com/wendyholdenfanpage/?ref=bookmarks). She is an occasional podcaster (http://wendyholden.buzzsprout.com). She has her own Youtube channel - https://m.youtube.com/channel/UCl-hBBGrQhBDQaV2yFqqyug, is her own literary agent, mentor to aspiring writers, and owns a company that develops and publishes e-books and book-related apps.
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Definitely showed the gentler side of Frank also the vulnerable aspects that made Frank so unique.
Barbara was no doubt the most suitable wife of the three..
Loved the book.
Top reviews from other countries
I have a somewhat different perspective on Barbara and the Sinatra kids. First, I understand how a woman can truly fall in love with a high powered and famous man, and how the man's kids can react sometimes because my own mother married such a man. My brother and I loved him and wanted them to be happy. Not so his children, though, and not so Sinatra's children. Same situation. Their wounds were deep, and nobody could make them feel better about it.
It's sad. No matter how much the man and woman love each other, there's always resentment from kids who want their dad back with their mother, even long after they're adults. It gets vicious sometimes, and I wish it didn't. The kids make wild charges, they keep themselves hating way, way longer than it makes sense to do so. So it went with the Sinatras, and so it went with my own parent and step parent. In both cases, the marriages lasted until one of them died, and they were both very happy in spite of the children who made unhappy noises forever. I think they should have been happy for their dad, and not blamed the woman who could make him happy as he grew old. Not to say Nancy didn't make Frank happy, she was a wonderful wife and mother, but people often change and they grow and need different things. And so it goes. None of that makes the last wife a bad person, but the kids who make the biggest noises never quite reconcile themselves to it. And a lot of the time it's the money, although in all fairness, not always.
I know something else is true. Any time a woman marries a very high powered, famous man, there is always a price whether she did anything wrong or not. The price is still there. The man is often spoiled, willful, a heavy drinker, and the wife has to cope if she wants to stay the new wife. Barbara wanted to stay the wife, as did my mother. And for that to happen, I know this is true: there has to be love because otherwise the woman who is watching all this all night drinking, even though he isn't abusive, still has to watch and live with it day after day. There HAS to be great love there for that to happen, which should calm the kids considerably if they think it out. I think Frank and Barbara had that great love. To me, it's very evident. They did. They were both exactly what each of them needed at that time. That doesn't make either of them criminals.
I believe that Barbara wanted to write this story because how else would people know, unless she told them? This story was told by a woman who loved a famous man, and who went out of her way a great deal to make him happy and keep him happy, because men like that are not easy to keep happy. But she did her best, and I think she did a great job of living it as well as telling about it. I'm grateful to her for being the woman that could make Frank happy during his last years. I salute her, and I'm happy for her that she got to live with one of our generation's greatest entertainers, who was also a generous, good father, and who also loved his children very much.
Well done, Frank. Well done, Barbara. And Barbara, thanks for writing this book and telling us about your years with Ol' Blue Eyes. We can all rest easier now.
PS: The name dropping didn't bother me. Frank and Barbara had a lot of friends, separately and together, and it was fun to read about them. I really loved this whole book.
What I DID find interesting..and actually was why I bought the book, was her rather banal married life to Zeppo Marx. As a teen I was interested in vintage Hollywood and had a crush on Zeppo, so it's all the more interesting to read about his relentless pursuit of her, his eagerness to marry her, and then how fast the marriage seemed to dissolve into this sort of bland disconnect. Dull retirement style days of card games, golf, tennis, all of which she was obligated to share with him. Of course he was out cheating on her too, so it makes you wonder why did he want to marry her so much..what was the point. He didn't even like her son, and there was the moment where she caught Zeppo so angry at him one day he had his hands wrapped around the kid's neck. All these behind the scenes moments add up to the conclusion that the truth is more fascinating than fiction, and life is often a dull ride even for the rich and famous, idling their time away in the desert. Some of these tales of older men at retirement age marrying much younger starlet types and then holding them hostage in this boring retirement scenario..UGH! Brother Groucho Marx also did this, marrying way younger model types, having nothing in common with them, then getting frustrated when they become depressed alcoholics. At least Frank kept going and worked up til the end. I just think this book would have been more of a fun ride with more great Frank stories, but alas, it is what it is, just be sure to read up on other books that offer different perspectives, I recommend "Mr. S: My Life with Frank Sinatra" for some good reading.
She forgot to mention that they would fight all the time, that she would punished him and take advantage of his kindness, give him the cold shoulder treatment for long periods of time including sleeping in a separate room. She also forgot to mention the many times that Frank realized he had made a very big mistake and wanted to divorce her. Everything she did was calculating including, as he continued to age & experience failing health, isolating him from his family and friends. Getting rid of his attorney and other business partners, getting Frank to retract the prenup also getting Frank to change his Will by giving her 50% of everything he made including royalties, before she ever came into the picture etc etc.
This woman is a snake and I don't believe one thing in this book. This book was all about damage control. She didn't even love Marx when she married him - he was a meal ticket for her and her son. Then Frank came into the picture and she saw even more dollar signs. People that were friends with her whom she met through Frank told Tina Sinatra that when Barbara married Frank she told a few friends that "this time I married for money". All during the time she was married to Frank and especially as he got older, sickly etc. she continued to put legal documents in front of him to get him assign more of his estate to her.
She is a female version of a con artist. The type of woman who preys on lonely men and at the time she married Frank, Tina said he was extremely lonely and vulnerable.
Don't spend you money on this book. Don't give her one more penny. If you want the real story, read Tina Sinatra's book. The marriage between Frank and Barbara was no love story. It was the worst decision and worst relationship of his life.



