Description
This is the first full biography of the formerly hard-drinking, blues-singing rocker who had it all, lost it all, and then got it back.
Bonnie Raitt has become a beloved star of the young, as well as the rejuvenated baby-boomers. The Quaker daughter of Broadway musical star John Raitt - Oklahoma!, The Pajama Game, and Annie, Get Your Gun - was given her first guitar at the age of eight, and became acquainted with the emerging folk and protest music as a youngster at a Quaker summer camp in the Adirondacks.
She entered Radcliffe and prematurely left in order to become a serious student of the blues. She also turned into one of rock's most outspoken political activists. The stresses of making it in a man's world led to a dependence on alcohol that nearly destroyed Raitt's career. In 1987, four years after hitting bottom, she joined a program for recovering alcoholics and started her life over again.
And in 1989, after two decades of critically acclaimed but commercially unsuccessful albums, Bonnie Raitt suddenly broke into the big time with her watershed album Nick of Time, which featured the hit "Thing Called Love." She swept the Grammy Awards that year, taking home four of the top trophies, including Album of the Year; Best Pop Vocal Performance, Female; Best Rock Vocal Performance, Female; and Best Traditional Blues Recording.
Her subsequent recordings have kept her in the pop music stratosphere.