With the publication of his second book, Howard Miss America, Howard Stern again vaulted from radio drive-time to the best-seller lists. But the man who is supposedly the rampant Id is, it turns out, fairly reticent about himself and his media empire. His silence is about to be violated by noted media commentator and columnist Paul D. Colford. In this thoroughly researched and engaging unauthorized biography, Colford tells all the facts that we haven't heard from the self-proclaimed "King of All Media".
Not exactly scintillating reading, but Colford's book is an easy to read straightforward career rundown with details that counterbalance Stern's own more fanciful and mythologized autobiographical tales, especially the circumstances surrounding the DJ's demise at NBC. The truth lies somewhere between this and "Private Parts." It helps to be a Stern fan to appreciate it, though it may have interest for people interested in general with the radio industry. Stern is one of the funniest men alive and a revitalizer of the radio business, like it or not, so any book about him probably has some merit. Worthwhile.
A quick read that seems like a more detailed version of the Private Parts movie, the author tells the story of Howard Stern's rise to greatness in detail, example by example. The book attempts to understand the dual personalities of Stern; acerbic and rude on the radio, meditating and kind off the radio.