Apparently, Aaron Carter by no means even wished his memoir to see the sunshine of day!
As we’ve been reporting, the 34-year-old singer was engaged on a e-book for 3 years earlier than his sudden loss of life. It is now set to be launched beneath the title Aaron Carter: An Incomplete Story of an Incomplete Life and can hit the cabinets on November 15 by way of writer Ballast Books. But based on Page Six, Aaron didn’t need the memoir launched and really tried to cease the writer from doing so earlier than his loss of life. His publicist claimed to the outlet on Friday:
“Aaron, in the midst of [working on the book], said, ‘I want nothing to do with this’ and stopped, so the fact that the publisher is saying it’s green-lit, it’s not. That’s against Aaron’s wishes.”
Related: Aaron Claimed He Had ‘Over 100 Seizures’ From Huffing Addiction In Interview Before Death
Wow… If the writer knew publishing the e-book can be towards the I Want Candy singer’s needs, it’s extremely disrespectful and terrible to now be dashing this launch so quickly after his loss of life — and even in any respect.
The memoir has already induced a bunch of controversy as a number of excerpts had been already launched, a few of which centered round his previous relationship with Hilary Duff and the way he took her virginity when she was about 13 years previous. And after all, the 35-year-old wasn’t completely satisfied in regards to the “disgusting” memoir and slammed it for being printed. She stated in a press release:
“It’s really sad that within a week of Aaron’s death, there’s a publisher that seems to be recklessly pushing a book out to capitalize on this tragedy without taking appropriate time or care to fact check the validity of his work. To water down Aaron’s life story to what seems to be unverified click-bait for profit is disgusting.”
And she wasn’t the one one who referred to as out the Ballast Books for capitalizing on Aaron’s loss of life! His administration staff and publicists agreed with Hillary, as Big Umbrella Management’s Taylor Helgeson stated in a press release to The Post:
“In the few short days following our dear friends passing we have been trying to grieve and process while simultaneously having to deal with obscenely disrespectful and unauthorized releases including an album titled blacklisted, a single titled ‘Lately’ and now a book. This is a time for mourning and reflection not heartless money grabs and attention seeking. We would ask the parties responsible to remove the aforementioned content and that no further content be released without approval from his family, friends, and associates.”
It’s horrible that there so many individuals are attempting to make some cash off Aaron’s passing. However, the ghostwriter and writer of the e-book Andy Symonds fired again, saying the rapper “hired” him to “help tell the world his story”:
“That story, while tragically cut short, was filled with good and bad. His life was far from pretty, and understandably certain people in the public eye don’t want some of the stories Aaron tells in his book to come to light. That doesn’t make them any less true or newsworthy.”
He added:
“Aaron had a right — as we all do — to tell his story. As a journalist, I am honored that he chose me to help him do that. In addition to being cathartic for him, Aaron hoped this book would help others struggling with addiction and mental illness. I hope and believe it will do that.”
Innerestingly sufficient, when Page Six requested Andy if Aaron ever shared he didn’t need to transfer ahead with the memoir, he didn’t remark additional. Hmm…
What are your ideas on this case, Perezcious readers? Do you intend on buying the e-book now understanding Aaron supposedly by no means wished it launched? Let us know within the feedback under!
[Image via MEGA/WENN]