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# Freddie Mercury: An Intimate Memoir by the Man Who Knew Him Best

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Freddie Mercury: An Intimate Memoir by the Man Who Knew Him Best [Freestone, Peter, Evans, David] on desertcart.com. *FREE* shipping on qualifying offers. Freddie Mercury: An Intimate Memoir by the Man Who Knew Him Best

Review: Did we all read the same book? - So many of the reviewers of this book seem to want everything spelled out in capital letters. Perhaps they have no nuances, no ability to read between the lines. To me, this is definitely a read between the lines book. This is not a capital letters book. As for some of the criticisms about it, they just seem to me to rather miss the point. Of course Peter isn't writing about what he doesn't know. He didn't grow up with Freddie. He was only with him in the role of personal assistant for the last decade or so of Freddie's life. For the people who complained that Peter said nothing at all about Freddie's childhood, it seems perfectly obvious to me that Freddie went WAY out of his way to obliterate entirely that portion of his life---with Peter and everyone else. If a person does that, use your common sense---why would he unless his childhood was something he was embarrassed and/or ashamed about? That's what I mean by reading between the lines. For example, on page 208 of my paperback version, Peter gives in my opinion all the information you need to know about Freddie's relationship with his immediate family when he writes: "...by maintaining a distance from them, he was also able to protect himself from some of their censure." Censure? That tells me volumes---that they disapproved of him in some ways. Probably, although I don't know this for a fact, because they were a religious family, they disapproved of his sexuality choices. It has been my experience that people who take organized religion very seriously are the most intolerant of those who choose to follow any path other that the one THEY have deemed correct. The Scientologists and the religious right are good examples of this. Put yourself in Freddie's shoes: here's an inordinately creatively gifted little boy from a restrictive highly religious family, who is shipped off to a boarding school---in another country!---from the age of eight until the age of sixteen, with only short holidays once a year to see his family members. While at this boarding school, by Freddie's own admission, he was chased around by at least one schoolmaster. "Chased around"---that suggests sexual abuse to me. I know from my probation officer husband that frequently pedophiles congregate in those situations: Boy Scouts, boarding schools, all boys choirs, etc. Now before someone gets a hernia from misinterpreting what I just said, I don't say that ALL people involved in those very worthwhile organizations are pedophiles, just that statistically, pedophiles are going to prey where the targets are. So here's Freddie, shipped away from his family, who seem intolerant to me, to a rigid boarding school, which seems intolerant to me, to be on at least one occasion "chased" by a schoolmaster. That poor, poor little boy! And yet he must also have had some good from his family, because otherwise he would have cut them off entirely once he had the ability to do so. He never did. Peter writes sensitively and insightfully about Freddie's behaviour. He does I think zero in on the fact that, for whatever reason, Freddie had to have some sort of drama to release his creativity. As Peter so well put it, "He had to sing angry." Anger, as any artist knows, is closely related to sex and sometimes even to inspiration. Most of the time this spark to creativity seems to have taken the form of Freddie picking arguments with lovers, although with the Bill Reid incident, physical violence erupted in the form of Bill actually biting Freddie on the hand. Ouch! Thank God Freddie dropped that idiot shortly thereafter. With regard to people being bored to death by the careful descriptions of Freddie's Garden Lodge estate, again I think they are missing the point. The descriptions of the things Freddie bought and how he decorated tell you volumes about the man. His furnishings tell you Freddie was tasteful, picky, careful, unencumbered by a lack of money like most of us, and very much into controlling his environment. He was into creating pictures, whether they be of a song on a Queen show, or exactly the right painting on the right wall to bring out the exact mood he wanted. Peter shows us that Freddie was an artist and a collector, and nowhere in the book does he state this so well as when he writes something to the effect of, "Freddie was a collector, of things and of people." The Freddie Mercury I came to know from reading this book was a highly gifted creative man, who had an enormous sexual appetite, a complete and utter devotion to the people who had proved themselves to be his real friends, and a man with absolutely no middles whatsoever. He was either embarrassed or ashamed of his origins and tried to hide them all his adult life, but not to the extent of denying his family once he became a huge star, although he was careful to keep his interactions with them on his own terms. He seemed to me to be extremely funny and extremely sensitive to slights both real and imagined. In addition, he seemed to be someone who went to great pains most of the time never to delve into his own psyche---and in order to avoid doing so, he surrounded himself with virtually non-stop activity. He seemed to have a gigantic capacity for fun and an equally gigantic capacity to be hurt. He hated confrontation and loved Mary Austin, Peter Freestone, Joe Fanelli, Jim Hutton, and all of his many cats, but each of them in deliberately separate and different ways. He seemed to me to be a master of compartmentalization, much like President John F. Kennedy, in that no one person, with the possible exception of Mary Austin, ever got the fully exposed, fully vulnerable Farrokh Borni Bulsara---pronounced FARR-oke. (That's the way his mother pronounced his name on the documentary I saw, and she should know.) And lastly, he seemed to me to be secretive, not necessarily because he was intrinsically that way, but because he learned through painful experience that that was how to protect himself. I consider Peter Freestone's book to be excellent---as long as you can read between the lines.
Review: Best book I ever read about Freddie Mercury - This book is absolutely splendid in every way! The level of detail is incredible, and it held my interest from the very first page to the last. If you really want to know all about Freddie Mercury from 1979 - his death, get this book. Peter Freestone formerly met Freddie in late 1979; so the book is based on the 12 years he spent with him until the day he passed. What I liked about this book is it was not written by someone who was in an intimate relationship with Freddie; but rather in a deep friendship and a support role.

## Technical Specifications

| Specification | Value |
|---------------|-------|
| Best Sellers Rank | #1,305,993 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #1,256 in LGBTQ+ Biographies (Books) #3,142 in Rock Music (Books) #6,660 in Actor & Entertainer Biographies |
| Customer Reviews | 4.6 4.6 out of 5 stars (1,265) |
| Dimensions  | 5.04 x 0.85 x 7.94 inches |
| ISBN-10  | 0711986746 |
| ISBN-13  | 978-0711986749 |
| Item Weight  | 2.31 pounds |
| Language  | English |
| Print length  | 258 pages |
| Publication date  | November 5, 2001 |
| Publisher  | Omnibus Press |

## Images

![Freddie Mercury: An Intimate Memoir by the Man Who Knew Him Best - Image 1](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/61oDYv31HDL.jpg)

## Customer Reviews

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Did we all read the same book?
*by T***R on April 20, 2009*

So many of the reviewers of this book seem to want everything spelled out in capital letters. Perhaps they have no nuances, no ability to read between the lines. To me, this is definitely a read between the lines book. This is not a capital letters book. As for some of the criticisms about it, they just seem to me to rather miss the point. Of course Peter isn't writing about what he doesn't know. He didn't grow up with Freddie. He was only with him in the role of personal assistant for the last decade or so of Freddie's life. For the people who complained that Peter said nothing at all about Freddie's childhood, it seems perfectly obvious to me that Freddie went WAY out of his way to obliterate entirely that portion of his life---with Peter and everyone else. If a person does that, use your common sense---why would he unless his childhood was something he was embarrassed and/or ashamed about? That's what I mean by reading between the lines. For example, on page 208 of my paperback version, Peter gives in my opinion all the information you need to know about Freddie's relationship with his immediate family when he writes: "...by maintaining a distance from them, he was also able to protect himself from some of their censure." Censure? That tells me volumes---that they disapproved of him in some ways. Probably, although I don't know this for a fact, because they were a religious family, they disapproved of his sexuality choices. It has been my experience that people who take organized religion very seriously are the most intolerant of those who choose to follow any path other that the one THEY have deemed correct. The Scientologists and the religious right are good examples of this. Put yourself in Freddie's shoes: here's an inordinately creatively gifted little boy from a restrictive highly religious family, who is shipped off to a boarding school---in another country!---from the age of eight until the age of sixteen, with only short holidays once a year to see his family members. While at this boarding school, by Freddie's own admission, he was chased around by at least one schoolmaster. "Chased around"---that suggests sexual abuse to me. I know from my probation officer husband that frequently pedophiles congregate in those situations: Boy Scouts, boarding schools, all boys choirs, etc. Now before someone gets a hernia from misinterpreting what I just said, I don't say that ALL people involved in those very worthwhile organizations are pedophiles, just that statistically, pedophiles are going to prey where the targets are. So here's Freddie, shipped away from his family, who seem intolerant to me, to a rigid boarding school, which seems intolerant to me, to be on at least one occasion "chased" by a schoolmaster. That poor, poor little boy! And yet he must also have had some good from his family, because otherwise he would have cut them off entirely once he had the ability to do so. He never did. Peter writes sensitively and insightfully about Freddie's behaviour. He does I think zero in on the fact that, for whatever reason, Freddie had to have some sort of drama to release his creativity. As Peter so well put it, "He had to sing angry." Anger, as any artist knows, is closely related to sex and sometimes even to inspiration. Most of the time this spark to creativity seems to have taken the form of Freddie picking arguments with lovers, although with the Bill Reid incident, physical violence erupted in the form of Bill actually biting Freddie on the hand. Ouch! Thank God Freddie dropped that idiot shortly thereafter. With regard to people being bored to death by the careful descriptions of Freddie's Garden Lodge estate, again I think they are missing the point. The descriptions of the things Freddie bought and how he decorated tell you volumes about the man. His furnishings tell you Freddie was tasteful, picky, careful, unencumbered by a lack of money like most of us, and very much into controlling his environment. He was into creating pictures, whether they be of a song on a Queen show, or exactly the right painting on the right wall to bring out the exact mood he wanted. Peter shows us that Freddie was an artist and a collector, and nowhere in the book does he state this so well as when he writes something to the effect of, "Freddie was a collector, of things and of people." The Freddie Mercury I came to know from reading this book was a highly gifted creative man, who had an enormous sexual appetite, a complete and utter devotion to the people who had proved themselves to be his real friends, and a man with absolutely no middles whatsoever. He was either embarrassed or ashamed of his origins and tried to hide them all his adult life, but not to the extent of denying his family once he became a huge star, although he was careful to keep his interactions with them on his own terms. He seemed to me to be extremely funny and extremely sensitive to slights both real and imagined. In addition, he seemed to be someone who went to great pains most of the time never to delve into his own psyche---and in order to avoid doing so, he surrounded himself with virtually non-stop activity. He seemed to have a gigantic capacity for fun and an equally gigantic capacity to be hurt. He hated confrontation and loved Mary Austin, Peter Freestone, Joe Fanelli, Jim Hutton, and all of his many cats, but each of them in deliberately separate and different ways. He seemed to me to be a master of compartmentalization, much like President John F. Kennedy, in that no one person, with the possible exception of Mary Austin, ever got the fully exposed, fully vulnerable Farrokh Borni Bulsara---pronounced FARR-oke. (That's the way his mother pronounced his name on the documentary I saw, and she should know.) And lastly, he seemed to me to be secretive, not necessarily because he was intrinsically that way, but because he learned through painful experience that that was how to protect himself. I consider Peter Freestone's book to be excellent---as long as you can read between the lines.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Best book I ever read about Freddie Mercury
*by N***T on November 6, 2025*

This book is absolutely splendid in every way! The level of detail is incredible, and it held my interest from the very first page to the last. If you really want to know all about Freddie Mercury from 1979 - his death, get this book. Peter Freestone formerly met Freddie in late 1979; so the book is based on the 12 years he spent with him until the day he passed. What I liked about this book is it was not written by someone who was in an intimate relationship with Freddie; but rather in a deep friendship and a support role.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Good read for Freddie Mercury fans.
*by S***7 on May 15, 2025*

Enjoyable read. Lot of info. about how Freddie arranged music, his love of opera, etc. Also several boyfriends, both good & bad, were mentioned. Freddie was a loving, generous, but complex man.

## Frequently Bought Together

- Freddie Mercury by Freestone, Peter (2001) Paperback
- Mercury and Me
- Freddie Mercury: A Life, In His Own Words

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*Last updated: 2026-06-06*