About this item
Highlights
- George Cory and Douglass Cross wrote just one hit song, "I Left My Heart in San Francisco.
- About the Author: Bill Christine won nine national writing awards and shared in a Pulitzer Prize during his 25 years with the Los Angeles Times.
- 200 Pages
- Biography + Autobiography, Music
Description
About the Book
"George Cory and Douglass Cross wrote just one hit song, "I Left My Heart in San Francisco." They were unknown before they wrote it--and unknown after it became an American standard."--Book Synopsis
George Cory and Douglass Cross wrote just one hit song, "I Left My Heart in San Francisco." They were unknown before they wrote it--and were unknown after it became a standard.
Their lives were a tangle. They eked out a meager living in San Francisco and Brooklyn for 15 years before Tony Bennett serendipitously came across the song, which had languished. His recording revived his career and made the songwriters rich.
Wealth didn't beget happiness. The duo broke up. Cross drank himself to death. Cory died from drinking as well (widely believed to be a suicide). In 2016, San Francisco dedicated a monument to the city's official song in front of the iconic Fairmont Hotel--a statue of Tony Bennett.
Review Quotes
"Meticulously researched...a superlative study of a song that has not left our hearts in the course of over half a century. It belongs on the shelf of all those who are interested in the Great American Songbook."-ARSC Journal; "Christine's book is a dual biography of the guys who wrote Bennett's signature song, 'I Left My Heart in San Francisco.' But the book is much more than a topsy-turvy Horatio Alger saga (rags-to-riches-to-booze). Christine writes in the first person, like a real-life detective novel, about his search for the truth about the star-crossed lives of the composer and lyricist...a captivating mixture of intrigue and double-crosses."-Ed Goldman, daily columnist, Sacramento Business Journal.
About the Author
Bill Christine won nine national writing awards and shared in a Pulitzer Prize during his 25 years with the Los Angeles Times. His books include Roberto!, a biography about baseball great Roberto Clemente. He lives in Torrance, California.