by: Bee Delores
Last Updated: October 15, 2024
10 min read
10 min read
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Lisa Marie Presley and her daughter Riley Keough wrote a book about their complicated family history and their challenges.
The book is a moving look at what it was like to grow up in the spotlight of Elvis Presley . It talks about fame, addiction, and death.
From different points of view, Lisa Marie and Riley talk about how the fame of their family has affected them emotionally and also talk about times when they were strong and connected.
Keep reading to know more details!
In a new memoir, Lisa Marie Presley writes about how terrible her sadness was after her son Benjamin Keough died.
Benjamin killed himself in August 2020, when he was 27 years old. His mother loved him very much, and Lisa was very sad when he died.
Riley Keough , Lisa’s daughter, wrote a biography in which she says that Lisa Marie kept Benjamin’s body in her home for two months after he died.
This reveal is in her autobiography, From Here to the Great Unknown, which came out on October 8, 2024, and was published by Pan MacMillan.
The book talks about how Lisa kept Benjamin’s body in a separate Casitas bedroom on dry ice at 55 degrees until she was ready to bury him.
In her writings, she said that she knew this would seem strange to other people, but she explained that her sadness was so strong that she could not say goodbye to her son right away. “I got used to having him there,” she wrote, adding that the kind owner of the funeral home let her keep Benjamin close.
Lisa Marie had a hard time dealing with her feelings after Benjamin’s death. She even thought about where to put him, but she could not decide between Hawaii and Graceland, Elvis Presley’s famous home in Memphis.
Benjamin was finally buried at Graceland, and Lisa was buried next to him after she died in January 2023, at the age of 54. The book also shows how much Lisa Marie was hurt by Benjamin’s death.
She wrote honestly that even though she was very sad, she had to fight to stay alive for her other children. Her daughter Riley, who co-wrote the biography with her after her mother died, shared this drive.
The author, Riley, who also reads parts of the podcast, said that finishing the book was her way of showing the world Lisa as a “three-dimensional human being” and the real person behind the news stories.
Riley and Lisa Marie remembered Benjamin by getting tattoos that looked like each other. Benjamin had the name of his sister on his shoulder and the name of his mother on his hand.
Riley got the name of her brother tattooed on her neck, and Lisa Marie got the name of Benjamin marked on her hand.
Lisa tells the story of a strong memory in her memoir: she showed a tattoo artist her son’s body to help match the pattern. Benjamin’s funeral took place in Malibu, and he was buried at Graceland.
Along with writing about her love for her father, Elvis Presley, Lisa Marie also writes about the hard times she went through after he died.
She talks about her relationships, being a mother, and how painful it was to lose Benjamin.
She was also happy about the birth of her granddaughter, Tupelo Keough, who is now two years old and is Riley Keough’s daughter.
The book is mostly about Lisa Marie Presley’s life and impact, including her relationships, being a mother, and her sadness.
Riley is going to honor her mother’s death story with a book tour that will take her to six cities starting from October 9, 2024, to October 20, 2024. These cities include New York, Memphis, and London.
Lisa Marie Presley and her daughter Riley Keough share the personal and painful details of their lives in their new book, From Here to the Great Unknown. This is especially true after Benjamin’s death.
Lisa Marie was Elvis and Priscilla Presley’s only child. She died at age 54 from a problem that came up after having bariatric surgery , leaving the book unwritten.
The book was finished by her daughter Riley, who is best known for her part in Daisy Jones & The Six . She used conversations and notes her mother left behind. Their different points of view make for a sad but true story.
Lisa Marie asks a question at one point in her memoir: “What is the point of an autobiography?” In Keough’s voice, the answer comes through.
Lisa Marie’s life has been in the public eye since she was a child. As Elvis Presley’s daughter, she was always being watched, from how she looked and how much she weighed to her marriages and drug use.
She writes in a piece, “I guess I did not have a shot in hell,” about how she wishes she had a private life.
Riley talks about how much public criticism affected her mother and how Lisa Marie felt alone because she did not have any brothers to share the stresses of her well-known life.
Keough says, “In a way, she was the princess of America and did not want to be.”
At the beginning of her book, Lisa Marie writes about her youth at Graceland, her family’s home in Memphis. The reader gets a rare look at parts of the house that are not shown on public walks.
For example, she talks about her memories of getting her tonsils taken out and driving her baby blue golf cart around the grounds. But along with these memories of youth, darker times loom.
Lisa Marie was only nine years old when she saw her father’s body being taken away from their home after he died. It was an experience that would stay with her forever.
Lisa Marie also writes in her book that her mother’s boyfriend, Michael Edwards, sexually abused her for three years, beginning when she was 11.
At age 14, she tried to kill herself after a 23-year-old man used her and sold sexy pictures of her.
Even though she had some famous times as a young woman, like having tea with Elton John, the stress she went through was too much for her to handle.
The connection between Lisa Marie and Michael Jackson was one of the most well-known parts of her life.
In her book, she talks about meeting Jackson for the first time when she was six years old, but they did not get back together and fall in love until she was twenty-one.
At that time, she was married to Riley’s father, Danny Keough, but she quickly split up with him to be with Jackson.
Lisa Marie says Jackson was not dating anyone before she met her. They often stayed alone in hotels and watched movies like “Jaws” while their room service leftovers piled up.
Even though Lisa Marie and Jackson were very close, their marriage ended when she refused to have his children. His growing drug use was another reason they broke up.
One of his family members even asked her to test Jackson’s pee to prove he was using drugs, but she refused. Lisa Marie also talks about the claims that Jackson abused children, saying, “I never saw a goddamn thing like that.” If I could have, I would have killed him.
This direct response shows how loyal she was to Jackson, even though their relationship was getting worse.
Lisa Marie found comfort in being a mother, even though her life had many problems.
After getting clean herself, she was fully committed to her two kids, Riley and Ben, for ten years. Keough remembers her mother telling her, “I am not pretty, I am not good enough, but I am a great mother.”
It is clear that she is proud to be a mom, but the fame pressures never go away completely.
There were times when Lisa Marie would put aluminum foil over the windows of their house to keep the cameras from looking in.
The problems she had with drugs came back after she had her twin girls, Harper and Finley, in 2008.
Following a C-section, she became reliant on drugs, which turned into an addiction that saw her taking as many as 80 pills every day.
In the last few pages of her book, Lisa Marie goes into great detail about her addiction and how terrible it was for her.
Keough is honest about how her mother’s death affected her, writing about meetings where Lisa Marie seemed lost and unable to recognize her.
In a sad scene, Keough remembers seeing her mother fight for five minutes to light a cigarette. She knew Lisa Marie would not be able to handle losing her son.
Lisa Marie’s touching words about her three children at the end of her book make it a moving whole. I fight it, I fight it, I fight it, I fight it.
It is a strong memory of how determined she was to keep going even though she was in a lot of pain.
Not only is it a story about Lisa Marie’s problems, but also about Riley’s strength as she deals with the deaths of her mother and brother. It is a moving ode to a family that has been through tragedy but has also been strong.
Event | Date |
---|---|
Birth | February 1, 1968 |
Elvis Presley’s Death | August 16, 1977 |
Marriage to Danny Keough | October 3, 1988 |
Birth of Riley Keough | May 29, 1989 |
Birth of Benjamin Keough | October 21, 1992 |
Marriage to Michael Jackson | May 26, 1994 |
Marriage to Nicolas Cage | August 10, 2002 |
Birth of Twins (Harper & Finley) | October 7, 2008 |
Death of Benjamin Keough | July 12, 2020 |
Lisa Marie Presley’s Death | January 12, 2023 |
Lover of hiking, biking, horror movies, cats and camping. Writer at Wide Open Country, Holler and Nashville Gab.
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