The lead singer of U2, Bono was born Paul David Hewson in Dublin.
He met The Edge, Larry Mullen and Adam Clayton at school and in
1978, U2 was formed. The band released their first album, "Boy," on
Island Records in 1980 and to date have released a total of 14
studio albums that have sold 157 million copies worldwide. Heralded
by Rolling Stone as "a live act simply without peer," the band's
record-breaking 360 Tour (2009-2011) remains the highest-grossing
concert band tour of all time. U2 have won numerous awards,
including 22 Grammys, more than any other duo or group, as well as
an Academy Award nomination and the Amnesty International
Ambassador of Conscience Award. In 2005, U2 was inducted into the
Rock n' Roll Hall of Fame.
Alongside his role in U2, Bono is a ground-breaking activist. A
leader in Jubilee 2000's Drop the Debt campaign, he next took on
the fight against HIV/AIDS and extreme poverty, co-founding sister
organizations ONE and (RED). ONE is a movement of millions of
people dedicated to the fight against extreme poverty and
preventable disease. With ONE, Bono has lobbied heads of state and
legislatures all around the world, helping to ensure the passage of
programs, such as the U.S. PEPFAR AIDS program, that have helped to
save tens of millions of lives over the past 20 years. (RED) -
which partners with companies to raise public awareness about, and
corporate contributions for, the AIDS crisis - has to date
generated more than $700 million for the Global Fund to treat and
prevent AIDS in Africa. Since 2020, ONE and (RED) have also been
fighting COVID-19 and its impact on the developing world.
In 2016, Bono cofounded The Rise Fund, a global impact fund
investing in entrepreneurial companies driving positive social and
environmental change in alignment with the Sustainable Development
Goals.
Bono has received a number of awards for his music and activism,
including the Freedom of the City of Dublin (with U2), Chile's
Pablo Neruda Medal of Honour, the Legion D'Honneur from the French
Government, an honorary British knighthood, the Fulbright
Association Prize for International Understanding and TIME
Magazine's Person of the Year (along with Bill and Melinda Gates).
He lives in Dublin with his wife Ali Hewson.
This is Bono at his best: thoughtful, reflective, revealing a
wisdom that his rock-star persona covers up ... At the root of it
all you don't doubt his decency or integrity
*The Times*
A rattling good yarn ... characteristically expansive, but it
whizzes by ... Bono has storytelling verve and a genuine desire for
self-examination and is enthusiastic about praising others, often
at his own expense. ... [a] generous, energetic book
*Guardian*
Bono's memoir bares his soul ... Has any rock superstar written a
more revealing biography? He deftly balances the comical and
profound and packs anecdotes with cameos by the rich and famous,
from Frank Sinatra to Pope John Paul II
*Telegraph*
Beautifully evoked, a mixture of Joycean exuberance and
Chandleresque irony ... most revealing are the intimate personal
experiences that shaped him and his chaotic creative process.
Punctuating it all is the music. Each chapter uses a U2 song to
pull us down memory lane
*Sunday Times*
A rewarding read about a loss-fuelled life lived to the full ...
What makes much of this book so exciting and interesting, is that
the sadness is overwhelmed by a desperate, frenzied desire to use
life more richly since it has proved to be so fragile. Sadness is
replaced here by an extraordinary and breathless zeal for
friendship but also for love ... Surrender is, in its own generous
way, a book written by an Irishman to tell his mother how much he
misses her, to tell his mates how much he rates them, and to let
his wife and children know how much he loves them
*Irish Times*
Bono's honesty will win over his harshest critics ... the U2
frontman's memoir is a trumph ... Honest, witty, informative and
beautifully written. Surrender will surely join the ranks of the
great rock memoirs
*Irish Independent*
Bono's prose is electrifyingly good. Not confected memories, but
the messy, sometimes bathetic minutiae of lived experience,
emotions remembered but only truly understood with hindsight and
vocabulary that comes much later
*Pete Paphides, author of 'Broken Greek'*
Will engage and entertain you, full of extraordinary anecdotes and
people from Sinatra and Johnny Cash to Pope Benedict and
presidents.
*Catherine Meyer, author and founder of WEP*
Bono's book is absolutely brilliant
*Simon Schama*
A brilliant, very funny, very revealing,
autobiography-through-music. Maybe the best book ever written about
being a rockstar
*Caitlin Moran*
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