LOVE, JOE
The Story Joe DiMaggio Never Told
No se pudo agregar al carrito
Add to Cart failed.
Error al Agregar a Lista de Deseos.
Error al eliminar de la lista de deseos.
Error al añadir a tu biblioteca
Error al seguir el podcast
Error al dejar de seguir el podcast
$0.00 por los primeros 30 días
Compra ahora por $5.99
-
Narrado por:
-
Virtual Voice
Este título utiliza narración de voz virtual
The Story Joe DiMaggio Never Told
A Novel by William Ferrier Jr.
★ A legendary life. A love that haunted him. A confession the world was never meant to hear. ★
Joe DiMaggio was an icon—America’s quiet hero, the Yankee Clipper, the man whose talent seemed untouchable. But behind the legend lived a man who built walls so high even those he loved could not reach him. Not his son. Not his brothers. Not even Marilyn Monroe—the woman whose memory he could never let go.
On the final day of his life, Joe begins to speak the truth he spent decades burying.
What unfolds is a haunting, intimate, and emotionally devastating portrait of a man the world thought it knew. Through Joe’s own voice, we finally hear:
The real story behind the roses left at Marilyn’s grave
The guilt he carried as a father—and the love he never learned to show
The loneliness hidden beneath fame, glory, and myth
The price of silence, and the cost of waiting too long to say what matters
Told with exquisite emotional depth, Love, Joe reimagines the final hours of a baseball legend as he confronts the memories, regrets, and fragile hopes that shaped his life. This is not the Joe DiMaggio of record books and highlight reels—this is Joe the man: flawed, tender, broken, and brave enough at last to speak.
A story about fathers and sons.
A story about forgiveness.
A story about the love that survives us.
★★★★★ Early readers are calling it:
“Heart-shattering and beautiful.”
“A masterpiece of empathy.”
“The most moving novel I’ve read in years.”
**A man becomes a legend. A legend becomes a myth.
Only in the end does he become human.**
LOVE, JOE is that rare novel that transforms a public figure into a deeply intimate voice—one that whispers, aches, and finally tells the story he never could.