A TALENTED teen, a troubled adult, a lost soul, an unfit mother, an out-of-control attention-seeker – she’s been called all this and more in the 26 years she’s been in the public eye. During those two and a half decades she’s had her freedom taken away from her, become estranged from her sons, found lovers and lost them again and been both supported and ridiculed on social media.
But Britney Spears is finally ready to tell her own story. Two years after a judge freed her from the iron grip of her father’s conservatorship, she’s released her memoir, The Woman in Me – and she’s lifting the lid on a long-held secret and many of the issues that have plagued her over the years.
“It’s finally time for me to raise my voice and speak out and my fans deserve to hear it directly from me,” she tells People magazine.
“No more conspiracy, no more lies. This is me owning my past, present and future.”
Her book, which has been called “a brave and astonishingly moving story about freedom, fame, motherhood, survival, faith and hope”, has already topped Amazon’s bestseller list.
Ultimately, however, Britney (41) hopes her book will be a source of inspiration to others.
“I want the overall takeaway to be that you should speak up. Be loud. Know your worth. Inspire people