A second generation Irish musician is to release a much-anticipated hilarious autobiography this month.
PJ McKeon, with roots in Abbeyleix and Mountrath, grew up as the youngest of six in a working-class Irish family in
inner-city north Manchester.
When bedridden with a broken shoulder, the musician passed the time by reading celebrity autobiographies. Mr McKeon was struck by how 'underwhelming and miserable' these books were.
The rocker-turned-writer decided to pick up a pen and write his own memoirs: 'the memoirs of a person of no importance or authority'.
This hilarious and deeply moving story brings readers from red-hot summers in 1970's Laois and Galway, to an emerging punk rock scene in an overcrowded urban Manchester.
"When I was young, I was able to ride the slipstream of my much older siblings," Mr McKeon explained.
"I became engrossed in their music, friendships, phrases and fashion. By the age of 8, I was convinced that I was Cheetham’s answer to Mick Jagger, and would perform my 'soon-to-be legendary' dance routines at the annual family weddings," Mr McKeon laughed.
The coming-of-age autobiography reminds readers of memories gone by: the Troubles, The Eurovision Song Contest, the exploits of British football teams, and Top of The Pops on the family’s black and white TV set.
As a self-described failed footballer, failed punk rocker, a nearly made alternative comedian, a failed radio presenter, a failed playwright and a social sciences lecturer, Mr McKeon paints a picture of an extraordinary life of an ordinary man through quick quips and insightful thoughts.
Pictured: PJ McKeon in the 1970's.
"I have held roles as a cloakroom attendant (in the Hacienda), a car valeter, a furniture salesman, in construction, as a carer, as a manufacturer of women’s stockings, as a painter and decorator, as a storeman and as a clerical assistant," he said.
"I have plenty of lively tales to tell, and yet to be told, from each section of my varied CV," he said.
The book is a true reflection of life, in portraying the lows along with the highs. Mr McKeon discusses corporal punishment in Catholic secondary school, rampant poverty in the 1970's, and abuse at the hands of his mother.
Mr McKeown paints a truly colourful picture of a life full of laughter, anguish, comradeship and betrayal in equal measures.
We follow the writer's musical journey, as he becomes 'a human jukebox' inspired by The Dubliners and emerging British punk-rock bands.
"Like millions of other people worldwide, I grew up being Irish descent and supporting Manchester United," he said.
"I studied for my A Levels, degree, master’s degree and PGCE at a variety of colleges in the Manchester area, then went on to work as a social sciences lecturer in further and higher education in the north west of England, in Dublin, and in Wales," Mr McKeon explained.
Pictured: The highly anticipated autobiography from author PJ McKeon
Along the way, Mr McKeon has performed as an alternative stand-up comedian and MC, a radio DJ, a writer and performer of one-man plays, an organiser of alternative comedy clubs and an author of articles for newspapers, magazines and journals.
He has appeared on numerous radio and TV shows, and in documentaries, discussing both comedy and social issues.
Mr McKeon will release his autobiography in two volumes: Volume One ‘My Generation – the memoirs of a wimpy second-generation Irish kid’, and Volume Two: “Shatter Resistant - Made in England”.
Mr McKeon's book will be released on January 30 2025, and is available for purchase on Amazon here.
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