As usual, Prince had high expectations.
The superstar who shrouded himself in mystery wanted his memoir to be the biggest music book ever, one that would live up to the hype.
"We need this to get weird," he implored his collaborator, Brooklyn writer Dan Piepenbring. "It's good to be controversial."
When "The Beautiful Ones" arrives Tuesday, it will be neither the biggest music book ever, nor a memoir. But it deserves some hype.
Three months and 28 handwritten pages into the project, Prince died of a fentanyl overdose on April 21, 2016. Piepenbring, a literary-journal editor who'd never written a book, had to salvage the volume with the help of Prince's estate.
In the icon's apartment at Paisley Park, he found a sheaf of papers containing a career's worth of handwritten lyrics, some with words crossed out, some in cursive, some hand-printed, some in capital letters.
In Paisley's top-secret vault, he discovered drawings, a middle-school report card and old photos with captions occasionally scrawled on the back. And he unearthed a crown jewel: Prince's treatment — hand-penned, of course — for the movie that would become "Purple Rain."
Piepenbring, 33, put it all together into a 280-page book the size of a modest novel.