Bobby Brown is not the bad guy.

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That statement came from Bobby Brown.

In his new paperback, Brown, infamous for his recurrent trouble with the police rather than his once upon a time Grammy-recognized music career, claims that it actually Houston who initiated his craving for drugs and used him to clean up her media illustration.

Excerpts from Bobby Brown: The Truth, the Whole Truth and Nothing But…, scheduled to be released June 1, were given to the New York Post. The publisher, Down South Books, established that the passages were genuine.

In an account from Houston’s publicist, the singer was apparently “sad that Bobby feels the need to say such things, but she chooses to take the high road, and will not speak badly about the father of her child even if it’s to set the record straight.”

Brown has a very dissimilar (and very surprising) outlook on how to depict Houston.

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I never used cocaine until after I met Whitney,” Brown writes. “Before then, I had experimented with other drugs, but marijuana was my drug of choice.”

Houston was the industry’s ultimate diva about to gain the major achievement of her career with The Bodyguard soundtrack.

If the duo seemed to be the perfect match—the King of New Jack Swing marries the Queen of Ballads—Brown claims that the pairing was “doomed from the very beginning.”

Brown writes that Houston just desired to get married to redirect interest from rumors regarding her sexuality.

Despite the fact that Houston was out to get married and have babies to “kill all speculation,” Brown said, he merely just wished for some affection and ‘be loved’.

Brown does a tell-all about himself in the book.

As per the tome’s publicity copy, it stated there that he dated Janet Jackson and Madonna, “sle[pt] with thousands of women,” and almost died from a drug overdose. For boy-band veteran, it pledges to divulge “the real reason he left New Edition.” And for the followers of author and music-video star Karrine “Superhead” Steffans, it offers this critique: “Yes, I’ve spent several nights at her house,” Brown writes. “But she was only good for what her nickname stood for.

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