Lee did say on Twitter at one point a little while back that he was keen to do a book and get his side of the story out there. At the time, it wasn't public knowledge that he was ill. I'm not sure whether he was aware himself but I suspect he was. I'm glad that the autobiography is now getting out there, albeit posthumously.
Franny certainly had grievances over the way he lost the chairmanship of City, and the OP refers to "dubious tactics among his fellow-directors" during that episode. I happen to have been around at the time working for a Manchester law firm that acted separately for Colin Barlow as an individual and for Stephen Boler and his business interests. We used to get quite a lot of information about the club.
To be honest, I do have a fair bit of sympathy for Lee, as I've expressed on here before. The state of the club when he took over from Swales was appalling, with assuming control of City at that time being the off-the-pitch equivalent of receiving a hospital pass on it. He's right that he did some good things off the field during his tenure but was undermined by the team's on-field failures. However, there are two things to note here.
First, the on-field woes actually owed much to footballing decisions taken by Lee himself. He assumed that his background as a former international player would be a big plus for him in terms of overseeing the football side of the club only for his record in this area to be patchy at best (indeed, this is probably an understatement).
Second, as David Bernstein has recently pointed out in interviews to promote his own book, Lee didn't have the money to implement his plans. That meant we needed further investment. It came not from Lee but from a share issue in which Boler put money into the club, along with the JD Sports pair of John Wardle and David Makin, who were introduced by Bernstein. The total shareholding of Lee and his associates dropped to 19%, with the other shareholders allowing him to remain in the chair, but he was reliant on maintaining their confidence to stay in post.
Unfortunately, it was inevitable that, as we continued to perform disastrously on the pitch, their confidence would collapse - whatever the actual rights and wrongs of the situation. That they chose to remove him when he was hanging on with grim determination really has to be seen in this light. What else did Lee really think would happen?
So, yes, I agere with the post I've quoted above. I intend to buy Franny's autobiography and acknowledge him as one of our club's true legends. But I strongly suspect that his comments about his period in the boardroom will need to be taken with a pinch of salt, with Bernstein's book (which I also haven't read yet but subsequently will) providing a neutral and far more reliable account of the same events. If I prove wrong in this supposition, I'll readily admit it in due course.
Finally, I see that the ghostwriter is Bill Bradshaw, though I'd personally hoped for
@Gary James when Lee first voiced his intention to write a book. Anyway, Bradshaw seems to have a decent sportswriting pedigree, while I don't recall having any issues with him back in the day, when he did paper reviews on Sky and occasionally stood in for Brian Woolnough on
Sunday Supplement. Just wonder if
@tolmie's hairdoo cas say how he's regarded in the trade?