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Greil Marcus once said to an interviewer, "There is an infinite
amount of meaning about anything, and I free associate." For more
than four decades, Marcus has explored the connections among
figures, sounds, and events in culture, relating unrelated points
of departure, mapping alternate histories and surprising
correspondences. He is a unique and influential voice in American
letters.Marcus was born in 1945 in San Francisco. In 1968 he
published his first piece, a review of "Magic Bus: The Who on
Tour," in "Rolling Stone," where he became the magazine's first
records editor. Renowned for his ongoing "Real Life Top Ten"
column, Marcus has been a writer for a number of magazines and
websites, and is the author and editor of over fifteen books. His
critique is egalitarian: no figure, object, or event is too high,
low, celebrated, or obscure for an inquiry into the ways in which
our lives can open outward, often unexpectedly."In Conversations
with Greil Marcus," Marcus discuses in lively, wide-ranging
interviews his books and columns as well as his critical
methodology and broad approach to his material, signaled by a
generosity of spirit leavened with aggressive critical
standards.
Legendary New Yorker writer and editor Roger Angell is considered
to be among the greatest baseball writers to date. He brought a
fan’s love, a fiction writer’s eye, and an essayist’s
sensibility to the game. No other baseball writer has a through
line quite like Angell’s: born in 1920, he was an avid fan of the
game by the Depression era, when he watched Babe Ruth and Lou
Gehrig hit home runs at Yankee Stadium. He began writing about
baseball in 1962 and continued through the decades, blogging about
baseball’s postseasons, until shortly before his death in 2022.
No Place I Would Rather Be tells the story of Angell’s
contribution to sportswriting, including his early short stories,
pieces for the New Yorker, autobiographical essays, seven books,
and the common threads that run through them. His work reflects
rapidly changing mores as well as evolving forces on and off the
field, reacting to a half century of cultural turmoil, shifts in
trends and professional attitudes of ballplayers and executives,
and a complex, discerning, and diverse audience. Baseball is both
change and constancy, and Angell was the preeminent essayist of
that paradox. His writing encompassed fondness for the past, a
sober reckoning of the present, and hope for the future of the
game. This edition features a new epilogue.
Legendary New Yorker writer and editor Roger Angell is considered
to be among the greatest baseball writers to date. He brought a
fan’s love, a fiction writer’s eye, and an essayist’s
sensibility to the game. No other baseball writer has a through
line quite like Angell’s: born in 1920, he was an avid fan of the
game by the Depression era, when he watched Babe Ruth and Lou
Gehrig hit home runs at Yankee Stadium. He began writing about
baseball in 1962 and continued through the decades, blogging about
baseball’s postseasons, until shortly before his death in 2022.
No Place I Would Rather Be tells the story of Angell’s
contribution to sportswriting, including his early short stories,
pieces for the New Yorker, autobiographical essays, seven books,
and the common threads that run through them. His work reflects
rapidly changing mores as well as evolving forces on and off the
field, reacting to a half century of cultural turmoil, shifts in
trends and professional attitudes of ballplayers and executives,
and a complex, discerning, and diverse audience. Baseball is both
change and constancy, and Angell was the preeminent essayist of
that paradox. His writing encompassed fondness for the past, a
sober reckoning of the present, and hope for the future of the
game. This edition features a new epilogue.
Kessinger Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of
rare and hard-to-find books with something of interest for
everyone!
This is a new release of the original 1948 edition.
Bonomo Self Improvement Library, Number 8.
This is a new release of the original 1945 edition.
Bonomo Self Improvement Library, Number 8.
Kessinger Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of
rare and hard-to-find books with something of interest for
everyone!
Kessinger Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of
rare and hard-to-find books with something of interest for
everyone!
Kessinger Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of
rare and hard-to-find books with something of interest for
everyone!
Kessinger Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of
rare and hard-to-find books with something of interest for
everyone!
Kessinger Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of
rare and hard-to-find books with something of interest for
everyone!
Kessinger Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of
rare and hard-to-find books with something of interest for
everyone!
Kessinger Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of
rare and hard-to-find books with something of interest for
everyone!
This is a brilliant study of the creation, impact, and legacy of
one of rock's great albums, and a hymn to the nature of teenage
fandom. Released in 1979, AC/DC's "Highway To Hell" was the
infamous last album recorded with singer Bon Scott, who died of
alcohol poisoning in London in February of 1980. Officially chalked
up to "Death by Misadventure," Scott's demise has forever secured
the album's reputation as a partying primer and a bible for lethal
behavior, branding the album with the fun chaos of alcoholic excess
and its flip side, early death. The best songs on "Highway To Hell"
achieve Sonic Platonism, translating rock & roll's transcendent
ideals in stomping, dual-guitar and eighth-note bass riffing, a
Paleolithic drum bed, and insanely, recklessly odd but fun vocals.
Joe Bonomo strikes a three - chord essay on the power of
adolescence, the durability of rock & roll fandom, and the
transformative properties of memory. Why does "Highway To Hell"
matter to anyone beyond non-ironic teenagers? Blending interviews,
analysis, and memoir with a fan's perspective, "Highway To Hell"
dramatizes and celebrates a timeless album that one critic said
makes 'disaster sound like the best fun in the world.' 'A growing
Alexandria of rock criticism' - "Los Angeles Times", 2008. 'Ideal
for the rock geek who thinks liner notes just aren't enough -
"Rolling Stone". 'A brilliant series...each one a word of real
love' - "NME"(UK).
In "Jerry Lee Lewis: Lost and Found", author Joe Bonomo delves
deeply into the accidental intersection between fading American
Rockabilly and the ascending Beatlemania. By first taking a look at
the critical years before his famed night in 1964 at West Germany's
Star-Club, then the tumultuous years that follow, culminating in
his years on the American Country charts in the late 60s/early 70s,
Bonomo brings Jerry Lee Lewis to life in new and fascinating ways.
By now it's an old story, as indelible as Juliet on the balcony or
Paul Bunyan in the forest, bearing in this case the imagery of
trashy southern culture, a sinning young man, and the myth of the
commercial rise-and-fall. The story of Louisiana hellcat Jerry Lee
Lewis and his 1958 wedding scandal - it was discovered that at 22
he'd married his 13-year old second cousin, Myra, before he was
divorced from his second wife - took precedence long ago over the
man himself and the music he makes. Because scandal is sexier than
toiling in long shadows, the incident will forever taunt and haunt
Lewis as he plays and performs, and after his death will likely be
the lead in each of his obituaries. In "Jerry Lee Lewis: Lost and
Found" author Joe Bonomo deigns to let others focus on the scandal
and delves more deeply into the accidental intersection between
fading American Rockabilly and the ascending Beatlemaina. By first
taking a look at the critical years before his famed night in 1964
at West Germany's Star-Club - what that meant not only for him but
the entire live album-making world - then the tumultuous years that
follow, culminating in his years on the American Country charts in
the late 60s/early 70s, Bonomo brings Jerry Lee Lewis to life in
new and fascinating ways. In spite of plummeting record sales and
concert fees, a media savaging of his personal character, a change
of record labels and management, and a considerable upturn in drug
and alcohol abuse, Jerry Lee Lewis persevered. In between being
betrayed and ignored, he would record one of the greatest rock
& roll performances in history. This book examines and explains
the almighty impact of the Father of Rock'n'Roll.
It's June 2001. Keith Streng steers a cramped mini-van north along
Lincoln Avenue in Chicago while Peter Zaremba, Bill Milhizer and
Ken Fox sprawl in the back nursing hangovers and road weariness.
They pull into the Apache, quaintly described as a "hooker hotel"
by local folk, and drag their gear and merchandise into a decrepit
room. Blood is splattered on the ceiling, roaches scurry on the
walls and grainy porn blares on the television. Next door, two
obese half-naked guys sit on a bed with an enormous bottle of cheap
bourbon between them, staring idly at the TV.The Fleshtones are
celebrating their twenty-fifth anniversary, but there aren't any
sold-out venues or golden gifts to cash in. A quarter century into
it and the guys still crash on promoters' floors or share small
beds in dingy hotels like the Apache."I don't want fame, I want
notoriety," Peter Zaremba once said, and in the years since making
that statement he has indeed become the charismatic leader of his
own cult. The Fleshtones stand as the ultimate example of
principle, pride and determination. A group of working-class guys
testifying to a cause in the face of odds stacked so highly against
them that they are destined to forever play in the shadows. "Sweat"
is a bare-knuckled account of road-paving rock & roll played in
the real world, where success measured over the long haul is
redefined each and every hard-won morning.
Using as its epigraph and unifying principle Luc Sante's notion
that "Every human being is an archeological site," Field Recordings
from the Inside provides a deep and personal examination at the
impact of music on our lives. Bonomo effortlessly moves between the
personal and the critical, investigating the ways in which music
defines our personalities, tells histories, and offers mysterious,
often unbidden access into the human condition. The book explores
the vagaries and richness of music and music-making--from rock and
roll, punk, and R&B to Frank Sinatra, Nashville country, and
Delta blues--as well as the work of a diverse group of artists and
figures--Charles Lamb, music writer Lester Bangs, painter and
television personality Bob Ross, child country musician Troy Hess,
and songwriter Greg Cartwright. Mining the often complex natures
and shapes of the creative process, Field Recordings from the
Inside is a singular work that blends music appreciation,
criticism, and pop culture from one of the most critically
acclaimed music writers of our time.
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