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"Goodbye, Little Rock and Roller" was a 2004 SEBA Book Award
finalist, and a 2004 Book Critics Circle Award finalist.
"Goodbye, Little Rock and Roller" is an inventive and original book
from Nashville singer/songwriter Chapman, who uses twelve of her
most resonant songs as entry points to many of her life's
adventures. Not a memoir, but a map of the places Chapman's been
and what went through her mind as she was traveling there, this
book is funny and tender, warm and exuberant.
Raised a debutante in Spartanburg, South Carolina, the daughter of
a mill owner and firmly part of proper society, Chapman became a
rocker at a time when women weren't yet picking up electric
guitars. She is "a living example," as one reviewer wrote, "of the
triumph of rock and roll over good breeding."
From New Year's Eve in 1978 when Jerry Lee Lewis gave Chapman
advice on how to live life ("I mean it's one thing when your mother
says 'Honey don't you think you'd better slow down?' But when The
Killer voices his concern....") to the time her black maid Cora
Jeter took the seven-year-old to see Elvis, "Goodbye, Little Rock
and Roller" goes to the moments when the influences on Chapman's
songwriting and psyche were cemented. And it winningly reveals how
the creative process comes from life: one of Chapman's favorite
songs was written after waking up facedown in her underpants in her
front-yard vegetable garden.
Revealing intimate rock and roll moments and memories of a South
Carolina childhood, Marshall Chapman is a fresh voice firmly in the
Southern tradition.
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