1 post tagged “hotel california”
BOOKS BOUGHT:
- McSweeney's #27--Dave Eggers (editor)
- The Bostonians--Henry James
- The Baron in the Trees--Italo Calvino
- Invisible Cities--Italo Calvino
- Civilwarland in Bad Decline--George Saunders
- When You Are Engulfed in Flames--David Sedaris
- Swann's Way--Marcel Proust
- Slapstick--Kurt Vonnegut
- God Bless You, Mr. Rosewater--Kurt Vonnegut
BOOKS READ:
Hotel California--Barney Hoskyns
The full title of this book is Hotel California: The True-Life Adventures of Crosby, Stills, Nash, Young, Mitchell, Taylor, Browne, Ronstadt, Geffen, the Eagles, and Their Many Friends. That's a mouthful right there. Although I don't care even one tiny bit about David Geffen stories, I like most of the other musicians mentioned in that run-on title. In a fit of boredom, I actually counted up the albums I had by the musicians mentioned in the title. I came up with 94, so this book was right up my musical alley.
Hotel California examines the Southern California music scene from about 1965-75 with a close look at the rise of the singer-songwriter movement and the country-rock genre popularized by the Eagles. It was actually a pretty good book. My only complaint was that parts of the book paid too much attention to Joni Mitchell's voracious sexual appetites. I don't remember exactly, but I think she had sex with everyone in the title with the possible exception of Linda Ronstadt and Neil Young. David Geffen was gay, but I'm pretty sure she tried to get with him anyway. When the author wasn't keeping track of bedpost notches, he was telling interesting anecdotes about all my favorites. He also gave Gene Clark his due respect and credit. That right there is enough for me to recommend this book to anyone with similar musical tastes.
The Adventures of Augie March--Saul Bellow
Augie March was a great book for the first 300+ pages. It followed the titular character's boyhood and young adulthood in Depression-era Chicago. Special emphasis was given to Augie's relationship with his family and his many employers. Then Augie went down to Mexico to train an eagle to catch lizards, and it seemed like all the characters suddenly stepped into a Malcolm Lowry novel. It was strange.
Augie eventually finished up the Mexican chapter in his life and went back to Chicago. Then it seemed like Saul Bellow didn't know what to do with the story so he just had Augie marry somebody he met down in Mexico. It was a disappointing ending to what started off as a very interesting, well-written book.
Augie March is considered a classic in many circles. In my mind, it's half classic/half disappointment. I liked the author's Henderson the Rain King much more.
One Picture for Every Page of Thomas Pynchon's Novel Gravity's Rainbow--Zak Smith
Zak Smith got the idea of making a drawing or painting that represented what took place on each page of Thomas Pynchon's Gravity's Rainbow. It was a great idea, but the final result was surprisingly dull. After about 50 pages, it became glaringly obvious that Zak Smith's art wasn't consistently interesting enough to pull off the project. Illustrated became very repetitive. How many pages can he represent with a black and white scribble?! He was always sure to draw the sex parts, though. I guess that's what happens when you let a pornographer make a book. A much better idea would've been to commission a different artist for each page.
I read Gravity's Rainbow about seven or eight years ago. I didn't reread it when I read Zak Smith's book. Maybe it would've been more interesting had I tackled both books simultaneously. Maybe not.
CURRENTLY READING:
The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gentleman--Lawrence Sterne
Swann's Way--Marcel Proust
The Book of Yoga--Christina Brown