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    The Beatles Literary Anthology

    The Beatles Literary AnthologyCreator: Mike Evans
    Publisher: Plexus Publishing
    Category: Book

    List Price: $24.95
    Buy New: $13.45
    as of 2/9/2010 23:32 EST details
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    New (19) Used (14) from $8.09

    Seller: booksatourplace
    Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 4 reviews
    Sales Rank: 254072

    Media: Hardcover
    Pages: 448
    Number Of Items: 1
    Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.9
    Dimensions (in): 9.2 x 6.5 x 1.7

    ISBN: 0859653153
    Dewey Decimal Number: 782.421660922
    EAN: 9780859653152
    ASIN: 0859653153

    Publication Date: September 21, 2004
    Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

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      • Hardcover - The Beatles Literary Anthology

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    Editorial Reviews:

    Product Description
    Spanning 40 years, The Beatles Literary Anthology compiles accounts of the Beatles by mainstream reporters, rock journalists, cultural commentators, acquaintances, and friends, including Greil Marcus and Geroge Melly. This extensive collection recounts the group’s rise from the Merseybeat music scene; the British invasion that made them icons in the U.S.; their experimentation with song structure and sound-recording technique that redefined pop music; their embracing of psychedelic drugs and pacifism; and the separate paths band members followed after their acrimonious breakup. The Beatles’ influence on the baby boom generation is also acknowledged in essays by writers on both sides of the pop-culture divide. Conveying the excitement of youth culture during the great social changes of the 1960s, the writers underscore the extremes of a career virtually unparalleled in mass-media history.


    Customer Reviews:
    3 out of 5 stars Disappointed   July 12, 2008
    Girl
    3 out of 3 found this review helpful

    I was looking forward to recieving this book from Amazon. After reading June Skinner's 'Read The Beatles' which I enjoyed very much, I was anticipating another even larger compilation of writings on the Beatles that spanned their career. The key here is, "their career" not John Lennon's. What I actually found were two things that I didn't enjoy. One was the over abundance of articles that the compiler uncovered that were about John Lennon. Not any of the others. Just John. While I love John and find him brilliant and interesting, with a title like "The Beatles" Literary Anthology', I was hoping to find articles about the band or at least as many individual writings and interviews featuring the other 3.

    Before you misunderstand, this book does have articles about the Beatles. Some of them are very interesting in fact. But it seems the interesting ones were already included in June Skinner's excellent book. The ones that are in here are a curious gathering from disgruntled people who can't stand the group. There are articles from people who thought they were horribly over rated and untalented. (Not that I mind articles like this. I don't expect everyone to think they were wonderful, but why so many in this book?) There were also articles from people like Nowel Coward who thought they were rude, (THAT one was quite interesting and fun to read!) and a few from fans like Carol Bedford who wrote a complete book called, 'Waiting for the Beatles'. The two that stand out for me were hers and an excerpt taken from 'The Beatles Down Under'. Other than that, unless you only love John and not the others or you really enjoy reading way too many articles written from the point of view of people who think they were over rated, I'm not sure what the point of this book was. Instead of this one, why not read June Skinner's book? It's cheaper and she includes many more interesting offerings than this one.



    5 out of 5 stars ANTHOLOGY OF THE LITERARY KIND   November 21, 2005
    Richard (Blackpool England)
    0 out of 1 found this review helpful

    Before the Beatles,anthologies such as this were usually reserved for Dickens,Sherlock Holmes or Shakespeare.
    Now we have one for the Beatles-which was followed by a seperate one for Lennon-and its one of these kind of books where you can dip in anywhere.
    Interesting to read what the critics in Philadelphia thought of the new English group



    5 out of 5 stars This Gets a Rave Review, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah!   March 12, 2005
    BeatleBangs1964 (United States)
    4 out of 4 found this review helpful

    This is a book of extraordinarily high caliber. Like the Beatle book by Mojo, this one includes a myriad of magazine articles spanning the Beatles' careers as well as musical analyses, comprehensive biographies and analytical dissections of each Beatle.

    One drawback the book has are some inaccuracies, e.g. that George Harrison did not contribute in a musically significant way until 1969 with the release of the Abbey Road album. That just isn't true. George Harrison was a gifted guitarist and extraordinary lyricist who had been writing songs for years prior to 1969! Just LISTEN to the 1966 stellar gem "Revolver" which has 3 songs by George Harrison. The intensity of his lyrics and his unique guitar playing helped define the Beatles as the extraordinary band that they were. Suggesting otherwise is counterproductive.

    On the plus side, this book digs quite deeply into history and provides fascinating accounts of the inception of the Beatles; Pete Best's dismissal from the group in 1962 and his replacement Ringo Starr; personal accounts from Best himself; Beatle manager Brian Epstein's first encounter with the boys in 1961.

    Each Beatle and the influences that helped shape and guide him down his individual Long & Winding Road are discussed in depth; their philosphies; political ideologies and core values and beliefs are explored as well.

    If you are on a quest for buried treasure, you will find plenty of it in this book. You will uncover anecdotes about Beatle conventions; Murray the K, a New York disc jockey who followed the Beatles around during their first trip to America in 1964; his views on John's wife Yoko in later years; John's and George's tragic and untimely demise as well.

    Even with the death of two Beatles (at the time of this review), the book does an excellent job of portraying their staying power and how they continue to influence music and other art media.

    All in all, a solid job. I highly recommend this one, yeah, yeah, yeah!





    5 out of 5 stars Essential to any Beatles library   October 7, 2004
    Charles Foster Kane (Who knows?)
    12 out of 12 found this review helpful

    Obviously this book should be picked up by any hardcore Beatles fan, but it might be even more essential if you're just a casual Beatlemaniac. Why? Because it contains excerpts from the vast volume of writing on the Fab 4 which you'll probably just dip a toe in otherwise. This anthology compiles magazine articles, both contemporary and retrospective, excerpts from biographies and autobiographies, analysis of music, "I was there" recollections, and dissections of the Beatles as a cultural phenomenon. The last category is often the weakest, since it tends to combines pompous extrapolation with incorrect "facts" and worthless repetition of conventional wisdom, i.e. that George Harrison didn't write any worthy songs till Abbey Road. Yeah, right: even leaving aside his love 'em/hate 'em Indian experiments, the White Album contains gems like the underrated & chilling Long, Long, Long and the widely acknowledged masterpiece While My Guitar Gently Weeps.

    But that's a minor quibble, and the book is full of buried treasures, too many to mention. I'll focus on the cream of the crop here. Culled from original drummer Pete Best's autobiography, we hear the tale of how Best got sacked for Ringo, this time from the horse's mouth (including an interesting anecdote about Best and manager Brian Epstein). Epstein himself has an entry, a truly fascinating account of discovering the Beatles in a sweaty Cavern performance. Then there's an eyewitness account of the Elvis-Beatles meeting which, contrary to press releases of the time, did not go well. Primarily due to Lennon's acerbic mouth.

    Speaking of John, we get to see how far left he swung after expressing doubt about politics in "Revolution": in an interview with British radicals, he pledges admiration for Chairman Mao and is brimming with angry Marxist rhetoric. A quote included in this section brings him down to earth by describing the room full of air-conditioned fur coats he and Yoko kept around this time that they were attacking capitalists. Future feminist Gloria Steinem submits a circa '64 interview with John Lennon which spends more time painting a vivid picture of the Beatles' chaotic stage show and backstage milieu than talking to the "sarcastic Beatle." A Q&A with George Harrison expresses his spiritual views, and the best interviews in the book are taken from Playboy, including one with all the Beatles in '65 in which they come off as surprisingly frank and honest. They describe themselves as agnostics and freely discuss topics ranging from sex to religion. Also included is Maureen Cleave's 1966 portrait of Lennon which caused all the controversy by quoting his thoughts on Jesus.

    And though I've already criticized a lot of the Beatles punditry, there are exceptions: mainly stuff written at the time, before the Beatles legend was set in stone. Pieces by Paul Johnson and John Gabree debunk the Beatles as musicians and pop icons, Gabree a tad more effectively than Johnson, whose arrogant vitriol is truly shocking. Also critical is William F. Buckley, condemning what he sees as the Maharishi's vapidity and scolding the group for not looking in their own backyard, accusing them of being ignorant of Christianity and Western thought. Pauline Kael is observant as always in her review of Yellow Submarine, and excerpts from the diaries of Andy Warhol and Noel Coward reveal their take on the pop phenomenon.

    Chances are you'll find whatever it is you're looking for in this book. Starting with the Beatles' roots in working-class postwar England and the art schools of the 50's, through their gigs in Hamburg and the Cavern Club, into the first outside analysis that greeted the early singles and albums, past first-hand accounts of Beatlemania at the height of its madness (it's astounding nobody died in the frenzy), the recording of Rubber Soul, the first evidence of backlash against the Beatles' popularity, lots of cultural commentary on Sgt. Pepper, into the dissolution of the band. And all kinds of cultural phenomena surrounding the group are put under the microscope too. Swingin' London, the Maharishi, Charles Manson, the rock renaissance of the 60's, even the bootlegs of the 70's and the spoof group "The Rutles" are touched upon. One of the most entertaining sections details a rabid Beatles convention, in which publicity-hound DJ Murray the K puts in his 2 cents on Yoko. Near the end of the book, there's quite a bit of ink spilled on the murder of John Lennon and the quieter death of George Harrison and, you know, the dream is over.

    Quite a stocking stuffer.


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