
John Lennon
The Life
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- نقد و بررسی
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نقد و بررسی

From his childhood to his untimely death, John Lennon's life was momentous enough to easily support the 1,000 pages Philip Norman devotes to it. Norman, who wrote what many consider to be the definitive account of the Beatles--SHOUT!--delves into every nook and cranny of the musician's life, revealing a sometimes tortured soul who never stopped changing throughout his tragically interrupted life. This abridgment is choppy in places but never less than gripping, partly due to Norman's typically English turns-of-phrase, partly due to narrator Graeme Malcolm's quintessentially British delivery, not to mention his ability to perfectly reproduce Lennon's Liverpool accent. J.S.H. (c) AudioFile 2008, Portland, Maine

Starred review from July 7, 2008
Norman (Shout!: The Beatles in Their Generation
) offers a grand, comprehensive, yet sprightly biography of the late Beatle. His sympathetic but sharp treatment captures Lennon’s charm and charisma, but also his cruelty to loved ones, his rebel posturings, his resentment of Paul McCartney’s matchless songwriting powers and growing dominance of the band, his debaucheries, his drunk and disorderlies, his shoplifting and his Oedipal yearnings. Norman is a smart analyst of pop music and its cultural setting and a scintillating miniaturist of Beatlemania. (He likens the band’s trademark shriek-inducing hair-shakings to “manic feather-dusters.”) He manages the difficult trick of loving Lennon’s music without swooning over it, pronouncing “Strawberry Fields” both a great song and “crafted druggy gibberish.” Lennon emerges as a bright, troubled, insecure man who grasped at profundity and occasionally touched it; from Norman’s portrait, we see why so many consider him a soul mate. Photos.
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