Rating:  Summary: Highly Interesting! Review: After reading this book, I felt i knew every drug invented:) ..including his music. I was so addicted to this book i read it twice. It's excellent!
Rating:  Summary: Okay...If You Like Fiction Review: First Of All, This Book Was Good. It Provided InSight InTo The Life Of Jim Morrison...But It Didn't Have Depth. These Guys Knew Jim...You'd Think The Book Would Be More Personal! I Suggest Reading Patricia's Book...It'll Probably Be Better....Oh! And "The Doors" Was Not A BioPic! It Was A Sick, Twisted View Of Jim's Life.
Rating:  Summary: A good chronicle of events but not about the man Review: This book accounts for the life and times of ol' Jimbo, but doesn't really tell us much about the man and his real psyche. I think the events and anecdotes are pretty accurate, but during the whole read we don't really learn much except some dry information. Morrison was definitely an intelligent man and much different than some of the posers passing for rock artists these days. His mind and music ran deeper than most and this book didn't really do him justice. I give it three stars for basic content though.
Rating:  Summary: no one here gets out alive Review: it was written well, and told me all about Jim Morrison. It was also well detailed.
Rating:  Summary: Misleading and Unethical Review: This book deserves some credit because it points kids who might otherwise spend their whole adolescence playing air guitar toward philosophy, poetry, and adventure. But I have three problems with it:It provides no insights into its subject's mentality. We are told what Morrison does, but not why. Many of the temper tantrums portrayed as being (luridly, romantically...) unprovoked were actually triggered by very trivial events. For instance, his violence in New York was in response to the Doors being left out of the Monterey Pop Festival. That's it. Not as thrillingly "enigmatic" as the authors' account, but more believably human. The Doors are not put into context as a mid-sixties rock band. What made Morrison so disturbing and explosive 'way back then was the fact that he embodied some elements that the rock scene had never seen before. Imagine a straight-laced pop world ruled by Herman's Hermits or the Hollies trying to deal with a sexually ambiguous, politically volatile, violently sado-masochistic yet literary suspected-junkie. This was like Lou Reed plus demon charisma and a deceptively catchy pop sense. The worst nightmare for Middle American parents. That's why the band got banned and prosecuted. This book gives no suggestion of Morrison's true "threat" whatsoever. Listening to Sugarman, he might as well have been Peter Frampton. The introduction to this book cribs whole sentences, word-for-word, from Venable Herndon's book "James Dean: A Short Life." Blatant unoriginality like this makes me lose faith in the authors, and suspect that many other passages were plagiarized from other, obscure sources. My suggestion is to order all of the Doors CD's (except 'Soft Parade') from Amazon, because they tell you all you have to know about the talent of this man. Buy the book and all you get is misleading gossip.
Rating:  Summary: FTW Review: What a nice guy ;) Just kidding. I first read this book in 9th grade; it changed my life. I started reading all kinds of crazy sh**; i even learned why Nietzche said "God is dead." To get down on it, the best damn book i've ever read; seriously. I hope it helps you as much as it did me. pds
Rating:  Summary: Couldn't put it down Review: This book really put me in touch with The Doors and especially Jim Morrison. They are one of my all time favorite bands and this is one of my all time favorite books! Not only was this book fun to read, but it helped out my vocabulary on the SAT!!!! Thanks for writing such a great book!
Rating:  Summary: Doors Review: One of the best books about Jim Morrison. Shows what his life was rteally about./ Does not hold back.
Rating:  Summary: Nice Piece of Fiction Review: There are better books out there like John Tobler's book and Jerry Reardon's "Break on Through." I probably would've given this book 5 stars back in 83 when I first read it Sugarman's book is entertaining and I give this book credit for helping perpetuate the Doors legend, but it reads like fiction and the dialogues are unbelievable. It made Sugarman, who clams Morrison took him under his wing at 13 (!?), a rich man.
Rating:  Summary: A great biography and depicition of the rise and fall ofagod Review: This book rocked, i have read this book six or seven times the first time i could not lay it down I think it depicts the rise and fall of Jim Morrison to the "t". I strongly reccomend it for any Morrison fan or reasearcher.
|