A Freewheelin' Time: Greenwich Village in the Sixties, Bob Dylan and Me
by
Suze Rotolo
A Freewheelin’ Time is Suze Rotolo’s firsthand, eyewitness, participant-observer account of the immensely creative and fertile years of the 1960s, just before the circus was in full swing and Bob Dylan became the anointed ringmaster. It chronicles the back-story of Greenwich Village in the early days of the folk music explosion, when Dylan was honing his skills and she was
...moreHardcover, 369 pages
Published
May 13th 2008
by Broadway
(first published 2007)
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Because Suze Rotolo grew up in a family that supported the Communist party, it has always been assumed that she played an important role in influencing Dylan's social protest material, but there are very few details about this in the book. Rotolo states at one point that the autobiography is an "emotional" rather than a factual recollection of the time. The book does seem to get better when their relationship is troubled and especially after they break up. It takes Rotolo almost 300 pages to adm...more
In a not so simple twist of fate involving a shipping error via Amazon used books, I received this memoir. It turned out to be a fortunate error. It was a fascinating read. Much more than a Dylan book (I should mention that Dylan really impacted my life)it is a way back into the consciousness,culture and the allure of the 60's. I'm glad that Suze Rotolo, immortalized on the cover of Freewheelin', waited to tell her tale. Historical perspective needs time and she gave it plenty of that...the girl...more
I became fascinated with Bob Dylan, then even more fascinated with whom he was affiliated. I wanted to read Suze Rotolo's memoir to break down the myth of the legendary Dylan; I wanted to see what made him tick, I was curious to see what their relationship was like. As I read on, I began to relate more to Suze, as a woman understanding her position and the frustrations she dealt with during her time in her relationship, in her environment, etc. I'm not going to lie though -- I was hoping to find...more
I grew up in the absent Bob Dylan years, when he largely disappeared from the scene in the 1970s, and also refrained from reading album credits, so grew up not knowing how many of my favorite songs were Dylan's. I was even a Beatle-basher, learned from a brother who was a heavy metal guy (Zeppelin, Thin Lizzy) so we were Stones partisans and words were less important than great guitar work. I even remember reading at the time the Doonesbury cartoon about Jimmy Thudpucker who is outside with his...more
I have to admit, I only read this because it was cheap and I wanted to suck what juicy marrow I could about Dylan from it. There were a few anecdotes that brought to light the fullness of the Dylan/Rotolo relationship by filling in the gaps left from all the biographies I've read about him. However, I skimmed through the endless ramblings of Rotolo, who through her own words, seems stuck in the idea of proving to the rest of the world, herself and possibly Dylan, that she was more than his girlf...more
I have mixed feelings about this book but overall I liked it. On the one hand, the writing isn’t stellar and Rotolo bounces all over the place chronologically and thematically. I found myself often having to go back and figure out where we were in the time line (which isn’t a very accurate term because there is no “line” of time involved here). On the other hand, this book is extremely valuable for its insight into Bob Dylan. Rotolo’s is a unique perspective on Dylan’s transformation from an unk...more
Decided to re-read this account of life in the early 60's Greenwich Village after the death this week of the author, Suze Rotolo. Suze was the girl walking with Bon Dylan on the cover of his Freewheelin' album from 1962. She was his girlfriend and muse for much if the music he created in the first several year sof his career.
Good book, told by a real insider from that time. From growing up a "red diaper baby" in a Communist family, to inspiring much f bob's early music, to having a life and fam...more
Good book, told by a real insider from that time. From growing up a "red diaper baby" in a Communist family, to inspiring much f bob's early music, to having a life and fam...more
Suze Rotolo’s statement, “He became an elephant in the room of my life,” sums up at the same time that it barely scrapes the surface of her relationship with Bob Dylan. She met and fell in love with Dylan in 1961, when she was 17, and she was the inspiration for many of his songs. Her book is a memoir of an era as much as it is a recollection of the relationship. Rotolo is a native New Yorker, and her love for her city shines brightly through her vivid descriptions of Greenwich Village during th...more
I'm not really a Bob Dylan fan however he has written some really great songs. I am a fan, though of folk music - Peter, Paul and Mary, The Weavers, The Seekers and a few others so I found this book informative and enjoyable. It's not the story of Bob Dylan per se, it's really Suze's life during that creative time. Along with being Bob Dylan's girlfriend, her Communist background and trips to Cuba added some extra spice into her young adulthood. Like most people at that age, there were a lot of...more
I was struck by the charity of Suze Rotolo's reflections on Bob Dylan. She strips her reminiscence of self-aggrandizement and tabloid-minded sensationalism. While Bob Dylan is still remains a bit of a mystery in the end (he was really that aloof all along), Rotolo remembers the little moments that sheds light on the Artist as a Young Man: the sweet love letters, the nights of cigarettes, coffee and conversation, and his confident, burning ambition.
But this book is more than "Bob and Me." It is a...more
But this book is more than "Bob and Me." It is a...more
I enjoyed this book. The title is accurate. Despite the fact that Suze Rotolo was Bob Dylan's girlfriend, its not a Dylan book. It's an understated story about a young woman in a certain place in a certain period of time. This book filled in some of the gaps of my understanding of the sentiments and reactions from the early 60's.
The book is a very easy read, though the narrative is guilty of being bogged down in names in some places, and not being sufficiently grounded in time references in oth...more
The book is a very easy read, though the narrative is guilty of being bogged down in names in some places, and not being sufficiently grounded in time references in oth...more
As she says, it's a memoir, and mostly focused on her politically saturated life, up to and including 2 or 3 years living in the village and dating Bob Dylan.
Personally, I'm not enjoying this book as much as I'd hoped, I'm a relationship and emotionally oriented person and I wanted less heady yap about what was going on politically, and more of a personal portrait. While I enjoy anything describing my beloved Greenwich Village, I find myself feeling close to nothing in empathy or resonance with...more
Personally, I'm not enjoying this book as much as I'd hoped, I'm a relationship and emotionally oriented person and I wanted less heady yap about what was going on politically, and more of a personal portrait. While I enjoy anything describing my beloved Greenwich Village, I find myself feeling close to nothing in empathy or resonance with...more
This was an enjoyable read. It covers much the same territory as Dave Van Ronk's recent memoir. But, of course, this one was written by Dylan's girlfriend of the time. (She's the one on the cover of "The Freewheelin' Bob Dylan.) There's some new insight into Dylan's rise in the early 60s, and insight into his personality, but, in many ways, Rotolo doesn't reveal much that is new. (In her defense, she seems to respect Dylan's privacy, or better said, the privacy of the relationship the two of the...more
As most people have stated her writing isn't the best, but once you get used to her run-ons and no use on puncuation in some instances it gets better. She also does jump around a lot in timelines.
This book reminded me a lot of "Popism" the book that Andy Warhol and Pat Hackett co-wrote with the amount of name dropping and stories about other people involved in the folk movement during the early 1960's. It took me a little while to get into "A Freewheelin' Time" but once I did I enjoyed the stor...more
This book reminded me a lot of "Popism" the book that Andy Warhol and Pat Hackett co-wrote with the amount of name dropping and stories about other people involved in the folk movement during the early 1960's. It took me a little while to get into "A Freewheelin' Time" but once I did I enjoyed the stor...more
I really enjoyed this book. Suzs Rotolo's memoir of Greenwich Village in the early '60s when she was Dylan's girlfriend and muse. She was a key figure in his political education - both her parents were communists. She is pictured on the cover of his second albumn - The Freewheelin' Bob Dylan - an iconic shot taken on McDougal St in NYC in 1962. She gives a really good account of the characters in the Village at that time, including the Clancy Brothers and the Whitehorse Tavern and Brendan Behan...more
Suze Rotolo, Bob Dylan's girlfriend in the early 60's, offers an insightful perspective into the music, politics and life of the early 1960's in New York's Greenwich Village. She successfully accomplished her goal of capturing "the emotional truth that defined the experience" as she related her coming of age in the 60's story. We learn of her upbringing as a "red-diaper" baby in Queens, are exposed to intimate details of her years with Bob Dylan, and get a real sense of the Village and the folki...more
Okay, I'm nostalgic about the Sixties. I enjoyed this memoir of Greenwich Village in the early 1960's--despite the cover photo and Rotolo's well-known status as Bob Dylan's girlfriend at the time, she writes about so much more than Dylan. This book covers, among other things, the Red Scare and its effect on left-wing families; the folk revival; experimental theater; the Cuban Revolution and the ban on travel to Cuba; and Rotolo's childhood and early adulthood. It's very engaging, and near the en...more
I bought this book from a bargain book shop in Waterloo, because I am a Bob Dylan fan and because Suze is the girl on the cover of the Freewheelin' Bob Dylan album.
She give a brilliant insight into what life was like in and around Greenwich Village in the 60's. There are lots of references to the characters who are part of Folk and Music at that time and her relationship with the icon that is Bob Dylan.
If I have a criticism for me I would have liked more detail but this would have made the book...more
She give a brilliant insight into what life was like in and around Greenwich Village in the 60's. There are lots of references to the characters who are part of Folk and Music at that time and her relationship with the icon that is Bob Dylan.
If I have a criticism for me I would have liked more detail but this would have made the book...more
This book is a bit disappointing. It was more about the history of folk music in the Village in the 60's and 70's than a book about the author's relationship with Bob Dylan. If you don't know much about folk music, you may get a little lost with all the names mentioned. I wanted more on Dylan and his early career. But it had some positive elements. Hearing about the Village before it was overrun with investment bankers, hipsters and Marc Jacobs makes you realize how much the Village has been rui...more
Don't read this book expecting dish on Bob Dylan. Suze Rotolo rises above that. This book is just what the subtitle purports: a history of a time (the early sixties) and a place (Greenwich Village). Rotolo was more than a "singer's chick" and she provides some interesting insight on that role. Unlike Pattie Boyd in Wonderful Tonight, Rotolo was uncomfortable in the role of muse and unconditional support to her man. She excuses no misbehavior by citing his talent or his demons. Rotolo's voice is...more
This was an interesting read, but I felt that Ms. Rotolo was holding back too much. And as other reviewers mention, the writing is somewhat disjointed; there were times I thought the story was moving into the future, and she'd be back in the past telling another anecdote.
I did enjoy learning the story behind some of Dylan's more famous songs, but I wish there had been more about Bob and Suze's life together. I have always been under the impression that Suze was a trust-fund baby, but was surpri...more
I did enjoy learning the story behind some of Dylan's more famous songs, but I wish there had been more about Bob and Suze's life together. I have always been under the impression that Suze was a trust-fund baby, but was surpri...more
Rotolo shares her memories in a relaxed style. Rotolo's relationship with Bob Dylan does take center stage, but her family life and her search for identity also make up a significant chunk of this memoir. An interesting aspect of this memoir is Rotolo's refusal to just be Dylan's girl. Greenwich Village is described in great detail-streets, music venues, people. At times I felt all of those details didn't seem to capture all of the spirit and energy the Village must have been filled with at that...more
Although it’s written by one of Bob Dylan’s ex-girlfriends, this book isn’t really about him. It’s more about the author’s life in Greenwich Village in the early 1960’s. Dylan was her first serious boyfriend so he does factor in a lot and it’s very early in his career, which is interesting. They break up once he gets famous, but she’s very dignified about it and never says anything cruel about him. Instead, she describes how she forges her own life as an artist, lives in Italy for a while, and e...more
An interesting snapshot of the emerging folk music and alternative lifestyle scene in lower Manhattan on the cusp of the counter-culture revolution - from the perspective of Bob Dylan's one-time muse and girlfriend. The somewhat stilted narrative jumps around quite a bit, but the author's reflections on her Italian ancestors, her red diaper upbringing, the Village before it became forbiddingly expensive, and her first-hand recollections of the genesis of a lot of influential music make for a som...more
I didn't really have many expectations when I picked up this book other than I tend to be inexplicably drawn to memoirs and tidbits of history having to do with New York City in the 1960s. I wasn't really expecting to be reading the memoir of Bob Dylan's ex-girlfriend so it was more like a pleasant surprise to me.
As I was perusing some of the other reviews, I was noticing some harsh criticisms of her writing style... which I will give isn't terribly polished, but I liked it that way. It felt ra...more
As I was perusing some of the other reviews, I was noticing some harsh criticisms of her writing style... which I will give isn't terribly polished, but I liked it that way. It felt ra...more
I found this book after becoming familiar with "Boots of Spanish Leather" by Bob. Suze did travel to Italy while she dated Bob and ended up traveling to Europe several times after their breakup. She was so young when she was in the relationship with Bob, and it was sweet to see how quickly they surrendered to each other. But I think I appreciated more her stories of recovering from the trauma of breakup and rediscovering her own pronoun apart from being "Bob's girl".
I especially like the quote...more
I especially like the quote...more
I bought this book from an old book store in Greenwich Village. I was so estatic to have bought a book from a place I had dreamt of going my whole life. It was my first trip to NYC and it was the best vacation I had ever had (even to this day). I was also excited about visiting Greenwich Village because I'm also an avid music fan and the history there is phenemonal. This book paints a really realistic and poignant times of life in the sixties in Greenwich. I found myself feeling like I was there...more
It would have been alright if it wasn't full of so much clutter. Sentences were mostly of the run-on variety...and strangely phrased.
Rotolo also tends to riddle her writing with subtle Dylan references that end up sounding corny instead of poetic...like "we were both overly sensitive and needed shelter from the storm" or "Dylan was a painter searching for his palette." Also, how many times can you use "freewheelin'" as an adjective to describe yourself and the people you hung out with...in a si...more
Rotolo also tends to riddle her writing with subtle Dylan references that end up sounding corny instead of poetic...like "we were both overly sensitive and needed shelter from the storm" or "Dylan was a painter searching for his palette." Also, how many times can you use "freewheelin'" as an adjective to describe yourself and the people you hung out with...in a si...more
This book illustrates how one girl living in Greenwich village in the early 60's got by very well on her socialist pedigree, good looks and idealism. Not only did she live in her own apartment in NYC without a steady job, but she had a relationship with Bob Dylan. If I was nineteen and had the opportunities she did, I'm sure I would've jumped on them too. (Well, maybe not on ALL of them. Despite my groupie tendencies, Bob Dylan never really did it for me. OK, maybe he was sort of cute...) I noti...more
| topics | posts | views | last activity | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Good portrait of people and time | 1 | 18 | May 22, 2008 10:05am |
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Jul 01, 2008 07:13am