This was a well done document of a time that is not well defined, but it could use an editor and must be taken with a grain of salt. Actually the reason I feel it is well done, and the reasons I have for warning readers about it are due to the same thing, the author's great ability to write as if he were there, young, inexperienced, carefree, without responsibility, and just trying to have fun. Vince really can write about this time as if he were there, and that same person, instead of the much older, wiser and mature person he must be now, 20+ years after the events described. His views seemed to me to come from a kid who was trying to have fun, that joined a business ran by older folks who had families, responsibilities and a lot on the line, meaning Joe, Paul and Bernie. Vince never seemed to look at it from their point of view; he never saw himself as a new employee, hired to do a specific job, and not an old friend and collaborator in some startup without a care. Even when the elders try to tell him he is selfish, he pouts around about them not letting him do what he wants and telling him to do this and that. Hmmm sounds like work to me. He complains about bad treatment, but hey, that is a new employee too as far as I can remember. We treat em bad till they prove themselves no? Vince never really proved himself, and only tried to do what he wanted, against the wishes of the band. I agree that Bernie is over the top and should have definitely been out of the producer and probably even manager business, but he was a person, and had a job to do and was trying to do it. I feel he was trying a lot more than Vince was. Well I can go on and on about this but in the end, I still really enjoyed reading this bit of history and it is worth reading if you are a Clash fan anyway. Also Vince can write, though he should stick to fiction and get an editor. Also check his website. He is a hell of an artist.