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Rolling with the Stones

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Book by Wyman, Bill

496 pages, Hardcover

First published October 21, 2002

8 people are currently reading
560 people want to read

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Bill Wyman

38 books9 followers

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5 stars
138 (41%)
4 stars
118 (35%)
3 stars
62 (18%)
2 stars
5 (1%)
1 star
7 (2%)
Displaying 1 - 18 of 18 reviews
Profile Image for Sharon Barrow Wilfong.
1,136 reviews3,968 followers
June 13, 2020
This was a fun book. If you're a Stones fan you should read it. Bill Wyman, the bass player for the Rolling Stones from the beginning in the 1960s until his retirement in 1993, kept a collection of hundreds of photographs of his time with the Rolling Stones.

This coffee table sized book contains photos from when the members were children, where they went to school, how they met and how their band evolved from covering the Blues to their own identity with self-written songs.

Wyman conscientiously describes each member of the band, including Bryan Jones, the founding member, yet the first to leave and his untimely death. He includes later members, their function and all the people surrounding or connected with the band.

We learn of their personal relationships, personal demons and life's journey through to the nineties, which is when Wyman left.

I appreciate how Wyman combines honesty with compassion. He has no ax to grind, no one that he bad mouths, although he doesn't sugarcoat the drug and alcohol abuse or rampant permiscuity.

After reading this book and looking at all the glossy, color pictures, of which every single page has several. I feel as though I have vicariously taken the journey with Mick, Keith, Bryan, Stu, Charlie, Woody, many others and, of course, Bill.
Profile Image for Lann.
2 reviews1 follower
November 10, 2008
If you read this large hardcover book, you have to read it very carefully, and even re-read some passages. You have to soak it in, cos' it's the ultimate Rolling Stone fact book. Bill was the Stone's archivist...and he kept precise notes and journals filled with everything Stone's you can think of. This book is only for the most hardcore, get the job done, Rolling Stone fan.
Profile Image for Ron.
436 reviews2 followers
February 5, 2012
Great if you can find it. It retailed locally at $75, then I saw it on sale for $19.99 and grabbed it. This is a massive coffee table book, but along with the photos of tour programs and ticket stubs, there's lots of text here as well. This book, as well as Wyman's Stone Alone are much more in depth than Keith Richards' otherwise entertaining Life. Wyman stood to the side and played bass for so long so he has seen it all, first hand.
Profile Image for Chris Ford.
36 reviews
February 4, 2013
Awesome book. Always admired people with the tenacity and discipline to keep journals and chronicle their journey through life. Bill Wyman's scrapbook of his own life with one of the most interesting bands ever is so amazingly detailed that even die hard Stones fans will learn things they didn't know. It is also just a well put together project that is packed with intelligent ways to share information as well as being beautifully presented.
Profile Image for Ira Carter.
37 reviews2 followers
September 30, 2015
I initially read Wyman's earlier history of the Stones trying to see if Mick and Keef really did murder Brian Jones. This book is full of photos and episodically describes vingettes about the ecosystem in which the Stones became the world's greatest rock & roll band.
Profile Image for Wilfried.
137 reviews6 followers
June 5, 2024
Nice to read how it all started.

Somehow you feel that Wyman was not the driving force of the group.

The overwhelming amount of illustrations hinders the reading.
Profile Image for Markku.
Author 5 books4 followers
October 23, 2016
Stone alone, part II with photos. Heavy, too big book to read and the thisandthat trivia overcomes the text itself. But some of the seventies was interesting, although one soon loses interest to various details of tours. Wyman is strangely silent of his womanizing which was the major part of Stone alone, admitting it every now and then. Anyway, nice memorabilia.
Profile Image for Garrett Cash.
849 reviews1 follower
May 30, 2024
I did not read this massive wall of exhaustive text, which seems to encompass every bit of Stones-related minutiae you could imagine. But I skimmed most of it and looked at the astounding collection of flyers, photographs, and more that Wyman collected over the years and put into this museum-in-a-book.
Profile Image for Jack.
83 reviews
January 26, 2021
There is plenty written about the years during with the Rolling Stones were successful. I read this because I was curious about the first few years, and it's the only book I know of that details the early tours and what they're lives were like when they were broke musicians.
Profile Image for Alan.
98 reviews3 followers
January 7, 2026
A really excellent book about the birth and early years of the Rolling Stones. Full of interesting pictures as well. My friends and I used to watch the Stones over Eel Pie Island every week during 1963 and although they are still going after 50 years, their best years were the early ones.
Profile Image for Susan.
1,066 reviews3 followers
January 19, 2023
Really interesting, but this is not a portable book. Massive in many ways.
Profile Image for Nita Herger gassen.
1 review1 follower
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April 15, 2023
i just read Stone Alone and Bill Wyman said Brian Jones started the Rolling Stones
700 reviews6 followers
October 30, 2014
Lavish production and Bill Wyman's voice! Forget about reading this one in a few sittings. It's something to be savored over weeks or even months. Besides, at its weight your hands will tire of holding it open and up. Love it!
66 reviews
January 1, 2013
A complete history of the band in words and pictures by their former bass player.
Profile Image for Funkykam71.
4 reviews2 followers
June 7, 2013
I really liked this book because it shows the cool things about one of my favorite bands. i give this book a five out of five.
Displaying 1 - 18 of 18 reviews