Amazing and gut-wrenching, but also inspiring and full of hope. A music band like no other in the world; quite honestly, even if their music were bad, their story alone would still be fascinating, if only because there are no bands like this one any longer... or very few, and even fewer that get any attention.
Manic Street Preachers. What to say. With an open heart I can admit the melodrama and Ritchie's puppy eyes got me to their albums, my love for their music came later. But twenty years on, and it's still here. Their first four albums (yep, even the much reviled Gold Against the Soul, I like what I like) were all I listened to for five years. I bought posters, magazines, badges and even a Welsh flag, I kid you not. When the book was published, I got a copy and read it in a couple of days. Nothing I could possibly read would make me change my mind about the Fantastic Four, but I was not ready for my obsession to be enhanced like it was.
However, I believe this is a book everybody can enjoy: one doesn't need to be into the Manics to care about the tragic events that happend to these talented and missunderstood boys from Nowhere. The book works perfectly as a story of pain, success, friendship and music in general, as it is a biography of the band itself. If you like reading, if you like gripping stories, I recommend this book: Everything has something for everyone.