I read this when it was published in 2011 and remember goggling at the cover where it says "Volume 1". Wait - this book is 1200 pages long - and you're telling me there's a Volume 2? Yes, there was one, eventually, in 2017, also over 1000 pages.
Johnny Rogan's Byrds mania began fairly modestly with a first version in 1980 called Timeless Flight. That was a mere 160 pages! The second edition came out ten years later and was 304 pages. Seven years after that we got Timeless Flight Revisited : The Sequel - what an ungainly title - all 735 pages of it - surely long enough to tell the story of the (complicated) Byrds? But Johnny muttered under his breath "you ain't seen nothin' yet" and carried on typing.
He was a pioneer of the epic encyclopedic strand of rock writing which, maybe, was kicked off by Peter Guralnick in 1994 with his over 1000-page two-part Elvis biography. In 2013 we gratefully received Mark Lewisohn's part-one-of-three Beatles biography - ordinary edition 944 pages, extended edition 1700 pages - years covered: up to 1962. Then a few weeks ago came The McCartney Legacy Vol One 1969-73 by Kozinn and Sinclair - 700 large pages of small print. These are just the ones I have noticed.
Is all this detail really necessary? Well, it will be way too much for some and just about right for some others. I loved the convoluted Byrds story, every page, and Johnny tells it very well. I think we live in a golden age of biography.
I do remember thinking "I won't bother with Volume 2, it's just about the dead Byrds, not so interesting". But then I bought it last month.