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Griff
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Jan 18, 2017 07:30AM

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John Singleton directed his first film, "Boyz 'N the Hood."
T. S. Eliot wrote "The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock."
John Keats wrote "Ode on a Grecian Urn," which ends with the lines, "'Beauty is truth, truth beauty,' - that is all / Ye know on earth, and all ye need to know. "
English poet Jane Taylor wrote "Twinkle, twinkle, little star."
Margaret Mead traveled to the South Seas as part of a "giant rescue operation" to study primative cultures before they perished.
Russian-American pianist Vladimir Horowitz made a spectacular concert debut when, impatient with the conductor's slow pace, he ran away from the conductor's tempo and finished Tchaikovsky's Piano Concerto No. 1 several bars ahead of time.
Novelist, playwright, and short-story writer Carson McCullers wrote her acclaimed first book, The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter.
Truman Capote published his first novel, Other Voices, Other Rooms.
Orson Welles produced and performed his "War of the Worlds" radio broadcast, terrifying millions of people. He also got his face on the cover of Time Magazine.
Jack Nicklaus became the youngest golfer to win the Masters.
Francois-Louis Cailler manufactured the world's first eating chocolate to be commercially produced.
Jamaican-born Barrington Irving became the youngest person to fly around the world solo. He had constructed the plane from over $300,000 in donated parts.
At age 23, Stevie Wonder wrote "Higher Ground".

I'm enjoying this, it richly details his pre Police days and then the early years of the Police up to their first success. I think my favourite part of rock and roll memoirs is the rise of the artist, the rags bit before the riches and this book is mostly the rags. Likewise with the Johnny Marr book, I really enjoyed his account of the '70s and the level of detail he was able to recount about his early bands. I wasn't as interested in his post Smiths career, but I was expecting to be cos it's very well written and he's a great guy but it just didn't grip me as much as the first half of the book (well it's most of the book really).Yes he was young, a mere child as Moz once said. When Sting was 23 it was 1975 and he was a good four years away from top of the pops
also reading
261 Albums since Punk and Disco by Garry Mulholland which is mostly right up my street, he's omitting some of my favourite bands Stranglers, u2, r.e.m but it's a good read and good pics of LP sleeves
I'm currently reading "The Bookman" by Lavie Tidhar, the first in a trilogy of steampunk-esque books, where real & fictional people from 19th century literature (Jules Verne, Moriarty, Irene Adler and so many more!) pop up and cross paths in their attempts to stop an assassin (the titular Bookman.) There are hair-rasing adventures, narrow escapes, pirates, interstellar lizards, automatons and poets.

Good luck with that, Anthony! I gave up on trying to only have 1 book on the go. These days it's usually 2 and whatever magazines I come across. At the moment I'm also reading a book about red teas (in Spanish), Cometbus #54 & I just picked up 6 issues of The Continental Magazine (surf, garage, R'n'R, etc zine)

I've lots of half read books lying around. Not because I don't like them or got bored just life got in the way, then I picked up something else when I had a bit of space. Spending time last night uploading books to here forced me to put the half-read ones in one place - and reminded me of some I'd forgotten about, so renewed enthusiasm abounds!
Just need the time to finish them now :-)


A latecomer, just getting into George Saunders myself these days Anita.

Trying to read Dan Stuart's "The Deliverance of Marlowe Billings: A False Memoir " - bit of a struggle , very random and manic but has some moments.
Last Music book I finished was Nile Rodgers "Le Freak"- brilliant, blistering yet poignant at times, an essential read for any music fan.
Keep those recommendations coming!




Currently reading Flann O'Brien's "At Swim-Two-Birds".
It usually takes me ages to get through a book. I blame the guitar.





I would like to invite you to visit my blog where I review books. Hope you will enjoy the reading.
https://anopenbookbyaneta.wordpress.com
All the best
Aneta






Looking forward to getting my hands on this. Wouldn't be able to narrow it down to one gig myself without a sort of 'pin the tail on the donkey' element to it.



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Conclave (other topics)
The Fish Ladder: A Journey Upstream (other topics)
The 10 Rules of Rock and Roll: Collected Music Writings 2005-09 (other topics)