John
|
| List Price: | £8.99 |
| Price: | £6.99 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Delivery on orders over £15. Details |
Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours
Dispatched from and sold by Amazon.co.uk
58 new or used available from £0.95
Average customer review:Product Description
Cynthia and John Lennon's relationship spanned ten crucial years of the Beatles phenomenon. But as well as new insight into the Beatles years, Cynthia has a compelling personal story of marriage, motherhood and the man who was to become the most idolised and admired of all the Beatles.
Cynthia is candid about the cruel and the loving sides of John. She tells of the end of their marriage and the beginning of his relationship with Yoko Ono in more detail than ever before, and reveals the many difficulties estrangement from John - and then his death - brought for herself and Julian. Cynthia is a remarkable survivor and this is her extraordinary story and unique insight into a man loved and idolised all over the world. (20050930)
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #41574 in Books
- Published on: 2006-04-10
- Binding: Paperback
- 416 pages
Editorial Reviews
Sunday Telegraph
'A fascinating first-hand account of one of the most bizarre phenomena of the 20th century.'
Review
'fascinating...all Beatles fans will be interested in the book, the best in recent years'.
(The Sunday Times )'an engaging memoir... along the way, it offers a fascinating glimpse into an altogether
more innocent age, before star-makers and svengalis began colluding with marketing
men and TV execs ...'
'vivid and engaging... refreshingly free of bitterness.'
(Mail on Sunday )'A fascinating first-hand account of one of the most bizarre phenomena of the 20th century.'
(Sunday Telegraph )'Fascinating stuff'
(Evening Standard )'loving but candid... vividly captures the time and place and the characters.'
(Washington Post )'A fascinating read that offers an insight into a brilliant and complex man.'
(The Sun )
Mail on Sunday
'vivid and engaging... refreshingly free of bitterness.'
Customer Reviews
Could have been so much better
This is Cynthia Lennon's second book about her ex-husband. The first (A Twist of Lennon) was short, pointless, and boring. This one is longer, contains lots of details, but is still boring in parts.
Cynthia describes her youth and love affair with fellow art student John in a monotone voice, with no emotional fervor whatever. Their long separations as John became famous and his growing drug use caused problems, but you don't feel it from her bland writing. It's only when the hated Yoko Ono enters the story that the narrative heats up, and even then it's fairly tepid. Ono is described as a conniving witch who cast a spell over John and made him abandon not only Cynthia, but their young son as well.
There are many candid photos of Cynthia and John but very little about the Beatles, so if you're looking for inside stuff about the Fab Four, keep looking. When Cynthia does write about Paul, George, or Ringo, it's like they weren't all that important to her. We get much more detail about her family and John's family, and the whole Beatles era is described with less passion than one would read in a newspaper account.
I was hoping for more, but the book is written with a oddly uninvolved voice and there are occasional awkward sentences. A better editor or a ghost writer might have brought more life to this story that should have been engrossing, but instead is just okay.
Just one chapter
I agree with a previous reviewer about the name dropping, this isn't word-for-word but an example would be: John and I often ate at (substitute some flash trendy restaurant) and on that particular night as I looked across the room I saw Brian Jones who was to sadly die only months later...etc etc, Its almost as if the editors/publishers asked her to spice it up a bit. A lot of the time when the interesting stuff happened Cynthia was at home at her mothers house. The only good chapter unfortunately is when John Lennon died where she geniunely does have plenty to say about the time and Yoko's treatment of her and Julian beggars belief.
Hmmmmm
Really not sure about this.
Loads of name dropping, some of it feels made up or spun!
Just doesn't feel right.
In places there is a sense of the book having been written simply to make money.
She was married at one time to a very talented person, cashing in on that connection feels a bit creepy. Half way through I felt like throwing the book across the room, not for any other reason than it made me cringe.




