Thoughts on books, reading and publishing from the staff and friends of the Tattered Cover Book Store.
Thursday, March 8, 2012
This Book Brought Carly Simon Back Into Hank's Life
A love song to an American icon: the first full-length biography of Carly Simon, from an acclaimed music journalist who has known her for decades
Carly Simon has won two Grammys and an Academy Award, and her albums have sold more than forty million copies. Her music has touched countless lives since her debut in the 1970s, yet her own life story has remained unpublished-until now. Tapping private archives, family interviews, and a forty-year friendship with the legend herself, Stephen Davis at last captures Carly Simon's extraordinary journey from shy teenager to superstar. More Room in a Broken Heart candidly covers everything her fans want to know, including:
* Growing up with her father, publishing mogul Richard Simon
* The Bob Dylan turning point that launched her career
* The real story behind "You're So Vain"
* Carly's severe stage fright (she's the only musical guest to pretape an SNL segment)
* Romantic involvements with Mick Jagger, Warren Beatty, and Cat Stevens
* How Carly and James Taylor went from being pop music's reigning couple to independent souls living at opposite ends of Massachusetts
* Surviving breast cancer
* Her recent financial and spiritual crises
Along the way, Davis vividly takes readers back to some of the most powerful eras in American music history and delivers a tribute worthy of the artist and her loyal fans, who know that nobody does it better than Carly Simon.
Hank says:
"Essentially a 400-page love letter to Carly Simon and her career, Davis recaps the singer's life from childhood through recent times. There are touches of warts-and-all, but it's not a dirt-dishing tell-all, by any means. I like to think maybe it's because Simon, refreshingly these days, hasn't really done anything egregious. I learned some interesting behind-the-lyrics information (but don't be expecting a definitive answer to the perennial 'You're So Vain' question), and the book made me curious to give some of her later work a listen."
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