Q:
Why did you decide to write a biography on John Lennon?
I was nearly sixteen when Sergeant Pepper exploded onto the scene.
It was the Summer of Love in the San Francisco Bay Area, where I lived.
Sgt. Pepper was full of magic and promise: we were going to change
the world, end racism and sexism, end the war in Vietnam. A longtime
Beatles fan, I found George sexy, Paul cute, Ringo laconic. John fascinated
and terrified me. He was sarcastic, angry and brilliant, liable to
mouth off. His singing was poignant, filling me with longings I didnt
understand. When I decided, decades later, to write a biography on
someone who had been influential in shaping the sixties, it was an
inevitable, magnetic pull.
Q:
Did you have a lot of preconceptions about Lennon before you started
writing the book?
As a child of the Sixties, it would have been impossible not to have
preconceptions about Lennon. It was helpful, however, that I wasnt
a dyed-in-the-wool fan before I began the book. I didnt have trouble
getting to know him more deepy because I didnt have precious illusions
about him to protect. I found him more than I expected more tender,
dependent, crazy, creative, brilliant, and funny. At times I also found
him infuriating.
Q:
Was it hard to write a biography on Lennon?
There has been so much written about him that is untrue, highly speculative
or downright trashy. I had to get back to the primary sources to be truthful.
Fortunately, Lennon spoke honestly to a number of journalists and reporters some
of whom he considered friends so I wove several hundred quotes
into the book and let him speak for himself.Lennons
song lyrics also expose his deepest feelings. His songs are spare and
beautiful poetry, driven straight into your heart with music. Listening
to his songs, you feel like you know something about him you didnt
know before, and something about yourself you cant quite express.
Q:
You have more than 150 photos in your book. Was it hard to chose
them?
I dove into the photo research hoping to find an image of Lennon that
had never before been published. To my surprise, I was able to include
three previously unpublished photos, and several rarely published. I
come from a family of photographers -- my grandmother was Imogen Cunningham
and my godmother was Dorothea Lange. Being raised in a photographic
family, Im trained to see the narrative power of strong visual
images. Just looking at the photos in All I Want Is the Truth, readers
can trace his life from the night he was born during a World War II
air raid on Liverpool in 1940 to the Strawberry Fields memorial in
Central Park.Lennon
loved to be photographed, and lit up around a camera. I was able to
include incredibly revealing photographs by Annie Leibovitz, Ethan
Russell, and Astrid Kirchherr. Fortunately,
a book like this becomes highly collaborative once most of the
writing is done. My editor, Jill Davis, worked insanely hard to find
fantastic photos, as well as going over and over what Id written
to make it stronger. Once we had the text and photos, the designer,
Jim Hoover, put them together in a way that is breathtaking. And
the copy editor, Janet Pascal, the unsung heroine of the book, did
the 1001 details that make the book snap.
Q:
What were you most struck by as you put together John Lennon: All
I Want Is the Truth?
As a young teenager, Lennon had hallucinatory images while staring at
his face in the mirror. Twice in his adult life he came perilously close
to going over the edge, and brought himself back with heroic effort.
He was smart enough to realize he needed to be contained by someone stronger
and more grounded than he was his Aunt Mimi, Paul McCartney, Cynthia
Lennon, Yoko Ono. I tried to deal openly with Lennons life on the
genius/crazy cusp by revealing Lennons tender vulnerability under
his brash exterior.It
wasnt until I was putting together the photos, that I really
understood how much Lennon lost by living such a famous life. The Beatle
years were so crazy, as they were rushed from hotel rooms to performances
and back again with the screaming crowds kept back by police. The madness
even extended to those around them losing their privacy. As I looked
through the photos I could feel the pressure inexorably gathering during
Lennons life, tragically ending in his being shot to death. It
all hit me viscerally in the photo of Yoko emerging from the Roosevelt
Hospital hours after Lennons death. She opened the hospital door
and hit a bank of photographers and flashbulbs. I looked at the photo
and thought: is nothing private? Even in her extreme grief, she was
assaulted.Lennon
fans whove read the book say they come away with a more profound
understanding and appreciation of Lennons struggles, and how
they made his music so moving.
Q:
What would Lennons life have been like if he hadnt been
killed in 1980?
Ive wondered about this so much. Would he have emerged from his
Dakota seclusion, as he seemed to be doing, full of renewed vigor and
enthusiasm for music? Would his music have lost its power, or stayed
as searingly honest and touching? Would he have retreated back into the
Dakota again, or plunged into some new creative endeavor? Would he have
loved computers and email, or would they have frustrated and confounded
him? Its impossible to know.
Q:
Many teenagers seem to be discovering Lennons work today, as
they have been doing for decades. What do you hope they get out of
reading your book?
Young adults are searching to make sense of their lives, and find ways
to express themselves. Lennons a great example of using your anger
to fuel creativity. Lennon dared. He persevered. He leapt off cliffs
when others turned back. Writing
All I Want Is the Truth gave me a chance to weave in a background of
several fascinating historical times: the aftermath of WWII, rock and
rolls roots in African American blues, the power and transformation
of the Sixties, the regrouping and introspection of the Seventies.
I hope young adults will be informed and inspired by Lennons
life.
Q:
Despite everything that been written about Lennon and the many times
weve heard his songs, his music still appeals to us.
Lennon understood that writing songs with simple, boiled-down lyrics
made them incredibly powerful. The sheer simplicity gave his songs amazing
staying power, and made many of them applicable today. Think of Imagine.
Were facing challenging times, and Lennons life and music
offer a rich wellspring to tap into.
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