Like a Rolling Stone A memoir

Jann Wenner

Book - 2022

Rolling Stone founder, co-editor, and publisher Jann Wenner offers a "touchingly honest" and "wonderfully deep" memoir from the beating heart of classic rock and roll (Bruce Springsteen). Jann Wenner has been called by his peers "the greatest editor of his generation." His deeply personal memoir vividly describes and brings you inside the music, the politics, and the lifestyle of a generation, an epoch of cultural change that swept America and beyond. The age of rock and roll in an era of consequence, what will be considered one of the great watersheds in modern history. Wenner writes with the clarity of a journalist and an essayist. He takes us into the life and work of Bob Dylan, John Lennon, Mick Jagger, Bon...o, and Bruce Springsteen, to name a few. He was instrumental in the careers of Hunter S. Thompson, Tom Wolfe, and Annie Leibovitz. His journey took him to the Oval Office with his legendary interviews with Bill Clinton and Barak Obama, leaders to whom Rolling Stone gave its historic, full-throated backing. From Jerry Garcia to the Dalai Lama, Aretha Franklin to Greta Thunberg, the people Wenner chose to be seen and heard in the pages of Rolling Stone tried to change American culture, values, and morality Like a Rolling Stone is a beautifully written portrait of one man's life, and the life of his generation.

Saved in:

2nd Floor Show me where

BIOGRAPHY/Wenner, Jann
2 / 3 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor BIOGRAPHY/Wenner, Jann Checked In
2nd Floor BIOGRAPHY/Wenner, Jann Withdrawn
2nd Floor BIOGRAPHY/Wenner, Jann Checked In
Subjects
Genres
Autobiographies
Published
New York : Little, Brown and Company 2022.
Language
English
Main Author
Jann Wenner (author)
Edition
First edition
Item Description
Includes index.
Physical Description
xv, 576 pages, 32 pages of plates ; illustrations (some color) ; 25 cm
ISBN
9780316415194
  • Prologue: The Last Days
  • Part 1. Beginnings
  • 1. Rainbow Road
  • 2. The School on the Hill
  • 3. Berkeley
  • 4. Turn On, Tune In, Drop Out
  • 5. London Calling
  • 6. Jane
  • Part 2. Rolling Stone
  • 7. The First Issue
  • 8. A Family Affair
  • 9. Mick Jagger, Pete Townshend, and the Naked Beatle
  • 10. A Brief Visit to Planet New York
  • 11. Trans-Oceanic Comics Company
  • 12. Me and Boz, Sittin' on Otis' Porch
  • 13. Talking Bob Dylan
  • 14. Altamont and the End of the Innocence
  • 15. Helter Skelter
  • 16. John Lennon and Hunter Thompson Drop By
  • 17. Lennon Remembers
  • 18. Putting Together the Home Team
  • 19. The House on California Street
  • 20. A Day in the Lire
  • 21. Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas
  • 22. The Beast Stirs in Big Sur
  • 23. Fear and Loathing on the Campaign Trail
  • 24. Truman and Andy, Paul Bowles and Uncle Earl
  • 25. A Wonder of American Journalism
  • 26. From Elko to Egypt
  • 27. Farewell to Ralph J. Gleason
  • 28. Becoming Bicoastal
  • 29. The Scoop of the Seventies
  • Part 3. The Empire
  • 30. The Big Apple
  • 31. John Belushi, Incoming
  • 32. Our Tenth Anniversary
  • 33. Christmases with Jackie
  • 34. The Dry Heaves
  • 35. Asleep at the Wheel
  • 36. The Dream Is Over
  • 37. Fuck the NRA
  • 38. God Has His Hands Full
  • 39. Diamond Rash, Limousine Elbow
  • 40. The Hall of Fame
  • 41. The Bonfire of the Vanities
  • 42. The Gift of God
  • 43. Yoko and the Gorbachevs
  • 44. My Father's Death
  • 45. Altitude Adjustments
  • 46. The King and Queen of Pop
  • 47. Blue Highways
  • 48. Bill Clinton and the Three Stooges
  • 49. A Visit to the White House
  • 50. The Death of Jackie Onassis
  • 51. Matt
  • Part 4. Settling Down
  • 52. Passages
  • 53. A Visit from Jane
  • 54. The Best Magazine in America
  • 55. Only the Good Die Young
  • 56. All Out for Al
  • 57. My City of Ruins
  • 58. My Private Idaho
  • 59. Watching the River Flow
  • 60. Kerry Loses
  • 61. Hunter Thompson, R.I.P.
  • 62. Hunter Redux with Johnny Depp
  • 63. Magazine Wars
  • 64. They Say It's Yer Birthday
  • 65. The Wheel of Life
  • 66. Is It Rolling, Bob?
  • 67. Burning Man
  • 68. 'Higher and Higher'
  • 69. The Runaway General
  • 70. The Wrecking Ball
  • 71. The Road to Rio
  • 72. The Million-Pound Shit Hammer
  • 73. Bad Moon Rising
  • 74. The Gathering Storm
  • Part 5. Goodbye to All That
  • 75. Selling Rolling Stone
  • 76. The Road to Recovery
  • 77. My Last Letter from the Editor
  • Acknowledgments
  • Permissions and Credits
  • Index
Review by Library Journal Review

Wenner turned on to drugs and politics as a student at Berkeley in 1964 but by 1967, it seemed to him "the only thing people were making better than drugs was music." That year, Wenner and music critic Ralph J. Gleason founded Rolling Stone. It quickly became one of the most influential magazines in America, read not only for music reviews but also for the quality of its writing and its take on public issues. In 1995, Wenner dissolved a 28-year marriage and moved in with Matt, now his husband. (His wife had known he was gay from the start.) He has hung out with virtually every big name in the rock world, including Dylan, Lennon, Ono, Jagger, Springsteen, and Bono. He also boasts of his friendships with Hunter S. Thompson, Tom Wolfe, Annie Leibovitz, Richard Avedon, and presidents Clinton and Obama. There are so many in rapid succession that often they blur as individuals. Three relationships stand out. With Jagger and Thompson--difficult to unpack characters--they were complicated, with Springsteen, more direct. Wenner's description of Tom Cruise? All front and deflection. VERDICT Wenner writes engagingly and doesn't pull his punches. It'll be hard to keep this book on the library shelves.--David Keymer

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

The Rolling Stone founder and publisher recounts a golden age of sex, drugs, rock 'n' roll, and cash flow. As Wenner (b. 1947) admits, he grew up in privilege: His first car was a Jaguar, and he got his first editing gig with the yearbook of his private school. He was swayed from preppiedom with the advent of rock, which he correctly deems a form of "soft power." Though he missed the Beatles' legendary performance on The Ed Sullivan Show, he became a devotee after seeing A Hard Day's Night. This long narrative is bracketed by his 2017 sale of the magazine he founded in 1967, its title borrowed from the Dylan song and not the British band. Soon enough, though, Wenner became friendly with both the Beatles and the Stones. The magazine was revolutionary, especially early on. As the author notes, it "introduced black music to an expanding white audience--not as music for white people created by black people, but as black music in and of itself." Staffed by the likes of Ben Fong-Torres, Joe Eszterhas, Hunter S. Thompson, and Annie Leibovitz, it also soon became an outlet of choice for musical acts around the world. In fact, John Lennon's first extensive interview ran in is pages. (Wenner does allow that there were bands that hated the magazine, notably Led Zeppelin.) In time, Wenner decided to abandon the "fading hippie orthodoxy" of San Francisco for the bright lights of New York, where--with the madcap Thompson in tow--Rolling Stone became a journal of politics as much as music, cheering on Jimmy Carter and Bill Clinton. The author writes frankly about money, sex (including his own long years in the closet), and his regret at selling his creation: "The new mantra was clear: What counted was not the printed word but the number of 'hits' on the website." A frank, sharp memoir by a zeitgeist-savvy entrepreneur who ranks among the earliest of modern influencers. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.