Cost: $0.75US
Page Count: 182
Well, we're back here at Stale Reviews. It's been a long time and there has been some serious reading going on here around the household. So, there will be a multitudinous splatter of reviews right off the jump. Hope you are ready.
Nobody Likes You: Inside The Turbulent Life, Times, and Music of Green Day turned out to be a really short and really quick read. As a fan of the band, it is sad for me to say that there is little in the way of new information revealed within the pages of this text. The reason it is sad is that I was looking for new insights, something different, anything that would urge me to push forward in my research on the band. Nope. The book reads like rehashed Spin articles mixed with a few interviews with some of the folks from the Gilman St. scene.
The added interviews, with the likes of Tim Armstrong, Jessie Michaels of Op Ivy, and Fat Mike, were what kept this relatively uninteresting piece of "literature" moving. As someone who grew up on this type of music, these were the guys in the punk scene who I looked up to. Seeing their insights were the highlights of the book.
Thankfully, Spitz didn't go too far into the childhood activities of each of the members of Green Day. Many biographers will go so far deep into the past of the artist that the text just completely loses interest for me. Spitz didn't do that. He gave just enough info and then moved on.
The book itself is lighthearted even if the author didn't mean it to be. To me, it was the literary equivalent of a VH1 Behind the Music episode. Quick, to the point...kind of senseless.
For less than a buck, though, this was one worth reading. That is, if you are a fan of Green Day. If you are not a fan and view Green Day as your father's or older brother's punk band, move along.
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