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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
27 of 29 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
IGNORE THE HORRIBLY WRITTEN REVIEW FROM BOOKLIST,
By A Customer
This review is from: Linda McCartney: A Portrait (Hardcover)
To anyone with enough genuine interest in the story of Linda McCartney--if you've read this far down the webpage, you deserve to hear the truth. And not the truth as seen by a stuffy, clueless professional reviewer who can sense an easy-target book to slam a mile away. I have read over 30 books about the rock scene in the 60's and this one told me details I'd never ever heard. I rank it as extremely well-written and the author names names because there are so many great ones to choose from! This book is as much about the beatles and the stones and Warhol's bunch as it is about Linda. You feel like you are PART of the story because Danny Fields certainly was her very good friend. And he can write and involve you in a book you just can't put down...
12 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Not Quite Enough,
By
This review is from: Linda McCartney: A Portrait (Hardcover)
I have been wanting to read an intimate biography of Linda McCartney for some time now, so I was anxious to read this book. Written by her long-time close friend, Danny Fields, I would have expected a bit more. Even though the book delves deeper into Linda than any book on the Beatles has been able to, it still wasn't quite enough. A lot of what Fields says about her childhood and teen years, before he met her, is conjecture. There is very little detail about that period of her life. Fields knew her best in the mid-sixties when, as a single mother in New York City, Linda entered the then embryonic world of rock photography. There really was no rock press at the time, and Linda got in on the ground floor, and was able to be a part of a scene that very few people could imagine today.While Fields vacillates from defending Linda to criticizing her, he is more than fair in his assesment, and, at times, a bit overboard in his praise of her. Although I didn't feel I knew Linda much better after reading the book, one point in Linda's favor became very clear. She was a very strong woman, with self-confidence and a deep, abiding love for her husband and children. She weathered storms I cannot imagine most women being able to handle. And, when the slings and arrows were aimed solely at her, instead of wallowing in self-pity, she felt instead a sense of pain for what the embarrassment caused Paul and her children to suffer. This book doesn't shed a tremendous amount of light on Linda Eastman McCartney, but it is still valuable for the brief glimpse into the woman before Paul.
8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
A breath of fresh air,
By A Customer
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Linda McCartney: A Portrait (Hardcover)
What a warm, generous and enjoyable book! I found it affectionate, but balanced and credible (the anecdote about how Paul and Linda "paid" New York cabbies was rather revealing). The quotes from Pete Townsend added a lot, too. I had no idea he was so close to the Macs, and his insights were always a delight. Linda comes off as a flesh and blood woman who made a conscious decision to make a difficult relationship work -- and viewed in those terms, her life was a success. I wish more attention had been paid to Linda's relationships with Mary, Stella and James (only Heather is mentioned often). But this is a small quibble with an otherwise moving love story.
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