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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A MASTERPIECE of superb writing!
It is NOT moralizing. It is a super fun read! It is NOT a dry lecture about the dangers of drug addiction - read it because it is fun! That it has a 'message' is a bonus - the book itself is a masterpiece!

I love this book! I've read it twice and could not put it down! Danny's writing style is superb! I have read LOTS of books and this is my #2 favorite book...
Published on April 9, 2005 by all love based paths lead to God

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3.0 out of 5 stars Drugs, drugs and rock 'n' roll
Danny Sugarman was the son of a Hollywood businessman (maybe some sort of connected guy, it's never disclosed but hinted at) who runs into trouble when his parents' marriage falls apart and he drifts into the orbit of Jim Morrison and the Doors. Sugarman has family troubles, that leads to drug use, which becomes pronounced as he becomes a rock hanger-on, then a manager of...
Published 5 months ago by Surferofromantica


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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A MASTERPIECE of superb writing!, April 9, 2005
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This review is from: Wonderland Avenue: Tales of Glamour and Excess (Abacus Books) (Paperback)
It is NOT moralizing. It is a super fun read! It is NOT a dry lecture about the dangers of drug addiction - read it because it is fun! That it has a 'message' is a bonus - the book itself is a masterpiece!

I love this book! I've read it twice and could not put it down! Danny's writing style is superb! I have read LOTS of books and this is my #2 favorite book of all time (after The Mists of Avalon)!

Very decadent but has tremendous redeeming value. Danny was press manager for The Doors, and this is his story....Witty, funny, outrageous! Danny's style of writing is SO incredible you really can't put this book down! (well after the first chapter anyway). And there is a bonus: after reading this with my son, he decided to become straight-edge! Note: has lots of sex, drugs, and rock n roll, not to mention excessive profanity. Not for the squeamish.

Interestingly, all of the reviews rave about this book except for one, and that one is by someone who obviously is very self-righteous and couldn't handle the sex drugs rock n roll. Too bad. His loss.
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17 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars ROCK'S ULTIMATE CAUTIONARY TALE, June 25, 2004
This review is from: Wonderland Avenue: Tales of Glamour and Excess (Abacus Books) (Paperback)
Danny Sugarman was a 14-year old kid living in the L.A. suburb of Westchester, near LAX. He was troubled, and did not like his step-father. He read an ad or heard about a rock band in Hollywood that was hiring a teenager to answer mail, so he went for and got the job. The band was The Doors. Getting from Westchester to Hollywood by bus is not all that easy, but he did it just about every day. Jim Morrison befriended him and told him not to let his parents addle his brain with Ritalin, an ironic anti-drug message coming from the Lizard King.

As a teenager, Sugarman accompanied Morrison on sojourns to the Sunset Strip, where despite his minority he was admitted to the rarified air of The Doors, The Byrds, and other classic California bands. His step-father was appalled.

Remarkably, despite his lifestyle, Sugarmnan was good enough at baseball to be offered a scholarship of some kind to play at UCLA, but his commitment to the band tugged at his dedication for the game, so he never went the diamond route.

As Morrison went downhill, so too did Sugarman. Unlike the song "No One Here Gets Out Alive", Sugarman managered, barely, to escape. After Jim's death, Sugarman picked himself up and lived in a house on Wonderland Avenue. It was all set up by Ray Manzaerek, the Doors' keyboardist extraordinaire. Manzarek, the "sensible one" among The Doors, wanted to continue the band, or at least his own musical career. Sugarman was hired to be the band's manager, and it was a lucrative life for a guy still in his early 20s. He quickly found himself drawn back into the sordid life of drugs, alcohol, sexual excess, and the like. The Wonderland address did not help, it being a small enclave off of Laurel Canyon, the famed street that connects West Hollywood with the San Fernando Valley. Its narrow canyons and streets are dotted with picturesque homes that embody the California Dream, and are inhabited (especially then) by those artists whose labors have born fruit. The Sharon Tate murders occurred in the general vicinity. Wild, loud parties were so commonplace that neighbors hearing the screams of Charles Manson's victims thought it was just another bash. John Holmes would be involved in a massacre there in the '80s. Later, this would be the area where Heidi Fleiss connected porn with Hollywood money.

Sugarman, who eventually would marry Iran-Contra ingenue Fawn Hall, lived with his gorgeous girfriend and lived the life. Aside from The Doors, he also managed the unbeliavable Iggy Pop. Once at the Beverly Hills Hotel pool, Iggy was sunning himself next to "Gilligan's Island" icon Tina Louise. Iggy plopped his manhood from out of his floppy shorts, showed it to Ms. Louise, and asked sardonically if she would care for a shag of the old English sausage. Tina politely declined.

The book describes one after the other of Sugarman's friends and associates meeting the Grim Reaper, and in the end he lists pages of names - musicians, producers, groupies, enemies, friends, girfriends, agents, and others - who died of drug overdoses in the pre-AIDS, pre-Cocaine-is-addictive era.

The message of this book is that despite glamour and fun, it is essential to be grounded, and one must do whatever he or she can to find that center.

(...)

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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars drugs and excess, January 8, 2001
This review is from: Wonderland Avenue: Tales of Glamour and Excess (Abacus Books) (Paperback)
the first time i read this book i was only a teenager and i don't remember reading it again for years. i don't even recall how this book came into my possession but i know i was grateful for it. i'd led a sheltered life and to read about someone's account of their painful existence was an eye-opener for me. this book may not be for everyone but it paved the way for my way of thinking today and i'm glad it landed in my hands.

not being a big fan of jim morrison probably gave me a more objective view towards danny sugerman because i wasn't likely to think that this was all about sugerman's obsession with morrison or the band. i read it as a raw account of sugerman's life from when he was an adolescent into adulthood, and his realisation that there was more out there for him than just drugs and excess. most of his friends are dead today. the fact that he's alive is amazing given what he's put his body through.

i have to read this book again soon.

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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Gimme Danger Little Stranger, October 30, 2006
This review is from: Wonderland Avenue: Tales of Glamour and Excess (Abacus Books) (Paperback)
The extraordinary young life of Danny Sugerman is chronicled in this second book covering the L.A. scene of the 1960s and 1970s.

Jim Morrison has died, The Doors are attempting to hang on as a group, Sugerman is chasing his own demons and Detroit's answer to the Lizard King arrives on the scene. Iggy Stooge (Pop) becomes the icon of decadence; destroying luxury cars parked at the palatial homes of his young girlfriends, being so smashed that his mop of hair is used as a mop to clean a floor and - through it all - perhaps becoming the lead singer of The Doors.

Sugerman tries to keep Iggy together as the party that never stops rotates faster and faster. It is an end of an era of sorts as Sugerman tries to clean up before becoming yet another drug casuality while The Doors put together one last great gig and Iggy whirls through a self-destructive fantasy that only comes to an abrupt halt years later.

Sugerman lived through it....and survived, barely. The book ends as a cautionary tale of wandering onto a wonderland avenue, only to find out too late that it's a living hell.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Danny Sugarman took me on a wild ride right along with him!, February 22, 2000
By 
Yvette Knupp (Harrisonburg, VA) - See all my reviews
Danny proved with this book that he has an enormous writing talent that keeps me waiting for another. His writing style made me feel like I was right there beside him through everything.I laughed, partied and suffered right along with him. He had the wonderful opportunity to be where the rest of us could only dream about.Danny, congratulations on all of your success, and hopefully much more to come!
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The best book ever., April 7, 2001
This review is from: Wonderland Avenue: Tales of Glamour and Excess (Abacus Books) (Paperback)
Fans of the movie "Almost Famous" should thoroughly enjoy this book. The decadent LA rock scene of the late 60's is almost as strong a character in this book as Danny Sugerman is; the reader gets drawn into the turmoil and excitement of both. Sugerman tells of his journey into rock and roll with Jim Morrison, the tragic philosopher/vocalist of the Doors. As a journalist/band manager, Sugerman gets to live the rock lifestyle full force: backstage passes, wild parties, and national tours give way to drug use, sexual hijinks, and general hedonistic debauchery. But Wonderland Avenue is about more than just drug use and "tales of excess", it is about finding strength and meaning in ones life. For Sugerman (as well as many of us out there) music is what gives him his strength, and will to power. Wonderland Avenue is a heartfelt book about experience, passion, and music. Through his detailed and unabashed descriptions, Sugerman proves that so long as you continue to learn and grow, Rock and Roll in it's finest form is worth almost any price.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars So well written and so real, September 26, 1999
By A Customer
I was really shocked by the reality of the pain of being an addict in this book. And the interesting rock stars lifestyle it put across, as soon as I read about the doors I had to raid my dads c-d collection to find out what they sounded like. I have listened to them ever since. The best book i've read in a long time, i found it hard to put down !
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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Helpful, enlightening, inspirational; this book helped to save my life!, September 24, 2005
This review is from: Wonderland Avenue: Tales of Glamour and Excess (Abacus Books) (Paperback)
A quick message to Peter Wild, of Manchester England, unload that chip on your shoulder before unleashing such rubbish about a book of this quality! It saved my life!

As for the book? Where to start? When I read this book I was living in squalour in Bristol, England, a week away from checking into rehab and didn't know it! Having experienced a simpilar lifestyle to Sugarman, I was fascinated and enthralled, loving the gory and druggy details, identifying with the clashes with family and dealing with not fitting in too well with my peers, but towards the end of the novel, I was identifying with the chaos of the world, and was inspired to finally deal with my problems! I have tried to follow suit and am now nearly 2.5yrs clean and sober myself living as a productive and responsible member of society! Truly inspirational!

I believe that even if you weren't into the drug scene, or even the music scene, someone could thoroughly enjoy this book; it's something to be admired for its honesty and will to go places alot of people shun! Buy it now!!
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7 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Made me Cringe, April 23, 2002
This review is from: Wonderland Avenue: Tales of Glamour and Excess (Abacus Books) (Paperback)
While I read Sugarman's book, I kept growing increasingly uncomfortable with the situations that kept coming up. Some of them were too familar to me. Mainly the 'I will risk life and limb to get high' scenario. My ex-husband was very much like Sugarman in a way; he was raised wealthy, spoiled and bored and nearly threw it all away once the partying got out of control. There is a section in this book where Sugarman takes a trip to NY and goes into Harlem to buy drugs, my ex- husband used to do that all the time, go into strange neighborhoods no matter what the risk. This is a book that should be distributed in rehabs all over, especially where teenagers are getting treatment for the first time. Maybe it would help some of them realize after reading some of Sugarman's horror stories, that it really isn't worth it.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Sugerman the Apostle, July 12, 2008
This review is from: Wonderland Avenue: Tales of Glamour and Excess (Abacus Books) (Paperback)
This book was mentioned frequently in the 2004 Steven Davis book on Jim Morrison. I knew before reading it that it would contain lurid Hollywood tales of sex, drugs and Rock and Roll. I also knew it would reveal more about the relationship between Jim Morrison and Sugerman, which is barely touched upon in the other biographies, including Sugerman's other book, No One Here Gets Out Alive.

It has a Fear and Loathing In Las Vegas feel to it for sure. Lots of drugs, this may be one of the most drugged out books ever. However, there is more to this book than drugs. For any serious student of Rock or Morrison fanatic like myself, you will enjoy this book. There is information that is left out of all the rest of the books that have been written on these subjects. Sugerman gets you on the inside. The parties, the lifestyle, the excess. Also, there is such an insight into Morrison, which for me, was the best part.
As a spiritual guide to another world he takes Danny on it. This occurs in chapter six, pgs. 151 - 154. and it's one of the best pieces ever writted about Morrison. In fact, I believe it gives you the whole Jim Morrison philosophy! From the mouth of Jim through the writing of Danny Sugerman. Reading this book I have to say Danny Sugerman truly is the great Morrison disciple.
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Wonderland Avenue: Tales of Glamour and Excess (Abacus Books)
Wonderland Avenue: Tales of Glamour and Excess (Abacus Books) by Daniel Sugerman (Paperback - August 1, 1993)
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