Perfect from Now On: How Indie Rock Saved My Life by John Sellers

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(Paperback - Reprint)

  • Pub. Date: March 2008
  • 224pp
  • Sales Rank: 357,562

    Reader Rating: (5 ratings)

    Detailed Rating: "Research" See All

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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: March 2008
    • Publisher: Simon & Schuster Adult Publishing Group
    • Format: Paperback, 224pp
    • Sales Rank: 357,562

    Synopsis

    John Sellers was powerless to resist the call of indie rock — once he finally heard it. In this hilarious and revealing memoir, Sellers meticulously charts his transformation from a teenage headbanger rebelling against his Dylan-obsessed father to a thirtysomething fixated on the obscure Ohio band Guided By Voices. Along the way, he commemorates the deaths of Ian Curtis and Kurt Cobain, makes a pilgrimage inspired by the Smiths, and riffs on Pavement and the other raucous bands that have ruled college radio since the 1980s. Packed with compulsively constructed lists, ridiculous formulas, and embarrassing confessions, this is a book for anybody who thinks that corporate rock still sucks.

    The New York Times - Mick Sussman

    Sellers works in the approved style of post-gonzo rock journalism, with an arch, self-deprecating, emphatic tone, digressive footnotes and "10 best" lists. His clowning about cheesy 1980s culture is only intermittently amusing, but whenever he immerses himself in the esoterica of alternative music the book improves. His knowledge of the subject is impressively obsessive.

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    Biography

    John Sellers has written for GQ, Spin, Entertainment Weekly, and The New York Times, and maintains the blog Angry John Sellers. He lives in New York City. For more information, visit www.johnsellers.net.

    Customer Reviews

    if you dig tiresome rantings, here's your book!by Anonymous

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    November 10, 2008: it was wack. isn't the point of indie rock to veer away from idolatry? kind of misses the point...

    Funny -- plus a whole chapter about Pavementby Anonymous

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    January 17, 2008: I bought this book mainly because it has a recommendation on the cover by my favorite author, Chuck Klosterman, but also because it talks about a lot of bands that I love, including the Smiths and Pavement. I'm glad I did. The story follows Sellers' path as a music fan, from basically his early love of Duran Duran and U2 to his later fixations on the legendary indie bands mentioned above. He concludes with a long appendix of lists -- some funny, some dead-on, and others that I completely disagreed with (he admits to not liking Sgt. Pepper's!). He does come across as a fanboy at times, and he often goes off on plenty of tangents, but I looked at it like I was having a conversation with someone about his musical past, and if you've ever had one of those, you know that they do tend to go off on tangents. Anyway, I was surprised to find myself laughing out loud on a few occasions. And I think that's the true accomplishment of this book: I feel like the author is someone who'd be fun to hang out with, and someone who is probably not that different than me (except the Sgt. Pepper's part!).


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