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The Dirt: Confessions of the World's Most Notorious Rock Band September 9, 2005
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There are a few genuinely dramatic and touching chapters in the book, though, like the one where Tommy Lee laments his months in prison after assaulting his wife or when Vince Neil writes about watching his 4-year old daughter slowly die from cancer. I couldn't even finish reading the latter because I got to it the night after Sam left with Geralyn for a visit to St. Louis. Most of the chapters, though, had me rolling my eyes at these decadent men living and acting like children and wondering "WHY OH WHY is everything falling apart? How could this be happening?" You know, when they're taking drugs, drinking, cheating on their wives, leaving their families to go on tour, and resorting to business practices that a three-year old would find childish. Their angst is ridiculous and they are, by and large, obviously dumbasses and misfits.
Still, this is a pretty well written (I'm sure they had a ghost writer or at least ghost editor for parts) drama that pops along at a good pace and gives a lot of insight into at least some of what really happened. Well, probably happened.
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Posted by mcandou on September 10, 2005 9:46 AM:
My teenage years were spent listening to Motley Crue, so I can't wait to read this. Thanks for the review.