• 110 replies
    izzie
    Joined:
    There's lots of 'em! Books about the Dead, by the Dead, both collectively and individually. And then there's books about us, the Deadheads, too! What's your current read?

Comments

sort by
Recent
Reset
  • leadbelly27
    Default Avatar
    Joined:
    David Gans interviews
    Some years ago I came across a book called "Conversations with the Dead" by David Gans. This is an amazing collection of in-depth and penetrating interviews with Garcia, Lesh, Weir, Hunter, Barlow, Bear, and Healy. Most are from the early '80s. The Garcia interview from '81, in particular, is enlightening. Gans really knows what questions to ask, and it's obvious that Jerry trusted him and really opened up. An expansive interview ranging from Garcia's thoughts on music and the Dead, to philosophy, Terrence Mckenna, religion, and even Jerry Falwell! Wow. Every deadhead should own this book. Oh, and the interview with Weir takes place while they are hanging upside-down at Weir's studio. This would be strange if it were any other band. Within the context of the Grateful Dead, it seemed logical and downright appropriate. The copy I have is copyright 1991 from the Citadel Underground Press. Amazon has it listed as being printed by De Capo press. Yo Soy Boricua!
  • Hal R
    Joined:
    Summer Of Love
    Not a book, but the newest Rolling Stone is all about the Summer of Love - 1967. Lots of photos of the Dead and other bands. Short piece by Bobby. Article about Owsley. Great fun. Further. Do I contradict myself? Very well then I contradict myself, (I am large, I contain multitudes.) Walt Whitman-Song of Myself
  • Fatjack
    Default Avatar
    Joined:
    Dead Books..
    I have Grateful Dead Family Album, Dark Star: An Oral Biography of Jerry Garcia and Phil Lesh: Searching for The Sound.
  • Oroboros
    Joined:
    books, I love 'em
    Yes, I do love to read. Have the Deadbase XI, which as been a great source of info. The 3 Deadhead's Taping Compendium's by Getz & Dwork. I loaned out McNally's book (which I loved). I loaned out Brightman's book which I enjoyed as well. Phil's Searching for the Sound (wonderful stories of appreciation for his bandmates/others and the times) which was last summer's read. Scully/Dalton's Living with the Dead (a little agenda noted there). Rolling Stone Editor's GARCIA, which has wonderful photos and interviews. What a Long Strange Trip by Peters with stories about all the Dead's original songs and their album process. The Official Book of the Deadheads by Grushkin, Bassett, & Grushkin which was given to me by a dear departed buddy who turned me on to the dead in '72 and is really about us all. Blair Jackson's Garcia- An American Life which will be my reread for vacation (in the next couple weeks). I must say that one of my all time favorites, has been 'Dead to the Core', by Eric F. Wybenga. Great passion and prose about the times, the band, the performances, and the songs themselves by Wybenga. Got several of these used (I am very cheap) on amazon.com. I am sure I forgot some and apoligies to those (I will remember after I post this) that I forgot. Oh, yeah, Hank Harrison's The Dead with the flexy disc inside with the GD jamming behind Neal Cassady 'rapping'. Well, I'd better call that good. Or I will go on and on. So what else is new?
  • SirX1970
    Joined:
    books i have
    i have hunter's "box of rain" personally signed to me, and somehow i obtained an uncorrected advance proof of "living with the dead" by scully. the ones that have gotten the most use have been the compendiums though - i almost need to buy new ones.
  • bsclowds
    Joined:
    Living with the Dead by Rock
    Living with the Dead by Rock Scully has some great stories and perspectives on his time with the Dead @~~~~~~~>~~~~~~>~~~~~~~~~>~~ When you want that groove that invokes dreams, close your eyes and focus on the dream not the groove
  • jsb4694
    Default Avatar
    Joined:
    I finished Phil's book too
    Excellent book. I think I finished it in about a week's time. Did anyone go to Barnes and Noble in Midtown NYC when this came out and he did the instore signing for it? I was there and met the man, thanked him for all the years of great music and I treasure my signed copy!
  • gdradio
    Joined:
    American Book of The Dead
    I LOVE this book... Click on it to go to Amazon.com...
  • LenG
    Default Avatar
    Joined:
    Books/Reads/Etc....
    Reading two: *Rolling Stone Collection or J.G stories and articles..... *A Long Strange Trip--D.Mcnally Both have plenty of info and quotes from almost anybody and everybody associated with the band. Can't get enough... LenG
  • it_must_have_b…
    Default Avatar
    Joined:
    just read phil lesh's book.
    just read phil lesh's book. very agreeable, read the whole thing in 2 days
user picture

Member for

17 years 6 months
Forums
There's lots of 'em! Books about the Dead, by the Dead, both collectively and individually. And then there's books about us, the Deadheads, too! What's your current read?
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

16 years 4 months
Permalink

...and took a nap! "Three Bags Full" was very enjoyable, and needs to have a sequel. Who'd've thought, a story about sheep could be cool. I just finished reading "Skeleton Key"(grate book, but a little out of date) and a few things synced up with some of the vine activity going on: *The entry for the WELL (starring our own marye) mentions the BCT '86 run of shows at which marye and David Gans handed out flyers for the GD conferences on the WELL - which is why the entire run is being vined even as we speak. We should all "whine" for a vine covering the Kaiser 11/20, 21, 22/85 run, in the balcony of which marye and Gans had the "lightbulb" moment of creating a Dead zone in cyberspace (note that marye has in fact played a part in creating a world, therefore = goddess). *There is a William & Mary '73 vine starting up - one of these shows (9/11/73) was the first GD show that Bruce Hornsby attended. He went on to start a band with his brother that played Dead covers, and from there...ended up playing with a Dead band that does Dylan covers! *In one of the appendices there is a list of Jim Powell's dozen favorite "Dark Stars". One of these is included in another vine just getting started, the Boston Ark '69 vine (4/22). Several other listed "Dunkelstern"s have been vined, although only the '91 DSB vine with the 9/10 MSG show appears to still be active. *This isn't vine-related, just an amusing coincidence: Several days ago I received a private message here with the very gracious offer of a place to stay in Chicago during my upcoming visit to see the Dead at Rosemont (I have been unable to reply to this offer yet, due to an extended internet outage resulting from the truly hideous weather here in Louisville). I read this PM just a few minutes after reading the following riddle in "Skeleton Key": Q: How do you know that Deadheads have stayed at your house? A: They're still there. Cheers! MarkintheDark ********************************************* *********This space for rent************** *********************************************
user picture

Member for

17 years 5 months
Permalink

Excellent Mark. I will have to revisit that book, been in my archives for years. Thank you,pk
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

15 years 10 months
Permalink

Just finished DARK STAR-Its pretty cool how its just quotes about Jerry by people cose to him,Makes it an easy read. I never realized how much pressure that poor man had to endure.He was truly a rock-n-roll soldier-He never wanted to stop touring because he did'nt want to put 100+ people out of work or let down the DEADHEADS and his body was begging him to at least take a couple years off the road Maybe if he cared about himself as much as he cared about everybody else-we would still be hearing that sweet sound. It's truly sad-I miss him.
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

16 years 10 months
Permalink

Hey Folks, Hope you'll indulge a little horn-tooting! My new book, Growing Up Dead: The Hallucinated Confessions of a Teenage Deadhead, was just published and I'd love you to check it out. This isn't a book about the band's history or an insiders story, etc. Those are great, but this ain't that. This is a book about going to shows, street level, pure and simple. I've gotten some good feedback on it already, but my favorite is from Dead publicist/historian Dennis McNally: "The hardest part of being the Grateful Dead’s publicist was convincing the media that Deadheads were diverse, thoughtful, and not infrequently accomplished. If I’d just had a copy of Growing Up Dead, I could have simply handed it out. The Deadhead subculture was rich and fascinating, and this book is a terrific documentation of it.” In support of the book, I've got interviews lined up on the Tales from the Golden Road show on the G.D. Sirius channel and also on the G.D. Hour with David Gans. Got some readings & stuff too. I'd like to pop a note in here and there & hopefully meet some people along the road. First stop is in Albany this spring, same night as the Dead plays there, at an art gallery just down the street. Fri, April 17, 5:30. Amrose Sable Gallery, 306 Hudson Avenue, Albany, NY. Hit the reading, then hit the show (that's what I'm doing!) You can check out the book at Amazon etc. (tho I hope your local indie bookstore will carry it too!) Thanks everyone... love to hear from you if & when you crack the spine & look inside... Peter Conners www.peterconners.com the storyteller makes no choice...
user picture

Member for

15 years 8 months
Permalink

HiI was just reading the previous post. I'm going to have to own that book. Meanwhile--here is the blurberino from mine-- FREAKED, by J.T. Dutton – YA – Humor, Coming of Age –Set in the mid-nineties. Prep school student and ardent fan of the Grateful Dead, 15 year old Scotty Douglas Loveletter road trips to the most unforgettable show of his life. HarperTeen March 17, 2009 You can read some of it on Amazon. It's fiction, but I'm guessing people will find a lot of truth in it. Jen Dutton
user picture

Member for

15 years 8 months
Permalink

I probably should have said that people MIGHT find some truth in it. I sounded a little arrogant to myself there.
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

15 years 8 months
Permalink

I wrote a book about my 30 years touring with the Dead: "Going Down the Road Feeling Glad" Can I donate a copy to the Grateful Dead Library? If so, how? The Grateful Fred
user picture

Member for

17 years 6 months
Permalink

is a figure of speech, pretty much, but UC Santa Cruz has the Dead Archive and might like a copy for that!
user picture

Member for

15 years 8 months
Permalink

I just finished reading Peter Conner's book Growing Up Dead and I really liked it. It bought back a billion memories but it also took me farther/further than my own Dead experiences on a journey of vicarious good times. It' recalls both the late era Dead scene and the music/philosophy that proceeded it as well as how teen rebellion is inspired, cultivated, and turned into something beautiful when it moves along to music.I'd give it about twenty-three stars, with twenty stars the most a book can earn.
user picture

Member for

17 years
Permalink

Tiger Lilly,Thanks for the great book tip! I've heeded a lot of the recommendations on this thread, with the rationale that grate taste in music might imply grate taste in literature. So far, so good! I'm just a little bit of a way into Three Bags Full, and it is totally delightful. Thanks again for bringing this delightful flock of sheep into my world!
user picture

Member for

17 years
Permalink

Hey now, Peter Conners,Job well done! I just finished and greatly enjoyed your book. I was struck by the fact that, although I didn't become a DH until I was 46 (better late than never, right?), so much of what you said still resonated for me. The Dead playing in my head all the time thing has me debating whether or not I should get an Ipod - or do I already have something better hardwired in my brain? It sounds like you have often felt like an outcast - hope you feel like you've found a bit of community here at Deadnet; it's a pretty nice place :)
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

16 years 10 months
Permalink

Hey Now - thanks Jen and Rosa for your comments on Growing Up Dead! Great to know the book is reaching people & bringing back good memories. Definitely a good community here that extends the reach of the parking lot for miles and miles and miles... Cheers, Peter the storyteller makes no choice...
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

16 years 10 months
Permalink

the storyteller makes no choice... I'm happy to say that my very own "Head Set" airs tomorrow (7/3) on the G.D. channel on Sirius/XM! I read short sections from my new book, Growing Up Dead: The Hallucinated Confessions of a Teenage Deadhead, and put together some other intros to accompany the tunes. All the songs are from shows between 1987-1989. The show airs tomorrow (7/3) at 5PM EST. For Sirius/XM subscribers, the Grateful Dead channel is #32. Cheers, Peter
user picture

Member for

17 years 5 months
Permalink

Has anyone read this recent Jerry biog. Any good? Jerry Garcia: A Biography (Greenwood Biographies) (Hardcover) by Jacqueline Edmondson (Author) April 2009 also this Jerry Garcia: A Biography (Greenwood Biographies) (Hardcover) by Jacqueline Edmondson (Author) Feb 2009
user picture

Member for

17 years 5 months
Permalink

Jerry Garica...sorry!
user picture

Member for

17 years 5 months
Permalink

the other book I meant to ask about was Dark Star: An Oral Biography of Jerry Garcia by Robert Greenfield (Paperback - Feb 10, 2009)
user picture

Member for

17 years 6 months
Permalink

came out not long after Jerry's death, so this must be a reissue. I haven't read it; as I recall it's fairly respected.
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

17 years 5 months
Permalink

I have Dark Star and it is not a hatchet job-it is interesting how people view the same events and times so differently. I know he could be very difficult but please a man that ill and he is not using a CPAP machine for his sleep apnea? A health resort admits him and doesn't have a doctor on premises or doesn't insist on a physical? Way too soon Way too soon And the road goes on forever.... BobbaLee
user picture

Member for

17 years 5 months
Permalink

Just finished Peter Connors' book - really enjoyed it. Definitely evokes the spirit and atmosphere of the shows, inside and out (that's inside the venue and outside in the lot, AND inside one's LSD-enhanced headspace and out!). Thanks for a good read.
user picture

Member for

17 years 5 months
Permalink

Also recently read Carol Brightman's book - it looks at the Dead and the scene around them from a more socio-political perspective, which is interesting and at times enlightening. It certainly goes off on long excursions into the author's own experiences as a political activist in the 60s and beyond, but it all ends up tying together pretty well. Not mind candy but enjoyable nonetheless, and certainly interesting. Anyone read that "Dead and Philosophy" book? I'm tempted but honestly it seems a little hokey. If I find it used somewhere I'll probably pick it up, but wondering what people have thought about it.
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

17 years 6 months
Permalink

I haven't read the whole thing, but editor Steve Gimbel's essay is great. He examines whether the parking lot vending scene is a critique of pure capitalism or an instance of it. The author did time as a vendor, so his perspective is from the trenches. I enjoyed it! And Bud Fairlamb's essay cites my books a lot, so of course I like that one, too :^) Gans/GD Hour blog
GD Hour station list
user picture

Member for

15 years 8 months
Permalink

For all you heads in the academy, and for those of us struggling to follow along, I wanted to share my excitement at a new publication: The Grateful Dead in Concert: Essays on Live Improvisation Jim Tuedio, Stan Spector, eds http://www.mcfarlandpub.com/book-2.php?id=978-0-7864-4357-4 My partner, Brent Wood, contributed an essay entitled "The Eccentric Revolutions of Phil Lesh". It is a great piece of work and feels good to see it in print after hours of conversation, listening and writing. He's already published an essay on Robert Hunter's poetry and psychedelic experience and is currently tackling the subject of Jerry & tragedy. These pieces will hopefully appear as a whole book in future. This book is carefully put together with foreword by Stanley Krippner and contributions by the editors, Gimbel, Merriwether... the usual suspects and many others. Great writing, nice organization (tuning, first, 2nd, 3rd sets, encore...) and good ideas! Reads like a good show. Enjoy!
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

17 years 3 months
Permalink

I just ordered a book by Sam Cutler about his days managing the Grateful Dead and the Stones. Should be a interesting read. The book is called: You Can't Always Get What You Want: My Life with the Rolling Stones, the Grateful Dead and Other Wonderful Reprobates. I found it on Amazon.
user picture

Member for

17 years 5 months
Permalink

Sam Cutler is doing a North America tour of book-signings and readings of his recently-released book. The book is on available at Amazon and is also on i-tunes as an i-phone ap, read in its entirety in his own voice. A simultaneous release like this is a publishing-industry first. Tonight he is in Portland, where he will do readings as well as signing the book at Powell’s Books on Hawthorne at 3723 SE Hawthorne Blvd . He's a wonderfully engaging man- I highly recommended that anyone in the area go, and meet him in person!
user picture

Member for

17 years 5 months
Permalink

Thank you marye!!~SAM CUTLER'S 2010 SPRING BOOK TOUR~ North America MEDFORD, OR -Thursday 15-April After today, there will be signed books on hand at Barnes & Noble- 1400 Biddle Road, Medford, OR SACRAMENTO, CA -Friday 16-April After today, there will be signed books on hand at Barnes & Noble Doubleday / Downtown Plaza- 545 Downtown Plaza Suite 1095, Sacramento, CA Call-in Radio show -Sunday 18-April, 1:00p.m. to 3:00pm David Gans, Tales from the Golden Road, The Grateful Dead Channel, on SiriusXM (satellite radio) Live Radio interview -Sunday 18-April, 10:30pm to 11:30pm WGN Radio Chicago, The Nick Digilio Show Host: Nick Digilio Live Radio interview -Tuesday 20-April, 12:00noon to 12:30pm CKLU Sudbury, Canada – Brent Holland Radio Show Host/producer: Brent Holland, This nonprofit show broadcasts to National College Radio system (80 stations) BEREKELY, CA -Tuesday 20-April, 7:30pm to 9:00pm Pat of I-House’s “Music Without Borders” series Free admission and open to the public- Onstage interview with Tim Lynch, KPIG 1510-AM radio personality, followed by a Q&A and book signing. UC Berkeley International House 2299 Piedmont Ave, Berkeley, CA Live Radio interview -Wednesday 21-April, 7:05pm (9:05pm CT) KFAB NEWS RADIO, 1110AM, Omaha, NB SAN FRANCISCO, CA - Wednesday 21-April, 2:00pm Dual Book signing with Robert Altman Connor Fennessy Art 801 Columbus Ave, San Francisco, CA SONOMA, CA -Wednesday 21-April, 7:30pm to 9:00pm Book signing Readers Books 130 E. Napa St., Sonoma, CA LOS ANGELES, CA -Sunday, 23-April After today the following will have signed books on hand: Book Soup 8818 West Sunset Boulevard, Los Angeles, CA 90069 -Saturday 24-April After today the following will have signed books on hand: Barnes & Noble / Santa Monica 1201 Third Street Promenade Santa Monica, CA Barnes & Noble / Grove at Farmers Market 189 Grove Drive Suite K 30 Los Angeles, CA Barnes & Noble / Studio City 12136 Ventura Blvd. Studio City, CA Barnes & Noble / Encino 16461 Ventura Boulevard Encino, CA Live author i-chat (for i-phone app) -Sunday 25-April, 6:00pm CYInterview via Skype with host Chris Yandek Live radio phone interview -Monday, 26-April, 09:05am to 09:25am WJBC FM, Bloomington, IL Host: Ron Ross TORONTO, Canada -Tuesday 27-April Live TV interview 7:40am CTV-Canada AM NEW YORK, NY -Thursday, 29-April Multiple live radio interviews, 8:00am-11:00am Premiere Radio Network On-air radio tour Walk thru of Grateful Dead exhibit, 12:00pm to 1pm New York Historical Society 170 Central Park West New York, NY Book presentation and signing, 7:30pm Barnes & Noble/ Lincoln Triangle 1972 Broadway at 66th Street New York, NY AND ~ONWARD~ TO EUROPE!
user picture

Member for

17 years 6 months
Permalink

the I-House one next week. This book is getting really good buzz and I'm anxious to check it out.
user picture

Member for

15 years 8 months
Permalink

Will Sam actually be in Toronto? If so, will he be making any public appearances? I'd be very interested, especially if there's an evening talk or some opportunity to meet him. Thanks, Kirsten
user picture

Member for

17 years 6 months
Permalink

and I heartily recommend checking this out if Sam's in your town. He's got some fabulous tales and, as he says, a distance of 40 years to put them in perspective. I have to admit my favorite is the one of Mick Jagger squelching a ballistic Bill Graham. I am no fan of Mick, but, priceless.
user picture

Member for

17 years 5 months
Permalink

found a small typo in Sam's schedule- The 23rd is of course, Friday (tomorrow) not Sunday- A repost follows. unless you can edit the original mayre.. ? :-).. in which case please delete THESE lol!
user picture

Member for

17 years 5 months
Permalink

~SAM CUTLER'S 2010 SPRING BOOK TOUR~North America MEDFORD, OR -Thursday 15-April After today, there will be signed books on hand at Barnes & Noble- 1400 Biddle Road, Medford, OR SACRAMENTO, CA -Friday 16-April After today, there will be signed books on hand at Barnes & Noble Doubleday / Downtown Plaza- 545 Downtown Plaza Suite 1095, Sacramento, CA Call-in Radio show -Sunday 18-April, 1:00p.m. to 3:00pm David Gans, Tales from the Golden Road, The Grateful Dead Channel, on SiriusXM (satellite radio) Live Radio interview -Sunday 18-April, 10:30pm to 11:30pm WGN Radio Chicago, The Nick Digilio Show Host: Nick Digilio Live Radio interview -Tuesday 20-April, 12:00noon to 12:30pm CKLU Sudbury, Canada – Brent Holland Radio Show Host/producer: Brent Holland, This nonprofit show broadcasts to National College Radio system (80 stations) BEREKELY, CA -Tuesday 20-April, 7:30pm to 9:00pm Pat of I-House’s “Music Without Borders” series Free admission and open to the public- Onstage interview with Tim Lynch, KPIG 1510-AM radio personality, followed by a Q&A and book signing. UC Berkeley International House 2299 Piedmont Ave, Berkeley, CA Live Radio interview -Wednesday 21-April, 7:05pm (9:05pm CT) KFAB NEWS RADIO, 1110AM, Omaha, NB SAN FRANCISCO, CA - Wednesday 21-April, 2:00pm Dual Book signing with Robert Altman Connor Fennessy Art 801 Columbus Ave, San Francisco, CA SONOMA, CA -Wednesday 21-April, 7:30pm to 9:00pm Book signing Readers Books 130 E. Napa St., Sonoma, CA LOS ANGELES, CA -Friday, 23-April After today the following will have signed books on hand: Book Soup 8818 West Sunset Boulevard, Los Angeles, CA 90069 -Saturday 24-April After today the following will have signed books on hand: Barnes & Noble / Santa Monica 1201 Third Street Promenade Santa Monica, CA Barnes & Noble / Grove at Farmers Market 189 Grove Drive Suite K 30 Los Angeles, CA Barnes & Noble / Studio City 12136 Ventura Blvd. Studio City, CA Barnes & Noble / Encino 16461 Ventura Boulevard Encino, CA Live author i-chat (for i-phone app) -Sunday 25-April, 6:00pm CYInterview via Skype with host Chris Yandek Live radio phone interview -Monday, 26-April, 09:05am to 09:25am WJBC FM, Bloomington, IL Host: Ron Ross TORONTO, Canada -Tuesday 27-April Live TV interview 7:40am CTV-Canada AM NEW YORK, NY -Thursday, 29-April Multiple live radio interviews, 8:00am-11:00am Premiere Radio Network On-air radio tour Walk thru of Grateful Dead exhibit, 12:00pm to 1pm New York Historical Society 170 Central Park West New York, NY Book presentation and signing, 7:30pm Barnes & Noble/ Lincoln Triangle 1972 Broadway at 66th Street New York, NY AND ~ONWARD~ TO EUROPE!
user picture

Member for

17 years 5 months
Permalink

After reading the book and then going to a local reading/signing, I think I may have to get Sam Cutler's book on I-tunes~ It's just SO wonderful to hear him read these amazing stories in his own deep, British-accented voice!!
user picture

Member for

17 years 6 months
Permalink

I'm reading the book now, but I'm thinking the same way. The things you learn. I had no idea, for example, that the egregious Lenny Hart was involved in a Jesus cult at the time he was ripping off the band. (Let's just say those were strange times.) But I asked around and so it was!
user picture

Member for

17 years 5 months
Permalink

Feed Your Head: San Francisco's Psychedelic Rock Revolution: From the Acid Tests to Altamont (Paperback) ~ Blair Jackson (Author) Product description from Amazon In the mid- and late 1960s, San Francisco was the epicentre of a cultural and musical revolution which is still reverberating to this day. It was the place where the carefully cultivated American Dream of an ever-expanding conformist commercial culture slammed headlong into the day-glo visions and utopian ideals of a young generation that suddenly did not want to play by the old rules, but instead wanted to create something bold, beautiful and new. The musical soundtrack for the counterculture that formed in Haight-Ashbury (and in other cities across the country) was also startlingly new and different - it took elements of rock 'n' roll, folk, blues, jazz, Indian and seemingly a hundred other influences, and combined them in a rich psychedelic stew that was unlike anything the world had ever heard before. "Feed Your Head! San Francisco's Psychedelic Rock Revolution: From the Acid Tests to Altamont" traces the rise of the Bay Area music underground through five of the original bands: Jefferson Airplane, Grateful Dead, Quicksilver Messenger Service, Big Brother & the Holding Company/Janis Joplin and Country Joe & the Fish. Using the popular 'day-by-day' format of previous Jawbone titles, author Blair Jackson offers a compelling look at not only the work of those seminal bands during that important period, but also other important groups in the surrounding scene, and broader cultural themes including the spread of psychedelic drugs, youth's resistance to the War in Vietnam, and the 'straight' world's response to the hippie revolution. "Feed Your Head" is a detailed, colourful, and occasionally funny book that is certain to appeal to fans of San Francisco rock, or the '60s in general. If the doors of perception were cleansed, everything would appear to man as it is, infinite. William Blake
user picture

Member for

17 years 5 months
Permalink

Altamont as end point. I wasn't there, but I have friends that were. I would like to hear what Blair's thoughts are as using this as a bookend for a period. To me the music never stopped, members of all of the bands featured are still active. I guess you have to mark some type of end to the book, but this music was just starting to flow out to many of us around the country and change where we were at, many of us were younger and there was a time lag between what was happening around the bay area and when it started to have a deeper influence for many of us. If the doors of perception were cleansed, everything would appear to man as it is, infinite. William Blake
user picture

Member for

17 years 4 months
Permalink

The Dead Book by Hank HarrisonFamily Album by Jerilyn Lee Brandelius Offical Book of the Dead Heads Playing in the Band by Gans and Simon Grateful Dead Anthology Vol.II Grateful Dead Songbook (This is my favorite)
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

13 years 7 months
Permalink

Hey there. My name is Leslie and I wanted to post about my stepfather's e-book titled The Temple of the Heart. My stepfather, Richard A. Anderson, was a huge fan of the Grateful Dead. He passed away in 2002 after a long bout with diabetes. However, I managed to get his manuscript published after his death, and it's available as an ebook. In it, he chronicles his trips to see the Grateful Dead at Winterland, on his path to self-discovery.The Temple of the Heart page on my website has buy links for his novel. Visit my site for details at http://www.lesliesoule.com -Leslie D. Soule
user picture

Member for

13 years 10 months
Permalink

Is this the thread where I can blatantly self-promote my own fictionalized account of 10 plus years of following the Dead, "The Hallucinogenic Bible", in which I discuss the Dead and its role as a religion. Music, religion, road trips, drugs, cops, all that and more. Available as an e-book only on Amazon Kindle, if interested. J.T. Gossard http://thehallucinogenicbible.blogspot.com/
user picture

Member for

17 years 6 months
Permalink

the thread! Your Own Storefront also an OK place...
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

13 years 6 months
Permalink

any one ever heard the aoxomoxoa released from europe. different takes and all from US version!
user picture

Member for

13 years 4 months
Permalink

coming out in October: Paul Grushkin (author of The Official Book of the Dead Heads) has a new book featuring those illustrated envelopes into which Heads poured their creative hearts and souls before sending them off to the ticket office. The ticket office ladies, Steve Marcus, et al., fortunately saved them and now they're in the Grateful Dead Archive. And people are still sending gorgeous creations to GDTS Too. The book will be in the Store here in due course, but if you'd like to keep up with the happenings in the meantime, feel free to check out our Facebook page http://www.facebook.com/pages/Dead-Letters/123073284439947 where we're posting some of the envelopes a little early... Thanks!
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

13 years 7 months
Permalink

Hey there. My name is Leslie Soule. I'm looking for people to review my stepfather's semi-autobiographical novel titled The Temple of The Heart - set in the 70s, it's about a monk who leaves the monastery to pursue life in all its glory. Also, it's about my stepfather's experiences seeing Grateful Dead shows and going to Winterland. If anyone's interested, I'll send the PDF of the novel. You can contact me by e-mail at falcondraco@hotmail.com, or through my website. Leslie Soule www.lesliesoule.com
user picture

Member for

17 years 5 months
Permalink

Congrats on the sure-to-be surefire bestsellerThanks!
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

15 years 10 months
Permalink

I got Hank Harrison's Book of the Dead when I was a Freshman in college in 1972 - it came with a flimsy 45 rpm record of Neal Cassady holding court which is long since gone. It is a book that I understood more as time went on.
user picture

Member for

13 years 4 months
Permalink

First of all, hey, we're in the Dead.net Store now, available for preorder, and should be shipping soon as the books are now shipping from the publisher's warehouse. Check it out! And second of all, check out our Facebook page, because Steven Marcus has unearthed the video of his long-lost 1986 interview with Jerry, in the ticket office, there for your viewing pleasure...
user picture

Member for

12 years 10 months
Permalink

I had a copy some number of years ago that got lost in one of my many moves. I've since collected many other Dead related books but I would LOVE to have another copy of Goin Down The Road by Blair Jackson if I remember correctly. If anyone has a copy that they wouldn't mind relinquishing send me a PM and we can work something out!Thank you very much to anyone who reads this and to anyone who even thinks of responding! CosmicDavid
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

12 years 5 months
Permalink

Would love to replace some of my long lost golden road issues. I do see them on ebay but if anyone wants to part with a large chunk send me a PM