StudyScores.com

No Direction Home: The Life And Music Of Bob Dylan

No Direction Home: The Life And Music Of Bob Dylan

zoom enlarge 
Author: Robert Shelton
Publisher: Da Capo Press
Category: Book

Buy Used: $140.39



Used (3) from $140.39

Avg. Customer Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars 14 reviews
Sales Rank: 866968

Media: Paperback
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 576
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.4
Dimensions (in): 8.2 x 6.1 x 1.3

ISBN: 0306812878
Dewey Decimal Number: 780
EAN: 9780306812873
ASIN: 0306812878

Publication Date: July 9, 2003
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Also Available In:

  • Paperback - No Direction Home: The Life And Music Of Bob Dylan
  • Hardcover - No Direction Home: The Life and Music of Bob Dylan
  • Hardcover - No Direction Home: The Life and Music of Bob Dylan
  • Mass Market Paperback - No Direction Home: The Life and Music of Bob Dylan

Similar Items:

  • Chronicles: Volume One
  • Down the Highway: The Life of Bob Dylan
  • Bob Dylan: Behind the Shades Revisited
  • Bob Dylan - No Direction Home
  • Dylan Speaks: The Legendary 1965 Press Conference in San Francisco

Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com Review
Robert Shelton, a critic for the New York Times in 1961, caught an early Bob Dylan gig at Folk City in Greenwich Village and wrote an effusive review for the newspaper. The coverage in the Times was a huge boost to the career of the then-struggling folksinger, and Shelton and Dylan became friends, seeing each other frequently around the Village folk scene. When Shelton, in the 1980s, finally got around to finishing his full-length biography of Dylan, he could draw upon a wealth of insider stories from the early days. The book is naturally strongest when describing Dylan's early career, from his coffeehouse gigs as a Woody Guthrie disciple to the insanely high artistic peaks of the mid-'60s. A particularly engaging passage concerns a freeform interview Shelton conducted with Dylan as they flew high above the Midwest in early 1966; Shelton's memories of Dylan are essential reading for fans. Shelton saw much less of the notoriously private Dylan as the years passed, and the book loses momentum as he becomes less of an eyewitness and more of a distant observer, though Dylan's story is credibly told up through the mid-1980s. --Robert McNamara

Product Description
Robert Shelton wrote the rave review of Bob Dylan in the New York Times that is generally credited with being the piece that "discovered" him in 1961. Twenty-five years later, Shelton, who had followed Dylan's career faithfully, published No Direction Home. Here is the "empathetic and rather magnificent" (Washington Post Book World) story of Dylan, musician and phenomenon.



Customer Reviews:   Read 9 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars Who is Bob Dylan?   March 9, 2008
Who is Bob Dylan? None of the biographies I've read - Sounes, Heylin, Scaduto, and a short book by Toby Thompson (1971) - are by people that really knew him. Shelton is the New York Times reviewer who heard Dylan play in a Greenwich Village coffee house not too long after he came to NY and wrote a very promising review about him, which helped him on his way... Shelton also got to know him, spent time with him, and was able to piece many things together and interview people that were not mentioned in the other books. The interviews and stories are interesting and informative, fill in gaps left by the other books, and we get more of a feeling of Dylan, especially before he came to NY and as he was developing. This is a very well written book. Fans will like it a lot.


5 out of 5 stars "No Direction Home: The Live and Music of Bob Dylan"   October 21, 2007
It was, to me, the best biography of Bob Dylan. Very good writing, never boring or exhaustive with details or ponderings.


5 out of 5 stars All sides and aspects of a cherished and popular figure   August 10, 2003
 3 out of 3 found this review helpful

Expertly written by Robert Shelton (the New York Times music and popular culture reviewer generally credited for "discovering" Dylan in 1961), No Direction Home: The Life And Music Of Bob Dylan is a faithful and definitive biography of the talented artist and his unforgettable music. An extensively detailed chronicle which explores all sides and aspects of a cherished and popular figure in American music, No Direction Home is a welcome addition to 20th Century Music History Studies collections and "must" reading for all Bob Dylan fans.


3 out of 5 stars Not the Place to Start . . .   January 1, 2003
 13 out of 18 found this review helpful

. . .start (of course) with the albums, of course, especially "Freewheelin'," "Highway 61 Revisited," "Blonde on Blonde," and "John Wesley Harding," "Basement Tapes," "Blood on the Tracks," "Bootleg Series Vol 4," and maybe "World Gone Wrong." Then check out "Don't Look Back" on DVD. Shelton's book has a lot of great information about Dylan, but it's not the best organized or most concise biography you'll ever come across (maybe it's the editor who worked on the book's fault [?]). It's also now a bit dated, published in 1986. Clinton Heylin's "Man Behind the Shades" (1991) and Howard Sounes' "Down the Highway" (2001) are both more up-to-date and easier reads. Greil Marcus' "Invisible Republic" (1997)does a better job of placing Dylan's music in a historical context. "No Direction Home" is a sprawling collection of interview excepts, biography, oral history, the author's personal recollections of Dylan, musicology, and literary criticism that never really connects the dots, but there is a lot of great information for the experienced or semi-experienced Dylan enthusiast to wade through


4 out of 5 stars Good Not Great...   August 2, 2002
 5 out of 5 found this review helpful

Whether or not this is the BEST Dylan biography is hard to say, there are millions of them out there...certainly it has to be the best-researched, and one of the most heartfelt; Shelton gave Dylan his first great review, "discovered" him, in effect, and though he critically assesses Dylan's subsequent works there's never a doubt that he's Dylan's biggest fan. A midnight conversation on a private jet between Shelton and Dylan in the mid-60's is the best thing in the book, fascinating reading...but there is such a concept as too much of a good thing, and the minutae Shelton indulges in gets tiring. He apparently went to every concert and every party Dylan did, and his insistence on inserting himself into the scene makes me wonder about his objectivity. Maybe Shelton thought he was one of the new journalists. I don't know. But less Shelton would've been helpful. Also, Shelton insists on punctuating almost every paragraph with a hidden line from one of Dylan's songs; for awhile it's clever, but it gets old fast.
The book was out of print for a long time, and that's too bad. I hope it stays in print. It's incredibly packed with facts and interpretations and long quotes both from Dylan and those close to him. It's just TOO MUCH, that's all. But good. A worthy biography of the most potent force in popular music since Sinatra. How's that for a name out of left field?


The products referenced on this site are sold and shipped by Amazon.com. StudyScores.com makes no representations regarding either the products or any information offered about products. Any questions, complaints, or claims regarding the products must be directed to the appropriate manufacturer or vendor, or to Amazon.com.