ISBN-13: 9781517042417 / Angielski / Miękka / 2015 / 462 str.
Have you ever wondered why girls (and guys too for that matter) screamed their heads off and cried real tears when they saw The Beatles back in the 60's? There's never been a decent explanation as to why. Cleve Brock attempts to tell you why, in his deeply personal memoir of growing up in the 60's in a small town in Oregon. This book is not about The Beatles. It's about the 73 Million people who watched The Beatles on the Ed Sullivan Show on black and white TV sets on that Friday night in February of 1964. It's a hilarious true account of what it was like growing up in the 60's, that Baby Boomers will understand and everyone else wants to understand. Brock is a master storyteller who depicts true accounts such as being forced to square dance in P.E., and playing spin the bottle on school picnics. The book might be compared to "The Wonder Years," a successful television series that aired on ABC from 1988 through 1993. But this book carries a constant theme of rock n roll and is a heck of a lot funnier. Yes, the book is a memoir, but it is also much more than that. Interwoven throughout the book, is a discography of rock n roll music of the 60's, documented with 20,000 words of endnotes. It reads as a narrative through strings of stories describing Brock and his friend's quest to become like The Beatles, only to find through adventures with siblings, schoolteachers, coaches, girlfriends, and parents-that they become Better Than The Beatles.