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STRANGE DAYS, MY LIFE WITH AND WITHOUT JIM MORRISON

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The wife of Jim Morrison offers a thorough portrait of the enigmatic leader of the Doors, discussing the shy, private, and complex man he was, plus Woodstock, the Miami obscenity trial, and other rock celebrities

Unknown Binding

First published January 1, 1992

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About the author

Patricia Kennealy-Morrison

12 books135 followers
Patricia Kennealy-Morrison was an American author and journalist. Her published works include rock criticism, a memoir, and two series of science fiction/fantasy and murder mystery novels. Most of her books are part of her series, The Keltiad

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 71 reviews
2 reviews
March 26, 2012
I did some research after reading this " And A lot of things she wrote did not make sense at ... She lied about dates & Times and yes she is a good writer & I don't doubt she loved Jim very much " But to go and say she is his wife is false and how can that be when Jim gave Pams his last name and his entire estate " Pamela & Jim where common law married & I just don't think it's right for Patricia to say all these experiences with Jim & Her are facts when they are not .. I heard she made the whole baby thing up just to trap Jim and he did not fall for it . It's very sad when you read this " Cause it's coming from a women is very mentally Ill and I felt sorry for her in some pathetic way ... Patricia Kennealy should be ashamed. Jim Morrison was such a beauty is many ways and I hope him & Pamela are in peace and together.
Profile Image for Kashmir White.
20 reviews4 followers
June 22, 2012
Garbage. She uses her relationship with Jim to this day to get attention. I do not find her credible at all. Utter crap.
Profile Image for Misti Rainwater-Lites.
Author 40 books49 followers
November 21, 2012
This book is filled with well-written sentences. It gets two stars because the author is a delusional psycho who spews far too much bile for my taste. Check out her blog. She calls herself The Lizard Queen in all seriousness.
Profile Image for Deadlift.
4 reviews4 followers
June 15, 2015
Patricia Kennealy is a great writer. And this story is an intimately written account about her version of events which involved a brief but important love affair with a Rock God. She paints an entirely different picture of Jim Morrison from the ones pushed by publicists, band-mates promoting records, or Hollywood looking to sensationalize a person into myth. Patricia however, shows a fully dimensional human being - loving, caring, thoughtful but highly self-destructive and sadistic. It is one of the few emotionally analytical portraits of Morrison ever written and without question is done with genuinely caring, albeit romanticized tenderness. And even the cruel, abrasive side of Morrison shown here does not compare in depravity with the violent cinematic portrayal on screen or former band mates calling him psychotic.

I have no literary criticisms to note, how much of this book is true is up for grabs. But no more than most other tales about Jim Morrison. Some events, such as the Pagan Marriage ceremony is not falsified - Patricia played a significant part in Jim's later life. To what significance is up to the reader. Accusations towards Patricia of seeking fame is hypocritical - she wrote the book in response of being in a feature film. As did several other Morrison associates (like Ray Manzerak or John Densmore) who felt compelled to write their own version of events to counteract Oliver Stone's own vision of Jim Morrison.

People speak of Morrison's other romances as if he was a middle-aged man. He was a mere 27 when he died... barely a man. It is perfectly plausible and reasonable he would move on from a girl he met in college. Morrison lived an eccentric and dysfunctional life and he attracted many similar people in his circle. If one finds Patricia strange - consider the suitor. She was not an ordinary person even if you do not believe their relationship meant as much to Jim as it did to her you should realize her story is well worth hearing
1 review
February 21, 2018
"People are afraid of themselves, of their own reality." - Jim Morrison

"We cripple ourselves with lies." - Jim Morrison

If I could give this ..."memoir"....negative 1000 stars, I would. Miss Kennealy, just Kennealy, why didn't you at least act as though you had some respect for the intelligence of your reading audience just label this as fan fiction? I want my $1.36 back.

It is also pretty obvious that Kennealy wrote this as a "memoir" to avoid any legal hassles regarding her claims.

"There was never a question of my not meeting Jim. I knew it was going to happen the instant I laid eyes on him, long before I got the job at 'Jazz & Pop'..." Patricia Kennealy, 2013, Mongrel Patriot Review

This suggests almost an obsession before their "fateful" meeting. Almost sounds like a fan laying siege to their favorite rock star, rather than a self-described "great intellectual" or an "accomplished author". The great, self-professed "trailblazing feminist" and her true motivation for taking the job with "Jazz & Pop".

1969. Jim Morrison is dealing with professional fall-out of the infamous "Miami concert" and the public humiliation that went along with it, as well as the possibility of a prison term. He is, by all accounts, professionally, emotionally, psychologically and physically at his lowest point and going downhill fast. Enter Patricia Kennealy, who was, without question!!!, going to meet the man she laid eyes on, "long before" she took her with "Jazz & Pop" magazine. (Can't help but wonder if Jim Morrison's weakened state made him seem that much more....accessible?)

1991. Kennealy get's a paid cameo part in Oliver Stone's "The Doors" where her "big wedding day!!" is falsely portrayed with Kennealy's full consent. 1992. We get Kennealy and "Strange Days" where all of sudden Kennealy is Jim Morrison's "wife", the love of his life, his "soul mate" and blah, blah, blah.

"...Jim and I had been lovers for half a year and we were having dinner with others..." She, very conveniently, never names "the others".

This is pretty much the gist of this book.

Claims made by Kennealy, claims that cannot be verified by anyone else but her and the Jim & 'Trish saga told only by her and her alone. (Who were "the others", Miss Kennealy (just Kennealy)? Why do I get the feeling there was no "dinner" and therefore no "others" involved.)

This book contains claims by Kennealy that only be verified by Kennealy herself, the more outrageous ones anyway. All of the cutesy-poo conversations right out of a straight-to-DVD romantic comedy that Kennealy claims she had with Morrison, again, these, conveniently, can only be confirmed by Kennealy herself.

Despite having almost 50 years to do so, Kennealy has never, ever produced one iota of the "stacks" of "proof" she claims Jim Morrison "showered" her with, she has never identified the minister who, according only to her, performed the "ceremony" and only has a "marriage certificate" with a lot of redacted information on it with a signature that to me, and others, does not look like Jim Morrison's handwriting.

One would think that after her "husband's" death that Kennealy would have gone before a judge with her minister and all of her "proof" and had her "marriage" legally validated. This would have given her credibility as well as a stake in her "husband's" estate and the chance to oversee the handling of his work and his legacy. Kennealy has never truly explained why she did not simply prove her claim of being Jim Morrison's "wife" despite, according to her (and her alone) Morrison having given her "stacks" of proof to do just that. Kennealy seems to demand that her readers simply take her word with no questions asked.

This..."memoir"...also offers pictures. One that is supposed to be of Kennealy and Morrison together although the woman in the picture looks nothing like Kennealy and looks suspiciously like a picture of Jim Morrison taken while in Mexico (I will state the obvious, Kennealy was not with The Doors in Mexico). There is a picture of Jim Morrison when he was in high school (any random fan could find this picture, yes, even back in the 1990s) and a separate picture of Kennealy when she was in high school (looking nothing like the "natural redhead" she claims to be), random pictures of Jim Morrison and random pictures of Kennealy, a sketch of Kennealy she claims Morrison drew of her and a picture of Kennealy with Jim Morrison's high school girlfriend, Tandy Martin. So, no smoking-gun of pictorial "proof" of her the long-term affair she claims to have had with her "husband".

Oh, regarding that picture of Jim Morrison's childhood friend Tandy Martin? There appears to be something of a backstory concerning that picture, from "Patricia Kennealy: 'Tiffany' Talks. Your Ballroom Days Are OVER Baby!", by Janet M. Erwin:

"She's at it again. She left Jim a valentine today, a big black and white picture of her with Tandy [Martin] Brody, his high school girlfriend. Stuck it under the windshield wiper on his car. She says she's going to keep doing things like that 'to make him crazy'."

Somehow track down Jim Morrison's old girlfriend, get a picture with her, use the picture to try and torment him and then include it in a ..."memoir"...as "proof" of being a significant part of his life. Creepy. Very, very creepy. Some left-over rage there, Miss Kennealy? How did you manage to track Tandy Martin down? And then insist on getting a picture with her? Creepy. Very, very creepy. Also, I don't believe, with all that he was going through at that time that Jim Morrison needed people trying to "make him crazy". Yeah. It's obvious how much Kennealy "loved" Jim Morrison.

And then there are all of these conversations and in-person meetings Kennealy claims to have had with Pamela Courson (that's Courson-Morrison to you, Miss Kennealy). The only documented meeting between Pamela Courson and Kennealy was in the Jim Morrison biography "No One Here Get's Out Alive" - Courson returns from Paris after finding a safe place for she and Jim to live should his Miami trial result in a conviction only to have Kennealy - the self-professed feminist - sit Courson down to tell her that Jim Morrison impregnated her and that she just aborted his baby (I'm sure Kennealy couldn't resist throwing in the "hand fasting ceremony" as well, don't know haven't read "No One Here" in a while. It's ironic, the same book that gave Kennealy any kind of credibility as far as Jim Morrison's life story goes is called, "Nothing Here But A Lot of Lies" by those who were interviewed for it and those who actually knew and cared about Jim Morrison. Weird to think that a book thought of as "Nothing Here But A Lot of Lies" was inspiration for Kennealy to write and try and make money off of HER book).

I have trouble believing that Miss Kennealy had all of these conversations with Pamela Courson and I do not believe the insulting, degrading portrait of a deceased young woman who is no longer here to defend herself that Kennealy so maliciously and viciously paints in this ..."memoir". (I take you were not raised with the notion that is cowardly and classless to speak ill of the dead, especially when their grieving family members are still alive when your..."memoir"...is being published, Miss Kennealy, no Morrison?)

Oh, there also seems to be a backstory about this abortion, or as Kennealy likes to say, "Jim's deceased child". (Can't help but notice all of the wonderful things Kennealy claims went on during her "relationship" with Jim Morrison can be attributed to her and all of the negatives - Jim removed her birth control device - nah, don't think so. Who had more to gain from Kennealy's pregnancy, Jim or Kennealy? - the abortion, etc., are all attributed to Jim Morrison.) But I digress, regarding "Jim's deceased child":

"My suspicions about the abortion are correct. She wasn't sure Jim was the father, and that's why she aborted. What I didn't know, didn't even suspect, was the reason for her coming to Los Angeles twice, throwing herself at him over and over despite his obvious indifference, even hostility. She's trying to get him into bed again, in hopes of conceiving again, 'this time 100% proof positive his'. She and I continued to talk on the telephone, and sometime in late November or early December she told me of an 11-page letter she'd written to Jim describing the abortion in graphic detail." - Janet M. Erwin, "Patricia Kennealy: 'Tiffany' Talks. Your Ballroom Days Are OVER Baby!"

I believe Ms. Erwin is still waiting to be sued over this article, should anything she wrote be considered libelous or damaging. While Kennealy has spent a lot of time explaining how "copyright laws" keep her from PROFITING off of Jim Morrison and the all of the other "legalities" she has to deal with and even though she was very careful not to name certain names in this book so she herself would not be sued, Kennealy has never taken action against the many people who have publicly, loudly and repeatedly called her liar regarding "Strange Days" and all of the other claims she has made about Jim Morrison.

And as far as Miss Kennealy's assertion that Pamela Courson "murdered" Jim Morrison because, again, according only to Kennealy, Morrison had written her "stacks" of love letters saying he was trying to let Courson down gently and that he planned to return from Paris and live in New York with Miss Kennealy, Kennealy remained oddly quiet after Jim Morrison's death.

According to Kennealy her "husband" who she claims to love with every fiber of her being (a "husband" she has honored, according to to her, by supposedly remaining celibate for almost 50 years) is constantly writing to her, professing his deep, passionate "love" for her and "stacks" of promises of him returning to New York to live with her in wedded bliss and she never, even once, questions the last person who was with him, the "horrible" Pamela Courson, at the time of his then mysterious death? Courson was in Los Angeles for a good part of her final years, she was not hard to find. What a strange lack of reaction from Jim Morrison's "wife".

It is also worth noting that is was Kennealy who started the rumor that Courson lied to Jim Morrison by saying the heroin Courson was using was actually cocaine in order to get Morrison to take his fatal dose so that, and I quote Kennealy, "...Patricia can't have him either" (SatireKnight, Patricia Kennealy, FAQ 3). Sorry Patricia, statements from Marianne Faithful, who lived with the dealer who sold Morrison the drugs that killed him and an article called "L.A. Woman and The Last Days of Jim Morrison" destroy your unfounded little theory.

Jim Morrison consistently, legally and formally indicated his marital status as either "single" or "unmarried", he consistently, legally and formally named Pamela Courson and his younger siblings as the sole heirs to his estate and he legally referred to Pamela Courson as his "only companion in life" to whom he left a good portion of his estate, "in the event we never wed". Correspondence written by Jim Morrison to someone named "Bob" indicating he and Courson's desire to stay in Paris long-term, to jointly sell "Themis" and asking for credit cards in both he and Courson's name, in Morrison's Last Will & Testament as well he declares himself "unmarried" and he declares himself "single" four months after his "marriage" to Kennealy on his "death benefits" card - this can all be researched online and these documents do not line up AT ALL with Kennealy's version of events.

"...but HE ACTUALLY MARRIED ANOTHER WOMAN, and the week before his death was writing this only wedded wife of his (that would be ME, in case the third-person voice shift confuses the grammatically challenged among you) impassioned letters about his return to her in New York: how much he misses making love with her (me), calling her (me) his wife (me) and himself her (my) husband, sending her (me) lyrical and erotic love poems and declarations of his undying devotion and spectacular costly gifts for their (our) first anniversary, admitting to her (ME ME ME) that he 'went back to Pam [HER HER HER] like a dog returning to its own vomit'. - Patricia Kennealy, "An Open Letter to Jim's Fans", still available online, in regards to Patricia Butler's equally ridiculous, "Angels Dance & Angels Die"

Kennealy to her Facebook followers: ""And though he just posted a nice followup piece, he blows it to hell by mentioning the junkie hooker [a reference to the late Pamela Courson] and their "common-law marriage." Which never existed: common-law marriage did not obtain in California back then. So, on the basis of that, I am indeed Jim's wife. I just have never gone to court to pursue my rights. Because, unlike the Courson and Morrisons (who sued each other after the junkie's death [another reference to the late Pamela Courson] intestate from a heroin OD), I don't grub in my husband's grave for money." "She Dances in a Ring of Fire" Tumblr blog (search "she dances in a ring of fire tumblr kennealy facebook),

A woman, particularly one who will tell anyone who will listen about her "great intellect" and one who considers herself a "strong feminist" and who is confident that she has the truth and the facts on her side, and who has "stacks" of of proof that she can offer up both legally and publicly whenever she so chooses in order to back up her claims should not feel the need to make such ugly, hateful, cowardly statements like this, especially when the grieving family members of the people you are trashing were well within hearing range.

"Patricia doesn’t know how seriously Jim took the ceremony ('probably not too seriously'), but to her, going through the ceremony was 'like being validated the way I wanted to be. It was a very private thing for me, a bond I wanted to make with this person'." - quote from Patricia Kennealy in Victoria Balfour's 1984 book, "Rock Wives", SatireKnight, "Stuff Patricia Kennealy Wants Forgotten"

As far as "grubbing" in Jim Morrison's "grave for money"? You grubbed Patricia. You grubbed quite a bit. Copyrighting photos of Jim Morrison's grave site, two failed..."memoirs"..., the long-defunct "Lizard Queen Productions" website, a paid cameo in the film "The Doors" and there's more...

"But I guess all those letters, poems and gifts from Jim (you know, the ones where he calls me his wife; especially the one I gave his parents, brother and sister a copy of, when his brother came to visit me the first time here in NYC) don't really exist, right?" -- Patricia Kennealy, leaving a comment on VintageGroupies.Livejournal.com (search "vintagegroupies livejournal kennealy")

When his, Jim Morrison's, brother came to "visit" you, Miss Kennealy? Care to share more about this "visit"? Something about letters, something about wanting to publish and profit from letters you claimed Jim Morrison wrote to you, something about wanting to publish and profit from poems you claim you co-authored with Jim Morrison? Can you give some more information? How did the meeting go? Why have you gone silent about your aggressive promises to publish these letters and poems for almost 25 years? (And why would the totally legitimate "wife" of a rock legend feel the need to comment on a low-rent website where people are discussing the various books about rock stars they have read?)

"Patricia's claim about the writings have proven to be false. She met with Andy, Jim Morrison's brother, along with a handwriting expert confirmed that the writings were forgeries. She was supposed to release them in 2010 (that would have been the 40 year mark under the old copyright law, thus making them eligible for the public domain), but when Andy made it known that they were forgeries, somehow all of the claims disappeared, and she never spoke of them again." - Lipstickalley.com, "Amazing Jim Morrison Doors Tea"

Well, I guess that answers my question. Yet another self-serving version of events meant to "prove" her claims made by Miss Kennealy.

More importantly though, I don't think anyone who counts themselves as a Kennealy fan should hold their breath for "Fireheart" - a project she was supposed to share with her public in 2010 but Kennealy seems to want the surviving members of Jim Morrison's family to think that she is going to prove herself once and for all in 2021! The 50th anniversary of Jim Morrison's death!! Giving herself an additional 11 years after her "visit" with Andy Morrison has probably just given her more time to try and come up with more forgeries and I have to believe Jim Morrison's family and his estate will be ready and waiting for Miss Kennealy in 2021.

"Oh, as to that answering machine message: it was on my phone for a very few months about 15 YEARS AGO (a disc jockey friend of mine, Carol Miller, helped me put it together, using Jim's own voice), and it was A JOKE. Geez, you people have no f**king sense of humor, do you? Or any sense of truth or accuracy or perception, either. Get a grip, leave me and Jim alone, and leave me out of your groupie crap. (Dame)Patricia Morrison (yes, really truly me)" -- Patricia Kennealy, VintageGroupies.Livejournal.com (search vintagegroupies livejournal kennealy")

You publicly admit to making a fake voicemail message, or outgoing message, whatever it was, that was supposed to sound like it was from Jim Morrison. Interesting. Did this message suddenly become a "joke" because you knew it would not hold up as "proof" of your "marriage" to Jim Morrison? (For a woman who claims the mere mention of Jim Morrison's name is - sniffle!! - just "too painful to bear", making that fake recording sounds like a very strange thing to do. Maybe it is your inability to PROFIT off of Jim Morrison that is "too painful" for you to bear.)

"Yeah, this is a LITTLE different from the other Bitter Ex books, because most of the Bitter Ex books involve a divorce from the rock star. In Kennealy's account, it involves the DEATH of the rock star. But there’s still so much bitterness and REWRITING OF HISTORY that it’s hard to see it as anything else. There’s so much HATE and BITTERNESS in this book that she had to write a FICTIONAL BOOK [Blackmantle] with herself as a Mary Sue to get even SOME of the venom out." SatireKnight, Strange Days: My Life With And Without Jim Morrison"

Sums this up pretty well. Hate, bitterness (rage over an unforgiven rejection from Morrison) and especially the "rewriting of history" part.

"Most of the people who don't buy her story or her self-promotion as the Lizard Queen are not "protecting" anything, let alone profits or lies or 'self-interest'. They simply don't believe her. Once again, I have to wonder if she's slagging off other writers who have produced books on Morrison over the years, since she claims they are all lying about her and hiding her true status out of misogynistic evil Pamela-worship. You know... THOSE BOOKS SHE WAS INTERVIEWED FOR. And the books by the Doors, who presumably saw Morrison a lot more than she did and knew more about his overall life? Ignore them! They're all liars! Only believe her! And ignore those previous interviews she gave before Strange Days! That was Oliver Stone's evil Patricia-lookalike robot, sent to spread lies! LIES!" - SatireKnight, Patricia Kennealy, FAQ 9

Sounds about right.

Skip reading or paying for this book and simply go online and search "Your Ballroom Days Are Over" by Janet Erwin, search "SatireKnight Kennealy" or for the Lipstickalley article (you can also search "Narkive Newsgroup Archive 2005 Jim's Letter to His Parents" which offers more damning information regarding the time Andy Morrison "visited" Miss Kennealy) and will get a much fuller and apparently much more accurate telling of the great romance that was Patricia and....what she wishes had happened.
Profile Image for Michelle Auer.
33 reviews3 followers
August 14, 2008
I read this after I "met" Patricia online. The story is really good. I really enjoyed it. All the way to the end I didn't understand why she had been getting so much flack for it. It was her story about what happened to her. Who is to judge that? I, for one, really enjoyed how she told her story!
29 reviews1 follower
February 1, 2008
I don't know why, but I couldn't trust this book as true. It was a good story though.
Profile Image for Jamie.
18 reviews1 follower
December 18, 2008
kennealy is a pretentious writer... i don't think i like her much/trust her recounting of certain things. but entertaining nonetheless. yes, i am taken with jim morrison.
Profile Image for Bernadette Giacomazzo.
Author 5 books13 followers
September 28, 2020
It's a shame.

When I first read this book, I was young, dumb, and first coming into the entertainment industry. I was single, ready to mingle, and working with some of the hottest rock stars of the day.

So when I came across this book, in the late 90s, I was entranced by someone who, I thought, would have had a unique understanding of the world I was just coming into. She was a woman, after all, in a position of power, and ultimately married one of the hottest rock stars of HER day. (It should be noted that while I enjoy The Doors' music, I don't believe they were the best band of the 1960s, not by a long shot - the Airplane did it FAR better, and plus, they had Grace Slick as their frontwoman.)

What an awesome read it was!

Alas, more than 20 years have gone by.
I'm older, now - in a healthy, loving relationship with a man who is the love of my life - and have lived several lifetimes in an industry where good men die like dogs, as Dr. Hunter S. Thompson once said.

And in re-reading this book during the COVID-19 lockdown, I realize that my initial perception of Patricia Kennealy as a strong, take-no-guff music industry feminist was little more than a house of cards.

I can honestly say that this book is entertaining, and that's because PK is a truly talented writer. Hence, my rating of two stars, instead of just one.

But the subject matter of this book is little more than wishful thinking, a fairy tale, and a depiction of a woman who never seemed to get over the fact that a rock star didn't want her.

During my time in the industry, I've had the fleeting and fanciful notion (key words being FLEETING and FANCIFUL) of having a HEA with the rocker-du-jour. But someone who is TRULY in the entertainment industry doesn't take those those notions as anything more than the fleeting and fanciful notions that they are.

Because even today, in 2020, women in the industry are held to a different standard than men, and having a dalliance with a rock star (or, these days, a rapper) would result in the woman being viewed as little more than a wanton groupie by those who write checks and make executive decisions.

This was doubly, if not triply, the case in the late 1960s-early 1970s, even with the bullshit notion of "free love" floating in the air. Even more to the point, what PK wanted from a relationship (a happy, healthy, traditional marriage with children, the 2.3 kids, the white picket fence, and Fido in the front yard) didn't jive with what JM wanted from a relationship (going with the flow, toxic, dramatic, fueled by drugs, partying until the early hours of the morning)...at least not with her.

I have no doubt that PK and JM had a romantic fling. However, it was clearly little more than a dalliance on JM's part - one he didn't take seriously (if he did, he would have left Pamela Courson, his longtime companion, and ran off with PK - sorry, Patricia, but at your big age, you should damn well know this by now - when a man wants to stay, nothing can make him leave, and when a man wants to leave, nothing can make him stay) - and one that was just another "notch on his belt."

I can understand why, at the time, PK felt jilted. We've all been there, have we not? I, like every other woman at some point in her life, have done dumb things in the name of what we THOUGHT was "love." We've done the drive-bys, we've done the novella-long text messages, and for the ones who have engaged in a one-night stand (I've never had one), especially with a celebrity (doubly not), we've blown up flings into "love" only to realize they were a big old nothing-burger.

But at some point, you grow up. At some point, you have a conversation with yourself and you realize that YOU are worth more than being some rocker's plaything, especially when he's little more than community property (seriously, HOW many women did JM bed in his lifetime?) , and you look for someone who can love you the way YOU NEED to be loved and in the way YOU DESERVE to be loved.

PK hasn't done that. She's forever remained stuck at the age of 27, bragging about being the editor of a long-defunct magazine that not even the journalists of today remember or cite (it wasn't Rolling Stone or The Village Voice - it was the equivalent of NYC Record or The Aquarian, for those old enough to remember), with no other credits to her name. Yes, it's impressive that she was the first woman editor of a major rock magazine, and she's to be commended for blazing that path for women like me - but really, as anyone in the industry knows, you're only as good as your last "hit."

Sure, she's written books and advertising copy - but she lost the contracts for BOTH for the same reason: her obsession with a rock star who made clear, with his actions and his words, that she was at best a fling, and at worst a stalker and a groupie.

It seems her life began, and ended, with that affair with JM.

And for me, THAT is the true tragedy of PK's story: that at 74 years old, she has nothing to show for her talent and her groundbreaking career but the same studio apartment she was living in when she first met JM, filled with the same memorabilia from the 1960s and 1970s that is yellowed and withering and gathering dust, dying her hair the same color that allegedly turned JM on, and repeating the false allegations of being married to him when you were little more than a problematic groupie during his lifetime (face it, she wouldn't have been able to make those claims of being his 'widow' if he, or Pamela, were alive today).

She's a rock'n'roll Miss Havisham, dancing around her studio apartment in her handfasting dress to "The Soft Parade," furiously hurling rage-fueled missives at long-dead rock stars and their long-dead dearly beloveds, and trying to claim a life that was never hers to claim in the first place.
Profile Image for EA Solinas.
671 reviews38 followers
April 28, 2015
I-slept-with-a-rock-star stories are a dime a dozen in the rock bio world, and it takes something unusual to make the storyteller seem like anything but a groupie. Patricia Kennealy-Morrison has something all right, but her obnoxious attitude and sketchy details make it hard to regard "Strange Days: My Life With And Without Jim Morrison" as much more than a curiosity.

Kennealy-Morrison was a journalist/editor working for Jazz'n'Pop magazine in the late 1960s. She was sent in to interview legendary rock bad boy Jim Morrison of the Doors, and was immediately impressed by him (the feeling was mutual, she says). They soon struck up a friendship, then became lovers while remaining on opposite sides of the United States.

Morrison and Kennealy-Morrison wed in a witch handfasting some months later, despite the fact that Morrison was still with his longtime lover Pamela Courson. Kennealy-Morrison chronicles the remainder of their increasingly volatile relationship, her abortion, Morrison's mysterious death in Paris, and the production of the distorted movie adaptation by Oliver Stone.

Never has so much been written over so little. Not very often, anyway. Morrison's brief involvement with Kennealy-Morrison is blown up into an affair to rival Guinevere and Lancelot -- and yes, that's her own comparison. What an unbiased reader sees is a rather average rock romance, full of the necessary sex, drugs and rock'n'roll. And lots and lots of Kennealy-Morrison's everyday life.

Kennealy-Morrison has a curiously self-centered view of the world: whenever anybody is less than friendly to her, they must be upset over her gender, brains, religion or relationship with Morrison. Her attitude (a bull getting ready to charge at a matador) wears thin quickly. She heaps scorn on almost all rock'n'roll stars, on any girl who slept (or wanted to) with Jim, on any friend of Pamela Courson's, on Doors fans, on rock audiences... pretty much everybody. Special vitriol is reserved for Pam. Rather than take Morrison to task for his behavior, Kennealy-Morrison vents on the pleasant, clueless Courson.

While Kennealy-Morrison is clearly knowledgeable, she seems to use her IQ solely to set herself above the groupies. She lacks the class, wisdom and vibrance of other rock paramours like Marianne Faithfull, or the sweetness of Bebe Buell. If this book is anything to go by, her intellect is stagnant and unsophisticated, and her personality is childish (she beats a groupie for coming on to Jim). In fact, her claims that she's a strong, decisive, take-no-guff woman becomes funny when you see that she was allowing a ridiculous amount of guff from Morrison.

There's no denying that Kennealy-Morrison is a talented writer. At times her lyrical, detailed writing makes this seem almost like a novel. It's especially vibrant during scenes like Doors concerts and the famous Woodstock. But too often her words are used as arrows rather than paintbrushes.

"Strange Days: My Life With And Without Jim Morrison" is a weird read. In the end, it's hard to see it as anything but Kennealy-Morrison's side of the story, but without any wisdom brought by time and thought. This is not the place to look for the "real" Jim Morrison.
Profile Image for Justin.
Author 6 books13 followers
July 4, 2015
Doors biopics are their own subgenre by now, and this one was penned by the so-called Wiccan wife of Jim Morrison. Kennealy is an able writer, but I feel like this memoir was tinged with desperation to prove to the world that SHE was Jim's biggest big squeeze and not a groupie/stalker/star fucker. Quite frankly, the tone of the book vacillates between sounding like she's making a court case and engaging in all-out rant, neither of which sparks my interest or adds much to the Morrison legacy. How much Morrison cared about this woman versus the dozens of others he poked is really a matter that can only be clarified by Jim, and he's dead, and even if he was alive, I still wouldn't care about who "wins" that contest. Beyond this bias, it really seems like she pulls out all the stops to convince the reader that she had an egalitarian relationship with Morrison, that she was able to put him in his place. Come on, seriously? I don't think so. Kennealy is very clearly the hero of her biased narrative. Looking beyond her bitterness, I found Kennealy and her own story much more compelling reading than her time with Jim. Her fantasy books have been on my radar for years. I should check 'em out.
5 reviews1 follower
March 11, 2018
I would say this "memoir" is at least amusing but Miss Kennealy's, minus the Morrison, constant attacks on the late Pamela Courson and a version of events that are only backed by Kennealy herself make this "memoir" an offensive and enraging book to read. This is just a bad, hateful Harlequin Romance novel based on the fantasies an aggressive, jealous, vindictive, rage-fueled, lying stalker who is out for an obvious money grab and who redefines the term "self-serving"

Miss Kennealy, minus the Morrison,

I read a very interesting article about you. It is entitled "Stuff Patricia Kennealy Wants Forgotten". (Potential scam victims who may be interested in purchasing this book can easily find the article online, just Google the article's title.) Here is a sample of the article that should give you an idea of why I am about to say what I am about to say:

"But she has reasons for not wanting people to read this (Rock Wives), this book was published five or six years before 'Strange Days' and the DRASTIC revision of her role in Jim Morrison’s life. Kennealy seemed to have been content to simply be the second-string girlfriend. So she says a LOT of things that are completely opposite what she would later allege about the relationship."

In interviews you talk about the "life" you had with Jim Morrison. Turns out you MAY have been a one-night stand, but given the many, many, many self-serving lies you have been caught in I even doubt you had any kind of romantic relationship with Jim Morrison AT ALL. You unsuccessfully to elbow her way into Morrison's and to get him to take you on as his legitimate partner through sheer aggression. (Sitting his long-time live-in girlfriend and companion to tell her that you had just aborted Jim Morrison's baby? That is straight out of the "Aggressive, Psychotic Stalker Handbook". Oh, many of your former acquaintances have helpfully pointed out that you were not sure who the father of the baby really was since your "soul-mate" wasn't the only man you had been with.)

You like to tell people that Jim Morrison showered you with love letters, poems and jewelry during your "relationship" with him. I do not believe you have ever produced any of these letters for anyone to authenticate them. (Hell, I'd even demand you turn over the jewelry he bought you so I could track down the merchant and then I would probably only come to find out that you purchased the jewelry yourself.)

About that marriage certificate. I couldn't help but come across it online and in your "memoir". What is with all of the redacted information? What are you hiding?

Caught your online rant regarding "Angels Dance & Angels Die". It appears if one value's one's personal safety they will not even attempt to say anything positive about Pamela Courson or even, for a second, look at her in any kind of sympathetic light. So many years later and you can go home and sleep at night after trashing an addicted, unhinged 27 year-old young woman who spent that last few years of her short and unhappy life dealing with the trauma and circumstances of Morrison's death and basically dying of grief and guilt feelings. I knew you were about go full-on nasty when I read your demand for people to use your LEGAL SURNAME - your caps, not mine - and when you said about Pamela Courson, "Oh, and what did the poor baby die of?" You are enough to make anyone's stomach turn.

Like her, love her or hate her, the truth is that Pamela Courson loved Jim Morrison before he became a famous rock star and remained by his side until the terrible, bitter end. Jim Morrison dedicated his poetry books to Pam, not you. Jim Morrison lived with Pam, not you. Jim Morrison took Pam to Doors-related functions and outings, not you. Jim Morrison wrote songs about Pam, not you. Jim Morrison wrote letters and poems to Pam, not you. Jim Morrison bought jewelry for Pam, not you. Jim Morrison turned to Pam in his darkest hours and darkest days, not you. (Morrison's final will and testament reads: "To whom it may concern I bequeath all of my worldly possessions to my only companion in life, Pamela Susan Courson..." In case you didn't hear that, "my only companion in life". Sorry, I know that's gotta sting.)

In print you have loudly and publicly accused Pamela Courson of murdering Jim Morrison because you were convinced that he was going to leave her at any moment (every stalker's favorite fantasy). Miss Kennealy? If you knew your "husband" as well as you claim you did then you would know that up until the final months of his life Jim Morrison was vehemently opposed to Heroin use. You would know that the biggest fights he and Pam would have were over her dabbling in the drug and that he routinely lectured Danny Sugerman on the evils of becoming a Heroin addict. No one "got" Jim Morrison to start dabbling in Heroin, he did on his on free will because that's where he was mentally and emotionally at that time, in a state of despair. Not because someone else told him to. (It's obvious to every Doors fan out so I am surprised it is not obvious to his "wife" that Jim Morrison did not take kindly to being told what to do and had an incredibly strong will when he wanted to.)

Like smelling a milk that has gone bad before you pour it down the drain I read the interview you did with Mongrel Patriot Review. In it you claim to have "been with" Jim Morrison during his trial in Miami. "With him". Really? That's funny because Jim Morrison's good friend and body guard, Tony Funches, who was also with Morrison at the trial, tells a very different story. You were harassing Jim, coming into the courtroom to give him a hard time because he did not want you as his girlfriend. Aggressively pursuing him, stalking him and harassing him during the most humiliating, painful and frightening times of his life. Yeah, I can see how much you "loved" Jim Morrison.

Funches goes on to say that Jim Morrison did not want you there and was not happy to have you there (Funches also uses some blunt, ungentlemanly language to describe how he and every single person Jim's and The Doors' circle felt about you and I don't blame him one bit.) For those who wish to read this interview just Google "tony funches interview Miami kennealy".

In the same interview you chuckled about Jim's "dry humor" during his testimony and laugh about how he knew he was doomed and decided to have as much "fun" as possible during the proceedings. Really? Hmmmm. From I, and any one who actually knew Jim Morrison, can gather, this case hung over Morrison's head for about two years, screwed up professional opportunities for he and the band and had him contemplating suicide at one point. So my feeling is that he was desperately hoping for a not guilty verdict. Him fleeing the U.S. to France with whom the U.S. has extradition treaty with didn't tell you anything Miss Kennealy?

I don't think you knew your "husband" very well at all. No, you are just a mentally unhealthy, aggressive, vindictive, self-serving, deluded would-be groupie, parasitic, opportunistic, compulsive liar and a fame seeking, vindictive stalker.

Anyone thinking of spending so much as a penny on this, or even accepting for free as gift I strongly advise you not to. Miss Kennealy is a dismal, nasty person and has a very, very bad relationship with reality and with the truth.

For a truthful and accurate telling of what actually went on between Miss Kennealy and Jim Morrison you can find a VERY revealing article entitled "Your Ballroom Days Are Over Baby" by Janet Erwin (keep in mind Erwin considered Kennealy a friend at one point). Google "patricia kennealy tiffany talks your ballroom days are over baby" and you should find it. Quote:

"In any case it's been decades now since I've felt any sympathy for her at all. Those tender feelings died a very quick death when 'No One Here Gets Out Alive' was published in 1980 and I saw the real Patricia in all her dubious glory, and when in 1986's Rock Wives (subtitled 'The Wives, Girlfriends and Groupies of Rock'n'Roll') she not only expanded her earlier tall tales but 'borrowed' my dream and grafted it onto her own.

I haven't read Strange Days, nor do I intend to, but I've had parts of it read to me, enough to know it's simply a further and ever more spiteful rearranging of reality. Since its publication in 1992 Patricia has continued to demonstrate what seems to me to be her utter lack of pride, her lack of love for anyone but her sorry self, and most of all, her truly vicious, vengeful and greedy nature."

I would wish you luck Miss Kennealy but at this point you are beyond all hope. People I know personally have described how...how shall I put this?....unsatisfying your life is now. Can't say I'm surprised as you come across as a consummate bully who likes to try and intimidate people if you don't get what you want. You appear to be a good example of "what goes around, comes around".

Save your time and money Jim Morrison/Doors fans. Stop bothering people Miss Kennealy. Minus the Morrison.
7 reviews1 follower
November 11, 2009
How could anyone aport his child? Tsk...tsk. Plus, she has the nerve to actually put his name hyphenated onto hers. I don't know...she's a good writer, but, a little strange--hence the title.
Profile Image for Cory Pedigo.
3 reviews1 follower
July 8, 2018
Patricia Kennealy is a great writer. And this story is an intimately written account about her version of events which involved a brief but important love affair with a Rock God. She paints an entirely different picture of Jim Morrison from the ones pushed by publicists, band-mates promoting records, or Hollywood looking to sensationalize a person into myth. Patricia however, shows a fully dimensional human being - loving, caring, thoughtful, but also at times highly self-destructive and even sadistic. It is one of the few emotionally analytical portraits of Morrison ever written and without question is done with genuinely caring, albeit romanticized tenderness. And even the cruel, abrasive side of Morrison shown here does not compare in depravity with the violent cinematic portrayal on screen or former band mates calling him psychotic.

I have no literary criticisms to note, how much of this book is true is up for grabs. But no more than most other tales about Jim Morrison. Some events, such as the Pagan Marriage ceremony is not falsified - Patricia played a significant part in Jim's later life. To what significance is up to the reader. Accusations towards Patricia of seeking fame is hypocritical - she wrote the book in response of being in a feature film. As did several other Morrison associates (like Ray Manzerak or John Densmore) who felt compelled to write their own version of events to counteract Oliver Stone's own vision of Jim Morrison.

People speak of Morrison's other romances as if he was a middle-aged man. He was a mere 27 when he died... barely a man. It is perfectly plausible and reasonable he would move on from a girl he met in college. Morrison lived an eccentric and dysfunctional life and he attracted many similar people in his circle. If one finds Patricia strange - consider the suitor. She was not an ordinary person even if you do not believe their relationship meant as much to Jim as it did to her you should realize her story is well worth hearing
86 reviews2 followers
February 12, 2009
This is another side of the story of fairly well known rock mythology-Jim Morrison and his relationships with women. Kennealy is a great writer with a very sardonic sense of humor that carries this book. It's interesting and unusual to hear the perspective of "the other woman". Obviously Jim Morrison was very important to her and she loved him deeply. It's hard to say whether he considered her as important to him. After all, he was in a long term relationship with someone else through their whole affair. This book shows Morrison's vulnerability, but also his cruelty and indifference at times. She does not sugar coat it although she does rationalize some things about his behavior like his relationship with Pam. Certainly this is not an unbiased account of history but it is an interesting perspective.
7 reviews
July 9, 2008
This is about Patricia, and her life...not about The Doors or Jim by himself...this is a true love story! This is about Patricia and how Jim and her fell in love and became man and wife, but it is also a journey by a woman who is her own, and her life and how Jim's life WITH her intertwined together. I recommend this book, not only to learn the truth about Patricia's and Jim's life together, but about two people who deeply loved one another, not only on this earthly plane, but thru time. Also, it is a great insight into the author's life, feelings and world, privately and public; her writings, and the twists and turns of life that has shaped her and her literary work.
Profile Image for Bren fall in love with the sea..
1,954 reviews470 followers
April 28, 2019
I really enjoyed this book written by Patricia Kennealy, Morrison's wife. I found it be just enthralling.

I know she was a journalist and maybe that is what makes her writing so beautiful. In any event, I have read many a music Bio and this is by far one of the better ones.

I know there has been much question about whether what she wrote was actually true. I had no problem believing that it was. Maybe that is because there was a ring of truth about everything she wrote, she had the ability to remember very finite details plus she was featured in the Morrison movie. I've no doubt she was telling the truth.

She did not always paint herself in the most flattering light nor Jim.At any rate, it was so nice to read a book that did not focus on the drugs, the more seedy aspects of his life..although there is that, there is also alot of joy.

So I would recommend this to any Doors or music fan in general. It was quite a read.
Profile Image for Annette Oliver.
5 reviews
January 16, 2008
I really enjoyed this book. Patricia Kennealy has the most sharp, wicked sense of humor and obviously intelligent. She loves her rock and roll and has lived a charmed life (no pun intended). Patricia has been unfairly slammed and harshly criticized for her marriage and relationship with Jim Morrison. Why it was not publicly accepted just goes to show how discriminating society still is.
Profile Image for Laura-Michelle Horgan.
71 reviews1 follower
May 23, 2022
This is an astounding tale of what I am going to call “hysterical historical fiction”. None of the following things make sense: 1) the in-depth dialogue between her and Jim throughout the book; 2) her version of Jim vs. everyone else’s during the same time period (somehow I doubt Jim stayed sober and stayed in every night that he was with her to watch television); 3) the amount of sex she claims to have been having with him throughout the supposed “relationship” and the fact that he only time he couldn’t perform with her was right before he went to Paris and died; 4) is she a witch or Catholic? Why did she suddenly try to have a Catholic priest conduct a “funeral”? Why did she think she had to “send Jim on after his death” because no one else bothered to do it and exactly how did she do this?! 5) the rings 6) the claim that he was always taking her shopping and buying her expensive stuff without naming any of these things; 7) her blaming Jim for her decision to cancel an early abortion and then have a late stage abortion and being forced to sign a death certificate (thank YOU for helping me decide where my pro-choice limit is!) 8) her admission of a lengthy assault of a friend that she was staying with b/c the friend was allegedly trying to hookup with Jim in front of her face; 9) that she caused a CA earthquake; 10) changing your name to take the name of a dead man who never agreed to give it to you; 11) being totally cool about allegedly staying in Pam’s apartment with Jim for a week or more after Pam left for Paris; 12) that she only got pregnant because Jim insisted on taking her diaphragm out once before and once after the abortion (gross and unsexy in every way); 13) her extreme judgment of everyone else’s use of substances while freely admitting to her own; 14) why she went to Miami; 15) how there were no witnesses whatsoever to the “hand fasting” and Jim’s supposed desire to marry her. And I could go on.
Profile Image for Arabella McK.
24 reviews
September 29, 2013
I'm really enjoyed about this book:
- it's well written,
- Patricia Kennealy-Morrison is a very intelligent and sensitive woman,
- I 100% agree with many author's opinions (especially section Q&A).
No one can judge if the story is all true or not, we weren't there! But it's a great story and I can feel the passion, the doubts, the pain ... but above all the strong love of two young people that lived those "strange days".
Thank you Patricia, great work ;)
Profile Image for Jeff.
353 reviews34 followers
April 6, 2017
1st Read: August 30, 1994 - September 7, 1994 (**** Rating)
I thought this was an interesting story about Jim Morrison from her perspective. Like any new story about the man, I label it as, "the best story so far", until the next book comes along. This was a good read, despite how deranged and psychotic people have judged her to be. Maybe she is, so what. In reality, none of us were there. This is her story, no matter how unbelievable it may be.

2nd Read: March 27, 2017 - April 3, 2017 (**** Rating)
I still believe this to be a truth that Patricia knows of the Jim Morrison she loves to this day. No holds barred in this book and that reinforces the truthfulness. For me, anyway.
For nearly thirty years or more, I've been a Doors fan and particularly, of Jim. I like to believe I honor James Douglas Morrison by forever learning, writing and not always having the answers, but instead to question everything.
Profile Image for Lauren Chase.
178 reviews27 followers
August 11, 2021
An interesting read, but certainly a stretching of the truth (if any) to suit the author's agenda. Kennealy comes across as attention seeking and unstable (she is very proud that she wears a t shirt that says "I f**ked Jim Morrison" to the set of The Doors movie). Content warning: This book contains a horrific account of the author's abortion, supposedly pregnant with Jim Morrison's child. Pass on this and read something more reliable/factual.
Profile Image for Rebecca.
601 reviews25 followers
June 30, 2009
If you loved the Doors, and/or Jim Morrison, or are just fascinated with that era in general, this book is a must-read. Ms. Kennealy-Morrison offers us a look at the man, his life and his writings from a very rare perspective, that of a trusted love, an integral part of his life, a mate, a wife in the sense that goes far beyond any legal union.
Profile Image for Jean.
118 reviews
April 20, 2014
I enjoyed this book as I always felt that Jim had many sides to him. I think that his love for Patricia was just as strong as his love for Pam. Each woman brought out different things in Jim. I commend Patricia for telling her story. It really was time to hear her side of what happen with Jim. Her insight on the Oliver Stone film was interesting as well.
Profile Image for Elizabeth.
63 reviews
May 28, 2015
I read this book because I'm a fan of Patricia, and was long before I knew of her connection to Jim Morrison. It's her story, not anyone else's, and she tells it in an intelligent, no-holds-barred account. If you're looking for validation for your deeply-held views of Morrison, look elsewhere. If you want to know Patricia's story, and her point of view, be prepared to have your mind opened.
Profile Image for Autumn.
54 reviews67 followers
March 2, 2007
i love patricia kennealy- a celtic pisces witch who married jim morrison in a handfasting ceremony. this book was excellent and she totally trashes pam courson.
Profile Image for Diane.
Author 3 books7 followers
January 1, 2009
A great account of Jim from a woman who truly loved him, and one who is deeply intelligent and compassionate. I loved it and got a real glimpse of the man from the heart as well as the intellect.
Profile Image for Melodie.
1,278 reviews82 followers
June 19, 2013
An interesting look at an enigma through the eyes of the woman who loved him and claims to have married him in a Wiccan handfasting ceremony.
1 review1 follower
November 11, 2009
Thought this was a really interesting look at Jim Morrison's life told from a person who knew another side of him. As everyone does....
2 reviews
November 28, 2011
Such an amazingly written book! I loved Jim Morrison, this book made me love him even more
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