This is something like the 4th update edition of the original 1999 book - only with an extra 100 or so pages added to bring the reader up-to-date on what has transpired Chuck Negron's life since the original was published. I have read many rock 'n roll, and country, biographies and autobiographies over the years and this is quite possibly the best - it is so gut-wrenching, so brutally honest that at times you keep asking yourself "how could someone with this much talent allow himself to become so screwed up all for the love of drugs?"
Negron was the most prominent and definitely most popular, of the singers who made up the group Three Dog Night which was a late '60's, early '70's phenomenon in the music industry. The group literally owned the pop charts with songs such as "One" to the one no one seems to know the real name of, "Joy To The World" (misidentified as "Jeremiah Was A Bullfrog," and "That Bullfrog Song" to radio listeners - I worked in radio when the song was popular and can tell countless true stories of requests for the song).
If you were fortunate enough to see the group in concert during their heyday, you never would have known it from the performance, but Negron was higher than the proverbial kite, being so strung out on heroin that he didn't know where he was most of the time. The stories are all here - and some of them will bring tears to your eyes if you have a heart - of how he literally sold his body and soul, not to mention everything he owned (at one point he was sleeping on the streets) so he could get that next fix. There wasn't anything he wouldn't do for it.
Brutally honest in its telling, Negron holds nothing back, telling how his need for heroin all but destroyed his life - numerous marriages included - and how he finally came clean and turned his life around and is now, once more, performing and recording as a solo act. This updated edition does get into some more recent details about why if you were to go see "Three Dog Night" today, you would see only one of the originals, Danny Hutton as well as offer touching remembrances of bandmates who have died, such as Corey Wells, the other lead singer.
He has paid the price for his addiction though, suffering from emphysema and COPD (the same disease that killed Leonard Nimoy of "Star Trek" fame), yet he continues to perform and record, just not like in the group's heyday.
At times, shocking; at times, sad, and there are even a few times where you'll chuckle to yourself - Negron's story is inspiring because he shows how a person who is determined to overcome the devil, can, in the words of Kris Kristofferson, "Beat The Devil."
There is also a DVD available "The Chuck Negron Story" which is recommended for the person who really wants to delve into the life of hell and redemption which makes up his story. It's been around for a number of years, so good luck in finding a copy.