This new and updated edition of U2 A Diary brings U2s story up to date with information about the band’s ground-breaking film, U2 3D, recording sessions for No Line on the Horizon and the story of how the album was leaked online twice before its official release, the U2 360 world tour and Bono’s back injury that forced an entire leg to be postponed and the band’s struggles to decide how to follow No Line on the Horizon and the 360 Tour with new material.
Here is the complete history of U2 told exactly as it happened in day-by-day diary format.
As well as following the mid-1970's birth of the band to the present day in journal form, A Diary also includes new revelations and fresh insights into key moments of U2's development.
Through interviews and extensive research, author Matt McGee sheds light on stories.
Fully illustrated with pictures spanning the bands career, this is a fanatically detailed account of a legendary group's life!
Matt's a great writer - check out his website www.atu2.com which is better than U2's official website in the way of news and fan connections. This book redefines comprehensive. It's well researched, gives a complete history of the band and does it with artistry. A must for serious fans.
For someone who didn't directly interview or spend time with U2, Matt McGee has written an incredibly thorough, in-depth account of practically everything the band has done since they started back in the 1970s. Quite a feat. The edition I read had some corrections and extra additions added on at the end of the book in 2011. It was really interesting for me because I learned some odd things, like the fact that Bono's very first nickname was...I kid you not...Steinhegvanhuysenolegbangbangbangbang, or that the Edge played guitar on some tracks with Jah Wobble. The pictures are all in black and white, and it would have been better if some of them were in colour, and there were a lot of typos (but not so much as to make it incomprehensible. Though at one point I did get confused when Joe O' Herlihy was said to have appeared behind the band on "a video well") but I would recommend the book to any serious U2 fan.
You have to be a REAL U2 fan to be able to make it through any part of this book. It is titled Diary--and that is exactly what it is.
Some of the diary entries are interesting--particularly the ones that occur during tours, but the majority of the book is stuff that you really don't want or need to know.
Certainly detailed, but I am sure it could be even moreso. If you aren't interested in hearing every place Bono has been and every person he's talked to about African issues, then this probably isn't for you. But there is alot of U2 info and that is interesting to me and I am sure would be for other like-minded fans.
Obviously only for die-hards, as a day-by-day account of U2's entire career. But still worthwhile -- you'll learn a great deal of interesting points, both large and small, especially when it comes to the latter-day rhythms of Bono's philanthropy, and the long, arduous stretches of time devoted to the band's recordings.