This book is pure perfection. These pages have something to offer everyone, whether your interest is music, history, sociology, photography, hippie culture, or all of these.
The photos are a mixture of black & white and color, with the majority being full-page. Many are candid shots, some are posed, and all of them capture one of the most fascinating periods of American history. We have many images of the musicians of the sixties. Many of these are offstage shots, giving us a glimpse into their personal lives. But perhaps even more interesting are the photos of the people on the streets. Some are tourists, some are just young residents hanging out. Jim Marshall managed to chronicle an era by expertly capturing the mood, the feel, and the look of the people making history.
The text is well-written, informative, entertaining, and the perfect accompaniment to Jim Marshall's photos.
I bought this book in hardcover, which I highly recommend. While I love my Kindle, I don't know that a digital copy would do this book justice. It's large and heavy, the pages thick. The images pop. It's a book that demands to be held, the pages touched, the ink smelled. This book deserves a place on a shelf or a coffee table, to be looked at, savored, and talked about.