If there was ever a glaring example of why writers/authors should be given leeway to do what they want to do, and why everyone should simply stay the hell out of their way, it is the case of "Most Dope: The Extraordinary Life of Mac Miller," and all the unnecessary — and frankly, absolutely frightening — drama surrounding it.
You can read about that stuff elsewhere, or see it written all in these comments (most of them left by angry trolls), but as the reviewer for the New York Times pointed out, "Most Dope" is indeed loving and tender. It's a very deep and probing book, operating on a level way beyond the surface, but I'm not sure if everyone will get it, or it will go over their heads.
I really like the way it is written though. The prose is very sparse and simple, and it moves quickly. A lot happens without you realizing it's happening. The beginning alone, where the history of his neighborhood is told, flies by in an instant. You learn about two hundred years of development in the span of a few pages, and by then you're just totally in it. I'm a history buff, so I loved that part.
I also really liked the parts where you learn about what went into making certain songs. Usually when people write about this stuff, it's very technical, and I have trouble following along. Here, it's broken down in very simple language, and it sounds almost just like someone talking about music plainly. You don't need to be a genius to decipher what's happening.
As for the more ... ahem... uncomfortable parts. I don't know what to say. To me, it didn't make me uncomfortable, and it doesn't seem any different from reading a book about the Civil War and learning about all the different atrocities, or learning about any other famous person and their various eccentricities. If none of these things happened, there wouldn't be a book to be written about this guy.
In the end, It felt like Cantor handled Mac's story with a lot of care. I just feel sorry he had to put up with such immature nonsense to tell it. We need to do better, or stuff like this won't get written again.