Borrowed book from Alloa Library
This was my first foray into Simon Goddard and his chronicles of David Bowie throughout the 1970’s, this was mainly because this part of Bowie’s life and career fascinated me and saw him create one of his greatest albums ( Young Americans) and his scintillating entrance into cinema with the extraordinary The Man Who Fell To Earth.
If you are expecting a straightforward chronological account of DB life and work in 1975 this is not it ,rather it is part portrait of Britain in the Seventies ,the emergence of Margaret Thatcher, a dark retelling of the Cambridge Rapist and of a series of murders of elderly women and a Priest in the UK that year ,alongside snapshots of Bowie’s disintegrating marriage,his attempt to free himself from his manager Tony De Fries,drug use,the film TMWFTE,the Y.A album,relationship with his mother
At times early on in the book I found the writing style a little florid ie “ as the night scrapes its dying heels through the muddy skies over Flood Street” but overall an interesting addition to the multitude of Bowie books.