Bought online and read whilst watching Smashing Pumpkins DVDs/Blu Rays, Billy Corgan's 33 podcast, and discography in order. (Only got up to Adore before finishing the book).
Books on the Smashing Pumpkins are very thin on the ground, to the extent this was the only one I've found, so it was a pleasant surprise to find it was a well-written documentation of the band and its music.
As a former journalist, I always appreciate the forensic detail and skilled writing style employed by fellow journalists when they turn to writing a book. There is no stone left uncovered, proper research, and use of quotes rather than a half-arsed skim over the surface of the band's discography.
This could particularly be applied to the chapters detailing Gish, Siamese Dream, Mellon Collie... and the various side projects and ancillary releases of the first half decade of the band. (Although I did feel like the author went on about the Grunge scene a little too much, with Nirvana and Kurt Cobain mentioned almost as much as Corgan and SP in the first half of the book).
However, the final releases, and closing chapters, seem rushed (as they often do in these sorts of projects as a fatigued author sees the finishing line in site and rushes towards it).
Ironically, it is in the discussion of the later releases - Adore, Machina I & II - that I actually derived my only real criticisms and not for the reason of brevity. It is actually because I felt the author verges on sycophantic in the way she praises the albums, and Corgan. It almost comes across as she is saying she 'gets' the music where others don't or didn't.
Personally, I didn't mind the SP's change of direction in terms of approach to the music and instrumentation, I just found those albums to fall below the standard of the first three despite having their moments. As someone who felt that way, I found the author's appraisals of the records irritating and a little haughty.
That being said, I wonder if I would have taken that if I'd agreed with her assessment of those albums? Maybe that's on me and my bias. But I am me, and this is my review, so...
On a similar note, I was a huge fan of the Zwan album and would have liked to have read more about its background. But then again, this is a Smashing Pumpkins book, not a Billy Corgan biography.
If you want the juicy gossip behind the scenes, you'll have to wait for WPC to release his autobiography (and maybe then you might not get it) but for now, this is certainly a well-written and researched book exploring the music of the Smashing Pumpkins.