Andy Warhol, 1928-1987: Commerce Into Art is an art book written by Klaus Honnef, a German art historian/professor. This book is Honnef's attempt to summarize Andy Warhol's life & works in less than 100 pages—which is remarkable since the book's first word goes something like this: all of Warhol's documented life that has ever existed today, if laid end to end, would reach halfway around the world. The book also contains many high-quality illustrations and images too, like any other TASCHEN publications.
Honnef narrates Warhol's life, beginning from his early life as a struggling commercial artist to becoming an iconic American pop artist/showbiz. Essentially, the book is about how Warhol redefined "art" into something modern (marketable). I love the part about his thought process & philosophy. I can understand why some people still despise Warhol even today—he literally sampled the "original" and turned it into something of his invention. He is, for lack of a better term, an art thief—a genius art thief that has left the art world in shock.
In summary, this book is for anyone wanting to spare maybe 2-4 hours of his time to explore Andy Warhol's life and works in less than 100 pages.