A celebration of the life and work of the late charismatic performer--whose untimely death still haunts the musical world--includes more than four hundred photographs, illustrations, and reproductions of his musical lyrics. Reprint. 35,000 first printing.
This is in a coffee-style format to take advantage of lots of great photos but it is much more than a coffee-table book. It is put together by noted, competent figures in reggae journalism (Boot and Salewicz, and "Executive Editor" Rita Marley) and qualifies as a legitimate biographical account of the life of Bob Marley. No, not a definitive biography - that doesn't exist - but it is filled with interesting material from start to finish. It is a welcome addition to the field, much different in style, tone and substance than Tim White's Catch A Fire and in some ways more accessible, or I should say, makes Bob more accessible.
Compared to another coffee-style book, Lee Jaffe's One Love, the photos are about equally good (both constitute outstanding photographic portfolios of Bob and the people and places around him) but the text here is far more satisfying.
Review by the author of Stir It Up: The CIA Targets Jamaica, Bob Marley and the Progressive Manley Government, a novel.
After the detailed biography by Timothy White, this book is probably the second-best book about Bob Marley (Berhan Selassie). It is well done and an excellent book to own for anyone who loves and reveres Bob.
From other books I already have been learning a lot of Bob Marley. This is more a big coffee table book which I love and it had over 500 great photographs I have never seen.