As much as I love the music of the Kinks, it had never occurred to me to want to read a book about them. But I came across this and inhaled it in a couple of days. I knew that Ray and Dave Davies were locked in a sibling rivalry almost unmatched in pop-music history (sit down, Liam and Noel, you're amateurs compared to these two). But I never knew that the story behind some of the greatest songs ever written was that the man who wrote them went through such periods of self-doubt and egotistical control over his band (which had been little brother Dave's band until he brought Ray in for rhythm guitar...and then Ray took over). This is a fun book that admits how the singles of the Sixties will forever be what most folks think of when they think of "the Kinks," but it does make a valiant effort to prove that the post-1970 albums have good material and that the band did its best not to devolve into an oldies act, giving the people only what they wanted. If you can find this book, it's worth a read, and now I want to read more about the Kinks (and by the Kinks; if I come across either Ray's "X-Ray" or Dave's "Kink", you'd better believe I'm snatching them up).