I opened the sole Christmas gift from my wife to find Jimi at 80, a book I knew I would want in the coming year. And here it is. His sister Janie, a fierce defender of Jimi's legacy, opens the book with lessons from her brother's short but productive life. In words only a family member could write, she expresses how great he looks at 80, making us pause to think what would Jimi look like, what would he be doing now. Surely something wonderful.
My previous Hendrix reading experience was through Seattle-native Charles R. Cross's epic Room Full of Mirrors, so I reasoned it would have to be a monumental tribute for anyone to tackle a picture book on Hendrix. The publishing crew did a beautiful graphic job on both the exterior and interior while retaining a family album feel and keeping the text brief, informative, and highly personal. The reader thus never finds him or herself turning the pages nonchalantly. This isn't a coffee table book to mindlessly flip through. It's one of the reasons I held off purchasing the 'other' Jimmy's picture book (Page's, that is). I don't seek spectacle, but knowledge. This book provides the appropriate pace and depth. It adds to the Hendrix biography as it subducts from his mythology. I think Jimi, if he were alive, would want it that way. And thanks to the family's long-suffering generosity, he's still with us.