Selected Product: | Bit of a Blur Paperback Author: Alex James Publisher: Abacus Release Date: July 2008 ISBN-10: 0349119937 ISBN-13: 9780349119939 List Price: £7.99 Average Customer Rating: | | Grow Up ISBN-10: 0091910714 That's Me in the Corner: Adventures of an Ordinary Boy in a Celebrity World ISBN-10: 0091897874 Slash: The Autobiography ISBN-10: 0007257775 Don't You Know Who I Am?: Insider Diaries of Fame, Power and Naked Ambition ISBN-10: 0091913926 Ronnie ISBN-10: 0330445049 |
To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for Bit of a Blur by Alex James (ISBN-10: 0349119937, ISBN-13: 9780349119939). At this time we have not yet written a review for Bit of a Blur by Alex James (ISBN-10: 0349119937, ISBN-13: 9780349119939). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com Should be titled - Alex James "My ego trip" | Customer Rating: | I bought this book hoping for an intelligent incite into the evolution of Blur that resulted in the last 3 records (my personal favorite), but instead I found myself sifting through pages and pages of tales from the Groucho or Browns or Claridges or wherever James had decided to waste his money that year. What I found hardest to swallow was the sense of delight and pride he took in describing his cliched rock and roll antics (hopefully I'm not just jealous!)
I think what summed James was when he mentioned that as far side projects go, he made a football chant called Vindaloo and Damon Albarn came up with the Gorillaz. Says it all really. | Such a shame!! | Customer Rating: | I'd been looking forward to reading this for a while, I'm a big fan of Blur, and always thought AJ was a good guy - having read this I came away hating him! His writing style is hard work to get through, as well as slightly pretentious and bordering on the twee.
He gives very little insight into the workings of Blur and what it was like to be part of the biggest band of the 90's and instead tends to tell contrived anecdotes about his 'mis-adventures', which are actually quite boring.
Its a shame because you could have got a really good behind the scenes tale, but instead it missed the mark. Sorry... | Fantastically entertaining | Customer Rating: | | I too am surprised by some of the negative reviews - this is my book of the year so far, fantastically entertaining and incredibly well written. Maybe it helps that I was never a huge Blur fan - I just love the way it portrays Alex James' rise to fame and the nature of celebrity. Funny, honest and an absolute joy to read. And I now have a bit of a crush on Alex... | Highly entertaining | Customer Rating: | I am surprised that so many people seem to be down on this book because it isn't a definitive story about Blur the band. As I see it, why would it be? This is a book that is about Alex James. As it is written by Alex James this makes it the definitive book about Alex James, and it's really rather good.
He is amusing, self-deprecating in many ways, honest and funny. He writes well and is full of enthusiasm, which spills out of the book at every page. It is the story of one man's life, loves and enthusiasms being filtered through the experience of being in one of the world's most successful bands.
I loved it and just hope he writes a lot more. A book about farming, a book about cheese, I don't care really. Just more of a very talented writer soon please. Thankyou. | If you want a detailed account of Blur, get 3862 Days | Customer Rating: | As this is the autobiography of Alex James. Which he makes very clear. If you want an insiders memories of the band, Albarn or Coxons autobio is the one to wait for (probably Albarns if you want stuff about Think Tank). There is very little focus on the band in the 2nd half of the book, whereas about half of the first involves aspects of the band. There isn't really a need for him to detail the band, there are 2 books already that do that, The Last Party (or Britpop, depending on which edition you get) and 3862 Days. The latter does go into far more detail as it's purely about the band, although it was published in 1999, so it does need an updated re-issue. This is the book about HIS life, not the bands, and for what it is, it's very good. From the lifestyle he seems to have lead, he really must have written this down before hand, as events would be hard to remember after his nights. Overall, a very funny book that shows the downsides of rock and roll hedonism, and how you can turn your life around. As he said, "It's horrid being in a rut, no matter how nice the rut looks from the outside." |
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