Joe Perry's was one of the more recent ones I read, really killer. Had to re-read Walk This Way after that, which is like the blueprint for The Dirt.
Yngwie's is comical. I love
his interpretation of events. When he writes about David St. Hubbins talking about him in This Is Spinal Tap, what he's quoting is St. Hubbins on the Hear N' Aid "Stars" Making Of video, Yngwie clearly thinks the dialogue happened in the Spinal Tap movie.
Devin Townsend just finished writing his which will come with an acoustic album as well, that'll surely be outstanding.
Corey Taylor's books have been decent. He gets on my nerves with his over-writing at times. Having a good command written word is great, but he gets off on it a bit too much.
Heart's autobiography was pretty killer. Hammer Of The Gods written by Zep's tour manager, Richard Cole, I've probably read that book 5x now.
Duff McKagen is working on an Alice In Chains biography which was authorized by the band, that will surely kick some ass a well.
Not a rockstar but he partied just as hard as them, Artie Lange's two books are really killer. Just as funny as they are intense.
I'd love to trade but I read everything on my phone or laptop via Kindle apps. After moving so many times and needing to drag a huge book/magazine collection around, I'm waiting until I settle somewhere permanently before I start buying physical books again.
tarices22":18sfkwje said:
Anyone read Randy Blythe's book "Dark Days" from LoG? Don't read a ton but I'm dying to read his book. His story is pretty insane if you're not already familiar with the cliff notes...
Yep, outstanding book. Randy's a bookworm and it certainly paid off when writing his own book. That dude can paint a picture with words. It can be very humbling to read during certain sections and I've got no doubt that was the entire purpose. Randy is certainly a lead-by-example good human being.