About the relationship between John & Paul. Very sympathetic to Paul; John comes across as an extremely damaged person at best, mentally ill at worst. The cruel things he wrote to and about Paul after the breakup were the rantings of an immature and insecure individual. Paul, in this telling, was just stoic, perplexed, bewildered. I felt so bad for him.
Both young men endured terrible losses early in life; John had the much more confused and unstable upbringing, despite his Aunt Mimi’s efforts to supply the opposite. Each man named his first child after his mother.
The premise of the book is that we can read the John/Paul relationship as a bromance conveyed in their songs. Men in that time and place could not openly express their feelings, especially about each other. I guess it’s what Jim Croce said: “I’ll have to say I love you in a song.” The song analyses in the book are spot-on and convincing.
Favorite quotes:
Actually an Arthur Schopenhauer quote. “Talent hits a target no one else can hit. Genius hits a target no one else can see.” The Beatles were just on another plane.
“All of the Beatles, with the partial exception of Ringo, were promiscuous; what distinguished Paul’s philandering was the scale of it, and his attention to logistical detail. He really put the work in.” Isn’t that so him?
Paul seemed “annoyed by John’s dalliances with avant-garde art. (When Lindsay-Hogg asks, ‘Where’s John?’ Paul replies, ‘Probably in a bag in his dressing room with Yoko. I think they brought their own bag with them today.’)” Everybody’s talking about bagism.
