Chicago Tribune , 10/11/16 Wilson's book documents scattered memories and streamlines them into a series of impressions and anecdotes
Offer[s] valuable if unsettling insights into the personal dynamics inside an American band.”AXS, 10/13/16 Wilson goes beach-combing through the past, panning the sands of time for the socio-psychological seashells that gave rise to America's most successful singing groupand launched Wilson's lifetime bout with mental illness
Here Wilson recounts the good, the bad, the ugly, and the beautiful in the straightforward conversational tone of a mature, experienced man reclining in his Lay-Z-Boy, albeit tempered with his boyish enthusiasm (and melancholy).”Dallas Morning News , 10/14/16 An unflinching portrait.”New York Journal of Books, 10/11/16 Immediate, informal, and confessional
Behind the wholesome image of shy boys and cute girls in a world of eternal sunshine, the Beach Boys inhabited a much darker reality. Brian Wilson nails it in his latest memoir.”The LA Beat, 10/13/16 One of the most honest and forthcoming autobiographies ever written by a musician
As you start to read, you really feel less an observer, and more of a participant in [Wilson's] journey
If you only read one book this year, it should be Brian's book.”Publishers Weekly , 9/12/16 [A] charming and powerfully written memoir that will engage a readership beyond the multitude of Beach Boys fans
Despite his fame and success, Wilson comes off as a genuinely modest and gentle soul
Wilson's emotional authenticity is beguiling as he takes readers deeply into his mind, voices and all, to describe his unique manifestation of musical genius.”No Depression, 9/16/16 Wilson's memoir offers a more sober glance at the spiritual and physical forces that haunt artists and that often drive them to produce the beautiful, sad, and relentlessly affecting music we often embrace
Wilson's memoir eventually grabs us at a deeper level than Love's. If you're looking for fun, fun, fun, pick up Love, but if you're searching for a more introspective, in my room, experience, pick Wilson.”Canadian Living, 9/22/16 In this tell-almost-all memoir, Brian Wilson candidly reflects on his struggles with family, substance abuse and mental illness and digs deep into the inspiration and meaning behind his music. It's a must-read for any fan of The Beach Boysor the '60s pop scene, in generalwith big-name music icons of the era (Phil Spector, Carole King, Paul McCartney) featuring in many of the stories.”Record Collector , Issue 459 His recollections of the abuse he suffered at the hands of life-coach Eugene Landy and his father are told with such blunt economy that they are quite crushing. Wilson's equally candid and plainspoken about his work
There's a good deal of myth-busting.”Goldmine , November 2016 Wilson's memoir is streaked with melancholy
Wilson fans will find it a compelling book.”Huffington Post, 10/12/16 Wilson takes you on a journey into the life of a creative genius, exploring his turbulent life and creative influences and how, regardless of his inner and outer demons, there is always hope
I Am Brian Wilson: A Memoir isn't the kind of book you can read in a day. Like a summer vacation, you want it to last forever
As a memoir, honest and insightful. But it's very much a memoir of a musician. From reading this book, you'll gain a deeper appreciation for the man behind some of the world's greatest hits and for music in general.”Forbes.com, 10/11/16 Wilson sets the record straight
His voice definitely comes through
It is a wonderful insight into a troubled genius.”Rolling Stone , 9/27/16 Excellent
I Am Brian Wilson is soulful and earnestlike spending quality time with a gentle sage with an endearingly erratic attention span
Wilson is heartbreakingly blunt about his mental breakdowns and suffering at the hands of his father. He has startling insights into the music.”Rob SheffieldTime magazine , 9/29/16 Disarmingly personal.”Minneapolis Star Tribune , 9/29/16 When you read his new memoir
you'll get an even deeper exploration into the mental illness and the rebound, the villains and heroes in his life.”Wall Street Journal , 9/30/16 As plain-spoken as its title. Here the band's presiding genius wanders over the terrain of his life as a son, father, husband and supremely gifted musician
Tell[s] us much that we didn't know
Suggest[s] how we might best view the artistic lifeany life, really.”Loud and Quiet , October 2016 In I Am Brian Wilson , Wilson is unflinching in his rendering of the euphoric highs and chaotic lows that have made up the last seven decades. His and the Beach Boys' story has been told many times before and is one we may think we know already, but it has never before been voiced with the clarity, honesty and insight on offer here.”A New York Times , USA Today , and Publishers Weekly Best Seller! Vanity Fair , September 2016 I Am Brian Wilson slipstreams through the past like a message in a bottle
It has moments of personal testimony that are poignant and indelible.”New York Post , 8/11/16 1960s Beach Boy on mental illness, sorrow, drugs, destabilization, demons, turbulence and discord.”Booklist , 9/1/16 Music journalist Greenman helps keep this meandering memoir coherent and poignant.”CNN.com, 8/24/16 Plenty of authors have written about this Beach Boy and now he'll get his say.”Rolling Stone , 9/8/16 Wilson tells his own story: his battles with his abusive father, the pressure to score hits in the Sixties, and his long struggle with mental illness.”Billboard , 9/3/16 Wilson delves into his battle with mental illness and how he created the band's pioneering sound.”The Scotsman , 10/15/16 As much about Wilson's reclusive existence in the 1970s and '80s as it is about the heyday of his band
This is no misery memoir, howeverthe tone throughout is almost breezy; difficult subjects are dealt with honestly, but never in such detail as to become uncomfortable
I Am Brian Wilson succeeds in shedding new light on Wilson's remarkable life.”Herald Scotland , 10/14/16 This autobiography of one of the most creative minds in 20th century popular music is clearly worth the reading, but the fact that it turns out to be an eloquent witness for a 21st century approach to mental illness may ultimately be its greater value.”St. Louis Post-Dispatch , 10/14/16 [An] essential read for Beach Boys fans.”Foreword Reviews , 10/20/16 With the release of his memoir, I Am Brian Wilson , those who love the music and wonder about the man are afforded access into his thoughts and insights. In nonlinear and candid prose, Wilson discusses his music, yes, but also his battles with mental illness, his career highs and lows, and sprinkles these accounts with peeks into his fascinating worldview. The work is empathetic and raw; there is humility here, and ingenuity as well.”Esquire.com, 10/11/16 A fascinating peek into the life and creative process of one of the 20th Century's most lauded songwriters and record producers
[An] intriguing glimpse into what makes one of rock's true legends tick.”Parade.com, 10/10/16 [Wilson] bares his heart and soul
He recalls the many personal and professional highs and the plentiful painful lows of his life and career.”Publishers Weekly , 10/10/16 In I Am Brian Wilson: A Memoir , the founder of the Beach Boys speaks candidly about his musical inspirations and mental illness
A wonderful gift to [his] fans.”Houston Chronicle , 10/9/16 In this honest and nonlinear memoir, one of rock n' roll's greatest composers talks honestly about both his musical triumphs and his struggles with mental illness and substance abuse
For fans of the music, Wilson does dig deep into the inspirations and recording of albums.”Psychology Today , 10/11/16 [Wilson's] extraordinary journey is intimately described in his new memoir.”Library Journal , 10/6/16 Wilson's memoir digs deep, with fierce honesty from the opening pages.”The Arts Desk, 10/16/16 It's intriguing to get a Wilson's-eye view of his own legendit's one of the great tales of the music business, after all
All the key elements of Brian's life are here
Where the book really lights up is when Wilson talks in detail about music. There are fascinating descriptions of the recording of "God Only Knows", the Pet Sounds , Surf's Up and Holland albums and the difficulties he had with the SMiLE material
When he analyses the influence of the Beatles, the Stones and Phil Spector, it evokes the extraordinary intensity of the mid-Sixties musical eruption that the Beach Boys were caught up in.”Toronto Star , 10/15/16 The book jumps through time, the drugs, the mental illness, the music, the love and the pain. It has charming asides.”Maclean's , 10/16/16 [The] book pulls no punches: Wilson openly discusses his five decades of mental issues, his struggles with an abusive father, drugs, alcohol and weight, his debilitating fears and his failures (and successes) as a husband, dad and bandmate.”The Arts Fuse, 10/11/16 Pleasures await the Wilson/Beach Boys fan, as Wilson recounts the making of the Beach Boys album (Pet Sounds ) and song (Good Vibrations') he's proudest of and enthuses over his favorite non-Beach Boys album (the Beatles' Rubber Soul ) and song (Be My Baby,' produced by Phil Spector), his favorite classical composer (Bach), and his influences
Wilson speaks at length about his mental illness, how it robbed him of the joy and optimism his music provided for so many people.”ABC News Radio, 10/11/16 Wilson talks candidly about his struggles with mental illness and drugs, while giving fascinating insight into the creation of many of The Beach Boys' beautiful, catchy and complex songs.”New York Magazine's Vulture, 10/11/16 The Beach Boys leader's story is well told by now, but reading his often blunt retelling is harrowing, especially as he describes years swaddled in drugs and alcohol, and controlled by the notorious Dr. Landy. But as much as the book delves behind the so-called madman, it also gets behind the genius. Wilson and writer Ben Greenman lay the story out simply and with limited sensationalism, including fascinating sections where Wilson recounts his creative process and the work behind so many classic songs.”The Australian , 10/22/16 Freakishly, genre-transcendingly good: a rock memoir of genius, if ever there was one
Brilliantly unusual, like Wilson himself
It gets his unique inner world on to the page intact
It's also illuminated, along the way, by sudden lightning-flashes of insight into the world of mental illness.”National Post , 10/18/16 The book's voice [is] plainspoken, earnest, prone to both anxieties and boyish excitement
[and] true to the man.”The Guardian , 10/16/16 A beguilingly honest account of what it is to be Wilson.”Phoenix New Times , 10/17/16 Reading I Am Brian Wilson is like having a conversation with Brian Wilson
It feels authentic
It's imperfectly flawless
This is the story of a hero as well as an artist, a genius, and a musician. He frankly portrays his mental illness from the beginning to his lowest depths to the heights he's at today
Famous people from the music world make appearances
In 300 pages Brian Wilson tells a tale that's as fascinating as any of his American sagas, a book that reads as much as a confessional as it does an act of catharsis.”VICE's Noisey, 10/16/16 Tells the harrowing, heartbreaking story of the life of Brian.” "Fascinating and intensely personal...The utter lack of pretense in the prose captures that familiar slightly flat, slightly sad, often rhapsodic voice with true authenticity...I Am Brian Wilson would fail as the Brian Wilson story if it did not deal with the darker corners of his life, and Wilson wanders through these areas fearlessly...Love, music, and an immensely sincere man's true voice are what you should expect and what I Am Brian Wilson delivers."—Psychobabble, 10/21/16 "An unconventional but fascinating read...One gets a terrific feel for Brian Wilson as a person and how he both thinks about and is affected by music. This is one true joy of the book...In all, I Am Brian Wilson is as interesting a book as you'd want it to be. It's not a linear history. It's not a juicy tell-all. But it is a beautiful view into the brilliant and sometimes troubled mind of a true genius of American music."—Under the Radar, 10/25/16 "Candid and tragic, yet in the end exquisitely triumphant and love affirming, I am Brian Wilson is the last (and only) word on Brian's all-too-written-about and over-analyzed past."—Elmore, 10/25/16 "A book almost the opposte of Love's: forgiving, chaotically associative."—New York Review of Books, 10/26/16 "A candid, heartfelt autobiography about a pop-music icon who managed to overcome dark influences that might have defeated someone less resilient."—New York Times Syndicate, 10/11/16 "The book is kind of like his music-gentle, spiritual, lyrical-and provides the expansive commentary that Brian does not usually provide in interviews...It's also funny as hell in places...An altogether lovely read."—The Suburban, 10/29/16 "He has worked with a ghostwriter, but anyone who has seen his spectacular solo shows or seen him interviewed will recognise the voice immediately: vulnerable, faltering, pained, unexpectedly funny...There is a candour and even a childlike openness to how he describes the battling voices in his head and the self-doubt and self-imposed pressure...Wilson's memoir has a weepily beautiful mellowness and a real poignancy that shines through the acrimony and wasted years."—Sydney Morning Herald, 11/5/16 "The enigmatic Wilson documents the poetic lyricism, inspiration and creativity behind his vast discography while at the same time showing a man who is over-time coming to terms with his past...Extremely candid...You aren't going to find any other story like that of Brian Wilson's. Very rarely if ever will you find a person with Brian's notoriety be as truthful and forth coming as he is in this book."—Media Mikes, 11/1/16 "Join the genius behind The Beach Boys as he takes a stroll down memory lane, revealing never-before-heard details about his upbringing with brothers Carl and Dennis, as well as his struggle with mental illness, drug use and more. In I Am Brian Wilson , the legendary surf rocker discusses how these hardships shaped the man he is today, and how he's learnt to forgive those who wronged him."—Over Sixty, 11/3/16 "A frank and revealing portrait of a troubled and popular music pioneer...Worth reading if you are a fan of the Beach Boys, or enjoy reading about how even extreme mental difficulties can be faced, and if not overcome, at least lived with." —Portland Book Review, 11/2/16 "The Beach Boys frontman has a fascinating story...He recounts the ups and downs of his life with candor." —InStyle.com, 11/1/16 "[An] alternatingly sad and inspiring memoir." —Downtown Magazine, 11/17/16 "Beach Boys fans finally get the scoop from the man himself...Provide[s] a crucial blueprint of the rise and fall of one of America's most interesting pop musicians. Wilson carefully answers questions that many die-hard fans have been wondering for years and doesn't shy away from exploring the darker, less glamorous side of being in one of the most famous American bands of all time."—Memphis Flyer, 11/17/16 "The 312-page book...convey[s] Brian Wilson's way of thinking-mostly gentle, conciliatory, a little disjointed and tinged with resignation."—Stockton Record, 11/17/16 "The Beach Boys legend once thought he just wasn't made for these times, but in his new memoir, he reflects on his brilliant career and his successful struggle against his personal demons." —Los Angeles Times "[Wilson] depicts mental illness candidly."—Austin Chronicle "In this candid testament, Wilson examines sources of his creative inspiration and reveals his mental and spiritual struggles, his highs and lows." —RTE "Filled with perspective and wisdom."—Music Is My Sanctuary, Top 10 Music Books of 2016
What makes someone want to, or need to, be a musician? What combination of vision, madness, focus, genetics creates a life driven by sound? The troubled, brilliant, oft-mythologized Wilson makes for a particularly intriguing case study, and if his memoir doesn't add up to a grand unified theory, it does offer some fascinating glimpses under the hood…At its best, I Am Brian Wilson has an odd, unpredictable rhythm, looping back to a few touchstone events…and jumping back and forth through time with thoughts that aren't always linear. It's in the throwaway moments that Wilson fleetingly snaps into focus.
The New York Times Book Review - Alan Light
★ 09/12/2016 In this charming and powerfully written memoir that will engage a readership beyond the multitude of Beach Boys fans, Wilson honestly tells the story of his life from its humble beginnings in Southern California—where he was raised by a father who routinely demeaned, frightened, and beat him—to becoming a Kennedy Center Honoree for his 50 years of musical contributions to American culture. Despite his fame and success, Wilson comes off as a genuinely modest and gentle soul who, with the help of his second wife, Melinda, has come to terms with his ongoing mental illness, his past failures as a father, and the profoundly sad deaths of his brothers, Dennis and Carl, who, with Wilson, were core members of the Beach Boys. He goes into great detail about how the band’s dozens of hits were produced and the many music superstars who added to the lush, complex arrangements Wilson is famous for. He recounts the pain of his many breakdowns and stays in psychiatric hospitals, as well as the nightmare years when Eugene Landy, Wilson’s psychologist, brutally took control of the artist’s life, forcing him to produce music for financial gain. Wilson’s emotional authenticity is beguiling as he takes readers deeply into his mind, voices and all, to describe his unique manifestation of musical genius. (Oct.)
★ 2016-08-02 Everyone’s favorite musical mad scientist reveals a troubled yet hopeful life.Famously, as depicted in the recent film Love & Mercy, Wilson stopped touring with his band, the Beach Boys, after suffering a panic attack while on a flight to Houston in 1964. He did not retreat—not yet, anyway—from music, spending the next year thinking about what kinds of songs he wanted to write and whether pop had any sonic boundaries beyond which one could not travel. “I couldn’t really think of any limits,” he writes, and so emerged “Pet Sounds,” “Good Vibrations,” “California Girls,” and other resonant wonders. At the same time, and ever since, Wilson has battled mental illness, a malady with a clear genetic lineage, as well as the effects of abuse at the hands of his father, his psychiatrist, and the less angelic voices in his head. Chasing down his sonic visions is a matter that Wilson treats with some mystery. As he writes, he saw bits and pieces of melody go swimming by like goldfish: “They dart one way and you see a little flash of orange, but you don’t really know whether they’re coming or going.” Wilson writes as he speaks, haltingly and with a kind of sideways hesitancy born, he tells it, from being deafened by a blow from his father’s fist—which has had one salutary effect, though giving him a lopsided appearance, namely that he writes in mono: “I can only hear out of one side, which means that it’s already mixed down.” Readers seeking a tell-all will find instead delicate, thoughtful reflections on how music is made as well as wistful remembrances of Wilson’s dead brothers and band mates Carl and Dennis. When the usual villain of the Beach Boys story, Mike Love, is mentioned, it is only briefly, and then usually in connection to some legal action or another. As a study in creativity, superb, though as memoir, partial and a touch reluctant. Whatever the case, essential for any Beach Boys fan.