Aletheia wrote:Fletch F. Fletch wrote:[quote=""membrillo""]
Fletch F. Fletch wrote:Can anyone recommend the best book out there on James Dean? One that covers his life and career?
The problem with books on James Dean is that many contradict themselves - because of people who knew him and people who "knew" him.
Anyway I would say the two best books are:
"James Dean: The Mutant King" by David Dalton
"Rebel: The Life and Legend of James Dean" by Donald Spoto
I would skip the Bill Bast material.
Thanks! I will check out those first two. I was wondering about the Bast book so thanks for the tip on that one.
Donald certainly did not know him. I thought it was the most sterile, formulaic and rudimentary of all the biographies on Dean that I've read.
His disdain for Dean and general negativity on his status as an iconic movie star is overt in every chapter. Essentially it's just a cut and paste job appropriating most of the anecdotal material from Joe Hyams's 1992 "Little Boy Lost" an excellent work by someone who actually knew him. I don't expect a hagiography when I read a bio, but when the author has so little understanding or empathy for his subject you think why bother...unless the advance was good!
Other recommendations apart from "Little Boy Lost" are “The Unabridged James Dean: His Life and Legacy from A. to Z." by Randal Riese this conveys the material in a lexicon format but is really comprehensive and detailed.
Also "James Dean A Short Life" by Venable Herndon which came out the same year as the Mutant King but while not as ambitious, is for me better written and more focused.[/quote]
Regarding the Spoto book - "sterile and formulaic" are exactly why I made this recommendation. It is an easy read, dispassionate and basic. However it covers the requestors criteria by covering J.D.'s life and career. I prefer this to stumbling across a homoerotic or phsycophantic biography which is what 90% of them are. (Paul Alexanders "Boulevard of Broken Dreams" quickly comes to mind) I would argue that Spoto's work has a more avuncular tone.
There are a million bios out there. Shit, even Morrissey wrote a small biography called "James Dean is not Dead" before he was in The Smiths.
While I agree that "Little Boy Lost" is a great biography, I would not recommend it as an entree to Deans life. I would recommend it a essential reading for any serious fan of James Dean.