Paul McCartney (Author)
Born in Liverpool in 1942, Paul McCartney was raised in the city
and educated at the Liverpool Institute. Since writing his first
song at 14, McCartney has dreamed and dared to be different. He
lives in England.
Paul Muldoon (External Editor)
Paul Muldoon is the Pulitzer Prize-winning author of fourteen
full-length collections of poetry, including Howdie-Skelp.
The Lyrics is a triumph. It is hugely readable, devoid of rock
cliché, and full of fresh stories and opinions that even devoted
fans won't have encountered before. The pictures of McCartney and
of handwritten lyrics, many of them never previously published, are
worth the entry ticket on their own and the quality of the boxed
product makes it a tactile pleasure and fun to possess. All that,
and its highly original organisation, means you never get bogged
down in a period of his life you don't find interesting ... The
Lyrics is McCartney at his best.
*The Times*
I know it all... or so I thought until I read Paul McCartney's
magical treasure trove of a book ... Touching... bountiful
*Mail on Sunday*
His composing methodology is revealed as a kind of innocent and
endless curiosity ... this mighty tome is billed as the closest
thing to an autobiography McCartney will ever write. It comprises
154 songs, with hundreds of fascinating photos and handwritten
lyrics from McCartney's collection, and an informal, thoughtful
text assembled from conversations conducted with acclaimed Irish
poet Paul Muldoon ... McCartney is a playful and brilliant
wordsmith ... His book of lyrics is charming
*Daily Telegraph*
Reading "The Lyrics" is like standing in a master chef's kitchen as
he prepares a dish, adding a dash of this and a spoonful of that
and talking to us so winningly ... there's nothing like listening
to Macca (as McCartney was known in his Liverpool days) talk about
the rise of a band composed largely of working-class teens who
changed the world forever ... charming
*Washington Post*
With a gravity, reverence and sense of occasion that hasn't been
seen since the Levites rolled out the Ark of the Covenant, the
complete lyrics of Paul McCartney are published at last ... This
vast, absorbing book is studded with McCartneyisms that make you
rub your eyes
*Sunday Times*
Describing it as a book doesn't quite capture the object. It is two
books, two separate volumes, in a gorgeous box. It weighs 8kg on my
bathroom scales. It's a big thing of great beauty, and going back
and forth through it is a hugely satisfying experience ... no
matter where you start, or continue, McCartney seems to be waiting,
ready to continue his warm, vivid, erudite stroll through his life
and lyrics ... the life - McCartney's - seems more believable when
examined in these glimpses. There is a modesty hiding in the book's
bulk, and raw, gentle honesty ... There are 154 sets of lyrics in
this book, and it's almost impossible to read most of them without
hearing the melodies and trumpet bits. But it is well worth trying.
Read, not heard, Lady Madonna is a different experience. I read it
and thought of Zola's best novels.
*Irish Times*
he provides a fascinating new insight into his life at the time
they were written, and the lives of his fellow Beatles ... This,
then, is a book for dipping into and sampling at leisure. It allows
us to see some of the most familiar songs ever written in new and
surprising ways ... [it] will not only thrill Beatles obsessives
but fascinate anyone who has ever sung along to a Lennon and
McCartney tune. Which must, surely, include half the world or
more.
*Daily Mail*
a feast for the eyes. Dyed-in-the-wool Beatles fans will be bowled
over by the sheer profundity of unpublished photographs, previously
unseen lyrics sheets, journal entries, paintings, and the like.
Indeed, The Lyrics easily represents the finest collection of
illustrations associated with McCartney's life and work. And it's
beautifully rendered, to boot. Drop-dead gorgeous as books go
*Salon*
the two things it reveals - an unrelenting work ethic and the
picture-painting imperative of the storyteller - are the twin
pillars of his life's work, as revealed here in random reflections
on 154 selected songs spanning 64 years ... it's this up-front
abdication of control, of responsibility and ultimately of
authorial meaning that makes McCartney's story, and his open-handed
attitude to a monumental body of work, so engaging.
*Sydney Morning Herald*
Nothing comes close to Paul McCartney's breezeblock of a title ...
Combine this monumental lyrics collection with Peter Jackson's Get
Back and many Beatles fans won't come out again until the clocks go
forward. Paul McCartney says this is as close as he will get to an
autobiography and no wonder - his life is in every line of these
songs. Each alphabetical entry (a smart arrangement that opens up a
trove of lesser known McCartney lore) is not only accompanied by a
wealth of wonderful photographs and memorabilia (the lyrics to
Carry That Weight on Apple notepaper!), but also McCartney's own
recollections and analysis. "Mostly, we were writing to the world,"
McCartney says about I Want to Hold Your Hand. The Lyrics makes it
a pure joy to reach out for these songs once again.
*The Sunday Times Book of the Year*
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