"The question with a book like this--a book that zeroes in on a particular happening or art moment and then extrapolates boomingly outward--is always: Is there enough there? Enough action at the core, that is, and enough concentrically moving energy to prevent the narrative from collapsing in on itself as it stretches to book length? The answer in this case, I am happy to report, is yes."
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The Atlantic "[A] fascinating chronicle... Edgers proves a master storyteller, rushing through the parallel narratives like a hip-hop DJ crossfading between turntables."
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The Boston Globe "An exhaustively sourced, briskly entertaining read."
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The Washington Post "Edgers, a veteran
Washington Post reporter, notes how a mix of creative, cultural and industry forces allowed the Hollis, Queens hip-hop crew and the bottomed-out Boston band to team up, altering their respective fortunes (both positively and negatively) and the course of pop music in the process."
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Mojo "A vivid snapshot of a unique moment in cultural history."
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Publishers Weekly "American music--and America itself--has always been a hybrid creation, different cultures and traditions colliding and cross-pollinating, becoming something new in the process.
Walk This Way captures one such moment, a happy accident that marked the end of one era and the beginning of another. Geoff Edgers has written an engaging and unusually revealing account of an unlikely song (and an even unlikelier collaboration) that became a chapter in American musical history."
--Tom Perrotta, New York Times bestselling author of The Leftovers and Mrs. Fletcher "
Walk This Way spans from hip hop's blazing birth to classic rock's last gasps, from dorks in New York dorm room to the Sunset Strip at the height of hair metal. Geoff Edgers takes a pop phenomenon and cracks it open to reveal a rollicking, curious and unlikely musical history."
--Jessica Hopper, author of The First Collection of Criticism by a Living Female Rock Critic "Hip hop is a descendant of the declarative storytelling that has sustained black people from the shores of their homelands to the strange new countries of their captors. Hip hop music is both battle cry and survival song wrapped up in the swagger and majesty of a mighty people. But when Run DMC instructed that we should 'Walk This Way, ' their words elevated beyond the confines of song and story to an actual manifesto that revolutionized an industry and a culture. Journalist Geoff Edgers chronicles the fascinating life of a song that changed the story forever."
--Ava DuVernay, director of 13th and A Wrinkle in Time "The story behind the revolution."
--Ice-T "You know when you love a song but have no idea what it means until your buddy explains it to you? Well, in this case the song is 'Walk This Way, ' and your buddy is Geoff Edgers, who tells a story of how a single track became a single moment that changed music forever. Rick Rubin will be proud."
--Norm Macdonald, comedian and New York Times bestselling author of Based on a True Story