Madonna: Like an Icon
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Average customer review:Product Description
Material Girl . . . Immaculate sexpot . . . Superstar . . . Mother . . . Kabbalah enthusiast . . . For three decades she has defied categorization. . . . She remains one of our greatest living pop icons.
Here is the groundbreaking biography that finally solves the mystery at the heart of Madonna's chameleonlike existence. Drawing upon scores of candid interviews with producers, musicians, collaborators, lovers, and friends, Lucy O'Brien's Madonna: Like an Icon explores the complex personality and legendary drive that have made Madonna the most famous female pop artist of our time. From her mother's premature death to Madonna's dynamic arrival on the New York club scene, from "Like a Virgin" to Evita and beyond, every stage of this dazzling star's life and career is brilliantly illuminated—the stereotypes deconstructed, the lies exposed, the artist examined, the legend celebrated.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #838552 in Books
- Published on: 2007-11-01
- Released on: 2007-11-06
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Hardcover
- 416 pages
Features
- ISBN13: 9780060898960
- Condition: USED - VERY GOOD
- Notes:
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Editorial Reviews
From Booklist
The Material Girl is respectfully, if not fawningly, limned by O'Brien in this lengthy bio undertaken without benefit of the subject's input. Fascinated by Madonna's media mastery, O'Brien considers her music-video, live-performance, photographic (remember Sex?), thespian, and other coups, inadvertently (perhaps) making the point that as singer, she's a heckuva dancer. Snide shots from reviewers aside, Madonna has made a lot of stuff in a variety of media. O'Brien seems to have covered it all to create a portrait of a driven, committed artiste of the highest order. Nary a negative word is spewed, but since by now most folks know how they feel about Madonna, hard judgments and artistic evaluations may be beside the point. Nonfans may avoid the book, but ardent followers who have either forgotten or sublimated, say, Desperately Seeking Susan will boost circulation at virtually any library. For kicking back and remembering when Madonna was cutting-edge, and not just in the worlds of kabbalah and kiddie lit, this is the ticket. Tribby, Mike
Review
"Meticulously chronicled" -- USA Today
"Meticulously chronicled"... [and] absorbing." -- USA Today
Review
"Meticulously chronicled"... [and] absorbing." (USA Today )
Customer Reviews
WHO IS THE "REAL" MADONNA?
Who can properly explicate the woman who is arguably the most famous female pop artist of our time? Many have tried; some have failed. Music critic Lucy O'Brien has a good go at it with Madonna Like An Icon.
O'Brien has been researching the phenomenon that is Madonna since the 1980s, fascinated by what appears to be unbridled ambition and the ability to repeatedly reinvent her image. This biographer's summary judgment is "The only place where she seems truly herself is when she is doing her work. Away from that she can be self-conscious, status-conscious, everything-conscious. Only in performance are those layers stripped away and it's just her."
Whether or not we agree with O'Brien's assessment this biography is meticulously written and researched, taking readers from Madonna's childhood in Detroit, Michigan, where she later danced at gay clubs to her almost fearless pursuit of success, through her tumultuous marriage to Sean Penn, to her Like a Prayer video, her movie roles, her stage appearance as Evita, her embrace of Kabbalah, and finally her marriage to Guy Ritchie.
Noting that Madonna's theatrical shows have made her a "quasi-religious icon", O'Brien cites friend and actor Rupert Everett who called Madonna the "Immaculate Conception." He describes his impression upon first meeting Madonna: ".....there was an energy field around her, like a wave, that swept everyone up as it crashed into the room"
Madonna once said of herself, "I am the work of art."
Who is the "real" Madonna? The answer may not be found in Madonna Like An Icon, but it is fascinating reading and sure to be devoured by her legions of fans.
- Gail Cooke
More re-hash than definitive
I've almost reached the end of this book. I feel kind of cheated. This was supposed to be the "definitive" Madonna biography. Instead, what you get are the same old stories re-hashed with maybe a bit of extra totally extraneous information. For example, I don't really care to know the exact address of Madonna's family home in Pontiac, but would've liked a bit more insight into what really makes her tick. This book basically runs methodically through every album release, every tour and throws in comments from some people who knew her. It's lazily written, there's no real analysis going on here. O'Brien makes statements about Madonna and just leaves it hanging (or makes comparisons to herself). I did kind of enjoy reading the book anticipating some new information - and there were a few morsels, but not nearly enough. Her family are barely mentioned, but we get what seems every detail of every album she's ever recorded! It just feels impersonal - I wanted to read about Madonna, not about everything I already knew about her career. Only buy this if you know almost nothing about Madonna's life and career. You'll end up knowing alot about her career and chart positions etc. But you'll learn almost nothing about the woman herself. This is the biography of a career, not a person. I think I'll wait for the autobiography....
'Like An Icon': An Intimate Study and Portrait of Madonna
One Amazon.com reviewer complained that 'Like An Icon' is just a re-hashing of old stories and that there's not much to this biography. I totally disagree. 'Like An Icon' by Lucy O'Brien dismantles the curious and elusive celebrity and pop 'icon' known as Madonna and pieces her back together, revealing her motivations, fears, accomplishments, setbacks and failures. While other biographies seem to take a distant, detached observer stand-point, re-telling the same stories and quotes that appear in magazines or through a simple Google search, O'Brien manages to truly delve into Madonna and her psyche, making for an intimate and very revealing case study. Having listened to Madonna's music and albums, I was hesitant to give this biography a try because I was afraid it would be the usual run-of-the-mill biography that didn't reveal much more than I already knew. I am glad to say that I was completely wrong.
'Like An Icon' is not perfect. It's strange; it covers Madonna from birth through motherhood, from the debut self-titled 'Madonna' album through the very early stages of 'Hard Candy'. I expected the more recent material, perhaps the 2000s onward, would be the most revealing due to the access of information. This is not the case. The most telling chapters of the book are of early, pre-fame Madonna. We learn of her parents, of her relationship with her mother and her issues with her father and brothers, all of which are reflected in some of her modern songs. We learn of Madonna's sexual assault, and how she manages to embrace sex later on in her career in an attempt to profit from it. The book reveals back stories of many of her albums and individual songs, making for a very interesting read. As a reader, I found myself most interested in reading of how Madonna approached each album and how each was, in some way, an attempt to either top herself or a response to the previous album's failure. The reader is treated to very rare side of Madonna; an intimate, up-close and personal look at a woman deemed an icon. She's revealed to be shy, reserved, unsure of herself at times. Yet, as the chapters go forward, and we see Madonna evolve from a dancer trying to make it in New York to a spiritual, devoted mother grappling with the desire for fame and immortality while rising above her flaws.
In a curious move, I found the later or modern chapters of 'Like An Icon' to be lacking in some respect. The earlier chapters reveal a very colorful portrait of Madonna, making you believe that O'Brien was always behind her and taking notes from conception through each album. The later chapters reveals a very changed Madonna; one who is in some respects more tame, conservative, coarse and a tad bit unlikable. There's less insight into the album and music-making process after the 'Ray of Light' era. While O'Brien touches on everything from 'Music', 'American Life', the tours, the infamous VMA Britney smooch, these chapters felt very reserved and pulled back, as if the older Madonna became, the more elusive she became and the harder it was to capture her essence in prose. By far the most interesting chapters were from the end of the 'Like a Prayer' era through the notorious 'Sex' chapter, showing how Madonna went from the safe 'pop' realm to the dark, adult artistic realm and how it threatened her fame and changed her.
After reading this biography, I feel as if I understand Madonna a great deal more. Even though the book doesn't delve into the 'Hard Candy' era, having read about Madonna's evolution through the years even has left me with some understanding as to why she may be, in some respects, finally looking back and going with styles and trends that aren't groundbreaking but are rather dated and familiar to her. O'Brien does a wonderful job of revealing situations and instances in Madonna's life that fans would recognize as themes in Madonna's musics, videos or photos. Yes, like any biography of a celebrity, especially one as exposed and one with a long career like that of Madonna, there's going to be rehashing of stories already told, familiar quotes, a sense of deja vu, but trust me - this is really the 'definitive' biography and the only one you will need to read if you are curious to know more about Madonna. It's not all pleasant; O'Brien's portrayal of Madonna in her later years is not very flattering and questions the star's motivations. Yet, this made the biography all the more great to me. This was a full, round-about look at Madonna and her rise to fame. It's an explanation of why she's managed to keep her career afloat through the years while many of her '80s contemporaries have faded off into obscurity. It's an explanation of why each generation still talks about Madonna and knows a different side or iteration of her. It's a case and study of why Madonna is indeed a pop icon and visual artist. This is a great story and holds little back; definitely worth your attention and read.




