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Paperback Freddie & Me: A Coming-Of-Age (Bohemian) Rhapsody Book

ISBN: 1596914769

ISBN13: 9781596914766

Freddie & Me: A Coming-Of-Age (Bohemian) Rhapsody

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Very Good

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Book Overview

High Fidelity meets Wayne's World in this utterly charming graphic memoir about a young man's life-long obsession with the rock band Queen. All of us have had that one band with which we identify, the... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Darned good for a memoir.

Mike Dawson, Freddie and Me: A Coming-of-Age (Bohemian) Rhapsody (Bloomsbury, 2008) My general rule of thumb on memoirs is simple: I loathe them. I have encountered a few that have been worthwhile over the years (Ruth Reichl's food-porn series of memoirs, Wilson Smith's Just Dirt, a handful of others), but for the most part, they're uninteresting people going on about their uninteresting lives. Graphic novel memoirs alleviate this trend somewhat, as they tend to be short (at least), but there's still a divide between the really interesting memoirs (Alison Bechdel's much-praised Fun Home, for example) and the... others. (Blankets. For the love of god, Blankets.) I'm still not 100% sure on which side of the line Freddie and Me falls, but I'm leaning towards the "really interesting" side with the caveat that I'm about ten years older than Dawson, and grew up during Queen's true glory days; News of the World came out when I was eight (and "We Will Rock You" and "We Are the Champions" were unavoidable if you owned a radio). So seeing a band I was so fond of back in the day (and even now consider something of a guilty pleasure) through the eyes of someone who wasn't around until (ugh) Hot Space is quite amusing, in its way. Freddie and Me is the story of Mike Dawson growing up. This probably won't surprise you given that it's a memoir. He gives us his early years through the lens of his obsession with Queen and his younger sister's parallel obsession with Wham!. (Anyone familiar with recent Queen history will know where this is going pretty fast.) While he keeps things firmly planted in the realm of Freddie Mercury and Co., we see Dawson's early life in England, his family's transplantation to America in the early nineties (where the kids didn't know anything but "We Are the Champions", he tells us, until Wayne's World brought "Bohemian Rhapsody" back into vogue), his post-high school years, and some of his struggles to carve out a niche in the graphic novel world. Warts and all, of course, as most memoirs (especially graphic-novel memoirs) are. Have you ever thought to yourself that it would be really cool to read a memoir with a few less warts? I think that's part of the reason I've become so fond of Reichl's books; she spends so much time telling us about the food that the nastiness gets not glossed-over, exactly, but dealt with on a lower key than one finds in most memoirs I've experienced. Dawson has the wart problem, in that he remembers some astonishingly traumatic events with far more clarity than any of the good stuff, but about halfway through the book, he has the sense to do something I've never seen in a memoir before: he steps back, looks at it all, and (using the example of an altercation with a neighbor's father when he was a child) ponders whether his memory is correct, or whether he's subconsciously doctored it over the years. That's tough ground for a memoir to cover, especially in the age when memoir after memoir is being exposed

The title says it all

One of the few autobio graphic novels that justifies being labeled a "memoir." Dawson uses the British rock group Queen as a vehicle for discussing different periods of his unique personal history of growing up in England and moving to the States as a boy. He tells an episodic story in a way that still has the flow of a continuous narrative. Dawson's portrayal of his family dynamics expertly sketches in a sense of everybody's personality -- and the warmth they all feel for each other -- without ever once getting sentimental. The section "Guitar Solo," on the way memory works, is an absolute tour-de-force; it's a textbook example of the singular narrative power of comics.

A great read!!

Freddie & Me is an engaging graphic novel intelligently narrating the journey through adolescence of Mike Dawson. Once I started reading it I could hardly put it down & I read the whole thing in 2 days. A lot of parts left me laughing out loud as I could relate. This is a great gift for any Queen Fan, or any one who is a fan of a good graphic novel!

Engaging, Humorous Comic Book Saga

As a long-time fan of the rock band Queen and of the comic genre, what a pleasant surprise to see both elements combined into a terrific coming-of-age graphic novel. Mike Dawson's story is every rock fan's story. He describes his journey from England to America, with every youthful, cringe-filled incident somehow made better by the music of Queen. The artwork is terrific and I admire Mr. Dawson's bravery in telling his life story in painful detail! The book is a must for Queen fans -- there are so many things we've all done as fans in this book (like fantasize about meeting our heroes in person) that are told and drawn with flair and hilarity. I'm looking forward to Mr. Dawson's next book, Queen-related or not!

Really enjoyed this

I just finished this book (ahem...graphic novel) and really enjoyed it. I got it as a gift and wasn't sure what to expect. Its a funny, sweet, easy read about how the author related to Queen's music throughtout his life. Anyone who is a Queen/Freddie Mercury fan, or even just a music fan, should enjoy this.
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