It’s an easy test to fail. The Book Test. Early on in a relationship, be it romantic or platonic, one party will test the other by giving them a book. And not just any book. Not merely the last book they read or one they thought the other person might like. If only. No, any book you’re given soon after you meet someone should be accompanied by a loud warning siren because it’s a test and invariably, it will determine your future relationship.
Years ago, after dinner on our first date, a guy I really liked took me to a late night bookstore. How cool, I thought. Better than, you know, taking me to a sex shop or to meet his dealer. Those are – cough – different stories perhaps best shared another time. Or not!
Anyway, back to the bookshop. It turned out we weren’t there to browse. To my delight, my date went straight up to the counter and bought me a book called Wonderland Avenue which he described as “Brilliant! Fantastic! Amazing!”. Book Test books are always described this way. Also ‘life-changing’. Nothing like managing expectations. No pressure.
Wikipedia describes Wonderland Avenue as a memoir that “…covers the first eight years of author Danny Sugerman’s career, starting with his first job at age 12 opening the Doors’ fan mail, and concluding just beyond his 21st birthday, when he is a frail and severely drug-addicted mental patient who has been given less than a week to live. His exposure to the decadent music industry world of parties, groupies, and drugs at such a young age facilitates a relentless heroin addiction that very nearly killed him. Notable is Sugerman’s close personal friendship with late Doors frontman Jim Morrison, who served as a kind of mentor. The book chronicles the decadence of the LA rock and roll lifestyle, lived to its most degrading and shocking extremes, in the early to mid-1970’s.”