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Michael Jackson: The Magic and the Madness
 
 
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Michael Jackson: The Magic and the Madness [Paperback]

J. Randy Taraborrelli
4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (52 customer reviews)
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Product details

  • Paperback: 704 pages
  • Publisher: Pan; New Ed edition (4 Jun 2004)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0330420054
  • ISBN-13: 978-0330420051
  • Product Dimensions: 19.6 x 13 x 5 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (52 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 232,877 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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J. Randy Taraborrelli
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Product Description

Review

'Taraborrelli...has put together by far the most detailed account of [Jackson's] life, not flinching from the gorier facts.'
--Evening Standard

`Anyone wanting a reliably solid account of Michael Jackson's life should continue to turn to J Randy Taraborrelli's biography.'
--Observer

`Backlist doesn't get any hotter than this.'
--The Bookseller

Product Description

The definitive biography of Michael Jackson by acclaimed biographer J. Randy Taraborrelli.

Inside This Book (Learn More)
Browse Sample Pages
Front Cover | Copyright | Table of Contents | Excerpt | Index | Back Cover
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Customer Reviews

52 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.3 out of 5 stars (52 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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42 of 43 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Fair and honest, 2 July 2004
By 
Louise Jones (Gloucestershire United Kingdom) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Michael Jackson: The Magic and the Madness (Paperback)
One good aspect of this book is that Taraborrelli has met and interviewed Michael Jackson. he hasn't relied on second hand information to make dangerous conclusions about the king of pop. i am a dedicated Michael Jackson fan, and on recieving my copy of "The Magic and the Madness" i was quite sceptical about the accuracy of the "facts" within. I must say i have never read such a balanced book about Michael Jackson. I would recomend this book to anyone who has an intrest in MJ or the truth. It gives the "evidence" of the Chandler events in a way that all readers can see how ludicrous these accusations actually were. Well worth the money.
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13 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A quite superb, engrossing read, 7 Aug 2009
By 
Mr. G. Lenaghan "Lenaghan" (Northern England) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Michael Jackson: The Magic and the Madness (Paperback)
I have to agree with many of the other reviewers: this was a book to keep me awake at night and delay the progress of many seemingly more imperative things in my life! At risk of repeating that which has been stated already, this is quite simply an incredibly detailed account of the life of Michael Jackson from his birth up until 2004. It covers his childhood living in an impossibly cramped house by any standards, alongside his siblings and parents amid the grime and gangs of Gary, Indiana; his later accession to fame as a member of the Jackson 5, helped by the tenaciousness of his father in getting the brothers first signed up at Motown; his painful experiences which later led to his seemingly interminable succession of changes of personal appearance; and his breakaway and independence as a successful solo artist beyond, through the Off the Wall, Thriller and Bad eras. As Taraborrelli quite fairly puts it, "to describe Jackson as having staggeringly succeeded would be to state the obvious".

As for what kind of experience you derive from this book aside from sheer accessibility to such obvious subject areas, albeit in so gloriously heavy detail, there were, of course, some discrepancies between what I expected prior to reading, and what information and impression of Jackson's life Taraborrelli goes on to furnish us with. I'd never quite gathered previous to my reading of this book, for example, just how fundamental and lingering an influence in MJ's adult life had continued to be his brothers and family (particularly the other members of the Jackson 5 and Joseph, whose insistence and seemingly ever-adamant faith it was that Michael would surely one day rejoin them to tour after 1984's Victory Tour, such to the point that this apparently remained on MJ's conscience whenever they otherwise attempted to lend their thus unwanted periodic public support to him during such troublesome times as the two instances of child sexual abuse accusations). Such ordeals into which he was dragged include the La Toya/Jack Gordon scenario and the Jackson/Moonies reunion project, eventually aborted, the latter of which I have certainly never read of either before or since.

Elsewhere, I was also initially a little surprised at Taraborrelli's squeezing of three of MJ's later albums (HIStory, Blood on the Dance Floor and Invincible) into one short chapter, only really briefly touching in any way on the artistic process involved within them and their videos - particularly noticeable given his seeming tendency during the Jackson 5/Motown section of the book to devote a chapter each to every little minutiae of development on such events as their decision to leave that label. In this later stage of the book, you do get the impression that he is either simply reduced to commenting from afar on the basis of a lack of later contact with Jackson, or otherwise presumably not terribly enthused by MJ's later work (there isn't even a section devoted specifically to any of Dangerous, the album; only the accompanying tour is really talked of during the phase where he is principally interested in discussing the Jordie Chandler situation which was erupting at that same time). Basically all of 1991 is missed out in his eagerness to transfer between the excellently documented run-up to the release of Dangerous when MJ fired manager Frank DiLeo, left John Branca and came under the influence of David Geffen. Whatever, maybe I'm just nitpicking here, given how much I adore the whole book, but it would have been nice nonetheless to hear more thoughts on MJ's artistic approach to his later music, for those of us who grew up following the MJ of the 1990s and early 2000s, as I did. Nonetheless, he doesn't let up on the overall detail during this period of MJ's life, as per the rest of the book, covering his marriages to Lisa Marie Presley and Debbie Rowe, the HIStory World Tour, the Martin Bashir documentary and all its fallout and, of course, his later realignment of his biggest priority in his life from show business to his children, a surprising development catalyzed by the sheer trauma of the Chandler ordeal.

Taraborrelli speculates, albeit insightfully, on the lack of wisdom on the MJ team's part of planting such outlandish media stories in the later 1980s (concerning the hyperbaric chamber and Joseph Merrick's bones, most famously) designed to promote a `wacky' image for Jackson; this policy later led to the previous careful manipulation of his image spinning precariously out of control as, in contradiction to MJ's own initial conclusion of an ability of his to "control the media", news outlets seized the initiative to weave all manner of their own pernicious tales. Comparable treatment is afforded to such claims made by MJ and his team as his outlandish Neverland lifestyle from 1988 effectively being a compensation for his `lost childhood'; Taraborrelli points out that even if this were true, as of 2004 (the date of the book's publication) this would have meant that MJ would have effectively compensated twice over; instead, he suggests that perhaps MJ simply missed his childhood, more than he ever actually missed out. He contemplates MJ's apparent continued immaturity and lack of awareness, reflected in his mistakes, and openly ponders why he doesn't seem to understand the world's less positive responses to his actions, or, associated with that, feel any real willingness to `grow up' or become more rational. All in all, the book's tone is objective, showing as much fascination in MJ as any star-struck fan or the most repulsed or outraged critic, while never really expressing as extreme a sentiment as either entity, instead reasoning so constantly and serenely as to lead you to believe even his more speculative observations of MJ's life to be probably true.

This is quite possibly the mostly rawly readable book I have read in my life. I devoured it in a week. It is to be absolutely, unhesitatingly recommended.
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11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Really good read, 9 Aug 2009
This review is from: Michael Jackson: The Magic and the Madness (Paperback)
I almost never review a book but this one compelled me to do so. I was a BIG fan back in the 80's and then waned a bit in the 90's. I, like possibly many others, believed the media hype about the molestation charges and that clouded my views of Michael Jackson. Upon hearing of his death though, it brought back all those great memories I had from his music and I was really sad that he had died so misunderstood.

I bought this book on a whim right after the news broke of Michael Jackson's death and I'm glad I did. I COULD NOT put the book down and that rarely happens. I was fascinated about how Michael Jackson became who is was. I have a whole different view of him now and wish I had never believed all the hype about him.

A true humanitarian doesn't tell about his good deeds but I wish SOMEONE had as I never really knew about all the charities he supported or the good work that he did.

I thought the author handled many of the sensitive subjects well and remained very objective. I think I read a reviewer's post that it sounded like the author was agreeing with the charges against Michael Jackson. I didn't get that at all. The author seemed quite objective and sensitive to it all. He only cautioned that maybe Michael should have been more careful and not so naive. No matter how innocent something might be and no matter how much Michael might say he had a pure heart, there are people out there who aren't pure thinkers. I think his sweetness and naivety set him up to be a victim of people who might have seen him as an easy mark.

All in all this was a really good read and I wish I had read it many years ago when I started to doubt Michael Jackson which then tainted my love of his music. I'm now curious to read the authors new book to see what additions he has added as well as Aphrodite Jones' book. I recommend this book for die hard fans as well as so so fans.
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