Clapton: The Autobiography
Clapton: The Autobiography book cover

Clapton: The Autobiography

Paperback – May 27, 2008

Price
$15.99
Format
Paperback
Pages
345
Publisher
Broadway Books
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0767925365
Dimensions
5.2 x 0.9 x 8 inches
Weight
11.8 ounces

Description

“Like the bluesmen who inspired him, Clapton has his share of scars... his compelling memoir is... a soulful performance.” — People “An absorbing tale of artistry, decadence, and redemption.” — Los Angeles Times “One of the very best rock autobiographies ever.” — Houston Chronicle “A glorious rock history.” — New York Post “This book does what many rock historians couldn’t: It debunks the legend... puts a lie to the glamour of what it means to be a rock star.” —Greg Kot, Chicago Tribune “Strong stuff. Clapton reveals its author’s journey to self-acceptance and manhood. Anyone who cares about the man and his music will want to take the trip with him.” —Anthony DeCurtis, Rolling Stone “Clapton is honest... even searing and often witty, with a hard-won survivor’s humor... an honorable badge of a book.” —Stephen King , New York Times Book Review “Riveting” — Boston Herald “An even, unblinking sensibility defines the author’s voice.” — New York Times “An unsparing self-portrait.” — USA Today ERIC CLAPTON is married to Melia McEnery and is the father of four daughters. He lives outside London. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Growing Up Early in my childhood, when I was about six or seven, I began to get the feeling that there was something different about me. Maybe it was the way people talked about me as if I weren’t in the room. My family lived at 1, the Green, a tiny house in Ripley, Surrey, which opened directly onto the village Green. It was part of what had once been almshouses and was divided into four rooms; two poky bedrooms upstairs, and a small front room and kitchen downstairs. The toilet was outside, in a corrugated iron shed at the bottom of the garden, and we had no bathtub, just a big zinc basin that hung on the back door. I don’t remember ever using it.Twice a week my mum used to fill a smaller tin tub with water and sponge me down, and on Sunday afternoons I used to go and have a bath at my Auntie Audrey’s, my dad’s sister, who lived in the new flats on the main road. I lived with Mum and Dad, who slept in the main bedroom overlooking the Green, and my brother, Adrian, who had a room at the back. I slept on a camp bed, sometimes with my parents, sometimes downstairs, depending on who was staying at the time. The house had no electricity, and the gas lamps made a constant hissing sound. It amazes me now to think that whole families lived in these little houses.My mum had six sisters: Nell, Elsie, Renie, Flossie, Cath, and Phyllis, and two brothers, Joe and Jack. On a Sunday it wasn’t unusual for two or three of these families to show up, and they would pass the gossip and get up–to–date with what was happening with us and with them. In the smallness of this house, conversations were always being carried on in front of me as if I didn’t exist, with whispers exchanged between the sisters. It was a house full of secrets. But bit by bit, by carefully listening to these exchanges, I slowly began to put together a picture of what was going on and to understand that the secrets were usually to do with me. One day I heard one of my aunties ask, “Have you heard from his mum?” and the truth dawned on me, that when Uncle Adrian jokingly called me a little bastard, he was telling the truth.The full impact of this realization upon me was traumatic, because at the time I was born, in March 1945—in spite of the fact that it had become so common because of the large number of overseas soldiers and airmen passing through England—an enormous stigma was still attached to illegitimacy. Though this was true across the class divide, it was particularly so among working–class families such as ours, who, living in a small village community, knew little of the luxury of privacy. Because of this, I became intensely confused about my position, and alongside my deep feelings of love for my family there existed a suspicion that in a tiny place like Ripley, I might be an embarrassment to them that they always had to explain.The truth I eventually discovered was that Mum and Dad, Rose and Jack Clapp, were in fact my grandparents, Adrian was my uncle, and Rose’s daughter, Patricia, from an earlier marriage, was my real mother and had given me the name Clapton. In the mid–1920s, Rose Mitchell, as she was then, had met and fallen in love with Reginald Cecil Clapton, known as Rex, the dashing and handsome, Oxford–educated son of an Indian army officer. They had married in February 1927, much against the wishes of his parents, who considered that Rex was marrying beneath him. The wedding took place a few weeks after Rose had given birth to their first child, my uncle Adrian. They set up home in Woking, but sadly, it was a short–lived marriage, as Rex died of consumption in 1932, three years after the birth of their second child, Patricia.Rose was heartbroken. She returned to Ripley, and it was ten years before she was married again, after a long courtship on his part, to Jack Clapp, a master plasterer. They were married in 1942, and Jack, who as a child had badly injured his leg and therefore been exempt from call–up, found himself stepfather to Adrian and Patricia. In 1944, like many other towns in the south of England, Ripley found itself inundated with troops from the United States and Canada, and at some point Pat, age fifteen, enjoyed a brief affair with Edward Fryer, a Canadian airman stationed nearby. They had met at a dance where he was playing the piano in the band. He turned out to be married, so when she found out she was pregnant, she had to cope on her own. Rose and Jack protected her, and I was born secretly in the upstairs back bedroom of their house on March 30, 1945. As soon as it was practical, when I was in my second year, Pat left Ripley, and my grandparents brought me up as their own child. I was named Eric, but Ric was what they all called me.Rose was petite with dark hair and sharp, delicate features, with a characteristic pointed nose, “the Mitchell nose,” as it was known in the family and which was inherited from her father, Jack Mitchell. Photographs of her as a young woman show her to have been very pretty, quite the beauty among her sisters. But at some point at the outset of the war, when she had just turned thirty, she underwent surgery for a serious problem with her palate. During the operation there was a power cut that resulted in the surgery having to be abandoned, leaving her with a massive scar underneath her left cheekbone that gave the impression that a piece of her cheek had been hollowed out. This left her with a certain amount of self-consciousness. In his song “Not Dark Yet,” Dylan wrote, “Behind every beautiful face there’s been some kind of pain.” Her suffering made her a very warm person with a deep compassion for other people's dilemmas. She was the focus of my life for much of my upbringing.Jack, her second husband and the love of her life, was four years younger than Rose. A shy, handsome man, over six feet tall with strong features and very well built, he had a look of Lee Marvin about him and used to smoke his own roll–ups, made from a strong, dark tobacco called Black Beauty. He was authoritarian, as fathers were in those days, but he was kind, and very affectionate to me in his way, especially in my infant years. We didn’t have a very tactile relationship, as all the men in our family found it hard to express feelings of affection or warmth. Perhaps it was considered a sign of weakness. Jack made his living as a master plasterer, working for a local building contractor. He was a master carpenter and a master bricklayer, too, so he could actually build an entire house on his own.An extremely conscientious man with a very strong work ethic, he brought in a very steady wage, which didn’t ever fluctuate for the whole time I was growing up, so although we could have been considered poor, we rarely had a shortage of money. When things occasionally did get tight, Rose would go out and clean other people’s houses, or work part–time at Stansfield’s, a bottling company with a factory on the outskirts of the village that produced fizzy drinks such as lemonade, orangeade, and cream soda. When I was older I used to do holiday jobs there, sticking on labels and helping with deliveries, to earn pocket money. The factory was like something out of Dickens, reminiscent of a workhouse, with rats running around and a fierce bull terrier that they kept locked up so it wouldn’t attack visitors.Ripley, which is more like a suburb today, was deep in the country when I was born. It was a typical small rural community, with most of the residents being agricultural workers, and if you weren’t careful about what you said, then everybody knew your business. So it was important to be polite. Guildford was the main shopping town, which you could get to by bus, but Ripley had its own shops, too. There were two butchers, Conisbee’s and Russ’s, and two bakeries, Weller’s and Collins’s, a grocer’s, Jack Richardson’s, Green’s the paper shop, Noakes the ironmonger, a fish–and–chip shop, and five pubs. King and Olliers was the haberdashers where I got my first pair of long trousers, and it doubled as a post office, and we had a blacksmith where all the local farm horses came in for shoes.Every village had a sweet shop; ours was run by two old-fashioned sisters, the Miss Farrs. We would go in there and the bell would go ding–a–ling–a–ling , and one of them would take so long to come out from the back of the shop that we could fill our pockets up before a movement of the curtain told us she was about to appear. I would buy two Sherbert Dabs or a few Flying Saucers, using the family ration book, and walk out with a pocketful of Horlicks or Ovaltine tablets, which had become my first addiction.In spite of the fact that Ripley was, all in all, a happy place to grow up in, life was soured by what I had found out about my origins. The result was that I began to withdraw into myself. There seemed to have been some definite choices made within my family regarding how to deal with my circumstances, and I was not made privy to any of them. I observed the code of secrecy that existed in the house—“We don’t talk about what went on”—and there was also a strong disciplinarian authority in the household, which made me nervous about asking any questions. On reflection, it occurs to me that the family had no real idea of how to explain my own existence to me, and that the guilt attached to that made them very aware of their own shortcomings, which would go a long way in explaining the anger and awkwardness that my presence aroused in almost everybody. As a result I attached myself to the family dog, a black Labrador called Prince, and created a character for myself, whose name was “Johnny Malingo.” Johnny was a suave, devil–may–care man/boy of the world who rode roughshod over anyone who got in his way. I would escape into Johnny when things got too much for me, and stay there until the storm had passed. I also invented a fantasy friend called Bushbranch, a small horse who went with me everywhere. Sometimes Johnny would magically become a cowboy and climb onto Bushbranch, and together they would ride off into the sunset. At the same time, I started to draw quite obsessively. My first fascination was with pies. A man used to come to the village Green pushing a barrow, which was his container for hot pies. I had always loved pies—Rose was an excellent cook—and I produced hundreds of drawings of them and of the pie man. Then I turned to copying from comics.Because I was illegitimate, Rose and Jack tended to spoil me. Jack actually made my toys for me. I remember, for example, a beautiful sword and shield that he made me by hand. It was the envy of all the other kids. Rose bought me all the comics I wanted. I seemed to get a different one every day, always The Topper, The Dandy, The Eagle, and The Beano. I particularly loved the Bash Street Kids, and I always used to notice when the artists would change and Lord Snooty’s top hat would be different in some way. Over the years I copied countless drawings from these comics—cowboys and Indians, Romans, gladiators, and knights in armor. Sometimes at school I did no classwork at all, and it became quite normal to see all of my textbooks full of nothing but drawings.School for me began when I was five, at Ripley Church of England Primary School, which was situated in a flint building next to the village church. Opposite was the village hall, where I attended Sunday school, and where I first heard a lot of the old, beautiful English hymns, my favorite of which was “Jesus Bids Us Shine.” At first I was quite happy going to school. Most of the kids who lived on the Green next to us started at the same time, but as the months went by, and it dawned on me that this was it for the long haul, I began to panic. The feelings of insecurity I had about my home life made me hate school. All I wanted to be was anonymous, which kept me out of entering any kind of competitive event. I hated anything that would single me out and get me unwanted attention.I also felt that sending me to school was just a way of getting me out of the house, and I became very resentful. One master, quite young, a Mr. Porter, seemed to have a real interest in unearthing the children's gifts or skills, and becoming acquainted with us in general. Whenever he tried this with me, I would become extremely resentful. I would stare at him with as much hatred as I could muster, until he eventually caned me for what he called “dumb insolence.” I don’t blame him now; anyone in a position of authority got that kind of treatment from me. Art was the only subject that I really enjoyed, though I did win an award for playing “Greensleeves” on the recorder, which was the first instrument I ever learned to play.The headmaster, Mr. Dickson, was a Scotsman with a shock of red hair. I had very little to do with him until I was nine years old, when I was called up before him for making a lewd suggestion to one of the girls in my class. While playing on the Green, I had come across a piece of homemade pornography lying in the grass. It was a kind of book, made of pieces of paper crudely stapled together with rather amateurish drawings of genitalia and a typed text full of words I had never heard of. My curiosity was aroused because I hadn’t had any kind of sex education, and I had certainly never seen a woman’s genitalia. In fact, I wasn't even certain if boys were different from girls until I saw this book.Once I recovered from the shock of seeing these drawings, I was determined to find out about girls. I was too shy to ask any of the girls I knew at school, but there was this new girl in class, and because she was new, it was open season on her. As luck would have it, she was put at the desk directly in front of me in the classroom, so one morning I plucked up courage and asked her, without any idea of what the words meant, “Do you fancy a shag?” She looked at me with a bemused expression, because she obviously didn’t have a clue what I was talking about, but at playtime she went and told another girl what I’d said, and asked what it meant. After lunch I was summoned to the headmaster’s office, where, after being quizzed as to exactly what I had said to her and being made to promise to apologize, I was bent over and given six of the best. I left in tears, and the whole episode had a dreadful effect on me, as from that point on I tended to associate sex with punishment, shame, and embarrassment, feelings that colored my sexual life for years. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • With striking intimacy and candor, Eric Clapton tells the story of his eventful and inspiring life in this poignant and honest autobiography.
  • More than a rock star, Eric Clapton is an icon, a living embodiment of the history of rock music. Well known for his reserve in a profession marked by self-promotion, flamboyance, and spin, he now chronicles, for the first time, his remarkable personal and professional journeys. Born illegitimate in 1945 and raised by his grandparents, Eric never knew his father and, until the age of nine, believed his actual mother to be his sister. In his early teens his solace was the guitar, and his incredible talent would make him a cult hero in the clubs of Britain and inspire devoted fans to scrawl “Clapton is God” on the walls of London’s Underground. With the formation of Cream, the world's first supergroup, he became a worldwide superstar, but conflicting personalities tore the band apart within two years. His stints in Blind Faith, in Delaney and Bonnie and Friends, and in Derek and the Dominos were also short-lived but yielded some of the most enduring songs in history, including the classic “Layla.” During the late sixties he played as a guest with Jimi Hendrix and Bob Dylan, as well as the Beatles, the Rolling Stones, and longtime friend George Harrison. It was while working with the latter that he fell for George’s wife, Pattie Boyd, a seemingly unrequited love that led him to the depths of despair, self-imposed seclusion, and drug addiction. By the early seventies he had overcome his addiction and released the bestselling album
  • 461 Ocean Boulevard
  • , with its massive hit “I Shot the Sheriff.” He followed that with the platinum album
  • Slowhand
  • , which included “Wonderful Tonight,” the touching love song to Pattie, whom he finally married at the end of 1979. A short time later, however, Eric had replaced heroin with alcohol as his preferred vice, following a pattern of behavior that not only was detrimental to his music but contributed to the eventual breakup of his marriage. In the eighties he would battle and begin his recovery from alcoholism and become a father. But just as his life was coming together, he was struck by a terrible blow: His beloved four-year-old son, Conor, died in a freak accident. At an earlier time Eric might have coped with this tragedy by fleeing into a world of addiction. But now a much stronger man, he took refuge in music, responding with the achingly beautiful “Tears in Heaven.”
  • Clapton
  • is the powerfully written story of a survivor, a man who has achieved the pinnacle of success despite extraordinary demons. It is one of the most compelling memoirs of our time.

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Most Helpful Reviews

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Claptrap

I think Eric Clapton would have been better off not to have written this book at all. Of course I'm sure he wrote it for the money, but the portrait it paints is neither sympathetic nor admirable even though he lobbies hard for both. As others have pointed out, his self-pitying stance gets old quickly and his lack of remorse is shocking. Clapton's sociopathic behavior toward women and his associates makes him look like a one man destruction derby.

Case in point, his description of his affair with Lory Del Santo is very disconcerting. I had to read it several times to comprehend that convoluted mess. First, he actively pursues an Italian woman to "date" while still married to Pattie Boyd, whom he had pleaded with to move back in with him after a trial separation. He mentions that Del Santo was the girlfriend of arms dealer Adnan Khashoggi, as if that's something to brag about. Incomprehensibly, within a few days they decide they'd make attractive children together so she agrees to get pregnant. Shortly thereafter he decides she isn't somebody he'll ever commit to but still goes ahead with their baby-making plan. Clearly, Clapton's only interest in her is as a baby-recepticle to carry his child. But then when she tells him she's pregnant guess what happens? He runs back to Pattie Boyd! Did you follow all that? Predictably, things don't turn out very well, especially for their son Conor who pays the ultimate price for shoddy parenting. When Clapton discusses his deceased son he does so with a disturbing detachment that sounds like he's talking about somebody else's child and not his own flesh and blood. All of it just leaves a sour taste.

Another odd piece to this puzzle is Clapton's discussion of his current wife, Melia. Obviously, she has had an enormous impact on his life but you never get any sense at all of who she is except that she has given him 3 children, that she mostly looks after, has acquired his hobbies, shares his interests, prepares his meals, and follows in his footsteps. She sounds like his "Mini-Me" who has taken up where Patti Boyd left off. It's a peculiar irony that for all of his misogynistic behavior he now has 4 daughters.

The inventory of faux pas, debauchery and self-indulgent behavior go on and on. Even his charitable endeavors leave the impression that ultimately he is doing them for himself, and that sobriety itself has become another self-indulgent addiction.

The bottom line here is to skip the sordid tale and just enjoy his music.
34 people found this helpful
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Please don't read this poorly written book about a disgusting character

Having been a fan of Clapton's recordings for decades, I am shocked to find out what a disgusting, vile person he is, according to his own (quite poor, stylistically and grammatically) writing. His remorseless confessions are utterly disheartening. No abuse of anything or anyone is beneath him. Manipulating and abusing lovers and girlfriends, betraying a good friend and stealing his wife, addicting a teenager to drugs so she is ruined and dies, ridiculing former collaborators, who have been some of the best rock musicians ever, taking advantage of anyone and using everyone for own selfish benefit.....etc. etc. ad nauseam. If you respect and like Clapton as a musician, please don't read this book - you will be sorry you did! The sordid tale of how incorrigibly bad, cruel, nasty and drug-addicted he was/is, never ends and only gets worse and worse, as the guy can't refrain from bragging about his money, houses, boats etc., when all he should have been talking about is how lucky he is to still be alive and not have ended like the 16-year old girl he fatally ruined. The lack of remorse is staggering, including about the death of his own son. The disrespect to legendary rock musicians like George Harrison or Ginger Baker only reinforces the feeling of ugly, pathetic, sociopathic behavior. It all amounts to a disgusting story written poorly, with a lot of mistakes, terrible style, amateurish vocabulary and grammatical errors. Save your money and don't buy this book
24 people found this helpful
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Clapton Must Be The Luckiest Man Alive.

I play guitar, so I know Clapton's works and guitar playing. Yngwie once said that Clapton has been playing the same blues pentatonic scale for over 40 years. That is true, but there's something special about his guitar playing. Anyway, I couldn't wait for this book and I am utterly disappointed.

He is self-indulgent and abusive to women. Although he claims that he and George Harrison were the best friends, he hardly talked about George's death in this book. As others have written, Eric doesn't seem like a person who can be a true friend.

Yet, he has somehow drawn a lot of good musicians to support him. He has always had good management. He doesn't have good composition skills. Most of his well-known songs were composed by others. Even the opening riff of Layla was not his composition. His vocals are nothing to write home about.

So, how does he have one of the best careers in rock? It's a mystery. He always had some people to help him. Well, I guess it's his talent to have that kind of people around him.

Getting back to the book itself, it's shallow and doesn't offer anything new. Basically, the whole book can be summarized as follows: I did tons of drugs, I drank tons of alcohol, and I abused women.
19 people found this helpful
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A Tribute to Clapton's Ego

I'll be honest- I could only get half way through this book. The first couple chapters are filled with the kind of details of Eric Clapton's early life that you can get off wikipedia- no sense of personal recollection- just dry boring facts. The rest of what I read was a little shocking. Eric Clapton reveals himself to be nothing more than a jerk who can play guitar. A man who has used and abused LOTS of people in his life, chalked it all up to the drugs and alcohol, shrugged his shoulders and moved on. After his supposed recovery journey he tells of dating 2 young women at the same time, until he finally settles on one and marries her. There's a sense that he was shopping for a caretaker and future mother for his children than love. The saddest part for me (and others if you read their reviews) is after years of admiring this man (even pity for his self destructive behaviors)I had to stop reading- I found I don't really LIKE who Eric Clapton is. I came away from this book thinking he's just as much a jerk sober as when he was drunk.
17 people found this helpful
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Better read than I thought it would be

I was torn on whether or not to even read this book after reading some of these reviews. I love a lot of Eric Clapton's music but didn't know much about his personal life. I knew some, I've read Pattie Boyd's biography and some others peoples from the same era but I didn't really have a clear picture of who Eric Clapton was. I have to agree with a lot of the other reviewers here, he doesn't always come across as the most likeable guy. Quite the opposite actually. He wasn't really a good friend to a lot of people. He definitely didn't treat women in a healthy way. He talks about them as objects of lust and things he desires to own much the same way someone else might refer to classic cars. He doesn't really talk about love- it's about looks and obsession and wanting them just to prove to himself that he could. Once that was accomplished the thrill was gone, the game was over and it was time to move on. He spent a lot of time with women he admitted he never even loved. Pretty harsh if you happen to be that woman. However, this is also where I have to give him some credit. His book is honest. It reads that way to me anyway. Telling the truth about your life and the people in it is not always easy and he's pretty blunt about things. I still prefer that over someone who tends to " sugarcoat" their story however. At times he almost shares too much information...I get that he was so drunk that he slept in a field all night but I didn't really need to hear how he defecated all over himself...that type of thing. Maybe it's just me but that was a little TMI. Regardless...in the end I realized that I don't dislike the man. He was a jerk in his younger years. Some of that may be related to his childhood ( he thought his Grandmother was his mother for a long time, etc.) I'm not one of those people who give people a pass when it comes to blaming their mistakes on childhood...and his wasn't abusive or anything but I do think that maybe that affected him to some degree. What I have no doubt affected him is his admitted addictions...especially to alcohol. Once he got sober he seemed to become a decent man. Also worth mentioning is that throughout the book, even during his younger years he does give praise to fellow musicians he respected and certain people that were in his life so even then he wasn't all bad.. He was always a great musician and he seems to have found stability and peace in his life. I wish him well and hope to hear more great music from him in the future.
11 people found this helpful
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Agree with RC Composer

This book is just like ec / shallow, vain, self absorbed and at times vengful. A silly chauvanistic child that even 12 step program can't help. He's still a dry alcoholic and drug addict, never able to change. I would put zero stars but the computer won't let me.
8 people found this helpful
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Terribly Dissapointed

This is the biography of a man who was literally at the center of rock music since its inception. He has played or performed with the most influential bands and personalities of this genre. You would think this would be a history of how the music of at least 3 generations developed. What you get is an overdose of drugs, alcohol, and lechery. I feel terribly sorry for someone with the talent and history of "Slow Hand" that he couldn't come up with more to say. I got really tired of the fanatical chase of his best friends wife. Love the music hate the book!
7 people found this helpful
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Fascinating Story

After reading some of the negative reviews written on this site, I delved into EC's autobiography with some skepticism. What I found was a most fascinating story covering 40 years of one of the greatest icons in the history of music. Expecting to find an egotistical tale of success(from someone actually dubbed "God"), I instead found Clapton to be an extremely humble, insecure and naive man, despite all his fame and fortune. He candidly tells his most inward thoughts and reveals many mistakes along the way.
The book begins in his early childhood when he learns his parents and brother are really his grandparents and uncle, and that his young mom wants little to do with him. This would leave any child feeling vulnerable and insecure, and Clapton is no exception. He believes this to be the cause of much of his erratic behavior and to his many poor choices of failed relationships throughout his life.
We follow him through swinging London in the '60s as he joins, and leaves, several legendary bands. Clapton explains how Cream was doomed before they even began; how he just wasn't into Blind Faith as much as he should have been; his lack of confidence was what kept him from going solo for so many years.
Clapton is painfully honest about his severe heroin and alcohol addictions, his botched suicide attempt and his obsession with Pattie Boyd. He describes how awkward it was to be good friends with George Harrison, all the while trying to steal his wife.

What I really enjoyed about this book was the humor as Clapton laughs at himself in retrospect at his naivete regarding his bizarre behavior. He discusses how he frequently brought derelicts home to his estate because he thought they might be more "real" than anyone else, but instead found them to be "barking mad and talking gibberish", with poor Pattie having to cook dinner for them all. There's the hilarious story of his being conned by a crazy woman from New York into performing spells and incantations in an attempt to win back Pattie's affections.

With this honest autobiography, Clapton has dared to lower himself from the pedestal and join the ranks of the "everyday" man who struggles to get by each day. This may be the best autobiography I have ever read.
7 people found this helpful
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Disappointing book.

As a big fan of Cream and Derek and the Dominoes and a lover of the Bluesbreaker album with Mayall I looked forward to reading Mr. Clapton's autobiography, especially concerning the early years. I found the author to be a very unlikeable, emotionally shallow, self absorbed narrator. He basically describes how he's screwed up everyone's life he has been associated with, including his own, with no apparent guilt or remorse. Sort of just a big whatever but it all ends well because he's happy now. Not an inspiring read at all.
7 people found this helpful
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Unforgivable

Some musicians' autobiographies are better than others, but rarely have I quit such a book halfway out of boredom and disgust. This is one of those books. After the episode where Clapton describes proposing to Pattie Boyd only after one of his friends makes the decision for him by leaking the story to the press, I just gave up. Seriously, this is the woman you supposedly love, yet you cannot be bothered to make up your own mind? It seems that throughout his life, Clapton merely went with the flow. He never once showed any strength of character, never once made an important decision or a sustained effort, never once acted as anything other than a shallow, selfish prick. While his musical legacy is undeniable, he did less with his talent than any other rock star of equivalent stature. But the worst part is, Clapton makes sex, drugs and rock'n'roll sound boring. And that is simply unforgivable.
6 people found this helpful