On October 15; 1967; bass player Steve Boone took the Ed Sullivan Show stage for the final time; with his band The Lovinrsquo; Spoonful. Since forming in a Greenwich Village hotel in early 1965; Boone and his bandmates had released an astounding nine Top 20 singles; the first seven of which hit the Billboard Top 10; including the iconic Boone co-writes ldquo;Summer in the Cityrdquo; and ldquo;You Didnrsquo;t Have to Be So Nice.rdquo;Little did Steve Boone know that the path of his life and career would soon take a turn for the bizarre; one that would eventually find him looking at the world through the bars of a jail cell. From captaining a seaworthy enterprise to smuggle marijuana into the U.S. from Colombia; to a period of addiction; to the successful reformation of the band hersquo;d helped made famous; Hotter Than a Match Head tells the story of Boonersquo;s personal journey along with that of one of the most important and enduring groups of the 1960s.
#2950030 in eBooks 2014-04-28 2014-04-28File Name: B00K5E0S0I
Review
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful. Toilets based on black holes seem a bit sillyBy CQCI was excited about this book because I like reading speculative futures; and this has 100 examples of such futures; with a specific focus on cities and ecology. The more and more I read through this book; though; the more disappointed I became. I write this post after reading about an art student who suggested creating toilets using black holes. This is a book of poorly thought out science fiction.