Synopses & Reviews
Twenty years ago David Sheff climbed the back steps of the Dakota into the personal thoughts and dreams of John Lennon and Yoko Ono. From the kitchen to the studio and up those fateful Dakota steps, Sheff recorded 20 hours of tape, discussing everything from childhood to the Beatles.
Sheff gives a rare and last glimpse of John and Yoko, one that seemed to look beyond the kitchen table to the future of the world with startling premonitions of what was to come.
Synopsis
Coinciding with what would have been John Lennon's 60th birthday and the 20th anniversary of his death, this is the fascinating last substantive interview with Lennon and Yoko Ono. Interviewer David Scheff captures the couple at their most candid as they lounge around their New York apartment. 8-page photo insert.
About the Author
David Sheff's articles and interviews have appeared in
Playboy, The New York Times Magazine, Rolling Stone, Wired, Outside, The Los Angeles Times Magazine, Esquire and
Observer Magazine in England,
Foreign Literature in Russia and
Playboy (Shueisha) in Japan. He also writes for and is West Coast editor of
Yahoo! Internet Life magazine.
Other interviews, including those with Ansel Adams, nuclear physicist Ted Taylor, Gore Vidal, Steve Jobs, Tom Hanks, Scott Peck, Betty Friedan, and Keith Haring, received wide recognition, as did his "Portrait of a Generation" in Rolling Stone. His radio documentaries for National Public Radio on John Steinbeck's The Grapes of Wrath and Harper Lee's To Kill a Mockingbird won several awards.
When it first appeared in 1981, Sheff's "The Playboy Interviews With John Lennon and Yoko Ono," which has been described as "historic," "compelling and compassionate" and "definitive," was a Literary Guild selection.