The year 1973 was a weird year. The first cell phone was created, there was the Watergate Scandal, and $203,000 was stolen from the rock gods, Led Zeppelin, at the Drake Hotel in New York City. Who could have stolen all that money without anyone knowing?
Former editor of Playboy and current editor of Inked, Jason Buhrmester, have an intriguing answer to the question of who might have stolen the money in his debut novel, Black Dogs. Unlike Adam Rifkin’s film, Detriot Rock City, where the main character ,Lex, (played by actor, Giuseppe Andrews) and his three burnout friends plan to sneak into a Kiss concert in Detroit.
Readers are introduced to nineteen-year-old, Patrick Sullivan, returning to his hometown of Baltimore, Maryland from New York City with the plan to rob Led Zeppelin at Madison Square Garden. Sullivan proposes his idea to his “black acting” friend, Alex, who has just been released from jail for Patrick’s crime, Frenchy (his musician friend that lives with his hot young mom) and Keith (his tool headed mechanic friend that steals back stereos he installed in rich people’s cars).
What seems like a good idea to Patrick and his band of misfits turns into twist and turns of trying not to get caught. They get involved with the Holy Ghosts Christian motorcycle gang and even the Misty Mountain Hoppers Led Zeppelin Fan Club. If you do not like Led Zeppelin or have any knowledge of the band prior to reading Black Dogs, this is not the book for you. If you like a good heist book with grit and a Reservoir Dog appeal than you’ll love it.
Patrick is a huge Zeppelin fan. It seems that no one understands his connection with the band and though it is not explain throughout the book why he loves them so much, readers can connect with being young and loving music.
There are a lot of great rock mysteries that will never be solved. Did Nirvana, Kurt Cobain, really kill himself, what really happened between Nancy and Sid Vicious in the Chelsea Hotel that night? Buhrmester intrigues the reader with this answer and you might believe it after reading Black Dogs.
Monday, October 18, 2010
Sunday, October 10, 2010
Lipstick & Dynamite: The First Ladies of Wrestling
Who would have thought that the old women that power walk in the malls around America could have been women wrestlers. Well they were in the 1940s and 50s. Lipstick & Dynamite,Piss and Vinegar:The First Ladies of Wrestling, a documented film by Leah Leitman, that follow veteran female wrestlers to explain the history of its beginnings. Money hungry, over confident The Fabulous Moolah is one of the many shining stars in this bitter sweet documentary of hard working women. Lipstick & Dynamite is a good movie for a night of procrastination and still wanting to learn of unknown American history.
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