cover image Under a Rock: A Memoir

Under a Rock: A Memoir

Chris Stein. St. Martin’s, $30 (304p) ISBN 978-1-250-28672-7

Blondie guitarist Stein (Point of View) chronicles in this knockabout personal history the colorful scenesters, grueling gigs, and desperate scrounging for drugs that have marked his musical career. Among other episodes, he recalls a Brooklyn boyhood in the 1950s and ’60s ; coming-of-age as a hippie; his musical and romantic linkup with Blondie front-woman Debbie Harry in the early 1970s; the band’s breakthrough with such hits as 1979’s “Heart of Glass”; and the exhausting tours, creative tensions, and escalating drug use that partly led to the band’s 1982 breakup. The last chapters slow down to cover Blondie’s return to touring after a 17-year hiatus along with Stein’s marriage and family life. The atmospheric narrative immerses readers in gonzo celebrity cameos (“Phil [Spector] came to the door... performatively drunk and doing a W.C. Fields voice”), grungy punk tableaux, and rock star excesses, though Stein keeps a clear eye on the consequences of such a lifestyle. In the book’s heartbreaking epilogue, he discusses his teenage daughter’s death from a heroin overdose in 2023 (“I thought that I presented my own drug experiences in a negative light to our kids... I’m wracked with guilt that any discussions might have been misconstrued”). The result is a candid if somewhat chaotic account of life in the spotlight. (June)