| Product Summary | | Format: Paperback | | ISBN: 9780060988531 | | Publisher: ReganBooks | | Publish Date: 10/1/2005 | | Buy.com Sku: 31192349 | | Item#: R3S97Y | | Dimensions (in Inches) 9H x 8L x 0.75T | | Pages: 272 |
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| | | This collection of 600 black-and-white photo-strips was compiled by rock star Navarro, who placed a photo booth in his home and opened his doors. Includes hilarious stories, tell-all anecdotes and other rare glimpses into the lives of the celebrities, drug dealers, and cleaning ladies who entered the booth. Annotation: In this Hollywood documentary, Dave Navarro, former guitarist of Jane's Addiction and the Red Hot Chilli Peppers, shares his experiment in which he required all of his house guests to step into his photo booth. In addition to strippers, drug dealers, and pizza delivery boys, several celebrities ended up in Navarro's photo album, including Leonardo DiCaprio, Keanu Reeves, and Marilyn Manson.
| PraiseEntertainment Weekly "This oddly compelling documentary-cum-coffe-table book pulls no punches." 10/22/2004Publishers Weekly "Weirdly fascinating..." 10/11/2004 |
| | Read A Chapter | Chapter One The Concept "Do you know what to do when somebody shoots up too much?" That's the first question Dave Navarro asked as we began this collaboration on June 1, 1998, making it clear that I had more than a life story on my hands; I had a life. Not a series of past events filtered through the dirty grate of memory, but a heart that was still beating. To document the beating of that heart was the goal, and if the past was relevant at all, it was only as the blood that coursed through that heart and gave it a reason to beat. Or to not beat. Because at times, that heart didn't want to beat. That night, Navarro showed me what he called his Spread movie. It began with a phone call to a rehab center. Navarro told the operator that he was in trouble and needed help badly; the operator said she'd call back later. The rest of the movie was a series of scenes he had filmed to the accompaniment of his music. It centered around three Click to read more... Chapter One The Concept "Do you know what to do when somebody shoots up too much?" That's the first question Dave Navarro asked as we began this collaboration on June 1, 1998, making it clear that I had more than a life story on my hands; I had a life. Not a series of past events filtered through the dirty grate of memory, but a heart that was still beating. To document the beating of that heart was the goal, and if the past was relevant at all, it was only as the blood that coursed through that heart and gave it a reason to beat. Or to not beat. Because at times, that heart didn't want to beat. That night, Navarro showed me what he called his Spread movie. It began with a phone call to a rehab center. Navarro told the operator that he was in trouble and needed help badly; the operator said she'd call back later. The rest of the movie was a series of scenes he had filmed to the accompaniment of his music. It centered around three images: a spoon in a bowl of Jell-O, symbolizing the nourishment of his past; a spoon with a rock of cocaine, symbolizing the nourishment of his present; and a picture of his mother, the bond that connected both spoons. In the movie, he shoots up with a picture of his mother in the background, an image all the more disturbing if you consider that Navarro's mother was murdered by an ex-boyfriend, a man Navarro had grown to trust. Occasionally, that camera would pan to a computer screen, which displayed the phone number of his lawyer and directions on how to find a certain song in his CD changer. The movie seemed disgusting not because of the images, but because Navarro's eagerness to exploit a tragedy for the sake of a self-aggrandizing art film. At least, that's what I thought until Navarro said it wasn't an art film. It was his will. The song in the CD changer, which he wanted played over and over at his funeral, was "This Is How We Do It" by Montell Jordan ...
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Excerpted from Don't Try This at Homeby Dave Navarro Copyright © 2005 by Dave Navarro. Excerpted by permission. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher. Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.
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