“Duane Allman was my big brother, my partner, my best friend. I thought I knew everything there was to know about him, but Galadrielle’s
deep and insightful book came as a revelation to me, as it will to everyone who reads it.”
—Gregg Allman“Galadrielle Allman offers a
moving and poetic portrait of her late father.”
—Rolling Stone “
Poignant and illuminating . . . brings Duane Allman to life in a way that no other biography will ever be able to do.”
—BookPage “[Allman’s] descriptions and scenes are
vivid, even cinematic. . . . The pleasure of reading
Please Be With Me lies as much in its lyrical prose as in its insider anecdotes.”
—Newsweek “A
compelling and intimate portrait of Duane.”
—The Hollywood Reporter “
Illuminating.”
—Kirkus Reviews “Frequently touching . . .
Readers will come away feeling more connected to the man and his music.”
—Publishers Weekly“If you have ever been part of a family that has no photograph left behind to record its wholeness, you know what the absence of that picture does to you: Its nonexistence is itself a portrait of an incomplete heart that doesn’t contain you. Galadrielle Allman grew up in the territory of that loss, trying to understand a father who held her but who she never got to hold in return. Her account of the life of Duane Allman—rock and roll’s most lyrical guitarist—is
the most moving music biography I’ve ever read. Better than that, Galadrielle has uncovered the heart and motivations, the desolation and saving graces, of the man, and lays it plain in a born-to-write southern voice. She has looked into absence, and from it she has salvaged two hearts: her father’s and her own.”
—Mikal Gilmore, author of Shot in the Heart “ ‘You can live forever inside a goodbye,’ Galadrielle Allman knows. But then you embrace it, explore it, and call forth its witnesses. In lyrical prose, and with love and wisdom, the now-mature daughter of guitar legend Duane Allman, who died at twenty-four when she was two, meditates on his outsized grip on her life, and retraces that life, and her mother’s, sending us to the South at the end of the sixties, when girls were hapless hippie goddesses, music was male and muscular, and even redneck culture was being transformed. But beyond that vibrant portrait is a comfort. We
all idealize someone who left us long ago; we
all romanticize
some memory. This story invites us to savor our own secret intersection of nostalgia and emotional mercy, and it feels very, very good to have
soulful, elegant company as we do.”
—Sheila Weller, author of the New York Times bestseller Girls Like Us: Carole King, Joni Mitchell, Carly Simon—and the Journey of a Generation