Goodbye, Guns N' Roses transports the reader into a mind-altering trip
through the colors, scandals, nihilism, and mythology that make Guns N'
Roses so much more than another "hair metal" band. A valentine and a
breakup letter to one of rock's most controversial bands. Goodbye, Guns
N' Roses is a genre-rattling attempt to explain the appeal of America's
most divisive rock band. While it includes uncharted history and the
self-lacerating connoisseurship of a Guns N' Roses fetishist, it is not
a recycled chronicle -- this book is a deconstruction of myth, one that
blends high and low art sketches to examine how Guns N' Roses impacted
popular culture. Unlike those who have penned other treatments of what
might be considered a clichéd subject, Art Tavana is not writing as a
GNR patriot or former employee. His book aims to provide an untethered
exploration that machetes through the jungle of propaganda camouflaging
GNR's explosive appeal. After circling the band's three-decade
plundering of American culture, Goodbye, Guns N' Roses uncovers a
postmodern portrait that persuades its viewer to think differently about
their symbolic importance. This is not a rock bio but a biography of
taste that treats a former "hair metal" band like a decomposing
masterpiece. This is the first Guns N' Roses book written for everyone;
from the Sunset Strip to a hyper-digital generation's connection to
"Woke Axl," it is a pop investigation that dodges no bullets.