From the acclaimed literary biographer of Kurt Vonnegut and Harper Lee
comes the life story of a song, one of the most iconic ever written:
John Lennon's "Imagine."
"Twenty-two lines of graceful, plain-spoken faith in the power of a
world to repair and change itself," said Rolling Stone. Only 183
seconds long, the simple melody and poetry captured the wounded
hopefulness of its moment - and transcended its time to inspire
generations that followed.
Charles J. Shields traces the song's origins - from the fire-bombing of
Tokyo during Yoko Ono's youth to the violent death of Lennon's mother
during his adolescence, from Lennon's post-Ed Sullivan skepticism to
John and Yoko's Bed-Ins of 1969 - and unearths the secrets of its
lasting import. If music can change the world, "Imagine" came as close
as any song might. This is its story.