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A native of the Southwest, Gary Tillery was born in Phoenix in 1947. In 1968-69 he served in Vietnam with the United States Air Force. His enlistment was over in 1970. After two decades in the business world, primarily as co-owner of an advertising agency in suburban Chicago, he turned his time and energy to his lifelong passion for literature and art. He published a collection of interrelated short stories set in Vietnam titled "Darkling Plain", and began a series of humorous novels featuring "soft-boiled" detective Jack Savage--the first two titled Death, Be Not Loud and To An Aesthete Dying Young. Tillery is also a professional sculptor. His most prominent work is the sculpture for the Vietnam Memorial in Chicago. He also created the bronze bust of Steve Allen for the Steve Allen Theater in Hollywood; and through his association with the Rotblatt-Amrany Studio he created, among other works, the life-size bronze of Luis Aparicio at U. S. Cellular Field.
John Lennon will likely be remembered for two things: helping found
the Beatles and writing the song Imagine. Those accomplishments,
however, only scratch the surface of a complex and fascinating
life. Writer and artist Tillery explores Lennon's spirituality as
it develops, beginning with childhood traumas, through his time
with the Beatles, and finally, in his role as a social activist.
Throughout his short life, Lennon fought many existential battles
with himself and whatever he thought of as God. To interpret
Lennon's spiritual hunger, Tillery draws upon the work of Victor
Frankl, the Austrian psychiatrist and WWII death camp survivor who
wrote volumes on the importance of people finding meaning in their
lives by focusing outward. The author characterizes Lennon as a
loving man who, in the latter part of his life, was able to find
some semblance of peace and to encourage others to do the same.
Lennon searched for and sang about the truth, discarding religious
indoctrination and accepted norms when they proved unhelpful. If
this is Lennon's legacy, one could do a lot worse. --Publishers
Weekly, Nov. 9, 2009-- "Reviews"
Like most creative people, John Lennon was a complex character,
part well-meaning, often starry-eyed idealist, part
leather-jacketed teddy boy, with much else thrown in to boot.
Whatever your take on him, the thinking-man's Beatle was the first
in a cadre of rock stars who used their celebrity as a force for
good, anticipating later figures like Bono and Bob Geldof by
decades. Lennon's ambivalent relationship with a number of self
help/spiritual fads mirrored the shifting moods of more than one
generation, and for teenagers like myself coming of age in the
70's, he was the conduit for a number of worthy causes: peace,
women's rights, and the painful exploration of the self. Most books
on Lennon focus on the skeletons in his closet. This one shows
where his heart was. --Gary Lachman, Rock n' Roll Hall of Famer,
former bassist for Blondie, and author of Turn Off Your Mind--
"Reviews"
The closest thing to a post-mortem sofa session. Lennon is
sympathetically sliced and projected in the context of his time,
leading to a sharp image of a spiritual man who became larger than
life while feeling very small. Oh, and readable too.
--Corjan de Raaf, Singer/Songwriter-- "Reviews"
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