Reviews

Detroit 67: The Year That Changed Soul by Stuart Cosgrove

billynev's review against another edition

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informative medium-paced

4.25

An excellently informative account of a tumultous year in soul history. Cosgrove’s finest skill is the way he manages to evoke the atmosphere of the specific time and place of Detroit in 1967. The descriptions are precise, the different plots he outlines - from the Supremes’ break-up to the police persecution of the city’s counterculture movement - are interesting, sometimes even riveting. The chapters on the Detroit riot and its aftermath are superb.
As well written as it is, the pace varies and a few chapters which describe the relationship between the three Supremes and that of other actors within the Motown machine can be a bit of a slog. However, mostly it is an excellent read and I’d recommend it to anyone interested in music history.

robreads123's review against another edition

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informative slow-paced

2.75

The first thing I have to say is that this book was extremely slow paced. At times I felt like I was reading the same things over again. Partly due to the fact that  the book is non-fiction(not my favourite) when I wasn’t reading it I had little to no motivation to pick it up. 
I feel the author has bias against Florence Ballard and at times whilst what I was reading corresponded with slight anti-police, anti-establishment views the subtle wording made me think the Cosgrove thinks differently. 
On the other hand this book does provide an informative insight into the year of 1967 with regards to Motown. The parts that I thought were best written were not actually about the Motown empire but the life of Detroit and the riots. Those passages were the most captivating. 
I gave this only 3 stars as I enjoyed it but the biggest flaw for me was the slow paced style and how it didn’t make me excited to read it. 


aoife_brown's review against another edition

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2.0

2.5/5

When the women in this book disagree Cosgrove describes them as ‘bickering’ or ‘bitching’, whereas the males are ‘bulls locking horns’ -eye roll-

The word ‘quixotic’ is also massively overused, but apart from that this was enjoyable.
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