Publishers Weekly
06/10/2024
New York Times reporter Corasaniti debuts with an immersive chronicle of the music venue in Asbury Park, N.J., where Bruce Springsteen got his start. Beginning the account with the Stone Pony’s 1974 opening, Corasaniti pulls from hundreds of interviews with a diverse cast of characters, among them the bar’s original owner, Jack Roig; manager Butch Pielka; and Springsteen himself. The interviews touch on Roig’s impromptu decision to open the Stone Pony in the wake of the 1970s Asbury Park race riots, the venue’s shift from disco to rock and roll soon after it opened, Bruce Springsteen’s frequent shows there with the E Street Band in the ’70s, the venue’s 1991 closure as the local economy nose-dived and its reopening six months later, and the renaissance of Asbury Park in the past 15 years. Seamlessly stitching the interviews together, Corasaniti vividly portrays the “The House That Springsteen Built” as a microcosm of the changes occurring across blue-collar America over the past half century. Springsteen devotees and fans of ’70s and ’80s rock will be captivated. (June)
From the Publisher
"This book . . . has charming bits of Springsteen-iana . . . . Like any rock ’n’ roll story, there are scenes of drugs and debauchery, but the main theme is of a community stubbornly determined to survive amid adversity . . . . Lively chatter and especially fun for Springsteen fans in particular and rock fans in general." — Kirkus Reviews
"Corasaniti vividly portrays the “The House That Springsteen Built” as a microcosm of the changes occurring across blue-collar America over the past half century. Springsteen devotees and fans of ’70s and ’80s rock will be captivated." — Publishers Weekly
"Corasaniti, a political correspondent for the New York Times, has authored an oral history of the Stone Pony . . . An engrossing, comprehensive chronicle of the venue’s ups and downs, told in the voices of the colorful characters closest to it." — New Jersey Monthly
"This is a love letter to The Stone Pony and to the Asbury Park community as well as a stirring tale of rock 'n' roll survival." — Booklist
Kirkus Reviews
2024-04-05
The inside stories about the Jersey Shore venue that Bruce Springsteen made famous.
The Stone Pony is practically synonymous with Springsteen. In the 1970s, the Asbury Park venue, rising from a riot-torn city, was key to his rise to superstardom, as he and other acts spearheaded a vibrant bar-band scene. Springsteen gets the first and last word in this entertaining oral history, and plenty of the words in between. Corasaniti, a political writer for the New York Times who used to be the Jersey correspondent, devotes many pages to the Boss’ support of local songwriters, his enthusiasm for softball and baseball (the E Street Band and Stone Pony teams had an ongoing rivalry), and his legendary impromptu visits to the Pony stage. But the story isn’t strictly Springsteen’s alone. The author weaves in stories about Asbury Park’s ever-shifting fortunes and the Pony’s occasional rescues from the brink. Though it lost its classic rock-and-soul vibe by the late ’90s, it became a haven for glam metal, punk, emo, and jam bands. Corasaniti has a well-stocked Rolodex of sources: He gathers input from Pony staffers and owners; DJs and promoters; musicians like Jack Antonoff, Bouncing Souls, Blues Traveler; and politicos like former governor Chris Christie, one of the hardcore Boss fans hoping for a surprise Pony appearance. (The sole big name missing is Jon Bon Jovi.) Inevitably, this book is largely of interest to Boss fans, and it has charming bits of Springsteen-iana; one local musician, for instance, recalls how he got a pocket lecture on contract language in the Pony’s men’s room. Like any rock ’n’ roll story, there are scenes of drugs and debauchery, but the main theme is of a community stubbornly determined to survive amid adversity, a theme echoed by a certain songwriter.
Lively chatter and especially fun for Springsteen fans in particular and rock fans in general.