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Charlotte Knee/Little, Brown and Co. In December 1970, John Lennon sent fellow Beatle Ringo Starr a postcard that read, "We're here and you're there. This is the truth as we see it."
Now Hunter Davies, who wrote the band's 1968 authorized biography, The Beatles, has helped annotate almost 300 of letters written in Lennon's own hand. The result is his new book, The John Lennon Letters. He joins NPR's Scott Simon to discuss the love and rage of Lennon's letters, and what the notes reveal about the man.
Interview Highlights
On Lennon's love letter to Cynthia Powell, who became his first wife
Charlotte Knee/Little, Brown and Co. Book inscribed to Brian Epstein, 1965
On the famous 1971 "rant letter" addressed to Linda and Paul McCartney
"That [letter] is well known, because it's come up in auction two or three times. It's sold for a huge amount of money. I mean, this is the most appalling letter from John, he's ranting and raving. The background to it was that it was the time they were suing each other ... so they're all fallen out; but also he was furious at the time because he got it into his head — I'm afraid rightly — that everybody hated Yoko, and the other Beatles hated Yoko. And they were being horrible to him, so John was very, very protective and very sensitive, so he lashed out even more. "
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Charlotte Knee/Little, Brown and Co. Unused notes for the Imagine album, 1971
"It's just an accumulation of all the aspects of his life, from the age of 10 — writing that nice letter to his auntie thanking her for his Christmas towel, and he says it's the best towel he's ever had — up to a few minutes before he gets killed, aged 40. So you see the whole span of his life. The thing about it: You see it through his eyes, through his handwriting. A biography can never really get as close as letters can. With letters, he's not writing for posterity, it's all coming out there and then, and it's all emotion. And he sort of — he does it, then he's moving on; so it's very revealing, I think."
That Hippie Penny Lane
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