A Freewheelin' Time: A Memoir of Greenwich Village in the Sixties

  Author:    Suze Rotolo
  ISBN:    0767926870
  Sales Rank:    1518
  Published:    2008-05-13
  Publisher:    Broadway
  # Pages:    384
  Binding:    Hardcover
  Avg. Rating:    5.0 based on 18 reviews
  Used Offers:    9 from $12.93
  Amazon Price:    $15.61
  (Data above last updated:  2008-07-05 02:06:23 EST)
  
  
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A Freewheelin' Time: A Memoir of Greenwich Village in the Sixties
  
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07-01-08 3 (NA)
(Hide Review...)  Interesting stuff, writing was often flat, still: Recommended
Reviewer Permalink
This book is for the most part, but not entirely, about the time that Rotolo was lovers with Bob Dylan. She's an interesting person so I was also interested in the stories about her time in Italy, her life as an artist, her upbringing as a working class red diaper baby, her experiences in Greenwhich Village, the people she knew in the folksinging world there in the Village. Then, of course, there's Dylan. Interesting stuff. However, her writing was often flat and the ending was disappointing. She skips chunks of time. I would have liked to know more about her evolution as an artist and the ways she may have struggled to keep being a creative person.

I do recommend it to those of you who are interested in that period of time and Greenwhich Village.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-07-02 01:08:43 EST)
06-25-08 5 1\1
(Hide Review...)  An evocative look at the early-to-middle 1960's youth movement in the U.S.that may surprise you.
Reviewer Permalink
This is a really good read--whether for a look back at the early folk scene in Greenwich Village (starring Bob Dylan, of course) or for a casual history of that still important time that spawned the "youth movement" in the U.S.
The hook to read this book is that it is written by Bob Dylan's girlfriend during his early career. But soon into the book, the reader realizes that it is not going to be a tell-all about the famous singer with anecdote after anecdote exposing Dylan's life at this very crucial stage. So, should the reader continue? I wasn't sure if it would be worth the time investment to hear Suze Rotolo's story. I did continue on and am I glad I did. What we have here is the story of the '60's by a remarkable, sensitive, intelligent,loyal girl who refused to be swallowed up by the cult of celebrity worship so prevalent in our society today. Yes, it was certainly alluring for her to be Dylan's girlfriend--with all of its glamour and power-- but she knew that she would lose her soul and never discover her own self-worth if she were to remain with him, despite being in love with him (and he her).
Rotolo writes in a breezy style with the vernacular of the early sixties. She captures well what is like to be a teen/young adult during any epoch and adds the specifics of the turbulent sixties. A long list of characters(most from the folk and music scene) make an appearance in this story: Dave Van Ronk, Ian and Sylvia, Joan Baez, Trini Lopez, Phil Ochs, John Hammond, Jerry Rubin, Raul and Fidel Castro, Che Guevara, Ramblin Jack Elliott to mention a few.
My favorite anecdote in the book is a short one that reveals a most endearing quality of Rotolo. Speaking to an audience in Cuba just after the Revolution, she tells them that she is alienated with the constant use of the terms the proletariat, blue-collar workers stating that she was the only one among the American speakers who was actually from a blue-collar background. "My father,who had worked in a factory, never referred to himself as 'a proletariat'."
Highly recommended for those who were young during this period, or anyone interested in the genesis and milieu of the young Dylan and his art.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-07-01 11:22:14 EST)
06-24-08 5 (NA)
(Hide Review...)  Fabulous!
Reviewer Permalink
Great book! Fabulous! The author really catches the time, the move from a black/white world to one of color and an array of choices. Her own story intertwined with that of Dylan's is well written. Her writting style, vocabulary and personal insight make this a must read.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-07-01 11:22:14 EST)
06-17-08 3 1\2
(Hide Review...)  For Interested Parties Only
Reviewer Permalink
I've always had a fascination with the folk movement centered in Greenwich Village in the early 60s, especially the incredible rise of Bob Dylan in that milieu. So, when I heard that Suze Rotolo, Dylan's girlfriend from that era, had written a book about her experiences during that time, I quickly placed my order. My feeling on completing it was that she is too guarded and careful here. She admits she doesn't want to upset Mr. Dylan and I also think that she doesn't wish to reveal too much of herself. Not that I wanted more dirt. I just wanted to know more things like what it felt like to have your famous boyfriend write and record a song lambasting your mother and sister (Ballad in Plain D). Yes, we do learn she had "mixed feelings" about the occurrence but I kinda coulda guessed that. She is too understanding when she hears from a third party about Bob's career-enhancing affair with Joan Baez. Come on Suze, go ahead and call him a two-timing [...]! Ms. Rotollo is careful to focus mostly on her life and not Bob's. Even though she has not achieved anywhere near the kind of things Dylan has, this could have worked if she had bared her soul. She describes some wacky dead ends she's taken (e.g. macrobiotic diet) but she does it with out tying it back to any flaws of her own. Suze seems like a lovely person, reminiscent of many of my best friends over the years. Fanatic that I am, I'm not at all sorry for having read her book and would suggest the same to like-minded folks. Just don't expect too much. Not to compare, but Dylan's own memoir "Chronicles Part I" stands on its own for anyone to read. Suze's book is for interested parties only.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-06-23 01:26:35 EST)
06-15-08 4 (NA)
(Hide Review...)  A Long-Missing Voice Is Finally Heard
Reviewer Permalink
Unless (like me) you are more than a casual fan of the music of Bob Dylan, the name Suze Rotolo is unlikely to mean anything to you. Yet there she is, striding next to Dylan on a cold winter's day on the cover of his second, brilliant album, The Freewheelin' Bob Dylan, not a model hired by the record company but someone closely connected with Dylan at the time. A native of Queens, Rotolo was only 17 years old when she met Dylan shortly after his arrival in New York City in 1961, but her own recent migration to the neighborhoods of Greenwich Village was the result of a precocious, independent and artistic spirit and a maturity stimulated in no small part by her unusual childhood.

As Rotolo explains in "A Freewheelin' Time: A Memoir of Greenwich Village in the Sixties," she grew up as a "red diaper baby," the daughter of parents who were both active in the Communist Party and the labor movement from the 1930s through the 1950s, when her father died. Rotolo offers fond memories of her father, who did some work as a commercial artist and clearly served as an inspiration to his daughter with his overall commitment to a kind of cultural radicalism (including an affinity for music), even in the darkest days of the postwar Red Scare. The youngest of two daughters, Susan - who adopted the name Suze after migrating to the Village - found her home life increasingly stressful after her father's death as she was subjected to her mother's depressed mood swings and a somewhat bossy older sister. Striking out on her own, Rotolo carried with her an innate and strongly-held commitment to social justice and a proto-feminist consciousness that would grow stronger as time went on.

Until now, most of what we knew about Rotolo was the result of the work of Dylan biographers seeking insights into the nature of their relationship during Dylan's first two years in New York. The most common interpretation has assigned Rotolo the role of Dylan's most important early "muse," a woman who inspired his great political songs through her own passionate commitments to justice and peace and who also frustrated Dylan through her unwillingness to stay with him, a story Dylan told in his bitter "Ballad in Plain D," a song released in 1964. The key missing element in this research, however, was Rotolo's own voice. Until recently a very reluctant interview subject, Rotolo tells us she has always been an intensely private person and also wanted to protect Dylan's privacy, especially as his fame escalated far beyond the neighborhoods of downtown New York and became oppressive to both of them.

Rotolo's narrative takes us through her childhood, her education, her move to New York City and her relationship with Dylan, and her life after splitting with Dylan to the end of the 1960s when she left the Village for Italy. Along the way we learn about her efforts to forge an identity as an artist, working in the areas of illustration, theatre production and jewelry design while supporting herself in more mundane jobs. Once she relocated from Queens to Greenwich Village she adopted a bohemian lifestyle and became fast-acquainted with the people and places that made up the folk music scene, a process much-accelerated after she began her relationship with Dylan in 1961.

Rotolo confronts the "muse" interpretation both directly (by dismissing it) and indirectly, telling several stories about people in the New York folk music scene who viewed her in such terms and who demanded she continue to serve so their increasingly popular goose would continue to lay golden eggs. To her credit, Rotolo does not pretend to understand the mysteries of the songwriting process and refuses to cite herself as an influence on Dylan's songs during his early years. Yet simply by telling the story of their life together from 1961 to 1963 and of her own interests and activities it is clear Rotolo was a critical source for Dylan's work; and by refusing to subordinate herself to Dylan as his fame grew and as pressures to do so increased around her, she emerges as the kind of heroic outsider that Dylan has always tried to be while at the same time rejecting the sexist strictures of her time.

Rotolo is at her best when telling her own story, and she has a real flair for the economical use of detail when describing a scene or an event. Her several accounts of time spent with the musician Dave Van Ronk and his wife Terri Thal are among the most interesting sections of the book, providing new insights into these well-known figures of the Village. As the narrative reaches the dissolution of her relationship with Dylan, she exercises much restraint in recounting a painful time, which included Dylan's open affair with Joan Baez and an unwanted pregnancy that Rotolo ended by abortion. In an effort to provide some context for her story, Rotolo frequently inserts passages to give us a capsule history of the era but these are the weakest parts of the book: cluttered with cliches, they distract from the central narrative.

Without a doubt, "A Freewheelin' Time" is an important contribution to the already massive amount of material on Bob Dylan, having the special advantage of Rotolo's unique firsthand perspective on Dylan's early career. More than that, however, it's a plain-spoken, compelling memoir of a time and place too often obscured by mythology and media hype. It's good to have Suze's story in her own words.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-06-18 00:19:42 EST)
06-12-08 5 (NA)
(Hide Review...)  Excellent Portrait, Vivid detail of the life at the time
Reviewer Permalink
Everyone looks up to Dylan as some type of God. She was there before and after all the hype and can see both sides of the picture. She lived through it all and didn't want to be part of the mass hysteria. Can't blame her. This book is great and recommended for anyone who wants to relive greenwich village at the time or for anyone who is interested in capturing some part of Dylan's life at the time.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-06-16 00:20:07 EST)
06-10-08 5 (NA)
(Hide Review...)  A State of Mind
Reviewer Permalink
Most people will probably be drawn to this book because they are fans of Bob Dylan. Others will be drawn to it out of an interest in, or nostalgia for, Greenwich Village in the sixties. Those were certainly the reasons that I purchased it. And I certainly wasn't disappointed. Like other reviewers I journeyed to the Village in search of freedom from suburbia, first as a commuter and later as a resident, albeit half a decade after Ms. Rotolo left it. Time and again as I was reading it I recalled places and feelings from those times, made alive once again by Ms. Rotolo's splendid prose. And there was plenty of Dylan, as seen through Ms. Rotolo's eyes, as well as many of the other figures, some famous, some not, that played a role in shaping the those times.
But what I was not prepared for was how intrigued I was by Ms. Rotolo's own story. And even more by her reflections on the events of those years. Through these pages she has transformed herself from "the girl on the cover" to an individual of profound insight and feeling. From her memories of growing up in a communist household during the McCarthy era to her days as a "slum goddess" she has her own fascinating story to tell.
Ms. Rotolo ends her book by noting that the Greenwich Village of which she writes is no longer physically there. But she goes on to remind us that the real Village is a state of mind where "A compelling and necessary idea will always find a place to plant itself. The creative spirit finds a way."
That creative spirit reveals itself in this book. If you are nostalgic for the past or hopeful for the future I urge you to read this book.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-06-12 00:19:13 EST)
06-10-08 4 (NA)
(Hide Review...)  Intruiging look back at the early Dylan/NY Sixties
Reviewer Permalink
I have to say that I was quite sceptical when I saw that Suze Rotolo came out with this book, bringing us her story of what it was like to be around in the early sixties in Greenwhich Village, and of course being Bob Dylan's flame for about 2 years (1961-1963), I mean, why now? why at all? Then I started reading the book, and my fears/suspicions subsided.

In "A Freewealing' Time: A Memoir of Greenwhich Village in the Sixties" (380 pages), Rotolo brings back vivid images of what the lower NY side was like in those days, and oh yes, she was Bobby's girlfriend. Rotolo retells the now-famous stories of Gerde's and the Gaslight but with a unique and never before seen/read perspective and it makes for great reading. As the years go on, in particular after her 8 month stay in Italy, seperated from Dylan, it becomes clear as daylight how more and more uncomfortable Rotolo is becoming of the whole scene, in particular as Dylan rises in fame and more hangers-on appear out of the woodwork. Retolo's details on the famous "Freewhealin' Bob Dylan" album cover are a delight to read. Her insights on Dylan, in particular as it became clear that they were breaking up, are kinda heartbreaking. Even as it is clear that she thinks mightly highly of Dylan, she also makes clear he was not the easiest person to be around (has that changed since then? I'm guessing not, but of course I'm just speculating).

In all, this was a much better book than I expected, and even though there are a lot of sections that deal with non-Dylan passages, in the end this is why were are reading this, and I'd say this is a valuable contribution to the mirrads of Dylan books out there.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-06-12 00:19:13 EST)
06-06-08 4 1\1
(Hide Review...)  Loved it
Reviewer Permalink
This was a fun and interesting read. Suze Rotolo writes well and simply and doesn't spout B.S. She's the real deal. No gossiping and defensive posturing, just the interesting stuff about her life in the Village in the '60s. She totally honors the people involved in the folk music scene and who contributed to Dylan's success. Don't expect a whole bunch of time spent on Dylan. This is really more about the scene and her history leading up to it - which is all really interesting. This is a major piece of American cultural history. It sure would be cool to go back in time and experience the music and talk and enthusiasm of the time. This gives a taste and I guess the rest we'll have to imagine..
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-06-10 00:20:17 EST)
06-05-08 5 (NA)
(Hide Review...)  Goodbye is too good a word, babe
Reviewer Permalink
So you're a Bob Dylan fan, and you've read his Chronicles, and you've seen No Direction Home, and you're on the lookout for more intel on the pride of Hibbing, Minnesota. Fair enough. But Freewheelin' Time isn't just 300 pages of "Bob did this" and "Bob said that" and "Bob wrote this song about me" and "One night Bob and I had sex on the fire escape and the neighbors complained about the noise."

Bob's there, all right, illuminated by telling anecdotes and snippets from love letters past. You'll get an impressionist portrait but one that helps you see him clearly all the same. Even better, Suze Rotolo manages to convey a sense of Sixties bohemian innocence without coming across like one of those smug Berkeley Baby Boomers waxing nostalgic over a pair of blue jeans that somehow doesn't fit any more.

No, Rotolo turns out to be charmingly self-deprecating, even playing down her iconic image on the famous Bob Dylan LP by saying she thought the coat made her look like an Italian sausage. And her memoir is fascinating on its own merit, the story of a red-diaper baby trying to navigate adulthood with her ideals intact while confronting some of the more unpleasant aspects of Communism here and abroad. It's a tale told with disarming wit and grace, aided by 'DVD Extra' type photos, postcards, and press clippings, including one that refers to the author as a "Blonde artist" storming the shores of Castro's Cuba. Worth the price of admission alone, that.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-06-10 00:20:17 EST)
06-04-08 5 (NA)
(Hide Review...)  A terrific memoir!
Reviewer Permalink
Being a big fan of Dylan and particularly the Freewheelin' album, I waited with much anticipation when I heard this book was coming out. I am about 3/4 the way through it and I have very high marks for it. It is a very entertaining book esp. if you are familiar with the era. I like Suze's writing style and this book is chock full of interesting tidbits and inside information. It was very interesting to read how this photo came about and anecdotes about the various clubs in Greenwich village. I recommend it for all fans of Bob Dylan, esp. 1961-1965. Great job Suze!
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-06-07 00:19:22 EST)
05-30-08 5 (NA)
(Hide Review...)  When America was a free country
Reviewer Permalink
It was refreshing to be allowed to go back to the time when America was a free country, now it's obvious we're not free or allowed to enter certain places even if we're americans. Suze's world was free and carefree full of hope and possibilities...alot did happen and even more was possible. If nothing else this book will serve as a valuable reference for ALL future dylan biographers, while reading the book I came across alot of facts that were validated by Suze. Also I learned that Suze wasn't decisive in most things which may have led to her downfall with dylan..mostly everyone knew he was 2 timing everyone so it's just as well...dylan was multifaced and multi everything which led to his success, what made him successful also hurt other people's feelings, this we knew already and it's been confirmed. Was the writing brilliant? No, it wasn't brillant. It was fun to read and a good reference book for future dylan biographers. I recommend the book to all who love greenwich village. I myself wandered the village for about 10 years before i had to leave nyc due to money problems so even though i was 30-40 years after the fact you still had a certain familarity to what suze was talking about...there's no other place in the world like the village, then again i've never been to san francisco or new orleans.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-06-03 01:01:08 EST)
05-26-08 5 7\7
(Hide Review...)  Honest, truthful, sweet, generous, loaded with information and insight
Reviewer Permalink
Like almost all the reviewers so far I loved this book, and like some I was also in the same neighborhood as the events recorded in this wonderful book. In every instance where I knew someone or hung out at a place mentioned, the version here coincides exactly with what I remember but there is so much more I didn't know and so many people I only knew about second hand. This is a generous and kind book but also a starkly honest one. If you want to know what it was like then in Greenwich village in the 60s, then this is the best source I know of. Bob Dylan's persona in various documentaries comes off to many as arrogant but you will gain a new appreciation for him both as an artist and as a person from one who was closer to him than any other in his first years as an artist (1961 to 1964), when most of the events in the book take place. You will also understand what attracted him to Suze Rotolo. My memory of her was of a radiant smile and personality, but you will understand clearly from this book, as did Bob Dylan, that there was solid substance behind her wonderful smile.

I also want to recommend this book to today's generation, those under the age of 25 or so. There is a new spirit of idealism and creativity and I think you would find it profitable to read an account of an earlier era that also was pregnant with that kind of promise that had yet to come to fruition. As Suze Rotolo makes clear, it was a time when the exploding creativity and freedom of the sixties was still living within the husk of an older and much darker world. The old ways affected everyone, even the most bohemian denizens of Greenwich Village. There is great wisdom here about the conflicts and struggles that come when a young woman instinctively knows that conventional ways are limiting and stunting her as a person but there is no vocabulary and not yet the support of the nascent women's movement to help her.

If you have any interest at all in Bob Dylan, in Greenwich Village in the sixties, in the folkmusic revival of that period, in the struggles of politically and socially conscious young women in the immediate pre-feminist period or if you just want to enjoy yourself or learn some lessons for the present from experiences of the past you owe it to yourself to read this terrific book.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-06-05 14:49:47 EST)
05-24-08 5 (NA)
(Hide Review...)  life looked at sideways
Reviewer Permalink
I found this to be a priceless document of a magical period in time- from my perceptions of it. It firmly establishes that Suze Rotolo has her tale to tell and her approach to biography is way way away from the 'received truths.' While Bob looms large in the story as her first love, she talks generously of the people she met who were Bob's contemporaries when he was one of the many folksingers (like Dave Van Ronk and Phil Ochs). She makes clear that a man who has an extraordinary inventive 'inner directed' personality need not necessarily be a genius in other areas. Her views are assuredly proto feminist and she emphasises that it was not her life's goal to be someone else's muse and that her own intellect and enthusiasms were a creative influence on Dylan. Above all else, she has the invaluable advantage of having been there.PS - it is nicely illustrated.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-05-26 00:18:56 EST)
05-22-08 5 (NA)
(Hide Review...)  I can finally let go of the 60's
Reviewer Permalink
I really enjoyed this book. I was born in '63 and can only hope to get a feel through bios and countless viewings of Woodstock, Dont look Back and others. I was emotionally slammed by this book as it shows Suze to be a strong, intelligent, progressive and sensitive woman waaay ahead of her time. The relationship with Bob now makes perfect sense based on their sensibilities and sensitivities. The info shared is deeply personal without being excessive or embarrassing. Dylan's character and emotional state is revealed while the progression of Suze and Bob's relationship brought me close to tears several times. The non-linear time format kept things lively and interesting. One of the gifts for me was Suze's attitude that Greenwich Village is essentially a state of mind and that we can recreate it in the present if the desire and creative elements are there. The book also offered me insight into my own parents struggles in this country as second generation European immigrants. I blasted through this book and as a result have had to cleanse my mental palate a bit (happily). Thank you Suze Rotolo for sharing after all these years and for some good advice for the present.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-05-25 00:18:07 EST)
05-19-08 5 (NA)
(Hide Review...)  been there R KAGAN ROSWELL GA
Reviewer Permalink
I COULD NOT PUT THE BOOK DOWN. TALKING ABOUT THE VILLAGE BACK IN THE SIXTIES AND DYLAN I WAS THERE GOING TO THOSE PLACES CAFE WHA ETC. GREAT INSIDE INFO ON DYLAN FROM SOMEONE WHO WOULD KNOW, WISH THERE WAS MORE. BRINGS ME BACK TO MY YOUTH
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-05-22 00:39:33 EST)
05-16-08 4 6\6
(Hide Review...)  Could Be Final Word
Reviewer Permalink
I have followed Dylan since 1964 and his music. This book is a refreshing, vulnerable essay of Suze's life with Bob Dylan for 4 years. It is intimate, respectful, sensitive [she speaks of tears listening even to this day of his early records as she was there and says today they accurately portray Dylan] and includes much never-before-read material that is helpful in getting to know the man Dylan. She gives us keen insight into her feelings about their relationship, friends and her family, with extensive history of her family as well as her life before and after Bob Dylan. She is as important in this book as Bob is. It is understandably obvious she still has emotions and maybe even wounds about this relationship. After reading this book (and I have read others on Dylan) I had feelings of nostalgia, and then feelings of satisfaction as the book concluded with a sense of completion. If I ever meet Dylan I feel for the first time I could relate to him as a man and not relate to him as a myth or icon. I just returned from the Village in NYC and Suze's description of it is completely accurate. I was there in the 70s and it is a completely different place today. I believe this book is vulnerable and complete enough to be the final word on Dylan as a person from the early years by someone who knew him better than anyone else.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-05-20 00:18:35 EST)
05-16-08 4 (NA)
(Hide Review...)  Could Be Final Word
Reviewer Permalink
I have followed Dylan since 1964 and his music. This book is a refreshing, vulnerable essay of Suze's life with Bob Dylan for 4 years. It is intimate, respectful, sensitive [she speaks of tears listening even to this day of early records as she was there and says today they accurately portray Dylan and are the naked true Dylan of the era] and includes much never-before-read material that is helpful in getting to know the man Dylan. She gives us keen insight into her feelings about their relationship, friends and her family, with much history of her family as well as her life apart from Dylan. After reading this book (and I have read others on Dylan) I had feelings of nostalgia, and yet feelings of satisfaction as the book concluded with a sense of completion. If I ever meet Dylan I feel for the first time I could relate to him as a man and not relate to him as a myth or icon. I just returned from the Village in NYC and Suze's description of it is accurate. I was there in the 70s and it is a completely different place today. I believe this book is vulnerable and complete enough to be the final word on Dylan as a person from the early years by someone who knew him better than anyone else.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-05-16 01:00:17 EST)
05-13-08 5 10\12
(Hide Review...)  Her Back Pages...
Reviewer Permalink
I loved this book. The story of a proto-feminist red-diaper baby artist who migrates to the post-beatnik Village is a story worth hearing--Suze Rotolo's re-telling of her role in publicly disobeying the Cuba travel embargo is alone worth the price of admission. But, while there are a few major revelations and Rotolo's sustaining respect for Dylan's privacy is admirable, I look forward to sister Carla's memoirs. I want more, more, more about the guy huddled-up next to the author in the famous photo.
(Review Data Last Updated: 2008-05-16 00:18:24 EST)
  
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