A New York Times Top 10 Book of the Year (Dwight Garner)
A New York Times Top 10 Book of the Year (Janet Maslin)
A New York Magazine Top 10 Book of the Year
A USA Today Top 10 Book We Loved Reading in 2017
An Amazon Top 100 Book of 2017
An Amazon Best Biography of 2017
An Amazon Best History Book of 2017
An Amazon Top 10 Best Book of the Month
“Hagan has delivered a supple, confident, dispassionately reported and deeply well-written biography. . . . It’s a joy to read and feels built to last. . . . Come for the essayist in Hagan, stay for the eye-popping details and artful gossip.”
–Dwight Garner, The New York Times
“Crisp and cutting. . . . Sticky Fingers is terrifically smart and full of anecdotes that anyone remotely interested in rock and roll, publishing, or the legacy of the nineteen-sixties will find engrossing.”
–Amanda Petrusich, The New Yorker
“Hagan’s biography is a colossal achievement of reporting and synthesis, fast-paced, compulsively readable, and consistently insightful in its understanding of how and why Wenner was able to turn a modest fanboy tabloid into an iconic cultural force. . . . The tawdriness goes with the territory and the creativity is on ample display.”
– Christian Lorentzen, New York
“Hagan has written a barn burner, fast and funny and gossip-filled (he names names) and also big—so big that it can stand as a case study of the entire era.”
– Rich Cohen, The Atlantic
“Hagan’s book is both highbrow cultural digest—a curious journalistic trip through the past fifty years of the (largely white) halls of music-biz power—and, thanks to the debauched nature of rock ’n’ roll’s coagulants sex and drugs, a gloriously trashy read. . . . That said, the rock-cultural deep dive Hagan provides is also crucial and compelling. . . . Sticky Fingers creates an epitaph for an industry rather than a shrine to a man who shaped it.”
– Jessica Hopper, Bookforum
“It’s impossible to chew through Hagan’s delicious and meticulous retelling of the magnate’s life and come away unimpressed by Wenner’s sheer ambition or unmoved by his devotion to rock ‘n’ roll. It’s a shame Wenner couldn’t read it the same way.”
–Kim Willis, USA Today
“Completely enthralling. . . . In the CBS Sunday Morning interview, Wenner complained that Hagan’s book doesn’t capture “the joy of what we did and… how important it was” — which is, actually, exactly what Sticky Fingers does.”
–Ken Tucker, Yahoo!
“Explosive. . . . Hagan treats his subject with the same reportorial scope and literary ambition as the New Journalism championed in the column inches of Rolling Stone.”
–Charlie Burton, GQ
“Hagan’s reporting is as vivid as the work of some of Rolling Stone’s most famous writers, including the avatar of the ‘new journalism’ Tom Wolfe and ‘gonzo’ journalist Hunter Thompson.”
–Sol Stern, The Daily Beast
“‘The biography would be independent, not “authorized” in the usual sense,’ Hagan explains. Wenner is unhappy with the result, and Sticky Fingers goes a long way towards explaining why this was probably inevitable.”
–Andrew Flanagan, NPR
“Sticky Fingers is overstuffed with anecdotes, interviews, and history that not only evoke Wenner’s persona in all its grandiosity and creative energy, but also that of the era he helped create.”
–Jon Foro, The Amazon Book Review
“Everybody from Mick Jagger to Paul McCartney to David Geffen to Bruce Springsteen talks in Hagan’s sex-drug-and-rock-‘n’-roll-filled story of Jann Wenner and Rolling Stone, which reads like a picaresque novel of the baby-boom era.”
–Esquire
“Sticky Fingers is a testament to the kind of deeply reported, stylish longform writing that Wenner’s great idea made possible, for a while anyway.”
–Lara Zarum, The Village Voice
“I inhaled the 500-page tome like the many piles of white powder that Wenner and his compatriots consumed during the magazine’s heyday.”
–Steven Hyden, Uproxx
“With so much sticky material to sort through, handpicked Boswell Joe Hagan was probably bound for a falling-out with his subject… Rolling Stone has managed to chronicle both — the substantial and the tawdry — consistently over its bumpy half-century journey. Likewise, Hagan’s book, said to have been sold in a bidding war for seven figures, manages both with a rich bounty of lively anecdotes.”
–James Sullivan, The San Francisco Chronicle
“It’s a delectable rise and fall of a man who once stated that his ambition was to become the ‘Henry Luce of the counterculture.’… [Hagan is] a marvelous stylist. He has a genuine passion for music and does a superb job of explaining the cultural shifts the magazine has navigated, from Richard Nixon’s presidency to the era of Donald Trump.”
–Davin Leonard, Bloomsberg
“A perceptive account that also details the bruised feelings, grudges, feuds and stitch-ups left in Wenner’s wake…. A terrific, sometimes comic portrait of a music biz mogul.”
–Neil Spencer, The Guardian
“Exhaustively researched and startlingly candid… Jann Wenner, who seems all appetite, is best at creating celebrity and then trading on it. He commercialized that talent in a singular magazine that blasted the establishment even as it became establishment itself. Joe Hagan’s book, occasionally giddy but never fawning, puts Jann Wenner in his rarefied, wealthy and fundamentally lonely place.”
–Carlo Wolff, The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
“The book is a subtle reading of the workings of American celebrity and the New York that Wenner, who founded the magazine in San Francisco in 1967, would come to inhabit.”
–Edward Helmore, The Guardian
“An exhaustive, wildly entertaining biography that pulls no punches.”
–Thor Christensen, The Dallas Morning News
“A lurid and revelatory tale of drugs, sex—and power…Wenner’s voracious appetite…for power, status, drugs, drink and sex, is vividly chronicled in this engrossing study of how he turned a small rock ’n’ roll fan paper into one of the most important and influential magazines in American publishing history.”
–Mick Brown, The Telegraph
“Hagan’s book resists the pressures of hagiography, chronicling in immense detail Wenner’s ambition, his public rise to prominence, his private feuds and some major miscalculations, such as rejecting a lucrative offer from Hearst to buy Rolling Stone.”
–Zach Schonfeld, People
“Hagan [is] a terrific storyteller with a keen ear for killer quotes.”
–Neal Justin, Minneapolis Star Tribune
“Looking at Rolling Stone today is like watching a dodgy videotape of a funeral for the idea that long-form, serious, intensive, irreverent and creative music journalism should be a valuable part of our cultural discourse…But reading Sticky Fingers reminds us of what was, what could have been, and what just might rise from the dead, if we all do our part. I plan to do mine.”
–Jeff Miers, Buffalo News
“Hagan’s bio doesn’t disappoint. At more than 500 pages, the book digs deep into Wenner’s life… and spins a warts-and-all tale of one of America’s last media titans.”
–Steven Ward, The Clarion Ledger
“A well-written and thorough biography of the magazine founded during the 1960s counterculture that brought real journalistic standards to rock-and-roll writing…filled with colorful characters.”
–Dan DeLuca, The Philadelphia Inquirer
“Founded 50 years ago, Rolling Stone was a self-proclaimed beacon of radical counterculture. But as revealed in Sticky Fingers—a new biography of Jann, written by Joe Hagan—many of the magazine’s staffers didn’t just chronicle sex, drugs and rock ’n’ roll. They lived it, hardcore.”
–Hardeep Phull, New York Post
“Sticky Fingers, meticulously researched and reported, is the result of hundreds of interviews, not only with famed musicians and actors, but friends, business associates, and employees of Wenner going back decades. And oftentimes, what they’ve said is deeply critical. Two pages into the prologue, Wenner is likened to a “boy vampire” and, according to his own staff, a “starfucker.” (With good reason, as the next 500 pages makes clear.)”
–Elon Green, Columbia Journalism Review
“Rife with juicy celebrity gossip and insider detail. (And Wenner has already expressed his disappointment.) But more than that, it tells, in full, the story of a man—and magazine—who, for better or worse, came to define his generation.”
–David Marchese, Vulture
“The first biography of the magazine’s founder is much more critical than HBO’s conveniently timed new documentary, and it’s a better tribute for it… its scope and rigor ultimately do far more to honor its subject… Sticky Fingers [is] undeniably substantial, an engrossing and exceptionally well-reported chronicle of a cultural empire and its emperor… A formidable tribute to an American original and a titan of his age, an age we’re arguably still living in. Sticky Fingers really does print the legend and all the news that fits.”
–Jack Hamilton, Slate
“Hagan’s book tells us more about rock stardom than plenty of actual rock biographies.”
–Michael Hann, Financial Times
“A fair and even-handed assessment of Wenner, whose treachery toward family, friends, colleagues and employees is the stuff of legend… I understand why Wenner didn’t like the Sticky Fingers title. The negative connotations are obvious. I bet he was hoping for something more like Citizen Wenner.”
–Michael Heaton, Cleveland.com
“Hagan is great at plumbing the dark side of the boom years… A dense and dishy and hilariously hypercritical broadside that burrows deep into Wenner’s thorny personal life.”
–Rob Harvilla, The Ringer
“It’s a book of tensions: between fandom and journalistic integrity, between financing and rebellion, between personality and projection. And it’s as much a story of the modern media landscape as it is the story of Wenner’s life.”
–Haley Cunningham, Hazlitt
“Hagan’s 547-page opus is a delectable peek behind the curtain of one of the most influential outlets in pop-culture history.”
–Simon Houpt, The Globe and Mail
“Drawing from more than 100 hours of conversation with Wenner as well as interviews with musicians, writers, publishers, friends, lovers, and past and present employees of the magazine, Hagan has fashioned a fascinating biography of a controversial figure and the iconic publication he started.”
–Booklist, starred review
“A moving portrayal of a complicated, brilliant, flawed man who genuinely moved the needle on American culture. . . . [Sticky Fingers is] a lasting legacy for the keeper of rock-’n’-roll’s watchtower.”
–Kirkus
“As freelance writer Hagan posits in this searingly honest biography, Rolling Stone and its founder, Jann Wenner, turned rock stars into celebrities, fed salacious fare to slavering fans, and assembled a staff of writers (including Ralph Gleason, Greil Marcus, and Jon Landau) who elevated rock music criticism into serious writing… Drawing on hundreds of hours of interviews with Wenner (who exercised no control over the book), his family and friends, writers who’ve worked for the magazine, and musicians… Hagan has provided an entertaining insider’s history of a legendary magazine.”
–Publisher’s Weekly