NYT book review: ‘I’m Your Man,’ Leonard Cohen Bio by Sylvie Simmons
By A. M. HOMES
Published: October 14, 2012
He is poet and prophet, Buddhist bard born in a suit, a wandering Jew ever searching. A man of many generations, Leonard Cohen is still debonair, looking like a Rat Pack rabbi. His languorous voice grows deeper year by year as he gets us on his wavelength with recurring themes of love, religion, sex and loss.
Leonard Norman Cohen was born in Montreal in 1934, into an upper-middle-class Jewish family. His mother was the daughter of a Talmudic scholar, Rabbi Solomon Klonitzki-Kline, his paternal grandfather, Lyon Cohen, a leader of the Canadian Jewish community. Nathan Cohen, his father, worked in the clothing business and died when his son was 9 years old. Cohen has talked about having had a messianic childhood and the strong sense that he was going to do something special, that he would grow into manhood leading other men. He was also well aware that he was a Kohen, one of a priestly caste.
A poet in the 1950s who wrote Let Us Compare Mythologies (1956) and a novelist in the 1960s with The Favorite Game (1963) and Beautiful Losers (1966), Cohen became disappointed with his lack of financial success and moved to the United States to pursue a career as a singer-songwriter. His first album, Songs of Leonard Cohen, was released in 1967 and now, 45 years later, Cohen has put out Old Ideas, his 12th studio album, while embarking on a tour that will spin him in circles around Europe and North America.
In 1969 he told The New York Times: There is no difference between a poem and a song. Some were songs first and some were poems first and some were simultaneous. All of my writing has guitars behind it, even the novels.
In taking on this artful dodger, Sylvie Simmons, a well-known British rock journalist and the author of biographies of Neil Young and Serge Gainsbourg, bumps up against the inherent difficulty of telling the story of a storyteller. Im Your Man demonstrates that its hard to write about a writer whose work is so language- and phrase-specific, so intimate and distant at the same time, perpetually engaged in the dance of seduction.
full: http://www.nytimes.com/2012/10/14/books/review/im-your-man-leonard-cohen-bio-by-sylvie-simmons.html?pagewanted=all