2 Memoirs by Rock ’n’ Roll Muses Who Were So Much More

featured-image

Marianne Faithfull was a star in her own right; Peggy Caserta was a hippie tastemaker. Their memoirs are riveting.

Dear readers, This week’s authors have a good deal in common. Both women were fetishized for their looks, entangled romantically with musical superstars, situated at the epicenter of 1960s culture, veterans of yearslong heroin addictions. And both were profoundly underestimated.

In their memoirs, both also divulge a preposterous amount of glamorous detail. But that’s not what makes these books remarkable. Every addiction story comes with a proof of fire testing.



The best ones speak frankly, without euphemism or hosanna, and both of these make the cut. When you consider that the authors spent years chasing a numbed, obliterated existence, their books are all the more meaningful for their clarity of feeling, vision and memory. Thank goodness they were paying attention all those decades ago.

Thank God they made it out alive. — “Faithfull: An Autobiography,” by Marianne Faithfull with David Dalton We are having trouble retrieving the article content. Please enable JavaScript in your browser settings.

Thank you for your patience while we verify access. If you are in Reader mode please exit and your Times account, or for all of The Times. Thank you for your patience while we verify access.

Already a subscriber? . Want all of The Times? ..