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“Only girl on the masthead? And in the room! And still standing! And with cojones! Green has written a straight-talking, utterly indiscrete, deliciously shocking story about being in the right place at the right time pretty much all the time.”
— Bill Buford, New York Times bestselling author
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“A dishy memoir about life…during the sex and drugs heyday of the 1970s.”
— New York Times
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"[A] funny, candid memoir…Green paints a vivid picture of being at the epicentre of the new rock’n’roll bohemian culture with the Rolling Stone crowd.”
— Guardian (London)
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“A ramble through the sex, drugs, and rock ’n’ roll wilderness of the ’70s…She writes unsparingly of her frailties, her fixations, the honest appetites of an explorer in a fragmenting America. Brave survivor of the psychedelic wars, she came, she saw, she conquered.”
— USA Today (★★★½)
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She writes
unsparingly of her frailties, her fixations, the honest appetites of an
explorer in a fragmenting America. Brave survivor of the psychedelic wars, she
came, she saw, she conquered.
— USA Today
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A dishy memoir about life as the first woman on the masthead at Rolling
Stone magazine during the sex and drugs heyday of the 1970s.
— New York Times
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They say if you remember the '60s, you weren't there. But Robin Green
was. She remembers the '70s, too, and all that followed. And what's more, in
"The Only Girl," she names names... lately, Green's been thinking back on those
hippie San Francisco days again. Her trips to Big Sur, beautifully crazy friends,
and her own flower-child belief that anything -- absolutely anything -- was
possible. Turns out, she was right.
— New York Daily News
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a stunning tribute
to a bygone era and a publication that defined a generation,
— Red Carpet Crash
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a must-read for
anyone who has ever been or felt like, well, the only girl in the room.
— Hello Giggles
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In this candid memoir, she shares how she earned a
reputation as a bitch, what it was like working alongside the intimidating
Annie Leibovitz and witnessing the drug-fueled ravings of Hunter S. Thompson,
and why she was fired over a Kennedy story...Filled with plenty of sex, drugs,
and some rock 'n' roll, this offers a one of-a-kind
perspective on the people behind a cultural phenomenon.
— Booklist
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The Only Girl's vigor comes from her blunt acknowledgment of the diffidence she faced early in her career. To follow her path to being paid, published, and praised amid many tribulations proves both a solace and great reward.
— Zyzzyva
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A lusty, reflective, score-settling memoir from the woman who steered a
chaotic career course between Rolling Stone and The Sopranos...Green's memoir is
both a solid insider's account and a happy-go-lucky, lifelong coming-of-age
story.
— Kirkus
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With humor and candid self-reflection, the author details her struggles
after being fired from Rolling Stone...Reading like a real-life road novel,
Green's memoir is a must for aspiring writers.
— Library Journal
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Brutally honest, Ms.
Green writes about what it was like to be the first woman granted entry into an
iconic boys club.
— WNYC
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[A] funny, candid memoir...Green paints a vivid picture of being at the epicentre of the new rock'n'roll bohemian culture with the Rolling Stone crowd.
— Guardian
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Entertaining,
page-turning, and scorchingly candid new memoir.
— No Depression
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Compulsively readable, laugh out loud funny and beautifully crafted. I ate up every word. If you thought they had more fun back then, this book will prove that you were right."—Ruth Reichl, bestselling author of My Kitchen Year
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Robin has written a frank, witty and loving memoir about growing up in the milieu of the seventies at Rolling Stone. Her honesty and insight brought all those times back, some of RS's wildest and wackiest early days."—Jann Wenner, Co-Founder and Publisher of Rolling Stone
—
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A funny, frank,
powerful and ultimately moving memoir by an extraordinary writer who didn't
merely roll with the Zeitgeist but remade it in her own image.
— T.C. Boyle, author of The Harder They Come and The Terranauts
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Robin Green broke ground for women as part of two media revolutions-Rolling Stone's reimagining of the magazine and the new era for television ushered in by The Sopranos. With The Only Girl, she offers sharp and striking scenes of a culture in transition, creating a vivid sense of both the thrilling possibilities and the heartbreaking limitations of the times.
— Alan Light, former Editor-in-Chief of Vibe and Spinmagazines and author of Let's Go Crazy: Prince and the Making of Purple Rain
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Only girl on the masthead? And in the room! And still
standing! And with cojones! Green has written a straight-talking, utterly
indiscrete, deliciously shocking story about being in the right place at the
right time pretty much all the time.
— Bill Buford, journalist and author of Among the Thugs and Heat
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Her prose has a
freewheeling, informal quality, summoning some moments vividly.
— Financial Times