Jack Eadon

Jack Eadon

 


Jack Eadon has had careers in rock music, corporate management, advertising photography, and writing.  From each of his varied experiences he has written a different book for his American Drama Series, so each is filled with the vivid details that comprised that particular career, but the plots share the drama that can be found in everyday life.

Got To Make It

Jack Eadon
Eloquence Press (2004)
ISBN 0975330063
Reviewed by William Phenn for Reader Views (8/06)

Synopsis: Jack Eadon’s “Got to Make It!” is a book about growing up in the sixties. It tells about the sweet and sour experiences of the author as a young teenager as he discovers the problems one has to face and the sacrifices to be made in order to achieve one’s dreams. Jack yearns to be a famous musician: a wish he shares with his close friends, Tom, Bob, and Bill. While Jack strums on a guitar, Bill plays a clarinet, Tom a ukulele, and Bob the drums. The four form a band, hoping to make a name for themselves in the music world. However, before that, they have to come to terms with their families, and more importantly, with themselves. A poignant coming-of-age tale, this book succeeds in creating a feeling of nostalgia tinged with sadness. The reader is reminded of his own childhood, and the loves and friendships of that period. The characters are depicted with an eye for detail, which results in the reader inevitably empathizing with them. The dialogues are well written and trendy. The narrative is fast-paced, and the tone understated.

Jack also effectively recreates the atmosphere of the sixties. The work is, in fact, an authentic chronicle of the ‘beat’ age, which featured writers like Jack Kerouac and Alan Ginsberg, and artists like the Beatles and Elvis Presley. With this book, Jack does what Salinger did for the forties with his “The Catcher in the Rye”, and what F. Scott Fitzgerald did for the twenties with “The Great Gatsby.”

Eadon immortalizes the sixties era in the pages of his memoirs. “Got to Make It!” is a must read for not only those who are interested in the making of modern-day America, but also anyone who loves music, and in fact, anyone who had ever dreamt, and then realized that dreams have a strange manner of coming true.