Review by New York Times Review
How could Bob Dylan win the Nobel Prize in Literature last year when the only conventional books he has written are a memoir ("Chronicles: Volume One") and an impenetrable novel ("Tarantula") that even the most rabid Dylanologists have trouble defending with a straight face? This common (and understandable) gripe overlooks the fact that Dylan has produced other books, including "Bob Dylan: Lyrics, 1962-1985," which I spent much of my teenage years poring over, studying the mysteries of songs like "The Ballad of Frankie Lee and Judas Priest" and "Desolation Row." It was an update of another lyrics collection from the previous decade, and before the internet these books not only complemented Dylan's music for many of his fans, they also provided a forceful early argument that the singer was a literary figure. Like the previous ones, "Bob Dylan: The Lyrics 1961- 2012" is admirably streamlined, free of any introduction or explanatory back story for the songs. The words speak for themselves. It's an improvement over the tome of my youth, and not just because it brings us up to date. This handsome collection eliminates Dylan's liner notes and other minor efforts that are more poems than songs. Putting aside the thorny question of the extent to which his music informs the lyrics, Dylan remains the rare singer whose work is worth reading on the page. His words are consistently funny, alive to the sound of language and of course appealingly cryptic. Yet now that you can find his lyrics on many websites, one wonders if the internet has doomed this genre of book. The times, they changed. JASON ZINOMAN, the On Comedy columnist for The Times, is the author of "Letterman: The Last Giant of Late Night."
Copyright (c) The New York Times Company [June 18, 2017]