Heavier Than Heaven

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Cover of Heavier Than Heaven
Cover of Heavier Than Heaven

Heavier Than Heaven (ISBN 0-7868-6505-9) is the name of a 2001 biography of musician Kurt Cobain, the lead singer of the grunge rock band Nirvana. It was written by Charles R. Cross.

For the book, Cross desired to create the definitive Cobain biography, and over four years conducted 400+ interviews; in particular, he was granted exclusive interviews and access to Cobain's private journals, lyrics and photos, by his widow Courtney Love. [1](Notably, neither Nirvana drummer Dave Grohl nor Cobain's mother contributed to the book.)[citation needed]

While arguably the most complete Cobain biography, Cross opted to include his own impression of what Cobain's final days were like. Several journalists questioned the inclusion of fiction in what was claimed to be a non-fiction book.[citation needed] At the same time, Cross' desire for the book to be as complete as possible meant that he occasionally accepted secondhand (and incorrect) information as fact.[citation needed] However, beyond the criticism, the book contained many details about Cobain and Nirvana's career that had otherwise gone unnoted.

Cross took the name "Heavier than Heaven" from a tour Nirvana did with the band Tad in the UK. The lead singer, Tad Doyle, was very obese; the name which was thought up by the tour promoters, was meant in part to poke fun at the inaccurate fact that Tad alone weighed more than all of the members of Nirvana put together. It also summed both Nirvana's heavy sound and Tad Doyle's heavy weight.

Access Hollywood reports that Love has acquired the rights to Heavier Than Heaven, with several studios engaged in discussions with Love to create an film adaptation of Cobain's biography.[1]



This article about a biographical or autobiographical book is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.
In other languages