



Heartbreaker
A Memoir
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4.8 • 105 Ratings
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- $15.99
Publisher Description
INSTANT NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER
USA TODAY BESTSELLER
"An exhilarating account. . . . an exemplary music memoir."--Publishers Weekly (starred review)
A fast-paced, tender-hearted rock ’n’ roll memoir for the ages, Mike Campbell’s Heartbreaker is part rags-to-riches story and part raucous, seat-of-the-pants adventure, recounting Campbell’s life and times as lead guitarist of Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers.
Mike Campbell was the lead guitarist for Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers from the band’s inception in 1976 to Petty’s tragic death in 2017. His iconic, melodic playing helped form the foundation of the band’s sound, as heard on definitive classics like “American Girl,” “Breakdown,” “Don’t Come Around Here No More,” “Mary Jane’s Last Dance,” “Learning to Fly” and “Into the Great Wide Open.”
Together, Petty and Campbell wrote countless songs, including some of the band’s biggest hits: “Refugee,” “Here Comes My Girl,” “You Got Lucky” and “Runnin’ Down a Dream” among them.
From their early days in Florida to their dizzying rise to superstardom to Petty’s acclaimed, platinum-selling solo albums Full Moon Fever and Wildflowers, Petty never made a record without him. Their work together is timeless, as are the career-defining hits Campbell co-wrote with Don Henley (“The Boys of Summer”) and with Petty for Stevie Nicks (“Stop Draggin’ My Heart Around”).
But few know of the less-than-glamorous background from which Campbell emerged—a hardscrabble childhood on the north side of Jacksonville, often just days ahead of homelessness, raised by a single mother struggling on minimum wage. After months of saving, his mother bought him a $15 pawnshop acoustic guitar for his sixteenth birthday. With a chord book and a transistor radio, Campbell painstakingly taught himself to play.
When a chance encounter with a guidance counselor inspired him to enroll in the University of Florida, Campbell—broke, with nowhere else to go and the Vietnam draft looming—moved into a rundown farmhouse in Gainesville, where he met a 20-year-old Tom Petty. They were soon inseparable. Together they chased their shared dream all the way to Los Angeles, where Campbell would meet his destiny, and the love of his life, Marcie.
It was an at-times grueling dream come true that took Campbell from the very bottom to the absolute top, where Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers would remain for decades, creating an astonishing body of work.
Brilliant, soft-spoken and intensely private, Campbell opens up within these pages for the first time, revealing himself to be an astute observer of triumphs, tragedies and absurdities alike, with a songwriter’s eye for the telling detail and a voice as direct and unpretentious as his music.
An instant classic, Heartbreaker is Mike Campbell’s heartfelt portrait of one throwaway kid’s lifesaving love of music and the creative heights he achieved through luck, collaboration, humility and extraordinary talent.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers guitarist Campbell teams up with memoirist Surdoval (Double Nickels) for an exhilarating account of his career. After some throat-clearing about Campbell's early love of music and poverty-stricken childhood in Jacksonville, Fla., the narrative takes flight in 1968, when Campbell enrolled at the University of Florida to avoid the Vietnam War draft. There, he formed a band called Dead or Alive and caught the attention of Tom Petty, who invited Campbell to play guitar for his band, Mudcrutch. In vibrant, up-tempo prose, Campbell charts Mudcrutch's transformation into Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers, going deep on the recording process for each of the group's albums, their move to Los Angeles, and their stints playing alongside the likes of Bruce Springsteen and Bob Dylan. Campbell doesn't shy away from fractious moments within the band, but his near-spiritual love of music-making keeps the proceedings from getting marred in rock memoir clichés. Instead, Campbell shares warm praise for his bandmates, and offers fascinating insights into the alchemy of songwriting, encouraging longtime Petty fans to listen with fresh ears to decades-old material. The result is an exemplary music memoir.
Customer Reviews
Heartbreaker
I really liked this book.
He goes into great interesting detail on his musical life with Tom Petty.
He’s honest about himself, the music and the legacy of the wonderful songs he wrote with TP.
Their music will last thru the ages…Timeless
Amazingly Good
One of my favorite reads in many years. It helps to have been a major fan of many of the musicians Mike mentions and to still love many of the songs he is a part of, but the storytelling style of Heartbreaker is what makes this book so great. It’s like Mike is sitting with one of his guitars talking to you.
If you even kind of think this book might be worth reading, get it.
Incredible Book
One of the best rock books I’ve ever read. I didn’t want it to end