Ghost Rider: Travels on the Healing Road (2002) did not quite meet my expectations, both the book itself and in a larger sense who I believed/expected Neil Peart to be. In life Peart was such a private person that I knew very little about him, even after listening to Rush for decades, seeing them in concert some 6-8 times, and reading articles and interviews here and there. With Ghost Rider I spent 460 pages inside Peart’s head, and now feel like I know him a lot better.
The bulk of the book consists of reprinted letters to his
friends written and sent while on the road from approximately 1998-2000, during
some 2 years of solo motorcycling that took him across Canada, North America,
and Mexico. Peart would get up early and ride his BMW motorcycle all day,
stopping at hotels around 4 or 5 p.m. to eat, drink, and smoke, occasionally tour
the local scenery, and write letters. He often rode through the rain or
navigated unpaved roads, putting a beating on his bike which necessitated
frequent repairs. Peart is revealed as a lover of nature, an aficionado of good
food and wine/scotch whiskey, books including the likes of Jack London (he’s a fellow
The Sea-Wolf and Martin Eden fan, I was pleased to discover), and someone who valued
staying connected through letters and evening calls with a circle of friends. Peart
also put a premium on staying private from the general public. He was rarely
recognized during his travels and when he was, was intensely uncomfortable with the attention. Ghost Rider reveals that Peart
had some low(ish) self esteem issues, and was amazingly humble given that he
was/is a top 5, maybe top 3, rock drummer of all time. I’d also put him way up
in the pantheon of all-time great rock lyricists.
Of course this trip was prompted after the crushing loss of his daughter and common-law wife within a year of each other, the first at age 19 in a single car accident, the latter from cancer but also depression and a broken heart. Heart-rending stuff. These experiences destroyed the former Peart and left him rootless, unmoored from his past, and severing him from what he thought to be his chief interests, including drumming, which he abandoned for more than 18 months. Certainly he lost all interest in touring and playing with Rush, which clearly he considered his work/professional life, separate from the interests that fed his soul. Rush and music are mentioned surprisingly little in Ghost Rider.
Ghost Rider is also raw at the edges.Peart is at a few points angry, even petty, in his
criticism of “fat Americans,” and an inattentive waitress. Some of these
passages come across as a bit mean-spirited, directed at people who didn’t seem
to actually interact with him, and were just in the wrong place at the wrong
time. But these incidents were most prevalent earlier in his ride/early in the
book, when he was angry at the world. A few times Peart expresses
(understandable) anger that loud, boorish people are alive, while his wife and
daughter are dead. I can’t blame him—that’s a catastrophe that I cannot imagine
enduring, and I’m sure it led to emotions spilling out of which he had no
control. I give him a pass.
Peart on the road. |
I find myself these days listening to more Rush than I have
in a long time. It’s fueled by a love of great music of course, but I suspect
it’s also nostalgia for my youth, and for my days seeing Rush in concert, which
will no longer happen again after Peart passed away in early 2020 from a
glioblastoma.
Farewell Neil Peart, you are gone but never forgotten.
Thank you for Ghost Rider, and the
music, and your life.
Nice review--I'm not a big enough fan to read it, but it does sound like it's a rewarding read to fans.
ReplyDeleteNice review, Brian. Thanks for sharing your thoughts on the book.
ReplyDeleteThanks guys... worth the read if you're a Rush fan and want to learn more about Peart.
ReplyDeleteI too am a long time Rush fan. I'm listening to Rush a lot again because of Geddy Lee's autobiography. I must get Ghost Rider. Thanks for the review.
ReplyDelete