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The Man Comes Around: The Spiritual Journey of Johnny Cash | 
enlarge | Author: Dave Urbanski Publisher: Relevant Books Category: Book
List Price: $13.99 Buy New: $7.93 You Save: $6.06 (43%)
New (30) Used (16) from $5.75
Avg. Customer Rating: 14 reviews Sales Rank: 194171
Media: Paperback Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 288 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.9 Dimensions (in): 8.9 x 6.1 x 0.7
ISBN: 0972927670 Dewey Decimal Number: 781 EAN: 9780972927673 ASIN: 0972927670
Publication Date: January 2003 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Shipping: International shipping available Condition: Publisher's Return MULTIPLE COPIES AVAILABLE. PLEASE READ AMAZON'S SHIPPING RATES AND ESTIMATED DELIVERY TIMES BEFORE ORDERING.
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Product Description Who Was Johnny Cash? Rock star? Country boy? Folk hero? Preacher? Poet? Drug addict? Rebel? Sinner? Saint? In truth, the Man in Black lived long enough and hard enough to embody all of the above-and much, much more. He was a musical legend, a one-of-a-kind communicator, an American icon-but you could never pigeonhole him or pin him down. You never completely knew him...or what he was going to do next. Cash's faith in God was no different: "I'm still a Christian, as I have been all my life," he once said. "Beyond that I get complicated." Cash's faith wasn't smooth, slick, or sweet-it was grizzled, challenged, broken, and messy. Worlds away from perfect. But it was transparent ... and real. Always real. The Man Comes Around: The Spiritual Journey of Johnny Cash explores with vivid, narrative detail the wild ups and downs, the highs and lows, the ebbs and flows, that took place within this man's soul-from beginning to end. It's his spiritual chronicle. His sacred story-yet one that no doubt describes, in one way or another, where we've all been...and perhaps where we're all going. Foreword by Dan Haseltine, Lead Singer for Jars of Clay
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| Customer Reviews: Read 9 more reviews...
Jesus and Johnny Cash May 17, 2008 Looking at a man with a passion for Christ and yet we see he humanity as he grows in all situations. It humbles me to know I have a passion for Jesus and I still realize we all will fall down in our walk with Jesus many times. Johnny realizes as well as I, Jesus still loves us despite our imperfections.
Good for the beginner, not the advanced fan May 29, 2007 While well constructed, this book is largely constructed from previous interviews and press articles. If you've read a lot or seen a lot about Johnny Cash, there won't be a lot that's new to you here.
That being said, this is a good introduction to the spiritual and philosophical side of Johnny Cash. Cash: The Autobiography is also a great starting point.
The Man Comes Around..... October 29, 2006 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
I can only sum up my personal experience in reading this book..EXCELLENT! A must read. From the 1st day I received it, I was unable to put it down. I wish I knew then what I know now about his love for the Creator of the universe and his deep love to be loved.
2nd best Cash bio I know November 20, 2004 21 out of 21 found this review helpful
The complexities of Cash's personality will keep biographers busy for years. Johnny Cash was a man of baffling contradictions. Steve Turner, in his superior bio., The Man Called Cash (2004) relays an event that is illustrative: Cash goes shooting and wounds a crow. He is so moved with compassion for the bird that he goes to great lengths to nurse it back to health. Turner writes, "...it encapsulated Cash's contradictions. Here was a man, though capable of destruction, who became overwhlemed with the desire to repair what he had destroyed; a nonviolent man who had a love affair with guns; an artist who could cause suffering and then turn that suffering into art..."
Cash's Christian faith was deep and abiding and passionate, but complex. Urbanski makes a good effort at portraying this, and generally succeeds. It is lovingly written and organized (if somewhatly shallow at times). Don't look for much critical engagemnet -- this is pure hagiography. I really should subtract one star for publishing this with "Relevent Books." What a STUPID name! Proof positive they are irrelevent.
Publisher aside, this book is a must have for diehard Cash fans. But if you are only going to get one bio., definitely make it the Turner one.
Check it out of your local library instead. September 11, 2004 21 out of 28 found this review helpful
As a long-time Johnny Cash fan, I really wanted to like this book since I thought a spiritual biography was such an interesting concept but the book ended up feeling, as someone already mentioned, like a high school term paper.
The author constantly made use of other previously published books and articles about Mr. Cash so nothing truly new was covered. Instead of actually writing anything fresh, the author pieced together a collage of quotations from Rolling Stone and Cash's autobiographies. And I felt the author's tendency to name-drop was embarrassing and insulting to Mr. Cash. A country legend doesn't need the approval of musicians with 15-minute careers. It felt like a blatant attempt to prove how relevant Johnny Cash is to current music (which is totally unnecessary- Johnny Cash is in a class by himself).
This book came out right after Mr. Cash's death so I can only speculate that it must have been rushed out to capitalize on public interest. Maybe if given more time, more resources, and a more polished author, the product could have been worth more than 2 stars.
I do hope another author tackles this subject material soon though since an in-depth spiritual biography would be fascinating to read.
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