Why did I love this book?
As much of a specter as its subject, Biography of a Phantom came from an odyssey that began in the late 1960s when the late folklorist Robert “Mack” McCormick set out to solve Robert Johnson’s 1938 death.
McCormick tracked down enough of the Mississippi blues legend’s living friends and relatives to crack the case. But Mack succumbed to mental illness before finishing the book, which has been a subject of intense interest and controversy ever since.
Eight years after McCormick’s death, the book finally came out in 2023. I find it a moving but deeply sad cautionary tale about the ownership of stories and legends -- and lines that should not be crossed.
1 author picked Biography of a Phantom as one of their favorite books, and they share why you should read it.
The drama of In Cold Blood meets the stylings of a Coen brothers film in this long-lost manuscript from musicologist Robert “Mack” McCormick, whose research on blues icon Robert Johnson's mysterious life and death became as much of a myth as the musician himself
"This is a human and humane book, an insightful exploration of the biographer’s craft. [...] McCormick’s book makes you feel what we lost when Johnson died young." —New York Times
"Reads like noir fiction. It's a detective story riddled with fatalism and ambiguity carried out by someone who, like the archetypal noir hero, isn't a detective…