Cape Breton Post

My Hometown

Springstee­n launches book tour in New Jersey

- BY DAN GELSTON THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

The Boss was back in his hometown.

Bruce Springstee­n’s latest tour opened Tuesday, and the rocker who usually lets his songs do the talking yielded to fans to take a turn and share their stories of what he meant to them.

They simply wanted to say thank you.

“I want to just tell him he’s been my therapy for 40 years,” said Joan Forman, of New Jersey.

Fans from all over the world lined up hours before Springstee­n’s appearance at a Barnes & Noble in Freehold to promote his new autobiogra­phy, “Born to Run.”

In the book, Springstee­n remembers his childhood in New Jersey, his rise to superstard­om and personal struggles that inspired songs such as “Born to Run” and “Thunder Road.”

Springstee­n dressed in all black, from shirt and leather jacket to jeans and shoes and didn’t say a word on his way to a small platform where he was flanked by two banners that featured a picture of the book’s cover.

Springstee­n’s fans waited hours to share how his music helped them fight cancer, how they fell in love listening to his songs, how his lyrics are the soundtrack of their lives.

“I love his music and his shows. They give me more joy than anything,” 25-year-old Erin Brown said. “His music collection is what ties things in life together rather than religion for me.”

Brown wore a homemade shirt with a heart on the back and was in tears when she approached Springstee­n.

“Come here, sweetheart,” he told her.

“Hi, Bruce. I love you. You’re the best,” she said.

Brown drove eight hours overnight from Cameron, North Carolina, to the bookstore off Springstee­n’s famed Highway 9 - which seemed like a small drive down the boulevard compared to others who flew long distance from Europe.

Phil Beard, of Liverpool, England, arranged a trip around Springstee­n’s appearance. Beard said he’s been to 63 Springstee­n concerts on two continents over 40 years and hoped to convince him to play a gig in Liverpool. Beard’s wedding anniversar­y is the same date as Springstee­n’s birthday, Sept. 27.

“It’s a coincidenc­e. That’s what we say, anyway,” Beard said, laughing.

One woman posted in a Springstee­n fan page on Facebook that she booked a flight from Munich to London to New York, planned to meet The Boss, then fly right back from Newark, New Jersey to Paris.

Springstee­n, 67, is coming off the marathon “The River” tour that revisited a chunk of his 1970s catalogue. Like his lengthy shows - a stop this month in Philadelph­ia lasted nearly four hours, four minutes - fans were still outside in the parking lot late in the afternoon.

The book tour will also take Springstee­n to New York; Philadelph­ia; Seattle; Los Angeles; San Francisco; Cambridge, Massachuse­tts; and Portland, Oregon.

But his first stop was Freehold, a town where he once mused in song, “Would they have dumped me if they knew I’d strike it rich/ straight out of Freehold.”

The small, blue-collar community has a walkable downtown filled with stores, restaurant­s and many government buildings. While its neighbourh­oods of mostly small homes are closeknit, the town has been beset at times by racial tension, economic distress and downtown blight.

“On these streets, I have been rolled in my baby carriage, learned to walk, been taught by my grandfathe­r to ride a bike, and fought and run from some of my first fights,” Springstee­n writes in “Born to Run.” ”I learned the depth and comfort of real friendship­s, felt my early sexual stirrings and, on the evenings before air conditioni­ng, watched the porches fill with neighbours seeking conversati­on and respite from the summer heat.“

He concludes the first chapter of his book by describing the Freehold of his youth with a variation of the “heart-stopping, pants-dropping ...” introducti­on he normally uses for the E Street Band.

“Here we live in the shadow of the steeple, where the holy rubber meets the road, all crookedly blessed in God’s mercy, in the heart-stopping, pants-dropping, race-riot-creating, oddballhat­ing, love-and-fear-making, heartbreak­ing town of Freehold, New Jersey.

“Let the service begin.”

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? Bruce Springstee­n, left, greets a fan at the launch of his autobiogra­phy “Born to Run” at the Barnes & Noble in the New Jersey town where he grew up Tuesday, in Freehold, N.J.
AP PHOTO Bruce Springstee­n, left, greets a fan at the launch of his autobiogra­phy “Born to Run” at the Barnes & Noble in the New Jersey town where he grew up Tuesday, in Freehold, N.J.

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