We All Shine On cover art

We All Shine On

John, Yoko, and Me

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We All Shine On

By: Elliot Mintz
Narrated by: Elliot Mintz
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About this listen

Brought to you by Penguin.

A personal and revealing look at the last 10 years of John Lennon’s life and his partnership with Yoko Ono, written by the friend who knew them best, publicist and music industry insider Elliot Mintz.

From the moment he interviewed Yoko Ono on his late night radio show in September 1971, Elliot Mintz’s life would never the same again. That phone call would lead him to an intense and revealing friendship with Yoko and her husband, John Lennon, until John’s untimely death in 1980, and beyond, to the present day.

In 1971, then the talk host on American airwaves, Elliot Mintz was talking to all of the major figures in the burgeoning West Coast music scene when he was asked whether he would interview Yoko about her new album. Their talk quickly lead to other private calls and then to John Lennon, with whom he quickly formed a firm bond.Those conversations became hours-long epics, to the extent that Elliot had another phone line put in, for which only two people had the number - John and Yoko.

The aftermath of The Beatles’ breakup ushered in a tumultuous decade. Elliot witnessed it, or heard all about it, at close hand including the unbearable cost of such fame when John and Yoko separated for what became known as his ‘lost weekend’. There was joy when their son Sean was born and the creative rebirth that was the multi-platinum selling triumph, Double Fantasy. But then there was unimaginable tragedy too when John was brutally murdered in December 1980.

We All Shine On is the personal, intimate and, at times, heart-breaking memoir of an extraordinary friendship, which gives a first hand view of what it was like to be close to one of the most famous couples of all time.

©2024 Elliot Mintz (P)2024 Penguin Audio
Entertainment & Celebrities Friendship Inspiring

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All stars
Most relevant
I thought he’d skirt around stuff but he didn’t. It’s a good book and an insight into life with the Lennons plus EM’s own life.

Enjoyed it. Definitely worth getting.

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Elliot Mintz was a DJ in LA when he interviewed and got to know the Lennons. The relationship quickly went beyond the strictly professional. They became friends - but later Mintz was also a gopher. He paid a private eye to help Yoko find information about people she was planning to hire by raking through their bins to find dates of birth (this was all passed on to numerologists working for Yoko). Mintz footed the bill for this, as he didn’t want to be seen as a sponger… Then there was the time John asked Mintz to shoo away a one-night stand during the ‘lost weekend’ - an epic Lennon booze binge which almost ended his marriage. Mintz wasn’t best pleased. But he remained ultra-loyal, one of the few people the Lennons felt they could trust. An insomniac, he would lie awake - or semi-conscious - in LA, waiting for an early call from the Lennons in their New York home in the Dakota apartment block. Mintz had very long chats with Yoko. He went to Japan to visit the Lennons on holiday. He was later enlisted to inventory the Lennons’ vast collection of belongings including an Egyptian mummy - and Robert Burns’s writing desk. Mintz wrote the book with Sean Lennon’s blessing (and it seems at his suggestion) and remains on good terms with Sean and his now elderly mother. It’s a fascinating book for Beatle fans. Mintz writes and narrates superbly. It also raises a question - was his slavish devotion to the Lennons worth it, given the big impact on his own life? It’s worth listening to make up your own mind… This is one of the most listenable and revealing Beatle books I’ve come across - and I’m an incurable addict…

Life with the Lennons

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I enjoyed this book on John Lennon. I enjoyed Elliots delivery as his voice is calm and drags you in to where you picture the scenes. I only wish Eliott would have read that letter. thank you Eliott. joe

thank you Eliott!

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A beautifuly read and visial inspired book I found difficult to put down, a must for any Lennon fan.

An honest and often touching recount

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Each book I read about John Lennon, and I've nearly read them all, I like him a little bit less as a person. He comes across as he most narcassistic, unreasonable, entitled, weird man. Elliot doesn't have much good to say about John or Yoko and he comes across as a lacky more than a friend. Did they ever care about him or his needs, it appears it was simply all about them with Elliot being like a pet that was trained to obey. The level of access he had was of course incredible and the anecdotes are amazing but you come away thinking it's kind of pathetic that he saw himself as a friend when he was treated like shit and pretty much used.

The level of personal access

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