Out today (Tuesday, Nov. 14th) is Rush bassist Geddy Lee's memoir “My Effin' Life.” It's the follow-up to his “Geddy Lee's Big Beautiful Book of Bass” in 2018 and takes a 512-page look at Lee's life, from his upbringing in Toronto as the child of Holocaust survivors to the present day, including the death of Rush drummer Neil Peart in 2020 and time he's spending as a grandfather. Although he enjoyed the process, Lee tells us that until Peart's death and the pandemic lockdown he never entertained the idea of a memoir:
“I was reluctant to do such a book. I was always looking forward. I live my life trying to reach out. I just looked at my life as being filled with some unfinished business — I don't know what that business was, necessarily, I just know there's more to do and it seemed to slow you down to spend so much time looking behind you. And besides, I thought, 'I'm way too young to do this kind of thing.' But a few things changed my thinking.” :41 OC: changed my thinking
Lee adds that the book was initially 1,200 pages long and went through an arduous editing process.