Tonight in Jungleland: The Making of Born to Run by Peter Ames Carlin will be available this summer
Bruce Springsteen’s seminal album, Born To Run, celebrates its 50th anniversary this year. In celebration, Doubleday will release Tonight in Jungleland: The Making of Born to Run, an intimate, tell-all account of the making of the album, sanctioned by The Boss himself, from celebrated musical journalist Peter Ames Carlin. The book will be available on August 5th.
From the opening piano notes of “Thunder Road” to the final outro of “Jungleland,” with American anthems like “Born to Run” and “Tenth Avenue Freeze Out” in between, Bruce Springsteen’s seminal album, Born to Run, established Springsteen as a creative force in rock and roll. It is indisputably his crowning achievement, which launched him to international superstardom—but it almost never happened.
By the spring of 1974, the situation at Columbia Records had become dire for Springsteen. His first two albums had been highly praised but had gained almost no commercial traction. Columbia was not going to pay for a full third album. They agreed to give him enough money to record just one more song; if it sounded like a hit, or even something with a chance of radio play, they’d consider financing a full album. Bruce was determined to craft a song powerful enough to stake the rest of his career on, so he sat on his small bed near the Jersey Shore and picked up his guitar. He listened to the traffic outside his window and envisioned the muscle cars he saw roaring around Asbury Park. Then he pulled some chords out of the air and wrote the words, “Baby, we were born to run.”
With his back against the wall, Springsteen wrote what has been hailed as a perfect album, a defining moment, and a roadmap for what would become a legendary career. Tonight in Jungleland details the writing and recording of every song on the album, a tortuous process that betrayed the fault lines in Springsteen’s psyche and career, even as it revealed the depth of his vision and the power of his determination. It’s a journey and a story—from the first harmonica notes of “Thunder Road” and its opening lyric, “The screen door slams, Mary’s dress sways,” to the “Barefoot girl sitting on the hood of a Dodge” in “Jungleland,” with its massive, theatrical finale of raised and crushed dreams against a backdrop of Springsteen’s hopeful and melancholic New Jersey (“There’s an opera out on the Turnpike / There’s a ballet being fought out in the alley… Tonight, in Jungleland”)—that combines Carlin’s signature narrative style, trademark energy, lush music writing, and intellectual style, with unprecedented access to Springsteen, his bandmates, and his longtime collaborators.
Peter Ames Carlin is a cultural writer and journalist who has written several books about music and musicians, including Sonic Boom: The Impossible Rise of Warner Bros. Records; Paul McCartney: A Life; Homeward Bound: The Life of Paul Simon; Bruce, the internationally bestselling biography of Bruce Springsteen; and the critically acclaimed 2024 biography The Name of This Band is R.E.M. Carlin has also been a freelance journalist, a senior writer at People in New York City, and a television columnist and feature writer at The Oregonian in Portland. A regular speaker on music, writing, and popular culture, Carlin lives in Seattle with his partner, the writer Claire Dederer.