Reviews
Featured on NPR’s Morning Edition. Listen here.
Selected by the Village Voice as one of the 10 Best Books of 2010.
Chosen by Amazon as the ENTERTAINMENT BOOK OF THE YEAR (2010).
“It’s unquestionably brilliant, not only one of the best music
books of the year, but also one of the best music books ever
written.”
— Los Angeles Times
“How to Wreck a Nice Beach is much more than a labor of
love: It’s an intergalactic vision quest fueled by several
thousand gallons of high-octane spiritual-intellectual lust. …
[Tompkin’s] biggest and most perilous adventure in
How to Wreck a Nice Beach is the plunge deep into the
throbbing radioactive heart of his own prose—a hallucinatory
stew of Rimbaud, Tom Wolfe, Lester Bangs, and Bootsy
Collins.”
— New York Magazine
“We should be thankful that Tompkins sacrificed a decade to this
unique and beautifully wrought book, in tribute to the brief
cultural moment when a tool of militarism, secrets and
destruction found itself transformed by music-makers into a
zap-gun of heroic space-age liberation.”
— Andrew Male, Mojo
“…work(s) the military-entertainment-complex angle with
admirable energy, piling up flash-frozen anecdotes of pilots and
DJs in voice-critical moments; showing, in its drooling over
antique military-signaling equipment, a musician’s gear-lust;
and striving incessantly to invoke sound: ‘It could sound like
an articulate bag of dead leaves.’ Despite its dense payload of
raw fact-bombs, the book remains, like the sound of the vocoder
itself, suggestively ghostly.”
— The Guardian
“…Achieves what the best music writing does–it opens doors,
tears off tarps and digs in the dirt to reveal the stunning
variety and potential in popular music.”
— The Nation
“While the language of hip-hop has long seeped into the words of
its critics, Tompkins goes further than simple slang-signifying.
His work echoes the rhythm and structure of the genre’s more
adventurous practitioners, spiraling down parentheses at an
ultramagnetic speed of thought and mirroring the interconnected
wordplay of De La Soul.”
— Andrew Noz, Washington City Paper
“From the atomic bomb to the band Zapp, from
The Gulag Archipelago to Detroit’s ghettos, Tompkins
rewires the connections between war, science, and art to give us
a glimpse of ‘evolved’ man, an analog crooner seductively and
jarringly alien.”
— Oxford American
“A fascinating and entertaining debut.”
— Bookforum
“Tompkins loves making disparate connections, and throughout his
history of the voice-distorting machine, he slyly links
seemingly unrelated people, places and moments in history like
he’s unscrambling his own personal
Da Vinci Code.”
— The Fader
“With verve and humor, Dave Tompkins tells the remarkable story
of the vocoder and its secret WWII offspring, which protected
the very words of Roosevelt and Churchill as they flashed across
the Atlantic. Nobody has ever related this before, and to have a
technological tale related this well is a great gift to science
and to history.”
— David Kahn, author of
The Codebreakers and Hitler’s Spies








