Aaron Chapman and Simon Kendall Tell the Unlikely True Story of Doug and the Slugs

Vancouver’s Doug and the Slugs never quite fit the mold, and that’s exactly what made them matter. ‘Real Enough: The Unlikely Story of Doug & the Slugs,’ written by historian and musician Aaron Chapman and former Slugs keyboardist Simon Kendall, arrives April 10 from Anvil Press and digs into one of Canadian rock’s most genuinely singular stories. Too polished for punk, too irreverent for radio rock, the group built a Gold record career out of relentless touring and the magnetic pull of frontman Doug Bennett, the self-appointed clown prince of Canadian rock and roll.

Kendall brings a rare insider perspective. He joined the band in 1978 and spent fifteen years as its music director and keyboardist, part of a run that produced four Gold albums and saw the Slugs perform everywhere from New York to the North Pole. Chapman, a two-time Bill Duthie Booksellers’ Choice Award winner and elected member of the Royal Historical Society, brings the historian’s eye. Together they’ve assembled never-before-published photos, personal diaries, posters, ticket stubs, and ephemera that make ‘Real Enough’ as much a visual document as a biography.