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Review Date: 11/5/2023
Demented kabuki dance of historical b.s.
Why a good writer like McMurtry put out books like this is a mystery to me. If anything like historical accuracy is important to you in your fiction, avoid this book at all costs.
Why a good writer like McMurtry put out books like this is a mystery to me. If anything like historical accuracy is important to you in your fiction, avoid this book at all costs.
Review Date: 11/1/2023
This book was obviously written for a youthful audience, but the adventures of John Bullard will find a home with adult readers, as well. It's not great literature by any stretch of the imagination, nor is it great science fiction. But it IS pretty good adventure, so if you're looking for escapism and fast pacing, this book fills the bill nicely.
Review Date: 11/9/2023
How Margaret Lane and her husband got into and out of the jungles of Mozambique alive is a mystery to me. Her memoir is replete with disaster after disaster and -- finally--very real danger. She was at one time one of England's top writers (most noted for her books on Beatrix Potter), and she uses all her skills in this entertaining and eye-opening account of the diamond expedition.
I came to correspond with Lane's daughter a couple of years ago, and she told me she was amazed that this book even found its way into print -- that her mother and father's hubris in going to Africa to rob an ancient grave could have been construed as a crime in both Africa and England. How they got their story out, without going to jail, is a mystery.
Good reading. I recommend the book.
I came to correspond with Lane's daughter a couple of years ago, and she told me she was amazed that this book even found its way into print -- that her mother and father's hubris in going to Africa to rob an ancient grave could have been construed as a crime in both Africa and England. How they got their story out, without going to jail, is a mystery.
Good reading. I recommend the book.
Review Date: 11/1/2023
Warmly written, with great big doses of humor. It's easy to see why Paine was once one of America's most popular writers.
Review Date: 11/9/2023
Very comprehensive and lucidly written. I used this book for years when I was a newspaper reviewer of the American Shakespeare Center's plays. It helped me gain an invaluable understanding of each play before I saw it.
Flight to Heaven: A Plane Crash...A Lone Survivor...A Journey to Heaven--and Back
Author:
Book Type: Paperback
22
Author:
Book Type: Paperback
22
Review Date: 11/1/2023
I found myself skipping parts of it, but the gist of it was quite inspirational.
Review Date: 11/11/2023
A do-it-yourself Createspace "book" that is 26 pages shorter than the miniumum # required by PBS.
Review Date: 11/1/2023
No one wrote more movingly about the great unspoiled wilderness of the Canadian north country than Sigurd Olson. This book chronicles his journey with several other men as they undertook a thousand-mile canoe trip through some of this territory. Well written, of course, and written with feeling. Love this bok.
Review Date: 11/1/2023
If you like Agatha Christie (or murder mysteries in general), you can't go wrong with this collection of some of her most popular novels.
Review Date: 11/1/2023
Not a long book, but one that chronicles a forgotten piece of Civil War history. Baker's memoir about a sea-borne Confederate partisan fighter is well written and interesting from start to finish.
Review Date: 11/9/2023
One of America's late, great authors -- Bertrand Sinclair -- gives us an entertaining (if steadily paced) story of a big city girl who marries a wild man from the Canadian north, and how they make a life together out in the middle of nowhere.
Good, solid adventure with good, solid writing.
Good, solid adventure with good, solid writing.
Review Date: 11/1/2023
The entire Pulp Western Anthology series by Clarion Publishing is entertaining and amusing -- and this volume is no different. The stories and novelettes vary in quality, of course, since they were written by different authors, but they are all fun as heck to read. Makes you wish all those pulp publications were still around.
Review Date: 11/1/2023
Kellogg wasn't an inspired writer, but he was certainly an erudite and thorough one. This book about the Civil War in the Shenandoah Valley of Virginia is researched to the hilt (the author participated in the Union conquest of the Valley) and presented in a non-biased, straightforward manner. I think this is a useful and valuable historic resource.
Turner Classic Movies: Must-See Musicals: 50 Show-Stopping Movies We Can't Forget
Author:
Book Type: Paperback
1
Author:
Book Type: Paperback
1
Review Date: 11/9/2023
Beautifully appointed, well-written and thoroughly researched, this is a must for anyone who loves movie musicals. You may disagree with some of the author's choices for great musicals, but he certainly nails all the standards and more. It's a good read and a valuable reference.
Review Date: 11/1/2023
As with all of Thurber's books, this one -- in which he gives us a detailed word-portrait of his boss and the founder of The New Yorker -- is written with a great deal of humor. And, since Thurber knew and liked Harold Ross, he wrote his reminiscences with warmth, as well. This is a well written book about a man who has essentially been forgotten by the American public; I highly recommend it.
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