Woody Allen Books


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Woody Allen Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

 Woody Allen
Mud Pie Annie
Published in Hardcover by Zonderkidz (2001-02-01)
Authors: Sue Buchanan and Dana Shafer
List price: $12.99
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Mud Pie Annie
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2001-07-19
This is DELIGHTFUL! The words twist and turn and almost taste good as the story develops. It is wonderfully illustrated. It is fun for adults to read and for kids to hear.

Wonderful story with a good message
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2001-05-25
This is a great book -- well written, fabulously illustrated and carrying a meaningful message for young children. I especially loved the recipes. Highly recommended!

Very cute indeed
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2001-04-24
My daughter got this book as a gift and we really enjoy it. We like it so much we loaned it to her teacher who has incorporated it into her lesson plan with an mud pie cookie project. The book also comes with some kids recipes in back.

Chux keen review
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2001-07-31
Playfully written, excellently illustrated. A tasty literary treat, with cool recipes to boot. Read it to your children then take the recipes and let the kids assert their individuality in the kitchen! ...

 Woody Allen
My Son Is a Marine
Published in Paperback by Echelon Press (2005-04)
Author: Jo Anne Allen
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A Wonderful Book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-24
From a Marine Mom's point of view....a wonderful book. I cried and laughed at times through the whole book. There wasn't a page that I didn't like. I thank Jo Anne Allen for writting her story to share with us. She is a brilliant writer and a wonderful Mom. God Bless you Jo Anne and AJ. -Lori

Ooorah!

Hard to put down, impossible to forget!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-12-07
Jo Anne Allen's MY SON IS A MARINE captures in riveting detail the author's personal struggle through every mother's nightmare; a child deployed to combat. Despite the sheer gravity of the situation, Jo Anne manages to fill her story with humor and an unshakeable faith while describing how she kept both her spirits and that of her deployed Marine high throughout his combat tour in Iraq. Through Allen's extraordinary writing talent, her children come alive to the reader, as well as her "other children" (AJ's friends, whom she practically adopts), and even the family dog is described in such simple yet warm detail that you expect her to come bounding into your room at any moment!

Allen draws her audience in early with a graphic account of a childhood near-death experience for her son AJ, and then another from his teenage years. Both of these events convince the reader that AJ must survive, because he has some higher purpose from God. Eventually it becomes clear that the purpose is going to Iraq, where AJ not only does his duty, but impacts the lives of so many of his fellow Marines as well.

My favorite part was all the little anecdotes relayed through the story, usually concerning AJ's childhood. They add such depth to the narrative flow of the book. And the stories of the Three Trees and the Cup Full of Sins are ones that I will carry around with me for a long time. This book is easy to read, easy to develop, hard to put down, and impossible to forget. It is a must read for parents of young deployed servicemembers, and also for anyone who has ever asked the Almighty "Why?"

Very Touching
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-04-24
I just got through reading "My Son is a Marine" and found it to be a very touching and inspirational book. My son is also in the Marines and is presently doing border patrol in Iraq. Reading this book has helped me to find strength to lay down a lot of my worries about his safety and well being during his deployment. This book is more than a Marine Mother's story, it is a story of how faith can change lives. AJ is a phenominal young man and his love of God is such an inspiration. Thank you Jo Anne for telling your story and may God bless you and your family.

MWSA's Reader's Choice Award for 2006!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-09-14
Moving, inspiring, compelling, mystical, spiritual and entertaining! Personally, it was one of the best reading experiences of the year for me. Author, and mother of an Iraq veteran, Jo Anne Allen writes from her heart and it shows in her memoir "My Son Is A Marine". It is a joy and a real pleasure to read something uplifting dealing with the Iraq War experience. Even though her book is filled with enough "Kleenex Moments" to make a great soap opera, she never loses her faith in life.

Her moving words about her son and his friends are touching and healing. This book would be good spiritual medicine for those with children in a war zone; or whose own lives have been challenged by having to carry some of life's burdens. Jo Ann is not some simple minded "Pollyanna" but a faithful and very much human being, who is trying to cope and deal with her life under some extraordinary circumstances.

I found myself rooting for her and her family throughout the pages of this book. It is one of those stories that you are glued to as soon as you begin and must continue reading through to the end. I read it the first morning I got the book--I could not put it down until I was done with it.

This is not your normal "I got a son in the war story" by any measurement. It is something very special. I believe it will help bring people back to their own spiritual roots. It will change lives and make people different in a very positive way.

This is the MWSA's winner of "The Reader's Choice Award" for 2006! I give this book our top rating of FIVE STARS! A must read book!!!!

 Woody Allen
North Pole Legacy: Black, White and Eskimo
Published in Hardcover by Univ of Massachusetts Pr (1991-04)
Author: S. Allen Counter
List price: $25.00
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North Pole Legacy: Black, White, and Eskimo
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-19
This is an amzing current day historical account given by Dr Counter on his childhood hero Matthew Henson's and Robert Peary's North Pole discovery and the legacy they left.

well documented
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-28
found this in my local library, and it was a great read. For a neuroscientist to be the writer, he is also a good writer. One passage describes as Peary's wife, coming to the artic from New York City on a relief ship, must have seen an Inuit woman with a Inuit child of white skin complexion, and "must have understood. A stoic woman", as the book describes, decided in not saying anything. Very very detailed, it filled the dots in many areas. Would have liked a critical analysis of the 1912 Henson book "A Polar Explorer" in light of the culture during the time it was written, and how it would have been re-written today, since the book publication could only be possible after Peary's review. And would have also mentioned more about the meteorites found and hauled in the 1890's. But still, the amount of detail and effort in stringing it all together is majestic.

Best of the Peary/Henson Books
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-01-09
I've read a good number of books by and about Peary, Henson, Rasmussen, Freuchen, Ehrlich, and others, and this is the best of the lot. It's a fascinating story that recounts the Peary/Henson trek to the N Pole and bundles it with such topics as Eskimo culture, race relations a century ago, and race relations today. Throughout it all, Dr. Counter writes with great sensitivity and objectivity about controversial topics. That he was able to discover the modern relations of Matthew Henson and bring them to the states for reunion and recognition is remarkable. If you are at all interested in history, the N Pole expeditions, or artic living, you'll really enjoy this book.

Amazing Story
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2001-11-05
I just heard this book's author on the radio, and was so impressed by him. He's a Harvard professor who got interested in the story of Matthew Henson, a black man who explored the Arctic and discovered the North Pole along with Robert Peary. The professor, Dr. Counter, has gone to the Arctic several times now, and has befriended the sons and grandsons of both Henson and Peary. Before Dr. Counter, nobody in the US even knew that these explorers had fathered children up there. And Dr. Counter has done a lot to get Henson recognition here in the States, where institutionalized racism has minimized his role in history.

 Woody Allen
The Occidental Tourist: More Than 130 Asian-Inspired Recipes
Published in Hardcover by Simon & Schuster (2001-10-16)
Authors: Sally Sampson and Stan Frankenthaler
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dude rocks
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2003-09-27
I caught this guy on the PBS TV show "Chefs A' Field" harpooning a giant Bluefin Tuna and thought "that dude rocks!" Yes, it sounds odd to harpoon something, but it's cool and very good for the environment...go figure. Anyway, I looked into him and found this fabulous book. The recipes are execllent as well as his philosophy. Anyone who likes a little asian influence in their dining experience will love this book!
P.S. I also picked up another book he is in, the Chefs A' Field cookbook (from the tv series), and really like that as well - he shares the spotlight with 12 other chefs in this one.

A reader
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2002-08-20
This is a great cookbook for the home cook. It gives the home cook the opportunity to cook using Asian ingredients and techniques readily available to most. The simple instructions are refreshing and encouraging. I have been quite pleased with the recipes I have tried, and I consider myself quite a "Food Snob", not that you have to be a snob to appreciate the food, my ten year old enjoys the recipes almost as much as I do.

A reader
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2002-08-20
This is a great cookbook for the home cook. It gives the home cook the opportunity to cook using Asian ingredients and techniques readily available to most. The simple instructions are refreshing and encouraging. I have been quite pleased with the recipes I have tried, and I consider myself quite a "Food Snob", not that you have to be a snob to appreciate the food, my ten year old enjoys the recipes almost as much as I do.

Excellent cookbook
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2001-11-09
Just reading the recipes makes my mouth water. The first chapter describes the basic ingredients and gives tips on stocking your pantry. I especially like the little blurbs on special ingredients that are interspersed with the recipes throughout the book. One of my favorite dishes at Salamander is the tea-brined chicken, so I was especially pleased to see the recipe was included in this book.

 Woody Allen
The Official Red Book of Morgan Silver Dollars 1878-1921: America's Most Popular Classic Coins
Published in Paperback by Whitman Publishing (2004-01)
Author: Q. David Bowers
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I hate Morgan dollars, but I enjoyed this book
Helpful Votes: 12 out of 13 total.
Review Date: 2004-09-14
Earning my living from numismatics, I can't afford to miss reading just about any book from the field of numismatics. So, I set myself down for some boring reading since I just hate Morgan dollars. But I was engrossed. Mr Bowers is a capable author as well as a famous numismatist. The history of all U.S. dollars is covered in brief, and then the history of why the Morgan dollar was even minted in the first place. Continues with how the original dies were made and includes portions of letters and notes from the people actually involved. There's intrigue, double-crossing, mystery, and so forth -- all in a reference book about one particular coin. You'd just never expect it. Of course, the remainder of the book deals with minting the coins and then a blow-by-blow for each date and mint in the series.

Excellent, invaluable resource!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2004-04-09
The best information and historical reference of the Morgan series I have read in years!

Very interesting read
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2004-12-02
As someone new to the world of numismatics (but interested in Morgans) I was a bit confused by all the varieties, mintmarks, etc. This book explained everything to me. The history is quite fascinating. I am looking forward to getting my first "CC". Overall, a very heplful and well written book.

Excellent Succint Description of The Morgan Silver Dollar
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2004-06-11
This book gives a concise desription of both the historical development of Morgan Silver Dollars as well as pratical information in determining the highlights of each Morgan Silver Dollar according to the chronological year. The book is informative and descriptive in its interpretation of the Morgan Silver Dollar. Most important the reading isn't dry but keeps you intrigued, especially the historical data associated with the Morgan Silver Dollar Series. The book is well written and definitely an addition to any numismatic literary collection.

 Woody Allen
On the Banks of the Amazon/En las orillas del amazonas (Bilingual)
Published in Library Binding by Raven Tree Press C/O Delta (2004-01)
Authors: Nancy Kelly Allen and Eida De LA Vega
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Very well done!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2004-10-31
I have read the book, On The Banks of the Amazon, to my grandchildren, who are more than facinated with the pictures. The story holds the interest of even the smallest child, all the way to the end. And what a nice surprise at the end!

The text and pictures compliment each other well. This book would be an asset to classrooms and libraries, especially since it is bilingual. It can be enjoyed by children of many ages.

On the Banks of the Amazon
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2004-08-24
Mrs. Allen has done a wonderful job showing the amazing sites of the Amazon along with keeping the reader on their toes as the hunter looks for exotic things. I recommend this book to all children, as well as educators. It would be a wonderful resource in a rainforest unit.

bilingual adventure!
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2004-05-05
Written in alternating English & Spanish, ON THE BANKS OF THE AMAZON/EN LAS ORILLAS DEL AMAZONAS will take you & your children into the rainforest of South America where glorious animals of all different shapes & sizes will entrance you.

Great illustrations by Elizabeth Driessen -- energetic, colorful & mesmerizing.

Rebeccasreads highly recommends this & any book published by Raven Tree Press for lively bilingual stories about life on Mother Earth.

Bright colorful book that children will enjoy
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2004-06-24
"On the Banks of the Amazon" takes the reader out for a day with two photographers as they travel along the edge of the Amazon River. They encounter howler monkeys, poison dart frogs, an anaconda, parrots, caiman and other animals. Detailed full-page illustrations keep a child's interest well and support the reading material. It is a well-done bilingual book written in English and Spanish for children about seven to ten years old. "On the Banks of the Amazon" is a recommended children's book.

 Woody Allen
The One and the Golden Circle
Published in Paperback by AuthorHouse (2003-06-02)
Author: Don Allen Beene
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Book review by Baryon Online--Reviewer Barry Hunter
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-01-23
Blane invites his best friend Bob on a fishing trip in order to catch up with what's going on in their lives since they both retired four years earlier. Bob seems preoccupied and tells Blane about his latest findings in the human genome and DNA research. It is now possible through his research that a person may be to relive the lives of their ancestors and possibly discover the origins of life.

Blane becomes the subject of the experiment and Beene has filled this very unusual novel with interesting characters and events to show the development of the species and to tie it in with the concepts of Genesis. Beene also uses astral projection to help some of the characters move forward in the story.

Beene has written a creative scientific mystery that intelligently mixes the positions of evolution with religion and made it believable and interesting. Kudos on a job well done using a topic that is just coming into the forefront of the news.

Selected excerpts from a book review by Sci-fi online
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2004-05-08
An original, engaging novel which puts a new slant on the well used " aliens are out there" plot."

"What if, after years of research scientists discovered that our DNA was actually an alien invader?"

"The One and the Golden Circle puts forward and interesting theory.
What would happen if scientists discovered that DNA not only originated on another planet, but that it controlled everything we do?"

"Okay, it sounds far fetched, but the events, as they are revealed in this novel, sound extremely plausible. And it would explain why, despite numerous warnings and chances to change the way we live, mankind is intent on destroying the environment that allows him to live."

" I like the fact that a lot of the author was in this book - it made it feel more realistic."

Scarily enough, this book is not as far fetched as I wish it was. A lot of it is grounded in scientific fact, and the leap the reader has to make in order to take in the rest of the events is not large."

Take the time to read.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2004-06-02
Imagine being one of those people that can't seem to pay attention when they try to read something. Well I am one of those people. I heard from a friend that this was a really well written book and that it would keep me interested. As soon as i received it, i began to read and could not make myself put it down. I found myself rushing home to just so i could get back into it. The author wraps you up in a totally original story that winds you through the lives of people and places traced back from one man's ancestors. I found it to be exceptionally intriguing and even an educational experience. I am not sure that science fiction is the best classification since there are several twists and turns of some obvious non-fiction, romance, spirituality and occult. The story is original and the writing puts the reader right in the story. In finishing I would, not to sound cliche, highly reccomend this book, to any type of reader. I want to thank the author for this enlightening experience.

A mystical, absorptive literary experience
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2004-04-12
The One And The Golden Circle by Don Allen Beene is an original and deftly woven novel that explores the secrets hidden within the human genome. From living in the mind of primitive man, to tracing human lineage all the way to the common ancestor of life on Earth, The One And The Golden Circle is a mystical, absorptive literary experience that takes the reader out onto a colorful and imaginative journey enhanced with what contemporary and the breaking edge science of genetics and mapping the genome has to say about the boundless potential of the human body and spirit.

 Woody Allen
Optimizing Compilers for Modern Architectures: A Dependence-based Approach
Published in Hardcover by Morgan Kaufmann (2001-10-22)
Authors: Randy Allen and Ken Kennedy
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Finally, everything in one place.
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2003-02-05
As a researcher in the field, this book was immediately useful to me. Nearly every source code transformation and optimization technique that I'm aware of is present in this book, which often saves sifting through stacks of papers or looking for an elusive reference. If you're looking for a book to teach you the basics of how compilers work, it certainly is not the appropriate place to begin, but if you already have one good book on that then this book will make an excellent companion to it. It was slightly annoying that the book comes with two loose pages, one errata list and another to tape over a page early in the book, but that's what you get with 1st editions. Overall it's very good and the errors are very minor typos as opposed to factual goofs.

An excellent book on loop based optimization
Helpful Votes: 14 out of 14 total.
Review Date: 2003-04-14
Randy Allen and Ken Kennedy are famous for their contributions
to compiler design theory. This book is a clearly written
discussion of the issues involving loop optimization and
dependence analysis. While this book also covers scalar
optimization issues, it is naturally complemented by Steven
S. Muchnick's excellent book "Advanced Compiler Design and
Implementation".

Randy Allen has spent many years implementing a variety of
compilers for supercomputers and hardware design languages.
While Ken Kennedy has published seminal theoretical work on
compiler optimization, he has also been involved in hands on
implementation as well. The experience of these two authors
results in a book which covers the huge body of knowledge in
compiler optimization and provides this knowledge in a
practical form that can be used by software engineers working
on compiler design.

For anyone working on modern compilers that require sophisticated
optimization features, this is an important reference work.
As with Muchnick's book, I have owned this since it was first
published. Rereading it reminds me of what a gem this work is.

Must-have for compiler writers and processor designers
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-15
Allen and Kennedy (A&K) haven't written your first compiler book. There's nothing about syntax analysis, code generation, instruction scheduling, or intermediate representations. You already know all that part, or you won't get very far in this book. Once you have the basics down, A&K is an irreplaceable reference.

It centers heavily on Fortran - even today, a mainstay of scientific computing and an active area of language development. Today, just as 50 years ago, the language's straightforward structure makes detailed behavioral analysis relatively easy. That's especially true in handling the array computations that soak up so many dozens (as of this writing) of CPU-hours per second on todays largest machines. There's far too much to summarize here, but A&K cover a huge range of processor features, including caches, multiple ALUs, vector units, chaining, and more. C code gets some attention as well, much needed because of the cultural weirdness around array handling in C. In every case, the focus is on the real-world kernels that need the help and on explicit ways of identifying and manipulating those code structures. As a result, the authors disregard the unreal situations that sometimes arise, e.g. in
"while (--n) *a++ = *b++ * *c++;"
Yes, the arrays pointed to by a, b, and c can overlap. But the pointer a can also point to a, b, c, or n, somewhere in its range - and likewise for pointers b and c, or all three. There is essentially no limit to how bad this can get, e.g when n is an alias for a, b, or c. Yes these are rare situations and generally errors - but I've seen on-the-fly code generation in production environments, so even the A&K example isn't as bad as it gets. I admit these to be pathological cases, though, better suited to an 'Obfuscated C' contest than to a compiler textbook.

The real disappointment comes from the section on compilation for Verilog and VHDL, and that disappointment may be a matter of emphasis only. The authors focus heavily on the strangeness of four-valued bits, which exist in Verilog and VHDL simulation, but not in synthesis. I.e., not in what really matters to a deployed application. The real challenge lies in compilation of C or Fortran into gates, a topic that the authors barely skim. That, however, is still a field of research exotica. It should be mentioned in a general book on compilation, as it is here, but awaits a text of its own.

All you processor designers out there should read the title a little differently. You should read this as "Modern Architectures for Optimizing Compilers," but you probably worked that out for yourself. If you have the luxury to define your own memory structure, all that analysis of memory access will give you plenty of ideas for your next ASIP. It will certainly give you lots of ways to quantify the behavior of your target applications, so you'll know just how to get the most MIPS per Mgate, including hard limits on how much hardware paralellism can actually do you any good.

All architects of performance computing systems, hardware or software, need this book. Even application developers can learn better ways to cooperate with the compilers and tools that run their codes. It has my very highest recommendation.

//wiredweird

Very readable, very specific
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2005-08-11
This book is a very thorough look through all the ways you can extract and use parallelism and data dependencies advantageously in an optimized compiler, depending on your target architecture. As one example, this book contains every imaginable way to deal with arrays and loops and the maddeningly complex data dependancies that can result from their various interminglings. The book is refreshingly easy to read and contains pseudo-code and step-by-step examples everywhere you'd want to see them.

 Woody Allen
Orphan of Creation
Published in Paperback by Foxacre Press (2000-12-01)
Author: Roger MacBride Allen
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Average review score:

What does it mean to be "human"?
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-22
This book is a wonderful example of SF at its best. It is a fascinating story in its own right with a very interesting and well-conceived protagonist but it also gives insight into an important philosophical question: just what does it mean to be "human"?
Previous reviewer Rob Sawyer (one of the favorite SF writers and one of the VERY few I buy in hardback!) has commented on this being a book with interesting psychological interactions (a quality I find very well represented in his own books). The most prominent of these is the protagonist's struggle as an African-American with the lack of acceptance of the Neandertals in Africa. However, men to whom I have recommended this book have resonated especially to the protagonist's relationship with her husband, which is tested in an extraordinary way in the course of this book.
This is a book I have recommended highly to non-science-fiction readers with excellent response. For SF fans, this is a great way to convince your friends that SF is more than space ships and invading aliens!

What if a group of primitive hominids had survived ?,
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-08

Like Harry Turtledove's "A different Flesh" this superb book by Roger MacBride Allen takes as its starting point the survival of an early race of hominids and the enormous moral problems which might arise if humanity discovered a race of creatures which are human enough that we have to accept them as people but primitive enough that we cannot pretend even as a legal fiction that they are our equals.

The story starts when a paleontologist, who is an American of colour, is staying with her family, who have done well enough that they now own the plantation where their ancestors were once slaves. She finds some records indicating that the original owner had imported as slave labour a group of creatures who her ancestor described as apes. Intrigued she organises an archaological dig to try to find out what kind of ape could have been used in this way. She was not expecting what she finds ...

An example of one of the thought provoking ideas in the book - a journalist asks a distinguished scientist what question he would ask an Australopithicus, and he replies that he would ask "What is a person?" Later in the story he actually does get to meet a hominid closely related to Australopithecus, and on a whim he does ask her this question.

On the last page of the book we get her answer and, although of limited use as a wider definition, it would be completely convincing. If you want to know what it is, you'll have to read the book.

A keeper
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2000-04-14
The year this book came out, my friends passed it around until the copies we had were tattered. We all thought Allen deserved to win the Campbell award for best new writer. I still have a "circulation" copy for others to read because it's so good.

The basic story line takes you from Africa to the Smithsonian Institue in Washington, DC, then to a startling discovery in the Southern States (remains of prehistoric man are found that only date back to the 1800's). The main character is a black woman, who's point of view is so convincing, I initially thought Allen was a pseudonym for a woman. She's not only dealing with an anthropological mystery, but also with everyday life and marital problems.

The anthropology and basic science presented in the story helps move the plot along, rather than interfering. In fact, by the end of the book, I found myself believing the events depicted really could happen!

Excellent book, now back in print
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2002-02-21
I finished reading this book a few days ago, and find myself constantly bringing it up in conversation with my wife and other people. It's extremely good: paleoanthropologically accurate, but also dead-on in its human psychology. More: it's one of those books that happens to be packaged as science fiction that could be read, and thoroughly enjoyed, by any thoughtful reader. Indeed, I used to say that no SF book would ever have a chance of being an Oprah's Book Club pick, but this one just might. Its soaring humanity, fascinating look at the concept of slavery (through the distorting lens of a group of African-American slaves having actually burried australopithecines who had been forced to work alongside them in the fields), and finely detailed (and completely believable) African-American female protagonist would make it a natural choice for Oprah. But it also should satisfy anyone who IS a science-fiction reader. It certainly satisfied this lifelong fan. I've written my own paleoanthropologically themed SF (HOMINIDS, from Tor Books), and deliberately waited until I'd finished before I started Allen's book, so as not to be influenced by it. Now that I have read it, it impressed the heck out of me. Five stars.

 Woody Allen
Our Mickey: Cherished Memories of an American Icon
Published in Paperback by Triumph Books (2007-03)
Authors: Bill Liederman and Maury Allen
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Congratulations
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2004-04-12
Well done! I remember when you two were kicking around the idea of a Mickey Mantle book. Congratulations on all your great ideas coming to fruition. You two make an excellent team. Good luck, I hope you sell them all! I look forward to your next collaboration.

Our Mickey: Cherished Book
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-08-03
I am a huge Yankee fan and I have read a lot of books about them including some about Mickey Mantle. Out of all the books about the Mick this is my favorite.

Bill Liederman and Maury Allen have created a different perspective about Mantle by not telling about his life and career but letting his freinds and other famous people who knew Mickey best, write a paragraph about experiences with him. It shows the real Mickey Mantle and some of the funny and great things he did.

The book is divided in four categories; Mickey as a Yankee and Teamate, Mickey as Legend, Mickey as Personality, and Mickey as a Ballplayer. The book has people such as Whitey Ford, Willie Mays, Billy Chrystal, Joe Torre, Donald Trump, Regis Philbin, and more.

I loved reading this book and I recommend it to not just a Yankee fan but any baseball fan or someone who lived during his career and remember him.

A 4-bagger
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2004-04-19
First, I am not a Yankees fan, but they have had some great players over the years and Mantle is, arguably, one of the best, and I have always admired his considerable talent. Everyone knows his statistics and how he liked to party, but I was looking for some insights into the man, and this book delivered. The book is a series of reminiscences by teammates, opponents, writers, friends and people whose lives were touched in some way by Mantle. Some are funny, some are poignant, but all of them together give a picture of the man. If you enjoy reading about the person behind the legend, and how he was perceived by others who knew him, then you'll enjoy this book. It's a good read and I recommend it heartily.

A fresh take on the legend of the Mick
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2004-03-31
There are lots of Mickey Mantle books out there, but I've never seen another like this. Anecdotes about Mickey from friends, teammates, and notable fans whose lives he touched. It's a fun, fast read as each story gives you a new perspective on one of the most colorful Yankees of all time. Unlike the standard-issue biographies out there, this book reads like a series of quick conversations and it is fascinating and entertaining to hear from such diverse names as Yogi Berra, David Halberstam, Regis Philbin, and Willie Mays. I learned a lot that I didn't know about Mickey, and I highly recommend this for you other Yankee fans out there.


Books-Under-Review-->Arts-->Celebrities-->A-->Allen, Woody-->34
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