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Collectible price: $27.00

An Inspirational TaleReview Date: 2007-10-10
OkayReview Date: 2007-07-09
I Am ThirdReview Date: 2003-02-06
By Gale Sayers
Devon Hurley
My book is called I am third and it�s written
by Gale Sayers. The price of the book is $...and u can find this book in any book store.
I am third is about the football
player gale Sayers .He plays football with his friends every day. He grew up in a poor house with barely any food. That didn�t
stop him from playing football though. He played no matter what. One time he tried to tackle some one and he got kicked in
the mouth and he was spiting out blood his brother played football too. He was older then Gale. Gale was a starter on the
high school football team with his brother he only got to play with his brother one season because he was a senior when Gale
was a freshman. Gale was a good player. He was like1st or 2nd best in the country. He wanted to go to a four year college
to play football. Mississippi State was in other sports besides football like track and basketball. He broke the long jump
record for track. His mom and dad were always working on something. Gale�s dad was tall and had long legs. His dad worked
hard every day and only got 40 dollars a day. His mom was at home watching all the kids. All the kids in the neighbor hood
were on the football team. After gale went to college he was going to go to the pros either the chiefs or the bears. on draft
day the Chicago bears picked Gale Sayers the first day of summer training he met Brian piccolo. Brian was a white person and
Gale was a black person they didn�t really get along at first of race but after they started playing together. The coach put
them in the same room partner. When gale was voted rookie of the year Brian starts to get sick and has to go to the hospital
and he finds out he has cancer and has to stay in the hospital for the rest of the season. Later he goes home and is recovering
but he gets cancer again a in his chest and dies from cancer. later gale plays the best game of his career he scores 6 touchdowns.
Awesome Book!!!Review Date: 2002-12-21
Great Book and movie, very MovingReview Date: 2002-07-25

Used price: $4.40

I Love You Because You're YouReview Date: 2008-09-04
I Love You Because You're You shows cute illustrations of a darling little fox and his mother (which becomes grandmother when I read the book). In each picture, the little fox is expressing parts of his personality and different emotions. Sometimes he's loving, curious, and full of energy. Other times, he is sad, scared, or angry. However, no matter what the mood, Mama reiterates that she loves her little one nonetheless.
Sweet book with cute illustrationReview Date: 2007-12-11
For All Ages and Cultures ...Review Date: 2007-01-05
Great to make kids feel lovedReview Date: 2006-03-12
The Message is for Children of ALL AGES - young and grown alike....Review Date: 2006-01-22
the regally dressed Mama fox says to her little one,
"I love you any way you feel, no matter what you do."
How many of us wonder, "Will they still love me, even
though I......." fill in your blank?
How many times we PRAY the important people in
our lives will love us unconventionally and how many
times do we deny ourselves the comfort of a
"Yes, ofcourse I will love you any way... no
matter what you do"?
Read this child to the preschooler in your life
AND be sure your teen-aged children (nieces,
nephews, neighbors, passers-by) are listening
as well. Read it often.
Read it to yourself when you are feeling low -
and allow yourself to be embraced by Mama Fox.
It is a less-than-five-minute investment
in contentment, peace and growth in
unconventional love... and hopefully the message
will carry over into the hearts and souls
of the listeners.


Inventing the MoviesReview Date: 2008-09-29
[...]
Excellent! Highly recommend for movie buffs, movie makers and innovators.Review Date: 2008-08-29
Falters at first, otherwise good.Review Date: 2008-08-24
Today we are in the midst of the most profound upheaval to Hollywood traditions in 100 years, so to provide analogy, one of the most important chapters was the first one, where Kirsner should have described in some depth the primordial battle between live theater and any sort of filming. Instead, he focuses on the competition between Kinetiscope and projection, as if film had vanquished live theater on day one and all that was left to do was iron out the details. Otherwise, this book hits the mark.
Understanding the evolution of technology in filmReview Date: 2008-08-22
Scott Kirsner has compiled a wealth of historical facts and he presents them in a wonderfully entertaining manner.
Truly an excellent and quick read. I highly recommend this book to any cinephile looking to understand the evolution of technology in film.
A compelling chronicle of innovation in the movie industry with lessons for othersReview Date: 2008-08-18

Used price: $19.31

THE DREAM HOUSE OF BOB BURNS!Review Date: 2005-02-24
There's a pair of Frankenstein's boots worn by Glenn Steele, the Captain America costume worn by Dick Purcell in the Captain America serial, costumes from Flash Gordon...There's models of the rockets from George Pal's "Destination Moon" and a replica of The Time Machine. Latex props from Alien and The Terminator..space helmets and laster blasters from 50's era TV and films. A marvelous collection and the object of envy of baby boomers everywhere.
in addition we'll learn of Bob's background as a makeup artist and the films he worked on as well as his short-lived career as a horror magazine publisher who went head-to-head with Famous Monsters of Filmland. We'll see Bob's long career playing a gorilla in appearances on shows like The Lucy Show as well as the short-lived Saturday morning show Ghostbusters.
From there Bob takes us through the many years of putting on some of the most elaborate Halloween displays and shows to ever show up in suburban America with help from guys who would go onto become some of the most famous special effects gurus in Hollywood like Dennis Muren.
This is a fun and utterly engrossing travel through time as we tour Bob's collection and see items that he saved from the garbage heap. Highly recommended!
Alot of fun for the Monster KidsReview Date: 2002-07-12
The anecdotes make this a fun read and the pictures are fantastic.
It's Not Just the Basement - It's The Man!Review Date: 2001-12-07
Buy it it's greatReview Date: 2001-10-27
Why doesn't some one with some Big Hollywood bucks open a place where the props and and seen and perserved.
Come on George and Steven... special effects and movies made you millions give something back and perserve the past.
Bob Burns Collector of DreamsReview Date: 2001-02-11
We seem to lose that innocence much earlier every generation, Bob has never lost it. He chronicles his awe as he discovers movies such as King Kong, which so captured his imagination that it set a path for his life's destiny, and became part of a lifelong fascination with science fiction, fantasy, and horror. Bob has worn many hats in his life, follow him as he changes from Major Mars, a live matinee host for children, to Bob Burns the contributor to many memorable horror movies of the 50's and 60's. Bob's fascination with movies has led him to many strange roads, and contributed to his ever-growing list of friends, some of whom are very well known. Over the years Bob has collected a multitude of movie props, many of which were given to him by his friends in the industry, a lot of these appear as gorgeous photographs in Bob's Book. A movie that I loved as a boy growing up in Southern California, was the Time Machine. This movie was so special to me, that when I see it today, I still see it through the eyes of the child that I was back then. Bob has the fully restored Time Machine prop in his collection, he not only includes photographs, but he tells the fascinating tale of how the studios put it on the auction block, and sold it to the highest bidder. Despondent, Bob told his good friend George Pal, (The man who directed the Time Machine, and many other excellent films.), who assured him that he would one day find it, since he was meant to have it. Many people over the years have had the opportunity to visit Bob's Basement, and view not only the "Time Machine," but all of his other movie props and memorabilia, and listen as he tells the stories behind each one of them. For those of you who have never had this wonderful opportunity, Bob has created this book for you, as he invites you to come in, sit down, and visit with him in his basement.

Used price: $9.97
Collectible price: $40.00

Marlene Dietrich's picture appears in the dictionary next to the term "pack rat" :DReview Date: 2007-06-23
This splendid book is a Marlene Dietrich museum all by its lonesome. Gorgeous photographs from every stage of her career (including some very sexy and risque ones displaying her famous legs to best advantage!) are coupled with a visual catalogue of the most interesting of her clothing and possessions, including her famous good-luck rag doll, which appeared in several of her movies, and a pair of matched pistols she received from General George Patton (with whom she is rumored to have had an affair) during World War II.
Speaking of which, Marlene's WWII service, one of the great defining experiences of her life, gets full attention in this book, with many very striking photos of herself at the front. My favorite pictures from this period show her watching a training drop by the 82nd Airborne Division, the unit closest to her heart, in Holland in early 1945.
Marlene, of course, is famed as one of the great style-setters of the 20th century, and we see many, many photos of her outfits and accessories, both as display items and when she was wearing them.
Can I use the word "splendid" twice in one review? :) Because that is exactly what this book is. It's a bargain at any price you care to name, and one of the best retrospectives on any great film star I've ever seen.
A vulnerable, more open MarleneReview Date: 2001-12-04
Photographs of BeautyReview Date: 2002-06-29
Am amazing book!Review Date: 2002-12-30
La DietrichReview Date: 2003-06-24

Used price: $4.49

most aspiring writers don't need ideas...Review Date: 2000-09-04
Provides the aspiring writer with compendium of sound adviceReview Date: 2001-03-06
Inspire & Enhance Writer's CraftReview Date: 2001-02-17
Great book on writing.Review Date: 2002-09-24
John M. Whalen, Journalist/Freelance Writer
If you're on the fence about buying this book, jump down!Review Date: 2000-02-15

Used price: $12.20

Murder in the Movies makes a great giftReview Date: 2008-04-29
LADY DETECTIVE GOES TO TINSELTOWNReview Date: 2006-04-27
One I had to make time for.Review Date: 2005-10-03
Solve a mystery in Hollywood!Review Date: 2005-09-03
Murder in the Movies delivers a KnockoutReview Date: 2005-07-18
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $10.00

my girl novelReview Date: 2006-03-02
Book ReviewReview Date: 2006-02-10
My GirlReview Date: 2005-03-09
KaseyReview Date: 2005-02-11
My Girl BookReview Date: 2005-03-20

Raj QuartetReview Date: 2007-04-15
Masterpiece LiteratureReview Date: 2006-12-01
A masterpiece.Review Date: 2008-01-25
It's not just the writing: the stories that unfold in this masterpiece will draw you in, grip you, and break your heart.
The Arrows of PhiloctetesReview Date: 2008-03-31
1.) History - This is the novelistic equivalent of Gibbon concerning the British Empire. It might even be called "The Decline and Fall of The British Empire." As a reviewer for the Sunday Times puts it, "A history student years from now should be able to say to his professor, `Yes, but what was it REALLY like in India in the last days of the Raj?' and be told, `Read these four books and you'll not only know, you'll understand...' " The "understand" part is especially significant in that these books will have you totally spellbound by Scott's deft character portrayal and psychological insight. It is no exaggeration to say that one feels one has lived in India from 1939-1947 after having emerged from the nearly two-thousand pages that comprise this work. But the deft character portrayal leads me to a more troublesome, salient point:
2.) Ronald Merrick-A host of characters populate this work, portrayed with deep sympathy herein. And yet, one can't help but feel, upon closing the pages, that the work might also be called, "Ronald Merrick: An in-depth Portrait of a Psychotic in India". It is a tribute to Paul Scott that we do not discover the depths of the....evil (Sorry, I can't think of another word that fully encompasses the character.) of Merrick until the tag end of the work. Yes, Hari Kumar is the other major character who, to a certain extent, offsets Merrick. But he fades into the background after his interrogation by Nigel Rowan with Lady Manners looking on in the second book, The Day of the Scorpion. Merrick, so to speak, stays on until the very bitter end. Not only does he stay on, but he lingers in the mind. What is he? What does he represent? The British Raj itself, as some would have it? Partly, I would say, but there is something about Scott's obsession with this fellow that refuses to be pigeonholed. It's all very eerie. By the end of the book, you won't be able to hear the word "Merrick" without a troubling frisson running through you. - He is not mad like, say, Susan Layton, who rather resembles a character from one of the Bronte novels. - His nature and the nature of his evil are complex. They defy reduction. So, I shan't venture on a futile quest to do so but rather come to salient point:
3.) The brooding fatalism that overhangs everything here. Of course, one knows before one picks the book up that the Brits in India are doomed. But, well, I'll just let Daphne Manners' quote from the first book, The Jewel in the Crown, give the reader notice of the feeling that permeates this work:
"We were sitting on the verandah. Oh, everything was there - the wicker chairs, the table with the tea tray on it, the scent of the flowers, the scent of India, the air of certainty, of perpetuity; but, as well, the odd sense of none of it happening at all because it had begun wrong and continued wrong, and so was already ended, and was wrong even in its ending, because its ending, for me, was unreal and remote, and yet total in its envelopment, as if it had already turned itself into a beginning. Such constant hope we suffer from!"
Salient points covered...except that the reader might do worse than to do as Perron does at the end and look up Philoctetes, not a futile quest by any means.
An unquestionable masterpiece.Review Date: 2006-02-19

Used price: $0.17

A look inside the making of the filmReview Date: 2000-11-21
There is wit in the descriptions and the photos, all well-captured. The journal entries are entertaining and a good look into the making of a movie. Although be forewarned -- because they dress like the characters of S&S, they do not talk like them. There is definitely some verbal crudeness in the book, men and women alike, but if you can overlook that (or are used to it) then this book will be a delightful read for any Jane Austen fan.
A fascinating look at a remarkable film.Review Date: 2000-07-07
Fortunately for the rest of the world, Ms. Doran changed her mind, and some twenty-five years after that first erroneous conclusion, has brought us this wonderfully witty, and extremely faithful film version of this first novel by Austen. As producer of the Kenneth Branagh/Emma Thompson film, DEAD AGAIN, she became acquainted with the woman who was not only a phenomenal actress, but also a gifted writer-one with a sense of humor and a strong romantic bent. These two qualities had proven to be the stumbling block over nearly ten years of searching for the right scriptwriter for Sense and Sensibility.
It took nearly seven years to come up with something close to a shooting script, sandwiched as it had to be between Thompson's many award-winning acting chores. Serendipity was obviously at work, however, and eventually, a budget was established, and casting accomplished.
Many of the actors Emma had envisioned in various roles had participated in a read-through the year prior to the filming; they were all in the film, in those same roles.
While the Dashwood ladies are all suitable beautiful, it is the men who are truly gorgeous. ("Repellently so," writes Ms. Thompson in the diary portion, referring to Hugh Grant. "He's much prettier than I am.") With his look-alike Richard Lumsden, they are the brothers Ferrar, Edward and Richard, with Greg Wise as the fickle Willoughby. Alan Rickman (be still my heart!) brings maturity and virility to the role of Colonel Brandon. The sets and costumes are sumptuous.
Interspersed with the actual shooting script and the diaries are some 50 photographs, 36 of them in luscious color. One script looks pretty much like another, but this one allows Ms. Thompson's wry wit to shine, especially in some of the non-spoken words. Of course, not every scene from the book could be included; the movie would have been more than six hours had they been. But the essentials are here, along with all the major characters. Providing testimony to just how perspicacious was the choice of writer is the number of awards garnered by Thompson for this, her first film script.
The diaries portion begin with a production meeting on January 15, 1995 and continue through July 9 of that year. A very small mention is made of Hugh Grant's visit to California, where he'd gone for his next film project after the completion of filming his scenes in England. A final two pages describes the 'location' houses chosen to represent those lived in by the families in the novel.
It may come as somewhat of a surprise to some readers to discover rather explicit language in the diaries. In addition to an apparent fascination with the alimentary process, our Emma has a bit of a potty-mouth, as do some of the gentleman involved, and their words are recorded, one presumes unhappily, all too accurately. They seem curiously jarring and out of place in a book otherwise devoted to the pristine words of Jane Austen.
Nevertheless, this is a lovely, hefty book; one which will bring the reader back to it time and again. There is always a new and enjoyable nugget to be mined from its various depths.
Emma Thompson's dazzling adaptation of Jane Austen's novelReview Date: 2001-11-28
Be aware that this is the Original Script, not to be confused with the Shooting Script. This should be clear as soon as you beginning reading, because originally Thompson had the scene shifting back and forth between Mrs. Dashwood and Elinor/John and Fanny Dashwood (credit for this revision must go, I believe, to Film Editor Tim Squyres, who recut the scene so that we get all of one side and then the other instead of alternating back and forth as in the original script). Overall the strengths of Thompson's script are in two main directions. First, she manages to convey the scope of the novel in a two-hour screenplay, no mean task. Second, the little details she adds to Austen's story are simply marvelous. For example, her use of Shakespeare's Sonnet 116 ("Let me not the marriage of true minds"), which Marianne and Willoughby share to their great mutual delight and which Marianne repeats standing in the rain looking at Willoughby's new estate. In fact, Thompson revised the first scene to make it even better, having Willoughby misquote a key word in an elegant bit of foreshadowing. Thompson also makes one nice little change at the end. While Austen has Elinor bolt from the room to cry outside during the happy ending. Thompson creates a wonderful moment by having her stay in the room and having the rest of her family flee. There are not too many scenes where you are crying and laughing at the same time, but Thompson certainly created one (and has the added virtue of relying on herself as an actress to nail the performance as well). All of these are marvelous examples of playing to the strength of the cinema to bring Austen's novel to the screen.
But we get much more than just the screenplay in this volume, because Thompson includes excerpts from her diaries kept during both the writing of the screenplay and the actual production of the film. It would be nice if there was more insight into what she was thinking when writing the screenplay as I am always interested in how decisions were made and where inspiration comes from, but Thompson makes up for that with her little tales of working with director Ang Lee and the rest of the cast in making the film. Finally, in the Appendices, there is a very choice little treat, namely Imogen Stubbs' Prize-Winning Letter, written to Elinor from Lucy. Do not worry; by the time you read it you will understand why it is so hysterical. There is also a list of the fine homes and estates where "Sense and Sensibility" was filmed if you happen to be roaming around England and are interested in looking for such things.
Excellent Book!Review Date: 2000-01-04
Great marriage of screenplay and journal writingReview Date: 2000-02-28
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