Television Books


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Television Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

Television
Visions of Jazz: The First Century
Published in Paperback by Oxford University Press, USA (2000-05-18)
Author: Gary Giddins
List price: $24.95
New price: $6.49
Used price: $0.85

Average review score:

A JOURNEY THROUGH THE PAST
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-14
Au unforgettable journey through the century written by one of the most open-minded and talented jazz journalist of our time! A MUST and HIGHLY RECOMMENDED READING!!!

Extremely Thorough History of Jazz!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-06-25
The main reason I read this book is because I have become a Billie Holiday fan in the last 2 years and up till now not a true lover of jazz. This book caught my attention when I did a search for books on Billie. There was about 6 to 7 pages on her but I never imagined how long this book would be! Not a bad thing though. I know it took me a long time to read as it is SO detailed and thorough. It was truly an education for me and I have a much greater apprecation for jazz! Gary Giddens is an exceptional author and is obviously a veteran writer and really knows his stuff! A truly well written book. Highly recommended for lovers of jazz and those of us who are just beginning to have a love for it!

Sloppy, Gary, Very Sloppy
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 2005-11-19
The source of Coltrane's 'Impressions' was (Morton) Gould's "Pavanne" and not Ravel's "Pavane Pour Une Infante Defunte" Giddins, however, confuses them on page 484. (After all, what's a pavane among friends?)

As someone who has spent a career reviewing documents and spreadsheets, I have a simple philosophy: if there is one error, I assume that there are others. This cost Gary a star.

Pure pleasure
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-04-17
Gary Giddins was only a name to me until Ken Burns's JAZZ series aired on PBS in early 2001. While I appreciated all the commentators in that remarkable series, it was the observations of Giddins that I began to eagerly anticipate night after night. He made me SEE music that I knew and loved but whose structure and complexity I had often been unable to grasp. Despite some jazz appreciation classes in college and haphazard collecting of old jazz records over the years, I had not gotten much past the "I know what I like" phase. His passion for music I was less familiar with led me on some rewarding treasure hunts.

I bought "Visions of Jazz" shortly after the conclusion of the Burns miniseries. I devoured it. I have turned to it time and again in the intervening years. Many critics overanalyze their subjects to the point where they suck the life out of the very thing they're attempting to illuminate. Giddins does not have that problem. His prose sings and swings with the elan of his beloved Sarah Vaughan.

Giddins's re-examination of the music of Ellington and Armstrong may seem at first blush to be superfluous; you may think you know all there is to know on that subject. But he proves that even the most accessible jazz figures and their music evolve from and operate within a such a complex idiom that periodic re-evaluation is necessary, and, if approached with respect for both the subject and the reader -- which Giddins has above all else -- it is most welcome indeed.

There are chapters in "Visions of Jazz" about musicians with whom I was completely unfamiliar. But I took a chance and read them, and wound up buying some Matthew Shipp recordings. It's that kind of book. You can take out as much as you put in.

As much as I appreciate Giddins's bone-deep love of jazz, his scholarship and wry humor, I also respect him for his fearlessness in making a case for, say, the inscrutable Cecil Taylor. But I am probably a big fan of someone who leaves Gary Giddins cold, and that's OK. The jazz tent is big enough for us all.

Why not 5 stars? The only "perfect" thing in jazz is Ellington's "Just a-Sittin' and a-Rockin."

Correction
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2005-11-21
To the previous reviewer: Mr Giddens was RIGHT. Coltrane's Impressions was based on BOTH pieces of music.

Television
Voyages of Imagination: The Star Trek Fiction Companion (Star Trek)
Published in Paperback by Star Trek (2006-11-14)
Author: Jeff Ayers
List price: $21.00
New price: $2.99
Used price: $1.73
Collectible price: $31.50

Average review score:

An encyclopedia of Star Trek novels
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-03
When I bought this I was hoping for some form of indexing of the characters and plots of the novels. What I got was a compendium of author comments on the creation of their novels. Interesting, worth reading, I'm glad I bought it, but it wasn't quite what I was hoping I would get.

WOW - WHAT A BOOK!!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-16
Hi all, if you read the star trek novels and have plenty of them this is THE STARTING POINT to figure out what books are placed where in the star trek chronology. Thuis one shows the books covers and gives a synopsis of each book - simply amazing. And its a thick book too, so perfect fot that rainy day to sort through your star trek novels = ) And the price if great too, so click that mouse and get it sent you - highly recomended!!!

Voyages of Imagination: The Star Trek Companion
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-12
Every serious Star Trek fan should have this book. It's interesting and fun.

Great Star Trek research tool
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-27
I cannot imagine all the research that Ayers did to assemble this book. The book is far from complete, but still to track down all the various Star Trek book covers, get interviews, write up summaries is a phenomenal achievement that should help all ST fan writers track down the best in ST fiction.

The factoids concerning the various books are fun and interesting. I, myself would have loved to have heard more on Barbara Hambley's Ishmael where she combined two television shows into one novel.

Another missing fact. That there were major differences in the hard cover and paperback version to the Star Trek:Generations novelization due to the alterations in the last moment on how our beloved Kirk was killed.

Someone at Pocket Books should consider doing a similar type text for all the Star Trek comic books that have been written. Now, that would be a great book. In a few years, I do hope that there will be a second edition to this text, with some of the non-contributing authors telling their side of the story on getting their books out.

Excellent read.

JThree
[...]

Lot of Work Put In There; Long-Awaited; Yet Could Have Been A Lot More
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-21
Yes, this book indeed contains each and every volume of officially released StarTrek fiction and not only sketches their plots, but also presents b/w pictures of each cover. What makes "Voyages of the Imagination" more than just a simple bibliography is the stories behind the novels, that Jeff Ayers collected in many interviews with the authors. Just the job of conducting these must have been immense. Still more incredible is the time arrow that places every chapter of the fictional world created by the StarTrek novels in the right year since 5 billion years b.c. until 1 012 260. Compared to that, the presumably giant task of finding a nearly practical structure for the bibliography consisting of miniseries which are part of other miniseries that also correspond to tv series, seems small.

But I could think of many other features that I would have expected from this book:
* The plot summary of every novel or short story never tells the ending and usually isn't more detailed than the back covers. I don't like that since I really was interested in the whole story archs.
* There is never a critique of any of the fiction. "Voyages of the Imagination" doesn't tell the readers whether any of the books is worth reading or not so much.
* I would have liked summarizing articles on which characters from the TV and movie productions appear in print fiction and how they develop; who was newly invented by the authors; where are overlaps between the novels that exclude each other etc.

On my rating: Apart from a complete bibliography and some fun with reading the stories behind the stories, this book doesn't offer me anything of what I had expected. But it gets a big bonus from me for the incredible task done and for the fact that it's the first of its kind. Therefore, three stars.

Martin Jost


I originally wrote my review in German:
Ja, dieses Buch enthält wirklich ausnahmslos jeden Band von offiziell veröffentlichter StarTrek-Fiction und umreißt nicht nur kurz dessen Handlung, sondern präsentiert auch s/w-Bilder vom jeweiligen Cover. Mehr als nur eine bloße Bibliografie ist Voyages of Imagination durch die Hintergrundgeschichten der Entstehung, die Jeff Ayers zu vielen Romanen in Interviews mit den Autoren recherchiert hat. Die Arbeit, die allein dahinter steckt, muss unglaublich gewesen sein. Noch unglaublicher wirkt aber der Zeitstrahl, der in jedes beschriebene Jahr von 5 Milliarden Jahren v. u. Zt. bis 1 012 260 unserer Zeitrechnung kapitelgenau den Ausschnitt aus der fiktionalen Welt der StarTrek-Romane einordnet, in dem darüber erzählt wird. Daneben scheint die ebenfalls nicht hoch genug einzuschätzende Leistung gering, eine halbwegs übersichtliche Struktur für die Bibliografie zu finden, in der Miniserien mit anderen Miniserien verschachtelt sind und dabei noch einer der Fernsehserien zugeordnet werden müssen.
Mir fallen aber auch noch zahlreiche Features ein, die ich mir von diesem Buch gewünscht hätte und die bei so viel Vorbereitungszeit doch hätten machbar sein müssen:
-Die Zusammenfassungen der Handlung jedes einzelnen Romans bzw. jeder anthologisierten Kurzgeschichte verrät nie die Auflösung und geht selten mehr ins Detail als die Umschlag-Rückseite. Ich finde das schade, denn mich hätten die vollständigen Handlungsbögen interessiert, die in der Roman-Welt ablaufen.
- Eine Kritik der Bücher fehlt völlig. Mit dem Handbuch "Voyages of Imagination" lässt sich nicht entscheiden, ob irgendeines der Bücher lesenswert ist oder nicht.
- Zusammenfassungen wären interessant gewesen, aus denen hervor geht, welche Charaktere aus den TV- und Kinoproduktionen mitspielen und sich weiterentwickeln; welche Charaktere neu eingeführt werden; wo es sich ausschließende Überschneidungen zwischen den Romanen gibt u. s. w. Diese hätten am Ende jedes Kapitels in tabellarischer Form oder am Ende der Beschreibung jedes Plots hervorgehoben Platz gefunden.

Zu meiner Bewertung: Abgesehen von einer vollständigen Bibliografie und einigem Lesevergnügen über die jeweiligen Menschen hinter den Geschichten bietet dieses Buch nichts, was ich mir von ihm gewünscht hätte. Einen dicken Bonus erhält es aber für die gründliche und unvorstellbar umfangreiche Arbeit die drin steckt und dafür, dass es immerhin endlich das erste seiner Art ist. Unterm Strich also 3 Sterne.

Martin Jost

Television
The Who: Maximum R&B
Published in Paperback by Plexus Publishing (2004-09-27)
Authors: Richard Barnes and Pete Townshend
List price: $24.95
New price: $14.88
Used price: $10.75

Average review score:

If you are a Who fan-you have to have this book!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-06
Very comprehensive. Lots of photos, very good history. It did come out a while ago so doesn't have anything about Entwistle's death. But it's a great history of the Who!

I Won't Get To Get What I'm After 'Til The Day I Die
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-14
The definitive book to have on The Who. Loaded & re-loaded with amazing photographs & anecdotes from a friend of the band who isn't afraid to point out the bad in addition to the good.

I bought this book on its original release back in the 1980's; the updated section to review the years 1983-96 is most welcome. Hopefully, Richard Barnes will release yet another edition that takes into account the years 1997 to the present.

If you're a Who junkie, this book is a must. If you're a new fan, this volume is a fantastic primer into the history of the greatest band there ever was.

Must have for Who fans
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-09-12
This book is an excellent resource for all fans of the classic rock band, The Who. Telling the band's story from their earliest days, the reader will find plenty of detail, interviews, and wonderful photographs to enhance this "amazing journey". The author takes a relatively unbiased stance, leaving out personal opinion in favor of simply stating "the facts".

If you are a fan of The Who, this is certainly a book that deserves a place in your library.

For the WHO fan, worth it
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-02-16
This book is really a great overview of the WHO's career. Starting out when the band started to meet as teenagers and spannig all the way to a few years after Keith's death, this book covers every single recording the WHO did.

Aside from just following the WHO through their career, this book is also jam-packed with those crazy Keith Moon anecdotes and interesting picures.

I really enjoyed this book, and enjoyed seein what one of my favorite bands was really like. I would definately recommend it to anyone who loves the WHO.

An Insider's View of the Who
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2005-03-14
As a HUGE Who fan, I first picked up "Maximum R&B" in the late 80's, and recently dug into the updated version.

Richard Barnes was an old art school friend of Pete Townshend's, and remained close to him and the band over the decades. His history of the Who is detailed, mixed with intimiate remembrances, especially of the early days of the band.

Barnes for the most part tells the story with a straight-forward, unbiased eye. He details the tulmultuous relationship between the band members, especially Townshend and Roger Daltrey, and draws on numerous interviews and press articles (the press materials are classic--some very early pix of a very young Detours lineup are among the entertaining bits).

Barnes also examines the Mod movement of the 60's, which was so critical to exposing the Who (for a while the High Numbers) to a hardcore audience.

For Who fans like myself, you may find some minor errors, and Barnes doesn't go too deep into some of the band member's personal lives, except where he seems to have an in. Among these would be Townshend's fascination with Meher Baba, his later drug and alcohol problems, and his later struggles with trying to deal with the Who while establishing himself as a solo artist.

In any case, a fantastic document of the history of one of rock's greatest and most talented bands.

Television
Writing a Great Movie: Key Tools for Successful Screenwriting
Published in Kindle Edition by Billboard Books (2006-10-01)
Author: Jeff Kitchen
List price: $19.95
New price: $9.99

Average review score:

Jeff Kitchen is a Jedi knight of Drama
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-07
His books and DVD's dwelve deep into his writing tools. I, like many, have read most of the books, and this is one of the top three I return to review. Mckee, Truby, Seger, Wright, and Tobin are all worth reading. Jeff's book is the most important, because it's crucial to find the spine of a story, and Jeff's tools are the best for finding it. All mention it, but Jeff's tools allow one to touch the heart of the story, so you write from the inside-out instead of the outside -- the most important, and the most difficult part of learning to write.

All You Need To Write A great Movie
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-29
I have read many screenwriting books, but Jeff Kitchen's book is the one I always use on all my script development and script analysis projects. This book teaches you invaluable tools that transforms the way you construct your screenplay. Jeff Kitchen demonstrates the tools through hands-on approach, breaking down popular movies such as Training Day, What Women Want, Minority Report, Blade Runner, The Godfather and Tootsie. He also takes you through the process of developing a script from scratch using the tools. This book will definitely transform the way you approach screenwriting and transform you as writer. If you want to master this craft I highly recommend this book. It's awesome!

...oh and check out his other book Script Analysis and the 5 DVD set.Script Analysis: The Godfather, Tootsie, Blade Runner Jeff Kitchen's Full Day Seminar

Very usefull book
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-11
I'm probably not going to be able to say anything about the book that hasn't been said, but I'll try.
If you want to know how to dissect a movie, this is the book for you. Mr. Kitchen will have you take a movie apart to its "spine" and lay bare the trail, from beginning to end, of the cause and effect of every dramatic event. I guess this is what studio execs call the "through line" Great book.

A great book for advanced screenwriting
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-03
To me, the book is too wordy. Some of the tools are not useful.
Sometimes you have to rack your brains and read twice to get what the author means. Well, maybe because English is not my native language.

Anyway, I give it five stars 'cuz it helped me make my story work.
I have read over 40 books on screenwriting and I have to admit: Jeff Kitchen's book is one the best. He teaches some tools which you will never find in the books of other screenwriting gurus.

Though, it should not be your first book. But it's a must if you want to grow as a storyteller.

For a novice screenwriter I'd recommend to read next books: Teach Yourself Screnwriting, The Screenwriter's Bible, The Comic Toolbox, and The Anatomy of Story: 22 Steps to Becoming a Master Storyteller.

The One Book to master them all ...
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-02

There is a multitude of books that have recently become standard over the last twenty to thirty years regarding the mastery of screenwriting. Viki King's book "How to write a Movie in 21 days" is probably one of the most well known, as is "Screenplay" by Syd Field.

I think the truth about a lot of these books is that most people are looking for small, concise manuals that are easy to read and easy to cull the real gems from. From the way I've seen a lot of people approach screenwriting, most of it is typically haphazard. The bulk of people read bits and pieces of books and rarely ever any one book from cover to cover. If you can imagine a person shaking a book above their head hoping for gold coins, diamonds, rubies and other riches to fall from the pages then you have the correct visual. It's a classic blunder, but one that more often than not is the result of too much television advertising and not taking one's dream serious enough.

Jeff Kitchen's "Writing a Great Movie", is a rare book that most people can, and should read from cover to cover at least once. If you read it twice, then you'll be ahead of the curve. It's most likely the best book on writing I've seen bar none, and not just on screenwriting either. Using a system of `comparison and contrast' with different films like Blade Runner, Training Day, Tootsie, Minority Report and The Godfather to illustrate the strengths, the thread and the blood of good writing. Kitchen shows you many, many times over how a good story builds up on itself and how to successfully break it down to properly understand it, and how to identify the most integral aspects of it and use them all as tools.

I've been writing novels for about fifteen years and my approach to writing has changed drastically now and I couldn't imagine going back and abandoning what I've learned from this incredibly helpful book. Some of the help and advice is complex, like the information about Enneagrams and the Enneagram Institute, which sounds daunting and pedantic and like someone trying to cloak Scientology and Dianetics within a screenwriting manual, which is not the case at all. The information about the Enneagram does pop up in Scientology and does get a mention in Dianetics, but for the record was around a lot longer than the usage made of it by Scientology. It's good information and not something to skip past. You'll find this in Chapter 4, so don't throw out the baby with the bathwater.

Other information and advice is simple and easy to grasp and stuff that all writing teachers should tell their students, but probably do not. Another point is the use of index-cards to outline and detail your story, which works for both Screenplay and Novel formats and is a brilliant idea that gets good discussion and was something that many great writers have often used themselves.

As a historical note, and something not covered in the book, Nabakov outlined everything he did on Index cards, quite extensively, and is a resource that scholars of his work have to glean and sift through to this day.

Kitchen tells the reader to make good use of quotes, biblical passages, idioms, etc. as themes within your story which will give it heart. The information in the book is inexhaustible and worthy on many levels. He also uses every piece of advice he gives, to bring it back to the films mentioned above and is quite original in doing so, and a very original way to teach.

If you're looking for "the" book on screenwriting, or writing in general, this book will take your efforts from the amateur realms, and launch it into the next level and bolster a real sense of skill and professionalism that it may have been lacking.

This book is worthy of much recommendation.



Television
24: Behind the Scenes
Published in Paperback by Insight Editions (2006-10-24)
Author: Jon Cassar
List price: $29.95
New price: $12.11
Used price: $9.33

Average review score:

24: Behind the Scenes hardback
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-29
A great book. Shows stunning photos of the TV show "24" being filmed for seasons 1-3. I highly recommend it for any true "24" fan.

Excellent
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-28
Excellent content for 24 fans, from Season 1 to Season 5, with plenty of professional pictures of very high artistic quality, to get insights into the show cast, crew and into some of the most challenging scenes.
You have a look at off screen actors relaxing and having fun while waiting for the next shot or discussing about it or trying to focus on their lines.
Finally you feel the strength of that "24 family" Kiefer Sutherland writes about in his nice foreword of the book.
Also excellent quality of the editorial format.

Worth every dollar
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-16
Get this book. Especially at the price, you can not go wrong. If you are a fan , get this book. If you've never seen 24 before, watch it , and then get this book.

Great book!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-11
I have become an avid "24" fan and really loved this book. I highly recommend it to any fan of "24".

A "Must Have" for a 24 fan
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-04
Loved the book - came with a CD which I haven't seen yet. Unfortunatly I read it all in one day - but it is great to get a glimpse of how they put together this amazing show and a sneak peak at all the interesting people that make it work so well.

Television
An Agent Tells All
Published in Paperback by Hit Team Publishing (2005-02-01)
Author: Tony Martinez
List price: $18.95
New price: $14.50
Used price: $13.75

Average review score:

Good Read
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-31
While I'm by no means into the industry yet, this book was an easy read and it contains invaluable information for the hollywood neophyte

A 1-hour Breeze
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-08
Trouble is, Tony Martinez is no devil. He comes across, in fact, as the ultimate boy scout in a shark-infested business. Part instructional, part ever-so-careful not to offend anyone, Martinez writes in a conversational, run-of-the-milll average-guy style that allows you to skim to the sections that may mean more to you. On the one hand, it's banal and boring and on the other, there are nut n' bolts insights that should be helpful for a rank beginner.
As someone involved in the business for many years, looking for some hidden insights or juicy info, I was disappointed. But I DID learn a little more about the way pilot season works and for that reason alone, I found this very brief tome to have some worth.

Fabulous Book! A Must Read and Worth Every Penny!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-04
This book is a must-read for any aspiring actor or aspiring agent and an entertaining book for anyone working in the entertainment industry. It's humorous, well-informed and succinct. It's not a surprise that this quick-witted and to-the-point agent provided the entertainment community with such a well-written book. His personal stories and antedotes complete this book. Do yourself a favor, and buy it.

Excellent, Easy to Read Book!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-24
An Agent Tells All by Tony Martinez is an excellent book that is very easy to read and hard to put down as it flows on very well.
Specific Contents that go straight to the point and excellent for the novice to clearly gain an understanding of the industry from agents point of view. Also Highly rate the Pilot Season Chapter!
Great Read.

Very useful information
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-28
I did a monologue in front of Tony Martinez at TVI Actors Studio, and he was generous enough to tell me what did and didn't work. His book just as helpful, only laced with his terrific sense of humor. I would say this is a must have for any actor and would probably be helpful for managers and workers in corporate America.

Television
Audrey Hepburn
Published in Hardcover by Putnam Adult (1996-10-29)
Author: Barry Paris
List price: $35.00
New price: $17.69
Used price: $1.98
Collectible price: $35.00

Average review score:

Riveting Bio Of a true legend
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-08
Having read most of the other books about Audrey Hepburn, a woman whom I respect and admired since my youth, I chose this particular one by Mr.Paris as the most engaging (besides the book by Sean Ferrer which I thought was essential). I could never tire of anything A.H., with that being said it was important to me that I had a sense of how she lived. This book was hard to put down and wasn't full of colorful writing like some of the other so-called biographies done on her. For me, it brought me closer to this person as if she were someone I knew personally and combined with her son's book provided me with an insight into the world that was Audrey. She was and still remains a huge inspiration for me, and this book should be read by every young 'actor' out there today. Kudos to Mr.Paris!

Audrey Hepburn was a fair lady of stage and screen who is well served by Paris
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2005-11-03
Audrey Hepburn (1929-1993) was born in Brussels the daughter of a Dutch woman and an English father. She was raised in Arnhem Holland suffering through the Nazi occupation. Audrey was a thin, sensitive child who excelled at ballet.
As a young woman she migrated to London appearing in British films until she was exploded into fame with her first US film
Roman Holiday (for which she won as Oscar as Best Actress)
Hepburn appeared in such films as "Charade"; "My Fair Lady"
(her singing voice being dubbed by Marni Nixon"; "Two for the
Road"; "Breakfast at Tiffanys"; "Sabrina: "Robin and Marion" :
"Wait Until Dark" and several other films.
Her gamin pixish face and figure was a revelation in the 50s era of Monroe, Ava Gardner; Sophia Loren and other well endowed film goddesses.
Audrey had a long but troubled marriage with stolid Mel Ferrer and had other husbands and a few affairs along the way most notably with film star Albert Finney.
She worked with such noted directors as Willie Wyler, George
Cukor and Stanley Donet. She lived in Switzerland in an isolated
village where she raised children and loved animals.
There is little dirt to plow in these pages1 Audrey was an
adorable and kind person! Her work with starving children on behalf of the UN is heartwarming.
Barry Paris (previous biographer of Louise Brooks and Greta
Garbo) does a fine job in this well documented biography.
The most exciting chapter deals with life in Holland during
the horrible Nazi occupation,
This is a good biography of the film star.

A book so well researched and written that it flows like...
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2005-04-02
A book so well researched and written that it flows like a meandering river. The prose is wonderful. Very difficult to stop reading the book until the reading is completed.

May Audrey Hepburn be in the Kingdom of God as I surely want to meet her and talk with her.

Excellent
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2003-04-23
A biographer shouldn't lower your opinion of the person they're writing about (as if you could ever
have a low opinion of Audrey Hepburn!) and Barry Paris certainly does a brilliant job of depicting
Audrey's life from age 15 until her death (age 64). The author blends his words so you don't loose
interest even once. The book has lots of quotes, from and about Audrey, and several pictures of
her throughout her life. There isn't a down side to this book, except for a few subjects where the author
should have elaborated on a bit more than he did. You can clearly see that Audrey was a truly
wonderful person, a real lady. After you read about what a hard childhood she had, in the middle
of WW2 and the miscarriages she suffered and basically being deprived of love from her parents,
it is amazing that she was still such a beautiful person, a beautiful soul. She traveled to countries to
help dying people and did things that few other people would do...she seems to have been an
angel, and certainly was to several people. This is a book that you don't need to read before buying, it's wonderful.

A tribute to Audrey and to Barry Parris' writing skill
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2004-08-02
What is the true test of a biographer's skill? Creating a riviting, insightful book about a subject who had no scandal in her life and who seems to have be beloved by everyone. Material that, in lesser hands, could have been saccherine or written with the usual "movie star bio" template is instead moving, wise, very informative, and beautifully written. Check out Mr. Paris' other biographies of Garbo and especially Louise Brooks for more great writing.

Television
"Backstreet Boys" Confidential
Published in Hardcover by Virgin Books (1998-11-19)
Author: Louise Barile
List price:
New price: $47.21
Used price: $0.44

Average review score:

G-R-E-A-T
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2001-06-24
this book is great.You know My auntie just sent me this book and just handled it.You know i can't buy books about backstreetboys,(but maybe i do,but it's hard for me to find one because i'm from the philippines) but luckily i've had a nice auntie in the U.S. who've sent me this book.But you know i'm really worried 'coz my auntie sent it through mail,so i'm afraid it won't come because some BAD people(philippines) just get it if they found it beutiful for them,so i kept on praying and hoping that the book will be sent to me,and luckily i did. I really recommend this G-R-E-A-T B-O-O-K

No BSB fan should be without this book!
Helpful Votes: 14 out of 14 total.
Review Date: 1999-11-09
this book is the best book on the Backstreet Boys that i have ever read. there is a bio on each of the guys, LOTS of hott pics-including younger pics and shirtless pics- and behind the scenes stuff. there are also stories of the pranks that they play on each other and of accidents and funny stuff that happened onstage. every BSB fan should have this book. it is worth every cent and worth getting! i love Brian soo much, he is soo hott and soo sweet! keep the Backstreet pride alive ya'll!

Great book with tons of great pictures!!!!!!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 1999-06-19
This book is the best!!! I'm a AJ fan and all of the pictures of him are great!!! A must have for any BSB fan!!!!!!!!

i love this book!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2000-07-10
i love this book as i said, i realy love the pic's on nick they are soooo beautiful and i love the info, and the pic's on the others of coures but nick most, you must get it!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

if you want to know more about them get this book know!
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 1999-09-20
This is the best book i have ever read.It tells you everything you need to know about Backstreet. It also gives you their biography,and some of their secerts.So if you haven't read it you better get it=)

Television
Blade
Published in Mass Market Paperback by HarperEntertainment (1998-09-01)
Authors: Mel Odom and New Line Productions
List price: $5.99
Used price: $0.01

Average review score:

BLADE ...
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2000-04-28
Blade was .... completely different from the movie. The movie had more fighting and you didn't get to see the true meaning of the novel. The movie described Blade as a cold blooded slayer with no mercy. The novel describes Blade as someone who risks his life everyday to save the human race in spite of the fact that the human race thinks he's a murderer and wants him dead. He uses his powers to serve and protect the very species that depises and fears him-our own. He has the power of an immortal, the soul of a human, and the heart of a hero.

Vampire Fans! Hang on tight!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 1999-11-25
Another ride on the good ol' roller-coaster of adrenalin! Who says books can't raise your blood pressure? For those who think so: Read Blade! Awesome action, packed with vampire-slaying excitement, and intense fun! I haven't even seen the movie, though I'm about to. If all movie-novels were like Blade, Carmike Cinemas will be seeing me more often.

Awesome book, you gotta read it!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 1999-04-26
Blade is the tightest book you'll ever want to read!!! The movie and the book are amazing. I've been watching the movie a hella-lot of times and you'll also like the book. Buffy v. Blade??? Blade all the way! cause he's the #1 slayer!

BLADE KICKS ASS
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2000-04-28
Blade was a kick ass book, completely different from the movie. The movie had more fighting and you didn't get to see the true meaning of the novel. The movie described Blade as a cold blooded slayer with no mercy. The novel describes Blade as someone who risks his life everyday to save the human race in spite of the fact that the human race thinks he's a murderer and wants him dead. He uses his powers to serve and protect the very species that depises and fears him-our own. He has the power of an immortal, the soul of a human, and the heart of a hero.

Deacon Frost Rules
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 1999-05-16
I loved both the book and the movie. I was really surprised at how the book captured the manic energy of the movie and the complexity of the characters. The book really delves into the deeper areas of the characters and captures the feeling that it's hard not to admire Frost while you're hating him, he's an awesome villain. Even if you haven't seen the movie, read the book, it's an absolute must for anyone who's a fan of Anne Rice or vampires in general, as well as anyone who wants to read a well-crafted piece of literature.

Television
Captain Saturday: A Novel
Published in Hardcover by Little, Brown (2002-01-08)
Author: Robert Inman
List price: $24.95
New price: $2.48
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $24.95

Average review score:

Fine story
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-24
Well written story of family stubbornness and the needs of self-contemplation, forgiveness and coming to grips with tragic loss. The author smoothly glides from present day to 35 yrs prior. His characters are believable, not cartoonish. Reminded me a bit of Anne Tyler's work. I felt real sympathy for Wilbur, the defrocked weatherman and accidental felon, as well as for his son and every other character here. This story on the whole was touching with a good sprinkling of levity thoughout.

Hooray for Captain Saturday!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-04
This was a well written, funny, witty book about Will the Weatherman. Will is the TV weatherman for a popular TV station in Raleigh. When he loses his job and gets arrested for running a red light, his whole life changes. He takes stock of his life and decides to go about making changes. He doesn't realize the real mess he is in regarding his personal life, until it's almost too late. I loved the transformation the author takes this character through. This is a heart warming story with many lessons learned through out the book. The humor just adds to the beauty of this story. I would definitely like to read other books by this author.

A Warm, Inspiring Tale of Love, Loss, and Renewal
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-16
Will Baggett, fictional TV weatherman from Raleigh, North Carolina is the toast of the town. He is the most recognized media figure in the market; widely successful, universally adored by young and old alike. Will has it all; a gorgeous wife who rakes in the big bucks as one of Raleigh's top realtors, a son in medical school. Baggett's world is compulsively tidy, taut, and orderly. The trains of his life run on time.

One day his well-ordered world comes spins wildly out of its orbit when a mega-media conglomorate buys his station and he is replaced by a younger man. For once in his life, Will is yesterday's news, and the transition is anyting but a smooth one. A waky set of circumstances takes will on a journey back home to his past and some R/R time with cousin Wingfoot Baggett. There Will learns the painful truth about his family, his childhood, and it is in this rediscovery of self where the seeds of reconciliation with his son are sown.

Before his journey is over Will will take the rap for a narcotics posessions charge and do time. He literally has to lose evertything before he begins to get it back again.

Robert Inman tells this touching story with grace and sensitivity as well as keen insight into the human condition. Falling from grace is all too common to the human condition, and this tale fits the template of loss, journey, and renewal that can be found in philosophy, religon, works of history and biography.


Excellent!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2005-01-13
Captain Saturday is a GREAT read! I thouroughly enjoyed the book. I will be reading more from Robert Inman soon. I have also read Dairy Queen Days...and was equally pleased with that book.
I cannot wait until Mr. Inman has a new book!

A pleasant surprise
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2002-08-25
I have to admit that I picked up this book on a whim, and I was very pleasantly surprised. Although it took me several chapters to get into this book, once I settled in, it was thoroughly enjoyable.

The novel tells the story of Will Baggett, a North Carolina weatherman who has been on the job 20+ years and is loved throughout the community. When his station changes ownership, the main character is fired. The firing sets into play a stage of events that leave Will questioning the choices he has made in life and re-examining the events of his past that have led him into his choice of journalism. Will emerges from the chain of events following his firing as a better man, and it was fun to watch him grow and change during his ordeal.

The author does a great job depicting the life of a small-town TV personality and the sacrifices he is forced to make. I was cheering for Will along the way, and think you will too. As a North Carolina native, I can tell you that the author gets his geography and local flavor 100% correct. I would definitely recommend this book -- don't be discouraged by the slow start.


Books-Under-Review-->Arts-->Celebrities-->H-->Hewitt, Jennifer Love-->Television-->18
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