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Fingerprint: The Art of Using Hand-Made Elements in Graphic Design
Published in Hardcover by How (2006-10-19)
List price: $35.00
New price: $21.81
Used price: $14.32
Used price: $14.32
Average review score: 

Excellent
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-10-06
Review Date: 2008-10-06
To tell you the truth, I bought this item on a whim. I was much more satisfied with this graphic design book than others I have purchased recently. It is excellent if you are a visual consumer like I am. I would highly recommend the seller. It was promptly sent and received. Thanks a million for this jewel!
Excellent variety
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-10-03
Review Date: 2008-10-03
This book is beautifully printed and bound. The work chosen covers a much broader range of techniques and visual styles than I'd anticipated when placing my order. It's a fantastic source of inspiration for graphic designers and artists of all disciplines. I wholeheartedly recommend it, especially at such an excellent price for a relatively large, hard cover book.
Great!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-07
Review Date: 2008-06-07
I bought this book as a gift for someone else, but after seeing it in person I'm thinking of buying it for myself! It is a beautiful book!
Very cool
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-22
Review Date: 2008-04-22
When relying on a computer all day, this book lets you return to how it all began. Get creative! Draw, doodle, color, cut, create and interpret this into your latest computer-aided design.
A beautiful book
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-08
Review Date: 2008-04-08
This is a fantastic resource filled with great examples of handmade design masterpieces. There are a few sections of illustrations that are already starting to look very dated, but a lot of the featured designs are timeless in their inginuity and beauty.
Whether you are already using hand-made techniques in your work, or you are searching for some inspiration on how you can get a more hands-on tactile feel with your designs in this age of InDesign, Photoshop and stock graphics, this book is great.
Whether you are already using hand-made techniques in your work, or you are searching for some inspiration on how you can get a more hands-on tactile feel with your designs in this age of InDesign, Photoshop and stock graphics, this book is great.

Flavored with Love: Mary Lou's Family and Friends Can Cook
Published in Perfect Paperback by Blue Moon Books (2006-05-15)
List price: $22.97
New price: $22.97
Used price: $8.49
Used price: $8.49
Average review score: 

Put the wonder and delight back into your kitchen!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-10-11
Review Date: 2008-10-11
If you love to cook, not just out of necessity to put something on the table -- but for the complete aesthetic experience that evokes a lifetime of comfort and happiness -- Flavored With Love: Mary Lou's Family and Friends Can Cook is the book for you.
When I make a pan of lasagna or a big pot of chicken soup, it's almost as if I'm back in Grandma's house in Richmond Hill, listening to the stories that she would tell as I helped her peel and chop. The smells would fill the entire house with the anticipation of the amazing meal to come.
Mary Lou's recipes will allow you to create new memories of your own while sharing the down-home stories that helped her present her own family's cuisine. This is a great gift for anyone who understands the passion for creating that special family experience in the kitchen!
When I make a pan of lasagna or a big pot of chicken soup, it's almost as if I'm back in Grandma's house in Richmond Hill, listening to the stories that she would tell as I helped her peel and chop. The smells would fill the entire house with the anticipation of the amazing meal to come.
Mary Lou's recipes will allow you to create new memories of your own while sharing the down-home stories that helped her present her own family's cuisine. This is a great gift for anyone who understands the passion for creating that special family experience in the kitchen!
Heaping dollops of Southern cooking & down-home stories ...
Helpful Votes: 32 out of 34 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-20
Review Date: 2008-09-20
Flavored with Love: Mary Lou's Family and Friends Can Cook is the perfect title for this book. Not only does this author flavor her tasty recipes with love, she seasons them with herbs, spices and other exotic taste sensations too. Author Mary Lou Cheatham--working under the pen name of Jane Riley, a fictitious cousin--seasons the BOOK with love, also, by adding heaping dollops of anecdotes about her family and friends that will please the literary palate of cooks and readers alike.
I like to think of these down-home stories as "love-thoughts," especially the tender morsels about her late husband Robert "Bobby" Cheatham. In this third edition of Flavored with Love: Mary Lou's Family and Friends Can Cook, Cheatham's friends and relatives contribute their favorite recipes and share stories, also.
Since I cook less these days, I purloined the easiest recipes to make myself, such as cornbread. To my delight, I found it similar in taste and texture to my late mother's Kentucky recipe. None of that Marie Calendar's too-sweet cornbread for me. I always tell my children it tastes like cake, so I agree with the author's Grandmother Gregg when she says we are " ... softies and that these days people eat corn cake instead of cornbread." Spot on!
I also tried the Angel Biscuits and Peanut Butter Balls, and believe you me, the biscuits melted in my mouth and the balls went straight to my hips!
I could go on and on about other simple recipes, but that wouldn't do justice to the entire book. When I wanted to taste something that took a little more time and energy, I called in daughter Debbie. She whipped up things like Michelle's Squash Casserole, good ol' Louisiana Jambalaya and Mike's steak in no time flat! But when she wanted to try Mike's Watermelon, which calls for an entire bottle of rum or vodka ... well, that's where I drew the line. I'll have my watermelon sober--as nature intended--thank you very much!
In addition to recipes and entertaining stories, this cookbook is sprinkled with off-beat humor, interesting cooking tips, and ... well, if you want to know more, you'll have to get your own copy. (I guess I'll have to get another copy; when Deb went home, mine mysteriously disappeared. ... hmmmmm)
Every home should have one!
I tip my fedora to the author and Chief Chef Mary Lou Cheatham, to contributing friends and relatives, and to cover designer Austin Jones of Austin Graphics. The cover is bright and cheerful with colorful photos and abstracts of delicious foods, overlaid with a cartoon chef, grinning as she waves a large cooking spoon. (Could that be a caricature of the author?)
Reviewed by Betty Dravis, 2008
author of 1106 Grand Boulevard
I like to think of these down-home stories as "love-thoughts," especially the tender morsels about her late husband Robert "Bobby" Cheatham. In this third edition of Flavored with Love: Mary Lou's Family and Friends Can Cook, Cheatham's friends and relatives contribute their favorite recipes and share stories, also.
Since I cook less these days, I purloined the easiest recipes to make myself, such as cornbread. To my delight, I found it similar in taste and texture to my late mother's Kentucky recipe. None of that Marie Calendar's too-sweet cornbread for me. I always tell my children it tastes like cake, so I agree with the author's Grandmother Gregg when she says we are " ... softies and that these days people eat corn cake instead of cornbread." Spot on!
I also tried the Angel Biscuits and Peanut Butter Balls, and believe you me, the biscuits melted in my mouth and the balls went straight to my hips!
I could go on and on about other simple recipes, but that wouldn't do justice to the entire book. When I wanted to taste something that took a little more time and energy, I called in daughter Debbie. She whipped up things like Michelle's Squash Casserole, good ol' Louisiana Jambalaya and Mike's steak in no time flat! But when she wanted to try Mike's Watermelon, which calls for an entire bottle of rum or vodka ... well, that's where I drew the line. I'll have my watermelon sober--as nature intended--thank you very much!
In addition to recipes and entertaining stories, this cookbook is sprinkled with off-beat humor, interesting cooking tips, and ... well, if you want to know more, you'll have to get your own copy. (I guess I'll have to get another copy; when Deb went home, mine mysteriously disappeared. ... hmmmmm)
Every home should have one!
I tip my fedora to the author and Chief Chef Mary Lou Cheatham, to contributing friends and relatives, and to cover designer Austin Jones of Austin Graphics. The cover is bright and cheerful with colorful photos and abstracts of delicious foods, overlaid with a cartoon chef, grinning as she waves a large cooking spoon. (Could that be a caricature of the author?)
Reviewed by Betty Dravis, 2008
author of 1106 Grand Boulevard
Down home
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2008-10-12
Review Date: 2008-10-12
Let me preface this review with the caveat that my family is vegetarian, and Flavored with Love is heavy on meat/animal product recipes. Hence the 3 stars. On the vegetarian side, this cookbook contains dozens of tempting dessert and candy recipes, along with down home dishes using cornmeal, beans and rice, and vegetable sides. Some of the recipes are humorously simple: Score a ham, glaze with juice and mustard, stick in some cherries, and bake. Most are accompanied by family stories, comprised of memories, characterizations, poetry, and anecdotes. The recipe for corn casserole is yummy, as is the basic cranberry sauce. As for the turtle recipes, well, I'm not convinced. Flavored with love is a folksy, light hearted guide to the preparation of Southern style foods.
Down-Home Cooking that Even I Can Handle!
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-21
Review Date: 2008-09-21
I love this book! I have a pile of cookbooks that I dust occasionally but almost never use. Why? They're too complicated, too predictable...too boring! But Flavored With Love? Now this is a cookbook I can sink my teeth into! Not only are the recipes delicious and simple, but the stories interwoven throughout this lovely book make me feel like I'm getting cooking lessons from my favorite aunt or best friend. At last--a cookbook I will really use! My family will end up loving this book as much as I do. And I plan to give it as a gift, as it is beautifully packaged. Highly recommended!
Flavored with Love - Comfort Food for the Soul
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-30
Review Date: 2008-09-30
This fabulous cookbook is packed with all of my childhood favorites. Raised by southern parents and now residing in the Pacific Northwest, I often feel deprived of these comforting dishes.
With nearly three-hundred recipes that include pecan pie, grandpa's lemonade, and red beans and rice, this book does not disappoint! I no longer have to call my mom for help when I want to cook southern food - everything I need is in this cookbook. I get hungry just flipping through the pages!
With nearly three-hundred recipes that include pecan pie, grandpa's lemonade, and red beans and rice, this book does not disappoint! I no longer have to call my mom for help when I want to cook southern food - everything I need is in this cookbook. I get hungry just flipping through the pages!

Fly Fast...Sin Boldly
Published in Hardcover by Addax Publishing Group (2000-12)
List price: $27.95
New price: $75.00
Used price: $27.95
Collectible price: $27.95
Used price: $27.95
Collectible price: $27.95
Average review score: 

Fly Fast... Sin Boldly - Autobiography of the Son of Bill Lear
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-25
Review Date: 2007-01-25
Normally Bill Lear Jr. is described in books about his famous father THE Bill Lear (Learjet) as somewhat a playboy who crashed a lot of planes. Perhaps this is the curse of having a famous father? Bill Lear Jr. has his own say here and comes across a bit of an a@#hole but he did fly a lot of high-performance aircraft, starting from an early age. His experiences doing the early air shows and air races are worth reading about. It was a different time when business deals were a bit loose and so I will give Bill Jr. the benefit of the doubt. Even his military experience is notable. Later in his career he seems to have become a successful aircraft and avionics salesman. Like his father, he had problems/opportunities with women and I lost count after wife #3. I find it a bit strange that he writes very little of his relationships with his children. All in all, a good read about a pilot with opportunity and balls.
Fly Fast Sin Boldly
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2004-03-05
Review Date: 2004-03-05
A friend loaned me the book. Having been in the aviation field all my life I found the book to be very entertaining. If you are merely an aviation Buff or involved, like I am, you will relate to much of the story. It's a fast read with hilarious anecdotes.
A Very Intertaining Book By a Fascinating Writer
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2004-03-04
Review Date: 2004-03-04
Owning and flying a WW II P-38 Lightning at age 17 is just one of the many episodes of his life that Bill Lear vividly brings back to life in this autobiography of his life. His knowledge of all aspects of aviation, his insight into life and relationships, combined with his great sense of humor, make this a book that is hard to put down once you start reading it. The only thing better than reading about his experiences is to hear him tell about some of them in person and I feel fortunate to have been able to experience that.
Non aviation enthusiasts will enjoy this book as well as aviation enthusiasts. It is a great gift idea and everyone of our friends who have read it have enjoyed it.
Living History
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2004-03-03
Review Date: 2004-03-03
A book that once you pick up you can't put down. A wonderful insight into Aviation and the adventures of a truly remarkable man.
A cool book, written from a cool guy !!!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2004-03-03
Review Date: 2004-03-03
A great book from one of the coolest guys I know!!
It is a "must" for anybody, who has something to do with aviation.
I would appreciate it, when this book will be continues published.
It is a "must" for anybody, who has something to do with aviation.
I would appreciate it, when this book will be continues published.

From Binge to Blackout: A Mother and Son Struggle with Teen Drinking
Published in Paperback by NAL Trade (2006-08-01)
List price: $15.00
New price: $2.50
Used price: $0.16
Used price: $0.16
Average review score: 

So helpful and inspiring!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-25
Review Date: 2008-03-25
This book should be read by every parent who has pre-teen/teen kids and should be made a mandatory book in every high school. It is a true eye opener and very insperational.
Great book for teens and parents
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-18
Review Date: 2007-10-18
I bought this book for myself and my 18 year old son to read before he left for college this fall. I read it first and then let him read it. The Volkmann family did a great job of communicating to the reader the dangers of teenage drinking. My son went to numerous parties during high school where alcohol was present. Our son told us about the drinking going on at these parties and I began to realize what a serious problem exists concerning teenage drinking. I hope that many parents will read this book and realize that teenage drinking is not something to be taken lightly. Many parents do not realize what can happen to their teens who take part in this dangerous activity. I encourage any parents of a teen to read this book and then make their teen read it as well and then discuss the book with your child.
PERSONAL TOUCH AND HOPE TO THIS EPIDEMIC DISEASE
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-05
Review Date: 2007-07-05
I found this to be extremly informative , seeing both sides of bing drinking and the perceptions of the family as well as the Alcoholic. I read this while my son (who also asked for help) was in rehab for his 21st birthday. He is now reading my copy. I found I could identfy with alot of the thoughts/situations as well as the codependent/alcoholic behaviors. As I work on my codependence and my son works on his sobriety I strongly encourage anyone with a teen/young adult afflicted with this disease to read this book.
Great resource
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-14
Review Date: 2007-05-14
As a high school counselor and child of an alcoholic I found this to be a great resource both personally and professionally. Your candid account of your journey for information and for recovery has already given me insights to help my students and their parents.
Thank you both,
Thank you both,
A Must Read!!
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-04
Review Date: 2007-01-04
This book was very educational and informative. A MUST READ for anybody struggling with alcoholism or who has a loved one struggling with the disease. Very realistic and honest.

From the Inside: Linkin Park's Meteora
Published in Hardcover by Bradson Press (2004-11-30)
List price: $26.95
New price: $11.30
Used price: $1.97
Used price: $1.97
Average review score: 

LP Book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-09
Review Date: 2008-09-09
Great book for any Linkin Park fan. I enjoyed the pictures and reading about the tour and how they made their videos.
A must have for any Lp's fans!!!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-13
Review Date: 2006-03-13
My friend and I are vietnamese fans of LP and we must say that it's really hard for us here to buy anything about LP we like, because most websites never ship to Vietnam. But luckily, a friend of mine told me about this site. And the first thing we bought when we entered this site was "From the inside". This book is something I think every diehard fans of LP must have. It's full of beautiful pictures, lovely quotes from LP members and commentaries of Mr Hahn about all the videos in Meteora album. I found out a lot more about all the LP members and how they made music. You should really buy this book, I swear you'll be satisfied with it.
Long time fan
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2005-02-26
Review Date: 2005-02-26
I've been a Linkin Park fan for probably about 6 years now and I'm amazed every time hear something new from them. The creativity and energy they put into each note, each measure of anything they put thier names on. That type of dedication is severely lacking in the music business today. I'm glad to say to say I'm a fan, without any hesistation or worries. I've read this book, 2 maybe three times and it's the kind of book you can go back to and get new views of the bands months or years after the initial read. It's a good job, well written and an easy read, not at all full of superflous language and unnecissary jargon. It proves they are a band of thier word, just average kids from SoCal, with nothing more in mind than making great music.
From the Inside: Linkin Park's Meteora
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2005-08-06
Review Date: 2005-08-06
If you are a Linkin Park fan, want to know more about the band, or just want to recognize how six down to earth guys spend their time on tour, this book's for you. This is a diary of life on the road. It is filled with beautiful pictures, and look inside minds of one of the greatest rock bands in history! A must have for any Linkin Park fan!
From The Inside: Linkin Parks meteora Review
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2005-03-01
Review Date: 2005-03-01
From the Inside: Linkin Parks Meteora is a really good book. It tells you how the band started out and gives you interesting facts about the band, Linkin Park. The book tells you what the fans mean to the band, and where the root of their songs and music comes from. A 'Rolling Stone' reporter gives you his insight on the band, and talks about the interview he had with Linkin Park. I would definately recommend this book to anyone who is a fan of Linkin Park, or to anyone in a band, or starting a band. They give you good tips to keep in mind if you are in a band and making music, and what to expect.

Gaining
Published in Kindle Edition by Grand Central Publishing (2007-02-22)
List price: $9.99
New price: $7.99
Average review score: 

Amazing read
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-05
Review Date: 2008-06-05
This was a fantastic and inspiring book. Aimee gives a good mix about real stories from the women she knew growing up with eating disorders as well as some new research in the field of eating disorders. Brilliant writing, and for people who feel lost like I do, this book gives a glimpse that there is light at the end of the tunnel. I will definitely read this one again.
One of the best books on this topic
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-04
Review Date: 2008-05-04
I recommend this book to anyone with a history of anorexia or bulimia nervosa. It is well written and promotes healthy insights about one's condition, psychological predisposition and family context. I have read Caroline Knapp's book - Appetites, which I found to be excellent too. I also recommend Sensing the Self. All the others I have seen are not worth the time... This one, if not the best, is among them... Aimee Liu intertwines stories, including her own, in a way that holds you close, helping us also 'connect the dots' while reading the book. It helps us be more open in finding out about our own stories and how it matches this growing population of people with eating disorders. I found extremely useful!
Offers hope and support for those in recovery
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-19
Review Date: 2008-02-19
'Gaining' is the best book I've read related to eating disorders. So many books out there get bogged down in the details of anorexia and/or bulimia. This is the first I have read that tells about life after all that. I'm in recovery after 15 years of bulimia, and this book was a catalyst in helping to push me into that next step of recovery. 'Gaining' explains that there is no prescribed path to health; while we are alike in many ways, we may need different things along the way to make it. Liu and the women she writes about show that reaching wellness is possible AND worth it.
Very good, but don't compare and despair
Helpful Votes: 13 out of 14 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-16
Review Date: 2008-03-16
When I started reading this book, just a quarter of the way into it, I was very excited and hopeful that this could be one of the best books out there on EDs because it focused a lot on recovery, and using real life examples. Reading about solutions instead of just epidemics and hopeless stats was refreshing.
The insight into people's personality traits was especially helpful. I bookmarked many passages with little post-it flags because so many things were right on.
I had to knock off two stars for one reason only--the height and weight stats of most the women she interviewed. At first I didn't notice but the more into the book I read, it became very distracting. First of all, height and weight does NOT paint an instant mental picture of what someone looks like to me, anyway. I am not one of those carnival game workers who is trained to know what that looks like. I didn't understand why she couldn't have just described them as "underweight" or used adjectives instead of stats, or whatever.
I couldn't believe it when she ACTUALLY listed the height and weight of the DAUGHTER of a woman with ED and inserted the following commentary--"far from excessive". You could almost hear the subtext after that, "but, could still stand to lose a few pounds." Instead, she lets the quote of the mother's opinion to speak what the author is thinking. And I'm thinking, how many girls who happen to weigh MORE than that and are SHORTER are going to feel when they read that? Never mind that she goes on to say how our bodies are functional and don't define who we are and how fathers can help daughters feel good about themselves--the seed of self-doubt could be planted somewhere.
I noticed she also talked a lot about her own weight numbers throughout her various life stories, as though this says something on its own. It obviously does to the author, since she had an eating disorder and weight represents what was going on in her life at that point, but it doesn't mean a whole lot to the general audience. If she said, I was at X weight at that point I would think, so? I'm sorry, I forgot to memorize your height and I don't know what that means and how that adds to the story. All I needed to know was how healthy she was, really. And it was triggering to start thinking about my own height and how it compared, and I had to consciously tell myself to stop doing that.
It was disappointing that for all the self-awareness and sensitivity the author brings to the subject, this detail escaped her attention. I don't think she meant anything malicious about it, of course, just a sad side effect of how an ED mind operates, unfortunately, even after the harmful behaviors have ceased.
(if the author had any input in the ironic cover art--a photo of a bone-thin model in a joyous leap in a sheer dress on the beach--this would get two stars, especially because there is a whole chapter devoted to how media images equate thin women to success, health, and happiness)
The insight into people's personality traits was especially helpful. I bookmarked many passages with little post-it flags because so many things were right on.
I had to knock off two stars for one reason only--the height and weight stats of most the women she interviewed. At first I didn't notice but the more into the book I read, it became very distracting. First of all, height and weight does NOT paint an instant mental picture of what someone looks like to me, anyway. I am not one of those carnival game workers who is trained to know what that looks like. I didn't understand why she couldn't have just described them as "underweight" or used adjectives instead of stats, or whatever.
I couldn't believe it when she ACTUALLY listed the height and weight of the DAUGHTER of a woman with ED and inserted the following commentary--"far from excessive". You could almost hear the subtext after that, "but, could still stand to lose a few pounds." Instead, she lets the quote of the mother's opinion to speak what the author is thinking. And I'm thinking, how many girls who happen to weigh MORE than that and are SHORTER are going to feel when they read that? Never mind that she goes on to say how our bodies are functional and don't define who we are and how fathers can help daughters feel good about themselves--the seed of self-doubt could be planted somewhere.
I noticed she also talked a lot about her own weight numbers throughout her various life stories, as though this says something on its own. It obviously does to the author, since she had an eating disorder and weight represents what was going on in her life at that point, but it doesn't mean a whole lot to the general audience. If she said, I was at X weight at that point I would think, so? I'm sorry, I forgot to memorize your height and I don't know what that means and how that adds to the story. All I needed to know was how healthy she was, really. And it was triggering to start thinking about my own height and how it compared, and I had to consciously tell myself to stop doing that.
It was disappointing that for all the self-awareness and sensitivity the author brings to the subject, this detail escaped her attention. I don't think she meant anything malicious about it, of course, just a sad side effect of how an ED mind operates, unfortunately, even after the harmful behaviors have ceased.
(if the author had any input in the ironic cover art--a photo of a bone-thin model in a joyous leap in a sheer dress on the beach--this would get two stars, especially because there is a whole chapter devoted to how media images equate thin women to success, health, and happiness)
Great book!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-05
Review Date: 2008-04-05
As someone working towards recovery from an ED, this book is an amazing read. I can relate to the experiences of the author. Beyond that, the information (some scientific, some observational, all GOOD) she presents and her retrospective look at her previous book from the '70's, is golden information. Considering how uncertain people feel about the future after an ED, a window into what it could be like instills hope! Thanks!
General of the Army: George C. Marshall, Soldier and Statesman
Published in Paperback by Touchstone Books (1991-05)
List price: $14.95
New price: $13.44
Used price: $4.25
Used price: $4.25
Average review score: 

The Essence of a Soldier Statesman
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-13
Review Date: 2008-07-13
Here is an honorable man. He was born in Victorian America at Uniontown Pennsylvania in 1880. George Marshall was a descendent of Chief Justice John Marshall. He was a graduate of VMI and was commissioned an Officer in 1902. Ed Cray has done an exhaustive study of Mr. Marshall. He portrays his experiences in the Philippines and later his staff work during World War I for General Pershing. Mr. Cray goes into great detail in describing General Marshall as a correct modern 20th Century General during the late 1930's.
George Marshall was given the responsibility of Chief of Staff when the total Armed Forces stood at 200,000 strong. At full force in 1945, General Marshall commanded the largest Armed Service in U. S. History.
Mr. Marshall transitoned from his Military Command to the President's Cabinet after World War II. He assisted President Truman through extremely turbulent times. His demeanor was ever professional. His brainstorm of the Marshall Plan was his epiphany toward World stabilization in Europe. He further distinguished himself later as Secretary of Defense during the Korean Conflict. Mr. Truman could't do without him.
When he died in 1959 Winston Churchill grieved deeply. General George C. Marshall stands only with George Washington as a true Soldier Statesman.
George Marshall was given the responsibility of Chief of Staff when the total Armed Forces stood at 200,000 strong. At full force in 1945, General Marshall commanded the largest Armed Service in U. S. History.
Mr. Marshall transitoned from his Military Command to the President's Cabinet after World War II. He assisted President Truman through extremely turbulent times. His demeanor was ever professional. His brainstorm of the Marshall Plan was his epiphany toward World stabilization in Europe. He further distinguished himself later as Secretary of Defense during the Korean Conflict. Mr. Truman could't do without him.
When he died in 1959 Winston Churchill grieved deeply. General George C. Marshall stands only with George Washington as a true Soldier Statesman.
War is about beans, bullets and brains (training & morale)
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-26
Review Date: 2008-06-26
Reading this book gave me the insight (which I guess already had subconsiously) that war is not (just) about the best generals on the battlefield, but maybe even more about those generals organising the campaigns and (grand) strategy.
Untill reading this book I had no idea that the US was so unprepared for WWII as it was. The 28th army in the world in 1939! And Marshall being responsible for making it the efficient warmachine it became, running on trucks, Jeeps, USO, icecream and welltrained units.
Could the Germans and Japanese have won the war had Marshall not been Chief of Staff? Maybe not, but I wouldn't stake my life on that assumption! The way Marshall convinced Roosevelt on may 14th 1940 that a balanced army was needed to win the coming war makes you shiver had Roosevelt NOT listened to Marshall and Hopkins.
Cray writes a very clear story, weaving in and out history on a world scale and back to Marshall pruning his trees in his gardens as almost his only hobby during the war.
A great read and compulsory reading for every soldier and/or statesman.
B. Kreuger, Haarlem, the Netherlands
Untill reading this book I had no idea that the US was so unprepared for WWII as it was. The 28th army in the world in 1939! And Marshall being responsible for making it the efficient warmachine it became, running on trucks, Jeeps, USO, icecream and welltrained units.
Could the Germans and Japanese have won the war had Marshall not been Chief of Staff? Maybe not, but I wouldn't stake my life on that assumption! The way Marshall convinced Roosevelt on may 14th 1940 that a balanced army was needed to win the coming war makes you shiver had Roosevelt NOT listened to Marshall and Hopkins.
Cray writes a very clear story, weaving in and out history on a world scale and back to Marshall pruning his trees in his gardens as almost his only hobby during the war.
A great read and compulsory reading for every soldier and/or statesman.
B. Kreuger, Haarlem, the Netherlands
Mediocre Biography of a Great Man
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-31
Review Date: 2008-01-31
This is not a bad biography. The facts are there as well as a reasonably complete account of a very complicated part of history. But the people and groups that Marshall dealt with are simplified to the point of caricature. Similarly, matters of grand strategy and the new tactics stemming from technological advance are treated merely as things that Marshall had views on. It's not clear from the book that the author understands anything about war as fought in the mid-20th century above the cartoon level. Of course there were many people; of course things were complicated, and a great deal happened; but in over 700 pages we are entitled to some subtlety and insight, which aren't there. General Marshall, one of the truly great mean, deserves better than this.
Gentlemen, scholar, and Inspiration
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-03
Review Date: 2007-10-03
This is a fantastic biography of an incredible leader. Marshall is usually associated with the European Recovery Act and as the Chief of Staff of the Army during World War II. He influenced so much more during his long Army career. A true gentlemen and scholar, his long career and dedication to service is an inspiration for all of us today.
Great Man, Great Biography
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-30
Review Date: 2007-10-30
For those of you who like their reviews to be direct and to the point: Ed Cray, a professor of journalism at the University of Southern California, has written the single best one volume life of George C. Marshall. The book is 15 years old and is unlikely to be surpassed for another 15-20 years. It is the kind of book that will still be in print 70 years after its initial publication.
Why? Well, it is well-written and a pleasure to read. More importantly, Cray does an excellent job of giving his readers a character portrait of the great general that brings the man alive. Not an easy thing to do with a subject as taciturn as Marshall. The man that emerges is one of real character. He became a protégé of General of the Armies John J. Pershing only after Marshall stood up to him as an overage captain, yelling at the general telling him he was wrong when Pershing had criticized Marshall's division. As Chief of Staff of the U.S. Army, Marshall was the critical figure in building the military that defeated the axis powers. He selected the commanders, who often went on to greater fame than he enjoyed. He was the leader of the Joint Chiefs of Staff during the war and often had to battle with his naval counterpart Admiral Ernest J. King. In the realm of allied strategy, he faced off against the head of the British Army, Field-Marshal Sir Alan Brooke. In both cases healthy mutual respect kept from making their differences and disputes personal. In running the army during the war, Marshall's administrative style was highly effective and can provide a model for many in other fields to follow. He also suffered. His stepson, who he had done a good deal to raise, was killed in Italy. It says a good deal about the man that he made no effort to protect one his family from dangerous assignments.
After the war, Marshall served as Secretary of State and then later as Secretary of Defense. He won the Nobel Peace Prize for the plan the State Department developed to rebuild Europe after the devastation of the war. He was twice "Time" magazine's "Man of the Year."
Marshall was the first five-star general in U.S. history and that was no accident. In this fine book Cray makes that clear.
Why? Well, it is well-written and a pleasure to read. More importantly, Cray does an excellent job of giving his readers a character portrait of the great general that brings the man alive. Not an easy thing to do with a subject as taciturn as Marshall. The man that emerges is one of real character. He became a protégé of General of the Armies John J. Pershing only after Marshall stood up to him as an overage captain, yelling at the general telling him he was wrong when Pershing had criticized Marshall's division. As Chief of Staff of the U.S. Army, Marshall was the critical figure in building the military that defeated the axis powers. He selected the commanders, who often went on to greater fame than he enjoyed. He was the leader of the Joint Chiefs of Staff during the war and often had to battle with his naval counterpart Admiral Ernest J. King. In the realm of allied strategy, he faced off against the head of the British Army, Field-Marshal Sir Alan Brooke. In both cases healthy mutual respect kept from making their differences and disputes personal. In running the army during the war, Marshall's administrative style was highly effective and can provide a model for many in other fields to follow. He also suffered. His stepson, who he had done a good deal to raise, was killed in Italy. It says a good deal about the man that he made no effort to protect one his family from dangerous assignments.
After the war, Marshall served as Secretary of State and then later as Secretary of Defense. He won the Nobel Peace Prize for the plan the State Department developed to rebuild Europe after the devastation of the war. He was twice "Time" magazine's "Man of the Year."
Marshall was the first five-star general in U.S. history and that was no accident. In this fine book Cray makes that clear.

Get a Grip! : A Take-Charge Approach to Living With Arthritis
Published in Hardcover by Tarcher (2002-04-15)
List price: $23.95
New price: $1.95
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $23.95
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $23.95
Average review score: 

Get A Grip
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-05
Review Date: 2007-07-05
I think the book is very interesting. I heard about it because I saw Amye Leong at an Arthritis Conference she spoke at and came home and ordered her book. She went through very tough times and is a very motivational speaker and I really enjoyed listening to her. I have family members with arthritis( not rheumatoid ) but I felt they could read the book also and be inspired by Amye. I am a registered nurse and I now know the daily struggles rheumatoid arthritic patients persevere. Thank you Amye for a great book!!
Get a Grip... on this book!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2004-10-21
Review Date: 2004-10-21
This book is full of inspiration for those with or without chronic illness. Amye shares a heartfelt, yet witty story of hope and perseverance. She weaves in helpful resources and advocacy strategies as she describes her journey with Rheumatoid Arthritis. Get a Grip is empowering and life changing. As a person with chronic pain - once I read Amye's book - I knew I wasn't alone.
Get this book!!!!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2004-08-29
Review Date: 2004-08-29
As a person with RA and as a professional health educator, I LOVED Get a Grip! Not only did I like the advice and inspiration that Amye Leong provides in it, but her personal story was amazing! I did not want to put this book down and when I did finish reading it, I wanted to read more about what happens to her next as she reaches for her dreams all while dealing simulataneously with a ravaging chronic disease. If you want to know exactly what it is like to have RA as a young adult or you just want to read how another person understands exactly how YOU feel while trying to live a full life and cope with RA at the same time, you have to GET THIS BOOK! Amye really is a wonderful arthritis educator and advocate but even more so, she is such a terrific role model. If she could come through her horrible flares of this disease as well as she did, it makes me feel like I can still move towards my dreams as well, RA and all. Amye is a great motivator and author, and now I can hardly wait for her next book to come out: to hear how her story continues!
A Truly Inspiring Book!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2004-06-05
Review Date: 2004-06-05
'Get A Grip' is not simply a story about how to deal with the pain and torment of arthritis, this is a story about how to deal with LIFE! This is a story about a woman who at the age 18 was stricken by a disease normally attributed to those much older. Amye Leong tells her story of pain, of despair and hope, of setbacks and victories. This is a story that can teach us all lessons on how to deal with whatever challenges we may be faced with in our own lives. This is a story that can teach us all that in the final analysis it is the person we all see looking back at us in the mirror that has the real power to affect our lives. But most of all, this is a story of COURAGE!!
Another Profile in Courage
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2003-02-28
Review Date: 2003-02-28
One does not have to suffer with rheumatoid arthritis in order to be inspired by this book. Its lessons are universal!Amye's descriptions of her pain, feelings of isolation, helplessness are almost palpable.It is hard to imagine the spirit and strong desire to lead a full life that propel her to go through countless surgeries. Her description of the role of family and loving friends brought home what we always knew that our relationships can make the difference between life and death. I also particularly appreciated her emphasis on taking control of your own health, and in dealing with doctors to work as a partnership. The phenomenal work she has accomplished is more than most people could do without health problems, but her contributions to others are a tribute to her courage, determination and tenacity. I advise everyone to read this book, lend it to others and rejoice that an Amye Leong exists!!!

GIMP
Published in Kindle Edition by HarperCollins e-books (2006-10-17)
List price: $19.95
New price: $9.85
Average review score: 

Book purchase
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-18
Review Date: 2008-03-18
The product was great and Woody's book store communicated great through email about the purchase and ordering information. The only thing is the number of days that it took to ship was confusing; I thought it would get to me sooner, but what the number of days meant was when it would be shipped as opposed to it arriving to me.
Awesome read
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-19
Review Date: 2007-07-19
This is a great book. Inspiring, entertaining, hilarious, and real. Mark doesn't pull any punches in this. It is not a self-pity book nor does it try to lecture the reader. It is a real account of someone who is very inspiring, yet doesn't pretend to be what he isn't.
Once I started reading this I couldn't put it down. Awesome!!!
Once I started reading this I couldn't put it down. Awesome!!!
psgator
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-06
Review Date: 2007-05-06
Mark Zupan makes you think about what you have, not what you do not have.
He may be in a chair, but he is not handicap. Mark Zupan speak frankly and openly about his life before and after. He does not blame anyone for his injury.
Make you think you life is O.K. and despite what happens you can survive and go on.
Life is not so bad.
He may be in a chair, but he is not handicap. Mark Zupan speak frankly and openly about his life before and after. He does not blame anyone for his injury.
Make you think you life is O.K. and despite what happens you can survive and go on.
Life is not so bad.
Zupan Rules!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-30
Review Date: 2007-12-30
Sometimes, people who have been "handicapped" in some manner end up withdrawing into themselves. A few of them are downright miserable. Mad at the world for being stuck in the situation they're in... the best they can hope for (because they're depressing to be around) is to have people feel sorry for them.
Mark Zupan (who, hopefully, you know from the astoundingly-good, and deserved-to-win-the-Oscar documentary, MURDERBALL), is NOT one of those people. He doesn't WANT anyone to feel sorry for him. (In fact, he doesn't even want to be seen as a "role model," or an "inspiration," though [sorry Mark!], to a lot of people, he is.)
Mark was an athletic, fun-loving 18-year-old, having a blast in South Florida when everything he knew changed in an instant. Sleeping off a night of heavy partying in the back of his buddy Chris Igoe's parked pickup, he had no clue when his friend got in and (also drunk) drove off. Not too long thereafter, Igoe swerved off the road and Mark ended up flying out of the truck-bed, over a fence, and into some dense foliage overhanging a small lake. (Igoe had no idea Mark was in the truck bed, so when the police came, they never looked for him.)
Mark regained consciousness, only to find himself unable to move (he didn't know it yet, but he was paralyzed from the neck down), hanging upside-down from a branch with his nose just inches from the water... and getting closer by the moment. He hung there for 14 hours, before a workman heard him yelling for help.
And that's just the START of the story!
In the years that followed, he has not only become one of the star players of the sport known as Quad Rugby (a.k.a. Murderball), his attitude about his "situation" (whether he likes it or not!) has helped untold numbers of others* to better cope with their own situations.
* I know of what I speak. My young and lovely wife has been in a wheelchair for several years due to Multiple Sclerosis. After seeing the movie MURDERBALL --and *especially* after meeting Zupan at a tournament, her attitude went from "good" to fantastic. She's no longer "the girl in the wheelchair." She's simply my wife, who's fun to be around, and who's interested in doing the things she CAN do, rather than fretting about the things she can't.
-Jonathan Sabin
Mark Zupan (who, hopefully, you know from the astoundingly-good, and deserved-to-win-the-Oscar documentary, MURDERBALL), is NOT one of those people. He doesn't WANT anyone to feel sorry for him. (In fact, he doesn't even want to be seen as a "role model," or an "inspiration," though [sorry Mark!], to a lot of people, he is.)
Mark was an athletic, fun-loving 18-year-old, having a blast in South Florida when everything he knew changed in an instant. Sleeping off a night of heavy partying in the back of his buddy Chris Igoe's parked pickup, he had no clue when his friend got in and (also drunk) drove off. Not too long thereafter, Igoe swerved off the road and Mark ended up flying out of the truck-bed, over a fence, and into some dense foliage overhanging a small lake. (Igoe had no idea Mark was in the truck bed, so when the police came, they never looked for him.)
Mark regained consciousness, only to find himself unable to move (he didn't know it yet, but he was paralyzed from the neck down), hanging upside-down from a branch with his nose just inches from the water... and getting closer by the moment. He hung there for 14 hours, before a workman heard him yelling for help.
And that's just the START of the story!
In the years that followed, he has not only become one of the star players of the sport known as Quad Rugby (a.k.a. Murderball), his attitude about his "situation" (whether he likes it or not!) has helped untold numbers of others* to better cope with their own situations.
* I know of what I speak. My young and lovely wife has been in a wheelchair for several years due to Multiple Sclerosis. After seeing the movie MURDERBALL --and *especially* after meeting Zupan at a tournament, her attitude went from "good" to fantastic. She's no longer "the girl in the wheelchair." She's simply my wife, who's fun to be around, and who's interested in doing the things she CAN do, rather than fretting about the things she can't.
-Jonathan Sabin
Not Your Usual Feel Good Story of Triumph Over Adversity
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-03
Review Date: 2007-12-03
A fast paced, gritty look into an Athlete's brush with death and the long road to recovery. If you are looking for the next inspiration for a cheesy After School Special on overcoming adversity...don't read this book. If you are looking for a well written, insightful look into how one guy copes with tragedy and disability, then this is an excellent read. To say Gimp has texture is an understatement thanks to its subject, Mark Zupan, a quadriplegic athlete who was made famous by the documentary Murder Ball. Gimp details how this proud, perhaps arrogant athlete dealt with a tragic accident that cost him the full use of his limbs thanks to drunken night that resulted in a brush with death and a debilitating spinal cord injury.
Gimp does not spare us the details that are often left out of such stories including the uglier side of human emotion. The books subject faces Zupan's denial, doubt, guilt, fear, despair and loss as a result of his tragedy. While he ultimately comes to terms with his injury and recovery, it is not without some serious setbacks, some self inflicted. It is this part of writer Timothy Swanson's writing that really sets Gimp apart. He does not spare Zupan some hard looks into his darker nature to include arrogance, self indulgence and outright self destructiveness at times. If there is a villain in the book, it is Zupan himself and his own feelings of despair and anger. It is Swanson's description of Zupan's struggle with his own dark feelings and fears that give the story its power.
The book is not without its own sense of humor and offers a dark amusement that Zupan has for the hand life has dealt him. Gimp deftly shows Zupan's outlook on life which is headstrong and confident but not without his fair share of hidden frailty in the face of a near death experience. In fact, the description of the actual accident that describes Zupan clinging to life, literally perhaps, is the book's strongest section. I have many friends who suffer from war wounds, especially brain injuries from IED's or "danger close" air strikes and I can say from personal experience that Gimp does an excellent job at looking at how proud warriors (in Gimp's case a world class athlete), deal with injury and recovery. I recommend this book without reservation to certainly anyone who knows someone who suffers from a disability or who has seen the documentary Murder Ball. The book has broader appeal to fans of sports writing as well since the book leaves no doubt that Zupan is an athlete. The fact that it is an easy read and has a brisk pace is no small feat given that other works of this genre tend to drag on, lack direction and are often burdened with sappy and clichéd, touchy-feely housewife book club nonsense. Zupan's force of will as described by Swanson carries the book along as does the suspense of how he will cope with each stage of his recovery and his entrance into the world of quad rugby aka Murder Ball. I thought it was a great read and recommend it without reservation.
Gimp does not spare us the details that are often left out of such stories including the uglier side of human emotion. The books subject faces Zupan's denial, doubt, guilt, fear, despair and loss as a result of his tragedy. While he ultimately comes to terms with his injury and recovery, it is not without some serious setbacks, some self inflicted. It is this part of writer Timothy Swanson's writing that really sets Gimp apart. He does not spare Zupan some hard looks into his darker nature to include arrogance, self indulgence and outright self destructiveness at times. If there is a villain in the book, it is Zupan himself and his own feelings of despair and anger. It is Swanson's description of Zupan's struggle with his own dark feelings and fears that give the story its power.
The book is not without its own sense of humor and offers a dark amusement that Zupan has for the hand life has dealt him. Gimp deftly shows Zupan's outlook on life which is headstrong and confident but not without his fair share of hidden frailty in the face of a near death experience. In fact, the description of the actual accident that describes Zupan clinging to life, literally perhaps, is the book's strongest section. I have many friends who suffer from war wounds, especially brain injuries from IED's or "danger close" air strikes and I can say from personal experience that Gimp does an excellent job at looking at how proud warriors (in Gimp's case a world class athlete), deal with injury and recovery. I recommend this book without reservation to certainly anyone who knows someone who suffers from a disability or who has seen the documentary Murder Ball. The book has broader appeal to fans of sports writing as well since the book leaves no doubt that Zupan is an athlete. The fact that it is an easy read and has a brisk pace is no small feat given that other works of this genre tend to drag on, lack direction and are often burdened with sappy and clichéd, touchy-feely housewife book club nonsense. Zupan's force of will as described by Swanson carries the book along as does the suspense of how he will cope with each stage of his recovery and his entrance into the world of quad rugby aka Murder Ball. I thought it was a great read and recommend it without reservation.
Gracie: A Love Story
Published in Hardcover by G. K. Hall & Company (1989-12)
List price: $19.95
New price: $21.93
Used price: $0.86
Used price: $0.86
Average review score: 

Lamb Chops alone? .....
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-14
Review Date: 2008-06-14
Lamb Chops...What do lamb chops have to do with this story, well everything! Lamb Chops is the vaudeville routine that brought fame to this comedic duo in the late 1920's. I have the link to a You Tube movie short that was filmed in 1929 for this popular routine here. ( http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kzFcsdgkg54 ) In this clip and others that I've seen with Burns and Allen, I think Gracie is the reason that they had so much success. She was so natural in her role as the "ditzy dame". She was good if not one of the best funnymen to a straightman role. This book takes the reader back to the waning days of vaudeville and the beginnings of film, radio and television as the new media for bringing entertainment to its audiances. George Burns takes us back down memory lane with a personnal love story that lasted nearly 40 years. His memories include many places and friends that I as a reader enjoyed visiting. I don't read love stories usually, but this love story is one that I enjoyed and won't soon forget.
A love and a marriage that that lasted a lifetime
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-21
Review Date: 2007-08-21
In our disposable transient society of today, it is a refreshing change to see a love and a marriage that lasted so long. As time goes on, it is becoming an even rarer event.
In this book, Mr. Burns fondly remembers his wife, Gracie Allen. The stories that he tells about her, how they met, and how they managed to stay together so long were interesting to read and entertaining.
I would recommend this book to all ages. It is easy reading and also tells somewhat of the history of vaudeville, radio, television, and movies.
In this book, Mr. Burns fondly remembers his wife, Gracie Allen. The stories that he tells about her, how they met, and how they managed to stay together so long were interesting to read and entertaining.
I would recommend this book to all ages. It is easy reading and also tells somewhat of the history of vaudeville, radio, television, and movies.
What a great look into Old Hollywood
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-12
Review Date: 2007-08-12
If you love old Hollywood, read this book. If you loved George & Gracie, read this book. If you want to read a true life love story, READ THIS BOOK. I just love the inside scoop on the old Hollywood that George dishes out. I never knew Cary Grant sold neck ties before becoming a screen idol. Harpo Marx (the quiet one) wanted one child in every window to wave goodbye or hello when he pulled up in the drive. George wasn't all that impressed with Marilyn Monroe.
This book is an easy read and so hard to put down.
This book is an easy read and so hard to put down.
Wonderful
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-26
Review Date: 2007-05-26
Growing up, I really only knew Goerge Burns for the occasional television special he would host. Other than that, and his "Oh, God" movie (which came out when I was very young), I was relatively unfamiliar with him.
In the mid 80's, when I was about 10 years old, I found that a local radio station would run old time radio comedies from 8-10pm, and as such, I used to fall asleep nightly listening to the like of Jack Benny, Fibber McGee and Molly, and, of course Burns and Allen.
I finally just purchased this book from and Amazon bookseller about two months ago, and honestly, it's as good a $2.95 as I've spent in a while.
As other reviewers have said, many times bigraqphies can be a bit on the dull side, but George really did well with this. It is an easy read... a page turner. It's very interesting to get more insight on what a great performer she was, and how natural it came to her. One always got the feeling that even though she was delivering her "dizzy" Gracie charater, that underneath that was a very smart, clever person. This book certianly backs that up, and it backs it up with all the warmth and affection George Burns had for his wife.
I thoroughly enjoyed this not only for the story of Gracie, but also as a way to look inside the life of an entertainer at that time. I neverquite understood before what it was to work the vaudeville circuit, but there is a ton of insight in this book.
This is a must read for even the most casual fan of old time radio and the celebrities of that era.
In the mid 80's, when I was about 10 years old, I found that a local radio station would run old time radio comedies from 8-10pm, and as such, I used to fall asleep nightly listening to the like of Jack Benny, Fibber McGee and Molly, and, of course Burns and Allen.
I finally just purchased this book from and Amazon bookseller about two months ago, and honestly, it's as good a $2.95 as I've spent in a while.
As other reviewers have said, many times bigraqphies can be a bit on the dull side, but George really did well with this. It is an easy read... a page turner. It's very interesting to get more insight on what a great performer she was, and how natural it came to her. One always got the feeling that even though she was delivering her "dizzy" Gracie charater, that underneath that was a very smart, clever person. This book certianly backs that up, and it backs it up with all the warmth and affection George Burns had for his wife.
I thoroughly enjoyed this not only for the story of Gracie, but also as a way to look inside the life of an entertainer at that time. I neverquite understood before what it was to work the vaudeville circuit, but there is a ton of insight in this book.
This is a must read for even the most casual fan of old time radio and the celebrities of that era.
The Allen and Burns Show
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-04-11
Review Date: 2006-04-11
I glanced at the reviews here to see if my opinion of this book was just a fluke, but they pretty much bear me out. I didn't expect this book to be nearly as good as it is. On second thought, though, it's not that surprising. This pair was magic and it was seen in everything they touched, the prime and lasting example being the without parallel Burns and Allen Show.
Burns and Allen successfully weathered many storms, making the transition from Vaudeville and stand-up comedy to radio and later to television. The earliest TV shows are the only ones available on DVD, but in later seasons they really hit their stride. In this hilarious and ground- breaking show, George would turn on the TV in the den to see what Gracie was doing, and regularly chat with viewers about events in progress. Gracie would walk in the wrong side of the set and regale viewers (or listeners) with non-stop comedic patter, malapropisms and surrealistic humour (ala Ernie Kovaks) with George as the straightman and pinnacle of style puffing his ever-present cigar.
Even as an octagenarian he could still act (Oh God, You Devil) but as a nonogenarian (92) he could still write. This marvelous memoir is not only the most delightful reading I've had in a long time, but makes me all the more want the Burns and Allen show on DVD. This book was a bestseller in hardback, but is now unaccountably out of print. Yet many readers would love this book, and would enjoy making the acquaintance of the remarkable Gracie Allen.
Burns and Allen successfully weathered many storms, making the transition from Vaudeville and stand-up comedy to radio and later to television. The earliest TV shows are the only ones available on DVD, but in later seasons they really hit their stride. In this hilarious and ground- breaking show, George would turn on the TV in the den to see what Gracie was doing, and regularly chat with viewers about events in progress. Gracie would walk in the wrong side of the set and regale viewers (or listeners) with non-stop comedic patter, malapropisms and surrealistic humour (ala Ernie Kovaks) with George as the straightman and pinnacle of style puffing his ever-present cigar.
Even as an octagenarian he could still act (Oh God, You Devil) but as a nonogenarian (92) he could still write. This marvelous memoir is not only the most delightful reading I've had in a long time, but makes me all the more want the Burns and Allen show on DVD. This book was a bestseller in hardback, but is now unaccountably out of print. Yet many readers would love this book, and would enjoy making the acquaintance of the remarkable Gracie Allen.
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