Rock Books
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For Fans of Pop MinutiaeReview Date: 2000-12-27
Great book, but be prepared for small typeReview Date: 2005-11-29
Music lovers -- get this book!Review Date: 2004-07-31
Find the songs, though popular, were not in the top pops! There are many of these songs around and Joel Whitburn does a fantastic job of documenting the artists, documenting the songs.
I recommend this book highly!
-- Kraig

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What a book!Review Date: 2003-04-26
I loved the way it seemed to celebrate and laugh at/with my reluctance to change. As with all of Carol Anderson's books, this one made me feel accepted.
Butterly Factor Books and SongsReview Date: 2003-04-26
The characters are fun and creative. I couldn't believe the music. I was surprised it is not available yet anywhere else!
I was able to get it off the pressesReview Date: 2003-04-26
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The Odyssey Redux, by a Homer from HarlemReview Date: 2006-07-13
I remember Dennis. Who could forget him? We crossed paths at Hotchkiss. I was from pathetically suburban Ho-Ho-Kus. He was up--way up--from menacingly urban Harlem. Hotchkiss then was all male, almost all white, and altogether remote from the "real world". It was the '60s, an energetic, earnest time. Although an entrenched part of The Establishment, Hotchkiss wanted to do better. It wanted to integrate. The mandarin trustees of Hotchkiss were in the hunt for how, armed with good intentions.
Thanks to their implausible efforts, into our wide-well, patch-madras world dropped this hulking, seething, throbbing man-boy. As Dennis wonderfully recounts in his book, his enrollment was the brainchild of Hotchkiss Trustee Bill Brokaw, a big-time Wall Street stockbroker from Greenwich. As a reasonably successful product of inner-city youth programs, Dennis somehow caught Brokaw's eye. Brokaw first saw in Dennis what we all came to know in him: presence, depth, daring, determination, charisma, and charm.
Did Brokaw really know what he was getting? We callow schoolboys suspected a dark romantic past. But hardly did we know what Dennis confesses to being before donning the tweed jacket: street hustler, gang member, heroin addict, violent criminal. And there he was at... Hotchkiss? With an even more sinister side-kick, the sly yet soulful late Noel Velasquez! Dennis' description of the chasm between the Innocents in Lakeville and these Vulcans from the cauldron of New York is delicious to read--and remember.
After Hotchkiss (where he was elected Senior Class president!) Dennis went a way we supposed he should. Himself a living art form, he entered the world of arts as a producer, director, and (now) writer. He has done well in all three, as his Emmy award and certainly this book attest. Yet Dennis again descended into Hell, when he became a crack addict, nearly causing him to lose everything--including his iconoclastic wife Ann, the daughter of a hard-bitten Irish American cop (who became fiercely loyal to his unlikely son-in-law).
Characteristically, Dennis dug deep yet again, connecting with old friends and drawing from his formidable reserves to turn himself around. Through his many oscillations he has lived richly, if often raw. From such a life both terrific and treacherous, he learned to embrace and trust the world, and then to come humbly to terms with his own racial conscience.
As he headlines in his book, he has now in his five score years transitioned from black, to gray, to white. But don't be dismayed: this cat ain't now no pathetically suburban white-boy wannabe. Dennis Watlington offers us an authentic voice of a reflective, intelligent, once hateful, now humble fellow life traveler with a well seasoned point of view. He is one of God's rare miracles, for which I give thanks to have been graced to behold.
Bold, Eloquent and InformativeReview Date: 2006-06-01
In defining and descriptive detail, Dennis Watlington shares his pain, struggles, joys and experiences in a very personable and candid nature.
You're walking with him as he walks the dark, creepy and active streets of Harlem NY during and after the Civil Rights Movement of the 1960s.
This memoir raises the bar for such insight and storytelling.
It is a captivating look into the life of an optimist.
A True Cross-Section of American SocietyReview Date: 2006-04-16
The value of Watlington's story resides inherently in these very ups and downs, because, unlike many rags-to-riches stories, this novel keeps making the traverse from high white society to the drug-riddled ghetto and back again. It is as though Dennis's life massages the brunt of the American social spectrum, whereas many life stories simply cut straight through it.
Perhaps I am overly partial to Dennis and this novel because he also attended my boarding school, but nonetheless this novel should be read by blacks, whites, and hispanics alike. It provides an inspiring perspective on the true definition of the modern American dream, and in this respect rivals the likes of Gatsby and the Grapes of Wrath for its honest and poignant depiction of an era.

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Thrilling romance full of mysteryReview Date: 1999-02-05
Found the book a bit hard to follow at first-but.......Review Date: 1999-04-20
the best so farReview Date: 1999-06-08

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A trip through timeReview Date: 2001-12-07
A month or so after I fell into Cityscapes, I was delighted to host a young couple from New York. They saw the book on my coffee table and picked it up. Hours later, the two of them were still pouring over the book, learning new and fascinating slices of urban life in their recently adopted city.
Just as New York offers something for everyone, Cityscapes brings light to the eyes of anyone who opens its cover and enters its world.
The Ultimate New YorkReview Date: 2001-12-07
A Beautiful Book!Review Date: 2001-11-27
Cityscapes is more than just a history of New York City and it is more than simply a book of beaufitul pictures. It is a unique social history that explores the timely question of how New York, the City, has been both constructed and reflected in images captured over four hundred years.
So far, this is my favorite book of New York City history.

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Classic Queen Mick RockReview Date: 2008-05-19
amazingReview Date: 2007-11-27
Mick Rock... Knows his stuff..Review Date: 2007-10-22

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Classic on all counts!Review Date: 2007-05-18
Absolutely Essential Tome for Classic Drum StylesReview Date: 2007-05-18
Profiles here feature Charlie Watts, Mitch Mitchell, Ginger Baker, Jon Bonham, Stewart Copeland, Richie Hayward, Keith Moon, and Ian Paice, plus this typist's favorite chapters, those on Ringo Starr, Levon Helm, and Jeff Porcaro.
A book like this is invaluable in helping to cut the time and arduous process of "getting the ultimate clue" that always seems like some zen koan that can't be achieved without suffering and madness. Messrs. Micallef and Marshall take a lot of the pain and mystery out of it. Note: Highly recommended for GB drummers who have to learn various major styles in a short amount of time before the audition or gig.
Drummers will benefit most from this book, but it's a good read for any musician. Very highly recommended. - JMM
Drumming is Their MadnessReview Date: 2007-06-28
For this book, the historical context is provided by Ken Micallef, one of the great drum specialists in rock journalism. His breadth of knowledge and experience in drumming provides a detailed yet concise analysis of each drummer's bag of tricks. Using archival footage, official and bootleg recordings, and copious interviews (many of them conducted himself), Micallef covers their early influences, how they sat at the kit, tuning methods, equipment, style, how they evolved throughout their careers, and everything in between.
Though clearly geared towards musicians, rock historians will not be disappointed in this book, as technical jargon is kept to a minimum and the wealth of biographical and musical information will keep even the casual reader interested. For instance, Micallef is able to draw interesting comparisons to drummers from all kinds of musical milieux, such as the identification of Gene Krupa as Keith Moon's principal forerunner as the "first drum maniac." Also, he often exhibits a propensity for humorous turns of phrase, delivered deadpan, and forthright opinions, such as a passage about Charlie Watts, whose "crotchety feel and slack strokes" nonetheless produce "exquisite, slipping, sliding drum breaks." This result is even more surprising, as Micallef points out that Watts "seems to miss rim shots, his timing is a little off, and he glances cymbals like a blind man." The secret to Keith Moon's style is perhaps even more chimerical, as Micallef advises that the key to playing like him requires "the ability to become very excited, perhaps even traumatized, before you sit down at the kit."
The drum lessons are provided by Donnie Marshall, a well-known drummer who has worked with Ray Charles, Aretha Franklin, and Bonnie Bramlett. On the CD, he plays expertly in the styles of each example drummer, providing audio lessons that are easy to follow and a pleasure to listen to. Overall, this is a great package for anyone interested in rock drumming.

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Climb On Quickly!Review Date: 2003-04-08
Great info and Inspirational stories to get you out there!Review Date: 2002-01-10
Short stories are interspursed with unique, new, and useful knowledge on the art of squeezing more climbing out of your: day, weekend, or evening.
The definitive book on speed climbingReview Date: 2003-01-10
The book mixes three distinctive components - theory behind how to climb faster, practical hands on tips, and fireside annecdotes that will inspire you to get on the rock. The book will provide useful tips for the beginner and experienced climber alike.

Kelley's Climber's Guide to North CarolinaReview Date: 1999-12-29
Must have!Review Date: 1999-05-20
Great BookReview Date: 1999-07-08

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THE Smith Rock Guide bookReview Date: 1999-01-20
Excellent Historical PerspectiveReview Date: 2002-01-09
Going to Smith in 2 days.Review Date: 1999-03-25
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