New York Books
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This play is amazingReview Date: 2007-06-15
Subtle and complexReview Date: 2007-01-28
Possible challenges in a couple scene changes, mainly costume/makeup, but a good director will find a way.
A favorite.Review Date: 2003-02-02
A favorite.Review Date: 2003-02-01
Beautiful, PowerfulReview Date: 2002-06-03

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I L O V E THIS B O O KReview Date: 2005-10-13
You're never too old to learnReview Date: 2006-07-12
This book gives you a glimpse into the minds of strangers, and, no pun intended, pulls you out of your own box. It opens your mind to things you might not have ever even considered.
It's thoroughly enjoyable to read, and doesn't take long, so why not give it a try?
street democracyReview Date: 2005-10-17
samples peoples views, it is a monitor for the state of various urban conditions.
Keep it Public.
Malachi Connolly
Great IdeaReview Date: 2005-10-16
If you were sitting on the subway and could put a bubble with one sentance over everyone's head representing what they were thinking or feeling, this is what you'd come up with. The guy next to you might be saying "beer flavored nipples" and the woman across from you suggesting "Dave should stop wasting my precious time" Humorous, thoughtprovoking and entertaining, this collection of suggestions, thoughts and opinions of your fellow humans walking by you on the street and sitting next to you on the subway is worth the read and a fun experience.
Thought jugglingReview Date: 2005-10-12

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The Best Maureen Johnson Book YetReview Date: 2008-07-15
I *loved* this book. Maureen Johnson is always great, but Suite Scarlett really stood out as her best book so far. Johnson has an amazing ability to remember what it was like to be a teenager and create intriguing "everywoman" characters that allow the reader to peek into a world populated by somewhat insane (but loveable) people. Johnson's particular off-beat brand of humor shows up in full force in this novel, as well. It's absolutely hilarious, with a very memorable cast of characters. Luckily for us, this is the first book in a series, so we'll be seeing more of the Martin family and all of their associates.
Another wonderful book by Maureen Johnson!Review Date: 2008-07-10
Adored this bookReview Date: 2008-07-09
The plot is surprisingly well put together, never focused on one thing. There's drama, suspense, romance, comedy. It flows realistically and entertainingly. Johnson is a magical writer and she can transform a scene into something unforgettable. If there is a sequel I will surely be buying it.
Amazing!!!!!Review Date: 2008-07-07
Funny and Entertaining... plus a little bit of first loveReview Date: 2008-06-14
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Best book for decade of 1960sReview Date: 2003-06-21
It's a roller coaster of a novel, so hang on and enjoy the ride. You might even want to go back for a second trip. I did.
Unjustly Overshadowed By Grendel-A Truly Fantastic NovelReview Date: 2000-08-05
Grossly over-simplified, it is about the tide of discontent and change that came about in the 1960s, exemplified in the stories of a handful of people who live in the small New York town of Batavia. All of these characters' stories occur at roughly the same moment, and to a certain degree overlap each other; they all come into contact with one another at some point during the novel, and may even influence each other, but every member of the book's huge cast has his or her own story and denouement.
The primary one of these stories is the one that concerns Police Chief Fred Clumly and a haggard, maniacal drifter known as "the Sunlight Man", and the happenings of this particular storyline are the catalysts for the rest of the stories. "The Sunlight Man", whom we later find out is Taggert Hodge, the black sheep of the wealthy and powerful family the members of whom comprise roughly half the other characters in the novel, is the one who sets all of these denouements into motion with his seminal return to his hometown as a magician, hippie, murderer, and poet. His has been a life of disillusionment, loss, betrayal and unattainable wants, and he returns to Batavia to set into motion a sort of romantically juvenile plot to take revenge on the world and to mewl out his disappointment with the way things are, the latter of which he does through Fred Clumly(thus is the origin of the title.)
Gardner is remarkably adept at character development; Taggert Hodge, Walter Benson and Fred Clumly are among the best painted characters of fiction I know of. The author has a gift for articulating neuroses and flaws of characters, from miniscule ticks in their everyday behavior to major personality faults. And with a cast of roughly eleven major characters, making each and every one entirely unique in their drives and hamartias is no task to be scoffed at. However, the ability of John Gardner's I perhaps envy the most is that of taking a very normal, even pretty environmental setting, and turning it nightmarish and haunting. In the novel, the dense forests and century-old barns of Batavia are made into artifacts and ruins of an almost Lovecraftian caliber of queerness, and yet it does not serve to displace the small New York town from the realm of believable reality, but rather forces you to evaluate your reality on the same dark and weird basis as his authorial voice.
The sheer scope of the novel (that of several stories cycloning around a unifying theme and plot catalyst) at times threatens to tear it apart, however; the reader at times is left wondering why the author has switched point of views when the scenario he was describing previously had yet to be resolved. This is a mere annoyance, however, and is not really something for which I believe the novel should be faulted, for the rewards of its pages are vast ones.
Due perhaps to its relatively young age, it has yet to receive the proper "classic" status it so rightly deserves, and, sadly, it may never, for "Grendel" seems to be John Gardner's only remembered and widely read work, and is perpetually overshadowing the rest of the author's material, most of which are just as powerful and memorable as tale of Beowulf's tragic nemesis. In fact, some may even be better, as I propose The Sunlight Dialogues is, but until the higher-ups at Norton and the like get around to looking at this master of fiction as a master should, I advise any and all of the people reading this to purchase this book from whatever obscure publisher it has currently been tossed to.
Not the same without the illustrationsReview Date: 2007-08-15
About 10 years ago, I tracked down a fine condition copy of TSG and re-read it. Bad move, though, donating the paperback to the library.
I welcomed the arrival of a new trade paperback edition of the novel, and of one or two others by Gardner until I actually had the opportunity to hold them. The reprints were done without the original illustrations, which are integral to the books. Unbelievable!
For old times sake, I bought a used Ballantine paperback copy and am re-reading it. I have no intention of buying this new edition.
So, five stars for Gardner and the book, with a one-star demerit for this compromised reprint. The new introduction doesn't add much to the book.
I think we're in big trouble.Review Date: 2002-04-07
EnthrallingReview Date: 2004-11-23

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The Best Of The Instant ReviewsReview Date: 2005-10-03
Something to enjoyReview Date: 2000-04-15
Great book about one of the greatest teams ever!Review Date: 1999-02-12
A captivating review of a team of destiny; The New York YankReview Date: 1998-12-19
Awsome!Review Date: 1999-11-28

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Fascinating look at the dioramas at Museum of Natural HistoryReview Date: 2008-06-18
The pictures are excellent. Good for children just becoming interested in the field as well as adults. Highly recommended. mj
Natural History memories of my youthReview Date: 2008-01-23
Windows on Nature is a must have in the library of any one with an interest in Natural History.
great nature bookReview Date: 2007-01-15
Beautiful.Review Date: 2007-05-11
Dioramas are amazing things. Looking at them may not make it seem so, but that, more than anything, is testament to the artistry practiced by the men and women who construct them. Windows on Nature goes behind the scenes of the construction of the dioramas at the Museum of Natural History in New York City.
This is a coffee-table book, so there are a large number of excellent pictures of the dioramas themselves accompanying the text on how they were created. Both are as fantastic as they are fascinating. If you're a fan, this is a must-have. ****
Monuments to WildernessReview Date: 2007-09-16
For many millions of people habitat dioramas have been their first taste of the beauty, calm, and nobility of wild creatures and wild places. More people are familiar with nature documentaries these days, and since I love good documentaries too I can't really complain about that. Nonetheless there are some things that habitat dioramas, when done well, can convey that the flickering image, even on an IMAX screen, just can't. No medium portrays the spacious calm of wild country, and the simple dignity of wild animals, better than dioramas. It's also important to remember the valuable record dioramas can provide: many of the dioramas in this book are of places no longer wild.
Stephen Quinn's credentials for writing this book are probably as good as anyone alive. He started as an artist for the museum and has been an important force in helping keep the medium alive through the dark years of the 60s to 80s, when across the U.S. it was frequently neglected, if not despised, by curators though not, blessedly, by the general public. Things are at least somewhat better now, and Mr. Quinn is now project manager for exhibitions at the museum. He has done a fine job with this book. The text is engaging and informative and the photos are big and beautiful.
I do have a few quibbles. He sometimes uses the word "captured" for animals collected (read killed) for the dioramas. I'm sympathetic with why he felt he had to do that, given what he's trying to do with the book and given the cultural forces with which he must contend. The moral issues behind hunting and museum collection are complex and beyond what a book like this could be expected to cover. Nonetheless, animals are never "captured" for taxidermy.
I should hasten to add that animals do not need to be killed specifically for taxidermy. Many if not most animals mounted for museums in the last few decades died in zoos, were hit by automobile traffic, etc. That generally was not a realistic option at the time these dioramas were created.
My other reservation is deeper, but harder to articulate, and I don't have a real solution to it. I also know that a lot of readers will be unsympathetic with it. I'm not completely comfortable with "behind the scenes" stuff in anything other than technical manuals, trade magazines, etc. The people who made these dioramas were of course just people but had high ideals (ideals that Mr. Quinn without question shares) and they wanted the dioramas to be about their _subjects_. His behind the scenes writing will engage people more with the medium and is interesting in itself, no argument. But how much does it really help to have people thinking "I wonder if that rock in Diorama Z is the one that employees used to go to make out behind on their lunch hour."?
I don't know the answer, and so I can't really fault the author. I also recognize that many of the reviewers here loved that aspect of the book. My hope, and I'm sure it's the author's as well, is that it will all stay in perspective. Let's hope that's right. It would be very sad to see dioramas become the subject of the kind of psychologizing and trivializing that permeates the world of "fine" art.
That said, this is a beautiful and well-written book about a noble, if often neglected, realm of art and natural history. If you've read through a long review like this one about a book on this subject, I promise you won't regret owning it.


eclectic and wittyReview Date: 2002-07-22
A fitting tributeReview Date: 2002-03-31
Recommended
You can't go wrong with this one!Review Date: 2002-06-05
The Last WordReview Date: 2002-03-02
Quirky, fascinationg compilation of obituariesReview Date: 2002-01-21
NEW YORK TIMES WRITER ROBERT MCG. THOMAS, JR. . . . this
is a quirky, fascinating compilation of obituaries about unsung
heroes, eccentrics and underachievers . . . among the inclusions were Edward Lowe, the inventor of Kitty Litter ("Cat Owner's Best Friend"); Angelo Zuccotti, the bouncer at El Morocco ("Artist of the Velvet Rope"); and Kay Halle, a glamorous Cleveland department store heiress who received 64 marriage proposals ("An Intimate of Century's Giants").
Thomas never got to put these pieces into book form. He died, but a fan of his work decided that his work should live on . . . and I'm glad this was the case . . . Thomas had the gift of being able to find something worth writing about--regardless of the subject . . . my only regret is that all obituaries in loca papers aren't as interesting . .. but as long as I don't come across mine, I won't complain!
There were several memorable passages; among them:
[in an obituary about Francine Katzenbogen] Her neighbors were
not amused that she planned to house 20 cats in a converted
two-story garage she had refurbished at a cost of $100,000. The
luxurious cat complex included tile floors, climbing towers,
scratching posts, skylights and cozy, low-lying window ledges
where the cats could stretch out and watch the world outside
their air-conditioned lair.
Not content to recognize a Brooklyn accent, Mr. Berger drew
on his broader knowledge of American speech and history to
develop a theory of just how the signature "Toidy-told Street"
evolved. It was, he theorized, a result of the close commercial
connections with the pre-Civil War South in which upper-class
southern speech, primarily from New Orleans and Charleston,
SC, was imported and hammered down to a lower-class
Brooklyneese.
A man given to gross exaggeration when simple embellishment
would suffice, Mr. McCartney also claimed to have visited every
state except Hawaii: His goats couldn't swim that far, he
explained, and if they could, they'd just end up eating the grass skirts off the hula dancers anyway.

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Nice reference book not only for Mets fansReview Date: 2002-04-04
If you like the Mets or baseball, read this bookReview Date: 2002-03-19
Amazin' Met Memories Was Amazin'Review Date: 2002-03-20
Another Met MiracleReview Date: 2002-03-20
This is an enjoyable and fascinating chronicle of 40 sometimes great, often frustrating years.
Perhaps my biggest kick, however, came from Bud Harrelson's wonderful and honest introduction. It alone makes the book a great buy, and brought back for this original Met fan many fond memories of the '69 Miracle Mets.
A Loge Seat Behind The Plate On A Perfect July NightReview Date: 2002-03-23

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WHERE BASKETBALL PLAYERS COME TO PLAYReview Date: 2005-05-10
this book talks about problems the players and coaches had with racism.Most players got started in the Rucker Park Tournament.After the park tournament they went on to college ball even some went to the NBA!
Asphalt Gods by Vincet M. Mallozziwas a great book about players before professional ball games.This book is a excellent book to pick up and read.
EngrossingReview Date: 2004-02-10
BALLERS Review Date: 2005-06-03
THE BESTReview Date: 2004-01-02
Hey, I know that guy.....Review Date: 2003-12-21

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Avant-Guide made my NY trip many times betterReview Date: 2006-05-10
Great for the off-the-beaten path-travelerReview Date: 2002-09-24
I travel a lot. Reqd every guide. This is the best.Review Date: 2001-07-12
The Best of the Guidebooks I've Seen So FarReview Date: 2001-04-03
this is a unique guide book.Review Date: 1999-09-10
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