Clubs Books
Related Subjects: A B C D E F G H I K N P Q R S W M L
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A Very Much Under-rated NovelReview Date: 2008-06-21
A MasterpieceReview Date: 2007-08-24
One Of The Best Books I've Read In A Great WhileReview Date: 2006-11-13
A warning of horrors to comeReview Date: 2006-02-09
After reading the book, however, I realized that Williams was fictionalizing the McCarran Act, which set up the very scheme the kid was worrying about.
That law is still on the books.
A great book I only recently discoveredReview Date: 2002-11-25
The story begins near the end as Max, who's dying of cancer, sits at an outdoor café in Amsterdam where he's come to investigate the mystery of the death of his friend, Harry Ames, "the father of black writers," a few days earlier in Paris. What he eventually discovers is mind-blowing.
Throughout the novel, Max opines on a multitude of subjects like: Marxism, African independence and African attitudes towards Americans, sexuality and interracial relationships (he works past some of his homophobia too), the different styles of reporters from 5 major NYC newspapers, the theory of the rich president and other political theories, the "lie" of Christmas ("the rich man's chance to dissipate the image of Scrooge"), American cars (with their "long, buttock-smooth lines"), existentialism, and Alban Berg's atonal opera, "Wozzeck" (whose climax, a child's scream, punctuates Max's argument with his woman). Max interprets bebop's message as, "we can not be contained," and modern jazz becomes the avatar of his literary aesthetic: "He wanted to do with the novel what Charlie Parker was doing to music -- tearing it up and remaking it; basing it on nasty, nasty blues and overlaying it with the deep overriding tragedy not of Dostoevsky, but an American who knew of consequences to come: Herman Melville, a super Confidence Man, a Benito Cereno saddened beyond death."

The best REALISTIC BSC bookReview Date: 1999-01-29
The best BSC Book EVER!!!!!!!!!Review Date: 1999-01-02
Mallory's leaving. Can the BSC go on without her?Review Date: 1998-12-18
Readers have to say good-bye to Mallory PikeReview Date: 1998-12-10
Great!Review Date: 2005-04-17
Collectible price: $10.00

book a must for kidsReview Date: 2008-01-23
A Favorite Book Since ChildhoodReview Date: 2007-11-09
I recently purchased this book for my niece and for the older children of two families who will be having a new addition. When I was asked to present a child's book to my class in middle school this was the book I chose.
THE MITTENReview Date: 2003-07-18
Rich with color and imaginationReview Date: 2004-10-13
The best version of an old classic taleReview Date: 2002-09-30

Used price: $4.45
Collectible price: $35.00

Book ReviewReview Date: 2005-08-03
My Life in FearReview Date: 2004-12-23
An excellent bookReview Date: 2004-11-28
A Must Read!Review Date: 2004-04-21
A must Read!Review Date: 2004-03-01

Sweet writingReview Date: 2008-04-05
Cut-rate Mencken but still entertaining...Review Date: 2007-09-02
Liebling tries too hard to emulate H.L. Mencken's style, and he doesn't have the chops for it...but, at the same time, he knows how to describe the action inside the ring. (Not as well as Jack London, but well enough.) At all times, you sense the depth of his love for boxing.
Another reason to recommend this book is that Joyce Carol Oates thinks Liebling was a racist. (I know, I know...who the hell is Joyce Carol Oates?) If you read the book, you'll discover that he wasn't...and a few more things besides.
Rest In Peace;Floyd....Review Date: 2006-05-31
in the fifties)was voted the best sports book ever, by Sports Illustrated.The incredibly colorful characters Liebling focuses on would be hard to beat by any writer in any field,even if he may not have gotten all of it right.For example,he seems to actually get along with Rocky Marciano's manager,Al Weill,even though evidence elsewhere suggests that Rocky may have retired to get away from him.And I think he resorted to cliche in describing Irish Billy Graham as as "good as a fighter can be without being a hell of a fighter"(p.250);Graham is a Hall of Famer who was robbed in a welterweight title fight against Kid Gavilan-and my (Jewish) uncle idolized him.But Liebling,who wrote on "serious subjects" for 'The New Yorker'and was an award winning war reporter, attended the first fight ever held in Yankee Stadium in 1923-and remained optimistic about the future through the lens of boxing,concludes,"I reflected with satisfaction that old Ahab(Archie)Moore could have whipped all four principals on that card within 15 rounds,and that while (Jack)Dempsey may have been a great champion,he had less to beat than Marciano.I felt the satisfaction because it proved that the world isn't going backward,if you can just stay young enough to remember what it was rewally like when you were really young."
Great Stuff!Review Date: 2006-05-13
Boxing as cultureReview Date: 2006-03-18
The fighters themselves - Marciano, Moore, Sadler, Robinson, Patterson, Farr - come across less as legends and more as contemporary sportsmen. It seems incredible to me that once upon a time you could just buy a ticket and stroll into the Marciano-Moore fight! For me, that fight and many others was the stuff of mythology and yet Liebling succeeds in making it real and tangible.
Final note: anyone who after reading this feels an uncontrollable lust to acquire Pierce Egan's Boxiana volumes will be enthralled to know that there is a company in Canada, Nicol Island Publishing, who have published at least three of the total of five volumes. Unfortunately, Amazon does not seem to sell any of them.


Yeah, baby!Review Date: 2002-09-20
A good, smart read.Review Date: 2004-01-24
Interesting but somewhat radical.Review Date: 2004-02-07
It's so good to be bad!Review Date: 2003-10-07
Realistic romp.Review Date: 2002-08-12
Though the ending is a litle sad, Playtime is now one of my favoite books.

Used price: $24.12

Soulful Search of the HeartReview Date: 2003-08-05
wonderful writingReview Date: 2003-06-10
superbReview Date: 2003-06-04
A New Voice of Truth has RisenReview Date: 2003-05-30
I love reading poetry and enjoyed reading this book because through the author's writing, I could feel what she was relaying. This is one book that is written with great depth and meaning. I hope she will write a second book because I can wait to read it!
A Voice For Today's YouthReview Date: 2003-06-18


This book has something for everyone!Review Date: 2008-02-21
William Mize Writes With Passion and PunchReview Date: 2005-07-09
Resurrection AngelReview Date: 2002-08-18
I enjoyed the character development of the two main characters of the book, Denton Ward and Monty Crocetti. By allowing both to have all to human flaws and weaknesses, Mr. Mize creates characters who are multi dimensional, and therefore more interesting than your average, 'hard boiled' private [eye]. As a woman, I especially enjoyed that the character of Monty was intelligent and tough, and not in the book as a plot device with the entire function of making the male character seem more macho.
The secondary characters are also well realized, and well written - there are no cardboard cutter 'bad guys' in this novel.
The plot of the novel is also somewhat different than your average mystery; including such aspects as as psychic abilities and alien abductions, and also has some unexpected twists and turns as it leads towards a very satisfactory ending.
I enjoyed the book very much, and look forward to the next installment in the adventures of Denton Ward and Monty Crocetti
Bill Mize Does It For The First Time...Review Date: 2002-07-30
Not Your Father's Mystery NovelReview Date: 2002-08-11

Used price: $11.23

It's beginning to look a lot like DecapitronReview Date: 2008-06-26
Matthew Fry's family is enjoying another festive Christmas holiday; however, Matthew is not. He fears his dominatrix wife Decapitron, and surrenders to his children - he is the weakest family member. In the traditional holiday-special spirit, the Fry family must band together and help Santa and his elves defeat his arch enemy, Frosty, a true detester of Christmas. Santa is scary, crass, and undeniably made of sausages - despite what your parents may have told you as children.
Certainly an unconventional and eccentric holiday legend, "Sausagey Santa" is not for children. Although this story contains its fair share of "miracles," Mr. Mellick's intentions are not to deceive the reader, nor are they to merely entertain him/her. The trials and tribulations featured in a traditional Christmas fairy tale are meant to test the family unit: to survive; to rely on each other; to trust that they are acting on the side of good, and that good is infallable and unbeatable. However, throughout this story, Matthew (our protagonist) never has this epiphany. His character makes very little progress, and is interminably unhappy and afraid. Mellick shatters the predictable presuppositions of holiday stories and their idealistic feel-good happy-endings, undoubtedly reserved by the average reader.
Having read a number of other works by Carlton Mellick III, I've become aware of his inclination towards alpha-female, dominatrix-type characters. The character of Decapitron becomes a sort of anomaly in this story. She is the head of the family, and the children's storyteller. She sexually dominates Matthew, and also becomes an intimidating force in the fight against Frosty. Christmas legends have their heroes, and they are usually male: Scrooge, Rudolph, the Grinch, and Santa Claus. Mellick turns the tables by making the most powerfully menacing character, female. English critic and editor, Cyril Connolly wrote "In the sex war, thoughtlessness is the weapon of the male, vindictiveness of the female." (The Unquiet Grave, 1944) No one but Mellick has perfected this female character-type.
If you're looking for some adult-themed, action-packed holiday fun or maybe just some role models, do yourself a favour and check this book out.
Christmas on CrackReview Date: 2008-06-09
It's possible to get lost in the sea of absurdity that Mellick's paints. However, his humor tends to hold everything together nicely.
This is a North Pole loaded with sexual deviant elves, a nazi-Frosty, a Santa made of meat and chainsaw angel wings.
Definitely not your parents Holiday yarn. Mellick has once again proven he is one of the top cynical voices of our generation.
Try not to get too drunk this ChristmasReview Date: 2007-12-13
Now, as for the story--this is a twisted take on the classic sort of Christmas tales that pop up a month or so before Christmas. It plays with the concept, though, because this is no sappy, sweet tale--this is a surly, irreverent version of Christmas where you leave beer for Santa instead of cookies.Can Christmas be saved? Do you care?
The style is concise, fast, and humorous. I laughed out loud at some points of the book. Mellick explores a lot of really interesting ideas, which is one of the things I liked the most.
So, may you have a Christmas. Read this book, and leave a beer for Santa.
--lotus rose
My book, which also includes a Christmas story called, "The Worst Christmas Ever":
The Corruption of Innocence
Awesome story!Review Date: 2007-11-27
This book is like South Park, Futurama, Aqua Teen Hunger Force, and The Night Before Christmas all wrapped together with a giant chainsaw bow and a fancy hairdo. It's a ball of laughs and totally fun!
Holy Crap!Review Date: 2007-11-24
There has never been a Christmas Book as entertaining and f'd up at Sausagey Santa. Elf s3x! Christmas fetish! Snowmen with axes for limbs! This book is hilarious, poignant, and ultra smashing x-massey goodness.
I am so happy that there's a bizarro christmas book like this. And I love the cover!

Be Prepared... for a great, refreshing book.Review Date: 2008-03-06
The idea of an active, "hands on" education still find its echo in today's most recent education innovations.
Of course, the key message lies in the the initials of the author: Be Prepared!
scouting for boys reviewReview Date: 2007-01-18
"The British Empire wants your help"Review Date: 2004-06-16
Now, as might be expected from its roots, this book reflects a lot of the biases and ways of thinking from Edwardian England. But, leaving that aside, this is a fun and interesting book that shows clearly the forms that have stayed with the Boy Scouts movement to this very day. The introduction was written by Elleke Boehmer, a professor of Colonial and Postcolonial literature, and is a fairly predictable deconstruction/analysis of B-P and his movement.
Now, as a newcomer to Scouting (my son is a Tenderfoot) did I find anything useful in this book? I sure did. Robert Baden-Powell was very knowledgeable about the subject, and this book sure shows it. (I never thought of tying my shoes like that!) Of course some of the information is out of date, especially the first-aid information, so it isn't really usable by the boys "as is." But, this is a nice resource, one that shows you where Scouting started.
Oh, and I must say that I actually enjoyed the somewhat jumbled organization of this book. It isn't as scholarly and antiseptic as modern Boy Scout books, and the stories and tales laced throughout make the reading much more fun. Plus, I did find the focus on some subjects, such as logic and deductive reasoning, to be quite interesting. I loved this book, and highly recommend it to you!
SM202Review Date: 2005-01-01
Excellent if you skip the introReview Date: 2007-01-11
Related Subjects: A B C D E F G H I K N P Q R S W M L
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The story is told through the eyes of a character called Max Reddick, a slightly hip, emerging intellectual, who wants to write like Charley Parker plays the Sax, but yet he is still a very much struggling black writer. Max seems to have as his number one goal in life that of decoding the game being played against blacks by the white man. Or maybe (and the novel leaves this up to the reader) this goal is just a normal by-product of being a black man in a white man's world. Very quickly Max realizes that "politics white boy-style" is just another way white people try to lead black people back to their proper "place" in society: in effect telling them through indirection how to think, feel, and when and how to act, and even how to suffer.
Max travels to Europe where he ends up in a select intellectual circle, that very much respects his manuscript, and where he eventually marries and later divorces a Danish woman who remained his friend even long after the marriage has ended, and who takes care of him at the end of the novel as he dies of cancer.
At the meta-psychological level, the novel proves Ishmael Reed's postulate: that writing, "is fighting and struggling by other more respectable means," as Williams gets to use his pen as his last, and most profound act of rebellion. The book thus is as Walter Mosley has described it as "a shout from deep within some existential void" that resonates on the same frequency of all struggling blacks: suspended invisible in a world that rejects blackness without the need for a cause or a reason, where "Black people have been hollering out in pain for centuries, fighting for freedom, dying in slavery, belittled by little [white] men, and denied by kings and history. Sometimes these black folk have just laid down and died. But mostly they have survived with deformed psyches and distorted notions of the world. Sometimes evil has begotten evil and the one-time slave has slaughtered and even cannibalized his oppressor."
As his personal life spins out of control and he contracts cancer, Max puts down on paper in a scatological way, what everyone else in everyday American society is thinking but cannot say aloud, and in this respect, William's novel is not only a shout from the void, but also a supremely iconoclastic and urgent psychological analysis not unlike Dostoyevsky.
While its organization is structurally very scattered, it still gets its message across. Clearly the novel has a deep existentialist basis and draws on existential themes and metaphors. However, at its core is the notion that at the end of the day, when everything is said and done, the only thing "real" in American society is white racism. Everything else its humanity, its values, its ideals, are subordinate and are carefully calibrated and measured in terms of how they affect the sensitively regulated "white supremacist status quo." According to Max's way of thinking, equality, freedom, and democracy are merely the chips used to move the pieces around the white supremacist chessboard. America and all of its "so-called" ideals are just byproducts of the hard core white supremacist ideology, which lies deep in the nation's bosom. Toward the end of the novel, Max leaves no doubt that "the man" will go to great lengths to protect his white male hero system--including the complete annihilation of the black race if necessary. Max thinks blacks are up to the task, able to match whites, evil for evil to the bitter end. [I, for one, think he is wrong in this regard.]
The book is sprinkled with deeply troubling characters and scenes that reflect Max's deteriorating state of mind, such as the following passage about Moses Boatwright, a Black cannibal and Rhodes scholar, who, after being run mad by racism, killed a white man and ate him. In a mock interview, Boatwright tells Max (acting as a reporter) that: "This world is an illusion, Mr. Reddick, but it can be real. I went prowling on the jungle side of the road where few people ever go because there are things there, crawling, slimy, terrible things that always remind us that down deep we are rotten, stinking beasts. Now, because of what I did, someone will work a little harder to improve the species." (page 53).
The book is filled with images such as this one that have both over and under tones that are frightening in their symbolic implications. This is deep, modern, intense writing. Fifty stars.