More Pages: Bucks Page 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32


No Oscar for this "Star Witness"
I liked the author's style....I didn't expect to like this Hollywood murder/courtroom drama as much as I did. The material has been done in a thousand other books....famous film director marries younger star...she's killed in a dramatic fashion....he's framed/arrested/put on trial....good attorney is hired to represent him/figure out who actually did it/restore the director's reputation.
What surprised me about this book was the author's literary craftsmanship. He employs a simple writing style to shed a harsh light on Hollywood glitz and glamour, showing what actually happens in the world of show business. There isn't a lot of action...and he doesn't overuse dialogue.
Reading this book was like being in the presence of a very good storyteller who makes you want to sit a spell and listen to what he has to say, because you know it's going to be good and it's going to be worth your precious spare time.
Enjoy!
Another Hollywood Murder MysteryAs usual Antonelli will have a close relationship with an attractive female character, and numerous clues will be dropped along the way to point the reader in one of several directions regarding the killer. Hopefully, Antonelli will not return to Hollywood, and return to accused murderers who engender more sympathy from the reader.


Underwhelming
The voice of St. Louis
Jack Buck--Hall of Famer

Philosophik Genius.
WonderfulI'm not usually a reader of literary scholarship and excavation. (Hey, I'm in the Army and very busy and I don't have much time to read). But there is something about this book which is fascinating and very intriguing.
Now that "The Arcades Project," Harvard Belknap Press: 1999, has just been published I have been trying to resist buying this rather expensive work. But I must say that because of this book I'm "reviewing" here by Susan Buck-Morss , I'm going to have to succumb and buy it soon.
Ok, this is not a fancy or insightful examination of the "why's" and "wherefore's" on my part. But I encourage any and all readers to trust their guts on this...what at first seem opaque and in-accessible, gradually unveils something crucial about Benjamin's project for ourselves and our cultural, our History.
I'm thinking now of what it would be like to find out that we have been missing something all along. I mean our Western Culture and its great wonders. Perhaps missing something crucial about ourselves.
Maybe this is one way to think of it, reader: and ask yourself this question perhaps. What if what has been shown to us as our history or culture, something we both admire and love, but are at times horrified by could be like a movie that holds us in its grip.
But imagine this movie has been worked on over many years, and various editors and directors have changed hands in the creation of the final, definitive print which will be shown to the rest of us.
Now, imagine that each director, based on his/her own sense of things, decided what part of the original film he might keep and which parts he'd destroy.
But some of the editors hated to let all the spliced out frames be destroyed. And put some of them away in a drawer let's say.
Its kind of like Benjamin was searching the arcades, the hidden passage-ways between buildings and looking in the drawers for the missing frames and was then trying to figure out where to splice the frames back into the original.
Now, would the reconstructed film of ourselves, our History and Culture make sense to us? If the original sequence is still inexplicable to us,or long forgotten, then what else is too late for us...amidst this century's human rubble? Maybe this is one thing to value about Susan Buck-Morss' book. Any reader, knowledgeable or not about this century's intellectual landscape, knows that there is something missing in this story about ourselves. Something more intolerable and heartbreaking than a few missing frames from a 2 hour movie. There has been a terrible human cost. We know that not all of the story has been shown. It will be terrible to forget that we have forgotten. Thus, Benjamin was trying to un-cover something we have all lost. This seems astounding in some way.
I disagree

Some good comping ideas, but ...
User-friendly jazz exercise courseThis book by Brown is for building chops (technique) and doesnt contain much ramblings regarding music theory- that information must be obtained from other books, of which there are many available. The work focuses on both chords and single-note lead playing. A single individual private guitar lesson must cost a fortune- here you get a years worth of work in the form of short exercises for a fraction of the price of a single guitar lesson. This book works best if you already have some music theory and elementary guitar technique, but it starts out simple and progresses gradually so that a beginner would have little difficulty, especially since you can refer to the CD, which I consider essential.
Great practical stuff

Cute, but not majorly impressive.
The best origami book I have ever seen

ImpressedThe author also succeeds in confusing the reader through dialogue.
Just when one begins to get a grasp of time and identity, the Australian colloquialisms throw a spanner in the works.
At first I found this odd and somewhat out of character, however, further reading convinced me of it's merit.
Even if one guessed the central character's identity prematurely, the book would still continue to hold the readers attention, for the author's imagination is impressive and writing skill admirable.
NEVER READ ANYTHING LIKE IT

Dottie Rambo-What a lady!
Dottie is the greatest!

Photo Quality
A fascinating compendium of stories and interviews

Terrorists' IntelligenceTerrorists are as normal as you can get [see Hendrick, C. (ed)(1987) Group Processes and Intergrouop Relations: Social Psychology of Terrorist Groups, Sage, Newbury Park, pp234-235]: everything about them is average. The fact that they have been able to carry out so many missions and have been successful in killing so many people tells us something. While risk managers may fear them or choose not to fear them, the greater fear is if we underestimate their potential.
Absolutely essential book for emergency planners.

A great book about the humor of duck hunting, great art too
A Guide's Guide Book
A terrific spoof on duck hunting guides