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Books to read if you're planning a vacation in "Bucks", sorted by average review score:

Star Witness
Published in Audio Cassette by Brilliance Audio (April, 2003)
Authors: Dudley W. Buffa and Buck Schirner
Average review score:

No Oscar for this "Star Witness"
Having read and thoroughly enjoyed Buffa's previous four books, I was astonished at how disappointing this one was. The basic idea was intriguing, but neither the storytelling itself, the characterizations, the pacing, nor the language were anywhere near as sharp as in his previous books. Joseph Antonelli is a fascinating character, and one of the things that has always attracted me was his intellectual approach to the law. This is a man who has inherited an incredible library and who is clearly well educated, and in this book there were so many basic grammar and syntax errors that it's hard to imagine it was edited at all, let alone proofread! Everything about it bespoke a kind of writing fatigue, and I can only hope with his next book the author will have regained his previous edge.

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 Mystery
Defense attorney Joseph Antonelli continues making his way down the Pacific coast in the latest book of the series. The past book had Antonelli heading south from Portland, Oregon, to San Francisco, and now he is in Hollywood defending a famous director (and studio head) accused of murdering his movie star wife. A combination legal thriller and Hollywood-based melodrama, Buffa places Antonelli in a middle of recognizable Hollywood types drawn from real life, with elements of the O.J Simpson case thrown in. In a cute twist, the reader is made aware early that Antonelli will be a character in a big movie. Like a snake devouring its own tail the fictional murder story evolves into a fictional movie as the plot progresses.

As 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.


Jack Buck Thats a Winner
Published in Hardcover by Sports Publishing ()
Author: Jack Buck
Average review score:

Underwhelming
Picking up the autobiography of legendary baseball announcer Jack Buck, you'd think you're in for a light summer read full of good-natured homilies, humorous anecdotes, and "I was there" accounts of great games and players. That doesn't set the bar very high but would make for a good baseball book. "That's A Winner" doesn't deliver on even these modest expectations. First, Buck himself doesn't come across as a very likeable guy. Free with his back-handed criticisms, judgmental of others, once slamming the door in the face of a desperate pregnant woman, and generally keeping his head down as the inveterate corporate guy trying to keep his job. Second, he doesn't really have much to offer. Less than half the book is about baseball, so the reader has to wade through chapters on Buck's youth aboard a boat, in World War II, going to school, reciting names of family and friends as though reading a phone book. There are futile discussions of Castro and the death penalty and Vietnam, issues to which Buck brings no insight and that merely serve to distract the reader looking for some sports. Third, when the baseball finally comes, it's feeble and fleeting. A few thoughts on drugs use in the late 1970s, praise for Whitey Herzog and Ozzie Smith, and that's about it. For a guy who's been around some of the greatest players in the history of the game and become famous for his steady deep-voiced announcing, Buck has written a book that manages to suck the life out of the games and players. No stories, no funny anecdotes, nothing to interest a fan. If you're researching Buck's life and need to know about his military service, this is the book for you. If you want to pass a weekend with a good baseball book, pick up Roger Angell instead.

The voice of St. Louis
What an inspiration Jack Buck is to all of St. Louis. Wouldn't we all like to be remembered as a truly happy person, just a nice guy? That is who and what Jack Buck was. We are richer for having known him in our lives, and thankful he shared this essay with all of us. Jack Buck loved St. Louis, but that love is returned 100 fold to Jack Buck. He's a winner!

Jack Buck--Hall of Famer
If you want to read about the St. Louis Cardinals any book written by either Jack Buck or Bob Broeg is sure to provide you with solid reporting. Buck has been announcing for the Cardinals since the mid-1950's and spent many of those years with another hall-of-famer named Harry Caray. Jack provides the reader with insights into his army career prior to entering baseball, his many years as an announcer for KMOX radio in St. Louis, and those glorious years with the Cardinals of the 1960's and 1980's. He also provides us with his opinions on the changes that have taken place in both baseball and the world from what it used to be. You don't have to be a Cardinals' fan to enjoy this book. If you enjoy baseball history, reading a book written by the much-respected Jack Buck is an enviable treat.


The Dialectics of Seeing: Walter Benjamin and the Arcades Project (Studies in Contemporary German Social Thought)
Published in Paperback by MIT Press (01 July, 1991)
Author: Susan Buck-Morss
Average review score:

Philosophik Genius.
"The Dialectics of Seeing" is an absolutely *superb* book -- possibly the best book on philosophy I have ever read. Not yet having read the Harvard U Press edition of the Arcades Project, I don't really have any basis for comparing the two works, but it seems to me that Buck-Morss' astonishing (incandescent) use of self-deconstructive and poetic literary techniques in this tour de force of an "invention" of the Arcades Project entitles it to rank as at least as dazzling and eye-opening (deep assumption-challenging) as anything else Benjamin himself wrote. Sources aren't important; spelling isn't important; pedantry is misleading as a criterion of value. All that matters is that the experience of reading the book be a dialectical one -- and the experience of reading *this* book *is*. An absolutely incomparable work.

Wonderful
I have to agree with the reader from Los Angeles, and the review of November 28, 1999. This book is a lot of fun! Yes, a peculiar judgement, I know.

I'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
Buck-Morss is very likely the most insightful and best informed scholar writing on Benjamin (or Adorno) in English today. If there are typos, misspellings, etc., they are more a sign of the declining standards in editing, even at university presses, than any reflection on Buck-Morss' scholarship. She knows the primary and secondary literature and has clearly spent much time with Benjamin's papers and in various archives. Morevoer, having written the best book I know on the philosophical relationship between Adorno and Benjamin, she is clearly well placed to provide insightful analysis the latter's unfinished masterwork. Since the Passagen-Werk is recently available in English ("The Arcades Project," Harvard Belknap Press: 1999), one can judge for oneself the worth of Buck-Morss' reading.


Jazz Chops for Guitar
Published in Paperback by National Guitar Workshop (01 August, 2001)
Author: Buck Brown
Average review score:

Some good comping ideas, but ...
much of this book is devoted to basic finger exercises, none of which are jazz-specific. My philosophy is that exercises should be musical, or at least close .... About 2/3 of this book is mindless permutations. I was disappointed.

User-friendly jazz exercise course
I own more than a dozen method books on chords and scales, but this book along with the enclosed CD has to be the best of the bunch. One reason is that the CD makes it clear PRECISELY what and when you are to play- there isnt any room for error, and the book is written in both standard music notation and guitar tab notation. There are 180 short exercises designed to promote right hand alternate picking technique as well as coordination of the fingers of the left fretting hand, assuming you are right-handed. Though there are a dozen other classic jazz method books that have been written over the past 50 years (Mickey Baker's book from 1955 for example, or the Joe Pass Jazz Guitar Chord book originally from 1971) but some are difficult to read- this book here by Brown is a cinch.
This 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
This is an easy to read book for people interested in being SERIOUS musicians. It's the "insiders" guide. I learned a lot.


The Buck Book : All Sorts of Things to Do With a Dollar Bill-Besides Spend It : Book and Dollar Bill
Published in Paperback by Klutz, Inc (July, 1993)
Average review score:

Cute, but not majorly impressive.
I suppose this book would be good for kids, especially because it is easy to folloe. If you are an origami enthusiast, nothing here really poses too much of a challenge, but I must admit that I have impressed quite a few people with the dollar bill elephant. I often include one in a tip.

The best origami book I have ever seen
I understand this was written for school teachers by school teachers. Its exceptionally clear illustrations make it easy to follow even if you have never tried this skill before. It is the only origami book that can be followed by the novice and the only book I know of on origami using U. S. currency for paper. Comes with instant one dollar rebate.


The Buck Passer
Published in Hardcover by Xlibris Corporation (April, 2003)
Author: John Vaux
Average review score:

Impressed
This book is very well written, with twists and turns that do tend to confuse the reader attempting to guess who the central character might be.
The 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
I loved this book. Not only was it a real page-turner - and well written, to boot - it also had a intriguing bonus I've never found in any other book. The author scrambles the timing and setting of the action and asks you to guess who is the famous historical figure portrayed. It is remarkably difficult and very entertaining. I, for one, did not pick the central character; I needed to wait until the end of the book for the author to spell it out for me. and it was well worth the wait. This is a unique, really clever approach to combining fact and fiction. Highly recommended.


Legacy of Buck and Dottie Rambo
Published in Paperback by ()
Author: Buck Rambo
Average review score:

Dottie Rambo-What a lady!
I just recently purchased the Legacy of Buck and Dottie Rambo at a Dottie concert. She stated that Buck Rambo wrote this book own his own without any input from her. I can believe it. Anyone that has ever heard Ms. Dottie sing, knows that the Spirit of God just flows from her in every song. Whether it be one that she wrote or just one that sings from another writer. He gives her some credit but not enough. A person can only believe that it is through her belief and faith in God that keeps her going through all of her health problems. Anytime you need an uplifting experience just read the book and pay attention to Dottie's unending never wavering faith in GOD.

Dottie is the greatest!
Dottie Rambo is the most gifted songwriter of all time. I have read the Legacy of Buck and Dottie Rambo many times! I think and know God has used and continues to use Dottie and thank God for that! Buck talks underatedly about Dottie and should give her much praise. Dottie we love you write our book soon!!!!


Mermaids on Parade: America's Love Affair With Its First Women Swimmers
Published in Paperback by Nova Kroshka Books (February, 2000)
Authors: Buck Dawson, Gene Kerr, and Paul Gallico
Average review score:

Photo Quality
First off, this book is not a hardcover as advertised. It's a legal size paperback. The photos would have made the book but they were blurred and extremely poorly replicated. The photo collection and newspaper shots looked like good choices. I only wish I could have see them clearly.

A fascinating compendium of stories and interviews
Mermaids On Parade: America's Love Affair With Its First Olympic Women Swimmers is a fascinating compendium of stories and interviews with more than two dozen American women who competed in Olympic swimming events and helped to bring the sport to the enthusiastic attention of the sports minded public. Buck Dawson's informative and engaging text is enhanced with a profusion of period photographs of the female athletes who dominated this women's sport event from 1907 to 1957 and rose to excellence in this competitive sport with grace, beauty and personality -- making generations of girls want to learn to swim and to compete. Mermaids On Parade is highly recommended reading for Olympic sports enthusiasts, women's studies supplemental reading lists, and anyone who has every thrilled to a women's swim meet competition.


Preparing for Terrorism: An Emergency Services Guide
Published in Hardcover by Delmar Publishers (15 October, 1997)
Author: George Buck
Average review score:

Terrorists' Intelligence
I found the book very useful for my MSc course. It is well written except for one part that I disagree with, pp27-28, where terrorists were described as "not very intelligent" and operated without a "coherent plan of action."

Terrorists 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.
Dr. Buck covers the subject very thoroughly. Terrorism, just like any other hazard requires thoughtful planning when an incident occurs. Planning for disasters is not new and this guide provides the reader with a step-by-step method to prepare for such an event. Many existing plans for other hazards already give jurisdictions a substantial capability to meet the challenges of a terrorism incident. This book is a must for anyone who is tasked to prepare for a terrorist incident.


The Compleat Waterfo(u)wler: A Discourse on Duck Hunting with a Little Goose on the Side
Published in Hardcover by The Lyons Press (March, 2003)
Authors: B. R. "Buck" Peterson and J. Angus "Sourdough" McLean
Average review score:

A great book about the humor of duck hunting, great art too
I have bought this for all my hunting partners and we laugh about it every time we are out. It is a very funny look at a sport that if you step back and look at you might question your sanity. Here is guy that some how gets to the humor of the sport and reminds us not to take it to serious. Now my Yellow Lab is still miffed about the idea of a pig and would like to say a few words if he could type! Lets face it we have all hunted with dogs that were not to smart! I learned a few things form it as itJoe well research and has enough humor to make it a good read. The art work is great too! This is goofy look at a sort of goofy sport. This is the type of guy you would like to spend time in a blind with on slow day! What a laugh.

A Guide's Guide Book
Being a duck/goose hunting guide, I don't very often read guidebooks but a client gave me a this book for Christmas. I think ol' Buck has spent maybe a little too much time in the blind at times but his book is very funny, especially when he describes why its better to use a pig than a dog as a retriever.

A terrific spoof on duck hunting guides
Buck has knocked the stuffing out of the serious stuff about waterfowling. He prefers to hunt with a pig, wonders about the same goofy things all duck hunters do when the birds aren't flying and shows that good humor is key to any enjoyment of a field sport. Buy this book - there are spoofs in this book that will make a serious hunter laugh out loud. My dad did.


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