More Pages: Harrison 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 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87


Not his own words...
Good But Sometimes Gets Off Track.
Retrospection on the AssassinationChapter 3 tells certain findings are conclusive: the back of the head is missing (p.71). If the photographs and X-rays don't show this, they are forgeries. Or from another body. HEL derides the theory that "the Mob killed Kennedy" on the grounds that they couldn't do a cover-up. But their controllers could! Chapter 5 discusses the events at Bethesda. The face in some of the autopsy photographs does not look like JFK, but of a younger man (p.135). Chapter 6 discusses the conflicts of the autopsy. This is one of the most important chapters in the book!
Chapter 14 tells of the discussion for a 1991 documentary. "The large hole in the back of the head was an exit wound" (p.287). These witnesses insisted there was not entry wound in the back of the head (p.293). Chapter 16 quotes the House Committee report that the authenticity of the photographs was never established (p. 314-6). Chapter 19 discusses some other major political killings following the assassination of JFK. HEL notes that if George Wallace ran for President he would have taken enough votes from Nixon so McGovern would have won (p.403). Friends of this lone gunman soon died or disappeared (p.407). More potential witnesses were bumped off when the House Assassination Committee started in 1977 (p.414). Page 418 summarizes the bottom line of American political history.
Chapter 20 summarizes the changes in America since the Nixon and Reagan reigns (p.422); it doesn't cover the 1990s. Page 458 claims the Schoolbook Depository rifle was not fired that day (from negative evidence)! Chapter 24 discusses JFK's "intent to withdraw from Vietnam", while the military sought to send in combat troops. That happened with the new President. Vietnam is important since it borders the oil-rich South China Sea; and Big Oil is the most powerful special interest in the country.
Chapter 25 tells of Jim Garrison's investigation. "A secret investigation ... pointed in the direction of Hoffa, Marcello, some Texas oilmen, and a few involved with the CIA in the New Orleans and Dallas area" (p.511). But Garrison couldn't get a conviction of anyone. David Ferrie, and others, soon died (p.513). Pages 518-9 discuss the justice system: "too often a case can be rigged". Jim Garrison was the first official to question the Warren Report in the 1960s. Oliver Stones's "JFK" was based on Garrison's book; he make a popular film about a Presidential assassination - a Hollywood first! It did renew a wider interest in the books on this case.
Chapter 28 gives HEL's ideas of "What Really Happened", and summarizes this case. Watergate and Nixon's removal were caused by Nixon's use of political murders. Page 571 imagines an "ice bullet" that would disappear; isn't it more likely that a plastic bullet would not show up on X-rays? Pages 573-7 gives HEL's ideas on how the real government works: politicians are like actors on a stage, spouting the lines written by the invisible government. He says "our elections are rigged from the
start". And that a vast amount of money was made by those who sold short on the morning of 11/22/1963 due to advance information. The Warren Commission and the Administration were from the high-level banking and financial interests that control our nation.


There can only be 'one' view of the rapture, not three.The point I'm trying to make is there cannot be 'three' viewpoints on the rapture. Sometimes I wonder if authors raise more questions to mask the fact that they cannot answer the question directly. But somewhere in the Bible there is only 'one' answer to this question.
Not convincing
A Decent Treatment, Not Great But AdequateBut, overall I was duly impressed. Feinerg, Archer and Moo are fine conservative scholars, and each make an impressive case for their stance as to the timing of the premillenial rapture. In my opinion, Archer stands out among them, and does an excellent job of setting forth the mid-tribulational rapture.
Not a great eschatology work, but an adequate synopsis of widely held views. I agree with the other reviewers that it is not for the novice, but for someone already familiar with premillenialism and end-times prophecy. It's a read and pass-on, no permanent place on my shelf kind of book.


hackwork
tedious
An eclectic look at an eclectic composerThe result is an eclectic and somewhat experimental book, fitting for the composer. Occasionally some of the chapters fall short of being comprehensive, particularly the one dealing with Harrison's sexuality. But in general this book is a refreshing read, with much new information and analysis.
A CD with several unreleased recordings and demonstrations is included.


Finally, a Cure For InsomniaThe author painstakingly decribes in nerve-racking detail, every step the characters make, with no apparant reason other than to fill space.
The "plot" centers around a new resort-development under construction in Blue Deer Montana. Along the way, the reader learns everything and more, about land grants and mining claims in that part of the country. The author once again goes into the smallest of minutia descibing the grants and claims process. It's not only maddening, but also a waste of time in reading. This book could have been cut to 200 pages and nothing would have been lost, it may have even made the book more enjoyable.
My neighbor gave this book to me, and page 165 was folded over. I asked her if she had finished reading it, and her reply was no. I now know why.
The one bright spot is that I won't waste any money or time on this author's other books.
A Great Book
Enjoyable easy readComparisons to the TV show Northern Exposure (with a little Twin Peaks thrown in) are fitting. Not a Pulitzer Prize winner, but worth reading. I look forward to reading the next two novels in the series.


A Silly Academic's Posturing PrattleThose of us who enjoy and appreciate Buk usually do so with a grain of salt. This book turns him into some sort of class representative which he most assuredly was not. Buk was a bum, plain and simple. He wrote well and simply, but he was still a bum. Anything else is the work of an overstimulated and grasping academic sensibility that has no place in the Buk universe. I would recommend Buk's biography by Sounes as an antidote to this sleep-inducing drivel.
HARRISON vs BUKOWSKI-- Brad Evans --
A suitable tool for the serious Bukowski fan.

Where's George?
A Classic, I Will Never Stop ListeningI would like to contact you by e-mail, but it sems to be impossible to find your address. So maybe this will get your attention.
This is the best audio have heard in a long time. I mean the only thing better than this is actually talking to George himself.
I just want to thank you for making me, a very hardcore Beatles fan, you make me appreciate what I grew up with. I mean, what our children is listening to now they won't remember when they are our age. Thank you again.
At Last The Truth About Beatle George

Who Cares?One thing was determined, however, and that was that a book can be written about anything---the spare change in your pocket, the color of dirt, whatever. It seems curiously reversed that I paid money to read this book when someone should have paid me a hefty sum to read it. Just awful.
a hatchet job
clearly not for everyone

Imperialist in denial: love Harry, hated the plotBut I just cannot stomach this triumvirate: it seems like an old man venting his spleen against the injustices done to his ancestors. I can only presume that Mr Harrison has an Irish background that still calls for vengeance against the English oppressors. It's rather like he wrote an SF novel in which the Croats exterminate the Serbs in a wierdo WW 2 alternative history. You're sitting there thinking: Was this really necessary?
I love alternative history, but PUH-lease make it credible and without the sound of axes furiously grinding in the background. The writing is wooden, but what irks me is the scenario and the politics. As an Aussie, I consider myself neither Anglo-, not Amero, -phobic or -philliac.
Previous reviewers have mentioned the technological problems with his scenario, and Mr Harrison's general presumption that all Americans are combinations of Rambo and Thomas Edison, whereas all Brits are like the guys from "Dumb and Dumber". I am surprised that no one has mentioned Mr Harrison's idiotic presumptions that:
* Forty years (I'm no American scholar.. correct me if I'm wrong) of the deepest tensions and social schisms in the USA concerning slavery suddenly vaporise instantly when a few Brits get off course;
* An American invasion of Ireland suddenly reconciles 800 years of Protestant-Catholic discord and hatred;
* Americans bring democracy to the UK. In the late 1860s, American senators were no more elected than the House of Lords, and the aristocracy Mr Harrison professes to despise: senators where chosen by state legislatures.
All this is about Mr Harrison's scenario. You may well think all three potboilers a grand read. I just think that Mr Harrison is an imperialist in denial.
An Anglophobe's wet-dream: a polemical reviewBut I just cannot stomach this triumvirate. The writing is wooden, but what irks me is the scenario and the politics. Please feel free to stop reading now if you are simply looking for a read.
As an Aussie, I consider myself neither Anglo-, not Amero, -phobic or -philliac.
Previous reviewers have mentioned the technological problems, and Mr Harrison's general presumption that all Americans are combinations of Rambo and Thomas Edison, whereas all Brits are like the guys from "Dumb and Dumber".
I am surprised that no one has mentioned Mr Harrison's presumptions that:
* Forty years (I'm no American scholar.. correct me if I'm wrong) of the deepest tensions and social schisms in the USA concerning slavery suddenly vaporise instantly when a few Brits get off course;
* An American invasion of Ireland suddenly reconciles 800 years of Protestant-Catholic discord and hatred;
* Americans bring democracy to the UK. In the late 1860s, American senators were no more elected than the House of Lords and the aristocracy Mr Harrison professes to despise: senators where chosen by state legislatures.
Best Of The "Stars And Stripes" Trilogy

Banalilty with a capital B
I made it through!I'm a huge Harrison fan and love Sundog, Farmer, and Legends of the Fall the best. I just don't get much enjoyment out of is name dropping and arrogant attitude. He mentions his wife and family rarely and there's just a couple references about his writing and approach. I get the feeling he wrote this pretty fast and a couple chapters seem like stand-alone essays that were thrown in. This book could have used some good editing/pruning.
That said, Harrison is still tied for my favorite author and his books are prominent on my bookshelf.
Portrait of the artist as a philosophical old drunkThe difference is that Harrison never lost touch with the land, much preferring to repair to his favorite hunting and fishing spots, and drink with the locals back home in Michigan, rather than toil away in the studios. Oh, he did lose his church unbringing, and G. K. Chesterton would surely call Harrison's idea of a private religion mere weakmindedness, but Harrison has undoubtedly consumed an adult portion of life, and he's here to tell us all about it.
As a biographical account of his life and career, this is much too misty. The reader must swim open seas of random impressions, interesting anecdotes, and barstool wisdom to get from one fact to the next. And they are not especially sequential, either. I guess that job will have to wait for a professional biographer.
But taken for what it is, this book is enjoyable. There's too much name-dropping in the Hollywood phase, though he is sincerely grateful to Jack Nicholson for his help breaking into pictures. But really--eating sandwiches with Art Garfunkel while betting on which skiers on a slope are going to wipe out? And there are dozens such little passing mentions. Maybe I'm just jealous...
His love of the land, of the countryside, of his hunting dogs, and his unsparing accounts of his own shortcomings and addictions and mistakes make this book one to respect. It may be a mishmash, it may not be the whole or unadulterated truth, but it is visibly a labor of love.


This Book is Bad Advice From Beginning to EndThe first reviewer was NOT reading a different book as the second reviewer suggests; accurate page #s and quotes are cited. As an intelligent, educated man I would never expect or ever want the woman in my life to behave so subserviently as Mr. Forrest wants his woman to behave. I have more respect and love for the female sex than Mr. Forrest will ever have.
Mr. Forrest incites the ultimate insult to women in stating that 'men stray because of "MISTAKES MADE BY THE WOMAN."' Women, are you going to follow advice from someone who has this attitude?
This book is bad advice from beginning to end. Mr. Forrest, seek yourself a complacent, servile nymphomaniac and stop ruining things for the rest of us men.
Solid Advise, well thought outI found that the book offered greater insight into "actually controlling my man" than any other book out there.
It isn't worth 5 stars but it is worth 4
Great Book, Worth Every Penny!