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Real life/all emotions/ no waiting...
Review: Enter

The history of the Rock
More than just the movie: a history of the Rock.Written by J. Campbell Bruce, a San Francisco Chronicle newspaperman for over forty years, the book delves into the history and social significance of Alcatraz Island. Beginning with its discovery and subsequent use by Native Americans, the book takes us through the island's history as America's "unescapable" prison.
The books most recognizable chapter, by far, deals with the mystery shrouding the prison's most famous escape attempt. This section of the book became the basis for the film Escape from Alcatraz.
The book is very intersting as a historical account of both the island and the San Francisco Bay Area. It comes highly reccomended from this reader.


A good photo-summary..heavier on Korea than WWII
One of the best F4U books!

gotta run
Gotta Run

Wonderful!
A wonderful overview.

Great for nativeamericans or english talking people, but..
There are some relly good role models for teens in this book

Indeed they ARE stuck with their metaphor..For those who have watched "The Power of Myth" videos, and read several JC books, this collection of dialogues is no disappointment.
No intimate details are given of Campbell's life; when asked for juicy details during one session, he responds (more or less):
"That's biography, and I don't do biography."
I was impressed with the quickness of Campbell's replies and answers.
JC relays several anecdotes of his friends Robinson and Zimmer, and gives honorable mention to the Bollingen Press and Sarah Lawrence College for crucial assistance in his career development. Particularly of interest are the frequent remarks concerning, and discussions with, his wife (and former student) Jean Erdman.
While many of the remarks are verbatim replies heard in "The Power of Myth" videos, some are unreleased gems: there are two kinds of people in this world - those who know their myth is a fact (the orthodox religious) and those who know their myth is a lie (the atheists)- both KNOW that their myth is most certainly NOT a metaphor!
I enjoyed it.
A wonderful collectionNote that this is a collection and is not as comprehensive a biography as 'A Fire In The Mind.' But what it misses in magnitude and detail, it makes up for in presentation. The book lends itself to both the page-through and in-depth readers. It is full of photographs (some full page)and highlights many of Campbell's memorable quotes.
In a beautifully written introduction, Phil Cousineau refers to Campbell as the "ecstatic scholar", an "animateur" who was capable of evoking "the telling shiver of truth about your own life." This book re-animates Campbell's work and he is capable as ever, through the interviews on these pages, of speaking to the heart of his listeners and reawakening the mysteries of life with enthusiasm and awe.
(I do also recommend 'A Fire In The Mind,' which contains details of Campbell's life and excerpts from his personal journals that are not included in this work.)


Hunters of the Night
The only in-depth study of Confederate Torpedo Boats

worth reading, impress your friends! be a hit on a talk show
Career Survival in the New Global Economy

Buffalo Legends and Ecstatic Dances
Smashing!
gives us a look at not only a personal part of his day to day existence, but the mind of a Father, Teacher, Husband, Son and Grandson as he deals with everything from sex to fast food to fear and death, part intellectual, part observer, he sees all obstacles and describes them to us before losing his lunch.
Well worth owning to read again and again!