Amazon.com
"When compared to the fact that he might very well be dead by this time tomorrow, whether he was courageous or not today was pointless, empty. When compared to the fact that he might be dead tomorrow, everything was pointless. Life was pointless. Whether he looked at a tree or not was pointless. It just didn't make any difference. It was pointless to the tree, it was pointless to every man in his outfit, pointless to everybody in the whole world. Who cared? It was not pointless only to him; and when he was dead, when he ceased to exist, it would be pointless to him too. More important: Not only would it
be pointless, it would
have been pointless, all along."
Such is the ultimate significance of war in The Thin Red Line (1962), James Jones's fictional account of the battle between American and Japanese troops on the island of Guadalcanal. The narrative shifts effortlessly among multiple viewpoints within C-for-Charlie Company, from commanding officer Capt. James Stein, his psychotic first sergeant Eddie Welsh, and the young privates they send into battle. The descriptions of combat conditions--and the mental states it induces--are unflinchingly realistic, including the dialog (in which a certain word Norman Mailer rendered as "fug" 15 years earlier in The Naked and the Dead appears properly spelled on numerous occasions). This is more than a classic of combat fiction; it is one of the most significant explorations of male identity in American literature, establishing Jones as a novelist of the caliber of Herman Melville and Stephen Crane.
Amazon.com Audiobook Review
An old Midwestern saying goes, "There's only a thin red line between the sane and the mad." War seems to stretch that line almost to the breaking point. James Jones's classic World War II novel recounts with brutal honesty the stories of the men of C-for-Charlie Company as they struggle to hold on to their honor, their sanity, and their lives on Guadalcanal. Actor Joe Mantegna turns in an able performance, his voice expressing a roller coaster of emotions (though his Welsh accent may require some patience). Whether or not you agree with Jones that war is the "most heroic of all human endeavors," this recording will move you. (Running time: 6 hours, 4 cassettes) --C.B. Delaney
Book Description
The World War II classic by the bestselling author of From Here to Eternity and Whistle, now a major motion picture from 20th Century Fox.
They are the men of C-for-Charlie Company--"Mad" 1st/Sgt. Eddie Welsh, S/Sgt. Don Doll, Pvt. John Bell, Capt. James Stein, Cpl. Fife, and dozens more just like them--infantrymen in "this man's army" who are about to land grim and white-faced on an atoll in the Pacific called Guadalcanal. This is their story, a shatteringly realistic walk into hell and back.
In the days ahead some will earn medals; others will do anything they can dream up to get evacuated before they land in a muddy grave. But they will all discover the thin red line that divides the sane from the mad--and the living from the dead--in this unforgettable portrait that captures for all time the total experience of men at war.
Download Description
Delta is proud to re-release "The Thin Red Line", soon to be a major motion picture. A classic war novel from the author of From Here to Eternity, it is the story of the men of C-for-Charlie company before, during, and after the Allied effort at Guadalcanal. Capturing for all time the total experience of men at war, it is a shatteringly realistic walk into hell and back.
Customer Reviews:
The Only Anti-war Novel Ever Written for Grown-ups.......2007-07-05
Nearly all anti-war novels are written at the intellectual level you find on display at college freshman rap sessions. "Gee, what would happen if they gave a war and no one showed up?" is the only message you'll get from Catch-22, Johnny Got His Gun and any others you can name. The Thin Red Line is the only anti-war novel with the intellectual and emotional heft that a serious thinker can enjoy.
The reason for this is that unlike other books that attempt to depict the horrors of war (which it does, by the way, better than any other novel I've read), James Jones understands the necessity and inevitability of war, even though he does not holdback from his readership the full horror of war. The result is a book like no other you'll read, one which brings you so closely to the cannon's mouth that you'll feel the humidity of the jungle, the sudden shift from calm to chaos, the friendships and the hatreds. Jones so captures the emotions of what it means to be a soldier, an American and a male that he is unparalled in American letters.
Not bad if you like War Stories.......2006-11-12
This is one of my first modern war books I read. It is about the invasion of Guadalcanal. But the story is so much more than the facts. The reader I think really gets to feel the blunt, ugly, horror of war. It would seem a soldier in WWII would feel the isolation and loneliness so far from home. Todays military features e-mail and access to information where ever you are. You have to wonder what kept many more of these soldiers from going insane. Sometimes I think the author could of developed his characters a little more, but the action in the book made for a lot of excitement.
Isolation of war.......2006-09-06
When I read the Thin Red Line, I was impressed by the imagery and character development, but I found myself searchign for the theme of the novel. There is no lead character, so I wasn't sure what point of view I was being asked to take. Most of the characters are unlikeable, secretive and selfish. But then I began to realize that this was the theme of the novel. It's about what war turns men into. All of these men in a normal time and place would enjoy friends and families, they'd have hobbies and ambitions and would feel love and kindness, but the war has robbed them of their capacity to care about anyone but themselves.
Most war stories are about the way that war brings men together, bonds them in ways that peacetime can never equal, but there is no bonding in The Thin Red Line. They're all on their own, selfishly scrabbling for survival. A few characters do show signs of humanity, but their kindness leads only to disgrace, death or tagedy.
As for the movie, All I can say is that I enjoyed the military scenes, but nothing in the movie holds a candle to the novel. Each character in the novel is so vivid and fascinating, but in the movie many of the actors don't seem to have any idea how to bring that character to life. Nick Nolte is awesome. He's exactly like the novel character. But Adrian Brody is nothing at all like Fife.
Mostly I was annoyed by how wimpy the movie was. There are scenes of horror in the book that are treated in the movie bloodlessly. It would have been better not to include those scenes at all. For instance, theres a long passage where an unlucky soldier is badly wounded in the field and is screaming bloody murder. In the movie his screams motivate compassion, and people die trying to help him. In the novel people are motivated by disgust at his screams. His screams are looked on as major annoyances, and he is credited with destroying the company's morale. So people die trying to shut him up. That was a raw and horrific scene in the novel, and would have been amazing if they'd done it properly in the movie.
Anyway, this is not an enjoyable novel, but it was definitely well written and not the same old thing. I've never read another war novel that's anything like it.
mission accomplished.......2006-04-14
James Jones draws the title of this book from the "thin red line between the sane and the mad." But the subtitle gives a clearer sense of the theme - "every man fights his own war."
On the surface, The Thin Red Line is strikingly similar to The Naked and the Dead. Each novel tell the stories of a group of inexperienced soldiers sent as cannonfodder to fight the Japanese on a lonely Pacific island.
But under the surface, the novels could not be more different. Norman Mailer's novel uses the war as a vehicle to preach a message about hypocricy and corruption at the core of American culture. The soldiers, not really human to start with, are manipulated and degraded by the military machine.
The soldiers in The Thin Red Line face the same experiences as Mailer's characters. But Jones' characters are realistically human. They display independent thought (rational or not) and realistic emotions (alternately strained and dampened by the extremity and exhaustion of battle). Canny or confused, each one strives to make sense of the war and of his own responses. The theme of the book is the diversity of those responses. The last line sums it up: "One day one of their number would write a book about all this, but none of them would believe it, because none of them would remember it that way."
Mailer gives us subhuman characters cast as soldiers; Jones helps us appreciate the humanity that survives even in the most degrading circumstances.
Although this is a novel about characters, it does not let the reader get sentimentally attached to them. I appreciated the measure of emotional distance because otherwise the (sometimes graphic) death, destruction, and mayhem would have been painful to read.
Excellent.......2006-03-24
A superb look into the psyche of the fighting man in the Battle for control of the Pacific Islands. Fast moving, page turning adventure.
Book Description
Jane Taylor is pregnant. Only, not in the conventional sense. It all began when Jane missed her period. Whether it was the clouds in the sky or a major case of pregnancy envy (this year's concern), Jane doesn't know. She only knows that she told her best male friend, and began to believe it. Until she got her period and realized she never was. Pregnant.
But that brief glimpse into the other world -- the world of smiling faces and courteous men -- was just too beautiful not to be a part of . . .and so Jane told a little white lie to her live-in boyfriend, and crossed the line. With the help of a pink Magic Marker she closed the gap that separated her from the positively perfect pregos.
Enter Jane's world, one of deception and success, Mr. Wrong and Mr. Right, Nutrition Police and tilted uteruses, baby showers and celebrity obstetricians. As Jane spins closer to her due date, she's got a lot of soul-searching to do -- not to mention an appointment with reality . . .
Customer Reviews:
with all due respect...........2007-09-25
This is one of the worst chick lit books that I've ever read. I mean, I expect "antics" in chick lit novels and I enjoy the genre....but *please*...the faking the pregnancy thing? So dumb. It's so obvious that Jane is going to mess up her work projects and "budding romance" - talk about the obvious. I had no sympathy for Jane and the entire plot was just...a waste of my time. The whole inventing of 'details' and 'faking' a growing stomach - er...this is entertaining or good reading? i don't think so. While I do think the plot is original - it isn't funny. In fact, I found it downright annoying.
I really expected to like this book..........2007-03-21
I'm an avid reader and usually really enjoy chick-lit as a fun, escapist read. I expected to really enjoy this book. I don't know if it is because I tried reading it while pregnant myself, but I just could not identify with this character. In fact, this is one of only two books I've ever just not been able to get through. I found the main character annoying, ridiculous and just plain shallow. I mean, if the author had found some really compelling reason for the main character to fake her pregnancy (which maybe she did, but not in the first 1/4 of the book), I might have liked her. But instead the main character just seemed shallow and I just couldn't root for her, or even continue reading about her. Too bad, the premise seemed like it could have made for a really fun and funny read.
What a Disappointment.......2007-01-25
Yet another one of those dime a dozen, 2nd rate chit lit books in which the heroine grates on my nerves through the very last page. I should've known better when the actual story begun on page 9 or the rather trivial quote that preceded the story.
It was hard to find any redeeming qualities in the novel. The story was implausible and unbearable- girl fakes pregnancy with dull boyfriend because "everyone else is having a baby" and she has a bad case of sibling rivalry. However, kudos to Jane for managing to keep up the charade without getting punched in the face for her stupidity, her blackmailing, or her lies. I guess it's supposed to be funny when someone fakes a pregnancy to force bf to propose so she can throw a wedding shower and a baby shower? The icing on the cake is when she steals a baby from a church steps and throws a party to showcase her arrival and come clean. Does someone have a bad case of the Me syndrome or what?
The cast of characters were as uninteresting as Jane herself- boring bf, "perfect" older sis, phony coworkers-friends,bland new love interest. It's no surprise she doesn't have any real friends except for the stereotypical gay bff name David (pronounced Duhveed) in which Jane learns to pronounce halfway through the novel. The author also gives a teaser for the sequel. I've read a few pages and it doesn't appear to get any better. Stealing a baby and trying to avoid child services is not funny or condonable.
If you read the book, just keep an open mind and try not to judge her too harshly (as I have done) and perhaps you will enjoy this little novel.
Kudos on Vertigo!!.......2007-01-13
I loved Vertigo!! It captures the reader right from the beginning. I never knew what was going to happen until the very last page. The characters were interesting.
I would have loved to like this.......2006-09-10
It all starts well for Jane Taylor. Period late, she sees a chance to snag her reluctant wet-rag boyfriend, Trevor. But then it all fall apart when she realizes the vacancy in her womb. Oops. But, heck, why not continue with the pregnancy? She'd get pregnant next month for real. A flawless plan.
Am I the only one who struggles with Janes motivations through out this book? Did the author do any research at all? This is not a believable book, not even by a stretch. Ponder this:
- Why, on this dear earth, would savvy Jane Taylor care to keep lackluster Trevor? Or get pregnant with him when he shows no interest in it whatsoever? Or marry him when he shows no interest in her whatsoever? So, either our author was grasping at motivational straws to make her story work, or Jane is the stupidest woman to have ever walked fictional chick-lit world.
- Why would David, her best friend (beautiful, gay, and loving of the wretched-- how ever so cliche) stand by her? And keep her secret? No one's friend is this nice.
- Fake a pregnancy in part to have people open doors and be nice to her? Oh come on!
- At the end of her 3rd month, Jane is looking for an out to her scheme, but would hate to come clean. Has our author ever heard of miscarriage? The fact that Jane did not take this very obvious out was the first big loss of credibility and enjoyability for me.
Jane is a sociopath with a chick-lit twist. That the author expected readers to connect with her in any way is astounding. So it speaks well to her ability that she's almost able to do that. There are moments were Jane is funny, charming even. But there's too much wrong with the plot for me not to have thought it a ultragalatic waste of time. The author frequently makes huge credibility errors (you cannot access a hospital nursery by giving the last name "Smith"- sorry- and a department store will not give you a fake preg suit- and if you steal a baby off a church stoop you will wind up in jail).
Worse of all, the author leaves us hanging. Jane has made a colossal mess of her life and she's in her ninth fake month. How is she going to dig out of this one? Her very professional and social existance hang in the balance. There's no way out of it for Jane. The author saw this and decided to take the easy road and just not resolve the issues. I suppose she realized she couldn't end the saga and make it sound at all realistic, so, hey, don't finish the story. The author should have known better to spin a fictional web she lacked the ability to control.
Book Description
The Thin Red Line (1998) is only the third film directed by Terrence Malick, the maverick genius of American cinema, in his thirty-year career. Set during the savage World War II battle for Gaudalcanal, it boasts a stellar cast--including George Clooney, Nick Nolte, Sean Penn, and John Travolta--but otherwise goes entirely against the grain of conventional Hollywood filmmaking. Action, narrative, and patriotism are subordinated to cryptic interior monologues and exquisite images of animals and nature, a strategy found by many to be perplexing and disconcerting.
How to make sense of this extraordinary film? Michel Chion traces the film's connections to Malick's earlier work and links The Thin Red Line to the novel on which it is loosely based. More than that, he pays minute attention to the film itself--the images, sounds, faces, landscapes, and words that create a magnificent reflection on the beauty, inexplicability, and tragedy of our coexistence with each other and with the world.
Customer Reviews:
Plagued by fundamental problems.......2007-09-23
Terrence Malick's, 'The Thin Red Line' is one of my favorite films so I was excited to read Mr. Michel Chion's discussion of the film. I was pleasantly surprised to see Mr. Chion discuss elements of 'Thin Red Line' in relation to Malick's previous two films, 'Badlands' and 'Days of Heaven' as there are themes present in all three films. I also thought the author did a good job in discussing the distance between characters (whether it be in relation to the dialogue, or the way Mr. Malick chose to frame his shots) as well as man's distance between ourselves and nature.
My biggest problem with Mr. Chion's book has to do with the voice-overs (or monologues) that populate 'The Thin Red Line'. The monologues in the film are incredibly important, which Mr. Chion admits, indeed, he spends much of the book relating the monologues to what is, or is not, happening on-screen. He also attempts to penetrate the meaning of these statements as they relate to the 'bigger picture' (love, death, life etc.) However, Mr. Chion's problem is that he does not credit the monologue with the actual character who is speaking it.
I'm not sure if the mix-up is due to Mr. Chion being French and that perhaps he saw a dubbed version of the film, or was just unable to tell the accents apart, but the North American DVD release of the film, does tell the viewer (if the subtitles are turned on) who is speaking the monologues. As well, if you listen carefully, you can hear the subtle differences in voice between the characters of Private Witt (Jim Caviezal) and the speaker of the majority of the monologues, Private Edward Train (John Dee Smith).
Many of you may think, 'so what?' Does it matter who spoke the monologue/voice-over or does it matter what the monologue says? I agree, WHAT is said, is more important then WHO said it, generally. But Mr. Chion's discussion, indeed his thesis, is severely hampered by his mistake as to the monologues.
For example, Mr. Chion spends a great deal of time breaking down the ending of the film, and the final voice-over found at the conclusion (the one that contains the phrase 'look out at the things you made, all things shining.') He states that a disembodied Pvt. Witt makes the statement (an honest mistake perhaps, as both Witt and Train have deep southern accents) when in fact it is Train that makes the speech. Chion believes that Witt is the central character in the film and that we are, perhaps, trying to understand the relation between war and nature, through him. Dead at the end of the film, Witt can reflect back on what has happened.
The problem is that Train (the young soldier at the end who says something to the effect of, 'I've been through the think and thin of it...') makes the 'big' statement, changing the meaning of Witt (as Chion sees him) and introducing another character into the discussion (Pvt. Train). Again, because Chion spends so much time on Witt and the monologues, their importance is front and centre. But because he cannot tell the speakers apart, his view as to the meaning of the film is hampered (and dare I say, incorrect).
I value the attempt of Mr. Chion in this book, and in general, the other books in the BFI Modern Classics series, but the fundamental failure of the author to attribute the monologues to their owners, cripples this book's power.
J. Adams
Good book about a great film and filmmaker.......2005-07-18
This film is difficult to categorize and even harder to discuss in simple terms. Author Chion devotes a lot of space in this book to comparing each of Malick's three films to one another. Hard to tell if Chion is very insightful or just grabbing for straws sometimes.
Of note, Chion wrote this text in French and only later was it translated into English. It is significant because the same translation issue comes into play watching the film with French subtitles. Some of the characters' inner-monologues in the film have words and expressions that just aren't directly translatable into other languages. Chion, being bilingual, has the interesting perspective of experiencing the film in both languages and can make comparisons between the two, noting subtle and not-so-subtle differences in interpretations.
I believe that to get the most out of this book one should have seen the film multiple times. But if you are thinking of buying this book, chances are you have already seen the film mulitple times anyway.
And for good reason.
Recommended book, though a large percentage of seems to be more about Malick's body of work than this particular film.
Average customer rating:
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The Thin Red Line
Manufacturer: Dell Publishing
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Hardcover
ASIN: 0739400584 |
Product Description
A gripping novel of World War II, now a spellbinding motion picture.
Average customer rating:
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The Thin Red Line
James Jones
Manufacturer: Avon 15-354
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Mass Market Paperback
ASIN: 0380410958 |
Average customer rating:
- Oral History At Its Best!
- Great Insight into a terrible war
- The way History should be told...
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THIN RED LINE: The Eyewitness History of the Crimean War
Julian Spilsbury
Manufacturer: Weidenfeld and Nicolson
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Hardcover
General
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| History
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General
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Russia
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General
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ASIN: 0297846256 |
Book Description
The Crimean War was the first 'modern' war for the British forces: journalists reported home via the telegraph, a device that also tempted the government to micromanage the war from the comfort of Whitehall. It is most famous for the charge of the Light Brigade, celebrated in poetry and film as a classic British military disaster.
It also gave us 'The Thin Red Line', when a handful of British infantry saw off a horde of Russian cavalry. It was the first war in which ordinary British soldiers recorded their experiences - and Julian Spilsbury brings their story to life, together with the very different world of their officers and assorted mistresses. The army in the Crimea was a microcosm of Victorian society with all its strengths and weaknesses.
Customer Reviews:
Oral History At Its Best!.......2007-07-30
To qualify my comments, I'm a career infantry officer in the US Army. I have studied military history for over 40 years and have done my fair share of writing for a periodical relating to the American Civil War. The amount of fine literature that was "required" reading by my commanders and schools in my career numbers into the hundreds. Add to that books of my own choice (probably a thousand or more) and it's safe to say that I'm hard to please. That said, I can say without question that Julian Spilsbury's "The Thin Red Line" is the finest piece of literature I've ever read, not just those relating to military history, but all (surpasses Bruce Catton, Douglas S. Freeman, John Keegan, etc). It's certainly obvious that Spilsbury has walked the ground in the Crimea and that brings a special touch to his work. His ability to relate this war to other eras is especially interesting. He clearly has a "soldier's" heart and insight for what he writes about, something only a fellow soldier can really appreciate. I read it non-stop while on a much-earned vacation and found myself re-reading most every page, wishing to absorb how he shared / said what he did (poetic would be an understatement). This book is timeless and I would love to see him do another on the era. While focusing on British forces, he does not short-change the efforts of the French or Russians, which is appreciated. Were I commanding men and women in the military today, I would require this book of all officers and would include it as a discussion topic. My only compliant, and it's a minor one, is I wish he'd had more maps (those used are excellent) showing in more detail some of the action he describes. I'd have also wished for more art work. Both of these of course run up the price of a book, something he may have been considering when limiting both. Regardless, I now intend to track down some books related to the actual photographs, drawings and heroic paintings from this war. And how I wish someone in Hollywood would read it and make it into a film (could easily surpass "Zulu" and others of its type). Mel Gibson ("Braveheart", "We Were Soldiers", and "The Patriot") could do wonders with it!!
Great Insight into a terrible war.......2007-03-10
Anyone who is a fan of Heroism and the ideas of duty, honor and country will love the journey we take with these British troops from the battle at the river Alma, to Balaklava, to Inkermann. Spilsbury does an incredible job compiling research and creating a book that is streamlined, easy to read, and enjoyable.
The Crimean War deserves attention from all history enthusiasts. Tennyson, James Jones and W.H. Campbell have all made famous reference to this conflict, and yet very few understand the context in which they referred. This Book by Mr. Spilsbury can change all that.
The way History should be told..........2006-06-29
I found this book to be written in style that truly brought this war to life. Mr. Spilsbury has woven the words of the participants in the struggle in with the historical facts as we know them in an entertainingly seamless way. He made you care about the participants in the drama and want to learn more about the subject. My only regret was that the book ends abruptly and you never find out what happens to most of the players.
Average customer rating:
- Best British Army Uniform Book EVER!
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The Thin Red Line: Uniforms of the British Army Between 1751 and 1914
D. S. V. Fosten , and
B. K. Fosten
Manufacturer: Howell Pr
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Hardcover
General
| Military
| History
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Uniforms
| Military
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General
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Military Science
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General
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ASIN: 1872004008 |
Customer Reviews:
Best British Army Uniform Book EVER!.......2000-07-24
Few books can combine the scope of detail and level of research this title does. It would take other uniforms series several volumes to encompass the uniforms of this period, whereas Mr. Forsten does just that.
This book is a wonderful refernce for wargamers, modelers, painters, historians and military enthusiasts. A "must buy" for any good collection.
Product Description
3 Titles By James Jones : A Touch of Danger The Thin Red Line The Pistol. Three mmpb books.
Average customer rating:
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The book of the thin red line
Henry John Newbolt
Manufacturer: Longmans, Green
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Unknown Binding
General
| History & Historical Fiction
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ASIN: B000876M02 |
Average customer rating:
- A fine reference book
- Old-fashioned, but good guide to hick music
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Encyclopedia of folk, country & western music
Irwin Stambler
Manufacturer: St. Martin's Press
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Unknown Binding
General
| Music
| Entertainment
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Theory, Composition & Performance
| Music
| Entertainment
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| Appreciation
| Composition
| Conducting
| Exercises
| Instruction & Study
| MIDI, Mixers, etc.
| Sheet Music & Scores
| Songbooks
| Songwriting
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Music
| Encyclopedias
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ASIN: 0312248180 |
Customer Reviews:
A fine reference book.......2003-03-15
This sizable book (900+ pages) is not the most up to date production in town (no biography of Garth Brooks here), but if you want a book that gives the history of many famous & not so famous country musicians, then I recommend this.
I can't open it to read about one artists without spending an hour in the book as I get absorbed reading about someone I've never heard of or forgot about.
The biographies are complete. Maybe the discographies are a little bit sketchy & in some cases incomplete or even incorrect, but it is my experience of such reference works that they all miss something out or get something wrong.
I'd certainly recommend this for someone who does want a little (a lot!) more than just what is on country radio at present.
Old-fashioned, but good guide to hick music.......2001-08-10
A massive book which has in many ways been superceded by other, later works. It's a bit bulky, with a layout which is a bit flat. Still, it includes entries on some artists which other guides may omit; the discographies are a bit suspect, though, particularly when it comes to little things like getting the titles right. You could opt for the newer, sexier country guides, but this one still has something to offer, particularly the longer, more narrative biographical entries.
Books:
- The Ufa Story: A History of Germany's Greatest Film Company, 1918-1945 (Weimar and Now: German Cultural Criticism, 23)
- The Way You Wear Your Hat: Frank Sinatra and the Lost Art of Livin'
- This Time, This Place: My Life in War, the White House, and Hollywood
- Tim Burton's Nightmare Before Christmas
- Uncommon Knowledge
- Untouchable: A Biography of Robert DeNiro
- Video Production: Disciplines and Techniques
- Waiting for Godot: A Tragicomedy in Two Acts
- Who Goes There
- Who the Hell's in It: Conversations with Hollywood's Legendary Actors
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