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by Amos Oz (Translator: Nicholas de Lange)
Product Group: Book
Publisher: Harcourt (2004-11-15)
ISBN: 0151008787
EAN: 9780151008780
Dewy Decimal #: 892.436
Hardcover: 544 pages
Edition: 1
SKU: 103008038
Condition: Used: Very Good
Comments: ...no markings or highlighting......some slight shelf wear on dustjacket....
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Editorial Reviews
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Product Description
Tragic, comic, and utterly honest, this extraordinary memoir is at once a great family saga and a magical self-portrait of a writer who witnessed the birth of a nation and lived through its turbulent history.
It is the story of a boy growing up in the war-torn Jerusalem of the forties and fifties, in a small apartment crowded with books in twelve languages and relatives speaking nearly as many. His mother and father, both wonderful people, were ill-suited to each other. When Oz was twelve and a half years old, his mother committed suicide, a tragedy that was to change his life. He leaves the constraints of the family and the community of dreamers, scholars, and failed businessmen and joins a kibbutz, changes his name, marries, has children, and finally becomes a writer as well as an active participant in the political life of Israel.
A story of clashing cultures and lives, of suffering and perseverance, of love and darkness.
(12/27/2005)
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Customer Reviews
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Memoirs are made of this
Rating (4)
Date: 2008-09-15
This review was published in The Australian, August 16, 2008. Greg Sheridan is the Foreign Editor.
[...]
Memoirs are made of this
OPINION: Greg Sheridan | August 16, 2008
A FEW years ago I experienced a severe addiction to travel literature.
With the contemporary serious novel in such a mess, travel writing, like biography, offers many of the traditional pleasures of the novel: story, character, good dialogue, development, resolution. But I can't say I discovered any great literature there, much as I enjoyed Bill Bryson's wit and Paul Theroux's misanthropy.
Now I am immersed in a frenetic bout of memoir reading and here the story is different.
When Tom Wolfe was promoting the new journalism, which has been with us several decades now, his essential insight was to bring the techniques of the novelist to bear on journalism: exploring the subjective elements of a story, the characters' inner lives and interior monologues, with the advantage that the events had actually happened.
A novelist's memoir can achieve this supremely. A Tale of Love and Darkness is the childhood memoir of Amos Oz, Israel's greatest novelist and surely soon a recipient of the Nobel Prize for Literature.
This is an incomparably good book. Perhaps it is the best book I have read. It tells of growing up in Jerusalem in the 1930s and '40s. Oz conceives life as one part comedy, one part tragedy, one part humdrum, quotidian concreteness, and if you are Jewish, the chance always of utter disaster.
His life proceeds against the backdrop of the Holocaust and the birth of Israel. Oz is an only child and his life is also shaped by the suicide of his mother when he is 12. This colossal roadblock dominates and shapes the book and yet does not distort the loving portrait of his father, a frustrated academic, out of his depth and at his wits' end with his wife's melancholy.
Oz's technical accomplishments in this book are dazzling. He writes of his grandfather:
It was not easy for him to go out. Grandma had a highly developed, super-sensitive radar screen on which she kept track of us all: at any given moment she could check the inventory, to know precisely where each of us was, Lonia at his desk in the National Library on the fourth floor of the Terra Sancta Building, Zussya at Cafe Atara, Fania sitting in the B'nai B'rith Library, Amos playing with his best friend Eliyahu next door at Mr Friedmann the engineer's, in the first building on the right. Only at the edge of her screen, behind the extinguished galaxy, in the corner from which her son Zyuzya, Zyuzinka, with Malka and little Daniel, whom she had never seen or washed, were supposed to flicker back at her, all she could see by day or night was a terrifying black hole.
This passage is instructive. First, there is a lovely metaphor for domestic life. How many grandmas have their perfect family radar screens? Then, everyone is mentioned by name. There is the accumulation of small details of location that give the passage life. But suddenly, at the end, the shocking reality of the Holocaust explodes this domestic tableau, as it does intermittently throughout these beautiful memories.
Almost every page of this book contains an observation or metaphor so striking you cannot let it go, or rather it will not let you go. Oz writes: "Both my parents had come to Jerusalem straight from the 19th century."
The contrast, indeed conflict, of east European Jews trying to recreate an idealised Europe, one free of anti-Semitism, in the hot, dusty climate of Israel, surrounded by hostile Arabs, is mined by Oz as much for comedy as tragedy. And there is endless comic delight in the crazy clash of expectation with reality. For bookish, intellectual, urban Jews such as Oz and his family, the kibbutz pioneers were a new kind of Jew. Oz mocks his own earnest idealisation of kibbutz pioneers, yet somehow affirms it as well:
Tough, warm-hearted, though of course silent and thoughtful, young men and strapping, straightforward young women ... I pictured these pioneers as strong, serious, self-contained people, capable of sitting around in a circle and singing songs of heart-rending longing, or songs of mockery, or songs of outrageous lust ... (people) who could ride wild horses or wide-tracked tractors, who spoke Arabic, who knew every cave and wadi, who had a way with pistols and hand grenades, yet read poetry and philosophy.
Oz is free of self-pity. Instead there is a generous human solidarity and understanding for everyone. But there are passages of aching melancholy and pain. The night the UN votes to establish Israel is the happiest night imaginable. Though it too is tinged with fear, as the Jews of Jerusalem are always in dread of a second holocaust. But the recognition of the Zionist dream is a fulfilment of generations' desires.
In all his life, Oz never sees his father weep, except that night. The father crawls into bed beside young Amos and tousles his hair:
Then he told me in a whisper what some hooligans did to him and his brother David in Odessa and what some gentile boys did to him at his Polish school in Vilna, and the girls joined in too, and the next day, when his father, Grandpa Alexander, came to the school to register a complaint, the bullies refused to return the torn trousers but attacked his father, Grandpa, in front of his eyes, forced him down on to the paving stones and removed his trousers too in the middle of the playground, and the girls laughed and made dirty jokes, saying that the Jews were all so-and-sos, while the teachers watched and said nothing.
Now, the father tells Amos, people may bully you, but not because you are a Jew: "Not that. Never again. From tonight that's finished here. For ever." Most of the book is not political in that sense. It's full of jokes, though its genius is to blend comedy and tragedy. Oz recounts how as a kid he talked all the time, but that was fine because everyone in Jerusalem talked all the time. A professor tells Oz that the odds of there being an afterlife, as there is no conclusive evidence either way, are 50-50. For a central European Jew in the generation of Hitler, those chances of survival are not at all bad.
When a great novelist writes a memoir with all the technique of the novel at its best, you get a superior art form. If I could recommend just one book to tell you something about the human condition, this would be it.
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The Eternal Jewish Mother
Rating (4)
Date: 2008-07-08
Amos Oz's A Tale of Love and Darkness is a memoir of his life and the life of his family up until the time of his mother's suicide at the age of 38 in the early 1950s. Oz's mother's suicide, never treated fictionally in his other work (as far as I can recall) is treated here with great care and thoroughness: there is anger, guilt, shame, sadness, loss, a sense of regret, and penetrating understanding. Without a doubt the book is strongest when Oz discusses his mother and her family. His mother, brought up on a romantic, Hebrew education in Rovno, was not ready for the tawdriness of life in Palestine, "the rough terrain of everyday life, diapers, husbands, migraines, queues, smells of moth balls and kitchen sinks." The story of his mother's mental decline and suicide is also the story of the convergence and divergences of Jewish life in the 20th century; the outline of the gap between the real and the ideal of the Zionist dream. That said, A Tale of Love and Darkness is generally overwritten. There is much useless repetition here which drags down the trajectory of the memoir. I do not recommend this work as the first work of Amos Oz to be read, but the last. It makes for an instructive book end with Where the Jackal's Howl and Other Stories on the other side.
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A beautiful and moving memoir
Rating (5)
Date: 2008-01-27
This is a beautiful and moving memoir from a sensitive and humanistic writer of great skill and style. The reader will feel that he or she is personally experiencing growing up with the author in the most modest and simple circumstances, in the young State of Israel, from before statehood and into its early years, getting to know as friends and neighbors some of its intellectual leaders who were the writer's family members and friends. The book is a sheer delight, and highly recommended.
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history and biography
Rating (4)
Date: 2008-01-12
This mixture of biography with the history of the birth and growth of Israel is a wonderful, warm , and poignant tale--well worth one's time.
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Superior Autobiography
Rating (5)
Date: 2007-12-29
This memoir by the Israeli novelist Amoz Oz is a fascinating depiction of both European and Israeli Jews. Although the author was born in Israel, his parents and relatives were all European Jews displaced by the events leading up to World War II.The graphic depiction of what anti-semitism does to an individual explains the need for a Jewish state more fully than any essay could, and the history of the first war against the Jews by the Arabs, aided openly by the British army which then controlled Palestine, and which started the very evening in November, 1947 of the U.N. vote to establish a Jewish homeland, not, as I previously thought, in May, 1948, when the state of Israel was officially declared, lends credence to the unfortunate belief that the Arabs will never accept the state of Israel. This makes the book sound incredibly sad, and of course it is in one sense. But in another, by creating the milieu of these early settlers in Jerusalem and their intellectual strengths and interests, and also the new Jew of the kibbutz, to which Oz went after the death of his mother and his father's remarriage, and where he lived and wrote for 30 years, the book turns out to be the best one I have read about this frantic period of Jewish history.
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by Barry Paris
Product Group: Book
Publisher: Berkley Trade (2001-09-01)
ISBN: 0425182126
EAN: 9780425182123
Dewy Decimal #: 790
Paperback: 464 pages
Release Date: 2001-09-04
SKU: 052008062
Condition: Used: Good
Comments: ...No Underlining or Highlighting...edge wear on cover 333
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Editorial Reviews
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Product Description
The most ambitious and personal account ever written about Hollywood's most gracious star-Audrey Hepburn by Barry Paris is a "moving portrayal" (The New York Times Book Review) that truly captures the woman who captured our hearts...
With the insights of family and friends who never before spoke to a Hepburn biographer-and never-before-published photographs-Paris has created an in-depth portrait of the actress, from her childhood in Nazi-occupied Europe, through her legendary career, and into her UN ambassadorship.
"Rich and definitive...fascinating." (*Seattle Post-Intelligencer)
"Illuminates the complex inner life of the highest-paid actress of her time." (San Francisco Chronicle)
"Certainly [Paris's] account seems more personal than other recent biographies of Hepburn have been. In part, this may be because Paris had better access to family and friends, but he is also a very good writer, and his mix of anecdote and observation is just right." (Booklist)
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Amazon.com Review
Barry Paris loves Audrey Hepburn, and who can blame him? His exuberant profile of the movie star traces Hepburn's life from her childhood in the Netherlands (where she aided the Dutch resistence) through her Hollywood career (from her Oscar-winning performance in Roman Holiday to Steven Spielberg's Always). Paris, a veteran of Hollywood biography books, wants to free his readers of any false impressions that might sully the late star's reputation. The impression that Hepburn was a snob, he persuades us, was the result of an introverted character formed by her experiences during the war. This wartime experience both fed Hepburn's love of the spotlight and inspired a concern for the poor and powerless that compelled her to campaign for UNICEF from 1988 until her death in 1993. Some of the most fascinating material in this delightfully readable volume concerns the impact the ever-elegant Audrey Hepburn had on women's style and self-conception. If you don't already love her, Paris's book will at the least evoke admiration of her, if not enlist you in a movement for her beatification.
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Customer Reviews
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Riveting Bio Of a true legend
Rating (5)
Date: 2008-01-08
Having read most of the other books about Audrey Hepburn, a woman whom I respect and admired since my youth, I chose this particular one by Mr.Paris as the most engaging (besides the book by Sean Ferrer which I thought was essential). I could never tire of anything A.H., with that being said it was important to me that I had a sense of how she lived. This book was hard to put down and wasn't full of colorful writing like some of the other so-called biographies done on her. For me, it brought me closer to this person as if she were someone I knew personally and combined with her son's book provided me with an insight into the world that was Audrey. She was and still remains a huge inspiration for me, and this book should be read by every young 'actor' out there today. Kudos to Mr.Paris!
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Audrey Hepburn was a fair lady of stage and screen who is well served by Paris
Rating (3)
Date: 2005-11-03
2 out of 5 customers found this reveiw helpful
Audrey Hepburn (1929-1993) was born in Brussels the daughter of a Dutch woman and an English father. She was raised in Arnhem Holland suffering through the Nazi occupation. Audrey was a thin, sensitive child who excelled at ballet.
As a young woman she migrated to London appearing in British films until she was exploded into fame with her first US film
Roman Holiday (for which she won as Oscar as Best Actress)
Hepburn appeared in such films as "Charade"; "My Fair Lady"
(her singing voice being dubbed by Marni Nixon"; "Two for the
Road"; "Breakfast at Tiffanys"; "Sabrina: "Robin and Marion" :
"Wait Until Dark" and several other films.
Her gamin pixish face and figure was a revelation in the 50s era of Monroe, Ava Gardner; Sophia Loren and other well endowed film goddesses.
Audrey had a long but troubled marriage with stolid Mel Ferrer and had other husbands and a few affairs along the way most notably with film star Albert Finney.
She worked with such noted directors as Willie Wyler, George
Cukor and Stanley Donet. She lived in Switzerland in an isolated
village where she raised children and loved animals.
There is little dirt to plow in these pages1 Audrey was an
adorable and kind person! Her work with starving children on behalf of the UN is heartwarming.
Barry Paris (previous biographer of Louise Brooks and Greta
Garbo) does a fine job in this well documented biography.
The most exciting chapter deals with life in Holland during
the horrible Nazi occupation,
This is a good biography of the film star.
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A book so well researched and written that it flows like...
Rating (5)
Date: 2005-04-02
4 out of 8 customers found this reveiw helpful
A book so well researched and written that it flows like a meandering river. The prose is wonderful. Very difficult to stop reading the book until the reading is completed.
May Audrey Hepburn be in the Kingdom of God as I surely want to meet her and talk with her.
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A tribute to Audrey and to Barry Parris' writing skill
Rating (5)
Date: 2004-08-02
9 out of 10 customers found this reveiw helpful
What is the true test of a biographer's skill? Creating a riviting, insightful book about a subject who had no scandal in her life and who seems to have be beloved by everyone. Material that, in lesser hands, could have been saccherine or written with the usual "movie star bio" template is instead moving, wise, very informative, and beautifully written. Check out Mr. Paris' other biographies of Garbo and especially Louise Brooks for more great writing.
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Excellent
Rating (5)
Date: 2003-04-23
7 out of 9 customers found this reveiw helpful
A biographer shouldn't lower your opinion of the person they're writing about (as if you could ever have a low opinion of Audrey Hepburn!) and Barry Paris certainly does a brilliant job of depicting Audrey's life from age 15 until her death (age 64). The author blends his words so you don't loose interest even once. The book has lots of quotes, from and about Audrey, and several pictures of her throughout her life. There isn't a down side to this book, except for a few subjects where the author should have elaborated on a bit more than he did. You can clearly see that Audrey was a truly wonderful person, a real lady. After you read about what a hard childhood she had, in the middle of WW2 and the miscarriages she suffered and basically being deprived of love from her parents, it is amazing that she was still such a beautiful person, a beautiful soul. She traveled to countries to help dying people and did things that few other people would do...she seems to have been an angel, and certainly was to several people. This is a book that you don't need to read before buying, it's wonderful.
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by Richard A. Hutch
Product Group: Book
Publisher: Continuum International Publishing Group (2001-01)
ISBN: 0826447457
EAN: 9780826447456
Dewy Decimal #: 291
Paperback: 220 pages
SKU: 091008057
Condition: Used: Very Good
Comments: ...No noticeable Underlining or Highlighting.....moderate cover wear..
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by Richard A. Hutch
Product Group: Book
Publisher: Continuum International Publishing Group (2001-01)
ISBN: 0826447457
EAN: 9780826447456
Dewy Decimal #: 291
Paperback: 220 pages
SKU: 091008057
Condition: Used: Very Good
Comments: ...No noticeable Underlining or Highlighting.....moderate cover wear..
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by Richard A. Hutch
Product Group: Book
Publisher: Continuum International Publishing Group (2001-01)
ISBN: 0826447457
EAN: 9780826447456
Dewy Decimal #: 291
Paperback: 220 pages
SKU: 091008057
Condition: Used: Very Good
Comments: ...No noticeable Underlining or Highlighting.....moderate cover wear..
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by Richard A. Hutch
Product Group: Book
Publisher: Continuum International Publishing Group (2001-01)
ISBN: 0826447457
EAN: 9780826447456
Dewy Decimal #: 291
Paperback: 220 pages
SKU: 091008057
Condition: Used: Very Good
Comments: ...No noticeable Underlining or Highlighting.....moderate cover wear..
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by Bruce Pegg
Product Group: Book
Publisher: Routledge (2005-03-30)
ISBN: 0415937515
EAN: 9780415937511
Dewy Decimal #: 782.42166092
Paperback: 318 pages
SKU: 060708035
Condition: Used: Good
Comments: ...No noticeable Underlining or Highlighting...minor corner wear
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Editorial Reviews
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Product Description
Brown Eyed Handsome Man: The Life and Hard Times of Chuck Berry draws on dozens of interviews done by the author himself and voluminous public records to paint a complete picture of this complicated figure. This biography uncovers the real Berry and provides us with a stirring, unvarnished portrait of both the man and the artist. Berry has long been one of pop music's most enigmatic personalities. Berry's career rise was meteoric; but his fall came equally quickly, when his relations with an underage girl led to his conviction. It was not his first (nor his last) run in with the law. He scored his biggest hit in the early '70s with the comical (and some would say decidedly lightweight) song 'My Ding-a-Ling'. The following decades brought hundreds of nights of tours, with little attention from the recording industry. Bruce Pegg offers the definitive, though not always pretty, portrait of one of the greatest stars of rock and roll, a story that will appeal to all fans of American popular music.
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Customer Reviews
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Very interesting
Rating (5)
Date: 2008-10-03
What a read! I first sought this book out after reading elsewhere about Chuck Berry throwing Keith Richards off stage at a peformance where Keith was sitting in. This book was the cited reference for the incident. Intrigues, I sought out and bought this book. I knew very little about Chuck Berry, the man, previous to reading it. While his career was sadly sililar to many rock stars, the rise, the fall, the cheats, the double crosses, and the tragedy of it all, it still was all original enough to hold my interest. Well written and an easy read, if you are interested in Chuck or just good Rock and Roll stories, by all means, buy this book!
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Hail, Hail, Chuck Berry!
Rating (5)
Date: 2004-09-14
4 out of 4 customers found this reveiw helpful
I've been reading this book for the last few months (it's been my reading material on the train on the weekends hehe) and it's been an enertaining read of the life and hard times of Chuck Berry.
Previous to reading this book, I had only heard Chuck Berry's music and loved it, but did not know much about the man himself.
Bruce Pegg has done a good job of detailing Chuck's life, from the early days in The Ville, his begginings in music, Racism in the USA in the 50's, Chuck's relationship with Chess Records, concerts, all his court appearances (the Mann Act Trial, the Southern Aire Restuarant Video Tape Scandal (which I first heard about on E! News!) plus much more.
There are some great photos in the book which i'm not sure have been seen before.
Pegg also has also rounded up all the important people in Chuck's life and they all give interesting comments.
I haven't read Chuck Berry's offical Autobiography, but upon reading this, i'm sure this gives a much better view into his life.
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Can't put this book down!
Rating (5)
Date: 2004-02-26
4 out of 4 customers found this reveiw helpful
As a long time fan of Chuck Berry, I have tried to read everything I could find about him, from enclyclopedia's to Rolling Stone Magazine. Over the past 20 years, I have tried to piece together the various differing messages about him, from musical genius to "difficult to work with" entertainer. This book puts it all together in an extremely well written and well documented manner. Pegg ties together all of the pieces with a lot of information and insight otherwise unknown, with interviews of principle persons in Chuck's musical and professional life. He is obviously a fan of Chuck's, but the book is very honest with the facts and never sensational.If you are a fan of Chuck Berry, please do yourself a favor and get this book. You will not be able to stop reading it! I think it also would be helpful for anyone interested in the social/historical milieu of this time period in relationship to black entertainers in general as well.
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Chuck Berry Demystified
Rating (5)
Date: 2003-03-06
1 out of 1 customers found this reveiw helpful
Great Book. Very informative. A thorough body of research was completed in order to have this book published. I thought I knew all about Chuck Berry until I read this book. I would recommend it to anyone who is a fan of Chuck's. The book is balanced and pulls no punches. No wonder the biography is unauthorized. It contains information that is both provoctive and endearing.
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by Bruce Pegg
Product Group: Book
Publisher: Routledge (2005-03-30)
ISBN: 0415937515
EAN: 9780415937511
Dewy Decimal #: 782.42166092
Paperback: 318 pages
SKU: 060708035
Condition: Used: Good
Comments: ...No noticeable Underlining or Highlighting...minor corner wear
More Product Infomation
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Editorial Reviews
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Product Description
Brown Eyed Handsome Man: The Life and Hard Times of Chuck Berry draws on dozens of interviews done by the author himself and voluminous public records to paint a complete picture of this complicated figure. This biography uncovers the real Berry and provides us with a stirring, unvarnished portrait of both the man and the artist. Berry has long been one of pop music's most enigmatic personalities. Berry's career rise was meteoric; but his fall came equally quickly, when his relations with an underage girl led to his conviction. It was not his first (nor his last) run in with the law. He scored his biggest hit in the early '70s with the comical (and some would say decidedly lightweight) song 'My Ding-a-Ling'. The following decades brought hundreds of nights of tours, with little attention from the recording industry. Bruce Pegg offers the definitive, though not always pretty, portrait of one of the greatest stars of rock and roll, a story that will appeal to all fans of American popular music.
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Customer Reviews
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Very interesting
Rating (5)
Date: 2008-10-03
What a read! I first sought this book out after reading elsewhere about Chuck Berry throwing Keith Richards off stage at a peformance where Keith was sitting in. This book was the cited reference for the incident. Intrigues, I sought out and bought this book. I knew very little about Chuck Berry, the man, previous to reading it. While his career was sadly sililar to many rock stars, the rise, the fall, the cheats, the double crosses, and the tragedy of it all, it still was all original enough to hold my interest. Well written and an easy read, if you are interested in Chuck or just good Rock and Roll stories, by all means, buy this book!
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Hail, Hail, Chuck Berry!
Rating (5)
Date: 2004-09-14
4 out of 4 customers found this reveiw helpful
I've been reading this book for the last few months (it's been my reading material on the train on the weekends hehe) and it's been an enertaining read of the life and hard times of Chuck Berry.
Previous to reading this book, I had only heard Chuck Berry's music and loved it, but did not know much about the man himself.
Bruce Pegg has done a good job of detailing Chuck's life, from the early days in The Ville, his begginings in music, Racism in the USA in the 50's, Chuck's relationship with Chess Records, concerts, all his court appearances (the Mann Act Trial, the Southern Aire Restuarant Video Tape Scandal (which I first heard about on E! News!) plus much more.
There are some great photos in the book which i'm not sure have been seen before.
Pegg also has also rounded up all the important people in Chuck's life and they all give interesting comments.
I haven't read Chuck Berry's offical Autobiography, but upon reading this, i'm sure this gives a much better view into his life.
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Can't put this book down!
Rating (5)
Date: 2004-02-26
4 out of 4 customers found this reveiw helpful
As a long time fan of Chuck Berry, I have tried to read everything I could find about him, from enclyclopedia's to Rolling Stone Magazine. Over the past 20 years, I have tried to piece together the various differing messages about him, from musical genius to "difficult to work with" entertainer. This book puts it all together in an extremely well written and well documented manner. Pegg ties together all of the pieces with a lot of information and insight otherwise unknown, with interviews of principle persons in Chuck's musical and professional life. He is obviously a fan of Chuck's, but the book is very honest with the facts and never sensational.If you are a fan of Chuck Berry, please do yourself a favor and get this book. You will not be able to stop reading it! I think it also would be helpful for anyone interested in the social/historical milieu of this time period in relationship to black entertainers in general as well.
|
|
Chuck Berry Demystified
Rating (5)
Date: 2003-03-06
1 out of 1 customers found this reveiw helpful
Great Book. Very informative. A thorough body of research was completed in order to have this book published. I thought I knew all about Chuck Berry until I read this book. I would recommend it to anyone who is a fan of Chuck's. The book is balanced and pulls no punches. No wonder the biography is unauthorized. It contains information that is both provoctive and endearing.
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by Brian Sibley
Product Group: Book
Publisher: Revell (1994-01)
ISBN: 0800755340
EAN: 9780800755348
Dewy Decimal #: 823.912
Paperback: 192 pages
Edition: First
SKU: 091308025
Condition: Used: Good
Comments: ...no markings or highlighting...minor wear on cover
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by Brian Sibley
Product Group: Book
Publisher: Revell (1994-01)
ISBN: 0800755340
EAN: 9780800755348
Dewy Decimal #: 823.912
Paperback: 192 pages
Edition: First
SKU: 091308025
Condition: Used: Good
Comments: ...no markings or highlighting...minor wear on cover
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