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Biography - Audio Books books

Posted in Biography (Monday, October 13, 2008)

Written by Ernest J. Gaines. By Books On Tape. There are some available for $8.00.
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No comments about The Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman.




Posted in Biography (Monday, October 13, 2008)

Written by Graham Robb. By Books on Tape, Inc.. There are some available for $32.00.
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No comments about Victor Hugo: A Biography Part 1 Of 2.




Posted in Biography (Monday, October 13, 2008)

Written by Harry Crews. By Amer Audio Prose Library Inc. Sells new for $13.95.
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1 comments about Harry Crews, a Childhood: The Biography of a Place/Readings.

  1. I KNEW HARRY AND ROOMED WITH HIM ONE SUMMER SESSION AT U OF F. I HAVE SEEN HIM SEVERAL TIMES SINCE. HE SOUNDS THE SAME AS HE DID IN 1960. THE TAPE IS EXCELLENT BUT TOO SHORT AND CONTAINS A VERY GRAPHIC BUT SMALL PART OF HIS LIFE STORY. HARRY READS SO WELL I WISH HE WOULD DO SOME MORE RECORDINGS.


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Posted in Biography (Monday, October 13, 2008)

Written by Piers Brendon. By Recorded Books. There are some available for $24.90.
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No comments about Winston Churchill.




Posted in Biography (Monday, October 13, 2008)

Written by Andrew Woods. By Troll. There are some available for $5.95.
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No comments about Young Orville and Wilbur Wright ; First to Fly ; A Troll First Start Biography ; Paperback & Audio Cassette.




Posted in Biography (Monday, October 13, 2008)

By Australian Broadcasting Corporation. There are some available for $29.99.
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No comments about My Brilliant Career.




Posted in Biography (Monday, October 13, 2008)

Written by David Brinkley. By Random House Audio. The regular list price is $14.00. Sells new for $4.33. There are some available for $0.01.
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5 comments about David Brinkley.

  1. From 1956 to 1970, before the days of Dan Rather on CBS, Chet Huntley and David Brinkley said "good night" to each other at the 'finis' of NBC network news, leaving everybody watching feeling a kind of contentment that "all's right with the world." After his first eighteen years spent growing up, working for the small town newspaper, in North Carolina, his tenure fin the world of television news saw him through four wars, three assassinations, two wives, twenty-two political conventions, eleven presidents, 2,000 weeks of canvassing and reporting the news to the American public and one moon landing, he is on terra firma at last. Born in Wilmington, and educated at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, and Vanderbilt University at Nashville, Tennessee, he spent most of his life on the Washington, D.C. scene. He had a soft Southern drawl and a knack for brevity, using just the right word or phrase to sum up a situation. This memoir as such is mostly about politics and his role as observer of the leaders then and now.

    He was in the press corps. "Even though I was in Washington covering the White House for the last years of Franklin Roosevelt's presidency and reported from the White House every day when there was any news and traveled with him on several trips, we only knew, as everyone knew, the U. S. Treasury paid him one hundred thousand dollars a year." Perhaps no form of governments needs great leaders so much as democracy. The political history of the 20th century lists six men as the best leaders: Lenin, Stalin, Hitler, Mao Zedong, Churchill and Franklin Roosevelt. The first four were tyrants; had it not been for the final two, western civilization might have perished.

    In March 1946, Harry S. Truman's private pullman, the 'Ferdinand Magellan,' passed on to him after Roosevelt's death, on a private train at Washington's Union Station pulled out with his guest, Winston Churchill, his press secretary, Charles Ross, and others as the Truman-Churchill Express to St. Louis. Churchill was noted for writing his own speeches and used Lord Byron as a part of this particular appeal: "He who ascends to mountain tops shall find the loftiest peaks most wrapped in clouds and snow.
    He who surpasses or subdues mankind must look down on the hate of those below.
    Though far above the sun of glory shine and far beneath the earth and ocean spread round him are icy rocks
    And fiercely blow contending tempests on his naked head
    And thus reward the toils which to those summits led."

    David had grown up watching the Tennessee Williams' plays and movies about the South with its drunkenness and cruelty. "I survived early radio at NBC, and it survived me. The grand old names in radio never made it in television." There had been only one 100-wattt AM radio station in the small town of Wilmington He called a spade a spade. His sister Mary Driscoll worked as legal secretary for Joseph McCarthy, who he called the "Grand Champion American Liar." He routinely pronounced "him to be what he was, a loudmouthed liar." He said, "had he been truthful, ...he might have been a great political figure. But it was only one lie after another...."

    The 1956 Democrat Convention was the first he covered. Adlai Stevenson from Illinois was the candidate to run for that party's choice for U. S. President. Senator Estes Kefauver of Tennessee was chosen with the help of Al Gore's dad, Senator Albert Gore, as Vice President. They lost. The 1960 election used "multimillion-dollar mainframe computers bigger than four-door Buicks" to count the votes.

    He wasn't impressed by President Nixon ("Before Nixon was forced to resign the presidency, he chose Spiro Agnew as his vice president, only to begin still another degrading and humiliating episode in American presidential politics."). He observed, "While eight years later, Nixon was one of the most intelligent presidents of modern times, he never seemed happy or seemed to enjoyed what he was doing. He always looked mournful and it is difficult to find a photo of him with a smile on his face." He didn't have anything good to say about Agnew, Gerald Ford, or Jimmy Carter. He called Eisenhower the Republican party's first president in twenty years. At the 1964 Convention, the agenda had them denouncing the John Birch Society, an even harder-line right-wing fringe group, along with the klan, and the Communist party."

    This memoir was just a beginning; David Brinkley also wrote EVERYONE IS ENTITLED TO MY OPINION and BRINKLEY'S BEAT: PEOPLE, PLACES AND EVENTS THAT SHAPED MY TIME.


  2. As a non-native English speaker who has been watching ABC's "This Week" all these years, I've always found David Brinkley's manner of speaking concise and easy to understand with short sentences and simple vocabulary. This was far cry from many other loud talking heads, including David's own colleagues on his Sunday program. He taught me how English could be spoken plainly but precisely and effectively. His memoir is written exactly the way he spoke. He gets to the point without being wordy and beating around the bush.
    One thing I liked about this memoir is that he wrote more about his professional life than personal, which was of little interest to me. This memoir is also a history of American TV journalism, filled with episodes that were new to me. I was particularly interested in learning what he had to say about Joe McCarthy, whom David's own sister served as secretary for many years. Quite a bit is written about Kenndey brothers, too, including JFK assasination. So glad he published this memoir before he passed away.


  3. I was quite excited to get David Brinkley's book, as I have enjoyed his newscasts for years, particularly the early conventions. As it turns out, this is a "Chatty-Cathy" book that rambles on about his life, with his TV persona somewhat as an afterthought. The book is quite readable with his enjoyable laconic style, but at the end, you don't know much more about him, TV, the process of TV news, or the events to which he was an eyewitness....at least not more than you already knew or could surmise.
    The book was a pleasant interlude, but somewhat a bit of froth


  4. Having grown up with the Huntley-Brinkley report and watching them at all the conventions, I truly enjoyed this book. Especially interesting is how Brinkley trashes Jesse Helms.


  5. To me, Brinkley always seemed a cut above the modern TV journalist / anchor -- more sober, more professional and less interested in focusing the attention on himself rather than his subject.

    David Brinkley tells his life story in this quick book. Growing up with the new medium of television, he and his partner (Chet Huntly) wrote much of the playbook for the way network news and tv interview shows are conducted.

    This is an interesting story that tells not only of Brinkley's growth and development but also of the maturation of the tv news industry. Along the way, Brinkley was witness to many seminal events and has of course met many of the notables of his era.

    The man's integrity and dedication to the profession of journalism shines through in this book. I can't imagine Sam or Cokie or Dan or Peter writing this book. Too much would be devoted to image and the their impact on the news. Brinkley was able to achieve the incredible credibility he enjoyed because he was made of different stuff -- this is the story of a darn good journalist who understood the difference between covering the news and entering it.



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Posted in Biography (Monday, October 13, 2008)

Written by Clay Jones. By Chivers Audio Books. Sells new for $69.95. There are some available for $65.05.
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Posted in Biography (Monday, October 13, 2008)

Written by Lester Frank Sumrall. By Sumrall Publishing. There are some available for $9.57.
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No comments about I Saw the Glory: My Relationship Wiht Smith Wigglesworth.




Posted in Biography (Monday, October 13, 2008)

Written by Joseph J Ellis. By Recorded Books. There are some available for $47.92.
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No comments about His Excellency George Washington.




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Last updated: Mon Oct 13 12:00:25 EDT 2008