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Biography - Rich and Famous books

Posted in Biography (Wednesday, October 8, 2008)

Written by Alistair Cooke. By Arcade Publishing. The regular list price is $24.95. Sells new for $2.50. There are some available for $0.07.
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3 comments about Memories of the Great and the Good.

  1. Prior to buying this volume of Alistair Cooke's writings, I knew him only as the former host of Masterpiece Theater, with his career as a journalist being only something I had heard about. The essays collected here are from various periods of Mr. Cooke writing career (1957 through 1999) and include a diverse group of people, including Frank Lloyd Wright, Irma Bombeck, Gary Cooper, Barry Goldwater and Eleanor Roosevelt . Each essay is rather short, averaging about ten pages. I read a comment by a reviewer that Mr. Cooke was excellent at creating a "portrait" of his subjects. While this is probably true, "Memoirs of the Great and Good" aims more at anecdotes and episodes, that Mr. Cooke elaborates upon, rather than having the detail and depth of a short biography. Many were written upon the death of the subject, so they are valedictory in tone. The essay about FDR relates an occurrence that happened to Mr. Cooke when he encountered the President as he was arriving to give a speech at Harvard. The last piece is a book review of "The Last Lion" by William Manchester, a biography of Winston Churchill, that gives us an insightful look into the early years of Churchill.

    In sum, I found these essays to be thoughtfully written and compulsive to read. It was surprising to realize how quickly I went through the book.



  2. "Memories of the Great and the Good" is a collection of essays that, as much as introducing the more casual and less public sides of nearly two dozen luminaries, reveals the evolution of America and of Alistair Cooke. The pieces stretch from 1951 through 1999 and the most useful advice, repeated both in discussing Churchill's love of war and hatred of the idea of women's suffrage, and in dismissing the alleged racism of golfer Bobby Jones, is to beware the "shame of seeing a man out of his time." One reporter recently dubbed Cooke the Dorian Gray of journalism, perhaps both for having been silver-haired and apparently the same age for as many decades as not, and because it is difficult to tell to what time the man himself belongs.

    Even though he is my grandfather, I can be no help on that score; in recent years I have seen the replacement of a knee and an angioplasty (both of which he has mentioned in his weekly BBC "Letter from America") leave him as sprightly as I have ever known him.

    Each essay reflects the time of its creation, whether that was 1967 or 1999. The 1974 piece on Duke Ellington mentions a visit to the bandleader's flat "on the swagger side of Harlem," and comments, "There is such a place," the Duke being at the top of "the hierarchy of Negro social status." Yet the 1999 piece on FDR is most memorable for an account of the unexpected, unseen, and contemporarily unpublishable view of the president being carried out of a car and limping, assisted, into a giant hall. By urging the reader to look at his subjects in their times, he sometimes implicitly admonishes himself for failing to do so. "Wodehouse at Eighty," for one, shows the father of Jeeves unquestionably out of his time, an anachronism as viewed--and, to be honest, caricatured--by Cooke, in his early fifties at the time. In other essays he steps almost too much into the times and shoes of his subjects, for example when mirroring the outlook of Erma Bombeck, whose career "was that of her generation--brace yourselves!--mother and housewife." While many of the pieces attempt and succeed at portraying the individuals 'in their time,' a large number of the pieces were written far after 'their times' as obituaries, which should not be surprising as Cooke shares with every nonogenarian the fact of having seen an extraordinary number of players both step onto the stage and then take their bows and make their exits some time later.

    Combined with this historical span, what is truly worthy about this book is that, like his earlier "Six Men," it displays the extraordinary degree of access which he, as a foreign correspondent par excellence, enjoyed with a dizzying array of figures. George Bernard Shaw is in a behind-the-scenes committee discussing the pronunciation of proper "BBC English." "The General"--Eisenhower-- sits on his back porch, commenting on his golf and waiting for Cooke's t.v. crew to reposition themselves. And Duke Ellington is in his boxers and a towel, devouring breakfast at two p.m. These are the kind of stories that I've heard come out over drinks in his study, or on Christmas afternoon in Vermont, as if they were the most pedestrian, ordinary experiences.

    On October 2, 1999, a fascinating sixteen-minute interview about the book was broadcast on Weekend All Things Considered, recorded in that self-same study in New York. NPR's finest have come to call, just as Cooke did on Wodehouse or Ike; as Cooke thus becomes a living museum of the twentieth century, I wonder if his plea is partly that he himself not be viewed out of his time. In the interview, he posits that America and Americans have, in asserting our 'rights,' lost track of the collective societal duties to which they correspond. With this I must respectfully disagree; we must recognize that these courtesies, if they existed, were only accorded to a small, privileged establishment. Thus, I far prefer a society where anyone can enforce his rights, to one that relies on a collective sense of duty from which many could never benefit. In any case, "Memories of the Great and the Good" offers a rare look, at Cooke (long an icon of Britain to Americans and in icon of America to Britain) and at many of the most important actors on the stage of the twentieth century. I truly hope you will enjoy it.



  3. I purchased this book for my 13 year old son for Christmas, and took the liberty of reading it. I read Cooke's sections on George C. Marshall, Winston Churchill,Dwight D. Eisenhower, and Bobby Jones because I was familiar with all of them from other works. Cooke writes in a breezy style, butI believe he captures the noble, transcendent charateristics of each man.I enjoyed each sketch thorougly. His vignettes are all perceptive. I hope that this might spark my son's interest in reading more about these figures. Overall an excellent, quick read.


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Posted in Biography (Wednesday, October 8, 2008)

Written by Kenneth Von Gunden. By McFarland & Company. The regular list price is $29.95. Sells new for $68.33. There are some available for $51.74.
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No comments about Alec Guiness: The Films.




Posted in Biography (Wednesday, October 8, 2008)

Written by Oscar Wilde and Collins Celtic. By Collins Celtic. There are some available for $11.96.
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No comments about Complete Works of Oscar Wilde (Collins Classics).




Posted in Biography (Wednesday, October 8, 2008)

Written by Lately Thomas. By Washington Park Press. There are some available for $24.87.
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No comments about The Astor Orphans: A Pride of Lions.




Posted in Biography (Wednesday, October 8, 2008)

Written by Biographiq. By Filiquarian Publishing, LLC.. The regular list price is $9.99. Sells new for $9.10. There are some available for $11.61.
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No comments about Albert Einstein: The Man Behind the Theories (Biography).




Posted in Biography (Wednesday, October 8, 2008)

Written by Michael Thomson. By Chrome Dreams. The regular list price is $14.95. Sells new for $8.60. There are some available for $29.27.
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No comments about The Unauthorized Biography of Counting Crows: The Unauthorized Biography of Counting Crows (Maximum).




Posted in Biography (Wednesday, October 8, 2008)

Written by Gregg Felsen. By Andrews McMeel. There are some available for $9.94.
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1 comments about Tombstones, Final Resting Places of the Famous.

  1. This is a really lovely book with a lot of interesting pictures of celebrity grave sites. If this is your thing (checking out the burial sites of famous dead people), you'll probably like this book! The sites can range from rather mundane to flashy and quite spectacular. The photography is excellent (as well as the informative text that accompanies each picture). Bottom line.....until you can afford that ticket to Paris or London (or even LA), you can be an armchair tourist for the bargain price of this book.


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Posted in Biography (Wednesday, October 8, 2008)

Written by Caroline Cass. By Diane Pub Co. The regular list price is $22.00. Sells new for $21.59. There are some available for $38.38.
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No comments about Elton John's Flower Fantasies: An Intimate Tour of the Houses and Garden.




Posted in Biography (Wednesday, October 8, 2008)

By Delta. The regular list price is $19.00. Sells new for $3.99. There are some available for $1.03.
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3 comments about Desperately Seeking Madonna: In Search of the Meaning of the World's Most Famous Woman.

  1. Whether you're a devotee or detractor of the lady in question, "Desperately Seeking Madonna" never fails to entertain (and even educate). Sexton features an impressive array of contributors (where else can you find essays by both Camille Paglia and Henry Rollins?) and himself uses Madonna as a springboard for such thought-provoking questions as "does our culture need to pigeonhole women in order to understand them?" An intelligent, fun and fascinating read.


  2. Where else can you read about the relationship between Madonna and man's desire to bowl?


  3. This book contains 51 different articles, thesis', poems and rants about Madonna, by authors varied as Camille Paglia and Vincent Canby to Henry Rollins and Liz Smith. It includes various one page cartoons and strips from "Mad" magazine and the Village Voice, and also in the mix are Rolling Stone poll results, a David Letterman top ten list about "Truth or Dare", and Sandra Bernhard writing about her Madonna dreams from her book "Confessions of a Pretty Lady". This book is chock full of more useless information about Madonna that us fans crave, new and old...The information covers roughly the 1984-1991 era (her most active IMHO) and is very entertaining, though not for the average reader. Madonna fans will find this book a great resource and companion to "The Madonna Companion", also a collection of written works about Madonna, though it is more on the scholarly edge. So this book is recommended to Madonna collectors, and all others...Borrow it from your own "Madonna freak".


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Posted in Biography (Wednesday, October 8, 2008)

Written by Carl Rollyson. By iUniverse, Inc.. The regular list price is $17.95. Sells new for $11.29. There are some available for $11.00.
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1 comments about Female Icons: Marilyn Monroe to Susan Sontag.

  1. I've included two chapters that were cut from the Sontag biography my wife and I wrote and a long essay on the difficulties of researching Sontag's life. Other pieces such as "Marilyn Monroe and the Idea of Biography" and "Writing about Women" give an overview of how I have constructed my biographies, of the nature of icons, and why icons tell us so much about ourselves and biography.


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Last updated: Wed Oct 8 06:56:59 EDT 2008