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| 1. Drunk Stoned Brilliant Dead: The Writers and Artists Who Made the National Lampoon Insanely Great by Rick Meyerowitz | |
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list price: $40.00 -- our price: $24.00 (price subject to change: see help) Isbn: 0810988488 Publisher: Abrams Sales Rank: 785 Average Customer Review: US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
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| 2. The Chicago Manual of Style, 16th Edition | |
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list price: $65.00 -- our price: $40.95 (price subject to change: see help) Isbn: 0226104206 Publisher: University Of Chicago Press Sales Rank: 2358 Average Customer Review: US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
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Editorial Review The Sixteenth Edition is available in book form and as a subscription website. The same content from The Chicago Manual of Style is in both versions. Reviews
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| 3. On Writing Well, 30th Anniversary Edition: The Classic Guide to Writing Nonfiction by William Zinsser | |
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list price: $14.99 -- our price: $8.41 (price subject to change: see help) Isbn: 0060891548 Publisher: Harper Paperbacks Sales Rank: 1902 US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
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Editorial Review On Writing Well has been praised for its sound advice, its clarity and the warmth of its style. It is a book for everybody who wants to learn how to write or who needs to do some writing to get through the day, as almost everybody does in the age of e-mail and the Internet. Whether you want to write about people or places, science and technology, business, sports, the arts or about yourself in the increasingly popular memoir genre, On Writing Well offers you fundamental priciples as well as the insights of a distinguished writer and teacher. With more than a million copies sole, this volume has stood the test of time and remains a valuable resource for writers and would-be writers. | |
| 4. 2011 Writer's Market | |
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| 5. Book Lust to Go: Recommended Reading for Travelers, Vagabonds, and Dreamers by Nancy Pearl | |
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list price: $16.95 -- our price: $11.53 (price subject to change: see help) Isbn: 1570616507 Publisher: Sasquatch Books Sales Rank: 4409 Average Customer Review: US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
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| 6. How to Write & Sell Simple Information for Fun and Profit: Your Guide to Writing and Publishing Books, E-Books, Articles, Special Reports, Audio Programs, DVDs, and Other How-To Content by Robert W. Bly | |
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list price: $15.95 -- our price: $10.85 (price subject to change: see help) Isbn: 1884995608 Publisher: Linden Publishing Sales Rank: 4069 US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
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Editorial Review Packed with income-generating ideas about creating a variety of saleable written works, this guide includes information for researching and writing effective, instructional materials and calling upon a variety of publishing channels, including magazines, traditional book publishers, self-publishing, and the Internet. The mechanics behind becoming a successful writer and information packager are presented in this resource that explores how to write and sell simple information in multiple formats, allowing writers to turn specialized knowledge into money-making books and products. | |
| 7. 2011 Guide To Literary Agents | |
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| 8. Fifteen Thousand Useful Phrases by Greenville Kleiser | |
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(2009-01-06)
list price: $1.24 Asin: B001P3O5PC Publisher: Writers Digest Books Sales Rank: 1740 US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
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| 9. The Ultimate Guide to Video Game Writing and Design by Flint Dille, John Zuur Platten | |
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Editorial Review There are other books about creating video games out there. Sure, they cover the basics. But The Ultimate Guide to Video Game Writing and Design goes way beyond the basics. The authors, top game designers, focus on creating games that are an involving, emotional experience for the gamer. Topics include integrating story into the game, writing the game script, putting together the game bible, creating the design document, and working on original intellectual property versus working with licenses. Finally, there’s complete information on how to present a visionary new idea to developers and publishers. Got game? Get The Ultimate Guide to Video Game Writing and Design. Reviews
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| 10. 2011 Children's Writer's And Illustrator's Market | |
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| 11. Writing Tools: 50 Essential Strategies for Every Writer by Roy Peter Clark | |
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| 12. Non-Designer's Design Book, The (3rd Edition) by Robin Williams | |
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list price: $34.99 -- our price: $22.30 (price subject to change: see help) Isbn: 0321534042 Publisher: Peachpit Press Sales Rank: 8697 Average Customer Review: US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
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The author explains simple principles that help us see what makes for a good design like proximity, alignment, repetition, and contrast. There are plenty of before-and-after examples to show you exactly what she means. The explanations are also very understandable. Williams does not preach to you, but rather helps you see the different elements which can make the visual more effective. There are also some quizzes with answers in the back. Included is a short bibliography so the reader can get more information if he or she chooses. There are some problems with the book. One, it discusses the use of color, but there are no color pictures to illustrate the point. The author knew the illustrations would no be color so asks you to visualize this in your head. It wasn't the most helpful here. Also, towards the end, she uses some editing/printing jargon that she never explains. If the reader does not have a design background, why mention leading if not explained? Overall, I find this book to be very helpful. Knowing the elements I should be looking for ensures that my experimenting with flyers is more productive and effective. I would recommend this book to anyone needing to create newsletters, flyers, and the like.
Williams's book should hit the mark for amateurs creating one-page designs such as simple web sites, brochures or business cards. Set aside an hour or two to read it and do the exercises, and your designs should improve immensely. Mine have.
Visual examples of weak design and what can be done to make the design better are on nearly every page, and make the subject matter very clear. The author maintains that most beginning mistakes in design are tied to mistakes in Contrast Repetition, Alignment, or Proximity (C.R.A.P). That sounds about right. If you are going to publish any document (print or electronic) this should be the first book you read before you do.
Writer Robin Williams delivers a powerful design seminar in fun-book disguise. Her tone is light, encouraging, and creative, and her information is killer. I've read many books on this subject, and I learned many things in "The Non-Designer's Design Book" that have never even been approached in other books. Williams begins with the basics, using examples and redesigns to illustrate design principles that will teach you how to make an effective newsletter, brochure, business card, or advertisement every time. She then moves into more complicated subjects such as typography (no kidding �-- I've never read anything about typography in any other book) that will serve to further refine your design projects. This book is not for the casual reader -- it is guaranteed to revolutionize the way you see, think about, and design any print media. Williams has written a clever, incisive lesson on design, while managing to be entertaining and encouraging. This book should undoubtably be a part of your complete designing education!
Definitely a quick read, it covers the foundations of good layout and typography. Each "rule" gets its own chapter, with plenty of examples. It would have been nice, however, if the chapter on "Color" had actually used color images! The entire book is in black & white, so this was a bit of a drawback. Not a fatal flaw, but rather a conscious effort to save printing costs that wound up detracting from one of the chapters. What I did learn were some obvious techniques and concepts that I needed to understand. The book helps you "notice" good design, and better yet, understand WHY it's good design. You'll also become more conscious of your designs, how to create them, and how to fix them when they're wrong, rather than just playing around with it until it "looks right". If you're new to designing - no matter what the medium - you'll be well-served by this book. For the price, it's certainly tough to beat.
The first half of the book is dedicated to CRAP (contrast, repetition, alignment, and proximity), four principles that, once The second half of the book focuses on typefaces (fonts), which so many of us love to collect. She describes the six main I've been so impressed by Robin's style of writing and the information she reveals that I've purchased two more of her books
Williams's approach to teaching is based in principles (like, "Pick an imaginary line running down the page and relate all your visual elements to it."), which she then supports with example after example. It matches my learning style precisely. Once I've grasped the principle, I can apply it again and again, as indeed I have in the past year and a half since I read this book. It serves as a solid foundation for the rest of the series, especially the "Non-Designer's Type Book," which should be the second of her books you read, in my opinion. I couldn't have accomplished in my job what I have without this book's help. It's not a reference book, but an essential introduction to sound design principles, which, once grasped, stick with you forever.
Her ideas are so simple, you'll wonder why you didn't think of them instinctively. The first half of the book focuses on four design principles: Alignment, Contrast, Proximity and Repetition. You'll be amazed at how supersizing a heading font or choosing a right side aligment can change a document. The rest of the book focuses on how to select and use fonts/type, emphasizing their use with the design principles. If you've been centering every item on an invitation or webpage or you've thought Times New Roman is the only font you'd ever need, this book will open you eyes and improve your work. There are great before and after pics and even quizzes on the reading and techniques. Don't worry, answers are included.
1.) I have had difficulty with the book's title. As an editor of a number of different publications over the years, I've had occasion to work with "designers" who couldn't align type to save their lives. I used this book to train them, and the title has been an obstacle. Not quite the level of problem I'd have had with the "* For Dummies" series, but still... 2.) In Williams' intro, she talks about Joshua trees. She received a tree identification book one year, saw a picture of a Joshua tree, and then went outside her parents' house in the San Francisco Peninsula area to find four of the houses in her block had Joshua trees growing in their yards. Wherever she went in the Bay Area after that, she saw Joshua trees growing everywhere. The moral of the story: once you learn about something (eg. design "don'ts"), you see them everywhere. Nice metaphor. Only problem is, the things she saw growing outside in the Bay Area were NOT Joshua trees. They were Cordylines, which resemble Joshua trees only vaguely. Williams' point is still important, but the truth adds two more lessons: Even an expert can still make mistakes through overconfidence, and it's really hard to find book editors who know anything anymore. Gripes aside, if you do any kind of page layout -- even if it's only for signs for your lost cat -- find a copy of this book. It won't turn you into an expert typesetter. For that, I suggest a few other books, such as Bringhurst's The Elements of Typographic Style, and years of setting type and seeing what works and what doesn't. But Williams will keep you from making the worst of all possible mistakes, and that will set you apart from the majority of design being done in the US. ... Read more | |
| 13. Writing Down the Bones: Freeing the Writer Within (Shambhala Library) by Natalie Goldberg | |
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list price: $18.95 -- our price: $12.89 (price subject to change: see help) Isbn: 1590307941 Publisher: Shambhala Sales Rank: 11196 Average Customer Review: US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
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When I purchased the book, I saw nothing to indicate that it was specific to one particular form of writing, but after reading it, I feel that the author speaks much more to poetry than other forms of writing. The author on several occasions admonishes us to write in the moment and not dwell on ideas we've had in the past. She relates an experience of one student who had a fully-formed idea while out jogging but couldn't reproduce it when s/he got home to the blank page. Goldberg went into a spiel about how we should just let go of those thoughts that are not inspired or conceived in the moment that we sit down to write. That's where I have a fundamental disagreement with her and feel her philosophy becomes almost destructive to new writers. Perhaps poetry functions that way. Perhaps someone has to have that spontaneous quality about their work in order for it to be fresh and exciting. I don't know. I'm not a poet. However, for novels, short stories, and longer works, you would be a fool to let great ideas get away. Personally, I like to let some of those ideas percolate for weeks and even years. Yes, we mature and our perspectives change, but in a lot of cases that only means that we can approach a subject in a different way as we grow older. It doesn't make the subject any better or worse to write about. Bottom line: I came away from the book with mixed feelings. In my opinion she crossed over the line of reason too often in the book to put forth her spiritual views. It was like a one day seminar that gets you pumped up, but then you get home and review your notes, and realize, sadly, that it was mainly hype with very little substance. I can summarize her tome with three bullet points: Be true to thine ownself. Always observe the world around you. Make writing a habit in your life.
As a professional writer who has written over 20 books and 500 magazine articles, I've given Writing Down the Bones away several times after mistakenly deciding that I'd outgrown it. Just as often I've had to go out and buy another copy to remind myself that there's more to the writing life than rejections, and royalties. Every time I reread it, I find something new. Last year I read Goldberg's memoir, Long Quiet Highway: Waking Up in America, which provides insights about how she came to her beliefs about writing and spirituality. I suggest reading both books.
The best, and if I may say, most fruitful and promising path to good writing is reading the words of those who have walked before us. Read and absorb the styles of others, THEN let the pen write directly and honestly from your heart. Write your own 'writer's bible.'
Of all the how-to writing books I have read, all the while looking for that one filled with honest, practical advice to help shake loose my creativity free from the confines of English class rules and order, this is the best one out there. Natalie starts out telling you that it isn't an ordered process that fuels creativity. She lets you know up front that all those rules and "regulations" that you learned in every English class you ever took don't apply in real creativity. She takes you step by step, holding your hand thruout, thru a creative storm complete with exercises designed to frighten and enlighten. In the end you realize that you are, indeed, a creative person when not confined to the traditional definitions of creativity and art. I felt I could do anything, write anything, and create anything when I was done with this book. I read it straight thru in an afternoon and then went back over the period of a week and did the exercises. I still go back, months later, re-working the exercises, reading favourite chapters, and reminding myself of the wonderful wellspring of creativity in all of us. I highly recommend this book to anyone frustrated with the traditional "this is how to be creative" books that so many of us have trudged thru in desperate hopes of finding a single grain of enlightenment. Natalie gives it to you in page after page of insight, comfort, and freedom. You won't be disappointed - unless, of course, you really do like all those ridiculous rules and regulations.
Natalie points out that all beginning writers are controlled by their "inner censor" and therefore write what they think other people want to hear, or they put a false face on their writing. Natalie does indeed "free the writer within," by giving us permission to "just write sh--" (her words,not mine). The gist of the book is this: just write. Go for volume, not quality. The quality will come as you gain experience and lose your inhibitions. Natalie says everything you write, not just the good stuff but the bad as well, creates a "compost heap of the mind." It stays in your subconscious and mellows and ripens, ready to fertilize your skills and imagination for future writing projects. I actually put Natalie's suggestions into practice and kept a writer's journal for several years (and still do), and wrote thousands of words. I feel that my writing skills did indeed improve and even shine. Natalie also discusses some things to try, like writing in different places, and discusses useful topics like metaphor and simile. Her book is not a technical manual, but rather an easy read, a personal insight into the joy and freedom from uninhibited writing. I always recommend this book first to anyone who expresses an interest in learning to write.
And I agree with this basic premise and have found that it works in my own writing. Goldberg emphasizes how much of oneself a writer offers to his/her writing and it is clear that this self is not to be tapped without the effort of practice and letting your thoughts come through. Once the novice writer has this basic concept down, Goldberg offers helpful hints to actually improve the quality of the writing. She offers examples (often in the form of sharing her own personal experiences as a writer) of how to trust yourself as a writer, how to make your writing more detailed, how to show what you are trying to say (instead of merely telling), how to be specific, among numerous other tips. I have read many books on writing technique and I believe that what Goldberg offers that many others don't is an acknowledgment that the meaningful events we seek to share and write about can be found deep within us. They merely must be appropriately tapped, which is attainable through some of the exercises she offers. This process gives writers the encouragement they need to actually initiate their writing and will form the basic foundation upon which the writing develops. I recommend this book particularly for those novice writers that have trouble "getting started".
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| 14. Book Lust: Recommended Reading for Every Mood, Moment, and Reason by Nancy Pearl | |
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list price: $16.95 -- our price: $10.14 (price subject to change: see help) Isbn: 1570613818 Publisher: Sasquatch Books Sales Rank: 9099 Average Customer Review: US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
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I have gone through each list and found enough books that interest me to give me reading material for the next couple of years. I have purchased several. Some of my favorites are: Action Heroines-the usual VI Warshawski and Kinsey Milhorne but several new ones like Susan Van Meter and Paul Flint. Adventure by the Book- Fiction and Non-fiction-Huckleberry Finn and National Geographic. Hamilton Basso: Too Good To Miss-New Orleans Southern writer like "View From Pompeii's Head". Bird Brains- books for and by birders Fathers and Daughters and Fathers and Sons-Solomon's Daughter and Gambler's Rose First Lines Too Remember-"First I had to get his body into the boat". First Novels-Virgin Suicides, Stern Men, Biggest Elvis The Islamic World-Islam: A Short History The Moon's My Destination-Apollo- Epic Journey to the Moon Shrinks and Shrinkees-I Never Promised You A Rose garden Three Hanky Reads-A Lesson Before Dying Texas, A Lone Star State of Mind-The Last Picture Show Zero: This Will Mean Nothing To You-The Hole in the Universe All together, 256 pages of books organized into themes that make sense. I really liked this book. I found it light reading, but full of great information.I will use this as a reference book for the times when I need a book of a particular theme, or a need for a book I can't quite put my finger on. If you are just starting out on a reading life, this book is for you. Or, if you are looking for something to read, but don't know what will strike your fancy, this book is for you. A book for everyone, for any mood or for every mood. prisrob
For one thing, she serves as the Director of the Washington Center for the Book, where she created the program, "If All of Seattle Read the Same Book." This program became a model for programs like the California Council for the Humanities statewide promotion of John Steinbeck's The Grapes of Wrath. (Isabel Allende will be Seattle's featured author for 2004.) Book group leaders will appreciate Pearl's historical context for different genres including the experiences of different ethnic groups in America, and a list of 100 good reads, decade by decade for the 20th century. (Ten books are listed for each decade.) Imagine immersing your book group in one book for each decade over the course of a year. Or just reading the 1940's with picks like Hemingway's For Whom the Bell Tolls, Richard Wright's Native Son and Marjorie Kinman Rawling's Cross Creek. The 1950's picks include Salinger's Catcher in the Rye and Ralph Ellison's Invisible Man. Book group leaders may also appreciate her section on Companion Reads--books that can be linked sequentially to broaden the understanding of each. For example, she suggests three "moving memoirs about growing up Hispanic in America: Down these Mean Streets by Piri Thomas, and When I was Puerto Rican and Almost a Woman by Esmeralda Santiago." Another interesting idea: pairing two novels about single women, written almost one hundred years apart, one by a man and one by a woman: The Odd Women by George Gissing and The Odd Woman by Gail Godwin. There's also a list of books about Elvis for those so inclined. One caveat: some of the books that she recommends are now out of print--which might mean more interlibrary loan work or asking your bookstore for a special order.
Her book is categorized in interesting chapters that seems to fit reading moods. Categories range from Ecofiction, Presidential Biographies, Civil War Fiction to Great Dogs in Fiction. She even has a section on Elvis. It's actually a fun way to look at books. In the section on Presidential Biographies, she references David McCollough. She mentions his best-selling books on Truman and John Adams, but what she actually recommends is his book about Teddy Roosevelt, Mornings on Horseback (which I'm ashamed to admit that I didn't know existed). My only complaint (and it's a really small one) is she really doesn't go into great length or depth about most recommendations. One to three sentences and she's already moved on. Which is fine with me. I'm able to make note of what looks interesting and then go and do a little further research on my own to see if it really looks like a book worth my time and money. I'd like to thank Pearl for introducing me to the following books: Sahara: A Natural History And oh yeah - I'm currently reading Mornings on Horseback and love it.
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| 15. 2011 Writer's Market Deluxe Edition (Writer's Market Online) | |
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| 16. A Poetry Handbook by Mary Oliver | |
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list price: $14.00 -- our price: $7.66 (price subject to change: see help) Isbn: 0156724006 Publisher: Mariner Books Sales Rank: 12218 Average Customer Review: US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
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The book is aimed at both readers and writers of poetry. For the latter, Oliver reflects on such practical issues as revision and participation in poetry workshops. The book reflects Oliver's own philosophy of poetry. She stresses that poetry is a craft that requires work and discipline, and encourages the reader to think of poets as constituting a "tribe" that transcends all geographic and cultural boundaries. The book is not without flaws. I found it quite Eurocentric; she never discusses the haiku, a Japanese verse form that has been embraced by many in the English-speaking world. Other non-Western forms are similarly neglected. Some of her opinionated pronouncements also seem open to debate. She notes that a poem "gives pleasure through the authority and sweetness of the language," but I think some poems are effective conduits of rage or outrage and make use of unpleasant language to shake up the reader. Regarding the revision process, she notes that sometimes "it is simply best to throw a poem away" -- but, I ask, who is to make that decision? Something a poet might want to discard may in fact be a great poem in another's eyes. Also, although she gives many good examples of good poems, it might have been interesting if she had included some bad ones to illustrate her points further. Despite its flaws, however, I think that "A Poetry Handbook" would be a solid text for both individual reading and classroom use. And I think that some of Oliver's questionable statements could trigger productive discussion! Ultimately, I appreciate Oliver's declaration that poetry "is a life-cherishing force [...] as necessary as bread in the pockets of the hungry." Recommended as companion texts: Audre Lorde's essay "Poetry Is Not a Luxury," from her collection "Sister Outsider," and Pablo Neruda's prose collection "Passions and Impressions."
What do poets know that the average storyteller doesn't? Words have sound. Imagine that. They have a feel that goes beyond connotation. There is a rhythm. And a sort of Dr. Suessian alilteration is available for 9.95 call within the next 10 minutes and shipping is free! Ms. Oliver would be hard pressed to find anything redeeming in my poetry. She'd probably wonder if I even read her book or if I pulled the ol' never touched the intern routine. I did-- not the intern, the book! I even learned that "dipthong" is not a dirty word. Darn it. ... Read more | |
| 17. Writing Your Journal Article in Twelve Weeks: A Guide to Academic Publishing Success by Wendy Laura Belcher | |
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list price: $51.95 -- our price: $39.16 (price subject to change: see help) Isbn: 141295701X Publisher: Sage Publications, Inc Sales Rank: 16971 Average Customer Review: US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
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Editorial Review "This book is a wonderful addition to a graduate course on professional writing, to a writers' group in need of some structure, or even to the lone writer who needs assistance becoming an academic writer." Key Features Writing Your Journal Article in Twelve Weeks can be used individually or in groups, and is particularly appropriate for graduate student professional development courses, junior faculty orientation workshops, post-doc groups, and journal article writing courses. Wendy Laura Belcher is assistant professor of African literature at Princeton University in the Department of Comparative Literature and Center for African American Studies. She has taught journal article writing workshops in North America, Europe, and Africa. Praise for Wendy Belcher and Writing Your Journal Article in Twelve Weeks “Humorous, direct, authentic … a seamless weave of experience, anecdote, and research.” “Wendy's guidance has been a tremendous help to me, and the book is great for grad students, junior faculty, or anyone who wants to learn how to write and publish more effectively.” “Your book struck such a nerve because there is a long chain of assumptions in academia that scholars should just know how to do certain things. The relief among faculty is palpable when I explain in groups that few of us -- even those who have been published in journals -- were ever taught properly. And although it helps everyone who cracks it, your book is especially a godsend for faculty from other cultures.” -Carole Sargent, Georgetown University “Thanks for your wonderful book!” “Absolutely LOVE the book!” Reviews
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| 18. On Writing by Stephen King | |
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list price: $15.99 Asin: B000FC0SIM Publisher: Scribner Sales Rank: 4028 Average Customer Review: US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
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The second part, "On Writing," is where the aspiring novelists will find inspiration. Assuming you're a serious writer (or wanting to be a published one), you'd no doubt would have read the countless manuals on the mechanics of writing. With Mr. King, you do get short lessons in the mechanics of prose here and there. What he mostly offers to the aspiring writer is the inspiration, the cheerleading, and as some have already suggested, after reading it makes you want to sit and write something. He actually allows you into his writing routine, when and where he writes, how many months it takes to write the first draft, and even how he goes about editing the second draft. Some very original thoughts I found quite interesting: 1. Story is a fossil you find on the ground, and you gradually dig it out slowly. 2. He doesn't plot his stories. He puts "a group of characters in some sort of predicament and then watch them try to work themselves free." In fact he even goes as far as to say, "plot is shift, and best kept under house arrest." 3. Write first draft with the "door" closed, and the second draft with it open. There are truly gems here for writers, simple, direct, to the point. As always, he doesn't talk down to you. There is even advice on finding agents. The final section elaborates his near-death experience in summer of 1999, when he was hit by a van driven by Bryan Smith. The book is actually a sandwich: two slices of autobigraphy with the writing advice as the meat of the book. Though the thin volume was not your edge-of-the-seat thriller or horror, I found myself reading the darn thing in one seating. A pretty good deal for a non-fiction book. This may sound funny, too, but I felt like the book became a good friend of mine. In a word, this is book is intimate. As a fan, and perhaps a writer, that might be worth something.
It generally takes Stephen King about three months to finish the first draft of a book. He began "On Writing" at the end of 1997, but put it aside a few months later, unsure how to finish it. Over a year later, in mid-1999, King decided to spend the summer "finishing the damn writing book." The events of late-June, 1999 interfered with those plans. King spent three weeks in the hospital after he was struck by a van. In late July he decided it was time to start writing again, and it was "On Writing" that he chose for his return to work. The finished product, "On Writing: A Memoir of the Craft" will be released by Scribner in early October, 2000. It was a discussion with Amy Tan while on tour with the Rock Bottom Remainders that inspired King to write this book. "No one ever asks about the language," Tan said in response to King's query about the sorts of questions that she doesn't get at author appearances. "Serious" authors get asked that but they don't ask the popular novelists who, he says "care about language in our humble way, and care passionately about the art and craft of telling stories on paper." King opens with a lengthy memoir that "attempted to show some of the incidents and life-situations which made me into the sort of writer I turned out to be." He calls this section "C.V," as in "curriculum vitae," his list of accomplishments and job skills. Some of the story is familiar, though many of the details are new. He works his way through his stages as a writer from childhood to novice to apprentice to worldwide success. For the first time in any detail, King addresses his battle with alcohol and drug abuse, when it started, how it evolved and how he eventually was forced to confront his problem. He reveals that he has little memory of writing "Cujo" ("I wish I could remember enjoying the good parts as I put them down on the page"), that he hadn't realized that when he was writing "The Shining" he was writing about himself, and how Annie Wilkes in "Misery" could well be seen as a symbol for coke and alcohol. "I decided I was tired of being Annie's pet writer," King says. King is more revealing of his life in this book than ever before. He is frank in discussing the merits and deficiencies of many of his books. Of "Rose Madder" and "Insomnia" he says: "These are (much as I hate to admit it) stiff, trying-too-hard novels." He talks about how he reached a point in "The Stand" where he had to set the novel aside for several weeks until he could figure out how to go on. If he had written a couple of hundred pages less at that point he probably would have abandoned the book completely. Also described in some depth are the issues he had to deal with in writing "Carrie," "The Dead Zone" and "The Green Mile." He spends some time relating an event that inspired him to write the upcoming novel "From a Buick Eight" and the research required for the second draft that had to be deferred after his accident - a couple of weeks riding with the Pennsylvania State Police. "But I'm not a writer," the prospective reader of "On Writing" might cry. "Why should I want to read this book?" While a substantial section of the book is about writing, King's approach to it and his advice to writers at all levels of the art, there is much here for the non-writer as well. King's success has made him a high-profile personality, more so than many other authors, and the level of public interest in his life is easily demonstrated by the overwhelming number of requests for updates on his condition received by his office and official web site in the weeks following his accident. Here is the opportunity to read King on King, and on his books. He describes the symbolism in many of his novels, rarely planted intentionally on the first draft but uncovered, as an archaeologist uncovers a ruin, during the writing of the second draft. For writers, though, the book is chock full of advice, some of it common sense, some of it uniquely King's. His taboos of writing: adverbs (especially those in dialog attributes) and the passive voice. His description of the writer's toolbox: Common tools on the top shelf (vocabulary and grammar), elements of grammar and style on the second level, along with an understanding of the paragraph as the basic element in fiction, and a synthesis of all of these along with innate and developed skills at the bottom. "If you want to be a writer," King says, "you must do two things above all others: read a lot and write a lot." King calls reading the creative center of a writer's life. He advocates reading in small sips as well as long drinks - in waiting rooms, in line at the theater, in the checkout line at the grocery store, on the treadmill at the gym and in the john. When it comes to writing, though, King is more selective. "We do best in a place of our own," he advises. The most important feature of this place: a door that you can and are willing to shut. No TV, no phone and no video games. Curtains closed. Write first with the door closed. Write for yourself without worry about theme, symbolism or accuracy of details. Those are for the second draft, which is usually written with the door open, after he has sent the book to a select group of critical readers. King includes examples of both good and bad writing, sometimes taken from his own work, sometimes taken from such writers as Elmore Leonard and John Katzenbach. The final chapter of the book is an annotated rewrite of his first draft of the opening section of "1408," one of the three stories in the recent "Blood and Smoke" audio release. This section should silence critics who suggest that King doesn't rewrite his work. It is an interesting look at the creative process and what an author should look for when editing his or her own material. He also describes his approach to research. It's all about back story, he says. "What I'm looking for is nothing but a touch of verisimilitude, like the handful of spices you chuck into a really good spaghetti sauce to really finish her off." Toward the end of the book, King tackles the subject of his accident. This section, called "On Living," is partly a bully platform for him to get his version of the story down, as well as his opinion about how the legal system handled the case of driver Bryan Smith. It also describes how an otherwise ideal day went wrong, the minute details of his injuries and some of the challenges of his recovery process. "Life isn't a support system for art - it's the other way around," he concludes. Throughout the book, but especially in this chapter, King pays tribute to wife, Tabitha. She is King's "Ideal Reader," the person for whom he writes all of his books, the one who he wants to make laugh or cry through his writing. His love and admiration for her shines through, from a touching scene in their early courtship where he sits at her feet as she reads her poetry in a workshop, his hand on her calf, to her organization of a group intervention to make him confront his addiction problems, and all the way through to her support and encouragement of him during his convalescence. At the end, King includes a list of nearly a hundred novels that he considers the best that he's read in the last three or four years. "A good many of these might show you some new ways of doing your work. Even if they don't, they're apt to entertain you," he concludes. The same might be said of "On Writing."
As a human, I was touched by his childhood anecdotes and often laughed with him about his insecurities. I am still in awe at what he has recently had to overcome physically. I mean, damn. As a writer, I am grateful for a brief glimpse into his vocational world. I gained confidence from learning about things I have been doing right and have changed many bad habits (may the adverb rest in peace). I've read several tomes on the subject and believe his reigns as the most complete. I've been a fan of King's since the seventh grade when I was given The Dead Zone and Cujo as an Easter present. A year later I had read every book he'd published (with the exception of the dreaded Limited Editions of which I could opine negatively for hours - suffice it to say that writing should be for everyone to read, not just the rich). I've read or listened to all his books since. I can honestly say, that this is my favorite. Sometimes the coldest hands to wrap around your neck are the true ones. The only bad thing I can say about this book is that it's too short, something one rarely has the opportunity to state regarding the beloved author. A huge thank you to Mr. King for a brief indulgence into the life of a genius.
I think Stephen King wrote this simply because he can. He knows it is a select audience that is going to read it. Those fans who don't ever care to be writers won't read this book. Well, actually they might, thinking to themselves that they might gain some secret insight into the mind of their idol. They will be disappointed. In not so many words, Mr. King says exactly the same thing himself. There is no secret to his storytelling. It just is what it is...lots of hard work. The first part of this 280+ page book is autobiography. He expounds on a few of his life "snapshots" that may or may not have influenced particular characters or scenes throughout his collection of works. But if you desire to buy this book just to uncover those snippets of Stephen King trivia, be my guest. It will only make him more money. I think the author was only trying to open up a bit more directly to his readers--instead of doing it via a fictional charcter (which he asserts every character he has created is a part of himself) within his stories. The other part of this book is, of course, on writing. He answers questions often asked him in book signings and semanars ("Where do you get your ideas? etc etc") as well as questions he wishes people would ask. He analogizes writers as having multi-leveled "toolboxes." Important things like vocabulary and grammar go on top of the tool box where they are most accessible. Elements of style and dialogue and paragraph structure go elsewhere along with theme and symbolism, etc. This analogy is a fantastic discription that I hope to use with my own students some day (whenever I go back to teaching). I also enjoyed the expert lessons on discipling one's self towards writing. Of course, what works for him may not work for everyone, but I think many hopeful writers reading this will find commonalities with someone who is making a living, and the rest of us doing it for now as a hobby. As he says, "you could do worse" in following some of his examples. Some of the lessons on style and grammar could be learned in a couple of writing courses in any college in the country. However, it would would be a lot less efficient and lot less interesting. This book isn't going to give you credit hours, but it will give you helpful tips. Sometimes a car only needs a jump start, not an engine overhaul. I could describe everything about this book that will keep it prominantly on my bookshelf (dog-eared, loaded with post-it notes and little penciled notes in the margins, no doubt), but the gist is this: If you love to write and feel you may be pretty good at it, read this book. If you just "like" Stephen King as a novelist and don't think about the intricacies of writing then go to the library. Check out this book and skim the auto-bio section and return the book after 2 weeks. You won't be bored and then someone else can use the book to do the same. I have always held that you can extract a ton of information about a person by what they read everyday. (Ernest Hemingway vs. Robert James Waller; Wall Street Journal vs. Field and Stream etc). In the last 3 pages Stephen King submits his private reading list that have influenced him in some way in the last 3 years. Wonderful list! I photocopied it so I can keep it in my wallet so whenever I am at a bookstore I can look for a few of the titles. It WAS a boost to my ego though, when I realized out of the 100 or so books he lists, I have read about 30 of them. Nice to know that a bestselling author and myself are on a similar mindset. Already after I finished, I began going through some of my own journals form college and looking for ideas I had started, but never finished. I have already set aside more hours to read (and turning of the TV, which he recommends) and to write. With a couple more readings of this book I may ever become encouraged to submit some stories for publication. PS: one more thing. The last section that he wrote describing his near-death accident in 1999, when he was run-over by a van being driven by someone messing with his dog, is a real sobering account. For anyone who has thought not to continue writing due to something tragic in their life (because they don't know how to keep creative, etc) this account will tug on your heart.
I was absolutely stunned. Sure, I respected Mr. King as a successful novelist, and knew a little of his personal life; after this book, I felt like I'd known him personally for years. As many others have mentioned, this book is really divided into three parts: a short memoir, a manual of writing technique, and the now well-publicized accident. The first part, "C.V.", was really glimpses into Mr. King's life, interesting little episodes that he considered life lessons or things that sparked his sense of humor. It also provides a very important part of a good writer: He grew up loving to read, and reading frequently. He also started writing and submitting his work at an early age. "C.V." paints the picture of a real-life struggling novelist: how he had to work at several different crummy (though interesting) jobs while supporting a family, a drug habit, and a hefty manuscript. The second part was "On Writing". In this, Mr. King takes almost no credit for what he's saying. He constantly refers back to 'The Elements of Style' by Strunk & White. He also gives you, flat-out but not in a patronizing tone, what you need to succeed as a decent writer. The best way to summarize how I felt about the section as a whole is this: when he revealed that he taught high school English for several years before the success of 'Carrie', I was desperately jealous of those students. He'd teach an *awesome* class. I was most impressed by the last section of the book, where he explores his painful memories of the accident and his slow road to recovery. It literally wrenched my heart when he talked of his wife setting up a table in the stuffy hall that he sat at to write for the first time. It was obvious that writing is more than just a business occupation--it's obvious Mr. King has a true passion for the craft. I applaud him for it--such people come few and far between. Read this book. You won't regret it.
I'll add to this pile now. The biographical first part is written in a smooth and flowing style that keeps you turning the pages late into the hours. It details King's journey to becoming a published author, as well as his battle with substance abuse. All the humour, heartbreak, and hardship shine through to inspire anyone who is unlucky enough to want to write. The second part contains the truth about the craft. The work, sacrifice, and the suggestion that writing is something you just might *not* be able to do. In addition, it contains helpful sections pertaining to building good writing habits, things to avoid, exercises, etc. There are some things I don't agree with, such as avoiding adverbs if possible, but it takes nothing away. The information in this part of the book is something you'll be hard pressed to find anywhere else. To some, it'll be ugly, to those who really do want to write, it'll be comforting to know that everyone doing it is fighting the same battle. The third part is King's view on his close brush with death and how it's affected his life. The two "And Furthermore" sections at the end contain a fully corrected piece of fiction that is an invaluable lesson, and a recommended reading list. If you want to be a writer, buy this book. Whether you read King's work or not.
"On Writing" is divided into two sections. The first comprises a series of essays, relating everything from his childhood to the publication of Carrie. This is entertaining writing within and of itself, and really shows King's ability to engage a reader. In the second section King tells us what he's learned in a lifetime of being one of the world's top writers. This is what you're paying your money for. Unlike the many other books of this sort I've read, "On Writing" doesn't pull any punches and isn't afraid to state it plainly. King has something that most other instructional writer's don't have - about 8 zillion sales to back up anything he writes - and therefore isn't afraid to tell us that "the road to hell is paved with adverbs" and "it's impossible to make a competent writer out of a bad one." There are several examples given of both good and bad writing, laced with King's observations on many of the authors he has read over the years. I can't recommend "On Writing" high enough. This line alone was worth the price of the book - "...You must not come lightly to the page..." - and it's only a fraction of the wisdom you're sure to encounter. ... Read more | |
| 19. 1,000 Recordings to Hear Before You Die (1,000 Before You Die) by Tom Moon | |
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list price: $19.95 -- our price: $13.57 (price subject to change: see help) Isbn: 076113963X Publisher: Workman Publishing Company Sales Rank: 13337 Average Customer Review: US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
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Editorial Review
Reviews
Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?) "1,000 Recordings To Hear Before You Die" represents a challenge Martin Landau and the IMF would love: "How do you present a mere 1,000 musical recordings across all major genres, across an entire century, and sufficiently global as to be credible while not esoteric?"
Put shorter, "Who made YOU the judge? And why are you such a snob?" There are no upsides to undertaking such a project for the arbiters of musical taste. While I was duly impressed with Tom Moon's boldness, I was fully prepared to gut him for his shortcomings in selecting these "essential" recordings. First, the boring stuff: The book is sorted alphabetically by artist. This presents some difficulty for, say, opera composers, as a given performance of "Madame Butterfly" might be under the composer or the artist. Fortunately, indexes refer to both. Unfortunately, whomever compiled the index (probably that Microsoft Word fella) didn't check for relevance---when I look up Beethoven's 9th Symphony, it takes me to a parenthetical reference to it (main subject: the "Missa Solemnis"), the page where it's truly discussed is not in the index. As a reference book, this poses some trouble. As a skimmer, it poses none. Now, let's get to the content. Many, many genres are represented here. Classical music and opera are given due prominence; country, metal, and Southern Rock are an afterthought; folk is way overrepresented; blues, rap, world, disco, and pop are about right. I'd say this compilation reflects the usual Baby Boomer view of the world of music leavened by a bit of "Empire Records" snobbery. So how'd the artist and recording selection by genre fare? Quite well, surprisingly. Since this is a target-rich environment for the snide, let me praise Caesar before we bury him. I tested content by looking up some movers and shakers in genres I'm fairly knowledgeable about. Alternative: The Pixies - "Doolittle" Okay, that means Moon isn't a fool. You HAVE to include The Pixies, and "Doolittle" was their biggest and most influential album. Blues: Stevie Ray Vaughan and Double Trouble - "The Sky Is Crying" The best blues guitarist yet produced must be included, but what about this pick? It's quite informed. Though a posthumous release, "The Sky Is Crying" is my favorite SRV LP and contains his best instrumental track (his blazing cover of Hendrix' "Little Wing") as well as the deeply affecting acoustic song "Life By the Drop". The title song was an instant classic and the revised take of "Empty Arms" corrected an awful production decision on an earlier album. I've got to admit---it's a helluva pick. Hard Rock - AC/DC - "Back in Black" Missed opportunity here. As seminal as this album was, its immediate predecessor "Highway To Hell" dwarfs it. Doomed lead singer Bon Scott's finest hour surpasses Brian Johnson's clutch performance in the wake of tragedy. Grunge - Mother Love Bone - "Apple" Moon's got some grunge cred. This was the album which straddled the glam and grunge eras and gave birth to the sludgy sound of the 90s, for good and ill. Out of it and lead singer Andrew Young's heroin O.D. came Pearl Jam, Soundgarden, and all of their imitators. Nice pick. Blues - Muddy Waters - "At Newport 1960" This is my favorite album from the Chicago blues master, the man who invented the modern blues combo. Nice pick. Metal - Metallica - "Master of Puppets" Your little sister would pick "The Black Album" of course, but it was "Master of Puppets" which your cassette player melted down over. Nice pick. Opera - Verdi - "Aida" featuring Leontyne Price I simply cannot argue with this choice. Verdi's the master of opera, "Aida" in my opinion is his finest, and this 1962 recording is my favorite recording of it. Nice pick, and stop raiding my music library! There are some quibbles: 1. No Iron Maiden? 2. Britney Spears "Toxic" isn't a recording Kevin Federline needs to listen to before he dies, much less the rest of us. 3. No Dean Martin? 4. The Beatles more essential than Beethoven? (6 albums to 5) But given the monumental task of pleasing casual listeners and outright nose-raisers across such a spectrum of music, these are minor quibbles indeed. All in all, a remarkable reference, and one worth building some iTunes playlists from --- well, would you look at that: at the rear of the book are suggestions for just such playlists! A worthy addition to the audiophile or audiophobe's library.
Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?) Coming late to the review party on this book, I will not analyze structure and organization, for others have aptly covered those points. I am impressed that anyone could take on such a monumental project and do as apparently well as he has. kudos.
To make my biases clear from the outset, though, it's worth noting that my areas of special interest and musical knowledge are classic rock (some pop) and classical music (including opera). This makes my perspective perhaps a little different from others, and from the author's, because he admits up front that his weaknesses are classical and opera. While I can't say I either totally agree with his choices (or recordings of the pieces he chooses), there's really nothing "wrong" with his selections in these areas that I've found -- they're mostly rather "safe" choices that a new listener can't go wrong with, though many of the standards I looked up were very old (granted, to a skilled listener, many OLD recordings are the BEST recordings), but with old tech, you don't get the clearest production of sound and detail that a new listener would obtain from a newer (DDD) recording. But there are exceptions to that rule. I was quite surprised that he chose Zinman and the Zurich Tonhalle's recording of the 9 Beethoven Symphonies -- Beethoven: The Nine Symphonies. This is a VERY fine recording, but it's of a new edition ("Barenreiter") that still has some critics unconvinced. It's a great recording, and I own it, but there are so many other cycles of Beethoven's Symphonies that have been around for decades and have passed the test of time. While a great recording of a great NEW edition, the Zinman/Zurich cycle is something of a blip in the author's otherwise rule of "safe" and "big name" recordings for classical. Just not the first Beethoven cycle I'd foist upon a potentially new Beethoven convert. The logic escapes me. One really interesting feature he includes with each choice is a "Next Stop" recommendation of what to try next if you like this work. I find this to be a brilliant idea: sometimes, though, I fail to see the connections, such as going from Handel's _Messiah_ to Bach's _St. Matthew Passion_ (o.k. so far!) and then to Mahler's Sym. 2. Huh? While the Mahler is one of my favorite pieces, I don't understand the multi-century jump, and Mahler's 2nd didn't even make his list of 1000 works (a point I take great issue with). Again, huh? I'm more encouraged by his classic rock picks. Again, while I don't always agree on what album by which artist, he almost always picks a safe choice that will at least get listeners interested in that particular artist. Good work here. For pop, I'm a bit lost. One, I'm not up on the latest pop, so it's a bit hard for me to evaluate his choices in this genre, but picking a Britney Spears CD over Billy Joel's entire oeuvre is completely beyond my comprehension. Lastly, what I'm most looking forward to (and this is why I gave the book 4, rather than 3, stars) is that the author seems to be on the right track (pardon the pun) with his jazz selections, at least as far as I can discern from others' reviews, and that is my note of hopefulness in getting this book because I've been dying for years to expand my Jazz horizons, and this may be just the guide to help me there. One note of caution on that subject - Lionel Hampton hasn't been only a remarkable jazz artist in his own right, but he COMPLETELY revolutionized the perception and inclusion of an entire instrument - the vibraphone - in Jazz ensemble, and solo, usage. So why doesn't he even merit a single entry into the 1000? All he gets is a peripheral mention of a non-included album he did with Stan Getz. Thus, I'm hopeful... yet wary.....
Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?) This book aims at the music lover curious about where to go for the best in genres outside the one's comfort zone. As a reader of classical music review books since the early Penguin days, I have no idea where to start with rock or blues or jazz, for example. I can't judge how Moon stacks up in the estimation of enthusiasts in those fields. In the classical world, he does a decent job, with the help of specialists outside his experience. As a limited guide to standard recordings of the greatest hits, it's fine, espeically for readers with a shorter attention span who hesitate to take on Penguin, the All Music Guide to Classical Music, or the Third Ear Classical Music guidebooks. At least he has a good index, something which Penguin lacks.
Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?) I gave this book four stars because while I have serious issues with the way the book is organized and the small type/font used, the book does list 1000 recordings and talks about each one in an effective manner.
Writing a book like this is an almost impossible task. After actually deciding on 1000 recordings to include in the book the author has to then explain why he picked the recordings. He does a good job in explaining what made each recording so great and why his readers should want to listen to the recording. After discussing each recording the author then lists the Genre, Date Released, Key Tracks, Catalogue Choice (which lists one or more additional recordings by the artist), Next Stop (which lists a similar artist) and After That (which references a recording less directly related to the one listed.) This is a nice formula and makes for interesting reading. The fact that the listings for the recordings are done so well makes the way they are listed all the more frustrating. The recordings are listed alphabetically by artist. This makes for good reading if you want to look up a particular artist and see whether you agree with the recording the author chose or if you want to see which artists are included or excluded. It makes it very hard if you want to learn about recordings in a particular genre. For instance I like Jazz. I am interested in listening to someone new to me. Let's say I want to see which Jazz recordings the author thought were the best and read about them so I can go out and buy a new cd. In order to do this I would have to: 1. Page through the book and stop at the selections that talk about a Jazz recording; 2. Look up Jazz musicians I already know and see whom the author thinks is similar; or, 3. Go to the end of the selections where there is a "Musical Genres Index" on page 894 which breaks the music into Blues, Classical, Country, Electronica, Folk, Gospel, Hip-hop, Jazz, Musicals, Pop, R&B, Rock, Vocals and World. Within these genres the artists are listed alphabetically. While option number three is the best option, I would have to mark the page where the Jazz category starts, look up an artist, go find the artist in the book and then, when I was done reading, go to the back of the book and start the process all over again and again and again. It would have been so much simpler to include the recordings by category in the first place so a reader could learn about artists who recorded the same type of music by just turning a page. The author also includes an Occasion index, a Classical and Opera Performers Index and a General Index. The indexes are a great addition but force a person to go back and forth way too much. It would have been so much more useful to have the recordings listed by category. My other complaint is the type size and or font. The first three sentences of each recording (as well as the introduction) have type the size of what I would expect in a paperback. Then for the rest of the recording description the type seems to get gets smaller and the spacing between sentences smaller as well. I am not an expert on type size or spacing so I can't tell if the font is different or if the type size is made a bit smaller (which is my guess) but in either case it is hard to read. In order to list 1000 recoding in any detail in one book that can be carried around I know type size is an issue. Yet the book measures 7.5 by 5 inches and is about two inches thick. It is the size of a slightly large paperback. The book could have been made bigger or thicker in order to have larger type. I don't wear reading glasses and my eyes have grown weaker with age but the type is much smaller than most books or any newspapers I have read. The smaller type makes this more of a chore for me. I do read a lot so I rarely have this problem. I commend the author and publisher for creating this book. I agree with some of the choices and disagree with others. You expect this in this type of a book. Yet, the book would have been so much better if it listed the recordings by genre and had bigger type.
Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?) Something in me WANTED to give this book a mediocre rating--its part of a "franchise" of sorts (see 1000 Places to See Before You Die G), and generally I abhor glib and messy little collections of "the best" of whatever.
This book is different. Trust me, if you are a connoisseur of any musical genre, you will not be able to put this book down. It is, above all, the little meaty and nourishing and satisfying turns of speech that author Tom Moon uses in his entries which draws one in again and again. Examples: (Regarding the Beatles' "Abbey Road") "A parade of discards and song frangments waiting to be finished, it presents the Beatles cleaning out the cupboards, and tossing anything once deemed workable ... into one last meal;" (regarding Mahler's Symphony No. 4) "When... first issued ... some scholars derided conductor Willem Mengelberg's elastic, shape-shifting interpretation;" (regarding Procol Harem's "A Whiter Shade of Pale") "Brian Wilson thought he was hearing the music to his own funeral when it was playing." Fantastic writing, folks! This is one awesome book not only for casual browsing, but also true insight into an amazing range of musical genres. Some other minor brownie points and/or beefs: 1. Well, everyone will find some things to quibble over. For me there are glaring omissions (e.g. there is nothing by Coldplay, the Moody Blues or Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young). The "country" genre listings seem a little weak. Moon also seems to love a lot of early 20th century mono recordings of classical pieces. But this is really nitpicking. 2. I'm still not sure about the alphabetical organization scheme. Genre groupings make more sense, although there are problems with that too. In the end, there are serendipitous juxtapositions which make the browsing all the more satisfying (e.g., blues artist John Lee Hooker faces the page with Gustav Holst--Fatboy Slim next to Faure was also a hoot). Ultimately the alpha listings became no-problemo when I discovered the indexes in the back--by genre, geophraphy, you name it. 3. My favorite index is a kind of collection of super playlists called "Occasions Index", with titles such as "Get the Party Started," "Romance Enhancers," "Headphone Journey," "Superman's Earbuds," etc., etc. The deeper I burrowed into this fat little book the more impressed and hooked I became.
Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?) I have to disagree with the Gentlemen who thinks this book should have been broken up by Genre. As a reference book it is easy to find who you're looking for when it is in alphabetical order. If you look in the back of the book you will see the different Genres with the page numbers of each song from each genre, so if you are in the mood for "Blues" just look in the back of the book.
This would be a great book for a classroom, for people who want to know more about music, and for anyone who loves music and would like to add to their collection. If I were a music teacher I would use this book in class. It's sort of like a "travel guide for music", taking you all over to the best places and giving you a "feeling" for each one. It is clear to see that Tom is an avid music lover and listener, and his viewpoint makes you want to hear what he has described- getting the most out of the music as possible. He is very passionate about getting the "mood" across to the reader. Mr. Moon did an excellent job of PACKing information and history about each artist. That was not easy to do!! He chose the best of the best. Even though music is in the eye of the beholder, for me his choices are outstanding . I would certainly buy this book again and consider it a valuable tool! Because music HAS TO BE HEARD to enjoy, I have been having a ball using this book with pandoraradio.com. (No I don't work for them and it is free) Pandora is a genome music project where it (they) will build a "radio station" for you based on a particular artist or song name. For instance, I wanted to hear what "Bebel Gilberto" (from the book) sounded like, so I went to Pandora and created a "Bebel Gilberto" station. For that station, "Bebel Gilberto", pandora will play some of her songs along with other artists that have a similar style and sound to hers. It tends to scout out that particular artist's most popular songs- I have found, and play them. For example, the first song that was selected by Pandora for "Bebel Gilberto" station was "Tanto Tempo", which is the same song featured in "1000 Recordings.." Pandora will play one of her songs about every 4 or 5 songs that it chooses, with similar songs in between. Or you can build a station on the "name" of a song. It is a great way to actually HEAR some of the artists in this book, and also enjoy listening to great "stations" which are free. Not all of the artists in this book are available on Pandora but most of them are- so far as I can find. I just hook my computer up to my stereo and play away. You can go to itunes from the site and purchase each song that you like. So this book rules for using the internet to build your music collection. Try to hear the songs he mentions then just buy the ones you fancy from itunes. I love all kinds of music other than hard rock-heavy metal type stuff so it is a real treat for me to have this info at my fingertips. I can't say the book would mean much to me if I didn't try to hear the music. Music is like food for me,...I like to eat all different kinds from all around the world, depending on what kind of mood I'm in, and this book is like a menu in a fabulous restaurant. I give this book A+. Thanks Tom for all your hard work!!
Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?) I've always considered my musical tastes to be rather broad, but I don't hold a candle to Tom Moon. His interesting (and thick) book "1,000 Recordings To Hear Before You Die" is far more than just another superfluous list of the "greatest songs of all time." Granted, musical taste is individual and personal, and not everyone will agree with every choice he's made, but there's plenty of variety, from pop and rock to classical and opera, from R & B and Hip Hop to Jazz and Musicals, and everything in between. He's even included lots of selections from around the world that will please the international listener.
I like the format of the book with the music listed alphabetically by artist or composer instead of ranked or grouped by genre, encouraging the reader to broaden their listening selections (there is a listing by genre in the back). Each entry, which is more often than not for a whole album, explains *why* he chose it and what he believes makes it worth hearing. My only complaint was with the format of each block of text, where three lines stretch across the page before switching to 2 columns - it gets a little confusing when you start the beginning of the second column. With each recording he includes notable other recordings from the same artist and also choices from similar artists. There's even a listing at the back that includes the works that didn't make the final 1000, but were close. And many readers will find the "occasions indexes" from the back of the book to be interesting, such as "romance enhancers," "play this for the kids," and "lazy sunday morning," among others. Honestly, I was a bit skeptical, expecting just another compilation of songs, some I would agree or disagree with and most I would care less about. But reading his justifications made me want to give some songs and artists a second listen, or find others I'd never heard before. And I found myself not even feeling offended that many of my favorites didn't make his cut. While I'm not sure I'd agree with or even appreciate everything he's included, it's an incredible listing that is sure to broaden your musical horizons.
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| 20. The Book in the Renaissance by Prof. Andrew Pettegree | |
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list price: $40.00 -- our price: $26.40 (price subject to change: see help) Isbn: 030011009X Publisher: Yale University Press Sales Rank: 7895 Average Customer Review: US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
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