Saturday, June 29, 2019

The Secret Life Of Walter Winchell – Lyle Stuart, 1953 ★½

Takes One to Know One

What is it like to witness one of history’s most lurid practitioners of below-the-belt gossip-mongering getting served with the same treatment?

Like Walter Winchell, the target of our book, this 1953 hit job is brassy, bitchy, and hard to put down. Once you do, alas, it’s easy to forget.

Friday, June 21, 2019

Moonraker – Ian Fleming, 1955 ★★

No Nukes, No Nookie

Which makes the bigger splash in a James Bond story: A nuclear explosion or a Bond girl that just says no to sex with 007? Moonraker gives you the chance to find out.

As a reading experience, Ian Fleming delivers some marvelous prose; the early glimpses of Bond’s everyday life deepen my appreciation for the character and his world. As a novel, it is one of the weakest Fleming Bond stories; a ridiculous scheme, contrivances galore, and a sloppy, rushed ending.

Saturday, June 15, 2019

Killing Reagan – Bill O'Reilly & Martin Dugard, 2015 ★★

He Did It for Jodie

How does one write about a murdering a person where the victim, a U. S. President, lives on for a quarter-century?

If you are producing a lucrative series of books with a running title like Killing So-and-so, you find a way of tying that person’s eventual demise to the murder attempt. That is what Bill O’Reilly and Martin Dugard did in the case of Ronald Reagan, who went down in history not as a victim of an assassin’s bullet but instead Alzheimer’s disease.

Monday, June 10, 2019

Seabiscuit: An American Legend – Laura Hillenbrand, 2001 ★★★★

Somebody Bet on the Bay

First-time author Laura Hillenbrand put on a master class in popular-history writing with this improbable tale of an ungainly little red racehorse that could.

Luminously written, with deep appreciation for the culture of the racetrack and the colorful personalities that lived and died around it, Seabiscuit is the sort of history book that not only edifies and entertains but asks us to ponder how amazing a thing life can be.

Saturday, June 1, 2019

Red Rackham's Treasure – Hergé, 1943-44 ★★★

Let’s Hear It for the Deaf Man

You’ve spent the last year pursuing bad guys, getting knocked out and kidnapped, escaping, dodging an attack dog, and putting aside whatever it is you supposedly do for a living. Now it’s time to collect your reward: Some old guy who can’t make out a word you say.

At least there’s quality time on a tropical island. Look out for sharks!