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Adelman's photographs depict a very young King with his family. It provides insight into his his upbringing and illustrates the foundation that culminates into the life of the great civil rights leader. It continues to depict his educational pursuits and ultimate marriage to the lovely Coretta Scott.
The books carries the reader through the voyage as a young King rises to prominence as a preacher, his continued quest for racial equality, and mainly
his persistent call for agapic love in conjunction with nonviolence. Also, shared in this tome is intimate photographs of King's time spent with his loving family and information about King's life that may not be well-known.
Although nearly 300-pages, this book capitvates the reader from cover to cover. All in all, Johnson and Adelman are to be commended for their efforts! This liteary piece is nothing short of superb!
Reviewed by Nedine Hunter
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These were called Tijuana Bibles, and also known as Eight-Pagers, Two-by-Fours, Gray-Backs, Bluesies, Jo-Jo Books, Tillie-and-Mac Books, Jiggs-and-Maggie Books, and F**k Books, this according to introduction writer Art Spiegelman.
Author Bob Adelman has collected dozens of these rare bits of cartoon history and republished them here, adding a commentary by Richard Merkin, and putting these into a quasi-historical and sociological context.
Ever wonder what Popeye looked like while having sex? What about Donald Duck and Minnie Mouse talking dirty while going at it? What did Cary Grant and Alger Hiss look like during gay love? All of this and more are here.
This book does a better job of reprinting the Tijuana Bibles than anything, but reading a bunch of them in a row gets very tedious. The introduction warns against this, as well. The drawings are often very crude, and the humor is very old, since their prime era was in the 1930's. Also, all but a few of the artists were anonymous, and the printings were not done in the exotic locales of Havana, Tijuana, or London (as the little booklets claimed), but probably in some basement with a mob type watching over the production.
This is not just a book of dirty pictures, but a very interesting look at what the author calls early sex education. While body parts are rather exaggerated, young men could look at these in the days before government and school sponsored sex ed and have a vague idea of what to do.
If you have any of these dirty little books around, then hold on to them, they are rare. If you have this overview of the history of Tijuana Bibles around, keep it away from the kids, unless they are curious about the sex life of Dick Tracy or Dagwood Bumstead. I recommend this thin book to anyone who claims to be a fan of underground comics, or erotic art and cartoons.
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That's why it's important to read the Author's Note on this book. It's almost like what would happen if you had Howard Stern write about a major league baseball team. "'Shocking' may be too mild an adjective for it" wrote the Pittsburgh Press when this book first hit the shelf.
And why not? Out of LF has great baseball subject matter. It was written in the season following the death of Roberto Clemente, and the feel of his absence is felt on every page of the book, as well as the standings for the '73 Bucs. The temporary demise of a great team, and Stargell doing everything he can to keep his slumping teammates in the pennant race until the very last day of the season. A managerial firing, the mysterious demise of a star player (Steve Blass) and the birth of a future star (Dave Parker).
But this book is not about on field action. It is about how rowdy, how spirited, how lecherous, and how profane a baseball team of the 1970's could be. The Pittsburgh Pirates of that era had the reputation of being the loosest and loudest of big league clubs, and this book only helps fuel the fire of that reputation.
Some of the most shocking stories of the book come from a five page diatribe from a baseball Annie named Gayle who makes Annie Savoy look like a nun. But when you see her picture; well, let's just say that if her stories are true there were a large number of major league baseball players who were slumming in 1973. Now, like any book of this nature, the reader must wonder how many of the stories are true, and how many are sensationalism or taken out of context. The Author's note at the beginning of the book also does little to establish credibility.
Still, like Ball Four before it, Out of LF shows that baseball players are human beings, and certainly not immune to temptation. And perhaps the highlight of the book is not the look in to a pivitol time in Pirates history, nor the shocking baseball stories. It is Dock Ellis' hilarious rant and theory that the Bible and Star Spangled Banner were written by the same person (p. 187)!