Book reviews for "Fox,_Frank" sorted by average review score:
Funky Butt Blues
Published in Paperback by St Expedite Pr (July, 1996)
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Funky, but Cool
Tee Tee Peetum
Published in Paperback by Mayhaven Pub (April, 1999)
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A delightful introduction to Indian lore for little people.
Mr. King has written and illustrated a delightful short story which my grandkids (ages 4-7) absolutely love. The book serves as a wholesome introduction to the creativity of the American Indian, and parents need not be concerned that its contents will prompt bad dreams when used a bedtime story. This book will make a great Christmas gift. Rick Smith
Design of High-Performance Microprocessor Circuits
Published in Hardcover by IEEE (July, 2000)
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An exhausting collection of papers...
Maybe my expectations were set too high. I had always found it amazing that designers of those state-of-the-art microprocessors were able to squeeze out cycles times that are almost an order of magnitude faster than what I can do on an ordinary asic flow and hoped for a well structured story, which is not to much to ask such an expensive book. I should haved noticed that the authors are listed as 'editors' because a good story is not what I got. Of course, there is some organization (big deal) into different parts (technology aspects, design techniques, clocking issues, fast adders and multipliers etc.) and there are some introductory chapters written by the editors but what you get is essentially a cut-and-paste collection of papers. Papers are usually exceptionally dryly written, cramming as much information as possible in a limited space. Sometimes going in too much detail, sometimes already assuming expert knowledge, almost never hands-on practical. And thus so is this book: overwhelming, dull and highly theoretical. Impossible to read this from front to cover. The statements from the editoral review that this book "Assumes basic knowledge of digital circuit design and device operation" is gross understatement. Be prepared for hard intellectual work while reading this. At one place, for example, a opcode selection circuit is described. For me, a good way of handling this in a textbook, would be to start with a description of the context in which it is used, going to a block diagram and refining into a detailed schematic that evolves into the final solution as trade-offs for speed and area are applied. Not here: the only thing you get is the final, very obscure schematic in domino logic that requires hard labour to figure out. But even after that you can't assess its usefullness since there is no context or anything to compare with. Knowing what I know now, I wouldn't have bought this book. All topics are handled and it has probably its place on some shelves as a reference, but I would have saved a lot of money by making use of the IEEE web access subscription of my employer instead.
Mathematical Modeling With Minitab
Published in Paperback by Brooks Cole (August, 1902)
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America: A Study in Heritage - An Interdisciplinary Approach
Published in Hardcover by Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company (August, 1993)
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A Constellation for Quilters: Star Patterns for Piecing
Published in Paperback by Main Street Publishing (October, 1990)
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A Distant Storm: The Four Days' Battle of 1666: The Greatest Sea Fight of the Age of Sail
Published in Hardcover by Press of Sail Publications (January, 1996)
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God's Eye
Published in Paperback by West Chester Univ of Pennsylvania (15 December, 1999)
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Great Ships: The Battle Fleet of King Charles II
Published in Hardcover by Lawrence Verry (August, 1981)
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J. Reuben Clark, Jr.: The Public Years
Published in Hardcover by Brigham Young University Press (November, 1980)
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"Funky Butt Blues" is just such a mystery, in which author F. G. Fox imagines a recording that may or may not have been set down by Father of Jazz, Buddy Bolden. Bolden has long been acknowledged as one of the first men to actually play a primitive form of the music we now know as jazz and such luminaries as Louis Armstrong and Jelly Roll Morton claim to have heard him play. Trouble is, no one knows for sure how he sounded, as no recordings exist.
Enter Max, independent librarian, freelance cataloguer, and guy with a knack for being in the wrong place at the wrong time. Hired to catalog an eccentric rich guy's rare books and records prior to selling them, Max discovers what may be the only known recording of Bolden's music, a song that may or may not be called "Funky Butt Blues". He also, regrettably, discovers why the last librarian is no longer working there; being murdered makes it hard to report for duty.
The result is a quirky, intelligent and occasionally hilarious run through New Orleans as seen by an insider. This is especially refreshing given the spate of mysteries that claim to be set in the Big Easy but which take no greater advantage of the locale than having the characters swing by the Cafe du Monde for sugary beignets.
Fox's insider status, the quality that makes this book fascinating and compelling, may also be what hinders it most as a mystery. He writes Max from the first person and makes him opinionated and curmudgeonly. We are offered rants on topics as varied as library science and the financial quagmire that is the Louisiana SuperDome. While a pleasure to read, they do tend to take the reader out of the story an into the rant, only to be plunked unceremoniously back into the action at odd times. The effect is unsettling.
Don't get me wrong; I thoroughly enjoyed this book and have, in fact, read it twice. I'd recommend it highly to anyone who appreciates jaunty, quirky mysteries and has the ability to overlook the home-made, self-published feel of many of the non-mainstream books being published through alternate means. "Funky Butt Blues" is a joy and well-worth the extra effort it may take. If you've had it up to here with slick mysteries with no heart, or with New Orleans mysteries that read like they were set in Ontario and the author just used his "Find & Replace" feature, "Funky Butt Blues" will delight.