Used price: $10.89
Collectible price: $12.99
Buy one from zShops for: $13.37
Robert David Jaffee manages to combine modified stream-of-consciousness narrative with a macho slugger sensibility.
His unwavering probe delves deep into the empty spaces left in the lives of two men who sacrifice all for the game.
Weak men will thrill; strong men will weep.
Don't miss it!
The book expands beyond the struggles of this ballplayer to include the trauma taking place in a racially torn New York City at the time of the Bensonhurst case.
Very gritty look at New York and poignant look at the men whose lives revolve around baseball.
List price: $16.00 (that's 30% off!)
Used price: $10.95
Buy one from zShops for: $7.88
Used price: $2.00
Collectible price: $3.16
Buy one from zShops for: $2.99
Used price: $7.00
Collectible price: $12.71
Buy one from zShops for: $8.99
Used price: $1.80
Collectible price: $4.20
Buy one from zShops for: $6.90
Not that Jernigan is alone in his life of horror. There's a cast of characters that are barely functioning. Of course, Jernigan cannot stand them. He's going to do things his way and it's a way so unimaginable yet possible, it leaves you riveted.
Used price: $5.04
Collectible price: $10.59
After this, read Quest for Lost Heros strait after.
List price: $20.00 (that's 30% off!)
Used price: $5.98
Buy one from zShops for: $7.98
That said, there are still problems with the book that prevent it from being a general history of the Peninsular War. The book focuses too much on the operations of military formations. Gates describes in detail what armies, corps, divisions, brigades, and battalions do. However, very little insight is provided to what soldiers were experiencing on the ground. Equally, the experiences of the Spanish and Portuguese people, who lived with 8 years of bitter war, are dealt with very briefly. Moreover, Gates writes very little on the guerrilla campaign, which was a major factor in the French defeat.
I do not mean to be overly critical. I enjoyed this book greatly. It is the best book out on the Peninsular War. Nevertheless, there is still no general book that covers the political, military, and social aspects of the Peninsular War.
Unlike most British Peninsular authors Gates follows in the footsteps of Oman and gives a balanced objective account giving credit to both the conventional and irregular Spanish forces, and does a masterful job of dealing with the French as well. I find, happily, that he eschews the usual hero-worship of Wellington and does find the Iron Duke human after all (particularly some of his ill-advised sieges). He accompanies his solid research with a useful chronology, some short biographical details, and some very good order of battle work. The work is marred by execrable maps (perhaps drawn by a child) and the all too often use of "sullen." I am happy to see that it's coming soon to paperback. I was most pleased to see information on the little-known Marshal Suchet and his long-suffering Army of Aragon. Buy it & enjoy it!
Used price: $6.95
Me, I got my illness well under control, with modern medication long ago (if only Ross had had access to today's drugs!) When sanity gets a little dull, there's much stimulation to be had from the story of Sphere. The tragic ending is a hefty price to pay for the wild ride, but I pay it at least twice a year.
I dearly hope Ross would be comforted to know: His book is not only educational, but FUN! Rest in peace, Sphere!
Used price: $3.40
Collectible price: $7.20
Buy one from zShops for: $4.95
Every story in this book has these in common -- overly-analytical people, unhappy and internal, trapped in their heads and the domestic situation that they pretend to have chosen.
Sound boring? Could have been and might still be to you, but this Gates feller riffs with so many personas, each dealing with these same issues in similar ways, people going out of control and trying to stay in control, it's a testament to his skill has a writer that Gates keeps us engaged. Reminded me of a jazz musician riffing on a standard (a metaphor that would not be out of place in one of these stories, i'm just warning you) if you could argue that the standard was written by john cheever (please don't say updike).
The slow build, the welter of observational detail that pulls you into these seemingly restrained parlor dramas that are suddenly upset by the tinest details, the capturing of the circular internal dialogues -- all make a captivating read. The old cliche about not being able to put it down--it's true of this book. While the first story sets the tone adequately enough, my favorite stories were Star Baby, Vigil, the Intruder, and Saturn. These felt finished and therefore induced some relief -- the ones that ended ambigously merely felt unfinished, but still left this reader with that sense of unease, claustrophobia, underlying lusts, passions and secrets that haunt the NPR cohort. So did the finished ones, now that I think of it...
My only reservation is less about the book but about the world that Gates has captured: has the intellegentsia in this country all become bergmanites, or is it just that Gates's abilites as a writer allow the uselessly educated, neurotic class in the usa a sheen of sexy tragedy?
List price: $25.00 (that's 76% off!)
However one of the interesting ironies of the business press is that journalists confuse themselves with their subjects. (I know of very few who went from covering a beat to running a company.) Unfortunately the more famous the publication you write for, the less you seem to remember that. This book simply fails when Banks puts on this business analyst hat. Luckily when you hear the scraping of the soapbox those pages are few and can be easily skimmed.
If you're interested in an internal history of Microsoft during the browser wars, buy this book.
Set in New York during a period of racial strife, it depicts the squalor and majesty of the city in unforgettable prose. It is the story of dreams unfulfilled, but not forgotten. It reminds the reader of his mortality and the longing and fears and regrets he shares with others. It is about overcoming fear through concentration on an elusive, but attainable goal.
It is a primer on baseball for the novice and an exciting read for the knowledgable fan. The last few chapters are baseball at its best. This is a very good book.