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Highly recommended.
Much to my amazement, I discovered that this book, which the publisher has unembarrassingly labeled "the definitive biography of America's First Billionaire," was not exaggerating. The story that unfolds here is a real pageturner...one of a life that hit upon politics, Hollywood, aviation, science, and parental neglect of the most extreme variety. What makes this book work as well as it does is the ability of the writer, Richard Hack (of whom I know nothing but intend to read more), has built the plot as if writing a novel. His words are lush with emotion and frustration, as the reader is brought along as an innocent observer of an incredible life story. It took a special talent to make material that has been attempted to be told elsewhere new and exciting. "Hughes" is both well researched and beautifully written. I cannot recommend it highly enough to men, women and teenagers.
So I would nominate George Clooney to take this role to the big screen. There are remarkable similarities in their looks, and the public would just eat up this tale. Here we have a man who was lucky enough to inherit a big fortune early in life. But he didn't just sit on his money. He re-invested a lot of it into other industries, such as movies and airplanes. His resources greatly advanced the art of aviation in it's time, and his movie marketing greatly enhanced Jane Russell's breasts in their time. He was a hands-on, get involved manager who flew test planes himself, setting many speed records.
This dashing lifestyle also made him the darling of Hollywood. His string of glamorous conquests was a who's who of movie actresses, from budding starlets to major icons. He literally had the world in his hand for awhile.
Alas, something happens to people when they gain so much power that there are very few people or institutions that can tell them "No". We've seen this in the last 100 years with characters such as Hitler, J. Edgar Hoover, Elvis, and Michael Jackson. They get a few successes, and think they are infallable. This leads to bad decisions in life that either deteriorate them, or leave a mess for those that surround them. They also withdraw, always mentally, sometimes physically, from the world around them, as if they were surrounding the wagons to protect them from that world.
This also happened to Howard Hughes. We see early signs of where he's going when he was merely a ruthless young business man. The first thing he did upon inheriting part of a company was to immediately buy out all the other inheritors to give him total control. Holidays such as Thanksgiving and Christmas mean nothing to him, and he calls upon his associates to work on these days to get more done. Marriage had it's uses, but none of them ever involved love.
So we get to see one side, which is this dashing young millionaire who becomes America's first billionaire. We see him as he lands at crowded airports after setting yet another air speed record. We see him with every hot babe on the silver screen, and a lot more hoping to get there. America even liked him thumbing his nose at the government when he felt they were digging into his private life too much. This would all have to be portrayed.
But we would need a director like Martin Scorsese to turn this into a "Raging Bull" type of hell. Yes, he had the women, but the feedback from them seemed to indicate a very selfish lover who often couldn't produce where it counts. Yes, he directed several films, but was such a control freak that the products went way over budget. And the volumes of instructions he wrote to his staff on how to guard against germs, real or imaginary, show a very disturbed mind.
And the movie would have to show how this increasingly lonely man deteriorated in his last ten-fifteen years of life. While it is true, as suspected, that his paid caretakers took advantage of his situation, and in fact sped up his demise, it is also surprising how much of his faculties remained in his later years. While he was well on his way to looking like the Walking Death he eventually became, he still had the ability to conduct a two-hour press conference to convince the world that the Irving biography was a hoax.
But the ultimate ending would have to show that all the money in the world cannot buy happiness. For the last several years of his life, he was surrounded only by people who were paid to be there. His hair, beard, and nails grew to extreme lengths. While obsessed with germs, he ended up living in putrid squallor, with jars of his own wastes stored everywhere. His body was stoked up with enough drugs to kill an average person, and he even had the remnants of five broken needs inside his arms.
This could be Oscar time for both Clooney and Scorsese if Hollywood lets them do it right.
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I have seen Jermaine Jackson on Feed the Children Informercials, defending his famous brother in interviews, and heard of his supposed conversion to Islam. I sincerely hope that by now he has dealt with his issues of abuse and womanizing, and that he is paying child support for the two sons he had with the author. I would love to see Margaret Maldonado write a revised version of this book, with updates as to whether or not things have improved between her sons and their father, as well as how she has rebuilt her own life.
Here's why I think this book is worth owning. It has a neat color picture of Alexander the Great on the cover-done by Peter Connolly now of A & E fame (you can find him on Amazon too). Hey the picture itself is worth $24.00 U.S., just to frame and hang. For miniature collectors of ancient figures or gamers the price of this book is less than it would cost you to buy a bag of figures! What good are miniatures if you do not know the proper way to use them.
Each of the 38 pages has diagrams and art work from the last century with all manner of ancient warriors. These are cleverly used to explain how the book is used as a set of rules. Rules for playing miniature war games.
Not being familiar with a lot of other such rule books (except HG. Wells Little Wars and Young's Charge, D & D, and the slow moving if not boring tournament stuff from England) I think this is an exceptional book. Not for its size but for its interesting approach and general content. Obviously the authors have spent a lot of dry research time. That's a plus for the reader. It saves the reader (especially this reader) endless hours of their own research on a usually uninteresting subject. I suppose that if you were a die hard ancient wargame buff it would inspire you to do more.
Other things about it include a well organized table of contents and what I especially like a fine working index! Not sure I have seen much of this in similar rule books.
The book follows a pattern that is clear and gets relatively to the point. I do not like to read a lot of long winded narrative explaining how to do something. First off the book tells you everything you need to have to start gaming. Then it explains how to build the armies you will require in order to entertain yourself via the thoroughly modern manipulation of military miniatures of the ancient period.
Each section follows the game outline as you go. You easily learn all that manipulation stuff. It is not in the King's English. It is written in plain old American. Common yes. Inspiring perhaps. Clear? Yes it is.
Attempting to see if the ideas for the basic manipulation of miniatures actually worked as explained, to my surprise it did work. I did cheat a little. I used pieces of paper cut to recommended unit sizes instead of actually painting up all the miniatures. I am sure we did some things wrong but we were pretty sure we got things right. Well we knew we were having a lot of fun doing it.
This book can be a source of great interaction with others too. The more we played the more we got into the period stuff on our own. In a way the book became a tool. I used all that boring basic statics stuff I studied in high school and later college. It took a bit of time to figure out that a matrix is not just a movie thing. It can also be a chart with numbers used in a very fast play game system. We were confident enough after 5 or more games (using the book) to stick just with the end page which has a quick reference sheet. Friends that have started joining the games we put on were doing fine by turn 2 or 3 without any previous experience.
When purchasing the book I looked long and hard at the back cover. It lists all the things the book does. I did laugh a little. Sure enough after getting the book it does indeed do the things it says it does and in record time. Perhaps you can tell a lot about a book by its cover after all.
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