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Book reviews for "Lindsay,_David" sorted by average review score:

Going Mad in Hollywood: And Life with Lindsay Anderson
Published in Hardcover by A. Deutsch (1996)
Author: David Sherwin
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Diary of a Mad Screenwriter
This book can be described by that old chestnut: "breezy." It's a diary of David Sherwin's 35 years in the screenwriting business (If..., O, Lucky Man, and Britannia Hospital) and as all diaries, it seems that it was harder to edit than to write and luckily, even easier to read.

If you're involved in the creative process (and who isn't now-a- days) you'll probably enjoy reading how tough it is to make a living in the film business, especially if you're manic-depressive, alcoholic, difficult to work with, and insist on living in the UK when the big money is in Los Angeles

Add an extra two stars if you worship Lindsay Anderson.


Mayflower Bastard: A Stranger Among the Pilgrims
Published in Hardcover by Thomas Dunne Books (01 November, 2002)
Author: David Lindsay
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Unreadable
My review must be tempered by my inability to finish this work. I simply could not bear to keep reading it. The writing style changes constantly but at no point is it good. It is characterized by awkward figures of speech, flowery stylistics, unclear point of view and unfathomable structure. One cannot even tell if, or at what point, the work is historically based. It reads at points like bad James Joyce. I was disappointed, as I was intrigued by the idea of a fictionalized account of an early Plymouth settler.

Too much supposition
MAYFLOWER BASTARD is riveting at first. The back story involving Richard More's parents reads like a gothic novel. Theirs was an arranged marriage that quickly unraveled with Samuel, Richard's father, living in London, and his mother, Katherine, carrying on an affair with another man, resulting in four bastard children. Richard More's father is such a snake it's hard to believe people like him actually exist. When his wife is too blatant in her affair, he divorces her and has their illegitimate children deported to America on the Mayflower. Richard is assigned to William Brewster the temporary minister at Plymouth Colony. Richard is pretty much treated like a servant and the Stranger (non Puritan) that he is and his brothers and sisters die.
Apparently Samuel's arrangement with Brewster was rather like that of an indentured servant. After seven years, Brewster's obligation was fulfilled. Richard then hooks up with Richard Hollingsworth, a shipwright whose daughter Christian he marries. They ultimately have seven children together. Richard becomes a sea captain and in the process takes another wife in England, an offense which could have gotten him hanged since the penalty for bigamy was death.
Richard More lived to be an old man and was known among the Puritans as one of the Ancient Ones. He was around at the beginning of the colony and was there for the Salem Witch trials. He was not hanged for being a witch but he did become embroiled in politic intrigue and was found guilty of adultery and required to wear a scarlet A, just like Hester Prynne.
Author David Lindsay, a descendant of Richard More, did extensive research on his subject, but the book is replete with supposition which cheapens his effort. Lindsay set out to prove Richard a rogue, but in the end he finds enough to like about him to determine that he was human just like the rest of us.
Lindsay has an annoying style of writing, addressing another character in the book. I got the impression this was supposed to be the person who accused Richard of adultery but I'm not really sure. I wasn't interested enough to read over the beginning to find out. History lovers will like the book. The fact that there was such a character as Richard More among the sanctimonious Pilgrims is enough of a hook.

Real People on the Mayflower
More often than not when people hear the word "Mayflower", a certain attitude surfaces in conversation. To those who bristle with ill disguised anger at the thought of someone else being a descendant of a First Comer, let him or her read this work. If another person gushes with adoration at the same thought, let him or her read the same. The fact is these First Comers were regular people who took a major risk in starting life anew in a place no one knew anything about. One may as well be a First Comer at Mars Colony #1. The major difference being that at present we know more about Mars than these Mayflower ventures knew about any part of the New World let alone the inhospitable coast of 17th century New England.

This is the story of a five year old boy who was all but literally cast into the arms of the pilgrims and lived and grew up in earliest New England.It is an interesting read and throws light on various aspects of life in New England, the Plimoth Colony and the town of Salem in particular. Richard More arrived at Plimoth in 1620 and lived there until very late in the 17th century (1696). He was not only a First Comer but a Long Liver as well. He was regarded as being very ancient and a representative of Ancient Times. The story of the Salem Witch Trials is dealt with and not pawed over in morbid fascination.

This was an interesting and useful read. I recomment it.


Improve and Modify Ford Fiesta (Foulis Motoring Book)
Published in Hardcover by Haynes Publishing (1990)
Authors: Lindsay Porter, Dave Pollard, and David Pollard
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Non-Technical, covers Mk 2 Fiesta only.
Covers very little that the Haynes Fiesta repair manual does not. Includes installation procedures for difficult items like "Baby Seats", "High Flow Air Filters" and fitting new "Struts and Shocks".

Dave Burroughs


Establishing Self-Access : From Theory to Practice
Published in Paperback by Cambridge University Press (1999)
Authors: David Gardner and Lindsay Miller
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Rock N' Roll Nuremberg
Published in Paperback by Pulpless.Com (1999)
Author: David T. Lindsay
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Ane Satyre of the Thrie Estaitis (Canongate Classics, 18)
Published in Paperback by Canongate Pub Ltd (1998)
Authors: David, Sir Lindsay and Roderick Lyall
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The Beggar's Opera and Other Eighteenth Century Plays (Everyman
Published in Paperback by Everyman Paperback Classics ()
Authors: John Gay and David W. Lindsay
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Best Loved Garden Plants
Published in Hardcover by Smithmark Publishing (1996)
Authors: David Myers, Lance Hattatt, Lindsay Bousfield, and Sue Norman
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Black Gold, Red Death
Published in Paperback by Fawcett Books (1991)
Authors: David Lindsey and David L. Lindsay
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Blake: Songs of Innocence and Experience (Critics Debate)
Published in Hardcover by Prometheus Books (1989)
Author: David W. Lindsay
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