Related Subjects: Author Index
Book reviews for "Lindsey,_Jim" sorted by average review score:

Goober in a Nutshell
Published in Paperback by Avon Books (Pap Trd) (1995)
Authors: George Lindsey, Ken Beck, and Jim Clark
Amazon base price: $10.00
Used price: $1.19
Collectible price: $2.12
Buy one from zShops for: $4.00
Average review score:

Highly Entertaining
A long-time admirer of George Lindsey the actor, I am now also an admirer of Mr. Lindsey as an author and, more importantly, as a fine human being. Although some of the details of his early life were quite sad, this story is an affirmation of the value of determination, hard work, and talent. Once the reader has started, it is hard to stop. The narrative flows nicely, and provides the reader with a wealth of interesting information and insights from a man who has made generations laugh. Thank you, Mr. Lindsey - Well done!

George Lindsey tells it like it is, baby!
This is the fourth book I have read on the subject of The Andy Griffith Show... Mr George Lindsey portrayed the character of "Goober" on this show and it's spin-off Mayberry RFD, and also on Hee-Haw. Not many people know that Mr. Lindsey was a student at the American Theatre Wing, attending on the GI Bill, and was trained in the Stanislavski Method of acting. His life story in this book is at once compelling and inspiring, for he truly is a student from the "school of hard knocks". Anyone wanting to know what it was like for a struggling actor starting out in the 50's trying to break into show business, and all the ups and downs of fame that comes with an actor's life, will be fascinated. He tells us in detail about all the people he has known, and experiences--both good and bad, with warmth and a sly sense of humor! He tells some crazy stories about himself that may raise a few eyebrows, but his candor is refreshingly honest in this day and age. I now have a new respect for Mr. Lindsey, and his often misunderstood character, the loveable Goober Pyle. You will too after reading this book!

Goober Rules!! Great Book!!Should Be on Video!!
Besides of this book having alot of factual data about the reknowned"Andy Griffith Show"and "HEE HAW" .There's also imformation about George Lindsey who portrayed Goober on that show who wasn't quite as popular as Barney Fife but when Don Knott's left the show,I think Goober(George Lindsey)contributed greatly to help keep the show popular until the series ended.Both Andy Griffith and Don Knotts have video biographies about their life and rich careers.I would like to see in the future that both superb actors George Lindsey(Goober) and Jim Nabors(Gomer) will someday deservingly have video biographies.


Lord Jim
Published in Mass Market Paperback by Bantam Classic and Loveswept (1995)
Authors: Joseph Conrad and Lindsey
Amazon base price: $4.95
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $5.25
Buy one from zShops for: $2.92
Average review score:

Can we escape our past ?
This is the central question explored by Conrad in Lord Jim. Jim is ultimately a character who inspires our sympathy due to his inability to find reconcilliation for his one tragic moment of weakness. In him we find a person of tremendous potential that remains unrealized as the tragic circumstances of his abandoning his post aboard the Patna continually haunt him and the associated guilt drives him to isolation.
Conrad successfully explores the concepts of bravery, cowardice,guilt and the alternative destinies that an individual may be driven to by these qualities.
The narrative can be a bit confusing at times as Marlowe relates the tale by recalling his encounters with Jim. The book reminded very much of Somerset Maugham's THE RAZOR"S EDGE" in style. However I believe that Maugham did a much better job of incorporating the narrator into the flow of the story. Overall LORD JIM is a wonderful classic novel that I highly recommend.

Guilt and redemption
This is the fifth book I have read by Conrad, and through these readings I have come to deeply appreciate his literary power and the perfection of his stories. Conrad has the skill to border about several similar subjects, without repeating himself. "Lord Jim" is truly a Shakespearean tragedy, mainly because of the Shakespearean nature of the main character. Jim is a young naval officer with high hopes of heroism and moral superiority, but when he faces his first test of courage, he miserably fails. While 800 Muslim pilgrims are asleep aboard the ship "Patna", Jim discovers that the boat is about to sink. There are not sufficient lifeboats for everybody. Should he wake them up or not? He gets paralyzed with fear and then sudenly jumps into a boat being set up by the rest of the officers. He is taken to trial and disposessed of his working licence.

Ashamed and humiliated, Jim dedicates the rest of his life to two things: escape the memory of that fateful night, and redeem himself. This agonizing quest to recover his dignity in front of his own eyes leads him to hide in a very remote point in the Malayan peninsula, where he will become the hero, the strong man, the wise protector of underdeveloped, humble and ignorant people. Jim finds not only the love of his people, but also the love of a woman who admires him and fears the day when he might leave for good. The narrator, Captain Marlow (the same of "Heart of Darkness") talks to Jim for the last time in his remote refuge, and then Jim tells him that he has redeemed himself by becoming the people's protector. Oh, but these things are never easy and Jim will face again the specter of failure.

Conrad has achieved a great thing by transforming the "novel of adventures" into the setting for profound and interesting reflections on the moral stature of Man, on courage, guilt, responsibility, and redemption.

Just as in "Heart of Darkness" the question is what kinds of beings we are stripped of cultural, moral and religious conventions; just as in "Nostromo" the trustworthiness of a supposedly honest man is tested by temptation, in "Lord Jim" the central subject is dignity and redemption after failure.

A great book by one of the best writers.

a delicate picture of rough brutality
After reading this book (along with several other of Conrad's books) I am under the impression that Joseph Conrad may very well be my favorite author. Here is another masterpiece, a deeply incisive study of character of the motivation and the ultimate failure of all high-minded ideals. Granted my own personal world view falls directly in line with this realization and therefore prejudices me towards anything the man might write, but, when considering such a lofty title as 'favorite author' one must regard other aspects of the novelist's creation. As with the others, Conrad wins by the power of his stories.

Lord Jim is my least favorite of the the four books I have read by Conrad. The story is rather scattered: a righteous young man does something wrong that he holds himself far too accountable for and the public shame the action brought him exaggerates the reality of his failure and makes him believe the rumors swirling around about his so-called cowardice. He spends the remainder of his life trying to reclaim his self-regard, mostly exaggerating his own importance in matters he hardly understands. His goal is to liberate the primitive people of the jungle paradise he inadvertantly finds himself in (due to an effort to escape every particle of the world he once inhabited) and his once high-minded ideals and regard for himself lead him to allow those people to consider him almost a God.

Jim likes being a God and considers himself a just and fair one. He treats everyone equally and gives to his people the knowledge of modern science and medicine as well as the everyday archetecture and understanding of trade that those primitive folks would otherwise be years from comprehending.

Of course everything ends in failure and misery and of course Jim's restored name will be returned to its demonic status, but the whole point of the novel seems to me that one can not escape their past. Jim, for all his courage in the line of fire has tried to avoid all memory of the once shameful act of his former life and by doing so becomes destined to repeat his mistakes.

Lord Jim is far more expansive than the story it sets out to tell, ultimately giving a warning on the nature of history and general humanity that only a writer of Conrad's statue could hope to help us understand.

If there is a flaw it is not one to be taken literally. Conrad was a master of structural experimentation and with Lord Jim he starts with a standard third person narrative to relate the background and personalities of his characters and then somehow merges this into a second person narrative of a man, years from the events he is relating, telling of the legend of Jim. It is a brilliant innovation that starts off a little awkward and might lead to confusion in spots as the story verges into its most important parts under the uncertain guidence of a narrator who, for all his insight into others, seems unwilling to relate his personal relevence to the story he is relating.

Nevertheless (with a heartfelt refrain), one of the best books I have ever read.


The Difficult Days (The Lockert Library of Poetry in Translation)
Published in Paperback by Princeton Univ Pr (1983)
Authors: Roberto Sosa and Jim Lindsey
Amazon base price: $10.95
Used price: $0.42
Collectible price: $5.81
Buy one from zShops for: $3.98
Average review score:
No reviews found.

The Exchange & Other Stories (European Classics)
Published in Paperback by Northwestern University Press (2002)
Authors: Iurii Valentinovich Trifonov, Ellendea Proffer, Helen P. Burlingame, Jim Somers, Byron Lindsey, Ronald Meyer, and Yury Trifonov
Amazon base price: $16.95
Used price: $13.95
Buy one from zShops for: $11.22
Average review score:
No reviews found.

Fed Up With Fat
Published in Paperback by Fleming H Revell Co (1978)
Authors: Jim Tear and Jan Houghton Lindsey
Amazon base price: $3.95
Used price: $0.83
Collectible price: $2.00
Average review score:
No reviews found.

Florida Simply Beautiful
Published in Hardcover by Farcountry Press (2002)
Authors: James Randklev, Jim Argo, and R. E. Lindsey
Amazon base price: $29.95
Average review score:
No reviews found.

In lieu of Mecca
Published in Unknown Binding by University of Pittsburgh Press ()
Author: Jim Lindsey
Amazon base price: $
Collectible price: $85.00
Average review score:
No reviews found.

Math Stories for Problem Solving Success : Ready-to-Use Activities for Grades 7-12
Published in Paperback by Jossey-Bass (2002)
Authors: Jim Overholt, Nancy Aaberg, and Jim Lindsey
Amazon base price: $20.97
List price: $29.95 (that's 30% off!)
Used price: $20.72
Buy one from zShops for: $20.05
Average review score:
No reviews found.

Revealing Statistical Principles
Published in Paperback by Edward Arnold (1999)
Authors: Jim Lindsey and James K. Lindsey
Amazon base price: $21.95
Used price: $2.99
Buy one from zShops for: $4.49
Average review score:
No reviews found.

Texas West of the Pecos: Photographs and Text (The Louise Lindsey Merrick Texas Environment Series ; No. 4)
Published in Hardcover by Texas A&M University Press (1981)
Author: Jim Bones
Amazon base price: $35.00
Used price: $14.75
Collectible price: $14.90
Average review score:
No reviews found.

Related Subjects: Author Index

Reviews are from readers at Amazon.com. To add a review, follow the Amazon buy link above.