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Book reviews for "Ng,_Larry_K._Y." sorted by average review score:

Beyond the Bedroom Wall
Published in Paperback by Avon Books (01 October, 1976)
Author: Larry Woiwode
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A midwestern childhood, beautifully told
I believe I first read Larry Woiwode's short stories about the Neumiller family in The New Yorker and Harper's before they were woven together into this richly emotional novel about a family of young children whose mother becomes ill and dies. Although there is a whole range of deeply felt emotions in the book, it is often the heartbreak of everyday life that permeates the work. Meawhile, there is a near-Proustian depth of detail in the account of lives lived in small midwestern towns, first in North Dakota and then Illinois.

Woiwode also captures the dynamics of family life, particularly in the close relationship between the narrator and his slightly older brother (a relationship celebrated, explored, and lamented in a sequel novel, "Born Brothers"). It's been years since I read "Beyond the Bedroom Wall," but there are moments in it almost seared into memory like film images. That is partly due to Woiwode's poetic gift for language that makes you want to read and savor every word on every page.

In later years, Woiwode returned to North Dakota and has lived there in a rural community in a kind of self-imposed spiritual exile. The early writings, in my opinion, are far superior to his later work. When he wrote "Beyond the Bedroom Wall," he was at the peak of his powers as a storyteller. Yes, it's a "great" American novel.

A true depiction of the lives and times
I remember when this book first came out. I had gone to school with Larry and read it immediatey. I knew many of the family (in Illinois) and was once hired (I think I was 17) to drive one of the older gentlemen from Illinois to North Dakota for a visit, therefore I know some of the places there also. Larry's father was our school Principaland was one of the major influences on my life, maybe he gave me the interest to visit all the foreign countries that I have. I have spent nearly 30 years overseas since leaving school in, 1960. I just re-read the book and many old memories came back. Thank you for this book. Our little town and school (my 1960 class might have been 40 or 45 people, I just can't remember) produced some top notch talented people within a year or two of each other, Larry and his brother Danny being typical of them.

truly memorable characters
It's been years since I read this fine novel from cover to cover--but not so very long ago since my latest brief delve. It was not unlike visiting old friends or neighbors, and I was most happy to spend some time with them. Larry Woiwode brings the simple pleasures and heartbreaks of everyday life vibrantly to life in this book, a "family saga" in the very best sense. There's a real joy to watching the lives of these characters unfold, and a recognized danger in the closeness of family life--I still recall the dread with which I read when it became clear that one of the characters was facing death. Creating that depth of feeling in a reader is no mean feat, but Larry Woiwode pulls it off time after time, as adroitly as a bird landing on a twig. He is certainly one of America's most under-appreciated writers, and this is a wonderful place to begin discovering his talents. These characters and events will linger a long long time.


Great Comedians Talk About Comedy
Published in Hardcover by Executive Books (15 December, 2000)
Authors: Larry Wilde, Woody Allen, Milton Berle, and shelley Berman
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Still Invaluable
I first read "Great Comedians" in 1972 when I was starting out as a comedian. I found it to be just what I needed as a young aspiring comedian. The interviews of Woody Allen, Shelley Berman, Jack Benny, and Phillis Diller resonated with me and helped me immensely in my standup comedy development. It also inspired me to write my own book probing the methods of my generations great comedians ("Comic Insights") in order to help today's young comedians get a better idea of what it takes to do quality standup. I recently read "Great Comedians" again, and my original verdict still stands. This book is still of immense value to all aspiring comedians.

A rich rate treasure of info from 20th Century comedy greats
It's no secret that comedians -- great and not-so-great -- are influenced by the WORK of other comedians. The advent of film in the 20th century made this a lot easier since when a comedian died the work was still available...and now with videos etc. it's easier than ever.

But what about HOW these comedians made laughs...how they were inspired...what specific techniques they used and did not use...and what advice they would give anyone interested in going into any area of comedy?

Those have been tough answers to get. To do it you'd have to buy a slew of good and sometimes rotten bios, many of them out of print. Until now. Stand-up comedian Larry Wilde's Great Comedians Talk About Comedy brings it all together.

Great Comedians is a superb, singular achievement that collects within one lively, 402-page, info-packed volume, detailed interviews done over several years with some of the 20th century's greatest comedians and comedy actors.

The selection is absolutely mind-boggling: Woody Allen, Milton Berle, Shelly Berman, Jack Benny, Joey Bishop, George Burns, Johnny Carson, Maurice Chevalier, Phyllis Diller, Jimmy Durante, Bob Hope, Dick Gregory, George Jessle, Jerry Lewis, Jerry Seinfeld, Danny Thomas and Ed Wynn.

Each interview is presented in straight Q&A format so you get to "hear" the question and "hear" the response, from what the comedian/comedy actor says to his/her own speech pattern. These folks worked in venues from vaudeville, to radio, to night clubs, to radio to early silent movies to talkies to TV. And their responses to questions contain revelations and constant inspiration.

A key theme: how "making it" in comedy requires timing, good material, dogged persistance, constant analysis of jokes/laughs and being LIKEABLE to an audience. Copying someone's stage personna or stealing their jokes just won't do it.

My favorite interviews were with Woody Allen (how he writes ten jokes on everything from matchbooks to napkins and only uses a few; how he won't try jokes out on friends since they're often too negative; how audience appeal MATTERS...and his pointing to Jackie Gleason as someone who often had a lousey show but people loved him), Jack Benny (the importance of learning comedy and advancing step by step...an explanation of his legendary timing), Joey Bishop ("...Luck cannot sustain you.Only talent can sustain you.."), George Burns (tips on timing, attitude and the importance emulating but not copying other performers), Phyllis Diller (five truly SUPERB short inspirational tips that can advance MANY careers...Her high laugh per minute standards), and Jerry Seinfeld (timing, getting into a focused mental framework and how his love of comedy as a kid blossomed).

This book an essential for ANYONE interested in comedy, or for students of comedy, public speakers, or anyone who simply wants to be funny in public. It's ALL HERE: the inspiration, the tips, the stories, the bios...the TOOLS.

It's now a cliche to say "comedy isn't easy" and the whole process is mysterious. Larry Wilde's Great Comedians Talk About Comedy makes it less mysterious and -- a a bit easier.

A must read.
Anyone interested in stand-up comedy Must read this book. Especially the people who hang out at "The Improv" bar who THINK they are a comedian. The Woody Allen interview is more important today than it was 35 years ago. About time the neophytes learned some history of the art form. A GREAT BOOK!


Professional Java Fundamentals
Published in Paperback by Wrox Press Inc (1996)
Authors: Shy Cohen, Tom Mitchell, Andres Gonzalez, Kerry Hammil, and Larry Rodrigues
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Excellent reference, no-nonsense summary
Fantastic book. Pithy style, very readable, no fluff, excellent as a reference. Anyone coming to Java from C++ should get this book. About the only thing I would do to improve it would be to have at least a short chapter on database access.

BEST BOOK TO START WITH...
This is one of the first books I bought to get an understanding of Java and how it is comprable to what I already know of C/C++. This book is the perfect starting point, giving every comprable declaration to C/C++. Kudos to the authors, can't wait for a more up-to-date version though.

Old but good
Even though this is one of my oldest Java books I keep going back to it. I wish it would be updated for the new Event model and swing however. The coverage of the 1.0 JDK is very good and I still go back to the gridbag description and examples when I get confused.


The Forgetful Bears
Published in School & Library Binding by Houghton Mifflin Co (Juv) (1982)
Authors: Larry Weinberg, Lawrence Weinberg, and Paula Winter
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The Forgetful Bears
The situations and the characters are very charming. Theillustrations are lovely. My nephew loooooved it.

Care Bears
THE FORGETFUL BEARS is a wonderful and entertaining story for young children. We have used the book in here classes at Seton School with great success, our young students always entranced with the stirring plot (and the concomitant moral values). Kudos to the authors!

Loved The Book
My little girl simply loves The Forgetful Bears story. And as all us parents know, five-year olds are never wrong--about anything. It's a bed time favorite around our house.


Isra the Butterfly Gets Caught For Show And Tell
Published in Hardcover by Yoroson Publishing (01 January, 2001)
Authors: Christine Young-Robinson and Larry Finney
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Charming
This is one of the most charming children's books I've read in ages. I bought one copy for my neice and another for my god-daughter. The author is really gifted.

Delightful and charming
Isra the Butterfly is a delightful and charming book for children ages four to eight. Isra is young, but wants to play with her older sisters and wants to leave Butterfly Land so that she can venture out into the outside world. Warned by her mother and under the supervision of her sisters, she's still convinced that she can move her wings quickly enough to escape any danger. Unfortunately, she's not as quick as she believes and is caught and taken to Show and Tell.

Young-Robinson has given us a careful blend of adventure for the children as well as lessons on obeying parents. I loved this book and would definitely recommend it to others. Finley's illustrations are an added bonus to this book and beautifully portray Isra, her family, and the children in the outside world.

Reviewed by Tee C. Royal...

Delightful!
This is a thoroughly delightful little tale of Isra the Butterfly and her desire to see the world where boys and girls live. Isra gets her wish, has a great adventure and gets a wonderful lesson about the importance of family and home. This is a book to read while curled in a comfortable chair with your child. A great story with a sweet, wonderful butterfly as the main character. Your child will love it.


Larry Burrows, Vietnam
Published in Hardcover by Knopf (22 October, 2002)
Authors: Larry Burrows and David Halberstam
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Great Collection of Photos
This book is an awesome collection of great photos. Larry Burrows did a fabulous job at capturing real life experiences in Vietnam. I commend him and David Halberstam for their professionalism and commitment to those soldiers who fought and died for our country. I only wish the descriptive captions were listed near the large photos in the book, not the back of the book. I'm sure the author had a reason for this. I strongly recommend this book.

The best of the best
The Vietnam war was defined as the first total media war, television was in the ascendancy but it was through newspapers and magazines that most people got there view of the suffering. The three greatest war photographers of all time (Robert Capa is the forth) brought the war to the breakfast tables of the world, Phillip Jones Griffiths, Donald McCullin and Larry Burrows produced pictures which showed the true horror and futility of the Vietnam conflict. McCullin through the pages of the Sunday Times Magazine, Jones Griffiths with his book "Vietnam Inc" and Burrows in the pages of "Life" magazine. Larry Burrows was given the massive task of showing the war in colour. Colour was regarded as being too pretty for the hard hitting task of showing war, also the actual technical limitations of the colour film of the time made Burrows task even more difficult. The sensitivity was very slow and getting the exposure absolutely spot on was imperitive. The steadyness and consideration needed to get the pictures are not condusive to the nerves in the midst of combat but Burrows had the metal to get the job done. This book brings together his work from 1963 till his death in 1971 in a way that shows not only his skill as a photographer but also as a journalist who could visualise the images and create the difinitive "picture story" The reproduction and layout are excellent and to see the images virtually as they would have appeared in Life are a credit to Larry's son Russell. This is a must for anyone interested in photography and photojournalism.

Lessons for the Next War
I couldn't pass this book up. As this country prepares for the next war we should be mindful of the lessons of the one we lost. Larry Burrows appears to have gone everywhere in Vietnam carrying his Leicas and Nikons. His images are gritty, sad, shocking, poignant, and, yes beautiful. He is at his best when he captures the mind bending reactions in the faces of the men who fought the enemy and fought to stay alive. I don't think color has ever been used so well in combat photos. An artist and historian with a camera. This book is the legacy of a man whose compassion brought him too close to his subject. He died in a helicopter crash in an incursion into Laos in 1971. His images show his feeling for nuance, composition, storytelling and empathy. Only David Duncan's photographs of the Marines retreat in Korea compare with Burrows' combat sequences. And David Duncan was with his unit for a few days. Larry Burrows spend nine years, off and on, covering the Vietnam debacle and its impact on soldiers, civilians and country.


Larry Kane's Philadelphia
Published in Paperback by Temple Univ Press (2002)
Author: Larry Kane
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A Good Book from Philadelphia Mainstay
Being from the Philadelphia area, I was pretty intrested in what Larry Kane would write about. Larry tells good stories and helped me fill in what little details on stories that were reported when I was a kis.You almost have to cheer on a guy who went back to Phildephia to report news despite it being a "smaller market" than New York.If you don't really know the Philadelphia area you my be lost reading this but if you know Philadelphia , you'll be pleasantly suprised at how detailed this is and even laugh out loud at a good Ed Rendell anticdote

Philadelphia TV Icon
A great book for those interested in recent Philadelphia history and culture, or those just looking for an insight into major market TV news. The book seems to reflect Larry's on screen persona: fast paced, open, sometimes cloying, but never dull. Larry's seen a lot of history in his career, and relates it in a highly entertaining book.

This Book is Amazing
Larry Kane, a Philadelphia fixture for 35 years, has outdone himself with this book. It's really well written, and takes you on an unusual ride through the tv business. So far, I understand in its fifth printing, and no wonder. This book should be read by anyone interested in improving the quality of tv news.

I especially enjoyed Kane's self deprecating sense of humor, and his description of Philadelphia. It makes me want to get to know Philadelphia.


Paris: True Stories of Life on the Road (Travelers' Tales Guides)
Published in Paperback by Travelers' Tales Inc (1997)
Authors: James O'Reilly, Larry Habegger, O'Reilly Sean, and Sean J. O'Reilly
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An American in Paris
Ahhh Paris. As a graduate student fortunate to be studying in Paris, I found myself falling into the dull routine of class and studying. I was failing to appreciate one of the prettiest cities on earth. This book opened my eyes to the multitude of interesting "trucs" around me in the Latin Quarter. Although some of the stories are more interesting than others, there is genuinely something for everyone's taste in this book. I now often study at the "Deux Magots" cafe due to its history and popularity with Jean Paul Sartres and Simone de Beauvoir that I read about. This book is wonderful for anyone interested in Paris, wanting to take a mental journey there, or a seasoned traveller who thinks they already know Paris. Anyone armed with "Paris Traveler's Tales" can discover the "Joie de Vivre" en Paris!

Breadth and depth
You can read this book before going to Paris, after going to Paris, or just to dream about Paris. Of the 5 different Travelers' Tales Guides I have read, this is the best. The writing quality is good, and there is a surprising diversity in viewpoints and experiences represented. It is as if the magic of Pairs inspired the editor's best effort. The essays/excerpts/stories cover such a variety of topics, from carousels to strippers to Napoleon to the French historical angst, that one really gets an insight into French mind and culture. If you have any interest in Paris, you will find this book entertaining and enlightening.

"çà, c'est paris"!
"รงร , c'est paris"! is a popular french song from WWII period. Parisians sang it when Paris was delivered by US and french troops. This is the song I started whislting when I read the first pages and table of contents of this book. It's good to read paris guide books where you're not obliged to go through 50 pages of historical descriptions before you understand what paris is all about. This book is not dull. It is well documented even if this documentation has nothing to do with "classical" culture. It belongs to a tradition in French publishing business: collection of essays written by famous writers about a specific place. In this case, I do not know the writers (I am french)and am not influenced by their past works. One could imagine to publish the same kind of books with texts from Victor Hugo, Ernst Hemmingway and other famous writers.


Three Books of Known Space
Published in Paperback by Del Rey (1996)
Author: Larry Niven
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Take a break from reality.
World of Ptaavs offers an enlightening glimpse into the billion-year past of the Niven universe -- the time when the Slavers and their Tnuctipun slaves ruled the galaxy. The Tnuctipun were masters of technology, but couldn't resist the mental might of the Slavers. But, they planned covertly to win! As their plans to overcome their masters became apparent, the Slavers planned to exterminate all life in the galaxy. Some -- Slavers and Tnuctipun alike -- survived in stasis boxes or fields. Kzanol the Slaver was one of these "lucky" ones. He's discovered on Earth and is inadvertantly set loose! What will happen in the 22nd century -- some 1 billion years later (Kzanol's time)?

A Gift From Earth takes place on the human colony of Mt. Lookitthat (or Plateau, as it is sometimes known). Society is divided into "Crew" and "Colonist." The Crew (and their descendants) are those who braved space to pilot their human "slowboat" through 30 years of travel time to the planet of Plateau. The Colonists all got to sleep in suspended animation. Crew began to think this was inherently an unfair situation -- they do all the work, and then the Colonists get to enjoy the fruits of their labor upon arrival at the new colony. So they devised the "Covenant of Planetfall" which stratified society into the privileged (Crew) and the common (Colonist). Organ Banks exist to serve the Crew -- and most the Bank's organs come from Colonists! This apartheid-like situation remains, until a wild card -- Matthew Keller -- discovers he has a unique psychic ability. That, and a "package" has arrived from the home planet of Earth (hence the story's title) which threatens the Crew's way of life.

Worth every penny.
Larry Niven's Known Space universe is probably one of the most developed in all of science fiction. It mixes hard science fiction with space opera so seamlessly that it's easy to just slip in a wave reality bye-bye.

This book represents the largest concentration of known space stories anywhere, with many of the ones included now impossible to find elsewhere. The novels are both excellent stuff, but the short stories are where the book really shines. They cover over a thousand years of future history (and even a little of the past), and their topics are just as varied. You can expect to read about your favorite characters, plus a few new ones. The timeline is also indispensible to know how the stories relate to each other.

All in all, you should own this book if you consider yourself a science fiction fan. It's that good.

A great Known Space Collection
Collected here are three novels previously published. Tales of Known Space(itself a collection of short stories), World of Ptavvs, and A Gift from Earth.

If you are just getting into Larry Niven's Known Space series, then this would be a fantastic place to start. It contains some very short stories, some medium sized stories and two novels along with a Known Space timeline. This timeline is not completely up to date. A search on the web should turn out some more recent ones.

All-in-all this is hard science fiction at its best. Larry weaves a fabric whose strands from the very beginning are encountered far into his alternate future. This gives the reader that feeling of breadth that only comes from years-long sagas.

The only ding I would give this work is the novel "A Gift From Earth". Honestly, I disliked this book. It just seemed to unrealistic to me. It deals with a world in rebellion and the whole situation and subsequent developments just seemed a bit on the improbable side of things. Because of this, I would have given it 4 1/2 instead of 5

Despite that, the rest of the book makes it worth the buy. Highly recommended.


Secrets of Modern Slot Playing
Published in Paperback by L and M Publications (01 January, 2003)
Author: Larry Mak
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As "reader friendly" as it is informed and informative
Now in an updated fourth edition, Secrets Of Modern Slot Playing by freelance gaming expert and writer Larry Mak is a fascinating and helpful book specifically designed for slot machine game players and will prove highly informative for anyone interested in how casino slot machine playing really works, tips and techniques for making the most of slot machine betting, how computerized slot machines function, and much, much more. A practical, detailed, entertaining, and highly recommended guide written both for those who gamble and those who do not gamble but want to learn more about the ubiquitous and popular slot machine, Secrets Of Modern Slot Playing will prove to be as "reader friendly" as it is informed and informative.

A MUST FOR ANYONE WHO SETS FOOT IN A CASINO
I can't believe I have played all these years without knowing the information contained in this book. There is no magic here, but there are strategies that casinos use in placing loose slots amongst tighter slots. Knowing where these slots are may increase your winnings. There is other helpful knowledge here such as avoiding progressives and common sense ways to get a grip on how to curtail your losses (which involves controlling yourself basically). But how many of us really take a minute to set up a plan how much we are going to let ourselves play with? Like I said, its not magic, but a lot of common sense tips to use to make sure you are playing with your head and not your emotions....

Secrets of Modern Slot Playing
Excellent book! Step-by-step plans for playing slots quarters to dollars are easy to follow. Humorous stories entailed in book really give you a perspective on how others play slots. Anyone who wants to prolong their sessions from losing to at least break even should consider this book. Author does not "pontificate" on perils of slot playing...assumes adults should know perils of slot playing. Author dispels quite a few myths on slot playing and gets to the bones of how to actually, conciously play. Also lists the various states/casinos with payouts per slot average.


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