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One of the top 100 books of Journalism of the century
MORE THAN A MOVIE BOOK!
A well written first-hand account of how a movie is made.
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Parents will be interested in this one!
This is a great book!
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A captivating and highly recommended picture book story
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Ego
Great Bathroom/Night-table ReadingPart of the charm of the volume are the older pieces where now-famous names and places are introduced as newcomers and one gets a real feel of Manhattan in the 20s and 30s.
Made Me A Fan of The New Yorker After Many Failed AttemptsThis book is filled with fun vignettes from The New Yorker starting in the 1920s and going through the year 2000. Each piece is a page or two and describes an interesting encounter with a New York personality.
You can read about the store that gave Mae West her corsets (1930), Gimbels' venture into live pony-selling (1947), what taxi drivers think is funny (1977) and about "a terrible new smell" that turned up in Tribeca (1992). Or read about "The Guy Who Makes President Clinton Funny"(2000.) And these examples barely scratch the surface. The pieces are written by such notables as James Thurber, Lillian Ross, Brendan Gill, Robert Benchley and even Johnny Carson ("Proverbs According to Dennis Miller"(2000)).
There are one or two clunkers, but they're in a definite minority. I really recommend this book to anyone who appreciates and likes to read about the quirky, creative and independent personalities that comprise New York City and, what the heck, America. The book's span of 70 years makes it even more fun and interesting. This book would be a great gift, too.

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Disappointing
Classic Non-FictionThe story begins as Miss Ross meets Hemingway at Idlewood Airport (now JFK) in New York City in 1950. Ross spends the next two days going to museums, shopping, and meeting Hemingway's friend Marlene Dietrich and Editor Charles Scribner.
She's so unobtrusive in the story, you forget that she was actually in the room. When Hemingway talks to her, it's like a character has stepped out of a novel to speak with the author. You get this feeling because "Papa" is so much himself that he doesn't seem to be hiding his true personality from a member of the press corps.
I learned a good deal about Papa in this short book. You will too.
does what biographies of 'Papa' cannot
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A Good Book!
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The Little Old Man and His Dreams
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Execrable
An interesting man as written by his "great love"
COMPASSION OFF THE MENU?
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same old same old
I was misled...
Journalism students will find this revealing
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