Related Subjects: Author Index Reviews Page 1 2
Book reviews for "Scully,_James" sorted by average review score:

The Unauthorized X-Cyclopedia: The Definitive Reference Guide to the X-Files
Published in Paperback by Kensington Pub Corp (1997)
Authors: James Hatfield and George Burt
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'A MUST HAVE'!
This is definitely a 'must have' book for all X-Files fans! Every person, place, company name, historical reference or 'you name it' ever mentioned in seasons 1-4 is covered here! Also serves as an episode guide! Mine stays right next to me whenever I am watching the reruns! Get it...now!

The Best X-Files Book Out There!
This is so packed with details that I am always searching for. It's awesome, it's so cool. It has everything that you need to know about the X-files, I have nothing but praise for the author. I love the fact that it told so much about all of the characters and stuff, and it's just so great that I recommend if you're as obsessed as I am about the show, to go and buy it. It's definitely worth the price. Again, really great book!!!

The book gives all the info you need up to season 4
I thought that the book had alot to give and I realy liked it. If any one has a good X-files book tell me what it is called


The Unauthorized X-Files Challenge: Everything You Ever Wanted to Know About Tv's Most Incredible Show
Published in Paperback by Kensington Pub Corp (1900)
Authors: James Hatfield and George Burt
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So worth the money
My brother got me this book for my birthday two years ago. It is my bible and my life (kind of sad, actually!) Anyways, it's really good and like that other guy said, if you take a few months to memorize it, you'll the X-Files Genius and you can impress your friends with little tidbits of knowledge. For example, what's Scully's home phone number? I'm not telling.. get it and look it up yourself! Note: good book for diehard fans!

Fun trivia for true fans
If you think you know EVERYTHING about the best show on television, you're wrong. These guys pull up obscure info and quiz you on it, drawing not only from the episodes but from interviews, books, and magazines. This is a great book and a must for an X-Phile's library! My only complaint: after reading Phil Farrand's lighthearted Nitpicker's Guide, the authors of this book seem really critical. I mean, what's up with their review of "War of the Coprophages"? Lighten up! Other than that, of course, diehard fans will cherish this book.

Stumps the Best
I've always considered myself an X-pert. None of my online friends (or real life for that matter) has ever been able to stump me on X-Files trivia. I'm completely addicted to the show and have 15 books.

This one is definately one of the best, pointing out many of the nitpicks and netpicks we've philes have already discovered in addition to new ones that sent me back to look for them. The trivia is extremely difficult and interesting.

I recommend this book to all philes who think they know it all. Take a few months to memorize this book and then you will know it all.


Apollo Helmet
Published in Paperback by Curbstone Press (1983)
Author: James Scully
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REVIEW QUOTES
"These poems offer a fresh image or perspective to startle and illuminate." --Publishers Weekly

"James Scully is one of our more courageous and undaunted poets...I find Scully to be a rising dragon in a time when much poetry is suffering from an identity crisis." --Cale Jacobsen, North Dakota Quarterly

APOLLO HELMET "raises important questions about politics and human nature with an infectious indignation." --Library Journal


Santiago poems
Published in Unknown Binding by Curbstone Press ()
Author: James Scully
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SANTIAGO POEMS by James Scully
A selection of lyric poems describing the life in Santiago de Chile immediately following the Pinochet coup d'état. It includes a tribute to Victor Jara, descriptions of the chillingly quiet terror of the Santiago streets and the many disappearances.

"A rich, vivid, and eloquent chronicle of life...relevant well into the future." --The Minnesota Review


Prometheus Bound
Published in Paperback by Oxford University Press (1989)
Authors: Aeschylus, James Scully, and William Arrowsmith
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Not worth it
Don't spend the extra money for this translation. Buy the Dover Thrift edition. You get the same story for a buck or two, and this translation is nothing spectacular.

Prometheus caught between the first rock and a hard place
There was a point at which some critics contended that "Prometheus Bound" was not actually written by Aeschylus, arguing that someone else, perhaps his son Euphorion, who was also a dramatist, The argument hinged on the portrait of Zeus in the play, which is highly critical of the king of the Gods and at odds with the wise and just Zeus of the "Orestia." Since we have only a half-dozen complete plays of the ninety Aeschylus is believed to have written, it is difficult to make a judgment regarding his entire body of work. However, we do have fragments from the other plays in the trilogy, "Prometheus Unbound" and "Prometheus the Fire-Carrier," which suggest that what happens in this first play sets the stage for an evolving Zeus, who eventually finds his better nature when he achieves a reconciliation with the rebel Titan. Given the dramatic scope of the "Orestia," with its evolving notion of justice, it seems to me reasonable enough that Aeschylus was attempting something similar with this trilogy.

"Prometheus Bound" finds the titan, who defied Zeus and gave humanity the saving gift of fire (among other sins), bound on a remote mountain peak with iron spikes driven through his flesh by the unwilling Hephaestus and his assistants Might and Violence, allegorical figures who define the source of Zeus's power. The scenes of the play consist of a series of dialogues between Prometheus and the ancient god Oceanus (the chorus consists of the daughters of Oceanus), Io, a woman turned into a cow because of Zeus's attentions, and Hermes, who wants to know the secret held by Prometheus that threatens the power of Zeus. Prometheus (whose name means "foresight") refuses and is then cast into the underworld to be punished further. At the heart of the play is the conflict between the immovable will of Prometheus and the irresistible force of the power of Zeus.

Clearly this tragedy speaks to an archetypal human condition, wherein physical power seeks to break the mind of an individual to its will. The audience is caught in a dilemma, for on one side is the king of the gods and on the other is the savior of humanity, for without the gift of fire early man was doomed. Indeed, that was clearly the intent of Zeus. Consequently, like Prometheus, the audience is caught between their own rock and a hard place. Fortunately, by the end of the trilogy Aeschylus gives his audience an out, for the Zeus who is represented in this play is transformed into a more acceptable deity in the end. Even without those plays and knowing the innovative brilliance of Aeschylus as a tragic dramatist, we can certainly appreciate the overall story arc that begins with this play. For teachers who do not want to contend with the entire "Orestia" or have to contend with editing it down for students, "Prometheus Bound" represents a single work by Aeschylus that is equally as pivotal to our understanding of classical mythology.

Great read
Prometheus Bound is the tale of Prometheus, a titan, who is being punished by Zeus. It is an interesting story and well worth the read, although it is only the first of three plays. The other two are lost to us. The price alone makes this a great deal.


A Biography of William Holmes McGuffey
Published in Textbook Binding by Univ Microfilms Intl (1967)
Author: James A. Scully
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James Dakin, Architect: His Career in New York and the South
Published in Hardcover by Louisiana State University Press (1973)
Author: Arthur Scully
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Line Break: Poetry As Social Practice
Published in Paperback by Bay Pr (1996)
Author: James Scully
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NMS Psychiatry (Book with Any PDA)
Published in Paperback by Lippincott Williams & Wilkins Publishers (15 December, 2001)
Author: James H. Scully
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Poetry and Militancy in Latin America
Published in Paperback by Curbstone Press (1982)
Authors: Rogue Dalton, Roque Dalton, Arlene Scully, and James Scully
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Related Subjects: Author Index Reviews Page 1 2

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