Related Subjects: Author Index Reviews Page 1 2 3
Book reviews for "Sisk,_Frank_A.,_Jr." sorted by average review score:

Whose Song Is Sung: Or, a Narrative of the Travels of Musculus Herodes Formosus, Known As Musculus the Dwarf, Through Barbarian Territories, Including an Account of His s
Published in Hardcover by Tor Books (1999)
Author: Frank Schaefer
Amazon base price: $23.95
Used price: $2.00
Collectible price: $3.69
Buy one from zShops for: $6.99
Average review score:

A Hell of a Tale
This is the way to tell a story! I felt like I was there, was really grabbed by this one. This book graces the otherwise limp, fluffy fantasy/sci-fi shelves.


Jesse James Was His Name or Fact and Fiction Concerning the Careers of the Notorious James Brothers of Missouri
Published in Hardcover by University of Missouri Press (1966)
Authors: William A. Settle and Will Settle
Amazon base price: $24.95
Used price: $7.00
Collectible price: $14.00
Buy one from zShops for: $20.33
Average review score:

Jesse James
Even today, in the year 2002, it's hard to find any American who hasn't heard the name Jesse James. All types of wild stories have been passed through the years about him, some saying he was nothing more than a cold blooded killer and some swearing he was more like Robin Hood. In William Settle's book, "Jesse James Was His Name", he chronicalizes the events of Jesse's life starting with his boyhood home on a farm in Missouri, through the bloody years of the Civil War where he fought in Confederate guerrilla bands, and then on to his outlaw career.
The book, in my opinion, was too lengthy, it was full of facts a lot of which were unnecessary, and it didn't flow very well. So as Jesse James himself was an exciting person, this book was far from it. If you want to find more about Jesse James, don't read this book.

Solid research without solid conclusions
The research in the book seems to be first-rate. However the author doesn't seem to present the information in a way that leads to the the implied conclusions. He gives information on various robberies, implying they were conducted by the James/Younger gang, but the information doesn't support the conclusion--I wouldn't convict them based on the info presented. In fact, I was left leaning far more toward the James' and Youngers' own statements that they _weren't_ involved in most of these robberies and were convenient victims of post-war, anti-Quantill sentiments. Evidence of the James/Youngers' guilt struck me as being rather shoddy. Sorting out which robberies really could be attributed to whom is largely left to the reader.

Though well worth reading, I would view this book as a suppliment to other reading and research rather than the sole, final statement on the events.

Fact - no fiction allowed - about Jesse James
Author Settle (true name: Dr. Robert Parker) was a college history professor from Oklahoma who spent 20+ years researching his subject - the notorious James Brothers of Missouri. His book, first published in 1961, still stands as the resource work in the "Jesse James" field. A historian, Settle refused to use or dwell upon anything except fact when dealing with his material. His research included developing a friendship with Frank James' only son, Robert - who lived on the James brothers' Missouri farm until his death in the 1950's. Settle leaned on family history, but primarily used grass roots documentation in reporting all of he known facts - through the time of publication. His work is the most often cited reference used by current authors. His research and book opened the way for the current boom of writers and researchers in the field of the James Gang. Nicely written and easy to read, the book not only discusses the family history and known criminal activities of Jesse and Frank, but tells how and why Jesse James - a known murderer and thief - has crept into legend as a hero. If you are interested in outlaw and lawman history of the Old West, this book is a "must".


His Way: The Unauthorized Biography of Frank Sinatra
Published in Hardcover by Bantam Doubleday Dell Pub (Trd) (1986)
Authors: Kitty Kelley and Leo P. Kelley
Amazon base price: $21.95
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $1.11
Buy one from zShops for: $2.58
Average review score:

"If Adolph Hitler Could Sing....."
When her meat cleaver of a 'biography', "His Way," was first published in 1986, Kitty Kelley appeared on the Larry King show and claimed it was a "balanced" book.

Had King read the book and if he had some guts as an interviewer,
he would have laughed her off the show.

Claiming "His Way" is "balanced" is like the Grand Dragon of the KKK stating his group is racially mixed.

With a certain amount of glee, Kelley recounts every seamy story of Sinatra's personal life...the women, the brawls, the fits of temper, the mistreatment of employees (Frank allegedly dumped a plate of spaghetti over his valet's head, because the man didn't cook it 'al dente').

Nowhere, however, in this litany of horrors, real or rumored, does Sinatra, the musician,emerge.

"His Way" paints the man who many regard as the finest pop singer of our time,as a psychotic egomaniac, who sang a song from time to time.

Kelley completely misses the point of what made Sinatra so alluring to the public...the dichotomy of the public man and the private artist...that a man so capable of violence and ugliness could also produce such continually beautiful music through the years (Example: Kelley recounts the year 1965 without once mentioning Sinatra's record breaking tour with the Basie band).

By almost ignoring the music, Kelley has produced a book with the mentality of the worst of the supermarket tabloids...no Sinatra epitaph would ever use the phrase "Frank was a nice guy," but'His Way' portrays a man who was Adolph Hitler with a tuxedo and hand mike.

It's like writing a biogprahy of Picasso and adding as a footnote at the end.."oh, by the way, he could ALSO paint!"

A mixed bag
Kitty Kelley's book about Frank Sinatra made countless headlines when it was released and shot to the top of the best seller list. Unfortunately, the book is very tabloidy. If you read this book without knowing anything about Sinatra, you will come away with the impression that he was a monster. True, he did have his share of fights and problems with the press, but Kelley makes it sound as if all he did his life was yell at people. The few times she mentions all of the charity work he did, its in passing and never very respectful.
There is no doubt that the book is readable. I found myself not wanting to put it down, but at the same time wishing Kelley was more unbiased.
It is one of the longer Sinatra bios, but I feel that the definitive biography of the man as a human being with both good points and bad points has yet to be written. Read this book with an open mind and don't take everything as fact. I suggest that to get "the other side of the story", you read Nancy Sinatra's "An American Legend" as well.

Book reveals much about our society, not only through music.
One would not expect a Kitty Kelley book about Frank Sinatra to have any great profundity, but *His Way* stands as a major cultural and social document of our times. Sinatra is one of the most-worshipped gods of our age. His life story shows all over again how much misery goes into "lifestyles of the rich and famous," and how much corruption comes out. Sinatra's origins were unromantic. His mother was a neighborhood abortionist. This was an albatross around young Frank's neck. Symbolic of our age, he grew up to personify the "good life" -- the suave, wealthy, hyper-romantic, carefree, yet blues-ridden one -- in his art, while his life embodied many kinds of evil. His mafia connections are well known and, like other unpleasant details of his legend, the book removes all doubt as to their authenticity. The most remarkable thing about *His Way* is in fact the superb job Kelley does of writing and documenting it. She researches and writes like a seasoned college professor. Like most muckrakers Kelley's truthfulness has been called into question, but the book seems entirely trustworthy, especially at a time so many entertainment deities are revealing themselves as tragically flawed or worse. Sinatra, the king of musical romance, bullied, used, and abused women, including his gentle wife Mia Farrow. The worlds of entertainment, crime and politics came together when Frank and company helped get JFK elected President. Frank was supposedly king of the heap himself, but displayed a pitifully boyish awe toward his fellow rake Kennedy, even after he himself helped to "create" Kennedy as president. *His Way* is a chronicle of an egomaniac who knew no restraints. He cause endless harm to others, then wrote them a check to cover their suffering. The moral of the story (every good book still has one) is that we ought to be more careful in whom we elevate as our heroes and "role models." Even those not fond of Sinatra or his swank big-band genre of music will find the book hard to put down. People of discernment will learn much from it as to why life is the way it is in 1999.


1823 - before and after: a story of William Effingham Lawrence, Tasmanian pioneer, and his family
Published in Unknown Binding by National Press ()
Author: Effingham Frank Lawrence
Amazon base price: $
Average review score:
No reviews found.

Alejo Carpentier & His Early Works (Series A: Monagrafias, Lxx/Monographs, 70)
Published in Hardcover by Boydell & Brewer (1981)
Author: Frank Janney
Amazon base price: $60.00
Used price: $47.27
Collectible price: $47.65
Average review score:
No reviews found.

Amos & His All-singing, All-dancing, Athletic Artistes: A Dramatisation
Published in Paperback by Moorley's Print and Publishing (1988)
Author: Margaret Franks
Amazon base price: $
Average review score:
No reviews found.

Amos Kilbright: His Adscititious Experiences; With Other Stories (The Black Heritage Library Collection)
Published in Hardcover by Ayer Co Pub (1972)
Author: Frank R. Stockton
Amazon base price: $22.95
Used price: $15.60
Average review score:
No reviews found.

As FDR said; a treasury of his speeches, conversations and writings
Published in Unknown Binding by ()
Authors: Franklin D. Roosevelt and Frank Kingdon
Amazon base price: $
Used price: $15.00
Average review score:
No reviews found.

Autobiography of Emperor Charles IV: And His Legend of St. Wencesias
Published in Hardcover by Central European University Press (01 June, 2001)
Authors: Balazs Nagy, Frank Schaer, and Balzs Nagy
Amazon base price: $54.95
Average review score:
No reviews found.

Autobiography, Historiography, Rhetoric.A Festschrift in Honor of Frank Paul Bowman by his Colleagues, Friends and Former Students. (Faux Titre 87)
Published in Paperback by Rodopi Bv Editions (1994)
Authors: Mary Donaldson-Evans, Lucienne Frappier-Mazur, and Gerald Prince
Amazon base price: $40.50
Average review score:
No reviews found.

Related Subjects: Author Index Reviews Page 1 2 3

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