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This is a detail packed book covering her personal & professional life.
If you want to learn about her relationships, romantic & professional, how she developed & utilized her talent as an actress, & why people the world over admired, loved her & for a brief time despised her, then this is the book for you.
A wonderful collection of photographs is included, as well as an excellent Bibliography & collection of notes.
This is the story of an actress whose performances on screen & her life off the screen changed peoples ideas of what it was to be a woman, & is a must read for Movie fans.
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One of my favorite books about her. I wonder about the Royal Family and how they manage to keep going. Is a puzzlement.
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You definitely should read this book. It's not hard to read at all. I'd also recommend Mr Spoto's biography of Ingrid Bergman, "Notorious". In relation more directly to Hitchcock, I would recommend "Hitchcock's Notebooks" by Dan Auiler as the second best Hitchcock book I've read.
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PS: I have a complaint about the review from "READER FROM USA" on January 8, 1999 - Get a grip! It is people like you that keep this rediculous stuff about murder going. Reading your review i realized u don't know what u are talking about."Donald Spoto just adds his own facts?", excuse me but did u see the amount of material this guy was into? AND THERE'S NEVER BEEN ONE IODA OF PROOF OF MURDER BY ANYBODY.
Marilyn's last days are realistically brought back to Life with a plausible explanation of what really happened the night she died.
One of the best parts of the book is the last chapter "Aftermath: the great deception", where Donald Spoto adresses all the tabloid biographies that sensationalize marilyn's death...the theories and speculations about her involvement with the Kennedys and the mafia and so called "best friends"....
Such as Robert Slatzer and jeanne carmen, to name the worst offenders among them.
I have read all the mayor Biographies on Marilyn and this one for me comes closest to what the truth might be about what happened to marilyn.
And, by interviewing people close to Marilyn such as Milton H. Greene and Inez Nelson (?), by reading papers from Marilyn to Lee/Paula Strasberg, Pat Newcomb, and others influential in her life, DS gives us further insight into the life of this beautiful but misunderstood immortal screen goddess.
We also learn the truth about her death. No, Marilyn was not killed by the Kennedys. (Both Bobby and John had alibis, and the information DS presents show no reason why they would want to assassinate her anyway.) And from what DS says, Marilyn was planning to remarry Joe DiMaggio and to her friends it didn't seem that she was planning to kill herself.
His hypothesis is that her suicide may have been accidental, after being fed all those barbituates by different people through all the years, and Dr. Ralph Greenson and her housekeeper, Eunice Murray, may have had a hand in it.
I thoroughly enjoyed this book and learned so much from it!
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The arrangement of the chapters in years the expectation evokes the expectation that those are important for the biographer and for the life of Francis. Alas, Spoto jumbles a lot with data and years. He does so with Francis' companions too: which friars visit Francis in the Middle East? When does Peter Cattani becomes minister of the fraternity? in which year the so-called 'first version of the Letter to the faithful' was written? and so on...
By his assessment of some protagonists Spoto shows a writer of a biography of Francis should be a craftsman in franciscanology, too, or he should at least devote more time to study and write than Spoto has done. To give only one example, it is not done to use the judgment of Brother Elias of Omer Englebert. There is too much research done since then!
Anyway, there are enough good and reliable biographies of Francis on the market. You would better choose another.
It is hard to know much about Francis, for so much of his story is hidden with post historical fantasy. Spoto does a good job of presenting these sources and letting the reader know what he considers reality and what he considers fiction. What we do know is that Francis was born in the town of Assisi, in present day Italy. The color and culture of the town in the area is described very well, as we can tell much from St. Francis? origins. Born to well to do parents, Francis quickly gained a reputation as a lazy playboy, living off his parent?s profits. He showed little interest in his fathers merchant business, his only real motivation was his own enjoyment. However, as he grew older, something really changed. Of course, as later observers, we can only guess at the spiritual catalyst for Francis? conversion, but the results are so very exciting. Spoto does a great job of describing this amazing change of heart, as Francis quickly leaves his comfortable lifestyle in the pursuit of ?true Christianity?. Although some of the mystical elements of Francis are stripped away, such as his alleged stigmata, Francis does emerge from this book as a very admirable person, selflessly dedicated to the health of others. His story should be inspirational to Christians and non-Christians alike.
Spoto also provides an intriguing look at the religious politics of the time. While conventional Catholicism was growing in power and political influence, it was losing its connection to the laity, quickly. Many clergy members were corrupt and amoral, with little actual understanding of the gospels themselves. Rome grew more powerful under the reign of various politically astute Popes, but many, including Francis, felt the Church was losing its spiritual mission. This became even more apparent as war after war was waged against the Muslims and various native heretics. The Church was becoming just another nation state, a fate people like Francis were determined to change. Through a mix of strategy and church reluctance to crack down on such an unimposing and pious figure, Francis managed to create an extremely prevalent order that survives and thrives to this day.
While it was a little too short, Spoto provides the reader with a readable and concise biography of a great man.
However many Francis biographies you may have read, this one will offer you insights and facts you haven't come across before...unless you're one of those Franciscan scholars listed in Spotto's excellent bibliography -- or have worked your way through all three of those fat volumes of the new "Omnibus." As a Secular Franciscan, I've read dozens of Francis books over the past thirty-plus years, but I couldn't put this one down.
If Franciscans had a required reading list (unthinkably un-Franciscan!), this book should be at the very top of it.
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Except where it concerns Rossellini, and that is perfectly understandable, because everyone who knows about Ingrid knows that was a real and terrible time in her life. I think it's sad that she went through all that and the marriage ended up falling apart anyway.
Anyway, basically he speaks of her work. She went crazy without it, and really as I think about it her life was work. That's what I remember froming reading this.
It is a very good book, and like everything I have read by Spoto, is well-written and highly interesting. I recommend it very much.
Is this a creative review or what? I seem to be suffering some sort of blank as far as reviews are concerned this morning.