Book Reviews - Other

May 04, 2008

Book Review - Weird Arizona

Weirdaz
Weird Arizona: Your Travel Guide to Arizona's Local Legends and Best Kept Secrets
by Wesley Treat
Tucson Weekly
Reviewed by William I. Lengeman III

The road that led to Weird Arizona began in 1992, when Jerseyites Mark Moran and Mark Sceurman began producing "a homespun newsletter" called Weird N.J. It became popular, and in 2003, the duo published Weird N.J.: Your Travel Guide to New Jersey's Local Legends and Best Kept Secrets.

Read more at the Tucson Weekly Web site.

December 13, 2007

Book Review - Lunar Prospector: Against All Odds

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Lunar Prospector: Against All Odds
By Alan B. Binder, Ph.D.
Reviewed by William I. Lengeman III
First published in Air & Space

There are no shortage of books about space missions, but Lunar Prospector: Against All Odds is rare – perhaps even unique – in that it presents a blow by blow account of a moon mission from conception to fruition, as recounted by the man who spearheaded the project and served as its principal investigator.

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October 31, 2007

Book Review - Driving Mr. Albert

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Driving Mr. Albert: A Trip Across America with Einstein's Brain
by Michael Paterniti
The Dial Press, 2000
Reviewed by William I. Lengeman III

It could be the ultimate road trip/buddy movie - a man and the aging and slightly dotty pathologist who removed Albert Einstein's brain take it (floating in formaldehyde in a Tupperware container) on a cross-country jaunt. In reality, it's hard to know what's more unbelievable, that it really happened or that Hollywood hasn't latched onto the story yet.

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October 26, 2007

Book Review - The Air Conditioned Nightmare

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The Air Conditioned Nightmare
by Henry Miller
New Directions, 1970
Reviewed by William I. Lengeman III

One almost has to admire the sheer vitriol with which reviewer Orville Prescott savaged Henry Miller in the New York Times, in late 1945. Though he admitted that his subject was "not without talent," Prescott ultimately concluded that The Air-Conditioned Nightmare was "as shallow, snobbish, uninformed, pretentious and monstrously egocentric a book as ever I read in my life."

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October 23, 2007

Book Review - American Odyssey

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American Odyssey: A Book Selling Travelogue
by Len Fulton, with Ellen Ferber
Dustbooks, 1975
Reviewed by William I. Lengeman III

Most road trip books have at their heart some type of quest, though many of these can be rather nebulous. For Len Fulton and Ellen Ferber, the goal of the road trip that spawned American Odyssey was very straightforward - to sell Fulton's novel, The Grassman, and to raise awareness of small press publishing, in general.

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February 16, 2007

Book Review - Dark Side of the Moon

Dark Side of the Moon: The Magnificent Madness of the American Lunar Quest
by Gerard J. DeGroot
New York University Press, 2006
Reviewed by William I. Lengeman III
(previously unpublished)

Very Short Review
The moon race sucked. Manned space exploration sucks.

Slightly Longer Review
Most people who have any opinion at all probably come down pretty hard on the issue of whether manned exploration of space is a worthwhile endeavor.

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January 29, 2007

Book Review - The Genesis Race

The Genesis Race: Our Extraterrestrial DNA and the True Origins of the Species
by Will Hart
Inner Traditions International, 2004
Reviewed by William I. Lengeman III
(First published in Fortean Times)

One of the most telling statements Will Hart makes in The Genesis Race is that “it is possible to make a case for almost anything and evidence can be found to support what we wish to prove.” This stands as one of the most well-reasoned arguments in a book filled with mostly well-reasoned arguments and an admission that ultimately, unless some staggering bit of “proof” is uncovered to support Hart’s theory of intelligent extraterrestrial intervention, or any other theory of evolution of humankind, we will each have to pick and choose among the theories that seem most viable and more or less take the rest on faith.

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Book Review - Hitchcock On Hitchcock

Hitchcock On Hitchcock: Selected Writings And Interviews
Edited by Sidney Gottlieb
University of California Press, 1997
Reviewed by William I. Lengeman III
(First published at Creature Corner)

The late Alfred Hitchcock may be one of the world’s best-known movie directors. The only other director who really comes close is Woody Allen. Among the contributing factors that made “Hitch” a household name were his prodigious output as a director – more than fifty feature films in roughly as many years – his trademark cameo appearances in each film, a television series that ran for ten years and to which he lent not only his name, but his hosting talents, and a keen awareness of the value of public relations.

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January 22, 2007

Book Review - A Distant Shore

A Distant Shore
by Caryl Phillips
Knot Magazine

A Distant Shore, the seventh novel by Caryl Phillips and a finalist in the 2004 PEN/Faulkner awards, is a bleak work -- even depressing, at times - but one can't help being drawn in and carried along by the intensity of the writing. It did not take the PEN/Faulkner prize, but Phillips' book certainly deserves the accolades accorded it.

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Book Review - Miranda

Miranda: The Story of America’s Right To Remain Silent
by Gary L. Stuart
Z Magazine

Watch enough cop shows and you’ll probably end up memorizing that old familiar litany, the one that begins, “You have the right to remain silent.” Watch cop shows long enough and you may even pick up on the fact that this recitation is known as a Miranda warning. What you aren’t likely to find out from watching cop shows is who Miranda was or how it came to be that criminal suspects are “Mirandized”—or read a statement explaining their rights.

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