Category: Review
You need these reviews in your life.
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I Owe Russia $1200
Review: Not one of the best in the Hopian oeuvre. I am a pretentions fop. Hopian oeuvre. An opus. Basically less than 40 pages about the Russia trip and all written with a lame gag from his writers every third line. The rest of the book rehashes the post-war Hope Christmas tours, nice enough but… Read more
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Midnight to the North
Review: Excellent, well researched history. The author spends a lot of time making sure you know that she did a lot of excellent well researched history work to make it an excellent, well researched history. I don’t know how anyone could have survived that journey. This book made me want to: wear more warm clothing… Read more
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Son at the Front
Review: A powerful, moving, intensely captivating piece of Whartonian brilliance. This one is not one of her noted masterworks, but it really should be. Mobilization and the Great War seen through the lens of Paris from 1914-1918, and seen through the experience of Americans before they joined the war. Fascinating. It emphasized to me how… Read more
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Songs of a Sourdough
Review: Great stuff. Boy’s Own Annual style, daring men in the frozen north. Really evokes the atmosphere of the Old Yukon, the last wild place. It’s not great poetry, it’s entertaining verse for Canadians on cold nights. This book made me want to: stay warm Overall rating: Readability: Plot: Other: Igloo ambiance Read more
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The Last Christmas Show
Review: This was a difficult one for me to read at an emotional level. It was a page turner for sure, couldn’t put it down sometimes, but the one liners and sexy girls could never quite cover the tragic loss of so many lives, both military and civilian. The flag waving and anti-Commie one liners… Read more
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Ice World
Review: What a nice light, concise effort. Originally published serially in a 1950s pulp mag, you can see by the ending that the editors likely told him to wrap it up. Very science based and no laser fights back then. They were pioneering the genre, and like Bradbury or Asimov, it holds up well over… Read more
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The Road Well Traveled
Review: Now that was a proper biography! Factual, incisive, not sparing the negative aspects of an extraordinary life, but not dwelling or even really digging into the lurid details. Bob Hope continues to fascinate me, and I knew from before I started my reading and collecting that there is always a skull beneath the skin,… Read more
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The Pickwick Papers
Review: Originally published serially, this explains the extraordinary length and often disjointed narrative. An excellent book, you get plenty of humour, plus a lot of pathos, and you can see the start of the Dickensian commentary on the social conditions of the 19th century. Learned a lot, laughed a lot. This book made me want… Read more
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Civil Disobedience
Review: Whiny little bitch. This book made me want to: punch a pond Overall rating: Readability: Plot: Other: Whinitude Read more