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LINCOLN BOOKS
Posted in Lincoln (Thursday, August 21, 2008)
Written by Wendy K Lincoln. By iUniverse, Inc..
The regular list price is $11.95.
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No comments about Shot in the Dark: A Novel.
Posted in Lincoln (Thursday, August 21, 2008)
Written by Ray Miller and Glenn Embree. By Lincoln Publishing (NY).
The regular list price is $52.00.
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No comments about V-Eight Affair: An Illustrated History of the Pre-War Ford V-8 (The Ford Road Series, Vol. 3).
Posted in Lincoln (Thursday, August 21, 2008)
Written by Gene Smith. By Simon & Schuster.
The regular list price is $23.00.
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3 comments about American Gothic: The Story of America's Legendary Theatrical Family-Junius, Edwin, and John Wilkes Booth.
- The older Booth brothers were a hard act to follow, being classical and Shakespearean actors of the highest degree. Edwin played Hamlet upteen times on stage. John felt second best and left out of the major plays and had to seek his fame in another way. He is now called American Brutus, but I beg to differ: Booth was in Harper's Ferry, Virginia, (now West Virginia) in 1863 and fell in love with the surroundings. I have seen this special place in a few movies since my boys and I were there. It is a distinctly different place from any other. Once you've been there, you will never forget every little detail. It is that historical and meaninful in this country's war zone. I have been interested in Lincoln's assassination for over twenty years, mainly because they hanged Mary Surrat, the first woman to be officially killed in this manner. It was at her boardinghouse where the conspirators met to discuss and plan killing Lincoln and others in his Cabinet.
John Wilkes Booth, from a prominent acting family, was a Confederacy sympathizer. But that in itself does not make him guilty. He was denied his right to a trial. Most of the South were more than a little upset when Lincoln was inaugurated for the second time. They refused to accept him as "our" President. We had Jefferson Davis who married Zachary Taylor's daughter. I don't believe old Zach was a Rebel. "Killing Lincoln' as a one-man theatrical presentation, written by Amy Russell, originally premiered in Toronto, Canada. I emphatized with the young actor (who I thought was an old man, as he is such a good actor) who said, "I enjoyed playing off you." I told him the reason he held my complete attention was due to the fact that I had read so much about Lincoln and also sympathized with Booth's reasoning.
Lincoln as it so happens was a Shakespeare fan and enjoyed going to Ford's Theatre. John Wilkes Booth (Brutus) as one of the most promising young Shakespearean actors of his day. Booth considered Lincoln an "American Caesar." He is sometimes called Booth "American Brutus," the title of another Booth book I have reviewed. He was an extremely handsome man and, even though he broke his leg in the leap to the stage (instead of running down the back stairs), he eluded capture with the help of a Dr. Mudd for twelve days. He was not given a chance to tell his side and the complex, misleading reasons he did what he did. That took fortitude! He did not act alone! That's a major issue. He was cornered in that barn like an animal and burned (at the stake) by the vigilante cowards. He was never close to Lincoln as Brutus was to Jesus so the title is deceiving. He was merely a misinformed player who ended up "on his own" after the dasdardly deed. He deserves better than to be called a devil. To some, he was an avenging angel. He achieved fame in his own way, though there have been romors thathe did not die in the fire but survied to live another day and another life. That has not been confirmed, but Eric will delve through the history and tell us what really happened. And why.
- I find this book to be very helpful in my investigations of understanding the Booth family. Those whom are interested should know it's like a Shakespeare tradgedy. I recommend this book to anyone studying John Wilkes Booth.
- As the two reviews below demonstrate, many people might read this book just to find out more about Lincoln's assassin. From the post-Civil War era to this day, "assassin" is the only translation of the name "Booth" that most people understand.
But Gene Smith gives us the rest of the story of a theatrical "dynasty", and the depth of his research is amazing, at least in my opinion. Yes, there were other Booths besides John Wilkes, and other reasons for memorializing this family besides Presidential death. No one today remembers the father, Junius Brutus Booth, a wonderfully boisterous, crazy old drunk and ground-breaking actor who was adulated like a rock star in his time. Edwin and John, two out of the nine or ten (legitimate and illegitimate) progeny of JBB, surpassed their father, and Edwin has been called the greatest American tragedian who ever lived.
Like any biographer, Mr. Smith puts flesh on these characters, with a particular eye toward trying to rehabilitate John. It is a lyrical, touching, sympathetic story full of little-known details: John's body finally being released to his mother from its secret basement hole for reburial in the family plot; Edwin burning his brother's theatrical trunk and every costume and prop in it, under the rueful eyes of a long-time servant; the spontaneous, disastrous collapse of the original Ford's Theater building, seemingly at the moment of the death of Edwin; a certain hummock in the median strip of a Virginia freeway, the site of the house on whose porch the "unfortunate" Johnny sucked his life away.
But Mr. Smith doesn't really answer the question of why Johnny did it. His (purported) fiancee, Lucy Hale, was a Yankee. John's animus seemed to be directed at Lincoln himself rather than the U.S. Republic. Maybe it was partly theatrics and partly the family tendency toward insanity.
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Posted in Lincoln (Thursday, August 21, 2008)
Written by William H. Armstrong. By Putnam Pub Group Library.
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No comments about The Education of Abraham Lincoln.
Posted in Lincoln (Thursday, August 21, 2008)
Written by Bruce Tap. By University Press Of Kansas.
Sells new for $19.95.
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No comments about Over Lincoln's Shoulder.
Posted in Lincoln (Thursday, August 21, 2008)
Written by James H. Duff and Adnrew Wyeth and Thomas Hoving and Lincoln Kirstein. By Little Brown & Co (T).
The regular list price is $19.99.
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2 comments about An American Vision: Three Generations of Wyeth Art : N.C. Wyeth, Andrew Wyeth, James Wyeth.
- This is a fascinating book - about all three artists and also a study of artistic ability and creativity running through the family. I bought it years after enjoying the exhibition and have also given it to other art lovers. What the artists have to say about each other is interesting and the reproductions are beautiful. Don't miss this - it will only enhance your appreciation every time you encounter a Wyeth!
- In 1987 there was a traveling exhibition, AN AMERICAN VISION: THREE GENERATIONS OF WYETH ART, that was accompanied by a beautiful hardcover book by the same name. Fortunate for art lovers that catalog, having passed through a paperback phase, is once again appearing on the shelves of book stores and museums. It is a treasure worth seeking. Presented with a fine overview by James H. Duff the book follows the lives and influences and works by the three Wyeths: N.C. Wyeth, 1882 - 1945, is introduced by his son Andrew; Andrew Wyeth (born 1917) is introduced by Thomas Hoving; James Wyeth (born 1946) is introduced by Lincoln Kirsten who not only brings the reader up to date with Wyeth the Younger, but also provides insights to the durability of the Wyeth tradition and influence on American art.
Some may have once dismissed the three Wyeths as minor artists and major illustrators, but today's critics share a growing appreciation for their output, both individually and as a family of unique thought. NC Wyeth's works were more devoted to historic adventure paintings and his works were often used in books as illustrations for tales of adventure. Andrew Wyeth captured the mood of an America losing contact with the simplicity of her roots and his simple, unfettered landscapes and portraits continue to be hallmarks of a simpler time, a period when the poetry of Robert Frost and William Carlos Williams and the music of Aaron Copeland defined the quiet frontier vision too often forgotten in the smoke of industry and the clangor of technology. James (or Jamie) Wyeth's approach to nature and her animals and to the rugged individualism of the people who populate New England continue to celebrate the customs and concepts of a neglected America continue to grow: many feel his current work is his strongest.
The book is filled with full color plates of the paintings and drawings of all three of the Wyeth clan and moving through the pages is not unlike strolling the museums where this exhibition traveled throughout the USA and in Russia, England and Japan. It is a book of revelations about the three artists and an homage to a family talent that persists. Very highly recommended: look for it now! Grady Harp, December 07
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Posted in Lincoln (Thursday, August 21, 2008)
Written by Egon G. Guba and Yvonna S. Lincoln. By Jossey-Bass.
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1 comments about Effective Evaluation: Improving the Usefulness of Evaluation Results Through Responsive and Naturalistic Approaches (Jossey Bass Social and Behavioral Science Series).
- The book is to ground hepl for persons that will want assessment cualitatives features like: institutional programs, relationship between teachers, behavior students, attittuds.
Guba and Lincoln give us one methodology to apreciate the set with one different perspective, more holistic. Give us how understand and interpretation the human behavior and, indicators or categorys that are important consider in one evaluation. I recomend this book for these persons who are intersted in impruve their enviroment through the one integrated vision. Ma. Teresa
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Posted in Lincoln (Thursday, August 21, 2008)
Written by Hyechong Cheung. By Frances Lincoln Children's Books.
The regular list price is $16.95.
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No comments about K is for Korea (World Alphabets).
Posted in Lincoln (Thursday, August 21, 2008)
Written by Stephen Lindsay. By Alterna Comics.
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No comments about Jesus Hates Zombies featuring Lincoln Hates Werewolves.
Posted in Lincoln (Thursday, August 21, 2008)
Written by Andrew Fusek Peters and Polly Peters. By Frances Lincoln Children's Books.
The regular list price is $8.95.
Sells new for $5.06.
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No comments about Roar, Bull, Roar! (Czech Mate Mysteries).
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Shot in the Dark: A Novel
V-Eight Affair: An Illustrated History of the Pre-War Ford V-8 (The Ford Road Series, Vol. 3)
American Gothic: The Story of America's Legendary Theatrical Family-Junius, Edwin, and John Wilkes Booth
The Education of Abraham Lincoln
Over Lincoln's Shoulder
An American Vision: Three Generations of Wyeth Art : N.C. Wyeth, Andrew Wyeth, James Wyeth
Effective Evaluation: Improving the Usefulness of Evaluation Results Through Responsive and Naturalistic Approaches (Jossey Bass Social and Behavioral Science Series)
K is for Korea (World Alphabets)
Jesus Hates Zombies featuring Lincoln Hates Werewolves
Roar, Bull, Roar! (Czech Mate Mysteries)
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