Books for/about - Autobiography


 

 
Heat: An Amateur's Adventures as Kitchen Slave, Line Cook, Pasta-Maker, and Apprentice to a Dante-Quoting Butcher in Tuscany

Publisher: Knopf
Authors: Bill Buford

ISBN: 1400041201
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Avg Cusomer Rating: 5
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Summary: I read the book twice
I am a restaurant professional with thirty five years back of the house experience. I know what line cooking under pressure is all about. I thought this book was an accurate and very entertaining portrayal of life in a high volume kitchen. Bill Buford is firstly a literary writer from the New Yorker, so his prose is witty and to the point. He is able to capture all of the personalities that surround him and charts his journey from raw prep cook who slices his finger on the first day, through the pasta station and finally to solo stints on the grill. His observations about celebrety chefdom, restaurant management and looking for truly rustic Italian culinary roots are thoughtful and laced with enough laughs to keep the pages turning until late at night. Like 4 A.M. for this night shift person.
Summary: Outstanding read
This book is entertaining, and hilarous. An absolutely must read for any amateur cook or would-be chef.
Summary: well done but I wanted medium rare
Quirky, madcap cast of character, whose devotion to cooking really comes through in this book. Very insightful as to the goings on in a professional kitchen and the prima donnas that call them home. At times, however, the writing does seem a bit tedious and felt hard to digest. If this book was a steak it would be thick and flavorful but a bit overcooked.
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Night (Oprah's Book Club)

Publisher: Hill and Wang
Authors: Elie Wiesel

ISBN: 0374500010
List Price: $9.00
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Avg Cusomer Rating: 4
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Summary: Long Day's Journey Into the Dark of Night
The book was particularly poignant being told by someone who had to endure the pain of loss, and disregard for his family. Being separated from his mother and sister was exceedingly difficult. But, having to watch his father being brutalized and treated as less than human had to be even worse. At an age when we see our parents as being strong enough to take on the world for us, and keep us safe from those who might want to harm us, it is even more devastating when we see our father, of all people, emasculated before our eyes. The reality of being totally powerless strips away all our defenses.
Elie has to deal with seemingly losing the same feeling of protection from God. He has always trusted God implictly and thought his greatest desire would always be to serve and honor this God. He didn't realize in his youthful simplicity that circumstances of life could compromise this seemingly settled relatonship.
What ultimately strikes us is man's inhumanity to man. We must always be vigilant. Unfortunantly, we always want to think it will not happen again. If we just give in a little, if we can appease our adversaries perhaps they will leave us alone. No one really wants to cause us harm, do they? The stark reality, at any age, is that for whatever reason, there are those who simply have no regard for others and will have what is ours if we offer it to them as an offering of appeasement, or if they have to take it from us no matter the consequenses.
And what ultimately is worse? Loss of life, loss of dignity or loss of illusions? Each are equally devastating. Perhaps Elie was right, grabbing the electirc fence would be the easy way out. No one should ever be put in that position.
That Elie should win a Nobel Peace Prize is the ultimate vindication. Wouldn't it be wonderful if his story could help
eradicate the perverse behavior he, his family, and millions have endured, and continue to endure? Would to God it would even make a substantial impact.
Regardless, the stories must be told, and heard. I loved this book, and the forward by Francois Mauriac. Along with the "Diary of Anne Frank" and Corrie ten Boom's "The Hiding Place" we do hear the stories we don't want to, but must, hear.

Summary: Night by Elie Weisel
This book is a page turner in that this mans journey through hell and back is just unfathomable. God bless him! This gentle soul, is just an amazing writer in which he can take his readers along a virtual life path in order to relive his life from when he was a young boy until the end of World War II. The deception that hid in plain sight was what really took me back. Who could ever have even imagined that mankind be so evil. Hell on earth doesn't come close to describing what this yound boy went through. It makes one think. Mr. Elie Weisel has that special gift and quality as a writer in describing his inner most thoughts and feelings as he somehow some way survives it all. What an amazing book. Thank you.


Summary: 'It's over. God is no longer with us.'
These tragically pitiful words summon the inordinate power of this small book NIGHT by Elie Wiesel. Everyone knows the story of the Nazi concentration camps: No one knows the story of the Nazi concentration camps. Novels, films, photographs, poems, speeches, tours of sites all try to give some idea of the gripping tragedy of the genocide and the deplorable conditions that befell the victims of the camps, but nothing does it as well as this deeply moving account by Wiesel.

The reasons are many. Not only does Wiesel tell his story in the simplest of language without cluttering the facts with gory details: the facts themselves are atrocious enough and when told through the words of a 16-year old boy who entered the camps from his life as a spiritually devout Jew in Sighet, Transylvania that gradually metamorphosed into a challenged believer who felt God and mankind had deserted both his ailing father and him, the impact is overwhelming.

Wiesel's writing is at once eloquent and harrowing and his descriptions of survival through the camps at Auschwitz, Buna, Birkenau, and Buchenwald searingly become imprinted on our minds. Every reader may think these facts are redundant but they can never be retold often enough. Even as we read this book there are occurrences in various places throughout the globe TODAY that resurrect the atrocities herein described. And in reading the Nobel Peace Prize statement by Elie Wiesel that closes this book we are bound to fight against the hate that allows such exploding carbuncles.

This is a book that should be read by everyone, globally. In it lies our only hope that history will not continue repeating itself. HIGHLY RECOMMENDED. Grady Harp, July 06
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Running with Scissors: A Memoir

Publisher: Picador
Authors: Augusten Burroughs

ISBN: 031242227X
List Price: $14.00
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Avg Cusomer Rating: 4
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Summary: Graphic yet Enthralling
For the last 10 years I have been employed by a psychologist who looks like Santa and lives/works in a funky old victorian house. When I saw the movie trailer, I was compelled to get the book to see what we will have in store when the movie is released this fall.

While the book was much more graphic in the details of the sexual abuse of young Augusten, and his persceptions of those around him than I anticipated, I was able to get through those grueling passages and appreciate the presentation of his horrendous life, and respect his ability to make a life for himself inspite of the chaos.

Working in the mental health field, I was of course, appalled by the actions of Dr. Finch, and upon further research was greatly relieved to learn that the real "Dr. Finch", Rodolph H. Turcotte, M.D., did eventually lose his license to practice medicine.

I am interested to see how they will interpret the screen play for this movie. It is difficult for me to imagine how they will be able to keep it an "R" rated movie that is watchable by the mainstream without minimizing the trauma endured not only by Augusten but also other Turcotte family members and patients.

It is an amazingly screwed up world and as Augusten notes, it is difficult to imagine what happens behind closed doors.
Summary: Ughhhhhh
I hate this book. I find this book really hard to believe. I think a lot of it was made up. You may ask yourself, "Why is this book so bad?" This book is so bad that I don't feel the need to explain how bad it is. So there...
Summary: running with narrative
Long winded and boring book. Central character very unappealing and has a rather condescending distance to the real people around him who are in real pain, as opposed to the caricatures he writes down. Could have been great, a real dud.
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The Game: Penetrating the Secret Society of Pickup Artists

Publisher: Regan Books
Authors: Neil Strauss

ISBN: 0060554738
List Price: $29.95
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Avg Cusomer Rating: 5
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Summary: What a story and the best part is that it's true!
Wow what a fascinating read, it left me wanting more. Not only was this a great story it also will improve your game. Neil Strauss goes into detail on methods he uses to pick-up women. However this book is not an "How-To" book, it is more a memoir of Neil's past two years, but it will help you improve your game.
The most amazing thing about this book is it is all true and while your reading it you tell yourself, "Wow this really happened", and it really makes the book that much more fascinating.
However, I really hope the never make a movie out of this book I think that would be a complete shame and would ruin the PUA world. A movie would reveal PUA routines to everyone and also make women more aware of their tactics and it would really ruin the game. A movie would really just be too revealing.


Summary: A fascinating must read!
This is one of the best stories I have every read! I think that it will teach almost every man out there at least a few valuable lessons about women, relationships, sex and life. I completely agree that this book can become a great starting point for a movie.

The story is about the fascinating transformation of an "average frustrated chump" into a first class pick up artist. It is never easy to go through such profound understanding about yourself, the girls in general and what you really need and want to have/achieve in life. However, Neil has successfully found the answers to these tough questions in less than 2 years. It is true that the childhood of all those wannapickup hot girls had been difficult. However, how many men in the world have had perfect and cloudless childhood? I guess, not many. That's why I see Neil's story as an example, at least for me, that you have no right to use such misfortune from your past as an excuse for not being successful with girls.

He proves to the reader with his personal example that if there is a will there is a way no matter whether you want to pick up girls, find the love of your life as he did at the end or open your mind for greater understanding of life. Additional exceptional book that surpassed my expectations is "Scientifcally guaranteed male multi-orgasms and ultimate sex". I highly recommend both bestsellers.
Summary: Secret Society Amazing to read about
This is the story of how an AFC(average frustrated chump) turns into a great PUA (pick up artist). The story is linear and intreaging. A must-not-put-down read full of things that seem too good to be true, but you cant help to not believe. An amazing story of these pickup artists: ups and downs.
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Team of Rivals: The Political Genius of Abraham Lincoln

Publisher: Simon & Schuster
Authors: Doris Kearns Goodwin

ISBN: 0684824906
List Price: $35.00
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Avg Cusomer Rating: 5
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Summary: A Fresh Look
One would think, that after the mountains of books written about the American Civil War in general, and about Abraham Lincoln in particular, that there'd be little more to write. After all, the events she described took place only once. However, Doris Kearns Goodwin has come up with a fresh look at the Lincoln Administration. Few books before this -- e.g., Gore Vidal's fictional "Lincoln" -- told how Lincoln could turn a Cabinet full of rivals into near-apostles.

That is, of course, what the book jacket and the reviewers mention. The details she refreshes are worth a mention here as well; that's the charm of this book. When Lincoln had to get rid of an incompetent Secretary of War -- Simon Cameron -- we learn that Lincoln handled it so adroitly that Cameron himself was grateful to Lincoln when it was done.

We also see the other Cabinet members in more detail than usual. Books about Lincoln and his Cabinet tend to talk about the official lives, rather than personal backgrounds, of these people, and usually only during the war years. (Other than, sometimes, the soap opera with Treasury Secretary Salmon P. Chase and his daughter Kate). Ms. Kearns Goodwin gives us rich detail about the lives and background of other Cabinet officers like Edward Bates and William H. Seward -- going back to the days when they and Lincoln were young lawyers competing for big cases.

Perhaps that explains some of the undertakings that Lincoln and his Secretaries got into, notably the incident where Lincoln, Chase and Stanton personally guided an amphibious landing near the rebel naval base at Norfolk, Va. in 1862. We also see how his young aides John Nicolay and John Hay were key to Lincoln's official and personal support during darker periods of the war.

The author also gives us a more nuanced look at Mary Todd Lincoln. She was part of the official White House and it is interesting to see a treatment of the First Lady that isn't simplistic -- too many take the public or anecdotal figure at face value and leave her looking like a harpy. The author has shown Mary Todd Lincoln to be a far more complex -- and somewhat unexpectedly sympathetic -- figure than we've been led to believe.

It's a lively and very human story, as Ms. Kearns Goodwin tells it, but it's also newly vivid Civil War reading for anybody who thought they had read it all.
Summary: Everyone Has Rivals
Lincoln's greatest political rival to win the Presidential nomination was William H. Seward. Lincoln, through methods I will likely never be able to capably emulate or comprehend was able to make close friends out of some of his most significant rivals.

I will have to re-listen to this biography again and again to try and decipher more of Lincoln's methods and genius, because I'm not smart enough to have discerned many of them in the first listening.

Richard Thomas (The Waltons' John Boy) reads this biography extremely well.

Lincoln led our country through it's most contentious, violent and deadly historical period. Historians will probably always debate if his methods of change were too quick, creating too many unnecessary casualties. But the issues were so great and so consequential for human rights and for government by the people - I doubt I'll ever be able to form a decisive opinion of "what would have been better." Nevertheless, I will try.

For those of you who don't recall the history, when Lincoln was assassinated, the plan was to assassinate his Secretary of State Seward, and Vice President Johnson simultaneously (much like modern terrorism's trend to time multiple violent events simultaneously). Seward barely survived due to some freak circumstances. As Seward was recovering, for several days no one told him the President had been killed so that he did not have that concern during his intensive care recovery.

However, Seward looked outside his hospital window and saw the flag at half mast and said to the man attending him, "The President is dead." The man, following orders, tried to deny it. But Seward continued, "Because if he were not, he would have been the first to visit me." I cried uncontrollably upon hearing this (truthfully, I cried through most of the 2nd half of the final tape, and during the recounting of Lincoln's son's death). The book does an excellent job of reminding us of the fears we have of losing people we love.

I recommend this book on tape for it's replayability. Lincoln believed in reconciliation. He believed in not trampling on a defeated enemy. He had great compassion for the Confederate soldiers. He was a man of letters. He was a man who believed in the importance of well phrased writing. Somehow, through his constant humor and fitting anecdotes, he mades friends of enemies. I aspire to learn more of his wisdom, for he had skills I don't possess.

I recommend buying this book on tape. When you aren't using it, pass it around to your friends, family, and children.
Summary: Excellent narrative of Lincoln's life and times
When it seems that more and more books are being written with an ever narrowing focus - a battle, a speech, "A Day in the Life ..." - it's a pleasure to pick up an old fashioned well researched and well written history that one can sink his or her teeth into. Team of Rivals is just such a book. Although per se there is nothing "startling" or "new" in this biography, the author's perspective/premise - examining Lincoln's growth, evolution, his success(es) and failures in conjunction with the members of his Cabinet - does yield a fascinating look into the multi-faceted character/mind of Abraham Lincoln and proves that 140+ years after his untimely death there is still much to learn from this man. Because of this, Team of Rivals is a welcome and worthy addition to the ever growing catalog of Lincoln history. The only caveat I have in recommending this book would be to a reader who wanted to start here in understanding this complicated time in U.S. history. The amount of information and the number of topics covered might be overwhelming. (Starting with other Lincoln bios by Guelzo or Donald; Battle Cry of Freedom by McPherson on the US Civil War would provide background and are excellent books in their own right.)
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The Glass Castle: A Memoir

Publisher: Scribner
Authors: Jeannette Walls

ISBN: 074324754X
List Price: $14.00
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Avg Cusomer Rating: 4
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Summary: Couldn't put this down!
Jeannette Walls pens an intriguing story. I was drawn to the plight of her and her siblings.
Summary: Awesome read!
I first heard about this book on The Diane Rehm Show (NPR). Diane was interviewing Jeannette about her story and I was intrigued. As it turns out, this possibly could make my top 10 list! I was hooked from page one. I could care less about the arguments other people have about the validity of the memories of a 3-year-old. The whole picture she paints of her childhood and parents was enough to sell me. I have given copies of this book to several friends who are expecting their first child. I think if you have any doubts about raising a "good kid", read this, and it should restore all confidence. I hear a movie deal is in the works. I doubt it will be as good as the book (they never are), but it will be interesting to see the cast. God forbid Brad Pitt or Jessica Simpson are anywhere near this.
Summary: Depressing
I feel bad that Jeanette Walls had such a terrible childhood. Mine wasn't the best either, so perhaps that is why I have put the book aside before I finished it.
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My Life in France

Publisher: Knopf
Authors: Julia Child Alex Prud'Homme

ISBN: 1400043468
List Price: $25.95
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Avg Cusomer Rating: 4
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Summary: A happy book
For an American ex-pat, living in the South of France, this was an especially interesting
book. Not just the colorful description of a successful and happy life, but how, this tall
Californian, who has never been in France and did not speak the language managed to
make it a success.

Julia Child's positive attitude, her curiosity and her talent to pick the good things out of
this foreign and strange country, won her real friends among the French people and
enriched her life.

Her energy was impressive. After a short while, she mastered the language, she studied in
the best French cooking schools, held cooking courses for Americans in Paris and started
to write her now famous Cook Book. She also had time to enjoy life in France. The reader,
through her happy book learns to know a lovely, interesting and pleasant country, which's
population knows how to enjoy the pleasures of life, especially good eating and good
wine.

Those who read her Cook Books will be interested to find out how she acquired the
Knowledge that went in to writing these very successful books.
Summary: An Intimate and Mouth Watering Memoir
This is the truth, that I'm almost embarrassed to admit: First off, my limited knowledge of Julia Child was reduced to perhaps a snippet of her show on television in passing, but more than that, Dan Aykroyd's send up of her on Saturday Night Live.Here's the other thing: I thought she was British.Whoops.
California girl, Pasadena California.
So I'm not sure what drew me to this delightful and informative bio, other than perhaps I thought it would do for France what Francis Mayes has done for Tuscany, it's people , and it's food.
Her prose is breezy and sweeping , since she's covering nearly fifty years in a short amount of time. Her love for her husband, and the various parts of France are in strong evidence, but her passion for food is what obviously drives her. The fascinating thing is seeing how that passion and near obsession is cultivated, through her gourmet education, and later writing her cookbooks and doing her television show. I suppose the ultimate would be to hear her voice while relaying these stories, but it's easy to imagine her as she's telling them. Or maybe that's still Dan's voice in my head. Either way, they're great.
Summary: My Life in France
The personality of Julia Child shines through her writing. A quick read that is very informative as well.
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The Year of Magical Thinking

Publisher: Knopf
Authors: Joan Didion

ISBN: 140004314X
List Price: $23.95
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Avg Cusomer Rating: 4
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Summary: more than one more day
Though not written in real-time, it may as well have been. The writing was done close enough to the event(s) that there might not have been perspective on what Didion was going through w/her husband's death and daughter's illness. BUT - that is somewhat the point: At the time of grief, there is no perspective. She wrote what she was going through *then* and what she was feeling *then*. I find that fairly admirable. To go back and rethink her grief and feelings and put them into another context would have been dishonest.

Does she draw on her's and her husband's previous work? Sure. Does she tie it in nicely to how her past and present have collided? Absolutely.

Didion literally relates her year (ok, year and one day), so I have to say I'm amazed at some of the reviews. Who cares where she ate lunch, stayed at, flew to or knew? It was her experience. Call it namedropping et al, the story is hers and she makes no assumptions that this is how everyone does or should deal w/loss.

Who cares if her daughter was adopted or not - does that change her being a mother? None of it discounts her take at her grief.

This is a fairly quick read. It answers no question - but I'm sure could give insight to grief in others and it shows how one can and does go on, as we all must.
Summary: Death is the universal leveler
I am amazed at the reaction to death by people of privilege. Like Leona Helmsley's infamous observation that "taxes are for the little people", Joan Didion reflects the same fabulistic sentiment about death. How do they arrive at this peculiar notion? Doesn't it speak ironic volumes that her husband's last thought on this earth was to worry that he might have drunk a blended scotch followed by a single malt?
Summary: A Stong Woman is Hard to Find
Admirable female heroines are as rare as hen's teeth so when I come across one I get quite giddy with glee. Joan Didion lives through just about all that life can dish out to someone who is not actually the victim, and she does so with a stoic humanity and grudging bravery that are riveting to this reader. I particularly like the way she takes on the medical establishment, and the rare but piercingly funny bon mots planted here and there throughout the book.
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