Book Review: “Life is a Gamble” by Andrew Perendes
Read MoreImagine a Guy Ritchie movie, only for real.
Read MoreImagine a Guy Ritchie movie, only for real.
Read MoreEach book is unique. Books not only mean different things to different people, they’re also open to different interpretations at various points in our lives. A book read at age 20 might not seem like the same book at age 40 — since that book is likely to have a completely different impact. But the book hasn’t changed. We change.
Read MoreLouis Zamperini’s name is probably unfamiliar to you, that is unless you’ve read Lauren Hillenbrand’s second book, Unbroken: A World War II Story of Survival, Resilience, and Redemption. By this time next year, you most certainly will know of this book and name as well as his incredible story, since it’s being made into a movie. Unbroken is scheduled for release in December 2014. A review of the book follows.
Read MoreWhen Malcolm Gladwell releases a new book, it’s an event.
Read MoreI’m attracted to historical biographies. Perhaps it’s an inherent sense of curiosity combined with the obligation to spend at least some measure of time reading the works of dedicated authors who in rare instances spent not merely years, but decades conducting extensive research and ultimately giving new life to people and subjects we thought we already knew well, but may have misunderstood.
Such is definitely the case with one of my favorite books, The Power Broker: Robert Moses and the Fall of New York, the 1974 Pulitzer Prize winner for non-fiction.
Such is also the case for any of the four other Robert A. Caro books on Lyndon B. Johnson, clearly the most thorough research and writing exercise ever conducted on a U.S President by one man. Such is also the case with John Adams by David McCullough, arguably our most noted historian. I could go on and on.
Such is also the case with “Mao: The Untold Story,” written by Jung Chang and Jon Halliday.