Gathering Remnants: A Tribute to the Working Cowboy
Average customer rating: 5 out of 5 stars
  • Wow
  • Shooting cowboys and buckaroos on the open range
  • Classic cowboy photos
  • A beautiful tribute to the American west - you'll love it!
  • A tribute to the working cowboy - for sure
Gathering Remnants: A Tribute to the Working Cowboy
Felicitas Funke-Riehle
Manufacturer: Prairie Creek Productions
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Hardcover

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  1. Cowboys: A Vanishing World Cowboys: A Vanishing World

ASIN: 0967744016

Book Description

The cowboy and his environment are among the most evocative, enigmatic, and surprisingly romantic icons of the American experience. Though considered an anachronistic occupation, the cowboy survives, and contemporary cowboy life is masterfully revealed in this new book of large-format duotone photographs. The apparent isolation of life on the range is balanced by the pride the cowboys exude in their work, and in the tightly bound communities in which they live and operate.

Gathering Remnants presents a world ruled by tradition and a strong ingrained work ethic, which fires our imagination and connects us to our own primal needs for rugged individualism. What makes this book unique is the photographer's ability to capture the authenticity and solidarity of the cowboy's world--vast, flat rangeland that is striking in its subtle beauty.

"Gathering Remnants is a sumptuous book, unabashedly romantic: cowboy as archetype. A spiritual tome, a prayer to a way of life we need to believe in as we stumble through our own, over-scheduled lives."—Teresa Jordan, author of Riding the White Horse Home: A Western Family Album

Contemporary cowboy life is masterfully revealed in this new book of large-format duotone photographs.

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Wow.......2007-09-04

Kendall Nelson captures her subject well. I saw her photos on display at my friend's house and she showed me the book. I couldn't afford the photos, but the book was right in my range. Book is great. Photos are wonderful. I especially enjoy the photo of the cowgirl and her dog.

5 out of 5 stars Shooting cowboys and buckaroos on the open range.......2003-07-02

Here's another book of fine photography devoted to cowboys and buckaroos, this time put together by three women. It's a big oversize book, with 48 black and white plates by California photographer Kendall Nelson. The rather worshipful and romantic text is by German-born writer Felicitas Funke-Riehle. Gretel Ehrlich has provided an introduction about the lonely, hard work of a cowboy, written in her own meticulous eye-for-detail style. (Clint Eastwood has a brief 5-sentence foreword.)

The photos were taken 1996-1999 on several ranches in Nevada, with some additional shots taken in Texas, Wyoming, and Idaho. Most of them are of individual cowboys, many with their horses. Typically they are captured against a sweeping terrain under a big sky with scattered clouds. A buckaroo gathers sage brush for a branding fire. Another sits in the open flap of a teepee tent bent over a silver bit he's repairing, Four vaqueros sit in the shade against a wall, smoking cigarettes, the oldest of them watching the photographer.

Cowboys move cattle through sage brush, raising clouds of dust. A cowboss stands with his wife and son against the plank walls of a shed, their three border collies gathered at their feet. A man leans, head down against a fence, snow collecting on the brim of his hat. The photographs capture the relentless, hard work of these men and something of their solitude. Even as they wait for their horses (see cover photograph) they stand separately, keeping a distance between them. I recommend this book to anyone with an interest in cowboys, cattle ranching, Western life, and thoughtful photography. For vintage photographs of cowboys, I suggest also Richard Collins' "The American Cowboy."

5 out of 5 stars Classic cowboy photos.......2001-04-19

Timeless black and white photography of a timeless subject, Cowboys of the American West. Well done with an obvious emotional connection to her work. A must for everyone's home and heart!

5 out of 5 stars A beautiful tribute to the American west - you'll love it!.......2001-04-06

If you have any interest in cowboys or the American west, you'll love this book. The stunning photographs and elegent text tell the story of a simple, rugged lifestyle that is, sadly, disappearing all too quickly from our national landscape.

You'll want to keep this one handy to look at again and again. And it makes a great gift!

5 out of 5 stars A tribute to the working cowboy - for sure.......2001-02-01

The coffee table book does an extraordinary job of documenting contemporary cowboys. The book is a must for all to see.
Make Them Go Away: Clint Eastwood, Christopher Reeve and the Case Against Disability Rights
Average customer rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars
  • This should be required reading!
  • I Won't Go Away!
  • God Bless America the Ignorance lives on
  • Glad this book makes people think.
  • Good book with some serious questions
Make Them Go Away: Clint Eastwood, Christopher Reeve and the Case Against Disability Rights
Mary Johnson
Manufacturer: Advocado Press, Inc.
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback

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  5. Disability, Society, and the Individual Disability, Society, and the Individual

ASIN: 097211890X

Book Description

Movie celebrity Clint Eastwood fights an access lawsuit. Christopher Reeve insists what's needed is cure. Those who argue for civil-rights protections for disabled people -- rights guaranteed by federal law for over a decade - are all but silent.

The Americans with Disabilities Act "defies logic and common sense," The New York Times once editorialized. Salon.com dismissed it as "a surreal ideology." Why are disability rights so disliked? Why do detractors insist nobody knows about it, even as thousands of articles have been devoted to it? Why do they claim it's a bad law?

In "Make Them Go Away: Clint Eastwood, Christopher Reeve & The Case Against Disability Rights," longtime disability-rights journalist Mary Johnson sheds rare light on this issue by examining the case against disability rights in depth. What are its main arguments? Where do they come from? And what is the other side? Can a valid -- strong -- case be made FOR disability rights? It can, says Johnson, who makes a compelling argument that, since the disabled minority is the one minority any of us can suddenly and unexpectedly join, the nation ignores disability rights at its peril.

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars This should be required reading!.......2007-07-12

At the risk of sounding dramatic, I can honestly say that this book
changed the way I see the world. It was my first formal introduction
to the disability rights movement, and more profoundly, to the social
model of disability.

I consider myself a liberal, and civil rights have always been at the
top of the list of issues important to me. Unsurprisingly (but still
appallingly), I'd never really thought about disability rights. I had
always just believed the medical model, because that's how disability
had always been presented to me. I ran across this book by chance, and
more or less decided to read it because the title intrigued me. The
case against disability rights? Who's against the disabled?

Chapter by chapter, Make Them Go Away reversed the way I think.
Mary Johnson combines history, anecdotes, and quotes from other people
to weave several convincing arguments that broke down everything I
thought I knew about disability. I started it knowing nothing about
disability rights, and by the time I finished it I had resolved to
become an advocate for the issue. I have been trying to tell other
people what I learned from it, but the book is so well-crafted, so
effective, that I just can't put it into my own words. I can only
recommend that people read it for themselves.

Despite being an excellent introduction to disability rights, Make
Them Go Away is not a textbook, and is definitely biased in the
direction of the social model. But I don't think that's bad at all. On
the contrary, I think it's exactly what the average person needs in
order to wake up to the reality of the marginalization of millions of
people.

5 out of 5 stars I Won't Go Away!.......2006-11-16

Quick! Who made the following comment:

"I think it's important to realize that treating all disabled
people as equal--with equal rights and responsibilities--is absurd.
Many of the patients that come through any rehab hospital are there
because of their own ignorance, negligence, stupidity or criminal activities."

A member of a supremacist group? Nope. It was Dr. Kenneth Lefebre
at the Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago. How about this?

"The legal requirement that 'the handicapped' be 'mainstreamed'
is damaging to 'the normal child'."

That was written by Eileen Gardner, appointee to the Reagan
Education Department, in one of her policy papers.

One more, and this one is the real shocker because the
commentator has a disability herself:

"Deny as we may want to, at the point when a person can not be
totally independent physically from others, one is no longer
equal in body. I do not want to be treated equally. I can still
think, but for the life of me I can't think of a way to get rid
of the wheelchair. Therefore, I am not on the same ground I used
to be on. To me that makes my way not equal...How can we bury our
heads so deep and say we are equal to the able bodies around us?
We are not. That's why it is called a handicap, because it is."

Comments like these only bolster the viewpoint Mary Johnson is
fighting against in her perception-shattering book, "Make Them
Go Away: The Case Against Disability Rights". She argues that
people with disabilities are a minority just as women and people
of color are nowadays. Disability, she posits, is a social and
cultural idea, and not merely a "medical problem".

Because people are perceived to be disabled, they are perceived
by society to be unable, incapable of doing much for themselves
or others. Johnson theorizes that the case against disability
rights is strong right now because of this philosophy. It is
also strong because "a disabled person's role in society was
not to criticize it from a minority perspective--for they were
not a true minority--but to work at becoming normal, to be
rehabilitated if not cured."

That, and there have been several lawsuits about the ADA, or
Americans with Disabilities Act. Nobody likes lawsuits, so...

...no wonder most of society still thinks, "Make Them Go Away"!

4 out of 5 stars God Bless America the Ignorance lives on .......2006-07-31

This book describes what has been happening for years centuries. As an EEO specialist I know my rights under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 should protect my rights at the Federal Level. The ADA Act is suppose to protect me at the local level and it does not. I do believe that EVERYONE has rights in this country our rights are comprised every day. As I read the other reviews I noticed Tomthumbguy believes the Civil Rights Moment 60s is not the same I beg to differ. Disabled people like African Americans in the 1960's are still not allowed to eat , shop, go to the movies, travel and live in certain places because there is limited accessibility or people just don't want us there. If I am not mistaken does that not sound like the segregated south from the 1700s until maybe 30 years ago. Also, let's keep in mind disabled people come from all walks of life and ethnicities. That included African Americans.

4 out of 5 stars Glad this book makes people think........2006-03-13

I have not completely read this book. But I am glad that it is making people think. To the reviewer who is up set with this book... I am white so I have no reference for what it is like for African Americans. However, I am disabled and I too would like to be able to go to the same places that everyone else does.

3 out of 5 stars Good book with some serious questions.......2005-09-29

I too personally have experienced what Mary Johnson documents in her well-researched work.

Social antipathy against people with disabilities is so mainstreamed in America that progressive activists who rush to condemn other forms of bigotry, engage in bigotry against people with disabilities. We are time and/or money consuming entities that are still honestly not perceived as contributing anything to society let alone being recognized as social equals.

This inequality then leads people to interpret the ADA as a burden on them as opposed to considering the greater burdens which unjust discrimination places on both the recipient and the nation.

However, I have one minor suggestion to ensure that this book gets to those most needing to read it.

Change the title to more accurately reflect that this book is a critique of how society handles disability instead of something itself which opposes the disability rights movement. Because the disability rights movement is acknowledged as seeking liberation of stereotypical attitudes and laws, it aids Mary Johnson's case.
Clint: The Life and Legend
Average customer rating: 3 out of 5 stars
  • No Million Dollar Bio
  • Clint Fans Beware !
  • Truth or Fiction
  • is "dirty harry" a "rotten clint"?
  • Disturbing yet necessary-Clint's still Clint though...
Clint: The Life and Legend
Patrick McGilligan
Manufacturer: St. Martin's Press
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Hardcover

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ASIN: 0312290322

Amazon.com

As celebrity biographer McGilligan tells it in Clint, Eastwood's career is the classic tale of power and fame corrupting: a small-town boy (who actually grew up in San Francisco) comes to L.A. with a wide grin and an easy manner; is remade by agents and directors (Sergio Leone said, that at first, "Eastwood had only two expressions: with or without a hat"); becomes one of the richest stars in Hollywood; and stops smiling--except wolfishly. McGilligan depicts him as a master of betrayal, casually discarded friendships, and alleged extramarital affairs (which seem to shock the author), complete with alleged children out of wedlock.

Readable though kiss-and-tell breathless, McGilligan's book sometimes overlooks Clint's full significance as a crafter of classics. He should remember the sage words of the French critic who observed, "If you love the films, nothing else matters." --Gregory McNamee

Book Description

Like The Man With No Name, one of his most famous roles, Clint Eastwood has always had an aura of tight-lipped mystery. He has long been an internationally famous star, first of television and then of the movies, and he has more recently joined a select group of Oscar-winning actor-directors, including Orson Welles, Charlie Chaplin and Woody Allen.

But the real Clint has always been an enigma-until now. With this gripping and scrupulously researched biography, Patrick McGilligan, one of America's top film writers, has revealed the man behind the indelible image.

Throughout his remarkable near-half century career, Eastwood has tended to play characters who are cold, hard and morally ambiguous-from Sergio Leone's "spaghetti westerns" through Hang Em High and Dirty Harry to In the Line of Fire and Unforgiven. No star is more the hero to his audience: a symbol of simple solutions, law & order, and rebellion against bureaucracy. But offscreen, Clint Eastwood has always been an arch manipulator: of women, friends and colleagues, publicity and finance.

Always even-handed, managing to steer clear of both fawning over and unfair excoriation of its fascinating subject, this biography sheds definitive light on Clint as actor, director and human being.

Customer Reviews:

2 out of 5 stars No Million Dollar Bio.......2007-07-29

If this biography was a boxing match, the author, Patrick McGilligan, would have been disqualified in the first round for low blows for its condescending tone and tabloid style. Being that as it may, I came into the book thinking there would be major revelations based on the other Amazon reviews I'd read. Hardly. A major Hollywood star of Eastwood's caliber had affairs behind his wife's back? Shocking! Eastwood's style of acting is "wooden"? No way! The only juicy tidbit is that Eastwood was physically abusive toward women. One story depicts him smacking his wife around in front of some friends. The only problem is, this isn't backed up by multiple sources, as the other reviews would have you believe. It's the word of one person, as are the majority of quotes and anecdotes from this biography. Some attributions even have an US Weekly feel to them, saying things like, "A friend added..." Contradictions abound as well. McGilligan claims Eastwood wouldn't allow the characters he played to be badly injured or beaten up to give his screen persona a sense of invincibility. Yet a few pages later he discusses, at length, Eastwood's first major American film "Hang `Em High," where Eastwood's character Cooper is hanged from a tree and left for dead "before the credits roll" and then later shot so many times in a bar fight that the director said it was rather preposterous that Cooper survived. Not to mention Cooper spends a rather long sequence of the film recuperating from the shooting with the aid of, say it isn't so, a woman! This is invincibility, Patrick? I am an Eastwood fan and I hope McGilligan's claims about physical abuse toward women are false. Since he provides little evidence to support these claims, and since Eastwood's films have always championed strong female characters---long before mainstream Hollywood caught on to this idea---I will choose to believe that this wasn't the case. It's true no Eastwood biography written prior to this one was the least bit confrontational or critical of the star, so I understand McGilligan's angle. But if you come to challenge an American icon like that, you better fight a good, clean fight. You can't put lead in your gloves or repeatedly punch someone in the groin and expect to be taken seriously by anyone other than the casual fight fan.

1 out of 5 stars Clint Fans Beware !.......2007-06-01

Patrick McGilligan's book "Clint: The Life and Legend" presents the reader with a negative account of the life of Clint Eastwood from beginning to end.

One can't help but wonder what was the motivation for McGilligan's vilification of one of the most popular living movie giants.

Little is said of the millions of moviegoers to whom Clint has given unquantifiable enjoyment in timeless works.

McGilligan's biography is unauthorised, which is no surprise after the first few pages.

The attention given to movies varies from too much information to very scant detail. "Where Eagles Dare", for instance, hardly gets a mention.

What a pity to waste an obviously good writing talent in such an unbalanced criticism.

Clint fans should definitely give this a miss.


1 out of 5 stars Truth or Fiction.......2006-12-30

If you really like Clint then don't bother with this bio. McGilligan paints Eastwood as a total bastard with no positive character attributes whatsoever. It's pretty much a total character assasination. There is some interesting info about his early career but there is an aweful lot of negative. Maybe that was McGilligan's intention to focus only on the negative and present Eastwood as a sod.

4 out of 5 stars is "dirty harry" a "rotten clint"? .......2006-11-03

john steinbeck said that all good books can be described in one sentence.
following that reasoning, i'd say this: "clint eastwood is not a good person".

according to the 4 year research by the author, eastwood always treated women like garbage, is given to attacks of fury, is an egomaniac, a sloppy director, lazy, holds grudges, is a sadist, is stupid, is a total coward, has no character, is a shmuck... etc.

clint was a sort of a teen idol of mine, i've seen all his films. according to the author, clint's career and myth are a triumph of publicity, of projecting a false image to a worldwide audience.
we all know that people under the spotlight of fame are exposed to false accusations, etc. but even steve mcqueen, with all his faults, had, according to at least 2 biographies, a very human side. according to this book, clint is a block of ice without remission. sometimes, it feels the author is not talking about a human being.

like other reviewers said, the author of the book may have a grudge against clint. but many of the episodes and stories contained in the book are checked and confirmed by 2 or 3 sources, on the record. either this is an extremely violent personal attack or, if it's the truth, well, clint eastwood is a despicable individual.

the author writes well, it's a very readable book. but it's not pleasant to know that dirty harry is, in fact, a "rotten clint".

there are 2 misinformed reviewers here. one says clint sued. but the book doesen't say he beat his ex wife. the book is still in circulation and the judge apparently decided that way. and there is another book by sondra locke which confirms many of the facts presented here. other reviewer says that the author of the book didn't get good reviews. i'd advise him to read the back cover, with praise from prestigious newspapers and magazines. someone also says here that it's an attack on eastwood political values and the author of the book is biased. eastwood supported nixon all through the watergate. any people with any sense of decency or any degree of honesty couldn't ever support nixon's activities in the watergate. need i say more?...

5 out of 5 stars Disturbing yet necessary-Clint's still Clint though..........2005-04-12

I've read this book 4 or 5 times now and I still find it fascinating. Though there are some errors in it, it's still tarnishes Clint's reputation-somewhat. Despite being overtly negative, and sad for those of us who are big fans, Clint will still be Clint to the vast majority. I find it disappointing that he fathered so many kids that he wasn't really a father to, and that he could distance himself from people who were once his friends without so much as a backward glance, but the quote at the end of the book says it all, really. It says: "If you like Clint's films, that's all that matters". I agree, sort of. I just feel let down knowing that someone I admire so much has so many deep character flaws.
AFI Movie Desk Reference
Average customer rating: 4 out of 5 stars
  • Relatively comprehensive look at the American Film Institute
  • Best film book ever
  • A Good Guide for Those New to Film
  • This Book Is Absolutely Perfect...
  • Comprehensive Guide to Movie Mania
AFI Movie Desk Reference
Melinda Corey , and George Ochoa
Manufacturer: Dorling Kindersley Publishers Ltd
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Hardcover

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ASIN: 0751349895

Book Description

The only source of movie history any fan will want to read. Presented by the American Film Institute, the nation's preeminent organization dedicated to advancing and preserving the art of the moving image, the American Film Institute Desk Reference is the most comprehensive reference book on filmmaking ever published. Providing detailed information on the world of film, its history and its personalities, this single volume is loaded with enough facts and trivia to satisfy any movie buff. Highlighting filmmakers and costume designers, financiers and actors, this complete guide is packed with more than 500 photographs and illustrations, a year by year chronology of film, and many special annotated lists, including the AFI's celebrated list of the 100 Best Films of the Past 100 Years.

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Relatively comprehensive look at the American Film Institute.......2006-02-01

There are plenty of good books available on what films are out there and other books of the art of making films. We can find vertical market books on specific subjects that are film related. However this book is exactly hat the title implies. There is more depth to this book than just an overview or an introduction book. Although this book could be a good coffee table book it also makes a good desk reference book.

With 608 pages, most containing partial if not totally glossy color snaps from the famous and obscure movies of our time. The different subject or chapters have color coded tabs on the edge of the page allowing for quickly finding the information sought.

Although designed as a reference I found it more fun to read page by page picking up gems here and there that would never have been found by just reference searches.

5 out of 5 stars Best film book ever.......2005-10-21

Great one. All types of information and fun. Just get it!

3 out of 5 stars A Good Guide for Those New to Film.......2005-08-20

I guess I should have realized from the title that this wouldn't be a comprehensive and in-depth guide. It is a good overview of film history and important movies for those just coming to know classic cinema. Otherwise, it is a bit basic and leaves a lot to be desired. The photos are great, the paper glossy, it's just that the message is a bit on the thin side.

4 out of 5 stars This Book Is Absolutely Perfect..........2005-08-03

...especially if you are a film student and/or studying for a movie trivia game show. I love that it has loads of pictures and tables/lists. Plus, it has any and everything you need to know about the movies. I definitely recommend this book for anyone who would like to know more about film. I promise, you won't be disappointed! :-)

5 out of 5 stars Comprehensive Guide to Movie Mania.......2003-09-17

"In Hollywood, anything can happen. Anything at all." ~Raymond Chandler

If you are looking for a one-volume source containing the information about movies and the people who produce them, this is an excellent reference manual. If information makes you high, this book will make you feel slightly heady. There is information on everything from film history to the biographies of major players. I enjoyed the hundreds of photos, quotes and factoids.

This desk reference is divided into five main sections:

1. Movie History - Take a journey from 1830-2002, decade by decade.

2. Movie Basics - An outline of who, what, when and where. This includes information on studios, creative people, how to break into the movies, buzzwords and coveted salaries.

3. Movie Crafts - The hands-on aspects of movie making. Producing, directing, writing, acting, cinematography, production design, costumes, makeup, hair, special effects, sound and music, editing, distribution and critiquing films.

4. People in Film - Profiles of historical and contemporary film-industry producers and players.

5. Films - Dream lists for the movie lover in you! See if you agree with the AFI's 100 Funniest movie list or read about the top 50 all-time box office hits. The movies are listed, then listed again with additional information. You can also read about the movies again in various parts of the book and page numbers are given for easy reference. Like "Some Like it Hot" is listed in AFI's Top 100 American Movies and while it is listed under AFI's 100 Funniest American Movies, they save space by referring you to pg. 383 for the detailed information.

This section also has a collection of "movie quotations" like: "I'd love to kiss you, but I just washed my hair." ~Bette Davis (Madge), Cabin in the Cotton (1932)

If you enjoy watching Foreign Films, this chapter has information about films around the globe. There are lists of films from Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Canada, China, Czech Republic, Denmark, Egypt, France, Germany, Hong Kong, Greece, India, Iran, Italy, Japan, Mexico, Russia, Senegal, Spain, Sweden and the United Kingdom.

Sources - Addresses, phone numbers and websites for every facet of the film world. If you want to know about film projects in development, there are places you can find this information online.

You can find out information on:

What you have to do to sell your screenplay to Hollywood.
Where you can rent cameras if you wanted to make a film.
Why films get chosen for the Cannes Film Festival.
How the Oscar got its name.
The stars names found on the Holly wood Walk of Fame.

The main features in this book include: Lists of movies, essays, articles giving information about who's who, detailed cinema history, fascinating anecdotes, gossip, trivia and quotes from film personalities in side columns. Information on "screenplay formats and terminology" is a real bonus. It is pretty amazing to find all this information in one book! If there is another book out there that can compete, I haven't seen it.

Essential reading for any film critic and movie lover. If you are looking for movies to add to your must-see list, this book will have you adding hundreds of movies to your list. The Index is very helpful for finding movie information super fast (although I think they should consider expanding the index even further in future editions) and the AFI has gone out of their way to make this book a dream to read.

The perfect gift for anyone who loves movies.

~TheRebeccaReview.com
Clint Eastwood: Billion Dollar Man
Average customer rating: Not rated
    Clint Eastwood: Billion Dollar Man
    Douglas Thompson
    Manufacturer: John Blake Publishing, Limited
    ProductGroup: Book
    Binding: Hardcover

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    4. Eastwood Eastwood
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    ASIN: 1857825721

    Book Description

    Over four decades, Clint Eastwood has become a Hollywood legend, with his success on both sides of the camera assuring him a place in cinema history. Born the son of a steel worker in 1930, Eastwood’s drive for success led him to his first break, in 1959, on the TV series Rawhide. Eastwood broke from television in 1964 with A Fistful of Dollars—his steely gaze and strong, silent screen presence made the film a surprise box-office smash. In 1971, his performance in Dirty Harry cemented his reputation as an electrifying talent, and he has since gone on to star in and direct some of the most memorable films in Hollywood history. Now, drawing on exclusive interviews with the star, Douglas Thompson gives us a definitive portrait.
    Clint Eastwood: Interviews (Conversations With Filmmakers Series)
    Average customer rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    • Great look at a still underrated filmmaker
    • DOA from boredom.
    • Boring
    • Good book, but too pricey
    Clint Eastwood: Interviews (Conversations With Filmmakers Series)
    Clint Eastwood , and Kathie Coblentz
    Manufacturer: University Press of Mississippi
    ProductGroup: Book
    Binding: Paperback

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    3. Clint: The Life and Legend Clint: The Life and Legend
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    5. Unforgiven (BFI Modern Classics) Unforgiven (BFI Modern Classics)

    ASIN: 1578060702

    Customer Reviews:

    5 out of 5 stars Great look at a still underrated filmmaker.......2005-07-14

    The focus of this volume is Mr. Eastwood the director, and this book collects a good variety of American and international interviews with him discussing his process, from PLAY MISTY FOR ME and THE OUTLAW JOSEY WALES to BIRD and UNFORGIVEN and up through MIDNIGHT IN THE GARDEN OF GOOD & EVIL (the book was published in '99, so of course it does not feature any of his works from this new century). If after MILLION DOLLAR BABY you're finally starting to come around and see Eastwood the artist, this book is a great negotiation of his career in the director's chair, in his own, laconic, well-chosen, unpretentious and to-the-point voice. Highly recommended for any budding or hardcore Clint Eastwood fans alike. Or any serious filmfan, for that matter.

    1 out of 5 stars DOA from boredom........2002-11-10

    I had to read this book for an English class. It's just a collection of articles of people interviewing Clint Eastwood through the years. Want to know how he makes movies? He shoots the first take, moves fast and comes in under budget. His history is told over, and over, and over, and over. Nice to read if you run out of sleeping pills.

    1 out of 5 stars Boring.......2002-05-12

    These interviews are dull and repetitive. Just buy the Schickel book.

    4 out of 5 stars Good book, but too pricey.......1999-08-04

    An interesting book for serious Clint fans. However, the $45 price tag is a little steep, and unjustifiably so. Very few photos, only black and white. Save your $$ and buy the paperback instead.
    The Good, the Bad, and the Very Ugly: A Hollywood Journey
    Average customer rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars
    • You won't be able to put it down
    • new title: Hot Flash
    • Awesome book!!!
    • Lies And Spin
    • A Class Act Book by a Classy Lady
    The Good, the Bad, and the Very Ugly: A Hollywood Journey
    Sondra Locke
    Manufacturer: William Morrow & Co
    ProductGroup: Book
    Binding: Hardcover

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    ASIN: 068815462X

    Customer Reviews:

    5 out of 5 stars You won't be able to put it down.......2006-10-31

    Rarely have I ever read a more honest, powerful, moving and funny book. I read the book in two days and was sick the entire time, but was unable to put it down and rest myself. My only wish is that this will be made into a movie...Sondra, god bless.

    1 out of 5 stars new title: Hot Flash.......2006-09-03

    But she is bright enough to keep it at bay. Sandra Locke is the beautfiul southern actress I admired since I was a child for her unique beauty.

    I bought this knowing that it took two to Tango and I stay with it. She sounds bitter and like she does live to be a victim.

    If my memory serves me correctly, she had limited success and she made her name in the 70's through Clint Eastwood. She did not have this great success she claims before him. Now that her meal ticket is closed off, she is resounding victimhood. What she denies in the book is actually what she is doing.

    Save the money and watch the Lifetime channel to hear how women are victimized on a daily basis.

    5 out of 5 stars Awesome book!!!.......2006-01-31

    This book was fascinating, mostly because of precious Gordon and Sondra's interesting encounters with synchronicity. I wish she would write more about it. I was especially fascinated because my mother and I wrote a mystery novel and screenplay about synchronicity titled "Fireworks" (Stargate Press, 2003). I know I was led to read Sondra's book! I wish she and Gordon would produce a movie from our screenplay! How can I reach Sondra?? I'm at www.stargatepress.com

    1 out of 5 stars Lies And Spin.......2005-04-09

    My whole family watches the Clint Eastwood movies, we like them very much and think Mr. Eastwood is a great actor. Sondra Locke is just telling a bunch of lies just because Mr. Eastwood did not want to marry her, I can see why also. If Mr. Eastwood was such a cold hearted weirdo, why does he have seven kids and has been married twice? Anyway, don't buy this book, if you want some good laughs rent it from The Libary. Go out and buy 'High Plains Drifter'.

    5 out of 5 stars A Class Act Book by a Classy Lady.......2005-03-17

    The Good, the Bad & the Very Ugly is an excellent book written by Sondra Locke showing the 'other-side' of the coin, the public doesn't see, of the imperfect 'icon'. Her book has flair, reads smooth and is written with 'class'. Having watched many of Eastwood's films, the most memorable line to me, of all his famous quoted lines, is the one his 'ghost' character articulates in High Plains Drifter - "... it's what a man knows of himself, that makes him afraid..." I hope Eastwood learns what caring and consideration is all about. Caring is an extension of Unconditional Love...something that seems to be drastically missing from his life.
    Reviewed by Stephen R. Sulik, author of "Color of Laughter, Color of Tears."
    Big Sur & Beyond: The Legacy of the Big Sur Land Trust
    Average customer rating: Not rated
      Big Sur & Beyond: The Legacy of the Big Sur Land Trust
      Douglas Steakley
      Manufacturer: Graphic Arts Center Publishing Company
      ProductGroup: Book
      Binding: Hardcover

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      ASIN: 1558686096

      Book Description

      This book takes the reader on a photographic journey through eighty-eight miles of one of America's most celebrated landscapes: Big Sur on the California coast. Co-published with the Big Sur Land Trust, Big Sur & Beyond showcases the natural beauty that led landscape painter Francis McComas to call Big Sur, "the greatest meeting of land and water in the world." It also documents the remarkable achievements of the Big Sur Land Trust, an organization dedicated to saving this precious land. Featuring the photography of esteemed photographer Douglas Steakley, Big Sur & Beyond reveals the splendor of this region, including the dazzling beauty of the Little Sur River, the rare Monterey cypresses at Point Lobos, the majestic Bixby Bridge, and the noble lighthouse at Point Lobos. The book includes an inspiring Foreword by Clint Eastwood, Leon Panetta, Robert Redford, and Ted Turner.
      The Films of Clint Eastwood
      Average customer rating: Not rated
        The Films of Clint Eastwood
        Boris Zmijewsky , and Lee Pfeiffer
        Manufacturer: Citadel
        ProductGroup: Book
        Binding: Paperback

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        ASIN: 0806514159
        Clint Eastwood: A Biography
        Average customer rating: 3 out of 5 stars
        • Fawning and ridiculous
        • Padded and Nonobjective...
        • Enjoyable read, very informative.
        • A mixed bag biography
        • Sufficient overview of Eastwood's career
        Clint Eastwood: A Biography
        Richard Schickel
        Manufacturer: Vintage
        ProductGroup: Book
        Binding: Paperback
        Similar Items:
        1. Clint: The Life and Legend Clint: The Life and Legend
        2. Clint Eastwood: Interviews (Conversations With Filmmakers Series) Clint Eastwood: Interviews (Conversations With Filmmakers Series)
        3. Clint Eastwood: Billion Dollar Man Clint Eastwood: Billion Dollar Man
        4. The Good, the Bad, and the Very Ugly: A Hollywood Journey The Good, the Bad, and the Very Ugly: A Hollywood Journey
        5. Eastwood Eastwood

        ASIN: 0679749918
        Release Date: 1997-10-21

        Amazon.com

        Schickel, a movie critic for Time magazine, surveys the life and career of Hollywood's laconic macho superstar. Eastwood's career has slowly developed: television success in Rawhide; his icon-defining role as the nameless gunslinger in Sergio Leone's spaghetti Westerns; movie superstardom with the Dirty Harry series; then a softening, and even some intellectual respectability, with his Oscar for directing Unforgiven. Shickel chronicles Eastwood's middle-class upbringing in Oakland, California, details a personal life that included a drive to bed many women, and recasts Eastwood from his role as the male equivalent of the "dumb blonde" to that of "one of the great ironists of the age."

        Book Description

        "Authoritative . . . highly nuanced . . . gives the reader a palpable sense of Mr. Eastwood's career."
        --The New York Times

        From the moment The Man With No Name first fixed the screen with his murderous squint, from the first time audiences heard Dirty Harry Callahan growl "Make my day," Clint Eastwood has been an icon of American manhood in all its coolness and ferocity. But that icon is also an actor of surprising subtlety, a filmmaker of vast intelligence and originality--and an intensely private man who eludes the stereotypes with which his fans and critics try to label him.

        In this in-depth biography, the distinguished film critic Richard Schickel talks with Eastwood's family, friends, and colleagues--and, above all, with his notoriously reticent subject--to produce a portrait more astute and revealing than any we have ever had.

        Following Eastwood from his unstable childhood through his turbulent love affairs, assessing films from A Fistful of Dollars to the Oscar-winning The Unforgiven, and locating the subversive streak of rage and solitude that runs through all his work, Clint Eastwood is candid and endlessly fascinating, an unerring closeup of one of our brightest stars.

        "Exhilarating . . . substantial, insightful, and right."
        --Newsday

        Customer Reviews:

        2 out of 5 stars Fawning and ridiculous.......2006-08-18

        Eastwood has always been one of my favorite action stars. Generally a stiff and unsurprising actor, he has played virtually the same character in all his movies. Which is not a problem (for me). My problem is biographies like this one written by Schickel, a usually intelligent and perceptive critic. I'm assuming he had to kiss up to Eastwood in order to get certain information in this book, and his writing reflects this position. Toadish and lacking in objectivity, Schickel finds nothing wrong with Eastwood's constant cheating on his first wife, his inability to work with other directors (he is a control freak), and his hiring of sycophants who would not question his motives--and if they did, they never worked for him again. A major disappointment for anyone seeking an honest evaluation of Eastwood's film career. However, if you worship the ground he walks on--as Schickel obviously does--then this is the book for you!

        2 out of 5 stars Padded and Nonobjective..........2004-08-10

        If you are looking for a thick book about actor/director Clint Eastwood's life and career, illustrated with some unusual photos, then this will fill the bill. If you want an objective biography of Eastwood, together with an objective analysis of his film work, this is not the book you want. Schickel was basically an employee and friend of Eastwood during the researching and writing of the book, and he tends to ignore or downplay the dark side of Eastwood's activities, particularly his alleged "women are like kleenex" philosophy, and his alleged cruelty toward former collaborators.

        The long book is made longer by merciless padding, including detailed and completely unnecessary plot summaries of the films.

        Viewed from 2004, Clint Eastwood is an important actor--- as good an actor as Jimmy Stewart and as iconic an actor as John Wayne. He is also an important and stylish director, and justifiably famous for his gentle ways with cast and crew, as well as his efficiency in coming in under budget. One of the author's continuing themes, brought up on nearly every page, turns upon the consistent misunderstanding of Eastwood, both as actor and director, by two generations of famous mainstream film critics. This theme wears thin quickly when one realizes that there is probably not a single case in which famous mainstream film critics have had the slightest clue as to the value, importance and significance of any new film or film star.

        Eastwood is an important figure in 20th Century cinema, and he deserves an objective, scholarly, independently-researched analysis of all aspects of his life and career. I don't know of one... we'll keep looking.

        5 out of 5 stars Enjoyable read, very informative........2004-07-12

        This is an excellent book about the life and work of a legend. Richard Schickel gives us a close look at the free spirited man that's living inside of the veteran actor. Very detail work about Mr. Eastwood's movie making process and his no bulls**t attitude toward the studio execs and anyone who stands on his way. Ms. Pauline Kael should just say it out loud that she's begging for the legend's attention or just shut the hell up. Any Eastwood fan will really appreciate the author's work.

        3 out of 5 stars A mixed bag biography.......2004-01-03

        Being a huge fan of Eastwood as well as a close personal friend creates quite the conflict in TIME film critic Richard Schickel as he attempts to write a biography about an artist who closely guards his privacy. This obstacle results in a hap-hazard biography that provides few surprises or insights into the laconic, silent man who has become on of America's true unique artists.

        Schickel also drives a stake through the pacing of his writing by providing scene by scene recounts of each of Eastwood's key films. He is overlooking the fact that the majority of his intended audience already has each film memorized. This causes the book to often languish in molasses and cause the reader to skim- never a good thing.

        Where Schickel does succeed is in the all-too brief insights into Eastwood's technique and artistic philosophy. Had Schickel chosen to focus in this area, his work would have provided more depth and sustained interest.

        As is CLINT EASTWOOD: A BIOGRAPHY is a mixed bag read. Worthwhile only if one is willing to skim.

        3 out of 5 stars Sufficient overview of Eastwood's career.......2003-10-23

        With few biographies of Clint Eastwood available, Richard Schickel's 1996 effort fills a void. Unfortunately, the void, though smaller, still exists since this is far from an objective look at either Eastwood the man, the star, or the filmmaker. It's certainly not a surprise. Schickel wrote a 1992 TV special promoting "Unforgiven," and also compiled the film clips for the tribute preceding Eastwood's reciept of the Irving Thalberg Award at the 1995 Oscars. Eastwood cooperated with the author for this biography and even did some interviews in tandem with Schickel to promote the book. And when informing us that the critic for Life magazine praised 1968's "Hang 'Em High," Schickel neglects to point out the name of that critic who just so happened to be...duh, Richard Schickel. When biographer and subject are such good buddies, well, you just have to wonder if you're getting anything closely resembling the truth. But...

        As an overview of Eastwood's career, particularly his transformation from a superstar in genre movies to respected auteur, it is sufficient, even though some easily detected errors go undetected ("Unforgiven" recieved 9 Oscar nominations, not 8 as Schickel says - doesn't anybody bother to check these things?).

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