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Books & Novels Children's Books General Non-Fiction History & Biographies (Books)

WHERE IS ALCATRAZ?

Written by Nico Medina & Illustrated by David Groff

SUMMARY:

Published in 2016 by Scholastic, Inc., this 108-page historical account explains the origin of Alcatraz Island dating back to its first known settlers.  Author Nico Medina explores Alcatraz’s evolution into a prison facility and its notoriety up through its status as a present-day tourist attraction.  Alcatraz’s occasional presence in films is also briefly mentioned.  This book is extensively illustrated with David Groff’s pencil sketches.   

REVIEW:

The author, Nico Medina, impressively provides more depth than one might expect, in terms of its notorious prisoners (i.e. Al Capone) and little-known facts (i.e. how families of guards once lived on the island).  Inevitably, Medina covers the various escape attempts with sufficient details without being too graphic re: violent content.  Yet, what really completes this book as an educational package is that artist David Groff’s sketch illustrations are superb.  Where is Alcatraz? makes an excellent teaching tool, primarily for fourth and fifth graders. 

ADDITIONAL CONTENT:

There’s a helpful flip-side insert: one side has four color photos and the other side is a color map of Alcatraz Island, as it is situated in San Francisco Bay.  There are timelines of Alcatraz & San Francisco, as well as world history between 8000 B.C. and 1973.  A short bibliography offers eight books for further reading, though none of them are recommended as kid-friendly.

ROSCOE’S ODD MOON RATING:                          8½ Stars

Categories
Books & Novels General Non-Fiction History & Biographies (Books) Westerns

WILD BILL: THE TRUE STORY OF THE AMERICAN FRONTIER’S FIRST GUNFIGHTER

Written by Tom Clavin

SUMMARY:

Released in 2019 by St. Martin’s Griffin, this 333-page softcover is a biography of “Wild” Bill Hickok.  The prologue recounts Hickok’s July 1865 duel with Davis Tutt in Springfield, Missouri.  The author then explores Hickok’s lineage dating back centuries before moving on to his youth and pre-Civil War adulthood.  Including his friendships with “Buffalo Bill” Cody and Lt. Col. George Armstrong Custer, Hickok’s life as an Union Army scout/spy receives extensive attention, as does his growing (and self-promoted) fame as a frontier lawman/gambler. 

After a tragic incident effectively ends Hickok’s career in law enforcement, readers learn more of his aborted run as a stage actor.  With his health and future options dwindling, the end of Hickok’s mercurial life is explored.  In addition to his alcoholism, the author examines Hickok’s only confirmed marriage and a less-than-romantic reality disproving his alleged fling with Calamity Jane.  The epilogue reveals the fates of significant individuals in Hickok’s life who outlived him.    

REVIEW:

To author Tom Clavin’s credit, he is rightfully skeptical re: many (but not all) of Hickok’s superhuman exploits that enthralled gullible admirers in his own lifetime.  Relying upon a solid bibliography, Clavin delivers a mostly plausible account of Hickok’s controversial life.  Clavin occasionally sidetracks re: peripheral participants, but he manages to resume his entertaining narrative without much strain. 

The sole oddity is that some documented incidents from Hickok’s life (i.e. a saloon brawl/shoot-out vs. two members of the Seventh Cavalry) are omitted while others (i.e. various other frontier shooting and scouting incidents) are inserted.  Of particular interest are glimpses of Hickok’s poorly-spelled correspondence with his family and later his wife, which reveal the frontier legend’s intriguingly sentimental side. 

Yet, Clavin’s best segment discusses Hickok’s premonition of his own imminent death in August 1876.  Evidently sensing days and likely weeks before that some unknown threat would finally gun him down, an aging Hickok’s decision-making (as if waiting for the inevitable) makes for an engrossing read.  While Clavin’s effort might not be the best-ever Hickok biography, Wild Bill will likely be the definitive one for this generation.

ADDITIONAL FEATURES:

There’s a sixteen-page black-and-white photo section, plus some additional black-and-white portraits interspersed of Hickok.  Included is an author’s note, acknowledgments, bibliography, and index.  A 11-page chapter entitled “The Fight’s Commenced” previews Clavin’s next book: Tombstone, which is set for release in April 2020.  The last page is a head shot of Clavin and his paragraph-length bio.   

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING:                            8 Stars

Categories
Books & Novels General Non-Fiction History & Biographies (Books) Westerns

TOMBSTONE: THE EARPS, DOC HOLLIDAY, AND THE VENDETTA RIDE FROM HELL

Written by Tom Clavin

SUMMARY:

Published in April 2020 by St. Martin’s Press, this 386-page hardcover is Tom Clavin’s account of the events and immortal characters precipitating the Gunfight at the O.K. Corral.  What follows is Wyatt Earp’s vengeance ride to avenge his brothers to finally end a three-year feud.  A prologue set in March 1882 has Wyatt sense that his undersized posse may be soon facing a climatic encounter with rival Sheriff John Behan’s own forces.  After the first chapter summarizes Wyatt’s stint with Bat Masterson in 1879 Dodge City, Clavin then analyzes the backstory of how Tombstone was first founded. 

Subsequent chapters explain the how’s and why’s of the various players converging in opulent Tombstone, as rustling, robberies, and murder in the Arizona desert take their toll.  Wyatt Earp’s covert effort to recruit cowardly rustler Ike Clanton to apprehend three fugitive stage robbers is only one of several twists leading up to the historic O.K. Corral showdown.  With the Earp Brothers and ‘Doc’ Holliday exonerated for the deaths of three cowboys/rustlers, a shadowy conspiracy bent on retaliation decimates Wyatt’s immediate family. 

Leading a federal posse out of Tombstone, Wyatt pursues the elusive culprits who permanently maimed one brother and brutally murdered another.  Clavin concludes his project with an epilogue revealing the fates of the various survivors.  

REVIEW:

As far as bolstering the Wyatt Earp biographical genre, Tom Clavin’s Tombstone doesn’t unearth new revelations.  Still, no matter how familiar his material is, Clavin still cranks out a high-caliber rehash.  His conversational style and occasional tidbits of wit are terrific storytelling assets — i.e. how a perpetually hung-over Ike Clanton was evidently an amateur track star, whenever it came to fleeing from/evading bullets. 

By commending Earp-friendly titles (i.e. Casey Tefertiller’s Wyatt Earp: The Life Behind the Legend), the fact that Clavin eagerly adopts the traditional viewpoint of the crusading Earps and Holliday vs. a horde of frontier mobsters isn’t a shocker.  As a result, most Old West enthusiasts won’t be disappointed.    

Giving Wyatt and, to a degree, Holliday a wide pass re: their own controversial activities, Clavin mostly aligns his detailed account with the 1993 Tombstone film.  Impressively, he avoids playing up Hollywood melodrama, as Wyatt’s mythical Buntline Special is nowhere to be found in Clavin’s book.  In a further nod to credibility, he acknowledges the socially-aspiring Earps’ various conflicts-of-interest, including a married Wyatt’s discreet affair with Behan’s enigmatic wife/ex-wife, Josephine Marcus.  Best of all, Clavin makes a convincing case re: why the ambivalent Earps felt little alternative in facing down an increasingly brazen threat from renegade cowboys – no matter the mixed perception by Tombstone’s citizenry.    

Ultimately, the author’s faith in Wyatt’s personal integrity and sense of family honor makes his Tombstone a compelling read for anyone — whether they’re armchair historians or not.

ADDITIONAL FEATURES:

Clavin provides an author’s note and concluding acknowledgments.  There’s also a selected bibliography and an index.  

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING:                             8 Stars

Categories
Books & Novels General Non-Fiction History & Biographies (Books) Westerns

THE GUNFIGHTERS

Written by Dale T. Schoenberger & Illustrated by Ernest Lisle Reedstrom

SUMMARY:

Published in 1971, historian-teacher-journalist Dale T. Schoenberger notes he spent sixteen years researching this 207-page hardcover’s biographical profiles of: Clay Allison; Wyatt Earp; ‘Wild’ Bill Hickok; ‘Doc’ Holliday; Bat Masterson; Luke Short; and Ben Thompson. 

Packed with photos, illustrations, and a few diagrams, Schoenberger’s stated premise is veering as far from legend and outright fiction as possible to document these seven gunmen’s lives through verifiable sources.  Specifically, he often relies upon local journalism and government reports written at the time specific events occurred, and even the reminiscences of surviving old-timers. 

Though some larger-than-life incidents and/or floating rumors are alluded to, the author opts for chronological reporting (with frequent citations) on each profile.  When appropriate, Schoenberger expresses bits of plausible speculation to fill in gaps (i.e. his theory for Allison’s raging temper would be undiagnosed manic depression exacerbated by chronic alcoholism).

With help from illustrator Ernest Lisle Reedstrom, Schoenberger strives to make his Gunfighters an impartial contribution to American Old West historical research.       

Note: There are some insensitive racial expressions in the text.

REVIEW:

It’s stunning that Schoenberger’s easy-to-read text dates back more than a half-century, and yet these seven profiles remain virtually indisputable.  Some present-day writers (i.e. Tom Clavin, re: both Hickok and Earp) have reported additional incidents that Schoenberger either missed or omitted, but, unlike many works in this genre, The Gunfighters doesn’t take sides. 

Case in point: the author acknowledges that some of Earp’s contemporary local detractors suspected his covert involvement in Tombstone stage robberies, along with other reported examples of Earp’s alleged criminal dishonesty.  Yet, Schoenberger also spells out Earp’s consistently respectable (though hardly spectacular) track record as a Kansas policeman.  While Earp’s enigmatic life and likely embellished exploits justifiably require the longest profile, the author tries not to overlap too much examining Wyatt’s favorite cronies: Holliday, Masterson, and Short.

Perhaps most intriguing are the Allison and Thompson profiles, as neither quick-tempered rogue has attracted nearly the same caliber of media attention as the other five have.  For instance, Schoenberger’s deductions re: Thompson’s autopsy report provides possible insight as to why his hidden assassins weren’t ever prosecuted, let alone conclusively identified.  Or, for that matter, the author indicates that eye-popping tales of Allison’s psychotic wrath possess some degree of truth, though likely dates and locales have shifted over time. 

Lastly, tidbits about how/when some of these lives intersected (i.e. Allison’s purported Dodge City encounter with Earp & Masterson) make the mythic American Old West seem far more down-to-earth.  If anything, Schoenberger’s obscure gem of a textbook merits re-discovery, as it should prove invaluable to the 21st Century’s armchair historians.  As this reviewer can further attest, it’s a dynamite reference for middle school and high school research projects.            

ADDITIONAL FEATURES:

There’s separate tables of contents for the chapters and black-and-white illustrations (including photos).  Schoenberger also includes: acknowledgements, impressively detailed footnotes for each chapter, an extensive bibliography, and an index.  Perhaps most insightful is a two-page introduction explaining his rationale re: these particular gunmen were selected and why certain other gunmen (i.e. John Wesley Hardin, Bill Longley, and Johnny Ringo) were left out.  Though he doesn’t specifically mention them, Billy the Kid and Pat Garrett were evidently excluded, in part, because they didn’t meet Schoenberger’s criteria re: a lifetime of geographical diversity.  

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING:                        8½ Stars

Categories
Books & Novels Children's Books General Non-Fiction History & Biographies (Books)

FIRST FLIGHT: THE STORY OF THE WRIGHT BROTHERS

Written by Caryn Jenner

SUMMARY:

Published by DK Readers in 2003, this forty-nine page 4th Level book is  a brief overview of the history of flight dating back to Greek myth and later to the 15th Century efforts of Leonardo da Vinci.  The next chapter leaps to 1878, where a young Wilbur and Orville Wright are amazed by a rubber band-powered toy (similar to a toy helicopter).  The subsequent chapters explain the Wright Brothers’ progression into adulthood in Dayton, Ohio, where they make a transition from newspaper publishing to a bicycle repair shop.  By 1896, after the death of German glider pilot Otto Lilienthal, the two brothers start contemplating a design for their own first aircraft.

Three years of flying experiments ultimately leads to their successful flights in mid-December 1903.  Further experimentation allows the Wright Brothers to finally set up their airplane business.  It is noted that one of their passengers was the first airplane casualty in 1908.  As of 1909, the Wright Brothers were now international heroes.  The last few pages detail Wilbur and Orville’s fates, and their contribution to modern aeronautics.

REVIEW:

For its intended young audience, First Flight effectively spells out the Wright Brothers’ contributions to world history.  Smartly, DK Readers includes reference to the risks of experimental flight, as a few lives were tragically lost during this era.  Still, the book’s best moment arguably is a brief depiction of Orville taking their 81-year old father up for his first-ever flight in 1910.  Assuming Milton Wright actually shouted, “Higher, Orville!  Higher!,” it really helps sparks one’s imagination visualizing what he must have likely seen and felt at the time.  For elementary-age kids, this book should prove an impressive little gem.

ADDITIONAL CONTENT:

There is a single-page glossary and a single-page index.

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING:                        9 Stars

Categories
Books & Novels Children's Books General Non-Fiction History & Biographies (Books) Movies & Television (Books) THREE STOOGES-Related

WHO WERE THE THREE STOOGES?

Written by Pam Pollack & Meg Belviso / Illustrated by Ted Hammond

SUMMARY:

Published in 2016 by Scholastic, Inc., this 106-page biographical account explains the history of the Three Stooges, which begins with Moe Howard’s birth in 1897.  Co-authors Pam Pollack and Meg Belviso review how Moe first joined forces with older brother Shemp and Larry Fine.  With Shemp leaving for a solo career, Shemp and Moe’s youngest brother, Curly, joined the act, which effectively created the Three Stooges.  Their history as a team (including its turnover from Curly back to Shemp, then to Joe Besser, and finally Joe DeRita) also includes some details of their own personal lives.  This book is extensively illustrated with pencil sketches.   

REVIEW:

Competently illustrated by artist Ted Hammond, this biography nicely repackages details from other sources (including Moe’s autobiography) to convey an interesting account of the Stooges.  As a result, this easily readable book could prove appealing to Stooge fans beyond its intended elementary school audience.  Generally well-played!   

ADDITIONAL CONTENT:

There are timelines of the Stooges’ lives (dating back to 1985 through 1975) and world history during their lifetimes.  A short bibliography acknowledges its seven resources available elsewhere for further reading.

ROSCOE’S ODD MOON RATING:                    7 Stars

Categories
Books & Novels General Non-Fiction Movies & Television (Books)

CADDYSHACK: THE MAKING OF A HOLLYWOOD CINDERELLA STORY

Written by Chris Nashawaty

SUMMARY:

Published in 2018 by Flatiron Books, this 294-page hardcover by Entertainment Weekly movie critic Chris Nashawaty explores the behind-the scenes hijinks during the production of 1980’s Caddyshack.  Nashawaty’s narrative harkens back to The Harvard Lampoon of the late 1960’s before moving on to National Lampoon magazine in the 1970’s. 

Edgy rising comedians, such as John Belushi, Chevy Chase, Bill Murray, and Harold Ramis, helped expand National Lampoon into other mediums, as well as inspire NBC’s Saturday Night Live.  Seeking to score big in Hollywood off their screenwriting gig for 1978’s Animal House, Ramis and cohort Doug Kenney soon finagle their way into making their own movie: Caddyshack

In face of upcoming box office competition from The Blue Brothers and Airplane!, an inexperienced production team and a cast of unique personalities proceed to literally take Florida by storm during filming.  Drug abuse controversies, ad-libs, backstage feuds, and scathing reviews resulted in the film achieving initially modest success.  Yet, Caddyshack’s eventual rise as a Hollywood underdog legend proves a bumpy ride for all involved.         

REVIEW:

Oddly, if one is searching for LOL anecdotes, don’t expect to find them in this book.  It’s no contest that viewing either Caddyshack, or its upbeat making-of featurette, “The 19th Hole,” is a far sunnier experience. 

To his credit, writer Chris Nashawaty delves into the backstory opportunism to explain how Hollywood neophytes Ramis and Kenney ultimately convinced (or perhaps conned) Orion Pictures into bankrolling a six-million dollar movie — let alone trust this duo to behave on location in Florida. Nashawaty’s account is an insightful read, especially head-shaking details of an orgy-like atmosphere freely indulging cocaine, dope, and booze during the film shoot – with Orion Pictures evidently oblivious most of the time.  

It’s not really surprising that a scene-stealing Rodney Dangerfield, for instance, was inexperienced and insecure re: whether his ultra-obonxious on-screen persona was actually funny or not. A more telling sign is how Ramis admits he ingeniously manipulated a spot-on performance from a simmering Ted Knight.  Considering Knight’s old-school professionalism was a far cry from the set’s lackadaisical (at best) atmosphere – it’s ironic how art copies life (or vice versa).

Reminiscences from Ramis, Bill Murray, Cindy Morgan, Chevy Chase, and Michael O’Keefe, among others, are intriguing. Readers get backstage tales of how scenes were improvised, re-improvised, or simply cut to emphasize its four main stars.  For that matter, it’s explained why executive producer Jon Peters pushed for the goofy animatronic gopher’s inclusion, despite lesser-known cast members (“the caddies”) being resentfully upstaged and their screen time considerably shortened. 

Yet, the book’s egotistical behind-the-scenes squabbles are overshadowed by Doug Kenney’s bizarre world, including his enigmatic death months after filming had completed.  For a professional humorist, there’s nothing remotely chuckle-worthy about Kenney’s troubled life.  Wild accounts of his drug-related antics in Florida alone are stunning, especially re: how far too many blind eyes were turned. A grim conclusion one is left with is that everyone else’s own self-involvement precluded emergency intervention to thwart Kenney from binging himself to self-destruction.  

Still, Nashawaty’s candid reporting (which definitely has its dry spells) divulges how the troubled Caddyshack morphed into existence, in spite of a slew of creative compromises.  If anything, this book reiterates why imitators won’t surpass Caddyshack’s unique cult classic stature in movie history.

ADDITIONAL FEATURES:

Eight pages depict color and black-and-white photos. The epilogue features post-Caddyshack career capsules re: its surviving players.  Besides a bibliography, a lengthy ‘Notes’ section specifies sources, interview dates & times, etc.   

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING:              7 Stars