Thank you for resurrecting! I ordered The Art of Fielding based off an almost 10 year old rec from GB54- always enjoyed his posts. Send it to OT but I hope people stoke the thread from time to time.
I love South Pacific and have read it multiple times!slotright20 said:
Pat Conroy's "My Losing Season" about his senior basketball season at The Citadel.
"The Fifties" by David Halberstam - touches on all aspects - political, cultural, social of a fascinating decade.
An oldie but classic - South Pacific by Michener. I defy anyone to read the scene at the cemetery near the end of the book and not get a little misty eyed.
Ike by Michael Korda. Anything on Truman ( David Mc Culloughs bio is probably the best ) - two fascinating underrated Presidents. And don't tell me Truman is a top 10 President in many rankings - he is top 5 in my eyes.
Everything by Norman MacClean is fantastic. The Ranger, the Cook and a Hole in the Sky is a great short story...Aggie Bear said:
A River Runs Through It...Quite possibly my favorite 100 pages of all time. Short, but still incredible. I think totally under appreciated as a piece of American Literature.
<-- sad facepingpong2 said:
The entire Game of Thrones series.
Really, the 4th (A Feast for Crows) and 5th (A Dance with Dragons) book were all the same volume... just too big to print in manuscript (And George was late with parts, per usual). Because of this it got split, but they aren't truly separate volumes like most books (including the first 3 installments) are.Sebastabear said:StayGold;842107631 said:
In my opinion, the last two books of the series have been much weaker and far too bloated than the first 3
First three Game of Thrones were amazing and in many ways unlike any piece of fiction I'd ever read (thinking here of how Martin dealt with principal viewpoint characters). Fourth book was terrible - he'd clearly run out of things to say. But a Dance with Dragons was a treat - Martin seemed re-energized by the long hiatus. Book was engaging and series was interesting again. Can"t wait for the next installment.
bearister said:
Two that I enjoyed on Bay Areabearister said:
Two must reads for all OG's that grew up in the Bay Area:
Like us Bearister, Gary Kamiya grew up in the east bay. His father was a Cal professor and his mother was a well known city planner for the City of Berkeley and later did planning work for Cal as a Vice Chancellor. (Disclosure: My dad dated her in the last couple years of his lifebearister said:
Season of the Witch* was A+. I will have to check out the other. Thank you, Sir. Just ordered the paperback on your recommendation. Wow! The hardback is expensive.
Steve Stills and Al Kooper from Super Session (1968):
*I was going to concerts at Winterland during the peak of the Zebra killings, many of which occurred in the Fillmore. What was I thinking?
okaydo said:
I recently finished this book, as it has helped me deal with a problem I've been facing.
Saw him perform in Portland OR, late 1969 early 1970. During one number, a real barn burner, he slammed the piano lid down on the piano in time with the beat. His back up singers (all women) were in top form, strutting it out in high top boots, sparkly shirts and short shorts. Brought the house down. When he backed Joe Cocker, the combination was unbeatable.prospeCt said:
https://tulsaworld.com/entertainment/books/leon-russell-biography-tells-definitive-story-of-rock-roll-hall-of-famers-life-career/article_136e712c-bc26-11ed-89f7-87a9ddf0cb9f.html
https://americansongwriter.com/leon-russell-life-and-legacy-to-be-chronicled-in-new-biography/
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/983872.Hunter
Hawaii Haas said:
"Creativity, Inc" a book about the founding of Pixar. You know how they just nail every movie that just fits the national mood. My biggest takeaway and the book doesn't say it explicitly, but if the audience falls in love with the story and characters, they will ignore technical flaws.
To tie it back to Cal Sports and the PAC-12, outside of the Stanford rivalry (USC and UCLA are gone), there is no story and a cast of characters that are neither loved nor hated. So, the audience doesn't care. And there are technical flaws.