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"Booknotes" has been a television program for over eight years. C-Span host Brian Lamb talks with authors about their latest books, about writing, and about the power of ideas and the written word.
This book is drawn from a C-SPAN program called "Booknotes", an author-interview format. The focus is on the "craft" of writing, and the interviewer is dropped out so as to "hear" the voices of the authors. [xxiii] Most of the passages are well-edited and short, and differs from the actual writings as these are basically transcripts of oral responses.
Three groups of people are represented -- story-tellers (46), reporters (47), and public figures (26). For the most part, this is less about their ideas than about flogging their books and indulging in what can charitably be called "name-dropping". Still, that is a craft too: Ideas about self-promotion. There is a real charm in the program and this book.
This book contains excerpts from transcripts from the show.
I don't really like the format. As they simply edited down the transcripts, there are many times when a section on a particular author ends abruptly, almost in the middle of a thought.
In addition I didn't much care for the stories themselves for the most part. I don't care much about Vietnam or about whether Nixon was a nice guy. These aren't my defining moments, and they're not fascinating for me like they would be for someone who lived through events. The subtitle "on reading and writing, and the power of ideas" is certainly misleading. Very little in the excerpts presented is actually about writing or the importance of reading. Most of the book is about the books the authors came to discuss, understandable, but not interesting to me as they're books I haven't read, nor do I want to. I'll leave non-fiction to others.
If you enjoy the show, this may be an excellent way to relive some of your favorite episodes and your favorite authors, but I was unimpressed. ( )
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Study has been for me the sovereign remedy against all the disappointments of life. I have never known any trouble that an hour's reading would not dissipate. --Montesquieu (1689-1755)
Dedicatòria
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This book is dedicated to those who taught me in the early years in Lafayette, Indiana:
To my high school broadcasting teacher, William S. Fraser, who taught me the basics of interviewing.
To C. J. Hopkins, my high school journalism teacher, who taught me to ask who, what, why, where, when, and how?
To Henry Rosenthal, who gave me my first job in radio and who let me do everything for $1 an hour.
And to Richard F. Shively, who gave me my first job in television and told me if you program a commercial television station for only your taste, you'll go broke.
Primeres paraules
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"Where do you write?"
Citacions
Darreres paraules
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But by and large the appreciation is enormous, and I think the thing they say to me most often in Britain is, "Thank you for what you did for our country," and that matters to me a great deal.
"Booknotes" has been a television program for over eight years. C-Span host Brian Lamb talks with authors about their latest books, about writing, and about the power of ideas and the written word.
Three groups of people are represented -- story-tellers (46), reporters (47), and public figures (26). For the most part, this is less about their ideas than about flogging their books and indulging in what can charitably be called "name-dropping". Still, that is a craft too: Ideas about self-promotion. There is a real charm in the program and this book.