Pages

Thursday, October 12, 2023

Elmore Leonard

Elmore Leonard - Two Stars 

I just finished four of Leonard's novels. I think Agnes Lowzier describes all the characters best: "A half-smart guy, that's what I always draw. Never once a man who's smart all the way around the course." All of Leonard's people are half-smart.

George W. Parker


Monday, September 25, 2023

Stalingrad: The City that Defeated the Third Reich

Stalingrad: The City that Defeated the Third Reich - Jochen Hellbeck. - One Star 

I am always looking for new material on the WW2 Eastern Front. Hellbeck presents fresh material but are interviews with Commissars reporting the bravery of other Commissars actuate? I didn't finish the book.

George W. Parker

Thursday, September 14, 2023

The Boys from Biloxi

 The Boys from Biloxi John Grisham. - Two Stars 

It's been years since I read a John Grisham novel. I wish I had kept that streak alive. He gives us cardboard characters and an obvious plot. The only surprise in the entire book is how the DA managed to live as long as he did.

George W. Parker

Tuesday, September 5, 2023

Night Has a Thousand Eyes

 Night Has a Thousand Eyes - Cornell Woolrich. - Two Stars 

This is a Twilight Zone episode. I have read it before but did not recall it until about halfway through. I wish I had remembered sooner. 

George W. Parker

Monday, August 21, 2023

Game of Thrones

 Game of Thrones - George R.R. Martin - Two Stars 

I read the book. I do not think I would read it again and I chose not to read the next in the series. I found Arya Stark the only interesting character in the book. That lack of interest reflects on the writer. I was disappointed.

George W. Parker

Monday, August 14, 2023

Tune In: The Beatles

Tune In: The Beatles: All These Years - Mark Lewisone - One Star 

This is a five-star book if you are a fan of the Beatles' minutiae. If you want to know what clothes Paul wore when he was 14 or what brand was Geroge's third guitar then this book is for you. I didn't finish it so the one star from me.

George W. Parker

Sunday, August 6, 2023

Leon Russel

Leon Russell - Bill Janovitz - One Star 

Russell was a very talented musician/songwriter/arranger/producer. Janovitz tells a great story and the book is filled with interesting material. But in the end, Leon Russell was an asshole. As I've stated before I don't have time for that type of person so I did not finish the book. Maybe you can overlook Leon's little character flaw.

George W. Parker

Sunday, July 30, 2023

Red Harvest

 Red Harvest - Dashiell Hammett- Five Stars 

The Continental Op drops into Poisonville "Hard BoiIed" incarnate. He's angry because they try to kill him and he's disgusted by the lying, backstabbing, double-dealing leaders of the city. His solution: everyone sufferers.

This is Hammett's first novel (1929) and his angriest look at the world. It's worth your time. 

George W. Parker

Sunday, July 23, 2023

Levon: From Down in the Delta to the Birth of The Band and Beyond

 Levon: From Down in the Delta to the Birth of The Band and Beyond - Sandra Tooze - 

I have been a fan of Levon Helm and The Band most of my life. There was a lot of material new to me in this book, from Levon's early childhood, his drug usage, and his post-cancer career. Robbie Robertson still doesn't come out very well. I enjoyed the book but I don't think I would re-read it which is why it is only two stars for me.

George W. Parker

Sunday, July 16, 2023

A Legacy of Spies

A Legacy of Spies - John le Carré - Four Stars 

Four Stars - I will reread it.

This last book from Carré has a fresh feel to it with a different approach (kind of) to its storytelling.  I enjoyed the new perspective on the Alec Leamas story and immediately reread The Spy Who Came in from the Cold, which is a five-star book.


George W. Parker 

Monday, July 3, 2023

Cathedral - Raymond Carver

 Cathedral - Raymond Carver - One Star ☆ 


I did not finish this collection of Carver short stories. The protagonist in the short story Cathedral is an asshole. "Ah, but he changes," everyone will say. I believe the protagonist does not have a "Road to Damascus" moment. He just has a moment. In the morning when he rolls out of bed he will still be an asshole.

In Chef's House Edna leaves a budding relationship to return to a former failed relationship. She seems to have forgotten there was a reason it had failed. What is that saying about repeating something over and over and expecting a different outcome? Edna is a fool. 

If I want to spend time with assholes and fools I can go for a drive on the freeway and sidestep the Raymond Carver.


George W. Parker

Sunday, June 25, 2023

Love and Let Die

Love and Let Die - John Higgs -Two Stars ☆☆ 


I have been a fan of The Beatles and Bond movies since 1964. But I was never one to run out into the weeds looking for "facts." (Unless you count playing a record backward a couple of times.) This book is filled with trivia like the bird sounds on "Tomorrow Never Knows" is Paul's laughter speeded up. And then there are Higgs' psychological interpretations. And psychological interpretations are like opinions, everyone has one.

 Not a book I would reread, hence the two stars. 


George W. Parker

 


Tuesday, June 20, 2023

Ike’s Spies

 

Ike’s Spies - Stephen E. Ambrose -Two Stars ☆☆ 

I don't foresee myself rereading this book.

The book has a lot of interesting facts about Ike's nurturing of the CIA and his leadership style. You can see why other countries distrust us when you read about our blithely organizing, backing, and forcing governmental changes around the globe often creating the problems we were trying to solve.

It's not a history I am proud of as an American.

George W. Parker

Saturday, June 10, 2023

The Pirates of Shan

 The Pirates of Shan - John Blaine - Five Stars 

I have read it several times and I will read it again.

This is my favorite Rick Brant Science-Adventure story. It's a middle school-level adventure story where Rick, Scotty, and Chahda travel through the Philippine archipelago fending off pirates as they search for their missing friends.

I first read this when I was in middle school. Now my youngest grandson is in middle school. When I recently reread the book I followed the boys' trip using Google Maps and Wikipedia which added another layer of entertainment to the reading.

George W. Parker

Thursday, June 1, 2023

Black Lamb and Grey Falcon

Black Lamb and Grey Falcon - Rebecca West - Five Stars 

Five Stars ☆ - I have read it more than once and I will read it again.

I have a complaint with this five star title. I think it should be three books: a history of the Balkans, a travelogue of the Balkans, and West's personal opinions on the Balkans. West has woven these three aspects into one mammoth book. It would be much more accessible as three titles. 

The history parts are a tour de force. The travelogue is still a great outline for visiting the area. (Watch out for the partisans.) But West's personal opinions are outdated.

George W. Parker

Monday, May 29, 2023

Flags of Our Fathers

 Flags of Our Fathers - James Bradley with Ron Powers - Three Stars 

Three Stars ☆ - I might read it again.

This is the very emotional story of US Marine Company E (Easy), 2nd Battalion, 28th Regiment, 5th Division, and some of their contributions to the WW2 assault and capture of Iwo Jima, including both raisings of the US flag on Mount Suribachi. Additionally, it is the author's attempt to understand his father through the father's actions during the battle on Iwo Jima.

Per the author during the battle for Iwo Jima, Easy Company's total force comprised 310 men, including replacements, who at the end of the battle, counted 50 survivors. The total force of the 2nd Battalion, including replacements, was 1,688. The number of killed or wounded during the action was 1.511. 177 walked off the island, 91 of whom had been previously wounded and returned to combat.

George W. Parker

Friday, May 26, 2023

Planet Gor Series

Tarnsman of Gor - John Frederick Lange Jr. as John Norman - Two Star ☆☆
Priest-Kings of Gor - Two Star ☆☆
Slave Girl of Gor - Two Star ☆☆
Kajira of Gor - Two Star ☆☆

Two Stars - I read them but I don't think I will ever reread them.

There are 37 titles in John Norman's Gor Series. I've listed these four together as I feel they all work at the same level. And I figure all thirty-seven titles would fit in this category. There's a thin overarching interplanetary plot in each title. Then an individual protagonist plot provides the grist of the title. There are large areas of Gorian factoids (How the boats are designed. Where the metal in the slave's collar was obtained. What letters in the Gorian language mean. And on and on and on.) And then there are the female slaves and how they find their freedom in their slavery. 

I found the interplanetary plot interesting. Mostly the individual protagonist was fun and action-oriented. My eyes glazed over while reading the Gorian factoids until I just started skimming them. What should I say about the female slaves? (Have you seen the Megan Fox SI swimsuit photographs? All her poses look like they were lifted from the pleasure slaves of Gor.) Sex sells. That's why there are 37 titles in the series.

George W. Parker

Thursday, May 25, 2023

Armies of the Night

Armies of the Night - Norman Mailer - Five Stars ☆*

Wait. What? Five stars?

I have read Armies of the Night at least three times and will probably read it again. By my rating system that makes it a five star book. There is an asterisk up there though. 

I have only read the "History as a Novel" section once. Now, after my initial reading, when I pick up the book, I go to the "The Novel as History" section. I enjoy it a lot. What Mailer was trying to do as a writer in providing two distinct views of the Pentagon March is interesting. I just don't equally enjoy both views. Does that make it a two-and-a-half-star book? Maybe. But then again, when I reread Moby Dick I now skip over the "Is a whale a fish?" discussions and stay with the meat of the story. Does that lessen Moby Dick? I don't think so.

George W. Parker

Tuesday, May 23, 2023

Doctor Zhivago

 Doctor Zhivago - Boris Pasternak - One Star ☆ 

Yeah, yeah, I know... won the Nobel Prize and the Soviet Union would not let Pasternak leave the country to accept his award. But I didn't find it an interesting enough read to finish. One Star.

It's just another windswept Russian steppe story withering in the summer heat, freezing in the winter cold with a war to supply some action. Isn't that a Russian genre? Tolstoy did that. Solzhenitsyn did that.

I'm not saying it isn't a good read. I am saying I didn't finish it.

Oh, and the movie is too long also.


George W. Parker


Sunday, May 21, 2023

Books vs ebooks

I can't begin to estimate the tonnage of paper I have moved from house to house in my lifetime. So I have finally broken down and accepted ebooks as my standard reading method. Lying on the couch or sitting at the kitchen table my phone is just easier to use. From John Norman to Norman Mailer, H.R. McMaster to Edward Snowden the books are out there.

But, like many old LPs when you are trying to find them on CD, you may not find some books out there. That is why I still have two bookcases of "real" books waiting to be boxed up for my next move.

George W. Parker


A New Effort

Once again I am taking a stab at "Socializing" and "Connecting." (I wonder what the over and under is on the number of days this will last?)

I have updated my website - https://www.georgewparker.com

and consolidated my blogs into one so it is the same on:

Blogger - https://georgewparkertalking.blogspot.com/

Goodreads - https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/4784146.George_W_Parker/blog

Website - https://www.georgewparker.com/blog



From 2021 - KISS

If you write, you probably want to be read. This is not Tolstoy's Russia, all snowed in with nothing else to do and nowhere else to go. People have so many other options (distractions) today: TV, Movies, Video consoles, Pokemon Go, and if nothing else they can solitaire on their phones. I think when you write it's important to follow the KISS method (Keep It Simple Stupid.) Make your story accessible. Keep it moving. Make it about something. Be entertaining!

George W. Parker

From 2021 - Work

Writing is work. Thinking is a chargeable operation. Aside from actually stringing works together there's research, plotting out the story, character development, editing, making time to write, and a thousand other things to do before you even get to the selling your product stage; which I find is the hardest of all work. 

Writing has been the one constant in my life for over fifty years. I have set it on a shelf for extended periods while I tried to make a living and raise a family. But it was up there on the shelf staring down at me at all times. I always knew it was waiting.

It's work. It's fun and exciting. It's humbling and frustrating. It is what I do.

George W. Parker

From 2021 - New Year Media Clean-up

 I have spent the last three days updating my customer-facing author internet points. I have bounced around from Amazon to Google to Apple to Barnes and Noble to Smashwords to Facebook to Instagram to YouTube to Goodreads and to a bunch of other web places. Thirty-eight specific spots where I verified access, checked links, and standardized my written content, fonts, images, and color schemes. And I haven't even started checking my gaggle of email addresses!

I still need to link this blog to my Amazon Author page, my personal website, (Which looks good in a browser and good on a phone; but I ported it over to my Facebook business page and the covers are all over the place. Give me a break! And I'm not sure it's a viable presence hidden below four other tabs anyway.) edited my favicon and who knows what else. 

I don't think I am doing anything special having all these access points. I think we all do everything we can to sell a book. There seems to be a new platform popping up every day. That can lead to a haphazard look and approach. Like me, keep refining that "Look." If you had a "Look" before you ever uploaded a file to Kindle, maybe you are a Marketer.

George W. Parker