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Rating: - truly unreadable
A random, and utterly boring, compilation of various bookstores and collectors that the author has encountered over the years. Don't expect memorable anecdotes.
Plenty of name dropping, but the names are meaningless to those outside the trade. No narrative drive. Left me wondering, "What's the point?"
Rating: - Big disappointment; bigger waste of time
McMurtry's works are erratically brilliant, sometimes downright bad, but this is a huge disappointment. Sloppy, badly in need of an editor (how many Bostwana "late" references do we need?), way too random and dropping names so frequently that we either don't know or don't care about...the whole effect is "who cares?" And I happen to love books, frequent second hand booksellers and have some familiarity with the turf described.To say nothing of being -- more times than not -- a fan of McMurtry's. But this book is hardly a memoir and, frankly, if not for the author's fame, I seriously doubt this would have ever been published. It's that big a waste of time.
Rating: - Devoured book, ignored my kids
In our house the greatest tribute you can give a book is that, while reading it, you ignore everything and everyone around you, including all offspring. I brought McMurtry's book about books up to my daughter's room where I was supposed to "tuck her in." I promptly sat down and began reading. An hour later said daughter asks if we're ever going to turn out the light. There's school tomorrow. Got a big day, dad. That's how wonderful and entertaining BOOKS is. Great people, great anecdotes--read Chapter 98, which is all of a half-page long, for an example. One of the funniest punch lines I've read (or heard) this year. If you love books, book selling or book buying, sprint, don't run to your nearest Amazon check out button and press. Better yet, dash over to your favorite bookstore--if you can find one.
Rating: - A Life in the Company of Books
Books: A Memoir, by Larry McMurtry, is a book that may not appeal to a lot of people, maybe not even to hard-core McMurtry fans. However, I found it highly entertaining and enjoyable.
McMurtry has penned a book detailing his life with books; as a buyer and seller of used, rare, and antique books and as a book lover. His life with books started when he was the recipient of a wonderful gift from his cousin. On his way to enlist in World War II, Larry's cousin stopped by their house, and gave him a box of 19 books. Books, McMurtry tells you, that changed his life. Prior to those books, he lived a life of realism and immediacy. He had no thoughts outside of his current surroundings. Those books, standard adventure stories of the 1930's, opened his eyes to a vast, untapped world. One where he could go anywhere, see anything, live through the eyes of the hero's and authors. And since the age of six or seven, he hasn't stopped reading.
Books: A Memoir has plenty of book selling/buying anecdotes, some of which may not appeal to everyone. McMurtry tells of books that he held and sold that were eventually sold for much more than he asked. He also drops plenty of insider names in the book selling business. While I certainly am not familiar with those circles, those stories added to the overall enjoyment of the book. Through those incidents, you could see how those people and incidents have added to his overall enjoyment of books. As you read this, you will come to have a better appreciation of McMurtry, the man, his life's work, and for books. Along the way, you will be exposed to his thoughts concerning libraries, computers, iPods, and his personal library (20,000 books, plus or minus). If you are a reader, you can probably relate to his love of books:
"Very quickly, once I had my nineteen books, I realized that reading was probably the cheapest and most stable pleasure of life. Sometimes books excite me, sometimes they sustain me, but rarely do they disappoint me--as books, that is, if not necessarily the poetry, history, or fiction that they contain."
This is quite a memoir from a man whose life has been spent in the company of books.
Rating: - McMurtry strikes again!
Larry McMurtry will steal the heart of any book lover with his newest, Books: A Memoir. The collecting and selling of rare books is seldom brought to our attention. It is amazing and lucrative. McMurtry's knowledge of the movers and shakers and history of the industry is impressive. I would love to visit his bookstore/library!
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