I bought this to brush up on sports history ahead of a tryout for Sports Jeopardy.
I didn't make the cut, but that's not why I take away a star. Overall this is a clean-looking book, and it is easy to read despite the denseness of the subject matter. There are records and stats for all the major sports and a lot of the minor ones -- though it is American-centric. You don't get cricket or rugby, and the only soccer is for the international competitions.
The first problem is that there is no index. This wasn't a major problem for me, because I was reading it cover-to-cover, but after the tryout I went to look up some of the questions I missed and it was hard to find the answers. There is a tabs system, so you can page to the area the book covers the specific sport, but then you have to dig.
The second problem is that there are enough typos and formatting problems that it is distracting for someone who is sitting through and reading the whole thing. I don't have it in front of me, but the one I set to my head is on around page 520 or so. The book is discussing women's golf international team events, and in the listing one of the teams is listed as the 'international Tea," With the comma in there. Now, it is easy to make that typo, since there is not much space between the comma and the letter "M", all I'm saying is that there needed to be a more careful copy-editing session. In the past several years I have read cover-to-cover the more general World Almanac and Book of Facts for a more successful game-show tryout. There were much fewer of these problems, with much more information. I wish they did a Sports Almanac.
July 18, 2014
July 15, 2014
On "Blue is the Warmest Color" the Graphic Novel
I was at my library the other day, and I came across a
graphic novel of “Blue is the Warmest Color”. I didn’t even know that it was a
graphic novel.
And the truth is I grabbed it because of the buzz about the
movie. It was supposed to be an incredibly graphic and sexy movie. I thought that
the book would have the same elements.
It does, but the sexy parts are only part of the book. It is
in fact an incredibly well-written and moving story about love and personal
discovery – the fact that the two main characters are women seems almost incidental
(almost, but maybe also not at all). Read it.
July 10, 2014
Reading "The Harlem Hellfighters" by Max Brooks
If you like books about war, graphic novels, and books that shine a light on social injustice, this is the book for you.
It tells the story of the Harlem Hellfighters, segregated group of African-American soldiers in WWI. They were excluded and reviled, but were highly decorated. It is well told, and well illustrated. The only issue is that the black and white illustrations are sometimes too busy when showing battles in the trenches, so it is hard to differentiate and to know what is going on. Otherwise, it compares favorably to other books in the genre from writers such as Jacques Tardi’s “It Was the War of the Trenches”. A good read and well-worth it.
And it was written by that guy who is famous for writing about zombies. It seems he is not one-dimensional after all!
It tells the story of the Harlem Hellfighters, segregated group of African-American soldiers in WWI. They were excluded and reviled, but were highly decorated. It is well told, and well illustrated. The only issue is that the black and white illustrations are sometimes too busy when showing battles in the trenches, so it is hard to differentiate and to know what is going on. Otherwise, it compares favorably to other books in the genre from writers such as Jacques Tardi’s “It Was the War of the Trenches”. A good read and well-worth it.
And it was written by that guy who is famous for writing about zombies. It seems he is not one-dimensional after all!
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