Showing posts with label old west. Show all posts
Showing posts with label old west. Show all posts

Wyatt Earp: The Life Behind the Legend Review

Wyatt Earp: The Life Behind the Legend
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Casey Tefertiller has written a very well researched, totally fair, and engrossing book about the most famous person of the old west.
He approaches Earp's life with an open mind and captures the essence of the man without nominating him for sainthood or branding him as the next satan.
He provides the detail from Earp's early years which help shape his adult personality and actions in Dodge City and Tombstone. He does not attempt to hide the seedy side of Earp's life during those years or the fact that Earp was not above using people or events to advance his cause or personal gain.
The most important part of the book is the detailed discussion that explains the reasons for the gunfight with the Clantons and his revenge against the cowboys,for the murder of his brother, that showed Earp to be more ruthless than any outlaw of his time.
It has always amazed me that movie makers during the 1950s, 60s, and 70s, dreamed up total fiction about Earp instead of using the truth. I have to credit the makers of "Wyatt Earp" and "Tombstone" for correcting this error. Both movies capture the soul of Earp in different ways.
If you are going to read one book about Wyatt Earp, this is the one to read because it is the best. If you want to read another, try "Inventing Wyatt Earp". It was written about the same time as this book and is very good.

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Tunes from a Tuscan Guitar: The Life and Times of an Italian Immigrant Review

Tunes from a Tuscan Guitar: The Life and Times of an Italian Immigrant
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I had the good fortune to meet the author when he MC'd the 60th reunion of his high school class last year (no, I am not in that class, I was there to represent the Alumni Association) and roared along with his classmates at the tale of how he ended up at cross-town Washington High rather than his neighborhood Galileo.
Well, after reading this wonderful account of his grandfather's life, I know the man is a born storyteller! Despite his in-person charm, I wasn't expecting much out of this book, and I was so wrong -- I couldn't put this easy read down, and my mind instinctively pictured film scenes. Somebody buy the movie rights for this hidden gem!
I'll now have a new appreciation for those Eucalyptus trees in Burlingame.

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Dark and Tangled Threads of Crime: San Francisco's Famous Police Detective, Isaiah W. Lees Review

Dark and Tangled Threads of Crime: San Francisco's Famous Police Detective, Isaiah W. Lees
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Historical book on Detective Lees and many of the crimes of that era, as well as a taste of the founding and development of San Francisco. For a historical it isn't dry reading and I do recommend it.
However, the book isn't polished. I feel that it was almost there, as if it needed one more editing pass. How information was grouped into chapters is unclear. Many items seemed as if thrown in just to get them in the book. Some items were referenced multiple times without any reason for the additional reference. The author would mention Lees as Lees then other times as Isaiah, making the reader wonder if it was two different people. Many chapters end awkwardly making them seem unfinished. Some of the most interesting crimes are passed over too quickly. That said, the book is good for bringing to life the era, the man and the crimes. I was surprised that I had never heard of Lees before.

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San Francisco Is Burning: The Untold Story of the 1906 Earthquake and Fires Review

San Francisco Is Burning: The Untold Story of the 1906 Earthquake and Fires
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It might be highly unusual for a supposed "competitor" to review the work of a contemporary, but seeing that only one person on Amazon has bothered to review Dennis Smith's compelling new book, "San Francisco Burning," I thought it incumbent to offer praise where it is richly deserved. For that past three decades -- ever since the first defintive text, Thomas/Witt's "The San Francisco Earthquake" and Gladys Hansen's unparalleled "Denial of Disaster" first appeared -- every writer on the subject of the great earthquake and fire has claimed to have the "untold" story and discovered some "breakthrough" evidence. It hasn't happened. But what Dennis Smith has achieved here is remarkable for its insight and observation. More than any other book, perhaps, Smith has identified the true heroes and villains of the 1906 earthquake. There were actually two disasters: nature's earthquake and humankind's raging inferno. Smith, a former N.Y. firefighter who wrote the marvelous "Report from Ground Zero", takes a street-level, in-the-trenches view of what occured. He adroitly argues that the true hero was Lt. Frederick Freeman of the U.S. Navy, who led a hundred sailors on Navy Tugboats in a desperate, three day struggle to save the waterfront and the trains station, the two locations which evacuated 300,000 people in just 72 hours. Smith puts the final dagger into the two former sacred cows of the disaster: the monstrously corrupt and incompetent Mayor Eugene Schmitz, and the almost pathologically intractable Brig. General Frederic Funston. While the Navy devoted itself to aiding the fire fight, Mayor Schmitz thought it more important to protect property -- property about to burn -- and issued a "Shoot To Kill" order to thousands of soldiers, National Guardsmen, and "Special Police" who were merely vigilantes. Schmitz and Funston's idea of protecting order and property was to shoot scores of citizens "suspected" of commiting any kind of crime, including several people carrying their own goods or attempting to aid the wounded, and using dynamite to try to blast fire breaks on wood frame buildings. The blasting -- 90% of which, according to Smith, was done with highly flammable granulated dynamite, black powder and gun cotton -- started hundreds of fires and destroyed sections of the city that would have likely escaped the conflagration. Smith's book is not perfect: the main criticism is that when he gets a full head of steam and is building marvelous dramatic momentum, he stops to give us history and biography lessons. This is especially glaring when, during a powerful dissertation on the events of Wed., April 18, he jumps ahead to tell us what happens to city officials much later, deflating his own momentum. Re-engaging that level of drama is not easy. Some wise editing could have made this book shine even more brightly. But Smith's powerful and fearless analysis, that the Navy achieved brilliantly and the Army -- in the issues that mattered most -- failed miserably, lends testimony to the inviolable concept that one man, one leader, can make a difference. And in his greatest analysis, Smith perceives what others of us have long shared: that it was the brilliant, visionary fire chief, Dennis Sullivan, the man who had fought the thieves at City Hall to spend money on fire prevention, the man who had a plan that might have saved many lives and much property, the man whose loss was the most catastrophic event after the earthquake itself. Sullivan would never have let fools spread the fire with the improper use of dynamite. Dennis Sullivan, a hydraulic engineer, would have concentrated on tapping every avaialbe source of water, and directing citizens, soldiers, sailors and marines into combatting the fire, with law & order left in the hands of police. Anyone who has ever vigorously studied Dennis Sullivan realizes that he, more than anyone, was prepared for that moment. Bravo, Dennis Smith: your book is the best written in the last 15 years on this subject, and your conclusions and scholarship are superb. You have joined a very small, select group who truly understands what happened in that awful week in April of 1906. James Dalessandro, author, 1906: A Novel.

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