Category Archives: review
Billion Dollar Ball
In Billion Dollar Ball: A Journey Through the Big-Money Culture of College Football, Gilbert Gaul shed slight on the $2.5 billion (and growing) entertainment business — a business that was once part of academia, but has now outgrown it. It’s … Continue reading
Soccer in Sun and Shadow
Eduardo Galeano’s Soccer in Sun and Shadow is a must read for anyone who loves the beautiful game. Read reviews from the Staten Island Advance, Publisher’s Weekly and World Soccer Talk. Listen to a story about the book at NPR.
@War: The Rise of the Military-Internet Complex
In ‘@War,’ Shane Harris explains tells the emerging world of cyber warfare. It is a world of blurred lines – there are no national borders in cyberspace, and the roles of the military, law enforcement, and intelligence services are much … Continue reading
The Soccer Diaries
The Soccer Diaries, by Michael Agovino, is a very readable personal soccer history by a passionate follower of the game. It begins in the Bronx when, as a child, Agovino finds himself captivated by ‘the beautiful game.’ (It’s a lso … Continue reading
Kill Your Friends
‘Kill Your Friends’John Niven’s Kill Your Friends does for the music industry what The Player did for Hollywood. It’s chock full of duplicity and cynicism, with a healthy dollop of sex and drugs on top. A very funny read. Read … Continue reading
The Hollywood Economist
Edward Jay Epstein’s the Hollywood Economist is a must-read for anyone who remembers the not-too-distant age when television was known as “the boob tube” and movies were more than a series of car crashes and shoot-outs. The author provides some … Continue reading
The Noble Hustle: Poker, Beef Jerky and Death
I very much enjoyed Colson Whitehead’s Zone One when I read it a few years back. And since I enjoy reading about writers who travel to Las Vegas for poker tournaments (among other things), I figured I’d check this book … Continue reading
Tomorrow-Land
With the recent 50th anniversary of the opening of the 1964-65 New York World’s Fair, this is obviously a timely work. And growing up in the New York City area, and having been to Flushing Meadow-Corona Park many times, I … Continue reading
The Expats
I haven’t read any “spy fiction” in quite some time, but I stumbled across of review of Chris Pavone’s “The Expats” which made it sound like an interesting read. The story takes a while to unfold — a former CIA … Continue reading
The Wolf of Wall Street
I figured that I would see Martin Scorsese’s “The Wolf of Wall Street” at some point, and I like to read the book before I see the movie. So I took Jordan Belfort’s 2007 “memoir” out of the library. A … Continue reading