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L**Y
Great Story, Great Subject
I got the book because I had seen the trailer for the movie and wanted to know more about Trumbo. I'd known quite a bit about the Hollywood Ten and those times through other histories of the time. I was able, while I was in law school, to meet a few of the attorneys who had represented people in that period. So I started out interested. Then when it came out I read Kirk Douglas book about the making of Spartacus..I'd give it 5 stars, but there were a couple of issues with the book that kept it from the highest rating. First, I just couldn't get interested much in Trumbo's early life and that took the first third of the book. Second, instead of writing in a strictly chronological fashion Cook make side trips into the present (well his present) to report on his interviews with his sources, almost like a magazine article.But once the book got to what I consider the meat of the matter, Trumbo's time as a radical and screenwriter and under the black list the story took over. Either the writing got tighter and better or the story itself was so compelling that it just took over. The latter two thirds of the book was so well written I could hardly put it down.I highly recommend it.
J**R
Interesting book on Dalton Trumbo and the blacklist of the 1950s
This is an excellent biography. Cook not only lays out the biographical facts of Dalton Trumbo's life but he also delves into the character and personality that made the controversial screenwriter such a fascinating figure. To achieve this depth, the author includes recreations of some of his research interviews with various individuals whose lives intertwined with Trumbo's--people who knew Trumbo as a boy in Colorado, family members and other members of the "Hollywood Ten", who were blacklisted in the 1950s for refusing to answer questions before the House Un-American Activities Committee.Cook keeps his subject at the forefront and in so doing offers as clear an explanation of the blacklist and its impact on American culture as I have ever read. Trumbo was a man of contrasts--a Communist who loved to live well, a talented writer who abandoned literature for the the money he could make in Hollywood and a political figure who refused to back down from his beliefs.I haven't seen the new movie based on Cook's work, but I look forward to it and I would highly recommend this book to anyone interested in the era of the Great Fear or anyone who enjoys biographies of people of conviction and integrity.
L**R
The movie is good; The book is better
The book was well researched and, although a little confusing on the issues of Hollywood politics to those unfamiliar, presents an accurate account of the events surrounding the blacklist and the effects it had on those listed and the hardships borne by their families. The author appears to be empathetic to the victims but reserves judgement on the issue of communism in America following the Great Depression largely for the reader.
R**L
Required Historical Reading
I've studied the Black List history for 20 years. This is the ultimate book that closes the subject as Trumbo was a member of the Hollywood 10 and also broke the Blacklist. Cranston is brilliant in the title role! Overall an unbeatable historical perspective as we now enter another period where fear in our country makes people overreact.
A**R
It seems we are entering another ugly scary era
I bought this book because I saw the movie and wanted to know more about the mam and his times. A very scary,all but forgotten time of hysteria and intolerance
J**B
History repeats
Interesting book. It’s a topic not covered in most classes about US history, but should be. Particularly pertinent today.
S**R
Perfect For Aspring Scriptwriters and/or Those Who Want to See The Trumbo Movie
Trumbo-(Movie Tie In Edition by Bruce Cook) touches on various parts of Trumbo’s personal and professional life such as in Chapter Two titled Colorado (starts on page 24) where is discusses Trumbo’s father Orus Trumbo, Trumbo’s family colonial origins in Virginia, West Virginia, and Kentucky as well as how the Trumbo family name actually traced back to Switzerland. Pages 70 and 71 touch on Trumbo being a ghostwriter for an Austrian nobleman living in Hollywood named Baron Friedrich Von Reichenberg and what Dalton was grappling with in terms of bringing in more money for him and his wife and children, while his wife Maud Trumbo was doing the best she could working as a seamstress for Hollywood dressmakers and special jobs for movie actresses such as Norma Talmadge and Constance Bennett.
R**S
A excellent Read.
This story is about a time that Americans should not forget. Trumbo is an incredible American that fought a corrupt and cruel government and survived.
P**Y
A Truly Remarkable Story
Having seen the excellent film and been fascinated by the life and achievements of Dalton Trumbo and am pleased that I did. It was a remarkable life and if he had written stand as a firm script it would have been turned down for being too fantastic - in the true meaning of the word.I will not dwell on the story as it is one that surprises and encourages. The writing is adequate but his story is what makes it so memorable and I recommend it without reservation.One slightly strange element is that photos are stills taken while the film was being shot. I would have expected (and preferred) actual photos of DT. A small quibble but one all the same.
M**H
In a first for me, I preferred the film ...
In a first for me, I preferred the film exposition of the life of this fascinating, inspiring man to the biography which led to it.
W**R
DO NOT BUY
Useless rubbish.
M**T
Four Stars
Very interesting book,very interesting man,very well written
M**S
Good
Saw the film and so read the book. Good work
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