Joe Posted March 20 Author Report Posted March 20 My copy arrived last week direct from the publisher. I've just flipped through it, but it looks like the authors really did their homework. Case in point: some discussion of Kenny's brother Joel and the efforts he made to raise K.D's profile. Quote
Dan Gould Posted March 20 Report Posted March 20 No shipping notice, just found it in the mailbox. Oh happy day. OTOH I only now realize that one of the co-authors is a professor of Political Science. I really hope we do not get bogged down in contemporary "academic" topics. Quote
Peter Friedman Posted March 21 Report Posted March 21 Looking forward to to some comments from those reading the Dorham book. Quote
AllenLowe Posted 11 hours ago Report Posted 11 hours ago (edited) well....I downloaded a sample on Kindle, maybe 40-50 pages worth and I think it's pretty awful. The intro is a waste of time, and the first section makes the same mistake every author, unedited, seems to be making these days. The writer has mistaken research for writing, and it is so overloaded with detail about - well, everything, Texas insects, the family history (could have been cut to about 3 pages), land deals, political battles - everything but Kenny Dorham himself. And written in a totally dead style, like a listings section of a newspaper. Sorry, this is probably not a popular opinion, but this weirdness is everywhere in current jazz bios and music bios in general. The writer(s) seems to thing that merely describing something is the same as having insight into it. I just am so tired of how badly music bios are done - unless they are by Robin DG Kelley of John Szwed. I gave up on this one (and I haven't even described one particular howler of mistake, which may be an editing mistake, but that just shows there was probably no editor). Edited 11 hours ago by AllenLowe Quote
Peter Friedman Posted 8 hours ago Report Posted 8 hours ago Waiting for opinions on the book from those who have a copy, or that have ordered one and hopefully should arrive soon. Quote
JSngry Posted 7 hours ago Report Posted 7 hours ago I would not discount the formative impact of Texas insects. Especially skeeters. Quote
gvopedz Posted 6 hours ago Report Posted 6 hours ago 1 hour ago, JSngry said: I would not discount the formative impact of Texas insects. Especially skeeters. I agree. Not only Texas insects, but also Texas arachnids - finding a scorpion inside your shoe is unforgettable. Quote
JSngry Posted 3 hours ago Report Posted 3 hours ago We call them "water bug" to lessen the impact, but if it runs like a cockroach and finally squishes like a cockroach .. June Bugs are not cockroaches though. They're beetles. Many newcomers lump them altogether, though. Making an informed delineation of Texas etymology not entirely superfluous. I will be disappointed if Texas reptiles are not equally covered. Quote
T.D. Posted 2 hours ago Report Posted 2 hours ago 9 hours ago, AllenLowe said: well....I downloaded a sample on Kindle, maybe 40-50 pages worth and I think it's pretty awful. The intro is a waste of time, and the first section makes the same mistake every author, unedited, seems to be making these days. The writer has mistaken research for writing, and it is so overloaded with detail about - well, everything, Texas insects, the family history (could have been cut to about 3 pages), land deals, political battles - everything but Kenny Dorham himself. And written in a totally dead style, like a listings section of a newspaper. Sorry, this is probably not a popular opinion, but this weirdness is everywhere in current jazz bios and music bios in general. The writer(s) seems to thing that merely describing something is the same as having insight into it. I just am so tired of how badly music bios are done - unless they are by Robin DG Kelley of John Szwed. I gave up on this one (and I haven't even described one particular howler of mistake, which may be an editing mistake, but that just shows there was probably no editor). Thank you. I held off ordering due to fear of something of the sort (lack of concrete KD info), and have been waiting for reviews. Re. lack of editor, sadly that seems practically the norm nowadays. Quote
Stompin at the Savoy Posted 35 minutes ago Report Posted 35 minutes ago I took a look at that kindle sample of the book. I did not read the whole sample, just skimmed through a bit. It did not look that bad to me. I like Kenny Dorham and am interested in his story so I'll probably order the kindle edition one of these days if they ever drop the price. Quote
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