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Rating:  Summary: Don't get too excited... Review: As a political science student and someone who appreciates "smart TV", my first clue that this book was going to disappoint me was the title. "An unauthorized look..." and so on. Clearly someone did not want him to write this book, or he would have been given authority. There are so many mistakes in this book, that even the casual viewer could pick up on them. The ones that disappointed me the most were the ones in the episode guides. I have been watching since the beginning of the second season, but have had help from people on message boards to catch up. Even with my "limited" knowledge... I picked up on a lot. In the synopsis of "In the Shadow of Two Gunmen" part 2, he says that Donna walked into the White House and hired herself without even being cleared by security. Maybe Challen wouldn't be so confused about security if he had correctly sited that Donna hired herself as Josh's assistant BEFORE Bartlet was elected! This book appears to be thrown together by a casual fan. Next time someone wants to publish an "unauthorized" book... consult the hardcore fans... we know more.
Rating:  Summary: Sounds like it was written by a high school girl Review: Fortunately I received this as a gift and didn't waste my money. I am usually a very patient, tolerant individual but it was hard for me not to throw this book across the room. The errors are abundant and many of them could have been avoided had someone proofread the darn book. After having read through the episode summaries I find it hard to believe that Mr. Challen actually watched entire episodes. It wouldn't take more than looking at the list of guest stars to realize that Zoey Bartlet did not appear in "Ellie". I would not recommend this book to serious fans of The West Wing, especially those who are "seriously committed to the idea of 'continuity'."
Rating:  Summary: There's more info on the cover than in the book Review: Hey! If you can't get interviews with anyone who makes the show, just phone some fans and tape the conversation! There's a little more to this than that but you'll learn nothing from the book that you didn't know and while it eulogises The West Wing it oddly makes you think less of the show. It's just padding filler of no lasting consequence at all. But, hey, apart from that, it's fine.
Rating:  Summary: Don't waste your money Review: I am a hardcore fan, but this book was a major disappointment and I must echo the reviews of those who have written them before me. The episode recaps were worthless and the photos uninspired. There's a much better book (an understatement, to say the least) out there on this wonderful show. Save your money and buy it instead.
Rating:  Summary: Don't waste your money Review: I have seen every episode(most, more than once). I am 15 years old. When I recieved this book, it didn't tell me anything I didn't already know about the West Wing. A synopsis of the episodes and biographies on the gifted actors and actresses who star in the show. Anyone who would buy this book, has to be a fan of the award-winning Wednsday night drama, and honestly, if you are that much of a fan of the show, you don't need the book.
Rating:  Summary: Shoddy and Secondhand Review: I scarcely know where to begin in cataloging the shortcomings of this book.First of all, it's obvious that the publishers fired all their editors and fact-checkers (although, as always, it's the *author* who must ultimately take responsibility for this kind of slipshod journalism). Most egregious of the Somebody Should Have Caught This Club was the listing of series creator Aaron Sorkin's name as Eric, in the list of sources in the back of the book. Mr. Challen, if it was *Eric* Sorkin you were talking to, no wonder you didn't get anything right! The first error of easily-checked fact came on page three, when he misquoted a line from the series pilot. How difficult is it to toss a tape in the vcr and verify a word? The sad fact is, of all the quotes Challen uses from dialog, it was difficult to find one that *wasn't* inaccurate. And for all his touted consultation of Big Name Internet Fans, he must not have asked any of them to read the finished product; I've only been a West Wing fan since midway through the first season, and from one search in one archive of one mailing list I discovered that the episodes aren't 45 minutes long, as he says on page 7, but rather 41:35. A perfunctory search of the first couple of chapters also notes mistakes in Aaron Sorkin's birthdate (he was born in 1961, Challen says 1960) and internal contradictions (on p. 10 he says Sorkin has written or co-written every episode, whereas in the episode guide on page 121 he correctly notes that Sorkin did not touch episode 8, 'Enemies'). The real fountainhead of misinformation, though, is Challen's "Episode Guide", that eats up more than a third of the book (70 of the 180 pages). Of the 44 episodes he allegedly summarizes, 24 of the reviews (which are as much opinion as recap) have factual errors. The real sources of Challen's information should be obvious to anybody looking at the art; he has more photos from the set visit of one of the internet webmistresses than from any other single source. Not that this is bad, necessarily, but it shows that this "unofficial" guide was cobbled together using secondary sources, perfunctory perusals of published reports, and materials obtained indirectly from official outlets via third parties. All it takes to write a book like this, it seems, is to spend an afternoon in the public library copying everything that had been written in the past year about Aaron Sorkin, "The West Wing" and *some* (but not all!) of its players, and spend an afternoon cajoling transcripts of various press events from loquacious television critics. I know at least a dozen fan writers who could have done a better job assembling the book out of their memories and their own files. And about the Big Name Internet Fans he *did* consult: one of them, Susannah Nix, runs a first-class operation at jedbartlet.com, the source of the aforementioned photos. Of the other three to whom Challen refers, one has shut down her site, one boasted to this writer that she never frequents mailing lists or chat rooms (where the real contact with fans takes place), and the last has a poorly maintained site, with out of date links to nonexistent webpages and obsolete cast lists. I could go on for pages listing the specific errors of omission and commission in this sad excuse for journalism; I'll confine myself to saying don't waste your money. And if you live in Canada, I'd demand that the Ontario Arts Council, which provided funding for the project, get theirs back.
Rating:  Summary: Nothing the fanatics don't know Review: If you are a major West Wing fan, this book is NOT for you. There is nothing in here the dedicated fans and internet users do not already know! This is just a book of facts - and many wrong ones at that - and older photos. Nothing new in these pages! If you are a new viewer to West Wing and want to catch up, I might recommend this book. However, all of the information here - and thensome - is available on the internet for free.
Rating:  Summary: A Big Disappointment Review: Like many West Wing fans, I eagerly awaited the release of Paul Challen's Inside the West Wing. And I am certain that most West Wing followers join me in saying that the book was a terrible disappointment. As any freshman journalism student knows, good writing begins with good research. Challen's was sloppy. While some of the mistakes may be overlooked by all but the most ardent West Wing fans, there were just too many to count. He also relies too heavily on existing sources and media stories rather than conducting his own interviews. The result is a poorly written mishmash of things the reader already knows and things that are just wrong. His episode summaries were laughable. Key plot points were overlooked--or overshadowed--by the author's own comments about his own favorite parts or things he believed would have made the episode better. I could barely recognize some of the series' most well known episodes. Summaries are summaries, and editorials belong somewhere else. Don't bother with this one.
Rating:  Summary: Run Away While You Still Can !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Review: The first clue to the shoddy workmanship of this so called book is the glaring fact that John Spencer is missing in action from the cover, which is a copied picture from the Golden Globes, I believe. As it turns out the cover really does tell you what the book, and again I use the term in its weakest meaning, is all about. In this case the cover screams, "I did a web search and this is part of what I found. Don't hurt me if its wrong I just copied and pasted." The majority of the thing contains factually incorrect episode summaries and a multitude of other peoples works on the series that have been copied and pasted. I could have done much better if I only worked from memory. Had this been passed along, free of cost, to fans of the show by a fan of the show it might have been better off. But it goes against every fiber of my being to pay an exorbitant amount, such as this, for this poorly held together reprinting of articles and hearsay.
Rating:  Summary: A Reference for Most Viewers Review: This book, is not aimed at fans who have watched each episode numerous times, been to Internet chat rooms on the show, and don't need a book that merely tells them what they already know. It is aimed at the majority of "West Wing" viewers who watch when they can and might tape the show but may have missed a few episodes and who would like an easily available reference to what they have missed or forgotten. Notes: 1) There are numerous mistakes, but I can't think of any book on any show without mistakes. 2) The book is UN-official so none of the producers were interviewed --- but then a show shouldn't need its writers to explain what they meant. 3) In the interest of full disclosure I should identify myself as one of the people interviewed for the book (due to running the "Continuity Guide to the West Wing" website).
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