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The Secret Parts of Fortune : Three Decades of Intense Investigations and Edgy Enthusiasms

The Secret Parts of Fortune : Three Decades of Intense Investigations and Edgy Enthusiasms

List Price: $18.00
Your Price: $12.24
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Must Read
Review: A blast! A quirky and original series of reports on subjects both profound and bizarre. But with a literate eye and a graceful tone that is engaging and riviting. These are terrific essays and together, they comprise a dazzling read.
As good as it gets.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Very Dense
Review: I had never read Ron Rosenbaum before I purchased this book and while I don't love everything I've read so far, I do have a great deal of respect for Rosenbaum as a journalist. To put it simply: he's brilliant. It's so refreshing to read his work. He's one of the best journalists I've ever read and am so glad that amazon brought him to my attention.

My problem with the book was that many of his essays just didn't grab me. The synopsis described several topics which I was sure would interest me but when I actually read them I found the writing style a bit dense and bogged down. I don't ever expect to like everything I read in collections. I particularly liked "The Great Ivy League Nude Posture Photo Scandal," as well as "Henry: Portrait of a Serial Killer Hoax." This is the kind of compilation which I would not recommend attempting to read in one sitting. Smaller portions worked best for me. This is a wonderful collection of Rosenbaum's work, and while I haven't read them all yet, so far, so good.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: America's best living essayist
Review: I have to confess being unfamiliar with Ron Rosenbaum until reading his excellent, perceptive book "Explaining Hitler." What a pleasure, then, that he has followed that book up with this collection of his magazine work extending over the past three decades. The essays collected here are a mixed bag showing Rosenbaum's extensive range, from amusing short pieces to long works in depth. Some personal favorites include his early exploration of the world of phone phreaks (in which Rosenbaum predicted, correctly, that computer hacking was the wave of the future - this in 1971!), his exposure of the Henry Lee Lucas serial killer hoax, his slightly crazed looks at TV culture via the war over canned laughter and the eminence of Mr. Whipple in toilet paper advertising, a short but incredibly horrible glimpse of early 60s teen film star Troy Donahue debauched and decrepit in the early 70s, his explorations into the world of the Kennedy assassination mythos, a brief, horrified look at Bill Gates' house, and his wonderful exposure of Yale's weird Skull and Bones fraternity. Every piece is well worth your time and several are worthy of close rereading. Rosenbaum is a fine writer, improving continuously as this collection shows (and he started at a very high level), and I'll be looking for his magazine pieces from now on.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Rosenbaum, The Gnostic Explorer
Review: Ron Rosenbaum got a lot of attention a couple of years ago with his amazing book "Explaining Hitler", which was about all the different theories people have come up with to account for that figure's almost overwhelming evil. However, he has been writing journalism for thirty years that explores the hidden underside of contemporary culture--the "gnostic knowledge", if you will, of the modern world. This book is a thick, satisfying collection of much of that work. Some of the best stuff: an exploration of Kim Philby and the information about him that Graham Greene might have taken to his death. An amusing expose of the naked "posture photos" that used to be required of every freshman at Ivy League universities. His Hitler essay that first appeared in the "New Yorker" magazine. The inside poop on the secret society of "Skull and Bones." There is also a lot of terrific "literary journalism"--the best essay I've ever read on J.D. Salinger, which first appeared in "Esquire"; along with his famous take on the underappreciated Charles Portis, which got his books back into print. Also, perceptive stuff on Martin Amis and an explanation of how the lost art of the "close reading" of the old-fashioned "New Critics" is better than post-modernism at explaining the world. Rosenbaum is definitely *not* a conspiracy theorist; his real subject is how human beings respond to mystery. He contrasts his own shifting views on the JFK asassination ("Oswald's Ghost") with the fatal paranoia that eventually overcame the late Danny Casolaro. This is an endlessly fascinating book--highly recommended for mystery lovers, history buffs, and fans of the weird and unexplained.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Ron Makes Me Want to Live to 1,000 Years Old!
Review: That's how long it would take for me to fully explore every subject Ron Rosenbaum so expertly and adroitly takes on in this hefty volume. Rosenbaum is blessed with a wonderful gift...his writing makes even the most prosaic subject suddenly fascinating. Not that he often tackles prosaic subjects...Hitler, underground cancer cures, his cat Stumpy (okay, maybe that qualifies), Bill Gates' "compound," the Dead Sea Scrolls, Kim Philby, on and on...Ron hits them all and he does an amazing job of bringing them to glittering life. I keep a dictionary at hand whenever I open this book...I don't want to miss a single nuance of this remarkable journalist's craft. I don't often give a 5-star rating...in fact, this may be the first. Ron Rosenbaum deserves it. Bless you, Ron, for turning me onto a lifetime of further discovery and knowledge. Now where do I find that Fountain of Youth???

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: YUCK
Review: When Entrepeneur magazine reviewed this book it sounded good so I bought it. In reading it, it's nothing more than a compilation of a bunch of dated magazine articles penned by the same author of this book. Random House was obviously looking for a quickie way to bring in cash over the holiday season so decided to put together this "new" book. The only NEW in here is a couple of editorial comments at the end of the dated stories. Whoopee.

First I read the story about Robin Leach, and Rosenbaum's casual nose-tipping, as if what he's about is So Much Better than Robin. Obviously he missed the irony of the situation, and still does.

Then I read the story about Salinger. There is a name for those people who spend their lives name-dropping, and this was a classic example of a New York Elite Writer taking it up a notch. Yuck.

I skipped to the story about phreakers. After reading it, I thought "So what?" The only point I can see in including this story in the compendium is so Rosenbaum can continue to toot his own horn. (See Leach comments, above).

Finally, I gave him one more chance. I read the story about two pets, Stumpy vs. Lucille. This was the one that really did it for me. Rosenbaum's logic screams a five-year-old's syllogism: All Dogs Are Pandering Suck-Ups. You have a dog. Therefore, your dog is a Pandering Suck-Up.

It's obvious that Rosenbaum has never set foot into true dogdom, where there are All Kinds of dog personalities, including the shy, terrified puppy that has never left its tiny chickenwire puppymill cage until it's purchased, the female breeder dog who has spent her whole life cranking out litters of puppymill dogs and, when set free, her dead eyes have no CONCEPT that dogs are supposed to be suck-ups because humans are good, and there's the Mean Dog, the one who learned how to survive in the puppymill pack by beating up anything that came near him, so he'd get enough food to stay alive. I spend my life dedicated to rehabbing these dogs, and when I see the life come back into their eyes again you damn well bet I'm proud. I don't do it to feel important, I do it because puppymill dogs deserve a better life and because I have the skills and patience needed to help them overcome their pasts. Perhaps I should cut Rosenbaum some slack - it's obvious he never leaves his quaint little upscale name-dropped world of Elite Writers to actually research the true parameters of dog/cat behavior before he slaps a label on it and throws his Elite Writer weight behind it to make it stick. When Gandhi said the moral progress of a nation could be judged by how it treats its animals, he was talking about people like Rosenbaum, who can't grasp concept One about them.

The only good aspect of the book is Amazon.com's return policy.


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