Searching for Woody Guthrie: a Personal Exploration of the Folk Singer, His Music, and His Politics

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Searching for Woody Guthrie: a Personal Exploration of the Folk Singer, His Music, and His Politics 354 Reviews Searching for Woody Guthrie: a personal exploration of the folk singer, his music, and his politics. By Ron Briley. Knoxville, TN: University of Tennessee Press, 2020. 388 pp. ISBN 978-1-62190-533-2 doi:10.1017/S0261143020000227 This is a book on Woody Guthrie that attempts something interesting, interesting perhaps especially to readers of biography, memoir or ‘life writing’. The book collects three distinct studies: a mini-biography of Woody Guthrie, followed by thematic overviews and, finally, discussion of three selected recordings. The mini-biography is preceded by a provocative critique of Hal Ashby’s biopic of Guthrie, Bound for Glory, which was released in 1976 when, as Briley points out, David Cannadine’s Guthrie vied for attention with Sylvester Stallone’s Rocky (p. 36). His criticism is that Ashby’s film ‘de-radicalizes’ Guthrie, and this claim sets the pattern for Briley to present a suitably politicised Guthrie, at odds to a subtle extent with accounts focussed on Guthrie’s personal life. The biographical chapters then follow, five in all, focussing on, first, Guthrie in California, with particular ref- erence to the newspaper, the People’s Daily World; then Guthrie in New York, with particular reference to another paper, the Daily Worker; then Guthrie’s time at the Bonneville Power Administration, his experience during World War II and, finally, his views on the war in Korea, before he was incapacitated by Huntington’s Chorea. Five thematic chapters then follow: on Guthrie and Christianity and Christian Socialism, on the outlaw tradition (Pretty Boy Floyd, Tom Joad et al.), on labour unions at this most interesting period, on race and on gender. The latter in particular attends to the ambiguity of the chapter’s title: ‘advocate for equality and sexual lib- ertine’. Three sets of recordings are finally reviewed: inevitably the Dust Bowl Ballads recorded by Alan Lomax in 1940, the album Struggle that Moses Asch released in 1976 but had recorded 30 years earlier, and finally, recorded slightly later than Struggle also by Asch, the neglected Ballads of Sacco and Vanzetti of 1947. As if that were not enough, and as though to balance the opening chapter on the Ashby film, a final chapter discusses Guthrie’s influence on three prominent musi- cians, their selection no surprise: Guthrie’s son Arlo, Bob Dylan and Bruce Springsteen. In method Briley’s book follows Ed Cray’s 2004 biography in its close attention to the Woody Guthrie archives. However, in its political emphasis, Briley’s approach claims some distance from Cray and Joe Klein’s ground-breaking 1980 biography (Klein 1980) – and indeed the view of Guthrie’s daughter Nora, conveyed by tele- phone to Briley – in favour of the approach taken by Will Kaufman in Woody Guthrie: American Radical (2011). At any rate, Briley is a dependable guide, clearly having put in his own time at the Guthrie archives and having mastered several strands of literature: the footnotes are a veritable course of study in relevant aspects of American history. So much for another book on Woody Guthrie, appropriately for Popular Music’s 39th volume: the journal’s second volume included Dave Laing’s commendatory review of Klein’s biography. What sets this book apart is the ‘personal exploration’ of its title. The book is an account of Guthrie in the manner described above, but overlaid with a secondary account of Briley’s own life and views. Briley’s life follows close to 40 years after Guthrie’s: Guthrie born 1912 (he died in 1967) and growing up between Oklahoma and Pampa in Texas and Briley born in 1948 and ‘brought up in Downloaded from https://www.cambridge.org/core. University of Athens, on 23 Sep 2021 at 12:23:22, subject to the Cambridge Core terms of use, available at https://www.cambridge.org/core/terms. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0261143020000227 Reviews 355 the small Texas Panhandle farming community of Childress – about ninety miles southwest of Guthrie’s adopted home of Pampa’ (p. 5). Comparisons and contrasts then follow. At times, the connections are rather slight, especially following the biographical chapters: given Guthrie’s complex views of World War II, Briley thinks of his own views on the 1960s counterculture in 1967 (p. 107). It has to be said that Briley’s stable life – 38 years spent as teacher of History and academic administrator at a small, independent prep school in Albuquerque, New Mexico (p. 11 and see Briley 2011) – is quite a contrast with Guthrie’s peripatetic, sometimes chaotic musician’s life among emergent forms such as radio and recording. Where I think the book is more successful is where Briley gives himself space, and sometimes offers specific details from his own life, so setting up a suggestive chain of historical understanding: these anecdotes and vignettes are to be found especially in the thematic overviews. For instance, on reli- gion, with the issue turning on Briley’s humanist scepticism towards even Guthrie’s Socialist extraction from the Gospels, Briley has a fascinating anecdote about being taken, while in junior high school, to the evangelist Oral Roberts for the faith-based healing of his asthma after which ‘I never again suffered from asthma’ (pp. 140–1). Elsewhere, concerning race, there is a disturbing but truthful anecdote about Briley’s mother offering to an African-American labourer working on their house ‘a Flintstones drinking cup that had been a peanut butter jar’ (p. 7): when the labourer leaves, Briley’s mother throws the cup in the bin commenting, ‘You just can’t wash it out’. Raised in a ‘racist, sexist and homophobic’ environment’ (p. 216), then ‘married with a family and transgender son’ (p. 216), Briley learned ‘tolerance and under- standing’ (p. 216), seeing Guthrie as part of that self-education, and recruiting an imaginary Guthrie for a sympathetic attitude towards the LGBTQ community (p. 216) and queer thinking (p. 308). So do these and many other vignettes allow Briley the opportunity to comment on his position in relation to Guthrie and the way that he became, across his life, connected to Guthrie’s world-view. It’s a risky approach but, firmly grounded in the detail of Guthrie’s life and reception academic and otherwise, Briley strikes a balance, so that I even wondered if the book would benefit from slightly less Guthrie and slightly more Briley. Briley writes as a historian and suffers from that discipline’s besetting affliction, which is to treat musical works as a collection of lyrics, culled for prosaic detail expressive of social and political circumstance: the recordings don’t sound at all. However, it has to be conceded in turn that Guthrie’s is a degree zero of musicality: voice for words and melody, guitar for chords, occasional but limited instrumental and vocal embellishment. Guthrie’s songs have been resurrected in a distinguished lineage of cover versions: the 1988 Folkways recording A Vision Shared: a Tribute to Woody Guthrie and Leadbelly took the songs into a variety of styles. Even better, Nora Guthrie has offered her father’s considerable and largely unrecorded lyrics and writings to various musicians, motivating the collaboration of Billy Bragg and Wilco as Mermaid Avenue and in which Note of Hope, overseen by Rob Wasserman, is a superbly diverse collection. Briley is of course right to single out Arlo Guthrie, Dylan and Springsteen – all found on A Vision Shared – but his several footnoted references to Bragg and Wilco suggest that there was more to be said about Guthrie’s enduring presence. Continuing Briley’s chain, I shall end with a small anecdote of my own. Like many listeners who came to Woody Guthrie via Bob Dylan, I knew Dylan’s 1965 Highway 61 Revisited long before I knew Guthrie in any detail: it was acquired Downloaded from https://www.cambridge.org/core. University of Athens, on 23 Sep 2021 at 12:23:22, subject to the Cambridge Core terms of use, available at https://www.cambridge.org/core/terms. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0261143020000227 356 Reviews while an undergraduate student, alongside Blonde on Blonde. ‘Desolation Row’ ends Dylan’s album and begins with the line ‘They’re selling postcards of the hanging’ which idly I assumed to be a particularly memorable case of the surreal imagery found elsewhere on the record. Little did I realise that there really were postcards of lynchings, and that some were produced for the hanging of Laura Nelson and her son Lawrence in 1911 in Okemah, Oklahoma. Based on the testimony of Woody’s brother Claude, Joe Klein suggested that Guthrie’s father Charley was among the Klansmen involved (Briley p. 184). In fact, Woody Guthrie produced a lyric called ‘Don’t kill my baby and my son’ which he didn’t set to music and record, but which Joel Rafael has, following the practice of setting Guthrie’s words alluded to above. At any rate, historically, there I was – to evoke David Lodge’s ever-useful distinction – hearing Dylan’s arresting opening line as metaphor, but the content of which proved to be lethally metonymic, hard realism (Lodge, 1977). Briley’s book confirms that, in establishing history, the perspective of the histor- ian himself is not irrelevant, as historical evidence passes through the filter of the his- torian’s perspective. Briley doesn’t make too much of it, however, even as Guthrie’s work came to him through such historical processes and, clearly and decisively, affected who he is. Be that as it may, his book is an interesting exercise in life writing, and I commend it to readers of Popular Music.
Recommended publications
  • Grateful Dead Records: Realia
    http://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/c8k64ggf No online items Guide to the Grateful Dead Records: Realia Wyatt Young, Maureen Carey University of California, Santa Cruz 2012 1156 High Street Santa Cruz 95064 [email protected] URL: http://guides.library.ucsc.edu/speccoll Note Finding aid updated in 2018, 2020, 2021 Guide to the Grateful Dead MS.332.Ser.10 1 Records: Realia Contributing Institution: University of California, Santa Cruz Title: Grateful Dead Records: Realia Creator: Grateful Dead Productions Identifier/Call Number: MS.332.Ser.10 Physical Description: 178 Linear Feet128 boxes, 21 oversize items Date (inclusive): 1966-2012 Stored in Special Collections and Archives. Language of Material: English Access Restrictions Collection open for research. Advance notice is required for access. Use Restrictions Property rights for this collection reside with the University of California. Literary rights, including copyright, are retained by the creators and their heirs. The publication or use of any work protected by copyright beyond that allowed by fair use for research or educational purposes requires written permission from the copyright owner. Responsibility for obtaining permissions, and for any use rests exclusively with the user. Preferred Citation Grateful Dead Records: Realia. MS 332 Ser. 10. Special Collections and Archives, University Library, University of California, Santa Cruz. Acquisition Information Gift of Grateful Dead Productions, 2008. Accurals The first accrual was received in 2008. Second accrual was received in June 2012. Biography The Grateful Dead were an American rock band that formed in 1965 in Northern California. They came to fame as part of author Ken Kesey's Acid Tests, a series of multimedia happenings centered around then-legal LSD.
    [Show full text]
  • Jerry Garcia Song Book – Ver
    JERRY GARCIA SONG BOOK – VER. 9 1. After Midnight 46. Chimes of Freedom 92. Freight Train 137. It Must Have Been The 2. Aiko-Aiko 47. blank page 93. Friend of the Devil Roses 3. Alabama Getaway 48. China Cat Sunflower 94. Georgia on My Mind 138. It Takes a lot to Laugh, It 4. All Along the 49. I Know You Rider 95. Get Back Takes a Train to Cry Watchtower 50. China Doll 96. Get Out of My Life 139. It's a Long, Long Way to 5. Alligator 51. Cold Rain and Snow 97. Gimme Some Lovin' the Top of the World 6. Althea 52. Comes A Time 98. Gloria 140. It's All Over Now 7. Amazing Grace 53. Corina 99. Goin' Down the Road 141. It's All Over Now Baby 8. And It Stoned Me 54. Cosmic Charlie Feelin' Bad Blue 9. Arkansas Traveler 55. Crazy Fingers 100. Golden Road 142. It's No Use 10. Around and Around 56. Crazy Love 101. Gomorrah 143. It's Too Late 11. Attics of My Life 57. Cumberland Blues 102. Gone Home 144. I've Been All Around This 12. Baba O’Riley --> 58. Dancing in the Streets 103. Good Lovin' World Tomorrow Never Knows 59. Dark Hollow 104. Good Morning Little 145. Jack-A-Roe 13. Ballad of a Thin Man 60. Dark Star Schoolgirl 146. Jack Straw 14. Beat it on Down The Line 61. Dawg’s Waltz 105. Good Time Blues 147. Jenny Jenkins 15. Believe It Or Not 62. Day Job 106.
    [Show full text]
  • The Songs of Bob Dylan
    The Songwriting of Bob Dylan Contents Dylan Albums of the Sixties (1960s)............................................................................................ 9 The Freewheelin’ Bob Dylan (1963) ...................................................................................................... 9 1. Blowin' In The Wind ...................................................................................................................... 9 2. Girl From The North Country ....................................................................................................... 10 3. Masters of War ............................................................................................................................ 10 4. Down The Highway ...................................................................................................................... 12 5. Bob Dylan's Blues ........................................................................................................................ 13 6. A Hard Rain's A-Gonna Fall .......................................................................................................... 13 7. Don't Think Twice, It's All Right ................................................................................................... 15 8. Bob Dylan's Dream ...................................................................................................................... 15 9. Oxford Town ...............................................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Freewheelin-On-Line Take Thirtytwo
    Freewheelin-on-line Take Thirtytwo Freewheelin 230 In Chapter 3 of ‘Chronicles. Volume 1’ – the chapter with the wonderful title of ‘New Morning’, Dylan writes about the idyllic summers he spent with his family at East Hampton, Long Island as the sixties turned slowly into the seventies: ‘I started painting landscapes there. There was plenty to do. We had five kids and often went to the beach, boated on the bay, dug for claims, spent afternoons at a lighthouse near Montauk, went to Gardiner’s Island, hunted for Captain Kidd’s buried treasure - rode bikes, go karts and pulled wagons - went to the movies and the outdoor markets … drove over to Springs a lot where de Kooning had his studio’. I doubt that Dylan, who at the time was craving anonymity, ever went knock,knock, knocking on de Kooning’s door but if he did then he may have spotted the giant canvass that forms the backdrop to this month’s Freewheelin cover. Whether the two artists ever met is not recorded but I have reunited them anyway. Willem de Kooning (1904 – 1997) was born in Rotterdam and started living in America in his twenties. He was a leading light in the American art movement of the 1940’s known as Abstract Expressionism which also spawned other luminaries such as Jackson Pollock and Mark Rothco. Paintings from this genre are easy to look at but hard to define because Abstract Expressionism is the artist expressing a deeply felt emotion by the use of form and colour on canvas. It is a non-representational, or non objective art which means that there are no concrete objects in the picture.
    [Show full text]
  • Stories from the Road... and the Real World, Too
    David Gans: Stories from the Road... and the Real World, Too It somehow seems appropriate that "Shove in the Right Direction," the first track on David Gans' wonderful new CD, The Ones That Look the Weirdest Taste the Best, kicks right in with a hot in- strumental jam, with careening fiddle, clucking banjo, bopping mandolin, driving acoustic guitar, thumping bass and cracking drums, all locked in and dancing together. "Shove in the Right Di- rection" is a tale of uncertainly and perseverance in strange times that sounds like it could have been plucked from this morning's paper. For although during the past several years David has es- tablished himself as the consummate troubadour, traveling the country solo with just an electro- acoustic guitar and a few gadgets, he's always been an amazingly sympathetic ensemble player. So there's something about this new music that just feels right. Out of the gate, track one an- nounces that this disc is going to show us a different side of David Gans. Some of the songs may be ones you’ve seen him perform solo in your local club or at one of the many summer and fall music festivals that have become part of his touring regimen, but chances are you’ve never heard them played like this. After releasing a series of fine solo recordings the last several years, for this outing David has surrounded himself with a helluva group of great players. The extremely versatile core band is 4/6 of the adventurous jamgrass unit Railroad Earth—violinist/harmonica player Tim Carbone (who also produced the CD), mandolinist and pianist John Skehan III, multi-instrumentalist Andy Goessling, and bassist Johnny Grubb—who also perform together in a side group called the Shockenaw Mountain Boys.
    [Show full text]
  • Jerry Garcia Song Book V7 Page 2
    Page 1 Jerry Garcia Song Book V7 Page 2 Back of front cover intentionally left blank Page 3 After Midnight || E7 / / / | G / A / | E 7 / / / | % :|| 7 | E / / / | G / / / | A / / / | B / / / | 7 7 | E / / / | G / A / | E / / / | % | Verse 1 After midnight we're gonna let it all___ hang out. After midnight we're gonna chug-a-lug & shout. We're gonna cause talk and suspicion, Give an exhibition, Find out what it is all about! After midnight we're gonna let it all___ hang out. Verse 2 After midnight we're gonna shake your tambourine. After midnight it's gonna be peaches and cream. We're gonna cause talk and suspicion, Give an exhibition, Find out what it is all about! After midnight we're gonna let it all___ hang out. Lead = Verse Repeated Verse 1 After midnight we're gonna let it all___ hang out. (repeated) After midnight we're gonna chug-a-lug & shout. We're gonna cause talk and suspicion, Give an exhibition, Find out what it is all about! After midnight we're gonna let it all___ hang out. 7 End Jam || : E / / / | G / A / :|| Page 4 Aiko-Aiko || : D / / / | % | A / / / | % :|| Chorus Hey Now (Hey Now) , Hey Now (Hey Now) Aiko-Aiko all day Jock-o-mo Fee-no ah-nah-nay, Jock-o-mo fee-nah-nay. Hey Now (Hey Now) , Hey Now (Hey Now) Aiko-Aiko all day Jock-o-mo Fee-no ah-nah-nay, Jock-o-mo fee-nah-nay. Verse 1 My spy boy to your spy boy, they were sittin' along the bayou, My spy boy to your spy boy, I'm gonna set your tail on fire.
    [Show full text]
  • Recent Studies of Book Illustration and Engraving, Including Cartography, 1985–2016 This Bibliography Surveys Scholarship Publ
    Recent Studies of Book Illustration and Engraving, including Cartography, 1985–2016 This bibliography surveys scholarship published between 1985–2016 on engraving, including illustrations, prints, and emblems, as well as cartography, during the long eighteenth century (roughly 1650–1820). The focus is on Europe and the Americas, but some of Asian developments, particularly Japanese, have been included. The bibliography is most inclusive for the years 1990-2014, in consequence of my compiling studies from those years for Section 1— "Printing and Bibliographical Studies"—of the ECCB: The Eighteenth-Century Current Bibliography. A shorter version of this list without cartographic materials appeared in The East- Central Intelligencer, n.s. 15, no. 1 (January 2001), 58-77. Then an intermediate version appeared at Kevin Berland's C18-L website. During 2015–17, I expanded the list four times, with it now reaching 236 pages in typescript. The bibliography includes cartography (particularly the printed products of map-making), but excellent annual surveys of cartographic publications have been compiled by Francis Herbert, Wouter Bracke, and Nick Millea for Imago Mundi (entered under their names below). It lists dissertations and reviews for books. Focused on printed sources, it fails to note some valuable electronic sources, such as Juliette Sodt's website on illustration in botanical books, <www. library.wwu.edu/ref/subjguides/BOTILL.htm>, and many exhibition catalogues posted on the web by museums (only some recent exhibitions are included). Also, some studies in my bibliography of children’s literature at BibSite, as those on chapbooks, could also have been placed into this bibliography on engraving but were not.
    [Show full text]
  • Brand New Cd & Dvd Releases 2004 5,000+ Top Sellers
    BRAND NEW CD & DVD RELEASES 2004 5,000+ TOP SELLERS COB RECORDS, PORTHMADOG, GWYNEDD,WALES, U.K. LL49 9NA Tel. 01766 512170: Fax. 01766 513185: www. cobrecords.com // e-mail [email protected] CDs, Videos, DVDs Supplied World-Wide At Discount Prices – Exports Tax Free SYMBOLS USED - IMP = Imports. r/m = remastered. + = extra tracks. D/Dble = Double CD. *** = previously listed at a higher price, now reduced Please read this listing in conjunction with our “ CDs AT SPECIAL PRICES” feature as some of the more mainstream titles may be available at cheaper prices in that listing. Please note that all items listed on this 2004 5,000+ titles listing are all of U.K. manufactured (apart from Imports which are denoted IM or IMP). Titles listed on our list of SPECIALS are a mix of U.K. and E.C. manufactured product. We will supply you with whichever item for the price/country of manufacture you choose to order. 695 10,000 MANIACS campfire songs Double B9 14.00 713 ALARM in the poppy fields X4 12.00 793 ASHER D. street sibling X2 12.80 866 10,000 MANIACS time capsule DVD X1 13.70 859 ALARM live in the poppy fields CD/DVD X1 13.70 803 ASIA aqua *** A5 7.50 874 12 STONES potters field B2 10.50 707 ALARM raw E8 7.50 776 ASIA arena *** A5 7.50 891 13 SENSES the invitation B2 10.50 706 ALARM standards E8 7.50 819 ASIA aria A5 7.50 795 13 th FLOOR ELEVATORS bull of the woods A5 7.50 731 ALARM, THE eye of the hurricane *** E8 7.50 809 ASIA silent nation R4 13.40 932 13 TH FLOOR ELEVATORS going up-very best of A5 7.50 750 ALARM, THE in the poppyfields X3
    [Show full text]
  • 11469 Songs, 35.2 Days, 75.18 GB
    Page 1 of 54 Music 11469 songs, 35.2 days, 75.18 GB Artist Album # Items Total Time Bryan Adams So Far So Good 13 59:05 Ryan Adams Easy Tiger 13 38:58 Adele 21 12 51:40 Aerosmith Aerosmith 8 35:51 Aerosmith Draw The Line 9 35:18 Aerosmith Get Your Wings 8 38:04 Aerosmith Honkin' On Bobo 12 43:55 Aerosmith Just Push Play 12 50:49 Aerosmith Pump 10 47:46 Aerosmith Toys In The Attic 9 37:11 Jan Akkerman Blues Root 1 3:03 Alice Cooper Welcome To My Nightmare 11 43:24 Luther Allison Blue Streak 12 53:32 Mose Allison Seventh Son 1 2:50 The Allman Brothers Band The Allman Brothers Band 6 33:23 The Allman Brothers Band Brothers And Sisters 7 38:24 The Allman Brothers Band Dreams [Disc 2] 10 1:16:00 The Allman Brothers Band Eat A Peach 9 1:09:56 The Allman Brothers Band An Evening With The Allman Brothers Band [1st Set] 9 1:14:08 The Allman Brothers Band An Evening With The Allman Brothers Band [2nd Set] 8 1:11:55 The Allman Brothers Band The Fillmore Concerts 2 41:36 The Allman Brothers Band Hittin' The Note 11 1:15:01 Music Page 2 of 54 Artist Album # Items Total Time The Allman Brothers Band Idlewild South 7 30:54 The Allman Brothers Band Live at the Fillmore East 10 1:32:44 The Allman Brothers Band Shades Of Two Worlds 8 52:36 The Allman Brothers Band Where It All Begins 10 56:02 Gregg Allman Laid Back 8 36:01 America Here & Now [Disc 1] 12 44:16 America Here & Now [Disc 2] 12 40:38 Tori Amos Crucify 1 3:11 Trey Anastasio Trey Anastasio 12 1:00:07 Eric Andersen Blue River 11 46:54 Ian Anderson The Secret Language Of Birds [Bonus Tracks] 18
    [Show full text]
  • Ulterior Significance in the Art of Bob Dylan” Journal of Macrodynamic Analysis 6 (2011): 18-40
    Glenn Hughes, “Ulterior Significance in the Art of Bob Dylan” Journal of Macrodynamic Analysis 6 (2011): 18-40 Ulterior Significance in the Art of Bob Dylan Glenn Hughes “[The importance of symbols in] human living is exemplified, for example, by the saying, Let me write a nation’s songs, and I care not who writes her laws.”1 It is a commonplace to refer to Bob Dylan as an extraordinarily gifted artist who transformed the medium of popular song, radically expanding and redefining its possibilities. It is also common to note the uneven quality of his artistic output—as songwriter, recording artist, and performer—during the fifty years of his still-continuing career. As the historian Sean Wilentz puts it in his 2010 study, Bob Dylan in America: “Dylan’s career has been an unsteady pilgrimage, passing through deep troughs as well as high points ...”2 Since the period of his early successes and innovations in the world of American popular music in the 1960s, there have been stretches—some shorter, some longer—when he has produced poor, even embarrassing, work, and his artistic reputation rests heavily on the achievements of those early years. Still, he has remained a prolific and recurrently powerful artist, creating significant and highly 1 Bernard Lonergan, “Art,” in Topics in Education, Collected Works of Bernard Lonergan, vol. 10, ed. Robert M. Doran and Frederick E. Crowe (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1993), 221 (hereafter referred to as CWL 10). This formulation of the famous saying is of uncertain origin. The expression of
    [Show full text]
  • {DOWNLOAD} Postcards from the Dead Ebook, Epub
    POSTCARDS FROM THE DEAD PDF, EPUB, EBOOK Laura Childs | 323 pages | 01 Oct 2013 | Penguin Putnam Inc | 9780425252277 | English | New York, United States Postcards from the Dead PDF Book Definitely recommend this book and the whole series! After all, what good did it do to hang on to them? Aug 19, Fairlee Corkran rated it really liked it. Owner of business states these will be busy days for the shop then proceeds to run all over town investigating leaving her staff to handle all the work. Postcards from the Dead is the tenth book in the Scrapbooking Mystery series. Oct 06, Brenda at MyShelf rated it it was amazing Shelves: mystery , cozy , american. Recommended for readers who enjoy mystery and suspense without violence and gore. Most were there for the free booze; only a few had been invited for actual interviews. Customer Service. Bob, her professor husband. Carmela blinked and glanced around again. Carmela and Ava watched the monitor as Kimber interviewed Sugar Joe. Will not be looking for more, and that's kind of harsh from me. Weak story, unbelievable main character. Pricing policy About our prices. For a better shopping experience, please upgrade now. Carmela was also the one who favored more classic okay, conservative clothing in colors of navy, cream, and camel, while Ava, always willing to push the envelope as far as humanly possible, loved to dress in black leather pants and tight low-cut tops. Postcards from the Dead is a fast, enjoyable read that has two mysteries cleverly masquerading as one. The songs remained in the Dead's live rotation throughout their existence.
    [Show full text]
  • Weirdest One-Sheet2 Weirdest One-Sheet
    DavidDavid GansGans The new studio CD: TheThe OnesOnes ThatThat LookLook thethe WeirdestWeirdest TasteTaste thethe BestBest Produced by Tim Carbone Mastered in HDCD by Joe Gastwirt Perfectible Recordings PERF-07 “... a solid collection of top-notch compositions fleshed out by exemplary musicianship.” - Honest Tune “...one of those really good albums that you know is "gonna get better" with every listen.” - KindWeb.com “...Gans tackles the downturn of the working class, romantic bliss, organically-grown food, and resisting the haters in the name of God.” - jambands.com David Gans's fifth CD was recorded with Railroad Earth by producer Carbone on a pair of fire extinguishers. violinist (and occasional Dharma Bum) Tim Carbone on Tim’s David is a veteran of the music business as a songwriter and turf near the Delaware Water Gap, along with a remarkable cadre performer, radio producer (host of the nationally syndicated of musical pals including mandolin wizard John Skehan III, Grateful Dead Hour, host of Dead to the World on KPFA- multi-instrumentalist Andy Goessling, bassist Lindsey Horner, Berkeley, and a consultant to the Grateful Dead Channel on Sirius and demon steel (lap and pedal) player Buck Dilly. XM Satellite Radio since its inception), record producer (Grateful Loaded with lyrically piercing songs, including a dark, Dead and Jerry Garcia boxed sets, Postcards of the Hanging, brilliant contribution from Grateful Dead lyricist Robert Hunter, Might as Well: The Persuasions Sing Grateful Dead, and others), Gans' latest is melodically vibrant and engaging as hell, borne on journalist (an in-demand magazine writer and noted author of the fluid textures of Carbone's players and encompassing a four books), and photographer (in addition to musicians, he variety of styles that will prove appealing to Americana, "jam," favors southwestern scenery and organic produce; he provided and AAA radio listeners.
    [Show full text]