Miscellaneous
The Halloween Tree - Ray Bradbury ( $5.50/$4.29, copyright 1972, 145 pages, Paperback)
For years I would read Bradbury's "Something Wicked This Way Comes" every October. Then my Granddaughter was born and I wound up reading books like "Where's Baby's Pumpkin" and "Daniel Tiger's Halloween". As she's getting older, I began to look into other books for her and found this for me. It's more of a Young Adult Book and deals with Tom Skelton and his friends getting ready for "Trick or Treating". But then their friend Pipkin is snatched away and Tom and his eight friends have to go looking for him. Bradbury uses the mysterious Mr. Moundshroud to teach the boys about Halloween across the ages. The writing is classic Bradbury but is aimed at a younger audience - poetic with a touch of Dr. Seuss. It's short and it's fun and I enjoyed it.
For years I would read Bradbury's "Something Wicked This Way Comes" every October. Then my Granddaughter was born and I wound up reading books like "Where's Baby's Pumpkin" and "Daniel Tiger's Halloween". As she's getting older, I began to look into other books for her and found this for me. It's more of a Young Adult Book and deals with Tom Skelton and his friends getting ready for "Trick or Treating". But then their friend Pipkin is snatched away and Tom and his eight friends have to go looking for him. Bradbury uses the mysterious Mr. Moundshroud to teach the boys about Halloween across the ages. The writing is classic Bradbury but is aimed at a younger audience - poetic with a touch of Dr. Seuss. It's short and it's fun and I enjoyed it.
I came across an article about Martin Scorsese's movie "The Irishman" (due out next year) starring Robert DeNiro, Al Pacino, and Joe Pesci and it was being filmed here in New Jersey. I looked into it and found out that it was based on this book about Frank Sheeran (DeNiro), the Irish gangster, who carried out more than twenty executions on the orders the Italian mobster Russell Bufalino (Pesci) and the Union Leader Hoffa (Pacino). The title, supposedly, were the first words Hoffa spoke to Sheeran and means to kill a man. After the tense beginning, the book goes back in time to capture Sheeran’s life and you see how his experiences during World War II, his entry into the Mob, and his climb up that ladder shaped his life. This was all interesting but then Brandt speculates about the Kennedy Assassination and Hoffa's disappearance. Also, he's written most of this as a first-person narrative that I didn't think rang true. It was OK.
We're entering the Holiday Season and Thanksgiving is just about a month away. I don't know what the plans are but I'm sure my immediate family will be together. For now, I just got another book in the mail that I'll be checking out tonight. Enjoy and ...
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