Out of print for more than 30 years, now available for the first time as
an eBook, this is the controversial story of John Wooden's first 25
years and first 8 NCAA Championships as UCLA Head Basketball Coach.
This is the only book that gives a true picture of the character of John
Wooden and the influence of his assistant, Jerry Norman, whose
contributions Wooden ignored and tried to bury.
Compiled with
more than 40 hours of interviews with Coach Wooden, learn about the man
behind the coach. The players tell their stories in their own words.
Click the book to read the first chapter and for
ordering information. Also available on Kindle.
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Above Suspicion (6/10)
by Tony Medley
114 Minutes.
R.
Spoiler alert. I read Joe Sharkey’s excellent book,
almost by accident. I listen to my books now and downloaded this
thinking it was something else, but I started it and it grabbed me. It
is so well written and researched, I thought it was a novel, although
there were clues that it was a true story throughout, and it was!
Then Hollywood got involved, and as Hollywood will,
they buried the lead. Instead of telling the story of FBI Agent Mark
Putnam (Jack Huston), the woman who produced the film (Amy Adelson) told
it from the POV of Susan Smith (Emilia Clarke) and made her the
protagonist.
The fascinating tale is that Putnam was a fledgling
agent with a wife, Kathy (Sophie Lowe), who was assigned to duty in
Pikeville, Kentucky. He retains Susan as a paid informant. She is a
hillbilly, mother of two, but wild as the wind. In the book which is
told from Mark’s POV, she seduces Mark, who reluctantly succumbs a few
times. Kathy is a heroine in the book but is an afterthought in the
movie. The intriguing theme of the book is that Mark, after killing
Susan unintentionally, confesses to the crime when he didn’t need to and
when the government had virtually no evidence and didn’t even know Susan
was dead, although she had disappeared. Kathy fought like a tiger to get
him to act smartly. That story takes up about the last third of the book
but is taken care of in only the last fleeting minutes of the film and
misses the point entirely.
In the movie, though, Mark is in a long, ongoing
relationship with Susan and the movie implies that he intentionally
murdered her. I loathe films that use real names but totally change the
facts. Directed by Phillip Noyce with a screenplay by Chris Gerolmo, the
true story told by Sharkey is a lot better than the story that Adelson
chose to tell. If Hollywood wants to tell a different story based on
facts, they should not use real names and it should be clearly labeled
as fiction. I can’t imagine that Sharkey or Putnam could be happy with
the result. Had I not read the book, I’d rate this 8/10), but since I
did read the book and the movie disappointed me, I downgraded it. I
highly recommend the book, however. Amazon Prime.
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