A chronicle of "The Ed Sullivan Show" incorporates more than 350 photographs of great stars and legendary moments into a text that describes the show's influential role in the history of American culture. 40,000 first printing. $40,000 ad/promo. Tour.
John Leonard Libros
John Leonard fue un voraz crítico omnívoro, explorando la cultura, la política, la televisión, los libros y los medios de comunicación con aguda perspicacia. Contribuyó a numerosas publicaciones prestigiosas, dejando una marca significativa con su destreza analítica y su voz distintiva. Leonard también fue autor de ficciones y colecciones de ensayos, demostrando un amplio alcance literario. Sus extensos escritos sobre televisión fueron particularmente notables por su profundidad y originalidad. Sus contribuciones a la crítica literaria y al comentario cultural siguen siendo muy apreciadas por su rigor intelectual.





Flight to Bogota charts an infamous episode in sports history, when UK footballers turned their backs on club and country before the 1950 World Cup for a sporting El Dorado. England's Neil Franklin led the rebellion, only to return home with his career in tatters. But the players' vociferous defence of their behaviour enlightened a shocked nation.
The Value of Milton
- 174 páginas
- 7 horas de lectura
Leading critic John Leonard explores the writings of John Milton from his early poetry to his major prose.
Vindicated
- 256 páginas
- 9 horas de lectura
James Marshall is a successful defence attorney, close to making partner at his firm, having never lost a case. He enjoys the spoils of success, but his ambitions and his work have destroyed his marriage. Since this breakdown, he has struggled to balance his life, scarcely seeing his young children, but his parents remain a solid support in his life, and his passion for his work has kept him going. Through his work, he thought he'd seen the worst that humanity had to offer, until the day a vengeful former client attacks his parents. Terrified for his family, Marshall finds himself making a list of the worst people he's defended, guilty people he had successfully kept out of prison, before tracking each of them down, intent on finding the culprit.
Salute examines why England's footballers made a gesture that would haunt them for the rest of their days. To Hitler, England's Nazi salute in the Olympic Stadium, Berlin, was a propaganda victory. Discover how botched British diplomacy amid the political flashpoints of the 1930s led to shame for English footballers.