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Chargement... Time Traveling to 1973: Celebrating a Special Yearpar Robert E. Miller
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Cette critique a été écrite dans le cadre des Critiques en avant-première de LibraryThing. This was unreadable. Unfactual. Biased. Terribly written. Slap-dash. Poorly researched and edited. It felt like i was reading a middle-schooler’s homework assignment. I understand that it’s supposed to be a light treatment of the subject, but it was simply unreadable. Save your money and ask a seventh-grader to tell you what they’re learning in history instead. ( )Cette critique a été écrite dans le cadre des Critiques en avant-première de LibraryThing. This is a quick, light summary of the news items, pop culture, even the most familiar magazine ads of 1973. Intended as a birthday or anniversary gift, it might be useful to those producing historical fiction or drama. There are almost *too* many pictures in this book--so many that my e-mail program seemed to hoke on it, keeping it in the spam folder but not deleting it as spam on schedule, for several months until I dug through the spam folder and found it there. Buy a printed copy. Cette critique a été écrite dans le cadre des Critiques en avant-première de LibraryThing. This should have been a fun stroll down memory lane, but this book needed an editor. It's riddled with errors - big and small. Misspellings (ex. pg. 13: "under the exact 'spot'", not 'sport'), layout errors (ex. pg. 50: "Panorama" is superimposed by "The BBC"), or just jumbled text/type-o's that were simply indecipherable (ex. bottom of pg. 50: "men who would just walk through around get into all kinds of 'adventures." What?? Note: The apostrophe before adventures isn't my type-o. It actually says that.) Even names are misspelled in places, namely David Purley referred to as "Purely". There's more -- these are all just examples.An editor might also have made sure the book was prepped more for a 2023 audience. They could have pointed out that choosing to include a list of 15 notable people who died in a given year and of those 15 people making a mere 2 of them women is not judging the room well. The same goes for listing 35 notable people born in that year and deeming only 11 women worthy of mention. I note these lists specifically because the sexism is easily quantified, but it's evident, though less quantifiable, throughout the book. The author wrote 3/4 of a page about the 87th Wimbledon championships on pg. 61, but the women's tennis blurb was limited to a single sentence: "In the women's singles, which was at full strength, Billie Jean King defeated Chris Evert in straight sets." That is all. More disturbing is the author's choice of words when discussing the recent overturn of the 1973 Supreme Court Roe v Wade case on pg. 11. He states, "It was a shattering blow to pro-abortionists." No one refers to the pro-choice movement as "pro-abortionists" unless they're looking at it through an adversarial lens. This type of language has no place in a coffee table book, and it took me straight out of my 1973 waltz down memory lane and jarringly back to the divisive, political vitriol of the present. Maybe other years in this series are better as I'm guessing they're not all written by the same dinosaur. I'm guessing this is generally a cheaply and shoddily thrown together series, a marketing gimmick for last-minute birthday gifts, and that the editing isn't much better in any of them. Cette critique a été écrite dans le cadre des Critiques en avant-première de LibraryThing. This was a great read! It reminded me of what a great year 1973 was. The book is arranged into different headings including: Fashion, film, music, television, sports and news and more.I really liked the visuals-the book included print advertisements from 1973 at the end. I highly recommend this book also because it’s a great list of movies and music to watch and listen to. I love that era. Cette critique a été écrite dans le cadre des Critiques en avant-première de LibraryThing. Robert E. Miller's Time Traveling to 1973: Celebrating a Special Year opens with the Watergate scandal and ends with iconic advertisements from that year. The book is filled with amazing and unforgettable tidbits that occurred in 1973.The entries in the book flow seamlessly, transitioning from one chapter to the next in a well-thought-out and extremely germane and interesting fashion. I was reading along and got caught up in the year, thinking to myself that this would make a wonderful birthday gift for someone born in 1973, graduated from school (be it high school or college) in 1973 or who got married that year. They would undoubtedly be overcome by poignant, sentimental and nostalgic memories after reading it, I'm sure. The pictures were an interesting mix of black and white and color, which decidedly enhanced the narrative. I was pleasantly surprised to learn that certain things I had assumed to be more modern inventions had actually been developed in the 1970s and were extremely pricey. An interesting chronology of a significant year in history, both in the US and abroad, may be found in Time Traveling to 1973: Celebrating a Special Year. The turmoil and upheaval of the year will pique readers' interest. You can't miss this book if you want a quick historical read! I received a free copy of this book from LibraryThing. 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