performing arts
Home » entertainment » entertainment » performing arts » alfred hitchcock a life in darkness and light
|
Aftersleep Books
|
||||||||||||||||||||
Alfred Hitchcock A Life in Darkness and LightThe following report compares books using the SERCount Rating (base on the result count from the search engine). |
|||||||||||||||||||||
|
Aftersleep Books - 2005-06-20 07:00:00 | © Copyright 2004 - www.aftersleep.com () | sitemap | top |
A good biographer or historian can weave the facts into a narrative. McGilligan can compile fact after fact but he cannot create an overview of what is going on.
He is so also extemely timid at making any personal assertion of the importance - or otherwise - of Hitchcock. His conclusion or coda constantly quotes other people such as Scorcese, Paglia, Ebert, French and others. He does not set out what he thinks.
Clearly the book is - in part - a rebutal of the claims made in Spoto's biography, but even here McGilligan does not attempt to refute Spoto, except by quoting other people. He is too cautious to make any conclusions, to say what he thinks. After reading the book, I was almost screaming at the author to tell me what his views were. Was Hitchcock a populist or an artist or both, If so why? What does Mr McGilligan actually think. I know he can research. He can write in a workmanlike fashion, but I wanted a great deal more.
In short, it is a good source book for Hitchcock, but it falls short as a masterly biography. You will learn a lot about the man. It is definitive to the extent that it is most extensive, but a first class biography of Hitchock needs still to be written.
The footnotes are lamentable. I know that they are seen as popular poison, but if you are going to write a serious book, it needs a proper system of footnoting to properly direct the reader to the source. In some cases, I simply do not know where the author got his information.