bellulapatata's review

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challenging dark emotional informative sad medium-paced

4.0


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ginabelle's review against another edition

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dark emotional informative sad slow-paced

2.5

I enjoyed thus gritty yet glamorous behind-the-scenes look into 1930s Hollywood. I will say that 80% of the book is about Lana Turner and her life, with a small part actually dedicated to the murder scandal and the fallout, so be prepared for that. Also, I think the author’s note was a nice sentiment of acknowledging Lana’s pain and struggles, forming her into an early feminist figure, and I wish that was more present throughout the book. Some of the verbiage seemed purposefully sensationalist and I wish more care was taken throughout if advocacy was going to be the author’s lasting end statement. Overall, it was pretty good!

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avidreaderandgeekgirl's review against another edition

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adventurous informative reflective slow-paced

3.25

   A new perspective on the decades-old "murder" of Lana Turner's lover.
   I can see this perspective but either way, and I hate to say terrible things about the "victim" he wasn't a good guy and deserved what he got. He probably would have been murdered at some point by a rival mafia guy. She had to marry him to live with him or sleep with him.
     He beat her, he drugged her, and took explicit photos of her, and it was the 1950s! She would have gotten the death penalty. So, whether Cheryl or Lana did it, good riddance. He wasn't a good guy at all. And in today's world IF Lana did it, she would not have been convicted, most likely.
  The book had some language that was seriously sexist and misogynist. Which is one reason I didn't rate it great. As well as just not being that interesting or adding anything new to an old story. It seemed well-researched though so it wasn't a total dud.

Narrator Rating: 2 stars 
    I'll say it louder for the people in the back. Do NOT read your non-fiction unless it's a memoir or you're a professional in some audio media. The author didn't do a great job and I HATE his voice!
 
Elemental Levels:  Fluff-0/5  Heartfelt-4/5   Helpful-1/5     Horror-NA    Inspiration-NA  
Love aka Romance -NA   Mystery-NA    Predictability-NA   Spice-NA    Suspense-NA    Tear-4/5  
Thrill-NA Humor-NA 

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chezler24's review against another edition

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dark informative mysterious sad tense medium-paced

3.5

I enjoy reading about this period in Hollywood, and this was a nice non-fiction book to break up my reading. The glitz and glamour of stardom married so closely with the sleaze of the underground mob life and seedier individuals at the studios makes the period a prime breeding ground for gripping, infamous stories. Sherman's book brought to light a murder case I had not looked into. For a true crime book, this reads pretty fluidly. I appreciated how the author handled certain aspects and wrapped up sensitive topics in the author's note. Some details seemed a bit unnecessary (such as the quote at the bottom of page 157), and some dialogue that has been paraphrased can raise some questions regarding the validity of the factual aspect of the book. Aside from that, Sherman was able to demonstrate how the lives of the various involved parties developed and slowly converged on that fateful day of Stompanato's death. I don't think we'll ever truly know what occurred that day but its mark will forever be made in pop culture history.

Rating: 3.5/5 stars

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