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Walled Towns

[audiobook] Walled Towns by Cram; Ralph Adams in Arts-Photography

Description

Henry is in heaven with the Lord Our Father. I wrote this for to know how I loved him; and quote a time from a letter that he once wrote to me stating; ldquo;Forever we will be together one day in heavenrdquo;. Henry wrote his our song like She would like to meet George Clooney and go to Egypt with an Egyptian someday. Written down in the morning while the imagery and emotions are still fresh; Denise bravely shares her personal and most intimate visions.(I tell my story to help other to tell their own story to help them to get their story out to other the their life time. my Life and Dreams book are my own writting and in my own words to.) To help other to understand the paranormal or mysterious dreams we all have at night time soon remember their dreams from the night or soon do not remember their dreams from the night it is part of the mysterious of the world it could be a pass life or in betting other times or space in the world and with learning troubles and disability. By Denise Pinch


2014-08-20 2014-08-20File Name: B00NDI7OPU


Review
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. All Beatles fans - read this book!By CustomerWhat a surprise. A book about one of the Beatle US albums; but it contain so much mote info and its written by one of the best. I kove this book. Ive read so many books bout my favorite band; this is one of the best. Top 3. Dexter chapter is worth the price alone. And YEAH; "She loves you" is the best Beatles single.0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Great Info; Horrid WritingBy The Magic ChristianMarsh needed an editor and a proofreader as his own prose is hopeless. Bad rock journalist-speak at its very best. But......the content; the narrative; the facts....priceless. If you ever wondered why the Capitol releases of The Beatles Second Album; The Early Beatles; et al; always sounded fat and uninspired; then this book will set your ears straight. He also spends ample time outlining the whole royalties issues that resulted in the 11-12 track Beatle LPs for the US market where the Brits got the 14-track platters. Hes a little harsh on Dave Dexter Jr; and would have made a better argument for Dexters short sighted incompetency if hed not made it such a personal attack.22 of 24 people found the following review helpful. Entertaining; but flawedBy ArchiverHow does someone; even the always loquacious Dave Marsh; write an entire book (albeit 180 small pages) about an album containing 11 songs? He doesnt. While perhaps a third of the book is about or relates to the Capitol concoction released in the US as "The Beatles Second Album;" the rest is a scathing attack on Capitol exec Dave Dexter; Jr.; who oversaw the release of Capitols Beatles records from late 1963 to 1966. This puts Marsh in an odd position; too; for as much as he adores the subject LP which Dexter assembled (there is no UK "counterpart" album); he cannot stop raking Dexter over the coals for everything Marsh sees that Dexter did wrong.There is way too much about Dexter in this book. And; of course; "Trashing Dave Dexter While Listening to the Beatles Second Album" would not have been a marketable title; albeit a more accurate one.Marsh offers some interesting descriptions of the LPs songs and how they affected him; though he retains his long-standing tendency to throw in totally unnecessary ten-dollar words here and there. But he does not offer any new revelations or; for that matter; insight. His primary sources are Bruce Spizers excellent books and Dexters own "Playback." Even so; he completely fails to explain why the LP includes both sides of the Beatles sole Swan single (Swan did not have the rights to issue the songs on an LP); no doubt because Spizers superb "The Beatles Swan Song" had not yet been published when Marsh was writing his book.Most of the factual material is condensed well; though quite a bit of it; such as the Vee Jay/Capitol debacle (all gleaned from Spizers excellent book on the subject) has little or nothing to do with the books subject. There are only a few obvious errors (e.g.; reference to a Canadian radio station in "London" and one reference to Capitols constructing "Meet the Beatles" from the UK "Please Please Me" instead of the UK "With the Beatles;" though Marsh gets it right in the acknowledgments section).The book suffers somewhat; though; from being written in spurts; as some sentences appear verbatim or nearly so in different chapters. This is likely due not to Dickensonian writing but rather to sloppy editing.A casual Beatles fan may find this thinly-disguised hatchet job interesting in spots; but the more serious fan will appreciate the book more for Marshs opinions. They make it an entertaning read; while the overbearing bludgeoning of Dexter and endless recitations of Dexters life history; most of which are utterly superfluous to the book; render it flawed.

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