This just in from Garry Apgar:
[My new book, Mickey Mouse: Emblem of theAmerican Spirit, published by the Walt Disney Family Foundation Press, was reviewed in the June 3rd issue of the Times Literary Supplement. The TLS is England’s, and America’s, oldest publication of its kind, and perhaps the classiest!
On another note: For those of you who live in
Connecticut, the cable program “Focus on Connecticut” is scheduled to broadcast
an interview with me over the weekend. The interview, which will air several
times on Saturday and Sunday, will focus on my article in the April issue of Connecticut Magazine about Walt’s
connections with the Nutmeg State.
Todd James Pierce is quoted in the article about rumored plans for a Disney
park in Connecticut. The interview will run several times over the weekend on
News 12, which is part of the Cablevision network. Alas, the TLS review is not available online.]
[My new book, Mickey Mouse: Emblem of theAmerican Spirit, published by the Walt Disney Family Foundation Press, was reviewed in the June 3rd issue of the Times Literary Supplement. The TLS is England’s, and America’s, oldest publication of its kind, and perhaps the classiest!
In
the opening paragraphs, the reviewer had this to say:
“If optimism is the defining American virtue
— and it had better be, you sometimes can’t help feeling — then this book’s
central proposition, that the essence of the nation is more fully embodied in
one animated rodent than all the flag-hoisters and touch-downers of nearly 250
swaggering years, makes perfect sense. It is hard to avoid a certain feeling of
manifest destiny when you are reminded of just how popular Mickey Mouse along
with his on-off consort Minnie and all their kith and kin were during the years
flanking the Second World War.
“This engaging and tirelessly informative
book is really two volumes in one handy slip-case … The first half narrates the
professional life of Walt Disney, from the genesis of his cartooning career in
Kansas City to a promising brief first stint in Hollywood, to the happy
accident that made sense of it all: the evolution of Mickey from the pooled DNA
of various ‘cute’ animals devised by Disney and others to star in the
pioneering animated shorts …”
Further
along into the review, the critic said: “You wouldn’t expect a book published
by the Walt Disney Family Foundation to be overly critical of the maestro … But
it is thorough and fine-grained, and fair on the events of Disney’s career.”
I’ll take that as a compliment, both for me and the WDFF Press!
1 comment:
In the quote reprinted here from the TLS review of "Mickey Mouse: Emblem of the American Spirit," the critic (a chap named Keith Miller) indicates that the book is a "slip-case" edition. Don't know what he was thinking. The book was nicely produced by Weldon Owen for the Walt Disney Family Foundation Press, but it ain't that fancy. Miller also said he looked in vain throughout the book for some mention of the dirty-linen side of Walt, things like the HUAC hearings after the war. But of course, that had nothing to do with Mickey. Critics, even in Jolly Olde England, must get their jollies any way they can, I suppose.
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