A richly detailed portrait relates Bogart's childhood, his early years on the Broadway stage and his subsequent rise in Hollywood, his tempestuous marriages, and his final illness, in a study of a man who exemplified the image of a tough hero of great integrity.
Jeffrey Meyers, a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature, has recently been given an Award in Literature by the American Academy of Arts and Letters. Thirty of his books have been translated into fourteen languages and seven alphabets, and published on six continents. He lives in Berkeley, California.
I recommend it. What more could one ask for? An interesting subject who led an interesting life. Mr. Meyers does a good job in that he doesn't ruin anything; he is transparent to this reader and lets the life and times of Bogart come through.
I didn't know anything of Bogart's early life at home, at school, in the Navy, or on the stage. And there is a lot to tell before the breakthrough Petrified Forest film.
The tangles of his marriages before Bacall, the dangers of the HUAC, his conflicts with his primary studio - it's all here, including his disturbing final days.
I find little to criticize in this work. Even the notes were interesting, although it is my preference to see them closer to the referencing subject rather than all at the end of the book. In this case, there are enough notes to make that a bit cumbersome, so I can understand the author's choice.
An in-depth bio of my favorite movie actor. Not a moral man in his personal life by any stretch, yet an interesting character none the less. Within you will find that "Bogie" (he preferred this over "Bogey" but said "Spell it anyway you want"): was quite a seaman (served in the Navy and later had his own sailboat), was a great chess player, loved to eat dinner on trays in front of the t.v. and once while drunk tried half heartedly to hang his likewise drunk wife (it was wife #3) from the second floor window of their house. [It's been six years since I read this but if I remember correctly she later tried to even the score by stabbing him.] Never a dull moment with Bogie!
The biography part was all right but the author is a complete idiot!!! His vocabulary is crude and blatant, his decriptions of the movies unrealistic and stupid, and it's quite obvious that his mind is in the gutter!