I love Almost Live!, and when I found out there was a book about Seattle's best show, I put a library hold on it immediately. I loved learning all about Almost Live!; tore through the book in a matter of days. But! Technically - only technically! - speaking, this is a bad book. It's incredibly poorly written - multiple spelling errors on pretty much every page (the author even misspells the names of the cast members and the book's other contributors, and spells Sydney Pollack's name two different ways in one paragraph), it bounces back and forth between poorly punctuated and not punctuated at all, apostrophes are used to pluralize (NEVER DO THIS!), the author never once uses [sic] to mark an error by a speaker/respondent, the transcribing is inexpert at best, and so on. I'm not sure if the book had an editor, or it just needed another (or a whole team), but so many of these errors are elementary school-level. The poor quality of the writing and editing were constant distractions from the subject matter, which was frustrating, because I couldn't have been more interested in the subject. Still, I loved delving into Almost Live!'s history - the show deserves a much better book.
P.S. A public service: "yea" and "yeah" are NOT the same word, nor are they interchangeable. "Yea" is pronounced "yay", and while it means "yes", it's used in the context of an affirmative reply or a yes vote - like in Congress - and is the opposite of "nay". It is not ever another version of "yeah".