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Everything That Moves

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Everything That Budd Everything That Doubleday & FIRST First Edition, First Printing. Not price-clipped. Published by Doubleday & Company, 1980. Octavo. Hardcover. Book is very good with library embossed stamp and spotting on page ends. Dust jacket is very good with light shelf wear. 100% positive feedback. 30 day money back guarantee. NEXT DAY SHIPPING! Excellent customer service. Please email with any questions. All books packed carefully and ship with free delivery confirmation/tracking. All books come with free bookmarks. Ships from Sag Harbor, New York.Seller 323797 Literature We Buy Books! Collections - Libraries - Estates - Individual Titles. Message us if you have books to sell!

251 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 1980

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About the author

Budd Schulberg

42 books104 followers
Budd Schulberg (1914–2009) was a screenwriter, novelist, and journalist who is best remembered for the classic novels What Makes Sammy Run?, The Harder They Fall, and the story On the Waterfront, which he adapted as a novel, play, and an Academy Award–winning film script. Born in New York City, Schulberg grew up in Hollywood, where his father, B. P. Schulberg, was head of production at Paramount, among other studios. Throughout his career, Schulberg worked as a journalist and essayist, often writing about boxing, a lifelong passion. Many of his writings on the sport are collected in Sparring with Hemingway (1995). Other highlights from Schulberg’s nonfiction career include Moving Pictures (1981), an account of his upbringing in Hollywood, and Writers in America (1973), a glimpse of some of the famous novelists he met early in his career. He died in 2009.

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Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
Profile Image for Andrew.
857 reviews38 followers
February 24, 2018
Budd Schulberg was a virtuous insider in different American 'rackets'...& none involved tennis balls or soft drinks! This briskly-paced novel of the early 80s tackles head-on the labor {sic} union/organised crime nexus which almost crippled the American economy.The main protagonist is named Joey Hopper (Jimmy Hoffa?!)...& thinly-veiled pen-profiles of several Stateside 'personalities' enliven what reads like a screenplay...Schulberg gave us classic cinema screen-writing in 'On The Waterfront'...& displays an abiding contempt for the whole dollar-driven impetus of so many superficially-worthy politicians, union reps & businessmen...Schulberg should have a higher profile himself for his powerful indictments of so much of complacent American morality. Reading this novel & his other little grenades makes me think that liberals in the US of A today have had a dose or two of amnesiac prophylatics! Donald Trump has much to learn too...or he'll suffer the same fate as J.H...in fresh concrete bodysuit! Fifth Amendment time comes around like Christmas!
Profile Image for M.R. Dowsing.
Author 1 book24 followers
September 6, 2019
Budd Schulberg's one of my favourite authors and I thought it might be interesting to read this before Scorsese's new film The Irishman is released as both are about Jimmy Hoffa ('Joey Hopper' here). This novel seems to have been Schulberg's least popular, so I didn't set my expectations too high. It's a good book, but Schulberg's decision to tell it from a fly-on-the-wall perspective in the present tense means that it reads almost like a screenplay and lacks some depth. We never really get inside the heads of the characters, and they come across as 'types' whom you can imagine being played by actors 'straight from central casting'. I could see James Cagney as Hopper, with Gloria Grahame and Wesley Addy in supporting roles. I felt very much as if I had just watched a black-and-white film from the '50s rather than read a novel with a story taking us up to 1975. Schulberg's heyday was in the '50s and this book made me think perhaps he was a little stuck in that time period.
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