Suche books:   





The Last City Room
Al Martinez

Thomas Dunne Books, 2000 - 272 pages

average customer review:based on 13 reviews
view larger image
 for more information click here

   highly recommended  highly recommended





Last City Room is Great First Novel

In this page-turner of a first novel, Al Martinez deftly plunges us into the wild and revolutionary days of San Francisco circa 1965. At the center of this novel is the once-great San Francisco newspaper, the Herald, which is dying a slow death. Our "hero" is the young reporter William Colfax who joins the paper after a fighting in Vietnam. We see a world that no longer exists both within the outside of the Herald: student protests, bombings by "revolutionaries," and hard-drinking, computer-free reporters. This novel rings true and benefits from Matinez's many years as a bay area reporter. Bravo!


 for more information click here


A compassionate tale about the '60s

This book brought back the '60s, the newspaper industry as it once was, and the decency of people like Al Martinez who made working at a newspaper both exciting and rewarding.

Although the craft is shaky in some areas, the story is strong, and the men and women depicted are people all of us who have worked in newspaper have known.

Few survived those times, and this sensitive novels shows why. Treat yourself to a trip back to the less-complicated world of the '60s, in a time it was much easier to tell the good guys from the bad. You'll taste the whiskey, smell the cigarettes and experience a time that will never be again.

Bonnie Hearn Hill
Author, Huelga House


 for more information click here









 for more information click here


DO YOU WANT TO BE A NEWSPAPER REPORTER?

I must state first, I read few novels all the way through. Eighty percent of the time I read non-fiction. I always check with Amazon critiques regarding all the books I read and usually attempt "5-star" books only when reading novels...and most of those I seldom finish. Well..I finished THE LAST CITY ROOM and enjoyed every page.

The characters are developed where you care about them (even the bad guys...to get their due)and the events and personalities are interesting and true-to-life. On one side the reader can see where a reporter could be a celebrity type person where they are in the spotlight and then again the job could be filled with drudgery and danger....as well as low paying to the extreme.

This story depicts the times of the sixties and many of the events that went on at that time. For me the "flavor" of a newspaper job was well developed as was the personalities of many of the characters. I don't believe anyone would be disappointed with this book.


 for more information click here






Creative

I found the book interesting and fun to read. Mr. Martinez has a true gift for writing. His play on words and deep insight into the subjects he writes about this book made for a pleasurable easy read. I strongly recommend this book for all lovers of great fiction writing.


Compelling

From the moment you pick up this book and read the introduction, you are compelled to keep reading. The characters draw you in and you want to know what is going to evolve. Newpapering experience isn't necessary to reading this book. Nor is being a child of the 60's. But it makes you feel as though you were there and have first hand knowledge. The characters become important even if you have never met anyone even remotely like them. Good reading that makes you want more.


 for more information click here


reviews: page 1, 2, 3



It's almost a tradition in the city room of The Herald for journalists to collapse at their desks, having worked, imbibed, and smoked themselves into the grave. On these occasions the behavior required by the dead man's erstwhile colleagues -- a group of cynical old news hounds with skin the color of faded newsprint-- is to applaud, simultaneously hailing their fallen comrade and signaling an opening in the city room. It is in this manner that William Colfax, an ambitious young reporter, earns a coveted position as a staff member of this long respected newspaper. Colfax accepts the offer mere minutes after his predecessor's body has been carted away.

The Last City Room depicts the decline of an influential newspaper in San Francisco during the turbulent early 60s. As the conservatism of the old guard, led by The Herald's publisher and his bylined minions, clashes with the radical leaders ascending to power in the city, Colfax quickly realizes that the golden days of The Herald are long over. With his past threatening to ensnare him between the two warring factions, Colfax's struggle quickly becomes one of not simply proving himself as a reporter, but of maintaining his independence and integrity as a journalist.

The Last City Room is a provocative evocation of a time when the carefully modulated social fabric of the country was just beginning to show signs of uncertainty. It is a tribute to the end of a newspaper and the beginning of a new era.



 for more information click here



hot or not?    What's your opinion?     Write a review and share your thoughts!





room

Room on the Broom
The Creed Room: A Novel of Ideas
The Velvet Room
A Library of Unfortunate Events, Books 1-10 (The Bad Beginning, The ...
Moving On: Dump Your Relationship Baggage and Make Room for the Love ...



last

Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows (Book 7)
The Last Colony
The Eat-Clean Diet, Expanded Edition: Fast Fat-Loss that lasts ...
The Last Patriot: A Thriller
The Last Oracle: A Novel (Sigma Force)



city

A Pattern Language: Towns, Buildings, Construction (Center for ...
The Power Broker: Robert Moses and the Fall of New York
White Lines
Mara, Daughter of the Nile
The Wheels on the Bus



search for books
last city, city, last, room


Impressum / about us


Suche books: