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Reviews for Illustrations from Nelson Mandela's Favorite African Folktales 2004 Calendar

 Illustrations from Nelson Mandela's Favorite African Folktales 2004 Calendar magazine reviews

The average rating for Illustrations from Nelson Mandela's Favorite African Folktales 2004 Calendar based on 2 reviews is 4 stars.has a rating of 4 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2017-10-01 00:00:00
2003was given a rating of 4 stars Leslie Cagley
i had high hopes for this book, because i am a devotee of the mix tape even in this age of the ipod, but ultimately, i was disappointed. why is it that every publishing project thurston moore touches is sullied by his involvement? at least he has more of a legitimate claim to being into mix tapes than punk houses. moving on. what i was really hoping for with this book was that maybe it would be a kind of history of the mix tape--how did cassette tapes supplant 8-tracks? what was the motivation for blank cassettes coming on to the market? how did this culture start up, of people making tapes & swapping them around to their pals? what are the different kinds of mix tapes & the cultures/traditions that surround them (ie, the road trip mix, the new romantic partner mix, the you-gotta-check-out-this-band mix, etc)? i thought maybe contributers would swap a few especially pognant mix tape stories (example from my own life: the first time i ever heard "smells like teen spirit" was when my dad played me a mix tape that included it--the tape was from a friend in the music business in chicago who had gotten ahold of a promo copy of "nevermind," so i heard "smells like teen spirit" a month before "nevermind" was released, & it definitely captured my attention). instead, the book took a kind of weird art book route, with lots of photos of mix tape collages & shit. dude, what the fuck? the text meandered & said nothing of consequence. & the book was so porly-constructed that the cover fell off after about two days, so i couldn't even sell it back to the bookstore. bah.
Review # 2 was written on 2020-02-19 00:00:00
2003was given a rating of 4 stars Antonio Chavry
Visually stimulating, highly entertaining, and deeply nostalgic is how I would describe Thurston Moore's book Mixtape. Moore and his crew of 30-odd friends gather to share their mixtape stories and photos of mixtapes given and received. They are a generation (or two?) older than me, so I enjoyed Moore's introduction on buying a cassette player for the van while Sonic Youth went on tour in the mid-80s. The player took 16 double D batteries and took up space equal to another band member. I didn't start making mixtapes until the mid-90s and even then, I was just recording songs off the radio. In high school, I began to make real mixtapes, lots of them. I was selfish with them though. I never gave them to friends or boys, as many do in this book. I played one or two mixtapes for Luke a couple of months ago...it was semi-embarassing/ super awesome. Anyways, my favorite mixtape contribution is "Goodbye's Too Good A Word" from Daniella Meeker. (She's comically tells us why Black Flag makes her sentimental.) Anybody who remembers what a joyful pain it was to make a mixtape should read this book.


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