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Reviews for Cheerful Americans

 Cheerful Americans magazine reviews

The average rating for Cheerful Americans based on 2 reviews is 3.5 stars.has a rating of 3.5 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2016-03-22 00:00:00
2010was given a rating of 2 stars Morgana Spake
Reference and research material This is a massive compiling of census data and a political history of Mexico. I would recommend it for use in academic research. This is a monumental effort by the author. Not light reading, nor anecdotal.
Review # 2 was written on 2011-12-11 00:00:00
2010was given a rating of 5 stars Melanie Holbrook
Situated somewhere between feature-story journalism and popular history, this book provides exactly what its subtitle promises: Twenty case studies of things - career moves, inventions, marketing strategies - that seemed like good ideas in theory, but went horribly wrong in practice. The authors are journalists, and their dedication to getting the facts and presenting them clearly shows on every page. The case studies are models of clarity, organization, and the open acknowledgement - both in the text and in the bibliography - of sources. The ones dealing with the Tacoma Narrows Bridge collapse and the window-shedding John Hancock Building in Boston are the best short, non-technical introductions to those subjects I've ever read. The quality of the research and the writing extends to the more offbeat case studies that could, in less careful hands, have descended into smirk and snark. Many books recount how Thomas Edison staged the public electrocution of an elephant. Smith and Kiger provide the context you never knew was missing: the history of other elephant executions. Many music fans of a certain age know that, for a brief time in 1967, rising guitar god Jimi Hendrix opened for the pre-fab pop group The Monkees. Smith and Kiger tell the other 99% of the story, providing a serious and plausible answer to the inevitable question: "What were they thinking?" Marketing debacles now remembered (if at all) only as punch lines - the 1955 Dodge LaFemme, the paper dress, Smell-o-Vision - get the same full and careful treatment. If the book has a flaw, it's that the authors' scrupulous research and crisp writing clash with their (or their publisher's) determination to make the book "wacky" and light-hearted. The intentional "misprinting" of the cover image and the small, boxed inset at the end of each chapter distilling the case study into a literal "recipe" for disaster are artifacts of that determination - and they fall as flat as Richard Nixon's 1968 attempt connect with young voters by appearing on Laugh In. If you're interested enough in the subject matter to be reading this review, you'll find the book fascinating. Just be aware that you're in for a very strange read.


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