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700 Sundays by Billy Crystal
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700 Sundays

by Billy Crystal

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258922,032 (3.78)10
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Grand Central Publishing (2006), Paperback, 192 pages

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A well-written autobiography of a famous comedian. Crystal weaves humor and sadness into this book about his childhood and adulthood. As I read it, I could hear his voice delivering the comedic punches. The one-man show is based on this book. ( )
  Writer_Librarian | Sep 4, 2009 |
This is a little book that packs an enormous punch and will make you laugh until you cry. And then it will just make you cry. Crystal lost his father at fifteen, but Jack Crystal was his first fan, and an enormously important influence. Crystal's descriptions of his grandparents, aunts, uncles and other relatives are just perfect. When he described his grandfather's deafness and chronic flatulence I nearly fell out of my chair laughing. When he tells of his father's sudden death of a heart attack the night after he and Billy had had a rare argument, I nearly wept for the young boy that Crystal was at the time. This is writing of the most honest and heartfelt kind. It only took me a few hours to read this book. I absolutely loved it. ( )
  TimBazzett | Aug 12, 2009 |
I enjoyed this, and not just because I love Billy Crystal, or even because I also hail from the Isle of Long. It's just a wonderful tale of growing up in the 50s and 60s, and of the importance of family. I just wish it had been longer! ( )
2 vote clamairy | Apr 28, 2009 |
This memoir of the comic's childhood in Long Beach, LI with a father who died young was sharp, funny and poignant. I've always liked Billy Crystal, and this book did not change my opinion. ( )
  ennie | Oct 8, 2008 |
Short book, fairly well written, occasionally funny. I read it for a NF readers' group and the discussion was wonderful. Many people identified with certain events and people and were able to relate similiar stories of their own. ( )
  NewsieQ | Jul 10, 2008 |
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Billy Crystal

Long Beach, New York

Milt Gabler

Book description

Amazon.com Amazon.com Review (ISBN 0446578673, Hardcover)

Actor and comedian Billy Crystal has forged a highly successful career by portraying other people in movies like When Harry Met Sally… and City Slickers. But in 700 Sundays, a memoir based on his one-man Broadway play of the same name, Crystal tells his own story, dissecting an often complex relationship with his father and how that relationship resonated in other aspects of his life. His father, Jack Crystal was an influential jazz concert promoter and operated an influential jazz record label, affording his son an opportunity to tell stories of being taken to his first movie by Billie Holliday and seeing his grandmother suggest that Louis Armstrong simply "try coughing it up." But Jack died when his son was fifteen years old, soon after a forever-unresolved argument between the two, leaving Billy to cope with crushing grief while simultaneously and perhaps ironically trying to launch a career in comedy. This lends 700 Sundays much needed gravity in a volume that is packed with zingy one-liners and whimsical observations that serve to illustrate the comedy career Crystal forged, while also providing some decent laughs. Interestingly, there is very little reference to the better known accomplishments of Crystal’s Hollywood career as the author chooses to focus instead on the seemingly mundane but highly entertaining aspects of his Long Island roots. Though 700 Sundays (the name comes from Crystal’s estimation of how many Sundays he got to spend with his father) is packaged here in book form, it reads like a piece of theater and, more specifically, like a selection of memories about a father, lovingly and touchingly re-told by his loving son. --John Moe

(retrieved from Amazon Wed, 06 Jan 2010 04:23:39 -0500)

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