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Tim Hill (1)

Author of The Beatles Unseen Archives

For other authors named Tim Hill, see the disambiguation page.

34 Works 1,525 Members 15 Reviews 1 Favorited

Works by Tim Hill

The Beatles Unseen Archives (2009) 821 copies, 11 reviews
Images of the Beatles (2004) 146 copies
JFK & Jackie (Unseen Archives) (2003) 92 copies, 1 review
The "Beatles" (2007) 44 copies
Formula 1 (Unseen Archives) (2001) 42 copies
The Beatles: The Illustrated Biography (2008) 39 copies, 1 review
BOXING (UNSEEN ARCHIVES) (2002) 10 copies

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Common Knowledge

Gender
male
Nationality
UK
Map Location
UK

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Reviews

16 reviews
This was kind of an odd collection of photos of the Beatles. A lot of them were quite interesting, but since they were only taken from one source (the Daily Mail archives) the content is actually quite limited. The book could have been improved by tighter editing choices, since there’s no reason to print a whole run of photos rather than the best image or two from the set. By trying to tell the story of the Beatles using a single source it often felt like the captions were stretching it a show more bit, and that a lot of the important parts of the story (their early years, international performances, behind the scenes family life, etc) were missing entirely, even though I will concede that it is interesting to see the depth of reportage on the Beatles from a single news source. show less
The photographs are wonderful but the substance behind them just isn't there in all the chapters. The first chapter rushes to get the group together and the post band chapter rushes through the last thirty years. The best chapters are probably the ones up through 1967 with the death of Epstein. The band members clearly overworked themselves. It was sad to see the break-up in the making.
½
JFK and Jackie is a truly extraordinary book, one that documents through photographs the lives and careers of US President John Kennedy and his wife Jackie Bouvier Kennedy (later Onassis). It contains more than 400 (gray – scale) photographs, many of which take up a full, large-format page or parts of a two-page spread. The book is organized into eight chapters, as follows:

1) Dynastic Roots: 1850-1945;
2) Formidable Candidate and Flawed Husband: 1945-1959;
3) President Elect: 1960;
4) The show more New Frontier: 1961;
5) Crisis and Separation: 1962;
6) Moral Maturity: 1963;
7) Dallas: 22 December 1963;
8) Jackie: 1963-1994.

Each chapter is introduced by 4-5 pages of text that recount biographical and historical details of the period under discussion. A paragraph of text also accompanies each of the photographs (often recapitulating information in the chapter introductions). Having a fairly good knowledge of the lives of the principals, I noticed no significant factual errors. However, room exists for disagreement over the book’s characterizations of certain political issues.

The photographs are what make this book unusual. They show Jack and Jackie separately and together, posed and unposed, in a wide variety of settings. Most of the photographs I have never seen before, and are likely to be new to most readers.

The book is not without flaws. One is its preoccupation with JFK’s private affairs with women; they are mentioned frequently throughout the book to such a degree that one might wonder how the man found time to govern. A second flaw is the peculiar juxtaposition of photographs with text. A photo of Jack and a radiant Jackie in their car is entitled “Hoover Applies Pressure”. The headline “Ransom for Bay of Pigs Hostages” bizarrely accompanies photos of the couple with their young children. “Drugs at the White House” accompanies a photo of JFK greeting Ecuador’s head of state. (The accompanying text explains that JFK was “experimenting with various drugs” -- novacaine, cortisone, and amphetamines-- prescribed by his physician to combat his pain). A good editor should have recognized the jarring effect of juxtaposing such headlines with unrelated photographs.

A reader who can overlook these potential flaws will find in this book a wealth of excellent photographs of Jack and Jacqueline Kennedy from throughout their lives and careers.
show less
Very much a photo record of the Beatles, from beginning to end. Lots of great photos, but it's unfortunate that none of the photographers were credited.

The biography aspect is extremely high level, not a lot of depth there, but truly the focus is on the photos.

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Statistics

Works
34
Members
1,525
Popularity
#16,865
Rating
3.9
Reviews
15
ISBNs
199
Languages
13
Favorited
1

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