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36 Works 506 Members 7 Reviews

About the Author

Disambiguation Notice:

There may be more than one person who writes as Jay David. The Jay David who wrote the Robin Williams biography is a pseudonym for Bill Adler, born 1929-05-14 in New York.

Works by Jay David

Growing Up Jewish: An Anthology (1970) — Editor — 138 copies, 1 review
Growing Up Black (1969) 118 copies, 1 review
The Flying Saucer Reader (1960) 66 copies, 1 review
Living Black in White America (1971) — Editor — 6 copies
Scarsdale Murder (1981) 6 copies
Black roots; an anthology (1971) 5 copies

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Gender
male
Disambiguation notice
There may be more than one person who writes as Jay David. The Jay David who wrote the Robin Williams biography is a pseudonym for Bill Adler, born 1929-05-14 in New York.

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Reviews

7 reviews
The story of Charles Band's Full Moon Entertainment during the VHS 90s. It took 20 years for filmmakers to get funding for a third Phantasm but Band and his own Merry Band were knocking out straight-to-video movies at a phenomenal rate from the Puppet Master series to Killjoy back-to-back with schedules of just a few weeks each. In the process his outfit produced Videozone an extra feature that emphasized behind the scenes material and of promotion you didn't often find on videocassettes. show more Band bought an Italian castle used in many of his movies and established a studio in post-Communist Romania due to low costs and every moviemakers shooting destination now, it seems. For a low-budget filmmaking fan like myself, it's a great close-up look, highlighted by an interview with my friend, prolific writer Troy Taylor, about his on-screen consultant experiences with the abysmal St. Francisville Experiment, for which he briefly appeared as a ghost hunting expert for what was to be a real hunt but wound up with portions reworked and rewritten and result to produce a bad horror movie. Full Moon, which now focuses an on online streaming model, as described in the book. This is the definitive tale of one of the longest surviving independent low-key movie making forms ever, at its peak in the 90s, pumping out dozens of movies a year. show less
A blast of fun, nostalgia, and information, this book is a must-read for any Full Moon fan or all-around cinephile.
Super informative and fun, taught me a ton about a part of the horror world that I had completely written off.
From Slave Days to the Present-25 African-Americans Reveal the Trials and Triumphs of Their Childhoods

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Associated Authors

Helise Harrington Joint Author.
Philip Roth Contributor
Allen Sherman Contributor
Arthur Magida Contributor
Adam Schwartz Contributor
Meyer Birnbaum Contributor
Gertrude Berg Contributor
Faye Moskowitz Contributor
Paul Cowan Contributor
Ari Goldman Contributor
Herbert Gold Contributor
Michael Chabon Contributor
Max Apple Contributor
Anne Roiphe Contributor
Kate Simon Contributor
Anzia Yezierska Contributor
Joanne Greenberg Contributor
Edna Ferber Contributor
Rebecca Goldstein Contributor
Grace Paley Contributor
Cynthia Ozick Contributor
Chaim Potok Contributor
Maurice Hexter Contributor

Statistics

Works
36
Members
506
Popularity
#48,974
Rating
½ 3.7
Reviews
7
ISBNs
36
Languages
1

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