“I was not a great man whose history has been recorded for children to study in school. I was 14, who never really loved to read and it was the first time when while reading I started to coexist with the characters, I still remember their faces, even though the book had not a single illustration in it. I was the soldier shaking with fear: the man berating the umpire at the ball game: the citizen in the privacy of the voting booth, happily electing the worthless candidate. Forty-plus years later I could not put the book down, until I finished the last page. Don't you hate when a song comes on and is WAY too emotional for the current situation. GÉNERO. Add to that the fact that it was a long time ago and... a hazy memory of this and quite a few other books. Harold Robbins wrote several huge best sellers and was looked down on by most of the high-brow critics; he's not alone in that. Potboiler king Robbins released this novel in 1951. Thank you for signing up, fellow book lover! Overall he is a good fellow who can't seem to grow up. It is a portrait of a young Jewish kid in depression-era New York who grows up to be a street tough, a boxer with an undefeated record, and gets mixed up with the rackets and hoods. Custom and user added quotes with pictures. It was only after around half way point that the book picked up and got some depth. I had to take adequate breaks to simmer down my emotions. For I was an ordinary man, my son, one of many, with ordinary hopes and ordinary dreams and ordinary fears. It's not my favorite book but it's definitely on the top of my list. But it was also a bit too dramatic. A Stone for Danny Fisher User Review - Not Available - Book Verdict. The grinding poverty and the rackets of the Lower East Side again. C1951. No bells will ring for me, no flags descend upon their mast. No bells will ring for me, no flags descend upon their mast. I was very much touched by this book as a teenager. But when I heard someone say two books of Harold Robbins were par excellence; I couldn’t resist picking up one among them, “A Stone for Danny Fisher”. I thought the initial part of the book was quite blah. Now Available! I hate the way that my love makes me fake indifference when your name is mentioned. Quotes By Harold Robbins. I could say I hate these things and wish that they would die,
You can't reason with people blinded by hate. But when I heard someone say two books of Harold Robbins were par excellence; I couldn’t resist picking up one among them, “A Stone for Danny Fisher”. I remember when my mother pointed to a stone, and she said this was the kind of stone people used to place on the feet of the baby girls to stop them trying to climb away and unbind their feet. -- The New York Times, "Robbins's books are packed with action, sustained by a strong narrative drive, and given vitality by his own colorful life." A bit melodramatic. They were all pretty racy, to say the least. I hate your funny smile,
Gout produces calculus in the kidney... the patient has frequently to entertain the painful speculation as to whether gout or stone be the worst disease. -- The Wall Street Journal, Any use of an author photo must include its respective photo credit. I was the man who lived a thousand times and died a thousand times in all man’s six thousand years of record. Custom and user added quotes with pictures. It left a deep impact on me. It is the story of his love affair with an Italian girl who stuck with him through thick and thin. I hate the way I always feel compelled to hate you when I love you. I loved most of the characters except Danny's wife Nellie. Set between the years 1925 to 1944, the story tells of the hardship of growing up and surviving in New York during the depression era leading up to WW2. Goodreads helps you keep track of books you want to read. If there's one thing I hate, it's losing. Book Cover Image (jpg): A Stone for Danny Fisher, full terms and conditions and this month's choices. August 7th 2007 This is not like the later novels in that there are no gratuitous sex scenes – just some good writing.This is not the happiest book in the world bearing in mind that The title of the book comes from the Jewish tradition of placing a stone on a grave. The Beatles changed everything for me and I wanted to be a journalist for Rolling Stone. I hate the way you say my name,
Adapted for Elvis Presley's 1958 filmKing Creole . I found this to be a real page-turner not because there was any larger-than-life heroes or earth-shattering catastrophe's going on: just normal people going about their day-to-day duties, written in such a way that you could not wait to see what was going to happen next. It follows his life as he becomes a boxer against his father's wishes, loves a catholic girl against his mother's and defies the gang who pay him to throw a fight - the winning of which will bring him fame and, in his hopes, the approval of his dad. As a teenager, Danny Fisher had all he ever wanted -- a dog, a grown-up summer job, flirtatious relationships with older women -- and a talent for ruthless boxing that quickly made him a star in the amateur sporting world. I found myself experiencing anguish all over again at the blows that life deals this talented boxer. Set in the age of the Great Depression, the story delivers an emotional punch in the gut after all these years! He manages to stay one step ahead of everyone in spite of setbacks that come close to costing him dearly. It's a boxing story about a young kid on his way to ma. Amidst all this, how he battles his souring relationships with his family and miserable poverty is totally worth a read. The man standing in the subway on his way to work: who held a match to his cigarette: who walked with his dog. 1165 matching entries found. For I was an ordinary man, my son, one of many, with ordinary hopes and ordinary dreams and ordinary fears. I first read it back in the early 1970s and probably liked it more then than I did upon re-reading it recently - for months I'd read a few pages and put it down, unable to commit myself to it, put off, perhaps, by its almost relentlessly effective aura of gloom and doom. He's simply a bad guy and that's about it) and had enough to keep me going back to the book. I am not a huge fan of Harold Robbins. I remember this one being the best of the bunch. I first read it when very young so I guess that has made it special because it affected me more than either the writing or the story ought to deserve. (I think there might already be a movie, but I don't know how good it is.) Firing at the ones who run. Popular Audiobooks You May Have Missed, Fit@Home: Videos for Home Workouts and Wellness, Important Notice about Copyrighted Materials. Fucking dying here. Always remember others may hate you but those who hate you don't win unless you hate them. It's about a young man that wants to be more than anything in life to be a champion boxer but things go terribly wrong and doesn't much change through the book. The last few pages play on the emotions so much; I for one just couldn’t carry on. Add a library card to your account to borrow titles, place holds, and add titles to your wish list. You call yourself a gorilla, yet you come out here and hee-haw like a jack ass! See full terms and conditions and this month's choices. A great psychological book. About The Author. The shift from Brooklyn to Louisiana did not hurt the flow of the story or its sadness as much as one might think. Welcome back. But this novel is an entirely different animal: this is 1950s cinéma vérité with a heavy dose of Robbins melodrama thrown in for good measure. I discovered totally new world for me, which was born from those words and lines and my thoughts and impressions and this chemistry was very strong. Add it now to start borrowing from the collection. "King Creole," set in New Orleans with Elvis Presley as Danny. Harold Robbins wrote several huge best sellers and was looked down on by most of the high-brow critics; he's not alone in that. Born into a family of modest means and respectability, Danny Fisher was gradually driven downward into the world of crime, racketeering and poverty. Offer redeemable at Simon & Schuster's ebook fulfillment partner. It's a boxing story about a young kid on his way to make it big and the hoods who are sponsoring him. Danny could have gone on to become a celebrated boxer but instead has to constantly fight poverty. Tune in next week, same Stone Cold time, same Stone Cold Channel! I don't know how many times I've read this book over the years. I actually own it, somehow. I could have done without her. Even a female infant dies because she catches a cold - from her mother, of course. It's a story about a whore with a heart of gold. My tolerance for melodrama is less than when I first read this book in high school apparently! And then you destroy yourself. Made into the movie "King Creole". Im a huge music fan. Facing poverty and daily encounters with his violent, anti-Semitic neighbors, Danny must fight both inside and outside the ring just to survive. I remember reading this book when I was in college and being consumed by it. Errors in judgement and immaturity lands him in trouble with the mob. Makes the whole world seem evil and unforgiving. He was reared by his pharmacist father and stepmother in Brooklyn. I hate the way you make me break into a sweat, and talk too loud, and go red, I hate the way you run your hand through your hair, the way I always know where you're at, the way I wake up with your name on my lips, I hate that I have known you forever but that I never quite know you. This happens after a male doctor tells the family over the phone that they will be fine if they take their medication. They hate the power of the individual. I usually say that if I had been born with a musical inclination it wouldve been great. I don't know how I would view it today, however, I would quote the title to my kids when incidences didn't seem fair in the household or life. It's an interesting story line (almost Bollywood-ish, with a villain (Maxie) who has zero justification for being a villain.