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Going All the Way

Going All the Way

List Price: $17.95
Your Price: $17.95
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A Very Fine Book Read By A Very Fine Actor!
Review: Ben Affleck is an excellent narrator of this already hilarious tale of sex in the 50s. With interesting plot twists, and fun romps, it's great for any Affleck OR Wakefield fan! AND, if you like the book (or book on tape) you should definitely check out the movie. It's great for anyone who's ever felt sexually frustrated!!

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Nostalgic, painful, hilarious, irreverent coming-of-age tale
Review: For anyone who grew up in the 50's or 60's, this will be a nostalgic trip back. Two seemingly mismatched college grads, straight out of the Army from the Korean War, return to Indianapolis to start the next chapter of their lives. However, before as yet undecided careers get in the way, the search for young women who are willing to "Go All The Way" is priority for these hormone-overloaded guys. We've all been through the pleasurable, sometimes painful memories. A straight-forward, quick read, it shouldn't be taken too seriously...it would ruin the fun! The movie is coming out this fall

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Growing Up In America
Review: I first read Going All the Way in a lit class called "Growing Up In America" at prep school, in 1974. The book was only a few years old then, and it was assigned along with other fine works like The Sound and the Fury, Member of the Wedding, Red Sky at Morning, and The Car Thief. Going All the Way was my favorite, and remains one of my favorites today. I've reread it many times, and have greatly enjoyed reading the whole thing aloud to two different receptive audiences-of-one.

Going All the Way is funny, wise, and true. As a girl of 16, it also taught me a great deal about men, and particularly about the visceral fear most men have of women -- the degree to which they feel we have the power to define them. It is a book that entertains, educates, and enlightens, all at the same time. It doesn't get a whole lot better than that.

I went to a book signing when this edition came out, so I could meet Dan Wakefield, and tell him how much this book has meant to me. I was also very pleased with the movie, which came out literally decades after the book -- while it did, of necessity, pare the story down to the essentials, it portrayed the heart and soul of the story and the characters truly.

Don't miss Going All The Way. It may not be The Great American Novel, but it's certainly *A* Great American Novel.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Abridged Apparently Means "Same as Movie"
Review: I wanted to write a review of the Going All the Way audiocassette to clear up one of the major questions I had when I considered purchasing this item. My question was, "What exactly does abridged mean?" How much of the book is cut out? Keeping in mind that I haven't read the novel, only seen the movie, I can say that the abridged audiocassette develops almost exactly like the movie. I give it only 3 stars because I think it is a good story, but I am very disappointed that it is missing the "extras" you don't get from the movie. The total running time is about 3.5 hours. If you think about how long it would take to read a novel aloud, this indicates that perhaps the majority of the book was cut. If you have seen the movie, you will gain very little from this audiocassette.

Despite these negative comments, the audiocassette has some good points, which is why I went no lower than a 3 star rating. The narrator does an excellent job of bringing all of the characters to life and putting the listener inside Sonny's head. This would be a great purchase for someone who has neither read the book nor seen the movie.

Finally, some potential customers may be worried that Going All the Way is something only people similar to the characters (20-something white males) can enjoy, but Dan Wakefield has done such a wonderful job with the characters that anybody can find something with which to identify in both Sonny and Gunner.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Abridged Apparently Means "Same as Movie"
Review: I wanted to write a review of the Going All the Way audiocassette to clear up one of the major questions I had when I considered purchasing this item. My question was, "What exactly does abridged mean?" How much of the book is cut out? Keeping in mind that I haven't read the novel, only seen the movie, I can say that the abridged audiocassette develops almost exactly like the movie. I give it only 3 stars because I think it is a good story, but I am very disappointed that it is missing the "extras" you don't get from the movie. The total running time is about 3.5 hours. If you think about how long it would take to read a novel aloud, this indicates that perhaps the majority of the book was cut. If you have seen the movie, you will gain very little from this audiocassette.

Despite these negative comments, the audiocassette has some good points, which is why I went no lower than a 3 star rating. The narrator does an excellent job of bringing all of the characters to life and putting the listener inside Sonny's head. This would be a great purchase for someone who has neither read the book nor seen the movie.

Finally, some potential customers may be worried that Going All the Way is something only people similar to the characters (20-something white males) can enjoy, but Dan Wakefield has done such a wonderful job with the characters that anybody can find something with which to identify in both Sonny and Gunner.

Rating: 0 stars
Summary: My favorite of all my writing
Review: My favorite of all my writing Going All The Way remains my favorite of all my books, both fiction and non-fiction. I had written several non-fiction books but this was my first novel, and I had tried several times to write it before it finally came out - and "poured out" once I got going. I was able to write from some deep place in myself, to tap into that source of truth, and portray many things I felt strongly about through the characters. I have always liked the two friends, "Sonny" the shy intellectual and "Gunner" the confident jock. When Mark Pellington told me he wanted to direct it as a movie he told me he identified with those characters: "I'm both those guys !" he said. I feel I am too - that we all have those different aspects within us. I was happy to be able to write the script of the independent movie that Mark directed and I feel it is really true to the book. The movie stars Ben Affleck and Jeremy Davies and has Jill Clayburgh and Leslie Ann Warren as their mothers, with Rose McGowan, Amy Locane, and Rachel Weisz as girlfriends.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A great read the first time and the second and the third...
Review: This book is alternately poignant and hilarious, adding up to a wonderful satisfying read. For anyone who lived through the 50s and 60s, it will evoke unforgettable memories; for those who didn't live through it, the book is the perfect time capsule. Dan Wakefield is a national treasure.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Abridged Apparently Means "Same as Movie"
Review: This is one of the most pitilessly honest and funniest books you'll ever read about early adulthood -- late high school, college and just after. The sexual preoccupation. The social striving. The uncertainty about one's future. Along the way, Mr. Wakefield captures a time and a place (Indiana, early 1950s) perfectly. You could draw a straight line connecting the art of J.D. Salinger, Dan Wakefield and Nick Hornby. Thank you, Mr. Wakefield!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Dan Wakefield CAN handle the truth!
Review: This is one of the most pitilessly honest and funniest books you'll ever read about early adulthood -- late high school, college and just after. The sexual preoccupation. The social striving. The uncertainty about one's future. Along the way, Mr. Wakefield captures a time and a place (Indiana, early 1950s) perfectly. You could draw a straight line connecting the art of J.D. Salinger, Dan Wakefield and Nick Hornby. Thank you, Mr. Wakefield!

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Captures turning points
Review: This novel captures the underlying unease that two young men face when they return home from the Army in the early '50's. It sketches their growing perception of all the boxes and groups that they were in before they left, like the jocks, what today would called nerds, and the sorority girls.

As they go through their first summer of freedom they begin to realize that the old home town has gotten too small and confining for them, and that it is time to go see what's over the hill. They begin to realize that they do have many choices, and the freedom to pursue them, and they try to sort out what some of them are.

Along the way there are some pretty accurate and painful descriptions of the social and sexual hangups of your average Midwestern male at mid-century.

Good stuff.


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