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My Life With Bonnie and Clyde |
List Price: $29.95
Your Price: $19.77 |
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Reviews |
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Rating:  Summary: Finally!! Review: I just finished my advanced copy of "My Life With Bonnie and Clyde." It has been 36 hours since I got it from the mail box. Sorry I took so long. Why the rush, you might ask. One reason. In the small world of serious researchers and writers who deal with the famous Texas Depression Era outlaw lovers, Clyde Barrow and Bonnie Parker, there are only two groups - John Neal Phillips, and all the rest of us. On this subject, anything with John's name on it automatically becomes "required reading." Nobody has studied them longer. Nobody knows them better.
In the spirit of full disclosure, let me say up front that I consider John Phillips a friend, and I hope he considers me a colleague. Many Emails have passed between us, beginning during the time I was preparing my own book "Bonnie and Clyde: A 21st Century Update," for which his first book, "Running With Bonnie and Clyde" was a absolutely essential source, and later as John was trying to unravel Blanche Barrow's manuscript and answer some of the questions that arose from it. We share a love of the process of research and a desire to solve more of the little mysteries that may help make some sense out of a story that seems like a senseless tragedy. John has taught me to be tenacious in research, meticulous in documentation, and generous in sharing the results. But enough of this personal testimonial! Is the book any good?
Those who know and appreciate the level of scholarship of John's first book will not be disappointed. The voice is that of Blanche Barrow, writing from her prison room, and trying to come to terms with her life - particularly the 107 days she spent running for her life with Bonnie and Clyde which ended with four men dead - three lawmen and finally her own husband - and herself in prison. Editor Phillips doesn't interfere with Blanche's occasional bouts of self pity and rationalization that run through her account, but he does add a substantial layer of commentary, both at the beginning of chapters and in the end notes, to keep the reader from getting lost. This is vital with a story as convoluted this one.
Bonnie and Clyde's life bordered on the chaotic. They planned little and moved almost constantly. Many times, they themselves couldn't remember where they were or what they had done a few weeks before. In explaining how Clyde managed to drag his brother Buck, and with him Blanche as well, into he and Bonnie's life as hunted criminals, Phillips quotes another gang member as saying "He [Clyde] didn't mean to do Buck no harm. He just couldn't see no further ahead." Well, neither could the law. That's how Clyde and Bonnie managed to live as long as they did. Nobody knew where they would turn up from one day to the next. Many times not even themselves.
Blanche's story is fascinating, since it is one of the few accounts we have of the people of the "Barrow Gang" from the inside, but following it is hard work. It takes someone with Phillips' skill and encyclopedic knowledge of the subject to guide us through. Thanks to Phillips' efforts as editor, Blanches' heart and soul are in the text, but much of the story is in his notes. Whether you are new to the subject, or an old Bonnie and Clyde hand, you MUST read the notes as you go. That's where everything is tied together. To give you some idea of what you'll miss if you neglect them, Phillips' appendices, notes and bibliography make up fully one third of the entire work.
Many people have waited for this book for a long time, and I, for one, think it was worth it. It is a look at the lives of the famous outlaw lovers and their families we've never had before. If you haven't read "My Life With Bonnie and Clyde," you don't know the whole story.
Jim Knight
Certified "Gangster Geek"
and author of "Bonnie and Clyde: A 21st Century Update"
Rating:  Summary: Incredible! Review: If you find this tragic story fascinating, then this is one that you must add to your collection.
I once held & looked through Blanche's very own scrapbook that she put together while on the road with Clyde & Bonnie, & after she completed her prison term.
I was shocked a bit that she had composed it in the very same way I have my own.
I now believe that Blanche would have attended "The Bonnie & Clyde Festival" in Gibsland , La. if she had lived.
To see a picture of Blanche late in life is a dream come true.
While I & every historian on this subject must tip our hats to John Neal Phillips,I think he has possibly even out done his first book, which was excellent.
Ralph Fults was kind enough to share with John his story and made us understand why Clyde snapped "from a schoolboy to a Rattlesnake".
But this book will possibly bring tears to your eyes.
Blanche Barrow should be considered "Bonnie & Clyde's last victim".
I would like to thank Rhea Leen, Buddy , "Boots", Lorraine , Marie &
so many others, & you know who I'm talking about!
To have been around all these family's & made such friends still
makes me feel that we are living this story still.
Bitter & Sweet , a oxymoron that defies Logic.
Rating:  Summary: Blanche's Story--At Long Last Review: At one time I thought the last thing the world needed was one more book on Bonnie and Clyde. The sixty years following their deaths saw hundreds of articles, a dozen or more books, millions of words printed about the infamous duo and the Barrow gang, all adding varying degrees of old, new, and contradictory information. Then came John Neal Phillips, whose "Running With Bonnie and Clyde" brought the story into new focus through his own extensive interviews with many of the leading participants. It was, it seemed, an historical breakthrough we weren't likely to see again as they're all dead. But Phillips has surpassed himself now by uncovering the first true inside account of the Barrow gang in the form of the prison memoirs of Blanche Barrow. It's a tragic, harrowing, haunting story of family life on the run, full of surprises and rounded out with a superb collection of Blanche's own photos (most seen here for the first time) and Phillips' own research and extensive endnotes. You just can't get any closer to the real Barrow gang than this.
Rating:  Summary: Bonnie and Clide.... Review: I highly recommend this historical autobiography deftly completed by one of the finest writers and experts on Bonnie & Clyde: John Neal Philips. His previous work is a definite must-read as well: Running With Bonnie and Clyde. It was through his first book that I learned whatever became of Blanche Barrow. I had often wondered and he has now completed her story and what a fine job he has done in completing an autobiography which Blanche Barrow wrote while in prison. He had only a handwritten first draft but Mr. Philips cites Blanche Barrow as the author and gives himself the title of "Editor". If you want an academic tome of the only member of the Barrow Gang who went on to live a life away from crime, this book is the one. It is thorougly researched with endnotes to read while reading the book itself (and it is more enjoyable to read it in that manner) then this book is the one. I do agree that it is also well worthwhile to also read "Running With Bonnie And Clyde" which provides a first hand account by a former gang member named Ralph Fults. John Neal Philips did a superb job in finding those still alive who knew Bonnie and Clyde and Blanche is also interviewed and quoted in his first book. Mr. Philips is thorough in his research and never relies on tabloid style rumours which others who have written about these Depression Era Outlaws have published as fact. He treats Blanche Barrow with dignity and respect and had she lived to see this book go to press, I believe she'd have been very grateful.
Rating:  Summary: John Neal Phillips Knows His Stuff Review: Several years ago I went to the book store ( a very large one ) and my main interest was getting a book to read about Bonnie and Clyde, after watching a program about them on A & E. There were several, and I read a few pages in each to determine which was best. Seemed like Phillips Running with Bonnie and Clyde was the best. Well written, but I was a little uncertain, because a lot of it dealt with Ralph Fults, who ran around with and knew Bonnie and Clyde, but I wanted to know about their life, and not Ralph Fults (I was wrong, I learned a great deal about Bonnie, Clyde and Fults). Mr. Phillips book was wonderful, because instead of reading newspaper reports, and FBI files, he interviewed the people that knew them, as several persons were still living, like Mr. Fults, family members of Bonnie and Clyde, and he even interviews the last Texas Rranger that helped gun him down. All this said, I have not read this book by Mr. Phillips, and I don't like giving reviews for books I have not read. However, there is one point I did wish to make. As I read the book Running with Bonnie and Clyde, the writer talks about Blanche quite a bit, and in the movie Bonnie and Clyde, they didn't do her any justice..... she was pretty and not a crying nut like the movie showed her as. I found her to be quite interesting, and though Bonnie and Clyde got what they deserved, I felt Blanche was a true victim. I even tried to find a book about her, but with no luck, and I read the listing of interviews Mr. Phillips did with Blanche, and realized he had talked in length with someone that was there from the beginning (and for her luck), almost to the end. All that said, I am very pleased that Mr. Phillips was allowed to read through Blanche's diary after her death, and had talked with her in person. True I have not read this book, but by the fact that his former book dealt with Mr. Fults, who wasn't as nearly involved as Blanche. He told a wonderful story in Running with Bonnie and Clyde, so I do intend on buying a copy of this....... I would venture to say this book will be even better. He is a very interesting writer and knows how to keep you interested from beginning to end. Since I have not read this book by Blanche, you probably need to go by the other reviewers comments.... but it seems to be doing very well. If you do read this one, you may want to consider his prior book with Ralph Fults.
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