mortmere: (Default)
[personal profile] mortmere
It's always annoying when you can't quite see the titles of the books the boys have in their homes. And they both have a LOT of books. Usually they are old ones with no dust jackets, or paperbacks. 

So far, I've identified THREE books at Starsky's place - two of them just a moment ago, so there's finally enough meat for a post.

I know the books were just randomly put there to fill the space, but it is fun to imagine how it'd change one's view of the character if these really were books Starsky thinks worth keeping around. Make your own conclusions. :)



In "Blindfold", there's one book title clearly visible: you can't see the author's name, and the dust jacket is gone, but it has to be the 1974 novel Embarkation by J.R. Salamanca. Here's a bit from the blurb: 

This novel is the story of a father and his family- a father whose single-minded dedication is to the craft of boat building. To his consuming passion for perfection Poppa sacrificed the happiness of his wife and his three children though, unquestionably, he was devoted in his own way to all of them. As the story opens, Poppa has been lost at sea. Unbelievably lost in one of his own superb creations during a storm which even he could not conquer. 

(And PLEASE: if anyone can figure out what the old book in the middle of the picture is, tell me! It's been driving me nuts. I've driven others nuts with it. Now I'm driving you nuts with it.)




Then there's today's haul, two books seen in the tag of "Starsky and Hutch Are Guilty".

One of them is The Fearful Master: A Second Look at the United Nations (1964) by G. Edward Griffin. The Wikipedia article on the author isn't a flattering one, and this, his first book, has been described a "conspiracy theory book, in a John Bircher vein; details the UNs actions in Katanga, and other places to show that the United Nations is part of a Communist conspiracy."  

(Ah, how I wish my first impression had been right: I first mistook the UN logo for that of the United Federation of Planets...)


The other book is Rendezvous with Destiny: A History of Modern American Reform (1952) by Eric F. Goldman, who was a professor of history in Princeton. A review from 2001 praises it as "one of the most brilliant and dramatic historical narratives ever written about the American experience. Eric Goldman tells a story of the wise and the shortsighted, the bold and the timid, the generous and the grasping men and women who are the stuff of American reform. He begins in the years after the Civil War, when our tradition of dissent was fueled by industrialization and urbanization."

(Hmm. Starsky had these books in the same shelf in his bedroom as his Playboy collection that was stolen except for one or two issues.)








Date: 2017-05-08 12:26 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] marianrose.livejournal.com
Wow! I'm so impressed by your ability to figure out so many interesting details in the show. Well done! And thank you so much for sharing with us!!

Date: 2017-05-09 06:11 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mortmere.livejournal.com
Always a pleasure! :)

Profile

mortmere: (Default)
mortmere

October 2018

S M T W T F S
 123456
78910111213
14151617181920
21222324252627
2829 3031   

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated May. 22nd, 2025 10:11 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios