Pete duel biography pamela deuel johnson

Organized chronologically, the biography features extensive personal interviews with Duel's closest family and friends, including sister Pamela Deuel Johnson and former girlfriends Jill Andre, Beth Griswold, Kim Darby and Dianne Ray. Plus exclusive interviews with close personal friends, actors, producers, directors and writers who worked with Pete Duel.

Pete duel biography pamela deuel johnson

Includes over 60 previously unpublished photographs. I learn something new every day and I like to go back to my hometown to visit. I rented a car. My father was a small town doctor who worked hard to make a living. Those few minutes over the table were about the extent of our relationship, with the one exception of summer vacations. I want to be with them, to watch them grow.

The fresh air of truth blows in on you and you realize it in your gut. Now I was stripping myself of myth and dogma and half-truths. We were probably offensive about it. My brother and I are very close. Geoff and I find ourselves judging, comparing, but we handle it well with each other. We have always talked about it. He is my best friend, my brother.

Pete Duel: On His Family. My initial research was in libraries. Pete Duel's fan base was apparent from the s. The internet followed this trend and didn't create it. Fan clubs and their newsletters and fanzines had been in existence since The printed fanzine "Deuel Memories" was a major source of initial research. Not the internet.

Personal interviews I conducted with people who knew Pete Duel in life were the prime source of information. Thanks again for your review Bronson. I didn't follow Pete Duel at all, but I do think we can't credit the I-net for somehow being instrumental in this book by Paul Green. Based on the dates he said he did his research, few were even locked into the I-net as they are now.

As to using the word 'suspicious' - I'd say that's your point of reference; certainly not the one of the author's. I'd say you're editorialzing when you shouldn't be. PS - If a tree falls in the forest, it will not be made into a book. And, any trees that fall, aren't suitable for making books at all - they at best, go into toilet tissue and newsprint.

Do a little research about how paper is made, so your remarks can be more appropriate - sadly, you seem given to being truly superficial not only as you try to be clever with your remarks about trees and books, but in your reviews of authors; their motives for writing, and why they choose to assemble their words and text, as they do. How many books have you written????

Post a Comment. Monday, July 20, Guest Reviewer. Posted by Bybee at AM Labels: book review.