Now in paperback comes Billy Crystal's heartfelt and hilarious "New York Times" bestseller: a moving memoir of his youth and the precious days shared by an adoring father and a devoted son.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
35 of 36 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
I LOVED THE BOOK...THE CHARACTERS & THE STORIES!,
By Steve Nakamoto "The Friendly Voice of the... (Huntington Beach, California USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: 700 Sundays (Hardcover)
I bought this book at the Hudson News Stand in Grand Central Station on Saturday morning and finished it at home in Huntington Beach, California on Sunday night. My trip home across the country in 24 hours seemed like nothing compared to the sentimental journey in time that Billy Crystal took me through.
This is a book that a baby-boomer guy will enjoy with its references to the Beatles, the Yankees, the family cars of the 1950's, the first girl we fell in love with, and family outings every Sunday. While Billy took me through a Jewish version of growing up at this time, I could see some similarities with the way I went through my Japanese-American coming of age. Like Billy's family, our lives were built around the Sundays, the holidays, and summer vacations. I've read a few negative reviews on this book which I'm sure have their place in criticizing this as a great literary piece. But this is Billy Freakin' Crystal! Mr. City Slicker and Harry of When Harry Met Sally. This is the guy who does the big award shows and Saturday Night Live. This is a regular guy of our time...one of us. This is not James Michener or Ernest Hemingway. So read it because it's a joy to look back at our lives growing up in the 1950's and 1960's. When families didn't have much in terms of financial resources, but life was real,innocent, and darn good although lacking by today's material standards. But I'd never trade in those baby-boomer years for the shallowness that today's youth must deal with. I hope that Billy does well as he takes his Broadway show across the country for the rest of America to enjoy. I'm glad he wrote this book and created the play. For me, it was a special adventure and one I'm so grateful for. I hope that Billy continues to share himself with the public with his thoughts, humor, and candor.
14 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
The Broadway Show Revisited, and Almost as Good,
By
This review is from: 700 Sundays (Hardcover)
The only thing that makes the Broadway performance better is the fact that Billy Crystal performed it in person on Broadway. Here, we read the script...but in reading the script, you can hear his voice, and his mannerisms come easily and readily to mind. This is a good book, true to the stage play, just as good, except we don't have Billy Crystal in person...All the pathos, joy, frustration and delight, the happiness and security of family. That's what this book is about, his family and our families, and Billy Crystal makes it come alive for all of us. Don't miss the Broadway show (now touring) and don't miss this book.
9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Happy Family,
By
This review is from: 700 Sundays (Hardcover)
If you're familiar with Billy Crystal's comic delivery, you can almost hear him narrating this book, which is the script for his one man autobiographical Broadway show of the same name. Although it loses something in translation when read, the story of Billy Crystal's "700 Sundays," the number of days he calculated he actually got to spend with his father, who worked six days a week and spent Sundays devoted to his family, prior to his sudden and unexpected death when Billy was only 15, is enjoyable reading for two reasons. In addition to the humor he injects, the author tells the remarkable story of a loving, mutually supportive, successful, "functional" family, which is refreshing. Second, the story offers some historical sense of the era in which it was written, because so many of his extended family were innovative and influential, particularly in the entertainment industry. Billy's father promoted jazz in New York, and put together iterracial bands to play at major venues. None of these threads overpower the story itself, the simple story of a son recounting his memories of the love and support he received from his father, and the effect the relationship, more than the premature loss of it, had on his life. Although it's a poignant story, the reader essentially feels uplifted.
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