Product Details
A Friendship: Letters

A Friendship: Letters
By Dan Rowen

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Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #2030987 in Books
  • Published on: 1987-11-12
  • Released on: 1987-11-12
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Mass Market Paperback

Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly
Mutual admiration was the foundation of a valued friendship between MacDonald (author of the Travis McGee series et al.) and comedian-writer Rowan. In addition to visits, the men kept in touch by mail from 1967 through 1974, when they had a falling out. Assembled here are selections from their witty, amusing and sobering correspondence: exchanges of advice on professional and personal matters, etc. The letters shed light on wheeler-dealers grabbing credit for the TV show Laugh-In, co-created by Rowan and Dick Martin; there are accounts of dismaying film treatments of MacDonald's bestselling novels. The correspondents also reminisce about shared pleasures. Before the letters stop abruptly, they reveal the career strains that caused Rowan's divorce and MacDonald's severe criticism of him as spoiled by fame. Lately, they tell the reader, they have mended the break in the relationship although, as both note, "It's not the same."
Copyright 1986 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Library Journal
This will appeal: for its profile of the rise and fall of Rowan and Martin's Laugh In, its grim look at TV, its picture of a successful novelist and of a comedian dealing with success, and its portrait of how a friendship lives and dies. At the suggestion of a mutual friend, Rowan and MacDonald began writing without having met. Their letters are frequent initially and each writer assumes a role: MacDonald/advisor and Rowan/seeker of such. There is an abrupt break-off in 1974 as Rowan's marriage disintegrates. The letters are not complimentary to Rowan, but they are compelling views of two dissimilar men and are nicely linked with two introductions by the authors. Missing arethe authors' impressions of each other after their first meeting and word of what Rowan has been doing recently. For general collections. Rebecca Sturm, Northern Ken tucky Univ. Lib., Highland Heights
Copyright 1986 Reed Business Information, Inc.


Customer Reviews

Fascinating look at "advice sharing" between famous friends4
Even the famous need a sounding board..a friend who will listen and sometimes advise. Rowan, the popular straight-man of the 60's hit TV show "Rowan & Martin's Laugh In" finds his attentive "ear" via correspondence with novelist John D. Macdonald. Their letters, gathered by MacDonald, aptly describe Rowan's fight with fame, his partner, and success. True Travis McGee followers will want this volume in their collection simply because, on occassion, MacDonald quotes Meyer--McGee's intellectual friend--when offering advice and wisdom to Rowan. A hard to find book, but one worth looking for.