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Book Reviews | Regular Feature FROIM THE BOOK EDITOR'S DESK: Due to a technical error in our last issue, Volume 31, Number 2, some of the book reviews appeared with the wrong author names. (All of the names were correct, but they had been shifted one review.) To set the record straight, we are reprinting those errantly attributed reviews in this issue and we wish to take the time to apologize to our readers and our authors for this inadvertent error on our part. Certainly, we regret any inconvenience caused by this production problem. All Book Reviews below are now correctly attributed and vetted. Thanks for your patience! Robert J. Fyne, Book Review Editor Book Reviews Scott Eyman. Print the Legend: The Life and Times ofJohn Ford. Simon & Schuster, 1999. 656 pages; $40.00. Daunting Chore John Ford is generally considered to be among the greatest Hollywood directors in history. This widely held belief has led to a voluminous amount of books, seemingly all of them ultimately laudatory, devoted to Ford's films. Among these texts, Tag Gallagher's John Ford: The Man and His Films (1986) is my personal favorite, although there are many others worthreading . But the flaw in Gallagher's book is characteristic ofthe flaw in most works on Ford; even when they purport to be about his films and his life, they invariably end up being much more about his motion pictures, which, with a filmmaker as prolific and influential as Ford, is understandable. Although Gallagher's study ofthe titles is rich, a clear picture of Ford the man never comes into focus, despite anecdotes about Ford's life laced throughout the text. Indeed, I am not the only one who has noticed the absence of available satisfying biographical detail aboutFord. In the third edition of? Biographical Dictionary of Film (1994) David Thompson, one of the few notable critics who is decidedly not a Ford fan, writes "On the strength of that one film [The Searchers, apparently the only Ford film Thompson likes] I would love to read a thorough life of Ford." With the recentpublication ofScott Eyman's Print the Legend: The Life and Times of John Ford, Thompson's wish has come true. Fortunately, Eyman is up to the task. What separates Eyman's book from others on Ford is that it really is first and foremost a biography; in fact, in many ways Print the Legend is best suited for those who are already familiar with Ford's work. When recounting the production of individual films, Eyman focuses his attention on what went on behind the cameras as opposed to in front of them. For example, in his discussion of the making oĆ­Stagecoach (1939), Eyman spends far more time discussing Ford's relationship with his players, particularly John Wayne and the Stuntman Yakima Canuti, than he does examining the film's oft-credited revitalization of the Western genre. This is not to say Eyman offers no opinions about the films, for he frequently and eloquently does, but more important is the fact that he couches his analysis predominately in light of how Ford's movies effected his life rather than how they influenced Hollywood filmmaking. Furthermore, Eyman treats Ford's life before and after his directorial career with as much energy as he does Ford's time as a filmmaker. One of the epigraphs of Print the Legend is the maxim that states "Half of an Irishman's lies are true." In the case of John Ford such a claim may be something of an exaggeration; if half the stories about Ford are true then no other director has ever led as interesting and varied a life as John Ford. Further complicating matters forbiographers is thatperhaps no one loved a good John Ford story as much as John Ford. As Eyman writes, "If all the stories about John Ford weren't absolutely true, it's because a lot of them were spread by him. He loved to tell stories ; whether they were true or false didn't really matter" (17). And therein lies the great triumph ofEyman's work: he has done a finejob separating the chafffrom the reliable as concerns John...

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