<p><em>The Lucky Strike Papers: Journeys Through My Mother&#39;s Television Past</em> was originally brought out by BearManor Media in 2007.&nbsp; BearManor has now released a revised version of the book.</p><p>In 1951 a critic in <em>Down Beat</em> magazine wrote that Sue Bennett was &quot;one of the coming female singers in the country.&quot; Bennett was a featured singer on several network shows during TV&#39;s early years including <em>Kay Kyser&#39;s College of Musical Knowledge</em> and <em>Your Hit Parade</em> (also known as the <em>Lucky Strike Hit Parade</em>).&nbsp; She also appeared regularly on such programs as <em>The Freddy Martin Show</em> and <em>John Conte&#39;s Little Show</em>.&nbsp;</p><p>Decades later Andrew Fielding began exploring the period of live television via the shows on which his mother sang. His resulting portrait of the era&mdash;which includes conversations with such early television luminaries as Dorothy Collins Snooky Lanson Eileen Wilson Raymond Scott Merv Griffin Morey Amsterdam Milton DeLugg Arthur Penn and Kay Kyser &mdash;is enlightening and captivating.</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p><strong>Editorial Reviews from the Original Edition:</strong></p><p><em>The Lucky Strike Papers</em> is &quot;a fascinating look at the early years of live television...&quot;--<em>Radiogram</em> magazine 2009</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p>The book &quot;was one of the best works on early television I have ever had the pleasure of reading. Fielding has done a remarkable job capturing a time period when television was new broadcasts were live and those working in the medium were learning on their feet.&quot;&nbsp;</p><ul> <li>Review on the website &quot;Television Obscurities&quot; 2010.&nbsp;</li></ul><p>&quot;It&rsquo;s a splendid book sensitively written that chronicles the phenomenon of live TV and the musical variety type programs which are no longer with us....Mr. Fielding manages to write a very personal memoir about a story that was not his own and that is something wondrous.&quot;</p><ul> <li>Novelist and nonfiction writer Jacqueline T. Lynch on her blog &quot;New England Travels&quot; 2013.</li></ul><p>&nbsp;</p><p>&ldquo;For anyone curious at all about the early days of live television and the transition from radio to TV as being the dominant form of home entertainment this book is a delight... &quot;</p><ul> <li>2008 review on the blog &quot;Master of My Public Domain&quot; by Michael Coston.&nbsp;</li></ul><p>&nbsp;</p><p>&quot;...Fielding has a distinctive approach using a narrative voice that&#39;s almost quasi-documentary in tone. &nbsp;It&#39;s very effective giving the reader the sense of flipping through the pages of a scrapbook and reading the captions written on the backs of pictures. &nbsp;In doing so he generates a warmth not only for the age but for the people participating in it. &nbsp;He makes it come <em>alive</em> which is one of my tests as to how good a book is.&rdquo;</p><ul> <li>2014 review by Mitchell Hadley on his blog &quot;It&#39;s About TV. &quot;</li></ul><p>&nbsp;</p><p><em>The Lucky Strike Papers</em> &quot;is a rich history of the early days of TV....Early TV was a fascinating world and reading about&nbsp;it is the next best thing to having been there.&quot;</p><ul> <li>Review on the &quot;Geezer Music Club&quot; blog 2008.</li></ul><p>&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p><strong>About the Author:</strong></p><p><br />Andrew Fielding&#39;s writing has appeared in <em>The Boston Globe</em> <em>The Boston Herald</em> <em>The Providence Journal</em> <em>The Philadelphia Daily News</em> <em>Horizon</em> magazine and other publications. He has also worked as a radio talk show host&mdash;in Philadelphia in suburban Philadelphia in Charlottesville Virginia and in northern New Jersey.</p>
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