Title: Admit One

Author: Emmett James

Genre/Pages: Nonfiction, Memoir/197

Publication: Fizzypop Productions, LLC; February 1, 2010

Rating: 3.5 BOOKMARKS

Source: Review copy courtesy of Lisa Roe of Online Publicist

A witty and entertaining memoir that details one Englishman’s life-long love of the cinema and experiences working as an actor.

Films have always played a defining role in Emmett James’s life, and his memoir, Admit One, takes the reader from his early childhood in South London all the way to sunny Los Angeles where, as an adult, James makes inroads into show business.

At the start of each chapter, James highlights a movie that had an impact on him, providing a succinct synopsis and starring cast information.  From there, Emmett entertains with humorous vignettes of his child and adulthood, drawing parallels back to the movies.

My husband is a huge movie fan and he and James seem to share the same taste in celluloid magic.  I found myself reading whole pages of the book out loud, especially those with references to Star Wars, Indiana Jones, and Amityville Horror.

James’s conversational tone and very English turn of a phrase brought to mind a few of my favorite non-fiction writers.  His honesty and self-deprecating humor were welcome, as were his interesting forays into the magic of Hollywood.  He offered up some interesting tidbits and a behind-the-scenes peek at being part of the cast of Titanic, one of the top-grossing films ever made.

I found the beginning and ending of the book to be the strongest, while the middle dragged a bit.  Also, I loved the idea of carrying the film theme through the whole book but felt a few chapters, especially ‘Coming to America‘ and ‘Ghostbusters’ were just vehicles to move the story along without really drawing parallels from James’s life to the movies.  In other chapters, he really explains how the movies impacted his life and his choices, but others felt forced–the movies didn’t really relate to what was happening in his life and only merited a mere mention instead of being the theme.

That said, I found this book to be a worthwhile and entertaining read.  I adore this genre–humor memoir–and am always on the lookout for fresh, new authors.  Emmett James fits the bill and I’m looking forward to reading more from him in the future.

Have you had any brushes with fame?  Maybe a walk-on role in a film or show?  Ever been to a taping of a show?  Any desire to act?

I’ve been to a few tapings and once won tickets and a limo ride to the MTV Music Awards at Radio City Music Hall.  When our limo pulled up out front, the crowds thought my friend and I were celebrities; I just put on my sunglasses and gave my best celebrity wave!

Does Size Matter?

I don’t know about you, but I’m getting a tad tired of a couple of the sidebar images here at Book, Line, and Sinker.  The cover of Stephen King’s weighty Under the Dome has been roosting in the coveted ‘Listening To” and ‘On My Kindle’ spots for weeks now; the next time I get the genius idea of borrowing a 30-CD audio book from the library, kindly remind me of this folly.

Coming in at 1,074 pages, Under the Dome is the  longest book I’ve ever listened to and one of the lengthiest I’ve read in quite a while.  Last year I reveled in all 1,048 delicious pages of Gone With the Wind, but it did take me almost a week to get through it.

I’ve heard of a few challenges that deal specifically with long books (chunksters, in the colloquial) but haven’t had the fortitude to sign up.  I’m not necessarily daunted by books in excess of 600 pages but find that my attention starts to wander if the books are too long.

My wandering eye gets me in trouble (with books, that is) and I’ll often pick up a shorter book and read it while still in the middle of a chunkster.  Heck, I sometimes cheat on short books too–I’ll read two or three books at the same time!

I can’t promise that Under the Dome will be disappearing from my sidebar anytime soon–I just started disc 11 today, 19 more to go–but I did read a great book review over at Write Meg! that I might just have to download onto my Kindle.

If you’re so inclined, I have a few questions about your take on longer books:

  • Do you avoid chunksters?
  • Do you have a personal ‘page limit’ or is that too restrictive for your reading habits?
  • What was the last chunkster you read?

I’ve made (and posted about) these cream puffs before–they are always a crowd pleaser.  Though a bit time consuming (baking the shells, cooling the shells, piping in the filling), they are worth the effort.  In a fresh twist for my nephew’s birthday yesterday, I made a chocolate ganache (chocolate mixed with heavy cream) to cover some of the puffs and powder sugared the rest.

I found the recipe for the shells in a cozy mystery–Cream Puff Murder by Joanne Fluke–and am sharing it in conjunction with Candace’s Weekend Cooking Challenge at Beth Fish Reads.  Enjoy!

Cream Puff Shells

(from Joanne Fluke’s Cream Puff Murder)

  • 1 cup of water
  • 1 tablespoon white granulated sugar
  • 1/4 teaspoon salt
  • 1 stick (8 tablespoons) UNSALTED butter
  • 1 1/2 teaspoons baking powder
  • 1 cup flour, packed down
  • 4 eggs, room temperature

Preheat oven to 400 degrees.  Line cookie sheet with parchment paper.

On medium heat in a small pot or sauce pan, pour in water.  Chop butter into pieces and put into water.  Let it melt.  Add salt and sugar.  Bring to a boil.

In a bowl, mix flour and baking powder.  Once water mixture is boiling, turn heat down to low and dump in flour/baking powder mixture.  Stir quickly for about 30 seconds–mixture will form a dough ball.  Remove from heat and let the dough cool for about 20 minutes on the counter.

Once dough is cool, break one egg and mix it into the dough until smooth.  Repeat with remaining eggs, one at a time until mixture has a smooth, taffy-like consistency–about 3-5 minutes with mixer.  Don’t overmix.

For mini-cream puffs, drop a teaspoon of batter per puff on to the parchment-lined cookie sheet.  You can fit 12-15 per sheet–don’t crowd them.  Cook them for about 25-40 minutes depending on size; when you take them out of the oven, pierce the sides with sharp knife to prevent collapses.  If you’d like to make large puffs, cook them for about 55 minutes.  Let the puff shells cool away from drafts.  Yield 25-50 mini puffs or 10-14 large ones.

When they are cool, cut the top 1/3 off and remove any stringy dough.  Fill with custard or the simple filling I use.

Easy Cream Puff Filling

  • 1 3.5 oz box of Jell-O INSTANT vanilla pudding
  • 2 cups heavy cream

Pour heavy cream and instant pudding mix into a bowl.  Whip with a whisk or mix master until it’s the consistency of whipped cream–light and fluffy.

Scoop filling into a quart-sized Ziplock bag.  Cut off the bottom right corner of the bag.  Pipe filling into shells.  Add lids.  Sift powdered sugar on top of cream puffs or dip them in chocolate ganache.  Watch them disappear.

Chocolate Ganache

There are many variations of this recipe but all you really need is some heavy cream and good chocolate.  I used a bit less than half of a 12 oz. bag of Ghiradelli semi-sweet chocolate chips and half a cup of heavy cream.

  • 1/2 cup heavy cream
  • 4 oz. chocolate (chips, chopped bar, etc)

Chop chocolate (if using a bar) and place in heat-proof bowl; set aside.  Over medium heat, bring saucepan of heavy cream to a boil.  Remove from heat and pour over chocolate.  Whisk until smooth.  (You can add additional chocolate if the ganache is too watery.)

Enjoy!

© N.A.M., 2009-2010. Theft and/or duplication of my ramblings, reviews, or photos without permission is strictly prohibited. Excerpts and links may be used, provided that full and clear credit is given to me. Poachers will be shot. Thank you.