Robert Crane is coauthor of My Life as a
Mankiewicz: An Insider’s Journey through Hollywood, Jack Nicholson:
The Early Years, and Bruce Dern: A Memoir, and a contributor to Hal
Ashby: Interviews.
Christopher Fryer is coauthor of Jack Nicholson:
The Early Years and Bruce Dern: A Memoir, and a contributor to Hal
Ashby: Interviews.
" Crane: Sex, Celebrity and My Father's Unsolved Murder is an
enthralling, courageous book; at times deeply poignant written with
intelligence, humor and fiercely forthright candor[...] [and is] a
densely layered, unique combination of autobiography, biography and
true crime mystery. A "must read" for Bob Crane fans!" -- Midwest
Book Review
"This is the tale of a Hollywood kid who wasn't tainted and came
out the other side, a bit sad and beaten down but never out. " --
Cinema Sentries
" Crane artfully weaves biography and autobiography together in a
well-written memoir revolving around the murder of actor, Bob
Crane. The narrative seamlessly moves back and forth between the
lives of father and son (both connected and apart) as told by the
son. It's an intimate, bittersweet look at what children of
celebrities truly inherit: moments of privilege in exchange for
losing the real parent to their Hollywood persona." -- Kelan O'
Connell, author of Delta Legend
"[The story] of a son's quest to understand how his father's life
could go so wrong after so much had gone so right." -- LA
Weekly
"Celebrity watchers and true-crime aficionados will enjoy this
candid, unflinching look at what it's like to grow up the child of
a celebrity." -- Library Journal
"Listen: Bob chats with Ed Robertson on "TV Confidential" (Part 2)
- Listen to part 2 online here" --
"Robert Crane and Christopher Fryer's, Crane: Sex, Celebrity, and
My Father's Unsolved Murder, is a fascinating tale. First and
foremost it's the bittersweet story of Crane's relationship with
his popular father, including the period following actor Bob
Crane's shocking murder. But Crane is much more than just a son's
reminiscence. It's also an insightful account of America in the
second half of the twentieth century, spanning the optimism,
affluence and westward migration of the postwar era to the
solipsism, disillusionment, and self-destruction endemic of the
post-Watergate period." -- Andrew Erish, author of Col. William N.
Selig, the Man Who Invented Hollywood
"Robert Crane's investigation into the murder of his dad and his
own life lived in the shadow of the show-business career of Hogan's
Heroes' Bob Crane and the fallout from that murder yields a
penetrating study in the fundamentally unhealthy, even corrosive
impact of celebrityhood. It deserves to sit on book store shelves
next to the latest biography of a fatuously famous star." -- Kirk
Honeycutt, former chief film critic for The Hollywood Reporter and
editor of Honeycuttshollywood.com
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