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Binding: Hardcover
Dewey Decimal Number: 791.4572
EAN: 9780826414106
ISBN: 0826414109
Label: Continuum
Manufacturer: Continuum
Number Of Items: 1
Number Of Pages: 6
Publication Date: 2002-06
Publisher: Continuum
Sales Rank: 2476344
Studio: Continuum
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Editorial Review:
Product Description: 'The Sopranos' has proved a pop-culture sensation as one of the most controversial, provocative, thoughtful and complex series on television. Its characters and phrases have entered everyday life, its language and themes have stretched the norms of commercial television. This book provides a compact and authoritative examination of each episode and season - the themes, inside jokes and broader allusions - thereby putting the series into a broader cultural context. If television programming is normally considered a wasteland, then 'The Sopranos' may be thought of as a jungle: richly coloured, teeming with life, dark with mystery. This book is designed for those who are already caught up in the excitement as well as viewers who are coming to the show for the first time.
Customer Reviews
Average Rating: 
Rating: - The Sopranos on the couch
We are reading this book episode by episode and then watching the episode. So far it seems to be very interesting and easy to understand.
Rating: - Couching The Sopranos
Was very skeptic of this publication from the title name. Once I skimmed over the content inside, I KNEW I wanted it.
Inside you will be exposed to the reasoning for actions of the characters. It offers insight to their motivations and their way of thinking.
Very entertaining for those who want exposure that goes beyond the surface of the action you see in the series.
Rating: - They're not really on the couch
Right off the bat, I realized that I would never get what I expected with this book -- a psychoanalytic assessment of the characters of TV's "The Sopranos." Rather, what you have is a light weight paperback with overviews of the episodes containing some interesting insight into character development and dialogue, but never really getting into the characters' heads. Perhaps we need Dr. Melfi to invite the other "family" members onto her couch and ask _her_ to write a book!
One of the few redeeming qualities of this book is Yacowar's comparison of the Sopranos series to Francis Ford Coppola's The Godfather films, but you have to skip to the back of the book for this.
If you were hoping to really see each of the characters on the couch, you will be disappointed. If you are just a huge fan who wants to reflect on one of the greatest television shows ever created in a 1 hour read, then I would commend this book.
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