This is half a book. There is much more of this story to be told that the author does not bother telling. Instead, he settles for superficially dipping into the story here and there, making TV Guide-like lists, and otherwise not giving readers what they ought to get from a book that claims to reveal what happened behind the scenes of this TV show. Whole subjects are not covered, such as the publicity for the show and how the actors participated in that, network censorship, and the reason for a change in direction during the casting process. Addams products are listed without explanations. You see on the list "Addams Family Cartoon Kit," but author Cox does not explain what this is and the name of the product does not indicate what it is, so we do not know. An Addams special that did not in include the original cast barely gets two sentences.
This is half a book so half the stars, right? You cannot give two and a half, so error on the side of generosity? I usually do, but there is a rather bad error, so I must go in the other direction. Composer Vic Mizzy claims to have invented the word "ookie" for the theme music, when, if fact, the word was used in a Dorris Day film the year before when her character's daughter says she does not like her shampoo because it "feels ookie." Carl Reiner wrote that script, so I presume that Carl Reiner should be credited with inventing that word, unless it is even older. I have to wonder what else is wrong in this book that I don't know about? I hope somebody writes a great book about the Addams Family someday. This isn't it.