This book was published in 1980 and I am pretty sure I bought it that year. I was still in mourning for the television show so I wanted a tangible reminder to peruse when I was really missing the unique characters and hilarity of one of the best series of all times. Today I decided to pass this book along to my son, who enjoyed M*A*S*H reruns so much that he bought the entire series on DVD. He and I compare notes often about what we think were the funniest moments.
This book is the early-eighties version of DVD commentary, imdb listings, wikipedia episode lists, and official actor websites, cheaply bound for the mass market. Features formulaic "I love working with that guy!" tributes and flavorful on-set anecdotes. Copious black-and-white production stills and acting-credit walls-of-text fill out the pages of the product.
A dour feminist might even snark about the book being an exemplary real-world relic of the Smurfette principle. So let us forgo the dourness, put Loretta Swit on a pedestal for her excellence at existing in the group, cheer on the ratification of the ERA, and admire Alan Alda's egalitarian grin, shall we?
Gave me a fresh appreciation for the availability of tailored-to-your-tastes fandom material in internet spaces.
#15 - David S. Reiss, M*A*S*H: The Exclusive, Inside Story Of Tv's Most Popular Show. MASH is one of my favorite television shows of all time, and one of the most popular and influential of all time, and so I was thrilled at the chance to learn more about how it all came together, what the actors were really like, the stories of the scripts and the characters, etc. The book provides all of that and more. My favorite part is a collection of long interviews with all of the major actors and producers. I give it an 8.