books by subject

United States Cinema

Filter by available

Women and Soap Opera: A Study of Prime Time Soaps (Social Psychology and Society)

By Geraghty, Christine

How to Survive Children

By Whitehorn, Katharine; Illustrations by Bill Belcher

Hollywood in the Information Age: Beyond the Silver Screen

By Wasko, Janet

Mia: Life of Mia Farrow

By Epstein, Edward Z., Morella, Joe

Leonardo: A Scrapbook in Words and Pictures

By Catalano, Grace

Hollywood Animal

By Eszterhas, Joe

Book of the Dead: The Complete History of Zombie Movies

By Russell, Jamie

Fred Zinnemann: An Autobiography

By Zinnemann, Fred

She Said: The true story of the Weinstein scandal

By Kantor, Jodi, Twohey, Megan

James Dean: Little Boy Lost - An Intimate Biography

By Hyams, Joe, Jay

Harrison Ford: A Biography

By Sellers, Robert

Book

By Goldberg, Whoopi

Once Upon a Time in Hollywood: The First Novel By Quentin Tarantino (A Phoenix paperback, 3691)

By Tarantino, Quentin

Blood Simple

By Joel Coen, Ethan Coen

Gone with the Wind

By Herb Bridges

Dustin Hoffman

By R. Bergman

Marilyn: The Ultimate Look at the Legend

By James Haspiel

The Hollywood Musical (BFI Cinema)

By Feuer, Jane

Once Upon a Time in Hollywood: The Deluxe Hardback Edition

By Quentin Tarantino

The Rat Pack: Neon Nights with the Kings of Cool

By Lawrence J. Quirk

Exposed To You: One Night of Passion Book 4

By Beth Kery

Godfather Book

By Peter Cowie

Man on the Flying Trapeze: the Life & Ti

By Simon Louvish

The Disappearing Act: The gripping new psychological thriller from the bestselling author of Something in the Water

By Catherine Steadman

Empire Building: Remarkable, Real-life Story of "Star Wars"

By Garry Jenkins

Celluloid Skyline: New York and the Movies

By James Sanders

Mr Wilder and Me: 'A love letter to the spirit of cinema' Guardian

By Jonathan Coe

Our Town

By Thornton Wilder

Family Secrets: Acts of Memory and Imagination

By Annette Kuhn

'Have You Seen...?': a Personal Introduction to 1,000 Films including masterpieces, oddities and guilty pleasures (with just a few disasters)

By David Thomson