Danny Diliberto's book available for sale here at AzB

azhousepro

Administrator
Staff member
Admin
Moderator
Just a note to everyone that we are offering Danny Diliberto's book "You Bet Your Life" for sale here on the site and the proceeds from the first 100 copies sold will be donated to Leonard Bludworth per the wishes of Danny D and his co-author Jerry Forsyth.

More info, as well as an excerpt from the book, are available at http://www.azbilliards.com/youbetyourlife
 
I'm in.

Having met Danny at Capones and listening to him talk about pool I know I will be in for a treat. People will wonder what the hell I'm laughing at while I am walking my dog listening to his CD. It should be a hoot.

Will the book also be offered?

Jake
 
The CD is the book in text format. My guess is that Danny and Jerry decided to sell it this way so that they didn't have to deal with the costs and headache of self publishing the book.

Mike
 
Why on CD and address

Folks,

Danny and I are offering the book on CD because the publishers reviewing the manuscript for publication take a long time to act and we want to help Leonard now, when he needs it.

The idea of making it a talking CD is a great one and I will investigate as to how to add an audio file to the CD as well as the text. Right now I don't know how to do that but I am sure someone can tell me.

No need to send me an email, though I will answer all that are sent. Just send a check made out to EPPA, Inc. to:

EPPA, Inc.
210 Tate Rd.
Cedartown, GA. 30125

I'll send the CD by return mail. Make sure you include yoour mailing address. Please help us to help Leonard. I can assure you he would help you if the tables were turned.

-Jerry
 
Not really impressed with the CD format. I bought a copy though mostly to help Blud through his tough time, books are best done in book format, reading them on a computer screen is a pain in the neck and printing off 17 chanters would be nuts. I am sure it would be a good read, if you ever do get a paperback version of the book going any chance of us who buy this CD getting a reduced price on the actual book? Maybe another $5-$10 for us CD buyers to cover the costs of printing?
 
Jerry, I hope I see you on Sunday at the tourney because I'd like to buy one of those CD's. What a GREAT idea! And the fact that it is helping one of our own is very admirable. It is a win-win for everyone (IMO).

BTW, Larry Nevel told me that when he is on the road, he likes to listen to book CD's to pass the time during those long, long trips to pool events.

JAM [posting under KM's account due to laptop cookie problems]
 
JAM [posting under KM's account due to laptop cookie problems said:
]
BTW, Larry Nevel told me that when he is on the road, he likes to listen to book CD's to pass the time during those long, long trips to pool events.

It would be awesome if it was a audio CD. It is a text file on CD from what I am gathering though. So you load up word or some program and open the file on the CD rom and poof, there is your book as text. Still, its for a good cause, there are alot of stories I imagine also about lost times in pool, so I bought one.

The free chapter alone is worth a read, it gives us a glimpse into the life of a legend in the game. Something I had no clue about and it makes the history of the game that much more sweet. The scene in that chapter would be such a sweet sad type of scene in a movie, someone ought to be writing a movie script about pool that is not so much action and rehersed as CoM, something more raw and real like that chapter looks at. Pool is a sport that has alot of bitter sweet era's and people.

I always thought following the life of a single pool player through the game from 1920 or so to the present would be awesome. Similar to McGoorty's book where it takes place as a whole flashback on the life of the guy. Start the movie in some dingy crappy pool hall with some ancient 90-100 year old man sitting at the bar of a pool hall watching some meaningless match between two hacks. Somehow he gets into flashback mode, not telling the story to anyone, just sits there and something familiar stirs daydreams about the good ole days. So we get to see the guys life as a young kid skipping school and sneaking into the pool hall, through to getting decent at the game, seeing the pro's, doing the road, making friends, losing friends, seeing great REAL hustles, none of that fakey crap we got in COM or even the Hustler, getting chased out of town, ect... The whole story about Lassiter if put on film in a movie like that would be gut wrenching, especially if at the end of that scene it told the audience that "soandso" years/months/days later he was dead and then went on with the story on towards the resent day of the last old timer all alone sitting in his modern divebomb pool hall with it's video games pinging in the background, the bartender and other people running the hall not knowing the first thing about poo, and young punks with $300 cues playing $2 a game 9-ball and trash talking and strutting like kings.

There is an awesome movie out there to be made. A script that is just waiting to be wrote by one of you old timers who have the stories and the past to know some great things. Just make it real. Somehow no movie got the scene and the hardships right. Pool Hall Junkies was such crap, the scene is not like that. Sure, there is drugs, there is alchohol, there is gambling, there is violence, all that exists in pool but not the way PHJ made it out, not even close. The current idea of a pool movie where "Mafioso Joe is a backer for pool matches, oh noes! my brother just lost 10 grand on him and now he owes him! I better save him in the climax pool match against the hustler that beat him!" is so bloody retarded.

The scene in McGoorty where Greenleaf hits the washroom after chopping it up hard in a opening shot in a huge match and there McGoorty witnesses he blow down a whole lotta booze, get loaded, and then casually saunter out and shoot flawlessly on the table is awesome REAL pool issues that exist and have existed, it is a rich part of our history in the game. That scene would be similar to the scene in Leaving Las Vegas when Nic Cage cannot sign a check due to his hands not being steady enough, he goes to the bar, pounds afew drinks, comes back and signs it with ease. That is tragic, and tradgedy exists in bounds in pool, as is evident through Lassiter's life as well.

The best pool movie yet to be made, it is a cross between Once Upon a Time in America, in that you follow the life of the main character through the years and various stages of his life, the book McGoorty, where you meet the player at the end of that life looking back and being saddend by what has become of the game he spent his life as a part of.

If I had the stories and the experience I would write teh damn thing myself. I am 28 years old though, I cannot write this, we need a old fogey.
 
Book Sales Update

Folks,

We have reached the 25% point on CD sales for Blud. I want to thank all of you who have stepped up for this cause for your big hearts and the kindness you have shown a brother, for we are all brothers in this sport.

We need to sell another 75 CD's to reach our goal of 100. I will mail out the ones already sold on Tuesday and Wednesday of this week, as soon as I return from Glass City.

Mark Griffin of the BCA Pool Leagues called yesterday and told me to bring CD's to next week's BCA 9-Ball Nationals at the Grand Plaza in Las Vegas. Mark is another of Blud's many friends and he told me: "We will make them disappear." So any of you who will be there and would like to take home a CD to help Blud please see me or Mark out there.

Blud, we love you and you and Janice are in our prayers and thoughts constantly. Hang in there, buddy, and know that we are with you.

-Jerry
 
Jerry Forsyth said:
Folks,

We have reached the 25% point on CD sales for Blud. I want to thank all of you who have stepped up for this cause for your big hearts and the kindness you have shown a brother, for we are all brothers in this sport.

We need to sell another 75 CD's to reach our goal of 100. I will mail out the ones already sold on Tuesday and Wednesday of this week, as soon as I return from Glass City.

Mark Griffin of the BCA Pool Leagues called yesterday and told me to bring CD's to next week's BCA 9-Ball Nationals at the Grand Plaza in Las Vegas. Mark is another of Blud's many friends and he told me: "We will make them disappear." So any of you who will be there and would like to take home a CD to help Blud please see me or Mark out there.

Blud, we love you and you and Janice are in our prayers and thoughts constantly. Hang in there, buddy, and know that we are with you.

-Jerry


I am just curious, is there a way in the CD format to prevent someone from being able to copy it? That seems like it could be a major problem with doing it this way. I.E. You sell one and he gives a copy to every person in the pool room.
 
Relying on honesty

MacGuy,

Nope, no way to prevent thievery. Danny and I are relying on the thought that most folks would want to help Blud. The CD is really just a sort of a premium given for a donation. Besides, if someone rips off this effort, they are the ones who have to sleep with that. I believe most folks would not steal from a charity. If they do and some of you guys find out about them I think they might have to avoid dark alleys for a while.

Personally, whenever someone has stolen from me I just assume they must need it worse than I do. I just feel sorry for folks whose souls are so barren that they can steal from or harm others. Just wasn't the way I was raised.
 
Jerry Forsyth said:
MacGuy,

Nope, no way to prevent thievery. Danny and I are relying on the thought that most folks would want to help Blud. The CD is really just a sort of a premium given for a donation. Besides, if someone rips off this effort, they are the ones who have to sleep with that. I believe most folks would not steal from a charity. If they do and some of you guys find out about them I think they might have to avoid dark alleys for a while.

Personally, whenever someone has stolen from me I just assume they must need it worse than I do. I just feel sorry for folks whose souls are so barren that they can steal from or harm others. Just wasn't the way I was raised.

I was talking about in the long run. Don't you plan on selling thousands of these on CD not just the offer for charity or is this a one time offer and then a book is coming out?
 
THe plan is for the book to come out under the flag of a standard publisher. But this could take as long as well into next spring. Publishers are good folks, but slow as they can be.

-Jerry
 
Back
Top