What Makes Sammy Run?: A Novel

What Makes Sammy Run?: A Novel

by Budd Schulberg

Narrated by Chris Ciulla

Unabridged — 11 hours, 37 minutes

What Makes Sammy Run?: A Novel

What Makes Sammy Run?: A Novel

by Budd Schulberg

Narrated by Chris Ciulla

Unabridged — 11 hours, 37 minutes

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Overview

The classic book that shaped two generations' view of the movie business and introduced the archetypal Hollywood player Sammy Glick.



He's got a machete mouth and a genius for double-cross. As Budd Shulberg-author of the screenplay On the Waterfront-follows Sammy's relentless upward progress, he creates a virtuoso study in character that manages to be hilariously appalling yet deeply compassionate.

Editorial Reviews

Mordecai Richler

"Sammy Glick remains at the top of the Hollywood sleeze heep, Hussler nonpareil....What Makes Sammy Run? is still the quintessential novel about 'the all American heel.'" -- G.Q.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940171045982
Publisher: Tantor Audio
Publication date: 05/08/2018
Edition description: Unabridged

Read an Excerpt

What Makes Sammy Run?
A Novel by
Budd Wilson Schulberg

Everyone of us knows someone who runs. He is one of the symp-toms of our times—from the little man who shoves you out of the way on the street to the go-getter who shoves you out of a job in the office to the Fuehrer who shoves you out of the world. And all of us have stopped to wonder, at some time or another, what it is that makes these people tick. What makes them run?
This is the question Schulberg has asked himself, and the answer is the first novel written with the indignation that only a young writer with talent and ideals could concentrate into a manuscript. It is the story of Sammy Glick, the man with a positive genius for being a heel, who runs through New York’s East Side, through newspaper ranks and finally through Hollywood, leaving in his wake the wrecked careers of his associates; for this is his tragedy and his chief characteristic—his congenital incapacity for friendship.
An older and more experienced novelist might have tempered his story and, in so doing, destroyed one of its outstanding qualities. Compromise would mar the portrait of Sammy Glick. Schulberg has etched it in pure vitriol, and dissected his victim with a precision that is almost frightening.
When a fragment of this book appeared as a short story in a national magazine, Schulberg was surprised at the number of letters he received from people convinced they knew Sammy Glick’s real name. But speculation as to his real identity would be utterly fruitless, for Sammy is a composite picture of a loud and spectacular minority bitterly resented by the many decent and sincere artists who are trying honestly torealize the measureless potentialities of motion pictures. To this group belongs Schulberg himself, who has not only worked as a screen writer since his graduation from Dartmouth College in 1936, but has spent his life, literally, in the heart of the motion-picture colony. In the course of finding out what makes Sammy run (an operation in which the reader is spared none of the grue-some details) Schulberg has poured out everything he has felt about that place. The result is a book which the publishers not only believe to be the most honest ever written about Hollywood, but a penetrating study of one kind of twentieth-century success that is peculiar to no single race of people or walk of life.

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