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When a Fan Hits the Shit: The Rise and Fall of a Phony Charity Paperback – September, 2004

3.7 out of 5 stars 24 customer reviews

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Product Details

  • Paperback: 352 pages
  • Publisher: Heisenberg Press (September 2004)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0965313646
  • ISBN-13: 978-0965313643
  • Product Dimensions: 8.4 x 5.4 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (24 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,641,754 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Format: Paperback
This particular sideshow? Worth the price of admission. Really.

Renne, whether or not it was her intention, has presented two highly memorable anti-heroes. Without in any way diminishing the reader's natural sympathy for the fraud victims, she nevertheless fascinates and amuses with the details of an almost unbelievable scam. Amy and Abby, at least as they appear in this book, are like villains from a nineteenth-century melodrama: charming scoundrals, dazzling montebanks, an object-lesson in manic creativity gone awry.

Renne's book may not be "objective," but why should it be? She was involved. If anything, the simmering anger and wholesale rejection of an "unbiased" stance only add to the hilarity. And history, really, isn't written by the victors: it's written by those with enough determination and self-discipline to keep their arses firmly planted in a chair long enough do the job. She's done that, and created a thoroughly readable and entertaining book. Go read it, and urge any fellow afficiandos of true crime stories to do so as well.
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Format: Paperback
This is a self-published tome, and as such, it isn't perfect. There are points where the prose could use a little bit of polish, and the jumping back and forth in time can get a little confusing. But honestly, if Jeanine Renne can write something this gripping without an editor, I'd really love to see what she can do with one. I wasn't involved in the events discussed in this book at all and in fact have nothing to do with Lord of the Rings fandom, but this story has fascinated me ever since I first heard about it last December, and it's great to finally get the full scoop in one place. One of the best parts is the "appendices," which include transcripts of an Internet chat in which supposed "hobbit channeling" took place, and Amy Player's final "suicide note" to her parents. Anyone who's interested in pathological liars, what makes them tick, and how they succeed in making people believe them is going to want to read this book.
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Format: Paperback
As a book, it's lively and funny, crammed with the kind of details bring the reader right into the story. It's almost too much information: I could have wished for a scorecard to keep track of the cast of characters, and a linear timeline - the book's chapters jump back and forth chronologically, which is an effective storytelling device but confusing as hell when you've got so many different versions of the same events. At times I thought that the lies should have been printed in red and the truth in blue; it would have made for a very colorful book.
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Format: Paperback
This story - the better for being true - moves quickly from revelation to revelation of astounding yet small-time duplicity, and of the gullibility all too common among those who wish to do good. Getting to know the anti-heroines (without being burned by them) is alone worth the price of admission. There is something pricelessly absurd about a self-proclaimed Warrior whose ultimate weapon is the fake suicide attempt.

Unusual among true crime stories, this one concerns major players - both con artists and dupes/avengers - who are women. The action takes place in a fandom centering around a group of men, the LoTR actors, of whom only one plays more than an elusive background role in the book. There is much food here for thought about sexual and gender politics.

While the story is dramatic even on a quick read, more of it would be accessible to a wider variety of readers if more background information were given; for instance about the organization of an international on-line fandom, the typical requirements for the success of a fan convention, or the IRS regulations concerning non-profit status. A great deal can however be gleaned from the text, with attentive reading.

A serious discussion of transsexuality and whether that is a relevant issue would have strengthened the book's focus. It is currently an unexplored subtext that has distracted some readers from the primary story.

The second part of Appendix A could, with a a bit of narrative added to the chat transcript, stand on its own as a very funny short story about clashing agendas. (Too bad that would probably not be quite legal.)
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Format: Paperback Verified Purchase
Wow, the events described in this book are just one huge clusterfu-- well, let's say fiasco.

I was interested to read this book for several reasons. First, because I was somewhat into the LOTR fandom when the movies were popular. Second, because this story took place somewhat local to me. And third, because I remember reading something about the organization and one of the charity events in this book at the time (and was kind of bummed I couldn't go). Oh yes, and because there's something weirdly fascinating about fandom wank.

The amount of crazy on display in the people the author's writing about is just mind-boggling. If it were fiction, I'd say it was unbelievable, but sadly I've seen just enough of the obsession and taking-it-too-seriously that happens with some people in fandom to believe some people could actually be this crazy.

It's fascinating and disturbing how these people conned a whole bunch of well-meaning others. It's like watching some horrible, slow-moving pile-up. I usually tend to find non-fiction boring, but this one had me riveted. I can't quite give it five stars, though, for a few reasons.

Like another reviewer said, there's really a bit too much here. The appendices in particular. There are many, many pages of nonsensical online transcript between people who are acting like complete lunatics, thinking they're channeling gay hobbits. (Although it turns out at least one of them, as I suspected while reading it, just thought they were doing an online role-play thing.) It really would have been a lot better if the author had provided maybe a couple of pages or less of excerpts. I think the point would have come across clearly without being so boring and repetitive.
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