[A] wonderfully reported and thoughtful exploration... Difficult Men is grand entertainment, and will be fascinating for anyone curious about the perplexing miracles of how great television comes to be.
-Wall Street Journal
Martin is a thorough reporter and artful storyteller, clearly entranced with, though not deluded by, his subjects... In between the delicious bits of insider trading, the book makes a strong if not terribly revelatory argument for the creative process.
-Los Angeles Times
Martin offers sharp analysis of the advances in technology and storytelling that helped TV become the 21st century's predominant art form. But his best material comes from interviews with writers, directors, and others who dish about Weiner's egomania, Milch's battles with substance abuse, and Chase's weirdest acid trip ever.
-Entertainment Weekly
Enjoyable, wildly readable.
-Boston Globe
An engaging, entertaining, and utterly convincing chronicle of television's transformation... Martin operates with an enviable fearlessness, painting warts-and-all portraits of autocratic showrunners such as David Milch (Deadwood), David Simon (The Wire) and Matthew Weiner (Mad Men)... Anyone interested in television should read this book, no matter how much or how little they know about the shows it chronicles.
-Newsday
Difficult Men, with its vigorous reporting and keen analysis, is one of those books that crystallizes a cultural moment and lets you savor it all the more.
-Dallas Morning News
Martin's analysis is intelligent and his culture commentary will be of interest to fans of many of today's better-written shows.
-Christian Science Monitor
Masterful... unveils the mysterious-to-all-but-insiders process that takes place in the rooms where TV shows are written.
-New Orleans Times-Picayune
'Difficult Men delivers what it promises. Martin had good access to actors, writers and producers . . . Difficult Men is an entertaining, well-written peek at the creative process.
-Fort Worth Star Telegram
A vastly entertaining and insightful look at the creators of some of the most highly esteemed recent television series... Martin's stated goal is to recount the culmination of what he calls the 'Third Golden Age of Television.' And he does so with his own sophisticated synthesis or reporting, on-set observations, and critical thinking, proving himself as capable of passing judgment, of parsing strengths and weaknesses of any given TV show, as any reviewer who covers the beat... in short, the sort of criticism that must now extend to television as much as it does to any other first-rate art.
-Bookforum
[Showrunners are] as complex and fascinating in Martin's account as their anti-hero protagonists are on the screen... Breaking Bad, The Shield, and Six Feet Under have dominated the recent cultural conversation in the way that movies did in the 1970s.... Martin thrillingly explains how and why that conversation migrated to the erstwhile 'idiot box.' A lucid and entertaining analysis of contemporary quality TV, highly recommended to anyone who turns on the box to be challenged and engaged.
-Kirkus (starred)
Martin deftly traces TV's evolution from an elitist technology in a handful of homes, to an entertainment wasteland reflecting viewers' anomie, to 'the signature American art form of the first decade of the twenty-first century.'
-Publishers Weekly
Brett Martin lays out the whole story of TV's new Golden Age - lucidly and backed by awesome reporting (and TV watching)... Difficult Men delivers the inside story of the creation of these landmark TV shows, along with Martin's astute take on how these series fit into the larger pop cultural landscape of the early 21st century... If I were you, I'd pre-order this terrific book on my Kindle or Nook. It should be among the most talked-about non-fiction titles of the summer.-ctnews.com
A New Yorker Book to Watch Out For
A Vulture Beach Read
A Christian Science Monitor 10 Best Books of July
This book taught me a thing or two about how a few weird executives enabled a handful of weirder writers to make shows I still can't believe were on TV. But what I found more interesting-and disturbing-is how it helped me understand why an otherwise lily-livered, civic-minded nice girl like me wants to curl up with a bunch of commandment-breaking, Constitution-trampling psychos-and that's just the cops.
-Sarah Vowell, New York Times bestselling author of Unfamiliar Fishes, The Worldly Shipmates, and Assassination Vacation
Aptly titled, and written with verve, humor and constant energy, Difficult Men is as gripping as an episode of The Sopranos or Homeland. Any addict of the new 'golden' television (or extended narratives on premium cable) will love this book. Along the way, it is also one of the smartest books about American television ever written. So don't be surprised if that great creator, David Chase (of The Sopranos), comes out as a mix of Rodney Dangerfield and Hamlet.
-David Thompson, author of The Big Screen and The New Biographical Dictionary of Film
Brett Martin has accomplished something extraordinary: he has corralled a disparate group of flawed creative geniuses, extracted their tales of struggle and triumph, and melded those stories into a seamless narrative that reads like a nonfiction novel. With characters as rich as these, you can't help but reach the obvious conclusion-Difficult Men would itself make one heck of a TV series.
-Mark Adams, New York Times bestselling author of Turn Left at Machu Picchu
The new golden age of television drama-addictive, dark, suspenseful, complex, morally murky-finally gets the insanely readable chronicle it deserves in Brett Martin's Difficult Men. This group portrait of the guys who made The Sopranos, Six Feet Under, The Wire, Deadwood, Mad Men and Breaking Bad is a deeply reported, tough-minded, revelatory account of what goes on not just in the writers' room but in the writer's head-the thousand decisions fueled by genius, ego, instinct, and anger that lead to the making of a great TV show. Here, at last, is the real story, and it's a lot more exciting than the version that gets told in Emmy acceptance speeches.
-Mark Harris, New York Times bestselling author of Pictures at a Revolution: Five Movies and the Birth of the New Hollywood
Sometime in the recent past the conversation changed. My friends were no longer talking about what movie they'd been to see, but what television show was their latest obsession. Brett Martin's smart and entertaining book illuminates why and how this happened-while treating fans to the inside scoop on the brilliant head cases who transformed a low-brow medium into a purveyor of art.
-Julie Salamon, New York Times Bestselling author of The Devil's Candy and Wendy and the Lost Boys