Budd Schulberg has 4 audiobooks on Listento.it, narrated by 3 narrators, with an average listener rating of 3★ across 2 ratings. The most-rated is What Makes Sammy Run?.

4 audiobooks
Cover art for What Makes Sammy Run?

What Makes Sammy Run?

2 ratings

Summary

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.

©1990 Budd Schulberg (P)2018 Tantor

Length: 11 hrs and 37 mins
Available on Audible
Cover art for Moving Pictures

Moving Pictures

Summary

Raised in the Hollywood of the 1920s as the privileged son of a pioneer studio mogul, Budd Schulberg went on to win fame as a distinguished novelist, short story writer, playwright, Oscar-winning screenwriter, and boxing historian. Moving Pictures is his fascinating remembrance of growing up amidst the glamour, swank, courage, triumphs, defeats, cabals, and double-crosses of an industry in the making. His utterly candid account includes unsparing portraits of outsized characters in all their power, venality, charm, pettiness, and vindictiveness. As a book on the early days of the movies in Hollywood, this one is hard to beat.

©1981 Budd Schulberg (P)2013 Audible, Inc.

Length: 22 hrs and 50 mins
Available on Audible
Cover art for Writers in America

Writers in America

Summary

In Writers in America, scriptwriter and novelist Budd Schulberg shares memories and insights from his relationships with authors such as F. Scott Fitzgerald, John Steinbeck, Nathaneal West, and Sinclair Lewis, as well as brilliant writers who never attained the success and recognition they deserved, such as Thomas Heggen. Here are stories of 20th-century American literary giants, by a man who was their friend, peer, and confidant. For example, when the author was introduced to F. Scott Fitzgerald as a potential partner on a screenplay, Schulberg was surprised that the author was still alive. In Schulberg’s view, the pressures of success and the public’s merciless judgment had destroyed Fitzgerald’s talent early in his career - a situation that is arguably typical for many of America’s great literary geniuses.

©1972, 1983 Budd Schulberg (P)2013 Audible, Inc.

Length: 8 hrs and 22 mins
Available on Audible
Cover art for The Disenchanted

The Disenchanted

Summary

Considered by some to be Budd Schulberg's masterpiece, The Disenchanted tells the tragic story of Manley Halliday, a fabulously successful writer during the 1920s - a golden figure in a golden age - who by the late 1930s is forgotten by the literary establishment, living in Hollywood and writing for the film industry. Halliday is hired to work on a screenplay with a young writer in his twenties named Shep, who is desperate for success and idolizes Halliday. The two are sent to New York City, where a few drinks on the plane begin an epic disintegration on the part of Halliday due to the forces of alcoholism he is heroically fighting against and the powerful draw of memory and happier times. Based in part on a real-life and ill-fated writing assignment between the author and F. Scott Fitzgerald in 1939, Schulberg's audiobook is at its heart a masterful depiction of Manley Halliday - at times bitter, at others sympathetic and utterly sorrowful - and The Disenchanted stands as one of the most compelling and emotional evocations of generational disillusionment and fallen American stardom.

©1959 Budd Schulberg; copyright renewed in 1978 by Budd Schulberg; Introduction copyright 1983 Anthony Burgess (P)2013 Audible, Inc.

Length: 16 hrs and 11 mins
Available on Audible