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Audio Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

Audio
City of Thieves
Published in Audio Cassette by Blackstone Audiobooks, Inc. (2008-05-01)
Author: David Benioff
List price: $54.95
New price: $34.61

Average review score:

Phenominal
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-15
One of the better books I've read in a long time. On par with "Kite Runner", this novel also provides historical background. Like others, I read this in two sittings and was saddened that it had to end. A book that creates such vivid pictures as this does is a treasure. Enjoy!

A Writer in Full
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-15
The great storytellers like Singer, Twain, and O'Henry, always seemed to write invisibly. They served story so strongly, that it was easy to get lost in their powers. David Benioff serves us just such a feast in "City of Thieves". These days, it is so rare to read a book where the author is confident and skilled enough to step back from the craft of writing. He is clearly in control, but his deftness allows a great yarn to simply capture the reader. The richness of word is palpable, yet Benioff is so comfortable in his skin, that story never serves writer. The themes are so universal that this work transcends a war story, a coming of age story, and a love story. It is simply about the human spirit, and how in our most difficult moments perhaps we live our most fully.
There is no greater thrill for a reader, than to witness a writer "become". "City of Thieves" is that moment for David Benioff. Not only is it great literature, but it is one terrific "read".

An Interesting Mix
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-14
A good mix of humor and the terror of surviving in WW II Leningrad. Not a top-tier novel, but one that reads smoothly, moves quickly and holds one's interest.

Excellent!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-17
This book was really excellent. I enjoy reading WWII novels, and this one is one of the finest I've read. All the characters are well written and the dialogue between Lev and Kolya is witty and entertaining. The author does a great job describing the cold and the conditions in which Leningrad's residents lived during the siege, without making it a "bummer" of a story to read.

The premise--finding a dozen eggs--is a crazy one, but when you consider the conditions in which the characters are searching, it seems plausible. The people and sites they encounter along the way are believable and entertaining, just like the main characters.

I highly recommend this book. It was very, very good.

A Must Read
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-12
In City of Thieves David Benioff sets his characters off on an absurdist quest: to find a dozen eggs in a frozen, starving war zone. Along the way the readers are treated to a detailed treatise on the meaning of survival, friendship, and hope, all of it dressed up in a story that is deftly plotted and wonderfully described. This is a novel you don't want to miss.

Audio
Coming Into the Country
Published in Audio Cassette by Books on Tape (1976-01)
Author: John McPhee
List price: $80.00

Average review score:

McPhee on Alaska
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-05
My wife and I like to listen to a tape while we read the book. We are rereading this book that way. It is a classic and a good introduction to Alaska, where we have lived and worked and touristed.

First Class
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-23
Want to read about the realities of the 49th state????
Want to really learn something about this region???
Want to get good visuals????????
If NOT don't read this book!!!!!!!!!!!!

A Wonderful Relic
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-17
This book is a wonderful relic, the last plausible vision of a living American frontier. In the mid seventies, McPhee went to Alaska to do a few pieces for the New Yorker. He met a lot of trappers, prospectors, and "river people" who'd built moss-chinked cabins and whose individualism, gruff hospitality, and happiness he admired. McPhee made a plea for democratic access to Alaskan land. He argued that land far from roads should remain fair game for homesteaders in perpetuity.

It is odd to read an ode to Alaska's wild immensity at a time when islands are being evacuated in the Aleutians, polar bears are drowning, and the permafrost is melting. The question these days is not whether Americans can still choose to live in more or less untainted outback. The question is whether that outback will soon be transformed beyond recognition, not by oil drilling, but by climate change.

What Coming into the Country offers the twenty-first century is escapism and nostalgia. McPhee's account of the political squabbles over the location of Alaska's capital has lost its relevance, but the rest of the book still comes to life. We meet a mix of clannish Christians, proud native people, and prickly bootleggers in the small, dry town of Eagle. McPhee's tale of a man's survival in sub-zero weather after a plane crash constitutes a minor classic of its own.

The book reminds us how powerful the frontier fantasy remains in American psyches. Can it be harnessed as a metaphor? Can the dream of self-reliance on a private patch of woods help motivate us, indirectly, to cut carbon emissions? It has motivated us to go camping and conserve some wild lands even while ruining others. Still, I suspect that as the environmental movement shifts in response to global warming, we may have to jettison the frontier fantasy. It depends too much on a view of nature as more powerful than man. Whether or not we agree with Bill McKibben that we have arrived at the end of nature, we know that everything is responding to elevated temperatures. There is no untouched patch of land left in Alaska. The romance of a homestead sours when the flora and fauna are marching north past the log cabin, driven by coal and oil fires from all over the planet.

A trip around Alaska in the 70's
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-27
I traveled to Alaska in 2006 but lived there in the early 70's. Why I delayed so long in reading "Coming into the Country" I don't know, but John McPhee has taken me back to that earlier day. Both his character and place descriptions are wonderful and make me long for the cabins, the ice break-up, the dogs, the bush planes, and the 55 gallon drums. The Anchorage of today is much changed, but the bush is still there -- Thank God.

Gets better with each read!
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2006-10-03
We bought this book in Nome, Alaska on a visit there in 2001 (my brother owns a flying service there). I took my time reading it the first time. Coming into the Country is not a book to be read quickly, but, rather, one to be savored, taking time for the details to seep into the crevices of one's memory until they become part of one's knowledge base. Every page holds a vast amount of information that if read too quickly blurs to nothingness and is lost.

McPhee's descriptions of the land, its rivers and mountains, its challenges, its beauty, and its people are thorough and draw the reader into the pages of his book. It takes a certain kind of person to survive in the Alaskan bush. I, for one, am drawn to its splendor, its starkness, its fearsomeness, but am sure I don't have the right stuff to live there long term. The river people and others, who thrive in communities like Eagle and Central (even Fairbanks and Juneau), have remarkable stamina and a strong determination to live the lives they choose in their respective settings, all of which are breathtaking in their beauty. McPhee also writes of the tension between the races (Indian and white)and the human dynamic among community members (the good and the no-so-good)that always accompanies the sharing of space and resources.

Over the past five years, I've picked up CITC now and then to re-read parts of it. Most recently, I re-read the whole of Part III Coming into the Country. This is my favorite section because it focuses on the bush and its people, most particularly on Eagle, Alaska located on the Yukon River and just across the International Boundary from Canada's Yukon Territory. (Incidentally, the term "coming into the country" refers to the arrival of a person into the Alaskan bush with the intent of staying. I may move from Michigan to Ohio or New York or California, but, if I go to Alaska, they call it coming into the country. "Brad Snow and Lily Allen came into the country in 1973." "Joe Vogler came into the country in 1944." "John Borg came into the country in 1966" (and he's still there. Check out the Eagle site. Borg has worn many hats in Eagle and still sits on the board of the Eagle Historical Society and Museum. Borg's wife, Betty, is the board's treasurer).

The original copyright on this book is 1976, thirty years ago. The growth in technology since that time has allowed almost every municipality to have their own website. Eagle is no exception. [...]

Carolyn Rowe Hill

Audio
Dirty Martini (Jacqueline "Jack" Daniels)
Published in Audio CD by Brilliance Audio (2007-07-03)
Authors: J. A. Konrath and Dick Hill
List price: $87.25
New price: $56.48
Used price: $44.00

Average review score:

Does Not Disappoint
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-09
This series of books is great. Just wish they would come out closer together. I will continue to read them as they do get published. I like them as well as Sue Grafton stories.

A Breezy, Thrilling Read!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-29
The thing that J.A. Konrath does exceptionally well is move a story right along. And he does it with wit and style in 'Dirty Martini.' Danger lurks on nearly every page, as a maniac is poisoning grocery stores and restaurants in and around Chicago, which has the police department stumped.

Yet another in his 'Jack' Daniels mysteries series, 'Dirty Martini' is a short, quick read, reminiscent of Carl Hiaasen in many ways. Konrath, like I've said, knows how to get to the meat of the story and doesn't waste time with a great deal of internal monologue or explanation of character motives.

Which is great but can, at times, leave you wondering why they would do things that are so brash. It almost makes you wonder if it's to do the dreaded move-the-plot-along thing. I don't think it works to the detriment of the novel, on the whole, however. Most, if not all, of the characters, are brash and headstrong and so their actions fit well into the story.

Overall, Dirty Martini is a wonderfully entertaining genre novel.

A stiff shot of Jack
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-20
J.A. does it once again with Dirty Martini! I have yet to even finish the book and this is surely one of his best to date. Funny. Surprising. Vicious. Scary. I defy you to go out and eat at a chain buffet after getting halfway through this book.

Oh, and you could say I have so much faith in this book that I'm comfortable making an appearance in it. That's right, you'll find me on pages 108-114. I'm the police officer with the motor scooter who gets into an unfortunate (and stinky) accident.

Buy this! Buy this! Buy this!

A police thriller
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-04
Lieutenant Jacqueline "Jack" Daniels of the Chicago police is given command of a task force to deal with the Chemist, a deranged individual who is poisoning food in grocery stores and restaurants. He is demanding two million dollars from the city, but his real mission may be something else. Nobody is safe. Deaths seem to be occurring randomly, but are they really random.

The case winds forward to a conclusion as "Jack" searches for the identity of the killer and deals with personal attacks on herself. A family matter is added in along the way.

The novel is light reading and a somewhat quick read. It is 282 pages at 32 lines to a page, divided into a prologue, 47 short chapters, and an epilogue. Some zany characters are added in along the way, and some scenes are a bit far out, like the police helicopter at the end. Fans of Janet Evanovich's Stephanie Plum series will probably like this novel. Readers looking for more serious literature will probably find it a bit lightweight.

Best One Yet!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-19
Over the last year or so J.A. Konrath has become one of my favorite authors to read. He has a great way of making his characters stand out, and adds a great mix of humor, horror, and thrill to all his novels. I really enjoy reading the Jack Daniels series and have read all four so far, and look forward to reading all the future titles. This in my opinion is the best book of the series to date. I can definitely tell that JA is getting better at the writers craft the more work he produces. You will definitely want to check this title out! Happy Reading!

Audio
Dirty Martini (Jacqueline "Jack" Daniels)
Published in Audio CD by Brilliance Audio on CD (2007-07-03)
Author: J. A. Konrath
List price: $19.95
New price: $19.95

Average review score:

Does Not Disappoint
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-09
This series of books is great. Just wish they would come out closer together. I will continue to read them as they do get published. I like them as well as Sue Grafton stories.

A Breezy, Thrilling Read!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-29
The thing that J.A. Konrath does exceptionally well is move a story right along. And he does it with wit and style in 'Dirty Martini.' Danger lurks on nearly every page, as a maniac is poisoning grocery stores and restaurants in and around Chicago, which has the police department stumped.

Yet another in his 'Jack' Daniels mysteries series, 'Dirty Martini' is a short, quick read, reminiscent of Carl Hiaasen in many ways. Konrath, like I've said, knows how to get to the meat of the story and doesn't waste time with a great deal of internal monologue or explanation of character motives.

Which is great but can, at times, leave you wondering why they would do things that are so brash. It almost makes you wonder if it's to do the dreaded move-the-plot-along thing. I don't think it works to the detriment of the novel, on the whole, however. Most, if not all, of the characters, are brash and headstrong and so their actions fit well into the story.

Overall, Dirty Martini is a wonderfully entertaining genre novel.

A stiff shot of Jack
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-20
J.A. does it once again with Dirty Martini! I have yet to even finish the book and this is surely one of his best to date. Funny. Surprising. Vicious. Scary. I defy you to go out and eat at a chain buffet after getting halfway through this book.

Oh, and you could say I have so much faith in this book that I'm comfortable making an appearance in it. That's right, you'll find me on pages 108-114. I'm the police officer with the motor scooter who gets into an unfortunate (and stinky) accident.

Buy this! Buy this! Buy this!

A police thriller
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-04
Lieutenant Jacqueline "Jack" Daniels of the Chicago police is given command of a task force to deal with the Chemist, a deranged individual who is poisoning food in grocery stores and restaurants. He is demanding two million dollars from the city, but his real mission may be something else. Nobody is safe. Deaths seem to be occurring randomly, but are they really random.

The case winds forward to a conclusion as "Jack" searches for the identity of the killer and deals with personal attacks on herself. A family matter is added in along the way.

The novel is light reading and a somewhat quick read. It is 282 pages at 32 lines to a page, divided into a prologue, 47 short chapters, and an epilogue. Some zany characters are added in along the way, and some scenes are a bit far out, like the police helicopter at the end. Fans of Janet Evanovich's Stephanie Plum series will probably like this novel. Readers looking for more serious literature will probably find it a bit lightweight.

Best One Yet!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-19
Over the last year or so J.A. Konrath has become one of my favorite authors to read. He has a great way of making his characters stand out, and adds a great mix of humor, horror, and thrill to all his novels. I really enjoy reading the Jack Daniels series and have read all four so far, and look forward to reading all the future titles. This in my opinion is the best book of the series to date. I can definitely tell that JA is getting better at the writers craft the more work he produces. You will definitely want to check this title out! Happy Reading!

Audio
Faith in the Valley: Lessons for Women on the Journey to Peace
Published in Audio CD by Simon & Schuster Audio (2000-12-01)
Author:
List price: $20.00
New price: $19.50
Used price: $18.00

Average review score:

IN my PURSE...ALL the TIME!!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-20
In. My. Purse.

All. The. Time.

Seriously ---- This book is amazing. It has a permanent home in my purse... (it's not too small, not too big - just right) And I use it almost daily....or at least a few times per week. Sometimes I'm in a bad place and need a quick inspirational message, and sometimes I just feel like feeling better about something....Whatever the reason, you will LOVE THIS BOOK. I ordered 5 more after I got it to give to friends and family...that's how much I love it. I know when some open it they will think "ummm....ok..?" at first....but they end up thanking me later.

GET THIS BOOK you wont be sorry!

helps you get through what you're going through
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-08
this book has been so helpful at valuable to me so many tough times like i'm going through now. the messages are short but powerful. this book will certainly help you restore your peace. like another poster said mine is getting worn out.

Touches a Point
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2002-07-30
Each time my spirt is down, or I'm going through a situation, I turn to this book. I hold the book in my right hand by its spine, fan the pages with my left hand to stop at randum. The passages I've read, I have felt its deep spirtual feeling and I understand its meaning. Then I reflect on my situation and the passage fits. It helps me to understanding whats going on. It uplifts my spirit to deal with my situation. It give me insight to view my problem from a different angle. It also assures me that what I am currently going through will end. I will get through it. In my view, its a powerfull book. I have read several other books by Iyanla, even watched her talk show (sorry that went off the air), but like the bible, I keep Faith In The Valley near by.

GET THIS and GIVE THIS to your favorite women:)
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2004-07-06
This is my FAVORITE book by Iyanla Vanzant because of: It's size(small enough for your tiny purse), its lack of preach-i-ness and how the index is organized by subject. I feel its a synopsis of all the subjects covered in her other books. I also feel the book is applicable to women of ALL cultures. You can use it as a daily guide or you can use the index to find a subject for which you could use guidance.

A great book for daily reflection
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2002-10-22
I can not express how insightful and helpful this book is! It really makes you look deep into the reason(s) why you thought you needed a book of affirmations in the first place. This book is perfect for those "why me" and "I really can't take any more" moments when you feel like life, and everything in it, needs to give you a break. If you're a woman experiencing a lot of change in your life and it seems like you just can't handle another crisis (or is it a crisis afterall?), this is the book for you. I carry it in my purse!

Audio
Final Salute: A Story of Unfinished Lives
Published in Audio CD by Penguin Audio (2008-05-01)
Author: Jim Sheeler
List price: $29.95
New price: $16.00
Used price: $17.91

Average review score:

moving
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-18
This is a moving book about the soldiers who have died during the Iraq war and the families that they left behind. Sheeler's writing is excellent and he engages the reader from the first page. The book brings you closer to the families who have lost a son/husband/father and helps to tell their story. It also tells the story of the men who had to deliver the casualty notifications to each of the families following the fateful knock at the front door. This book stays with you long after you put it down and you can't help but be inspired by the courage described within its pages.

A Great American Hero
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-16
This book may be the single best I've ever read on the bond created among the youg men who fight for the United States.

Weather you are for or against our going into Iraq you will be so moved by Mr. Sheeler's fine portrayal of Marine Major Steven Beck, (now a Lt. Colonel).

Advising next of kin of the death of their warrior son (or occasionally daughter) is the most difficult assignment.

The word "closure" just does not apply since we all need to never forget those that have died for us.

Mr. Sheeler, who is young and probably a liberal, manages to accurately portray the entire process of the duties of the Marines as they "never leave their fellow Marine," until final interrment.

Great job!

Good book, better news story
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-11
Jim Sheeler's story in the Rocky Mountain News was far more affective than his book. The concentration that focused the story in the newspaper was entirely too diluted in the book. The images and the impact of the account of the return of Lt. Cathey to his wife were so well done as to make one to consider enlisting in the United States Marine Corps just because you knew they would take care to assure your family and the country that your sacrifice was meaningful. Mr. Sheeler's article should be required reading for every American.

While the stories of the other lost soldiers and marines were informative and added to the understanding of Major Steve Beck's goal of having every serviceman's story told in the clearest voice, no matter who that soldier was or where he came from, the story of Lt. Cathey was enough. If every one of the fallen were treated with that kind of respect, even in the public's eye, as at the airport on arrival, then we all would appreciate what price we are paying for the world in which we live today.

A human face on war
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-12
Please, please take the time to read this beautiful tribute to the fallen and their families and friends. We see the photos of soldiers and sailors on the evening news broadcasts every night. We momentarily feel bad and then life again intrudes along with the next TV program. This book should be required reading for every American...but especially for those in the Pentagon, the White House and Congress who send our military in harms way. These are not just numbers...these are people...sons, daughters, husbands, wives, fathers and mothers who are sorely missed. I was so impressed with Col. Beck. Why isn't he being asked to teach others how to do this so difficult job??? A beautiful book but you will have to read it in stages..it's too hard otherwise.

A Fitting Tribute
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-12
Whether you support the war in Iraq or not is immaterial. This book is about the people who pay the ultimate price. The parents and children, brothers and sisters, spouses, and soldiers who served next to those who have been killed in Iraq. Final Salute tells the stories of the deceased with great respect, but the thing that makes this book important is telling about the REAL casualties of war. The people left behind. From the soldiers who inform the families to the children who will never know their parents, it explains the human cost of war.

Audio
The Folk Keeper
Published in Audio Cassette by Listening Library (2000-08-22)
Author: Franny Billingsley
List price: $22.00
New price: $10.99
Used price: $3.76

Average review score:

A wonder!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-11
In this tale of tallow candles and turning tides, Corinna Stonewall, keeps her silences, knowing the power of them. In her skin ticks the beat of a timepiece, in her belly is a familiar emptiness from saving her food to feed "the folk", a band of magical beings, all teeth and mischief. As the folk keeper, a job Corinna secured without apprenticeship but by running off the real Corin and buying what knowledge she could get through eavesdropping at the market and doing other boys' chores.

Those days are gone though. Corinna has stopped traveling from home to home and has settled at her place in the cellar when a group of nobles arrives, looking for...Corinna. Though she cuts her hair each morning (it grows two inches every night) and eats little to nothing, she cannot always hide her gender. Even more interesting is the deathbed pact one of the visitors makes with her, having her promise to be a lady of his house. Instead, Corinna secures the place of folk keeper at the new estate, a job no one can take away from her.

The northern isles reveal things Corinna never knew about herself: she his hungry, eating fish right out of the waves, she grows soft in heart, becoming friends with the young man of the house and worst of all, she cannot control the wild folk of the north, who take their strength from stone and sea.

This is an unforgettable story full of imagination, betrayal, secrets and strength. In the darkest pit, Corinna discovers her true identity and with it, her power. The reader finds her own power and place along the way too. Not to be missed.

Amazing, fantastical world!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-06
This was a wonderfully written fantasy novel. I immediately fell in love with the main character and her world. I would highly recommend it to kids *and* adults!

The Folk Keeper
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-18
Interesting read. Certainly a different writing style. Difficult to hold my interest until late in the book. It shows great imagination. It is not a casual read.

Beware of the Grues
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-12-16
In the old Zork video games were these nasty critters called grues. If you went into the caverns without a candle you'd likely be eaten by one, but you never encountered them in the light and had no idea what they looked like. Somehow, it was a lot spookier that way.

I'm not saying that Billingsley based her Folk off the Zorkian grues, but both were likely inspired by the same old legends about ravenous teeth lurking in the unknowable darkness.

Instead of avoiding the Folk, like a video game adventurer would, fifteen-year-old Corrina Stonewall seeks them out. Armed only with her courage and a collection of dubious charms, Corrina spends long hours in the cellar "tending" the Folk--that is to say, keeping a journal of what the ravenous creatures eat and providing a bit of herself on the occasions that they're still hungry.

Corrina has to pass at being a boy in order to keep this plum of a work assignment, but at least it's better than scrubbing floors.

As we get to know Corrina through her Folk journal, we discover that this Folk Keeper's gender is not her only secret. She also has strange abilities and a secret past that she herself does not even guess at. The writing is powerful and poetic, and the ending is sure to please.

If you read this book, make sure you have a nightlight handy in your bedroom. Or else, you might be eaten by a grue.

The Perfect Book
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-13
I know there are a lot of books about girls pretending to be boys ( like the books by Tamora Pierce), but this one blows them all away, until only The Folk Keeper stands in all its glory on a podium made of gold.
Now, I did not think I would ever read a perfect fantasy book. Either the character is not fully developed or the writing style is boring/cheesy or it is bogged down with romance. After reading The Folk Keeper, I knew I had found the perfect book. Corinna is immediately a lovable character, a character you stand up for, that you know like the back of your hand. The plot is formed out of seemingly magical hands, spinning a tight web about you that you just can't break till the end. The end, I must tell you, is perfect, it is glorious, it gives you shivers on the back of your neck. And it's all because of the author's extraordinary writing style. Each word is perfectly placed, each scene completely vivid in your mind, until Corinna's world seems to be surrounding you on all sides -- until it is part of you, until you are part of it. I will say again: Do not stop with Tamora Pierce, thinking that no one could possibly write another good book about a girl disguised as a boy. Read The Folk Keeper(it is a million times better!!!). Enjoy!

Audio
The Gift of Peace: Personal Reflections
Published in Audio Cassette by Soundelux Audio Pub (1997-06)
Author: Joseph Cardinal Bernardin
List price: $17.95
New price: $47.50
Used price: $1.91

Average review score:

Thoroughly enjoyable!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-15
I found this to be a wonderful piece of work and have lent it to several friends who were diagnosed with cancer. Monsignoir Velo's reading was very delightful and I give him a lot of credit for being able to read his good friend's memoires.

A Gift of Peace
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-03
Beautifully written. As Cardinal Bernardin reflects on the last three years of his life, he shares the importance of embracing prayer, family, suffering, beauty, reconciliation, pain, and forgiveness in order to appreciate and completely enter into the fullness of peace.

For anyone who feels lost or alone in life or frustrated, angry, or scared at the thought of facing death, I recommend this book. Love and peace pour out of the pages as the author shares his life experiences, struggles, and genuine concern for others. He shared his love with countless people he encountered in his life, and his love continues to be shared after his death to any reader who has the opportunity to read this book.

The book is quite short (can easily be read in one sitting) and is incredibly focused and well organized. The book title, chapter titles, and introductory letter are handwritten by the author and really add genuineness to the book. Highly recommended.

Statement of a great man.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-28
Joseph Cardinal Bernardin made a very large impact on the City of Chicago. A simple, humble, very human being, he was greatly loved by all Chicagoans. At the end of his life, two huge events impacted his life, being falsely charged with sexual molestation by a young man, and learning that his life was soon to end as the victim of cancer. This book is a moving, eloquent statement of how he dealt with these and how his faith in God was tested and ultimately made rock solid. It is an inspiration to all who who are faced with burdens beyond their strength.

The perfect gift
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-07-08
I have purchased this book several times and recommended it on numerous other occasions. I bought it first for myself, and on the other occasions for friends, family members and acquaintances who were dealing with serious illness and end of life issues. The feedback received from each recipient has been very positive. Cardinal Bernardin leads the reader through his last days of life as he deals in a very graceful and touching way with terminal cancer, life's issues and personal spirituality. It's not long until the reader feels he or she is walking the journey with a close friend. Through his experinece, Cardinal Bernardin helps the reader deal with his or her own mortality in a peaceful way. He is still ministering to us. I highly recommend this book for all those dealing with illness, family members, ministers, and healthcare professionals. Incidently, You don't have to be Catholic to fully appreciate this book.

A PURE, GENTLE, SAINTLY VOICE WHICH LEFT US THIS EVERLASTING GIFT OF PEACE, FORGIVENESS AND RECONCILIATION WE NOW SO BADLY NEED
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-22
Those of us losing our eyesight and who love to read often turn to the audiobook. It is like having a wonderful text read to us at bedtime as we listen on levels spiritual and psychological unreached by silent reading. Please notice the audiobook of this present precious text of peace is read by a Monsignor, a close coworker of this blessed Cardinal.

The false accusations of abuse made against this great American Cardinal were quickly cleared up, and this slim volume insightfully and clearly records that process and the holy process of reconciliation with his false accuser, in a lesson for us of peace and reconciliation and of forgiveness of those who most completely destroy us. The Cardinal truly lives and demonstrates for us the promise we make each time we pray the Our Father. Forgive us in the same way that we forgive those who have trespassed against us. Forgive us with the same forgiveness we show others. Just as we must do unto others what we want others to do for us, JEsus also calls us actively to forgive others in the same way we want the Father to forgive us. This saintly and courageous Cardinal Forgave the disturbed young man who falsley accused him of abuse, and this book well displays the process, that we might also learn to forgive, in the Love of God, in our interpersonal relationships and national policies.

How many times must we forgive, o Lord. Not seven but seventy times seven.

We need in our national Catholic Church this voice now more than ever. Read this book and weep and become renewed in our Gospel mission to love and to forgive and to spread the good news to the poor and liberation to the captives. Sight to the Blind. In this time of unjust war and overwhelming violence, we need to hear this book.

Yet some Catholics for political reasons continue to condemn this saintly man (while silent on Cardinal Law), eagerly assuming the accusations true, or some association with others similarly accused, in order not to hear the exhortation by this great Cardinal that the right to life does not end at birth, but at a natural and God given death. The right to life must be supported at every point in our life and in every aspect of life. This great CArdinal elaborated for our edification the seamless garment explanation of the right to life.

Womb to tomb.

Please read this book.

I must rush to Mass now, and I bring this book with me to help my confused prayer. I thank God this great and holy and courageous Cardinal left us this Gift of Peace in the weeks before his untimely death. As head of the USCCB at the time of the crafting of the prophetic letter The Challenge of Peace, his courageous voice is needed now more than ever. Yet we have this, his abiding Gift of Peace, and that strong letter for peace. Take and read.

Pray for peace. Receive this Gift of Peace.

Audio
God Has a Dream Unabridged Audio
Published in Audio CD by Maui Media LLC (2004-03)
Author: Desmond Tutu
List price: $24.95
New price: $18.34
Used price: $18.57

Average review score:

Precious Promise
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-09
It's rare to come upon literature with a pulse and a heartbeat on every page. This is one of those precious gems that I will read once a year for the rest of my days.

God's blessing in print. Hope again. Hope anew. Hope for you. Buy it. Read it. Live it.

Thank you Archbishop TUTU

Bill Dahl
Author, Creator, Editor
The Porpoise Diving Life

Love, Charity and Devotion to Jesus Christ
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-14
What an eloquent writer! Bishop Tutu writes so beautifully, especially when he describes the Love of God. The concept of transfiguration is explained in a passage about the cross which truly brought me closer to my Lord. Dear Christian brothers and sisters: read this book and be prepared to have your prejudices and fears about other people shattered by the Love of God.

A terrific study course on reconciliation!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-14
I am leading a group study at St. John's Cathedral in Jacksonville, Florida using this beautiful book of meditations by Bishop Tutu. There are discussion question after each chapter.

perfect
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-11
The book came in in a short amount of time, and was in great condition.

This book should be required reading for every American
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-09
Desmond Tutu is a man of morals and conscience with the courage of his convictions. This book should be required reading for every school student. Better yet, invite him to talk -- he is outstanding!

Audio
The Grannyman (Unabridged)
Published in Audio Download by audible.com ()
Author: Judith Schachner
List price: $1.41
New price: $0.74

Average review score:

Kindergarten fave!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-05
A student of mine brought this to class to share. After reading it aloud to my K/1 class, I ordered one for the classroom and one for my aide, who fell in love with the story. A winner, for sure!

Really sweet book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-04
This is a great children's book that, I think, helps children develop empathy for other animals. Very sweet book.

Grannyman is a winner!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-29
Judy Schachner in her pre-Skippyjon Jones days, created a memorable, touching, loving picture of an old, old cat that gains new purpose when he's introduced to a spunky new Siamese kitten. I fell in love with the book when I borrowed it from my local library and had to get a copy of my own. When I read this to the kids at the school where I work, they fell in love with Simon as well. Schachner has deep insight into cats and kittens and it comes through beautifully in this must read book.

AW, TOO SWEET.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-26
Who'd a thunk the author of Skippy John Jones (psycho kitty) would also be a softy. I truly love this story since we have an ancient cat and a rambunctious kitten ourselves.

GREAT BOOK ON SEVEAL LEVELS - AN ABSOLUTE DELIGHT
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 13 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-19
The Grannyman, by Judith Byron Schachner is one of the better children's cat books out there. I was absolutely delighted and I must admit a bit surprised when I read this one. Schachner is the author of the Skippyjon Jones books, which are on my favorites list and I am not sure how she was able to transition from cat stories about a little kitten who is a complete mess, to one about a lovely old cat like Grannyman. First, I must admit to being able to relate to both the characters of Skippyjon and to Grannyman. When I was a kid, I could well have been a prototype for Skippyjon and now that I am old, I fit the profile of Grannyman pretty well.

Anyway, this is the story of a very old Siamese cat by the name of Simon. He is blind, deaf and his bones ache and creak. Simon has lived a long life with a very loving family and now spends most of his time in his calico chair looking out into space and dreaming of his life since he was a kitten. The book reviews this old cat's life from the time he was a kitten to the resent. Delightful pictures and wonderful text tell his story. Then, feeling absolutely useless in his dotage, one Tuesday night, Simon sticks his bony old legs in the air and breaths his last....or so he thinks!

Suddenly, plunk, his loving human family drop a new kitten right on Simon's belly. Simon suddenly has a new life. This new little member of the family becomes Simon's charge and Simon his teacher. This is absolutely wonderful.

While this is the story of an old cat, living in a loving home, it is actually the story of all of us, or how all of us should be anyway, as we grow older. What an excellent way to teach children of the aging process in a very gentle and happy way. It is also an excellent way to teach those of us well in to our dotage that life is not over until it is over.

Splendid and lively art work is found in this work and while not as wild as that found in Skippyjon books, it is quite appropriate for this particular story. The text is very well done. I, like another reviewer was hesitant at first about reading this one as I felt it was going to have a sad ending and I avoid books like that at all cost. I was very well pleased and I need not have feared. This work is a must for cat lovers of all ages in particular, animal lovers in general, and all good hearted people. Most importantly though, the kids all seem to love it. I should also not that this author wrote I know n Old Lady Who Swallowed a Pie which is a wonderful work also.


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