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

Audio
Contented Cows Give Better Milk
Published in Audio Cassette by Williford Communications (2000-09-30)
Author: Bill Catlette
List price: $30.00
New price: $30.00

Average review score:

Strong Argument for an Employee-Friendly Workplace
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-23
How could Southwest Airlines achieve 23 consecutive years of record revenues and profits while other airlines were hemorrhaging red ink? How could GE produce refrigerator compressors at a cost substantially less than its foreign competitors, despite an unfavorable cost differential of $15 an hour? This fascinating book suggests an answer.

In 1996, authors Bill Catlette and Richard Hadden noticed that every single one of the top 15 companies listed in Fortune's "Most Admired Corporations" were also widely recognized as exceptional places to work! Hmmmm.... Catlette and Hadden conducted a study of such companies over a ten year period, with interesting results: Compared to their top competitors, the "Contented Cow" companies consistently enjoyed big financial gains in every important way--productivity, revenues, and growth.

The book is not without its flaws. For example, Wal-Mart is listed as one of the "Contented Cow" companies--a designation that Barbara Ehrenreich's Nickel and Dimed: On (Not) Getting By in America certainly puts the lie to. Still, CONTENTED COWS makes a strong case for the connection between sound human resource management and successful financial management--a connection far more direct than many managers think. So in my opinion this book is highly relevant for today's globalized-and-outsourced Corporate America.

Doni Tamblyn is author of Laugh and Learn: 95 Ways to Use Humor for More Effective Teaching and Training and The Big Book of Humorous Training Games (Big Book of Business Games Series)

Who's Milking Whom?
Helpful Votes: 13 out of 19 total.
Review Date: 2001-08-06
Don't be deterred by the title (initially I was) because it is appropriate to the authors' purposes in their essentially serious analysis of why only some companies sustain market supremacy and profitability...and why the others don't. Years ago, Jack Welch (then CEO of GE, one of the six companies featured in this book) explained why he admires entrepreneurial companies:

"For one, they communicate better. Without the din and prattle of bureaucracy, people listen as well as talk; and since there are fewer of them they generally know and understand each other. Second, small companies move faster. They know the penalties for hesitation in the marketplace. Third, in small companies, with fewer layers and less camouflage, the leaders show up very clearly on the screen. Their performance and its impact are clear to everyone. And, finally, smaller companies waste less. They spend less time in endless reviews and approvals and politics and paper drills. They have fewer people; therefore they can only do the important things. Their people are free to direct their energy and attention toward the marketplace rather than fighting bureaucracy."

These remarks are directly relevant to the key points which Catlette and Hadden make in this book. It is no coincidence that the most highly admired companies (i.e. those for whom employees of their competitor companies prefer to work) are also the most profitable as they dominant their respective marketplaces. They include FedEx, GE, Hewlett-Packard, Southwest Airlines, 3M, and Wal-Mart. Revealingly, each of these six was founded by entrepreneurs and each has since retained its entrepreneurial spirit. They are among the "Contented Cows" which have outgrown the "Common Cows" (e.g. Consolidated Freightways, General Motors, Texas Instruments, United Airlines, Xerox, and Sears) by a margin of roughly four to one. Catlette and Hadden explain why.

At one point in their book, they assert that "just as productive employees are not always satisfied, satisfied employees are not always productive." A "Contented Cow" company offers generous employee benefits, including those which address personal needs. For example, EDS has a car repair facility, bank, store, day care center, and dry cleaners on-site. However, a "Contented Cow" company also has leaders (at all levels) who recognize the importance to their employees of meaningful work to do, high standards to which everyone is held accountable (a "level playing field"), a clear sense of purpose and direction, feeling appreciated, and finally, meaningful opportunities for professional growth.

There is a "Summary" at the conclusion of each of the 14 chapters. These lists of key points will be invaluable to those who may wish to re-read the book (all or in part) as they attempt to formulate strategies and tactics to transform their own organization into a "Contented Cow." I hasten to add that these key points are relevant to ALL organizations regardless of their size or nature. "To become Contented Cows. companies must realize that just as they have choices, their employees (particularly the better, more skilled ones) do so. The new rules of the game have been set, and now it's only a matter of time before everyone learns how to play, and play it to their advantage." Quite true. Contented employees should never become complacent employees. I am among those who believe that great leaders inspire rather than motivate others: they activate in them what is, in fact, self-motivation. Davenport and Beck address this in The Attention Economy, correctly suggesting that there is a form of ADD in the business world which has serious, indeed profound implications for managers at the executive level.

Decision-makers in "Contented Cow" companies understand full well what will attract the attention of those for whom they are responsible. The challenge is to involve and then engage them productively and enthusiastically, indeed passionately in the given enterprise. Only if and when they are can the nature and extent of relationships with customers ensure sustainable profitability. Those who share my high regard for this book are urged to check out David Maister's Practice What You Preach. His key point, with which Catlette and Hadden obviously agree, is that individuals as well as organizations must have impeccable integrity. "Contented Cow" companies are nothing more and nothing less than human communities within which such values are constantly affirmed, not merely in word but in deed.

Business Bovines
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2001-04-02
We are using this wonderful book as a tool for understanding why companies are successful. As future investors and entrepreneurs this book will always be our guide. Want to know how and why a workforce is happy, get a Contented Cow. ZM Stevenson, 7th grader

Facts vs. "Flavor of the Month"
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2002-01-24
Having spent eleven years in one of the winning companies profiled in Contented Cows, I can personally vouch that the strategies and methods recommended by the authors will truly produce a world-class, highly-motivated workforce that will in turn produce exceptional customer service and financial results. Not occasionally, but every time! What is so impressive about the authors approach is that they first thouroughly researched the "people" practices of truly great companies, then show how those practices in turn naturally and inevitably lead to great bottom-line performance. Too many business authors first create a "neat" model or premise, then go out and find examples to validate what they hope will be the next management "magic pill," establishing correlations that in reality, if they exist at all, are quite tenuous. These guys have done their work the old fashioned way, and you can (and will) take their recommendations to the bank!

What dairy farmers already know!
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2001-04-02
This is not rocket science! No matter what our managerial "level", we all have a boss somewhere. Don't we perfom our best when we are treated as some who is valued, someone who matters? That's all this book is telling us, with facts and examples of successful companies, large and small, who "walk the talk"! Read this book and them commit yourself to leading your folks based on it's simple principles (which are not new, we just just needed the authors to write them down for us!)

Audio
Douglas Adams : The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy/the Restaurant at the End of the Universe/Life, the Universe and Everything/So Long, and Thanks For the Fish (unabridged - audio edition)
Published in Audio Cassette by Audio Literature (1994-01)
Author:
List price: $99.95

Average review score:

none stop excitement
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 1999-11-04
douglas adams shed real light on a subject few authors ever even dare to touch.he made me want to stop and take time to appreciate what i do have and feel lucky about what i have lost.he kept me on the edge of my seat the whole time

Nice acting
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 1999-08-18
Although I have not had the pleasure of buying these tapes, I have, in fact, heard them elsewhere on a digital recording. These tapes are sure to bring a smile and some intelligent entertainment.

The Hitchikers Guide to the Galaxy
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2000-03-21
I loved it! I was so funny! I wish I had a robot like Marvin.

Better when read aloud
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2002-04-22
Douglas Adams is funny in print, but his books really come to life when you listen to him read them aloud. He has a good sense of comic timing and often addes just the right split-second pause, or twists a word *just-so* and brings off a joke that might otherwise be missed.

We've had the 4-volume audio set for ten years and my kids have worn it out. I highly recommend getting this as a book on tape. (Better yet- bring them out on CD!)

My absolute favourite!
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 1999-02-04
Some people say that pure genius is very close to insanity. Either Douglas Adams is a true genius or he smoked some serious stuff when he wrote the Hitchhiker's Guide. "One must have chaos in oneself in order to give birth to a dancing star" - Nietzsche. For me, the Hitchhiker's guide is the best escape from reality anybody can ask for. Travelling with Arthur Dent through different worlds makes you see our own world in a different light. It is almost inconceivable that somebody could consider the Earth to be "Mostly Harmless"! It makes you wonder what sort of galaxies they travel to. A great read - don't miss out on this one.

Audio
Follow the Reader #25: Stage Fright on a Summer Night (Follow the Reader, 25)
Published in Audio Cassette by Listening Library (2003-04-22)
Author: MARY POPE OSBORNE
List price: $17.00

Average review score:

Bravo!Mary Pope Osborne Rocks!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-22
This was my first Magic Tree house book and I was really impressed. The story was well-done, and the concept of the tree house time machine reminded me of when I was a kid with a tree house in the woods with books strewn across its floor. In a way, many of us did or do have a tree house time machine to carry us away on wings of imagination, and I guess that's one of the reasons why these books are so popular. Osborne is a skillful writer, and I liked that she was realistic about the medieval culture that the siblings visited while still remaining a children's fantasy. Many young adult books set in medieval times shy away from the fact that civilization smelled horrible in those days and life was lived unhygienically by today's standards. A modern person entering the culture would be shocked by the smell, and most time-travel books ignore this, even the adult ones. But it adds to the suspension of disbelief that in this story, Jack and Annie notice such things.
I also learned things about Shakespeare and his era from this book, even though I've taken classes on the Bard in both highschool and college. Osborne includes facts in an unpatronizing way that really supplements the story. The extra facts listed in the back of the book are a great added bonus, and I'd be willing to bet that most kids read and remember them as well as the story.
I'll be ordering more of these great books next time my kid brings home the old Scholastic form for sure!

J. Lyon Layden
The Other Side of Yore

Fright on a Summer Night
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-16
Mary Pope Osborne has found a way to make it enjoyable for young people to read. There is a series of her books which will keep the student spell bound for the next chapter book.

This book was really, really, really good!!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-09-03
Stage Fright on a Summer Night happened in England, which is where I live. Jack and Annie got to see Shakespeare, which I like alot. They did one of my favorite shows, which is Midsummer Night's Dream. I really liked this book alot because it was the 15th one I read this summer. Magic Tree House books are great because they teach you about all different places, people and things. They are great adventures!

MY BOY LOVES READING
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-07
My 1st grader hates to put it down, he would rather read Magic Tree House books, than play video games. He even reads them to his class and explains the story for show and tell. In his kindergarten class the teacher would also let him read the Magic Tree House books out loud, not to give her a break, but to promote reading out loud. Great books!

There isn't a bad book in the series...both my boys love them
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-04
I could write the same review for every "Magic Tree House" book. We were introduced to the series when my oldest son was 5, and just starting to read. We got the #1 book (the Dinosaur one) on audio when he was learning to read independently. Then he started to read the book along with the audio. Now, at 7, he is bound and determined to read every book in the series, in order, of course. He just finished this one. The words are fairly simple, so the series is great for kids ready to tackle chapter books - they won't get frustrated by having too many words they cannot sound out. They are all ten chaper books, with a little larger type and good line/paragraph spacing, making it easy for kids to keep their place. They all tell a little slice of history in a very interesting way. Everyone in the family learns something everytime.

Audio
Frog and Toad All Year
Published in Hardcover by Amer School Pub (1987-01)
Author: Arnold Lobel
List price: $33.30
Used price: $8.99

Average review score:

Frog and Toad All year
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-17
Frog and Toad where helpachful to eatchather.There storys where creatav.I like Frog best.He teaches Toad alot of things.Frog and Toad spend all year together.

excellent
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-01
Frog and Toad All Year continues in the delightful and thoughtful tradition of Arnold Lobel's books. It has stories for each season and as always they are deceptively simple but actually full of love, truth, good values, and humour. My daughter's, 3 and 5, love them.

Arnold Lobel's books fan
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-30
Frog And Toad All Year


Hi, if you are a fan of Arnold Lobel's books, and you have not read Frog And Toad All Year, then you might want to read it.

If you like ice cream, then you should read page's 30-42. It is about Frog and Toad sitting by a pond Frog wishing for something sweet like ice cream. Toad thinks that is a great idea, so he gets some but before he can make it back it melts. They both go and get more ice cream. But instead of going back, they sit under a tree by the store. I like this chapter is because of the ice cream melting.

I liked this book because of the lessons like the lesson in chapter Ice Cream and the lesson is never travel with ice cream on a hot summer day.

Review by Giovanni P.S. 39
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-05-07
If you are scared of being alone, well, you might pick Frog and Toad All Year by Arnold Lobel. Find out if Toad will ever learn how to be alone.

In the beginning, Toad was so nervous to be alone in the sled. So Frog was behind him. There was a big bump and Frog fell out. Toad was still on the sled. And he went by himself all the way to the bottom. Toad learned that being alone is not that bad, and you don't have to be scared.

If you like this book you might pick others in the series. There is Frog and Toad are Friends and Days with Frog and Toad.

Arnold Lobel's fourth charming collection of Frog and Toad stories
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-28
I was at a wedding where the minister was a very good friend of both the bride and the groom. When it came to the part of the service where the minister imparts words of wisdom, he started to read the Frog and Toad story of "The Surprise." It is all about how one October when the leaves had fallen from the trees Frog decides to go to Toad's house to surprise his friend by raking up all the leaves on his lawn and Toad decides to go to Frog's house and do the same thing. The minister read the story, showing the surprised groom the pictures, and when he finished the story he explained how it was all about thinking of somebody else before you think of yourself. All I was thinking is that I have to get my hands on this story.

"The Surprise" is the fourth of the five stories that make up "Frog and Toad All Year," a Level 2 (Reading with help) "I Can Read Book." The stories begin and end with winter, starting off with "Down the Hill" as the two friends go sledding and end with "Christmas Eve." In between Toad finds that Spring is waiting around "The Corner" and buys some "Ice Cream" cones for he and his friend to enjoy, before it is time to rake the leaves. Lobel's stories have an exquisite simplicity that should really resonant with young readers. I know that frogs and toads are both amphibians, but I had to look up the biological differences: toads have brown skin that is dry and leathery because of convergent adaptation to drier climates and environments than frogs. So there is a reason why frogs are green and toads are brown. What that means to kids is not evidence of convergent adaptation, but rather than Frog and Toad are alike and yet different. In the end what is most important is that they are friends. Whether you think of yourself as a frog or a toad, you still need a friend and friendship is what these stories are all about.

"Frog and Toad All Year" was originally published in 1976, the fourth of Lobel's collections of stories about these characters. It follows "[[Frog and Toad Are Friends" (1970), "Frog and Toad Together" (1971), and comes before "Days with Frog and Toad." Each has five stories and if I think this one is the best it may just be because it was the first one I happened to read. If you have the soundtrack to "A Year with Frog and Toad," the musical adapted from Lobel's charming stories, you will find that three of these stories end up in Act II. "The Surprise" becomes "He'll Never Know," "Down the Hill" retains its title, and "Christmas Eve" becomes "Merry Almost Christmas." I mention all this because once your young reader reads one of these books they are going to want to read the rest, and when they find out that there are only four books you might need something else to keep them happy and the musical is out there to be enjoyed as well.

Audio
The Great Little Book of Afformations (Unabridged)
Published in Audio Download by audible.com ()
Author: Noah St. John
List price: $19.98

Average review score:

Afformations Work!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-30
I like this book. It is small and I keep it in the car or in my purse so I can take it out when I am stuck in traffic or in a waiting room. afformations work! The mind is a powerful thing. It can work for you or against you! The mind will automatically try and figure things out if you ask it a question and this is how these afformations work.

Afformations Turns The Old Affirmations Model On Its Head
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-08

Not sure what I expected before getting this little book. What I got was a simple (the genius of this is in its powerful simplicity) and more potent(in plausible theory)spin on the old affirmations model that has been with us for for generations.

Personally, doing a kabillion affirmations has delivered only scattered results over my thirty five years of using them. I am pleased that Noah was given this "affirmations on steroids" model by his inner resources that fateful day in the shower. I fear the setting of new intentions in our subconscious mind in this new way is so simple, most persons will fail to try it or stick with it because most of us suffer from a "if it ain't hard, it can't be good" mind set.

Too early in the game for me to report any results with afformations, but I fully intend to abandon doing affirmations that mostly serves to bring to the surface the very thing(s) I was doing affirmations to resolve or transform and adopt the afformation questioning process.

Lastly, dealing with the publisher and co-author of the book, Denise Berard was a good experience. Always answered my email in a timely fashion and shipped the book to me ASAP so I would get it in time to take with me on vacation.



Great things come in small packages
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-06
Love this book! Simple and effective. Better than affirmations. Bought extras for friends and family.

Awesome reading
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-25
Different from the self-help category I've used, it made sense, doesn't take long to read, and it's a great tool to use in order to achieve your goals.

The Great Little Book of Afformations
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-27
The Great Little Book of Afformations is like a breath of fresh air! I've been a student of visualizations and positive affirmations/thinking for many years and did not have as much success as this book provides! Positive affirmations usually take quite a long time to work because you have to change the negative belief system of your resistant subconscious. Whereas asking a question, the subconscious quickly works to find the answer! Try this experiment and test it for yourself - say an affirmation such as "I love my job (or whatever it is you would like to change)". Do you hear or feel that little voice in you saying, "yeah, right! That's not true!" or something along that line. Now, ask, "why do I love my job so much?" and you will not feel the resistance that was there with the affirmation! Keep asking the question and the subconscious will work to answer why you love your job so much! Noah St. John and Denise Berard are brilliant! Thank you for writing and sharing this wonderful little book that can quickly and easily change anyone's life for the better!

Audio
In A Dark House (Duncan Kincaid/Gemma James Novels)
Published in Audio Cassette by Sound Library (2004-10-31)
Author: Deborah Crombie
List price: $69.95
Used price: $42.44

Average review score:

Revenge that backfires
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-17
We came into this series from the back end. Then purchase preceding works to catch up on the story line as the characters were compelling enough to warrant further reading. Deborah Crombie's Inspector's Kincard and James is such a pair. Their personal lives intermingle with their cases. As readers, we root for each installment. Her stories are keepers as we weed our shelves to make room for new favorites.
With "In a Dark House," Ms. Crombie apply demonstrates her ability to rank with Martha Grimes in creating the stark and brutal side of human relations. Knowing how the personal issues evolve, we concentrated on the deftly plotted case and the steps taken to reconstruct the crime from almost non-existent clues in this great police procedural.
Nash Black, author of "Qualifying Laps" and "Sins of the Fathers."

Hard to imagine it could be any better
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-09-05
Deborah Crombie continues to deliver a series worth reading and rereading...this entry is no exception. Balancing jurisdictional disputes, personal life distractions, and a strong sense of historical detail, In a Dark House is another superb example of Crombie's sensitive portrayal of character, place and pitch-perfect plot. If you haven't read her work yet, get them all and be prepared to enter a world you won't want to leave.

Excellent mystery...
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-14
I thought that the two books previous to this in the Duncan Kincaid/Gemma James series were slight disappointments. Kincaid seemed relegated to a side character with Gemma taking the lead. IN A DARK HOUSE is an excellent mystery that brings the two back to equal ground and re-establishes them as one of the best partnerships in mystery fiction.

an entertaining but forgettable mystery novel..
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-28
'In a Dark House' is my first foray into the world of Duncan Kincaid/Gemma James and, mostly likely, it will be my last ... which is strange because the book has all the hallmarks of a good detective/mystery series. The author has obviously done her research on the story's setting (Southwark section of London) and criminal investigation procedures. And the story, an interwoven affair involving arson and murder, has surprising yet plausible plot twists. But why is "In a Dark House" so forgettable?

Well it strikes me that the characterizations, especially of our investigative duo of Duncan Kincaid and Gemma James, are just a bit too manufactured. It felt something out of EastEnders (a UK soap opera) rather than anything realistic. I also felt the author, who is obviously a talented writer, played too safe in her narrative. I wanted high drama, conflict, and the tangible feeling of suspense ... and I didn't find any of it.


Bottom line: a competent mystery perfect for the beach but certainly the sort of book you won't want to keep on your bookshelf afterwards.

good, better, best!
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2006-09-10
Deborah Crombie's James & Kincaid series just gets better and better. Here the setting is Southwark, not a usual venue for London-loving writers. As always, Crombie provides a physical map with her text, although her descriptions of place are so excellent that it's ironically unnecessary. The aged warehouses oozing toward oblivion in the Thames, the aggressive marks of gentrification (for an even better take on this hot topic, see _Kissed a Sad Goodbye_) mingle with the tang of traditional cheeses from the open market by the cathedral and the wacky/wonky lives of the fringe business people who flourish in spaces between the run-down and the rave restaurant review.

Crombie's characters are equally vivid, not only the series stars, but also the agoraphobic in her doll's house and the oddly honest self-made politician. The characters are given dead-on details that call them to mind for the reader, even after an absence of many chapters. Yet Crombie never falls into the grey-page plague of prose. She uses her omniscient narrator's voice and swaths of unforced dialogue to convey both news and nuance. Her skill at plotting really shines here, as she moves among three sets of self-absorbed characters and the police, never once making the reader feel that "now for something completely different" sense of dislocation.

This is a mystery worthy of a re-read - first class!

Audio
Into the Blue
Published in Audio Cassette by Blackstone Audiobooks (1995-02)
Author: Robert Goddard
List price: $85.95
New price: $85.84
Used price: $61.75

Average review score:

Into the Blue - KINDLE edition
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-06
I came across this novel quite by accident, having seen a Steven King review of one of Goddard's other novels. King praised Goddard so I decided to check out his work. I settled on "Into the Blue".

The book has been well reviewed by 20 others here and I will just add this: Goddard is quite literate, but never boorish. The story is intricate but well told. His characters are well developed and his telling of the tale is superb. It's a tale of mystery, murder and international intrigue. I will definitely read Goddard's other novels.

As to the Kindle edition of the book, it is superb. There was not a single typo or error of any kind. The text flowed smoothly and flawlessly.

I highly recommend the novel itself and I highly recommend the Kindle edition for you Kindle owners.

A HUNT FOR THE TRUTH THAT LEADS INTO THE BLUE
Helpful Votes: 24 out of 24 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-15
Goddard does it again! In this novel we meet Harry Barnett, a fiftish failure with a past. Harry's life is immersed in failure; its only positive aspect being Harrys unlikely friendship with Alan Dysart, an Undersecretary of State at the Ministry of Defense. While house sitting at Alan's villa in Greece, Harry is drawn into a perplexing and bizarre puzzle involving the disappearance of a beautiful, young houseguest.

These are only two of the several plot threads that textures this story and weaves it into compelling whole cloth. Goddard's writing invites you to walk in Harrys shoes as he attempts to utilize the one clue in his possession to solve a mystery whose pieces are scattered from Greece to England to Switzerland.

You may think you have the solution.....but don't be too sure!!

One of Robert Goddard's best
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-16
Harry Barnett lives the life of an Englishman on holiday on the Greek island of Rhodes where he is the care taker of the Villa ton Navarkhon belonging to his powerful friend Alan Dysart. He lives peacefully in the shadow of a past disgrace until Heather Mallender, a guest at the villa, disappears on a walking tour on Profitis Ilias. Harry becomes the number one suspect. While a Greek detective tries to catch him, and the British newspapers accuse him of murder, Harry's conscience is his worst enemy of all. What happened to young, beautiful Heather Mallender? Who took her-and why didn't Harry realize that something was amiss?
Suddenly Harry, a man steeped in failure, finds a purpose: retracing the strange, twisting route that led to Heather's vanishing. But the more he learns, the less he knows. Until Harry finds himself at the heart of a dangerous puzzle whose pieces are scattered everywhere: in the realm of British politics, in the beds of adulterous lovers, in the past, the present, and most of all, amid the secrets of an unsuspected killer....
A nicely designed plot with plenty of twists and turns and a sympathetic protagonist are the strengths of one of Mr Goddard's most entertaining adventure stories.
Paul Shelley reads "Into The Blue" for BBC Audiobooks. A very good performance indeed.

Addicted to Goddard
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-02
This was the first novel by Robert Goddard I read. After that, I was completely hooked. I rate Goddard as the best suspense novelist I've ever read. His plot twists are incredible; as a long-time reader, I'm used to being able to predict endings. It's depressing, really, how few can surprise me. Well, Goddard can! And his are true plot twists, all the information is planted early in the novel, but you can never quite see which little nugget of information will end up being the crucial one! Delightful! As for _Into the Blue_, I felt like I had visited Greece along with Harry. And Harry rates as one of the most likable characters in suspense fiction, too. Not all Goddard novels will hold the same interest, but they are all very well-plotted.

vivid, engrossing
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-09
You'll like Harry Barnett. He is in Greece, on the sunny sunny island of Rhodes, house-sitting there for a rich British member of parliament. Harry smokes, he drinks, he likes food, he likes women, especially the attractive young woman named Heather, who befriended him a few days ago. Heather is much younger than Harry's overweight middle-aged self.

Heather persuades Harry to take her on the half-hour drive up a nearby mountain for the view. They stop, get out of the car, and climb for a while. Heather decides to continue walking up to the summit. Somewhat winded, Harry says he'll sit and rest for a little. Harry waits and waits and waits, and no Heather. Heather does not return. Where is she? Where did she go? Was she waylaid? What happened? He finds her scarf, and loses it.

Harry goes to the police, who question him, begin their own meticulous search of the summit, dutifully find the scarf, but quickly begin to suspect himself, that he may have murdered her and done away with the body. She has disappeared Into the Blue.

The book involves Harry's search for the young woman and what happened to her. A most engrossing and vivid read. This is Goddard at his best. A few months ago, local bookstores did not have any of his novels; he wasn't even listed in Books in Print. Amazon did not have him. You had to go to Amazon.co.uk. Goddard writes wonderfully. We must all be pleased that his excellent novels are now easily available.

Audio
Is Paris Burning?
Published in Audio Cassette by Blackstone Audiobooks (1994-08)
Authors: Larry Collins and Dominique Lapierre
List price: $76.95
New price: $48.48

Average review score:

fascinating
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-02-01
This is a real jem. Well written, fast paced, and a must read for visitors to Paris.
Prepeare to be rivited!

Bob McCallan

Courage and Heroism
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-06-28
This is a very moving story of courage and heroism in the face of overwhelming odds. It is evident that the authors did alot of research on the story. It helps that they are both journalists by profession. One thing I would like to see is how the major players lives turned out since. Perhaps in the next edition. I bought the movie on DVD at the same time as this book. Reading the book adds so much to the movie watching experience as well.

One good man in time of war
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2005-06-22
German infantry general Dietrich von Choltitz has gone down in history as the "saviour of Paris." [See the New York Times on his death in 1971.] He was Hitler's military governor of Paris in 1944 and charged with leaving the advancing Allied forces with a city consisting of nothing but rubble. The core scene of the book is one in which a subordinate officer asks Choltitz---as they look out over the city by night--if he really can destroy what lies before them. In the end, he cannot.

Choltitz stalls; he contacts Resistance leaders and advance Allied troops; and he has the latter get a message through to Eisenhower with the plea to liberate Paris and delay his march into Germany. Of course it reads like tightly knit fiction---how could such a thing happen in real life? Except it did. But, then, it almost didn't...

LaPierre and Collins wrote as journalists, from the perspective of the man and woman on the street and the foot soldier. It is not a book about high military intelligence---and those who are wedded to that type may find "Paris" other than expected.

I haven't. It has continued to be a favorite. Choltitz risked not only his own life but that of his wife and child in Germany as he defied Hitler---whom he had finally recognized as being mad. The world needs more men like Choltitz, since the type of the charismatic leader capable of enthralling whole nations and leading them into illogical warfare still exists.

Entertaining but hardly brilliant
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2005-06-06
The liberation of Paris was a coup de grace for the Allies. Paris did not suffer the fate of Berlin or Stalingrad, to name a few cities, in becoming a contested battleground. Nor, as the book pointed out, did the German commander follow Hitler's orders to destroy the city's major monuments, bridges, and other sites. It is interesting to note his actions in view of other German officers' claims that they were "only following orders".

However, this book is written by two journalists rather than historians, so it does not have the academic research nor analytical insight that a serious work might have. Cornelius Ryan comes closer to the style of writing that might have made this a heavier book. This is understandably difficult, in some ways, given the relative sparcity of combat and drama; or so this book would suggest. Again, a better writer and researcher would find more material to include.

Some material that might be considered, for example, are Allied intelligence estimates, Axis intelligence estimates, operational orders, etc. It is not clear to me, for example, how the German commander could fail to execute Hitler's orders in August 1944 when the Gestapo and SS were omni-present, especially after the failed July plot on Hitler's life.

Moreover, good research might show to what extent the Allies knew of Hitler's intentions. The Allies had significant intelligence capabilities, not the least through Ultra. And if they knew of the plans to destroy large parts of Paris, why didn't they send in commandos and special forces to disarm any explosives? Indeed, the French themselves seemed to put a higher priority on erecting road blocks rather than disarming explosives.

This is an easy, enjoyable read; and one of the few on the subject in English. However, it's about time someone else updated and added value to this book.

No Prior Experience Needed
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2005-10-27
This book accomplishes what many "popular" history treatments do not, in that it leaves the reader much more enlightened on its topic (at least capable of actively contributing to any cocktail party conversation on the topic) without requiring the reader to have had a lot of background on the subject first. This is not a comprehensive, academic-style study of the German occupation and surrender of Paris; rather, it reads like a collection of anecdotes and vignettes (mixed with generally known facts about the events) that weave together to present a reasonably clear picture of what sounds like a fascinating time. You don't have to know a lot about the war, Paris, or military strategy to enjoy and benefit from this book. Another comment: This made the liberation of Paris sound like the world's greatest celebration, and leaves one feeling sorry to have missed it.

Audio
The Jazz Fly
Published in Audio CD by Tortuga Press (2003-06)
Author: Matthew W. Gollub
List price: $8.95

Average review score:

Everyone Stops to Listen!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-18
I first heard the cd that comes with this book when my 5th grade teacher played it in class. Everyone stopped what they were doing to listen even two kids who hardly ever stop talking. My teacher's a drummer and so am I so we LOVED the jazz beat. I read that another reviewer thought the beats were on 1 and 3. Anyone can hear the hi-hat clicking on beats 2 and 4. This is real jazz played by real jazz musicians! (I don't think that reviewer is a musician.) The thing I liked most about The Jazz Fly besides the music, was the illustrations and the way it introduce scat as a kind of language. It IS a language, ZA-BA-ZA-BOO-ZA-BA. Everyone can speak it their own way.

Hippest Book on Jazz for Kids
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-08
This book is solid! One of the best books on the market today about jazz for young kids. This is the story of a jazz fly who ultimately gigs on drums at a club following his encounters with several other creatures. The fly riffs off their contributions to create his own improvised session. Children love the rhyme scheme and enjoy scatting to the sounds of za ba za boo za ba zee za ro nee ... Read it aloud and children can't resist trying to repeat the syllables in song. The book is sold with a CD that compliments the text and informs the reader on how it should be read aloud rhythmically. I highly recommend this book to anyone who teaches young children or has a child of their own that they want to expose to jazz.

A Great Gift for any Musically Inclined Child
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-30
I've given several copies of this book/CD as gifts to my friend's children. It's always enthusiastically received.

Most conventional music education seems to ignore jazz, which is puzzling since it is our own music, not a European implant. Matthew Golub has found a way to make the learning process truly enjoyable. The rhythms are infectious; you find yourself singing along with the CD. And the cartoon-like text is fun for children of all ages. This is a book to own, if you have a musically inclined child.

Scat and buzz
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2005-05-03
Jazz can get elitest sometimes. Jazz musicians can narrowly define jazz as only rhythm change or blues. I love this book because it does not put jazz in a box - it gives life to jazz sounds. This book gives kids and those who read to kids a chance to just "dig it." There is no over-emphasizing the roots of jazz or making the rhythm too complicated to follow, it's just a fun introduction to different scat sounds that even a little kid can relate to and follow.

Cute, but it's more "jazz" than jazz.
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 16 total.
Review Date: 2004-11-17
This is a fun book. It's a cute story about a drummer-fly who's
trying to find his way to a gig, but gets lost. He gets help from
several animals along the way, and then later incorporates the
animal's sounds into his drum solo at the club.

However, as an introduction to jazz, it's more like an introduction
to "jazz". The musicians on the accompanying cd are very heavy
handed -- as if they are classical musicians who were handed
sheet music titled, "JAZZ!" The rhythm is all off. And the description
of the rhythms in the back of the book tell the whole story: the
author says the emphasized words fall on the 1 and the 3.
Why is it so hard for folks to hear the 2 and the 4? If there are
emphasized beats in jazz, it's those, not the 1 and the 3 -- which
are emphasized in western classical music.

I have a feeling this was not the fault of the musicians, but of some
producer who decided that jazz just isn't "jazzy" enough, and
directed the band to "jazz it up". It's an unfortunate slight to a
rich musical form and heritage.

So buy the book, but ignore the suggested emphasis in the
phrases. Sing, "za-BA-za BOO-za-BA zee-ZA ro-NEE!" That's
slightly better. Alternatively, make up your own scat words for
the fly's dialog -- afterall, jazz is all about improvization.

Audio
Lauren Bacall by Myself
Published in Audio Cassette by Audio Book Company (1986-09)
Author: Lauren Bacall
List price: $12.95
Used price: $8.93
Collectible price: $349.99

Average review score:

great look at a great dame
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-07
buy it used. good read for the beach. then see her movies.

Lauren Bacall: By Myself
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-07-27
I enjoyed Lauren Bacall's autobiography better than any autobiography I've ever read. Her style of writing is so personal, it's just a pleasure to read. It's written with heart, it's witty, poignant, and so honest. You'll also learn about the original "Rat Pack", and other celebrities. I can't say enough about this book!

Bacall holds nothing back here.
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-01-09
I read this book 20 years ago when it first came out and I couldn't put it down. The love story between her and Bogey was sweet, but tragic. His death was so detailed in this book that when my own father was dying I couldn't help but relate back to her description of Bogey's final hours. It made me sob for her. The mention of Hollywood in the 50's and all of the corrupt politicians trying to blackball performers is deplorable. I believe Ms. Bacall is our current Kate Hepburn - a no BS kind of Hollywood woman that is still well-respected and greatly admired.

Triumph and Tragedy.. A Life revealed.
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-11-21
I have never considered myself a Lauren Bacall fan but having recently rewatched To Have And Have Not, her film debut, I became intrigued about her and Bogart so I picked up this book after reading such positive reviews here at Amazon.

Well, was I surprised. First this is a very well written autobiography that demonstrates a keen intelligence and a reflectiveness on the past that is truly admirable. It is also incredibly honest and not just a recitation of a Hollywood star's accomplishments.

From Bacall's youth in New York where she tried desperately to find a place in the theater to her ultimate return to the stage as a star after spending years in California as Mrs. Bogart and raising a family, every stage of her life is well examined.

Bogart emerges as a truly good guy, not perfect but clearly they were a great match despite the obvious age difference.

Some of the episodes in her life with Bogart have the added quality of capturing a period in Hollywood and the film industry that is long gone. Bacall isn't and doesn't need to be a name dropper but so many famous characters pop in and out of her story that it is a virtual who's who of 1940's Hollywood.

What I initally picked up as a casual read turned into something much deeper. Lauren Bacall , who I knew little about before reading this is a woman who I came to really like as a result of this book.

Well written and well worth checking out for filmfans, fans of Bogart or anyone interested in acting and theater and the celebrity life of the 40's and 50's.

Bogie and Baby and more
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-11
Lauren Bacall's 1984 autobiography details her humble beginnings, how modeling led to acting, and her marriages and love affairs. She met Bogie on the set of her first movie when she was 19 and he was 43 and married. They fell in love at first sight and had a good marriage until his death. Her next husband was Jason Robards, Jr.; his drinking made for trouble from the start. The ups and downs of her movie and Broadway careers and her love of politics (and politicians) round out the book.

The woman who emerges from the pages is pretty much what I expected - strong, independent, and passionate - but also quite self-centered and spoiled. She's had a charmed life and makes no excuses for her shortcomings.

The book is full of famous tinseltown names and fabulous jet-set locations. She writes as if she were talking, often using ungrammatical half-sentences which slowed me down sometimes, but that is a minor quibble. I heartily recommend it to her fans.


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