A Books
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Related Subjects: Affleck, Ben Allen, Woody Anderson, Gillian Aniston, Jennifer Arquette, David Aykroyd, Dan Adjani, Isabelle Allen, Karen Anderson, Kevin Andrews, Julie Ann-Margret Alley, Kirstie Astaire, Fred Applegate, Christina Azaria, Hank Astin, John Astin, Sean Andrews, Réal Autry, Gene Argento, Dario Ashton, Richard Allen, Joan Alda, Alan Alonso, Maria Conchita Atkinson, Rowan Alba, Jessica Adams, Joey Lauren Auberjonois, Rene Alaimo, Marc Ashton, Joseph Araki, Gregg Abbott and Costello Arbuckle, Fatty Andrews, Anthony Arness, James Aldred, Sophie Arquette, Patricia Andrews, Bethany Allen, Tim Agutter, Jenny Arquette, Rosanna Anthony, Lysette Ashley, Elizabeth Acker, Sharon Adams, Phil Adams, Stanley Appleby, Shiri Antonio, Lorenzo Andrews, Naveen Ashworth, Chris Akin, David Anderson, Loni Arkin, Alan Abraham, F. Murray Armstrong, Lee Angel, Vanessa Arden, Eve Alvarado, Trini Arthur, Jean Asner, Edward Acker, Amy Assante, Armand Anderson, Richard Dean Ana-Alicia Affleck, Casey
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Related Subjects: Affleck, Ben Allen, Woody Anderson, Gillian Aniston, Jennifer Arquette, David Aykroyd, Dan Adjani, Isabelle Allen, Karen Anderson, Kevin Andrews, Julie Ann-Margret Alley, Kirstie Astaire, Fred Applegate, Christina Azaria, Hank Astin, John Astin, Sean Andrews, Réal Autry, Gene Argento, Dario Ashton, Richard Allen, Joan Alda, Alan Alonso, Maria Conchita Atkinson, Rowan Alba, Jessica Adams, Joey Lauren Auberjonois, Rene Alaimo, Marc Ashton, Joseph Araki, Gregg Abbott and Costello Arbuckle, Fatty Andrews, Anthony Arness, James Aldred, Sophie Arquette, Patricia Andrews, Bethany Allen, Tim Agutter, Jenny Arquette, Rosanna Anthony, Lysette Ashley, Elizabeth Acker, Sharon Adams, Phil Adams, Stanley Appleby, Shiri Antonio, Lorenzo Andrews, Naveen Ashworth, Chris Akin, David Anderson, Loni Arkin, Alan Abraham, F. Murray Armstrong, Lee Angel, Vanessa Arden, Eve Alvarado, Trini Arthur, Jean Asner, Edward Acker, Amy Assante, Armand Anderson, Richard Dean Ana-Alicia Affleck, Casey
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A Books sorted by
Average customer review: high to low
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Never-ending Story (Roc)
Published in Paperback by RoC (1991-09-26)
List price:
New price: $34.50
Used price: $21.97
Used price: $21.97
Average review score: 

Childhood Favorite
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-13
Review Date: 2008-04-13
This book is a childhood favorite and even to this day at the age of 21 I absolutely love this book. The adventure and writing style is absolutely irresistible.
Neverending Story
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-19
Review Date: 2008-03-19
One thing I wanted to mention about this particular book is that although it alternates between worlds (earth and Fantasia) and might seem difficult for young readers to handle...the print color changes depending on which world Bastian is in. Makes it easier for kids to handle...not to mention we adults!
The Neverending Story
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-30
Review Date: 2008-01-30
I have been looking for this book for years and finally I have it!
Its a wonderful and enchanting story, you get to meet many charming characters along the way, discovering the fantasy world of Fantastica.
A beautifully written story tale for both young and old.
Its a wonderful and enchanting story, you get to meet many charming characters along the way, discovering the fantasy world of Fantastica.
A beautifully written story tale for both young and old.
Simply fantastic
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-02
Review Date: 2008-01-02
Don't ever watch the movie, this is a fantastic book which relies on your imagination! You won't want to put it down...
one of the greatest novels of the fantasy genre in its most beautiful form
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-06
Review Date: 2008-01-06
My first experience with this treasure was through the film as a young child. The film is full of beautiful special effects and weird images (the crumbling Southern Oracle, the beautiful Ivory Tower, the cute/creepy Falcor) that imprinted my brain. Years later, in high school, I discovered that this was actually a German book by the son of a surrealist artist. After devouring the book, I realized that making this into a film was pretty ridiculous. It's like "dancing about architecture". Don't get me wrong, I love the film. But saying the book is better is beside the point. The medium is supposed to be a book. And this book is one of the most clever I've ever read, one of my absolute favorites of the fantasy genre because it is a treatise on the fantasy genre, while also being just a great tale. You're reading The Neverending Story, at the same time, Bastian (the main character) is reading The Neverending Story. In that story, Atreyu is fighting the Nothing that is destroying Fantastica because the Childlike Empress needs a new name from the human world. Through his adventures and journey, Atreyu brings Bastian into their world (*sigh*, the power of reading) to give her her new name. Bastian, now a character in The Neverending Story, must journey and adventure in order to grow and change, and eventually return to his world. Bastian risks being lost and escaping, rather than returning to his distant, heartbroken widower father. Full of extraordinary characters and unbelievably imaginative things, The Neverending Story is a perfect illustration of the inter-dependency of the real human world and that of our fantasy. One needs the other, and yet, it is a delicate balance. Too little, and we are empty and corrupted and powerless. Too much, and we lose ourselves in greed and selfishness and self-denial. Needless to say, this is a beautiful, ingenious, and insanely clever tale of the yin and yang of reality and fantasy. It's everything that I deeply love about the genre.
The hardcover version of the book is not only a beautiful presentation, but it includes the differently colored text and illustrations at the beginning of each chapter.
The hardcover version of the book is not only a beautiful presentation, but it includes the differently colored text and illustrations at the beginning of each chapter.

Boy's Life
Published in Mass Market Paperback by Pocket (1992-05-01)
List price: $7.99
New price: $3.00
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $10.00
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $10.00
Average review score: 

When can we expect "A Man's Life?"
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-08
Review Date: 2008-05-08
First: this should be required reading for every young person in America. McCammon paints a perfect picture of life in the deep south during the 60's. The principles young Corey learns are as true today as they were then. Second: This book represents real life. Sure Corey's lessons came from more dramatic circumstances, but who among us didn't learn the same life lessons in our own fashion. This is one of the finest stories of innocence lost through experience examples I can ever remember reading. Thank you Mr. McCammon! This book IS what a great book should be: a compelling story that encourages us, the reader, an opportunity to drift away to a magic place.
Wow!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-08
Review Date: 2008-05-08
If I was given the choice to read one book before I died, this would be the book. A true classic and should be required reading in every English class across America.
Boy's Life=Pure Magical Stroytelling.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-21
Review Date: 2008-04-21
I've always thought a good author creates pure magic with a great story. Robert McCammon does just that with Boy's Life. There's mystery, suspense, humor, horror, spooky things, and just about every sentence will command that you keep reading well past the time you usually go to bed. This author is very gifted and as this was my intro to him, I plan on reading everything else by McCammon I can lay my hands on. Ignore the 'poor man's Stephen King' tags that were placed on him and discover another author who will take you far into a magical realm when you start reading the first page. You won't regret it. Brilliant book!
Has bumped my all time favorite book down one notch!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-30
Review Date: 2008-03-30
For many years, when asked what my favorite book was when I was a boy, I have replied, "Where the Red Fern Grows by Wilson Rawls". I still love that book very much. Boys Life has taken over the #1 spot. Though the intended audience is not the same, the sense of storytelling and flavor is similar. Boy's Life is a cross between the aforementioned book, Summer of the Monkeys (also by Rawls) and several other books that I have read that evoke an authentic voice and time that harkens to an easier and more "innocent" time. Boy's Life is so full of life, death and mystery that it made me stay up too late on too many a night. I was both relieved and saddened to finish it. I love a book that makes you sense for several days that something is missing. That you are forgetting something, have left something behind, only to be reminded that you have left a world apart from your own and yearn to return.
I want to know what Cory is doing now. I want to know what Cory did after this period of time in his life. I want to know if the triceratops, the Lady, Rocket and other characters lived on in some way, other than the fertile imagination of this and other readers. I will wonder for a long time about my friends in Boy's Life as I have often wondered how by good friends Little Ann and Old Dan are doing in Dog Heaven.
Now, I must say this to you, the reader of this review. IF you haven't read this book and it has been recommended to you, as it was for me, and you still haven't picked it up, PLEASE DO. You will not regret it. You will be captured the way I and the hundreds of reviewers before me were. IT SIMPLY IS A MASTERPIECE! Thank you Mr. McCammon for giving me so many hours of true pleasure!
I want to know what Cory is doing now. I want to know what Cory did after this period of time in his life. I want to know if the triceratops, the Lady, Rocket and other characters lived on in some way, other than the fertile imagination of this and other readers. I will wonder for a long time about my friends in Boy's Life as I have often wondered how by good friends Little Ann and Old Dan are doing in Dog Heaven.
Now, I must say this to you, the reader of this review. IF you haven't read this book and it has been recommended to you, as it was for me, and you still haven't picked it up, PLEASE DO. You will not regret it. You will be captured the way I and the hundreds of reviewers before me were. IT SIMPLY IS A MASTERPIECE! Thank you Mr. McCammon for giving me so many hours of true pleasure!
My all-time favorite
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-01
Review Date: 2008-03-01
Whenever I have occasion to recommend for another serious reader a good book, Boy's Life is the first title to spring from my lips, almost without my knowing I've said it. Even though there's a thirty-year gulf between protagonist Cory's childhood and my own, I recognize every word of it. I remember so well the apple-flavored days of summer, the adventures both real and imagined, the off-beat characters of small towns, and the one weird girl in class nobody liked. McCammon drops the word "magic" quite often throughout the novel, and if I had to use one word to describe the cause of my deep-rooted love for it, I would indeed call it, simply, magical.

Crown Duel: The Crown & Court Duet, Book I
Published in Hardcover by Jane Yolen Books (1997-04-01)
List price: $17.00
New price: $11.16
Used price: $0.04
Collectible price: $17.00
Used price: $0.04
Collectible price: $17.00
Average review score: 

Awful
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-28
Review Date: 2007-06-28
This book was so bad that I actually keep it on the shelf so that I wont forget the author's name or the writing style. Nothing seemed coherent in this novel and the dialogue was awful.
AWESOME!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-06-24
Review Date: 2005-06-24
I loved this book, even my mom liked it! We liked it so much we had to read the next one. This duet is awesome. I would recommend this book and its sequel to anyone interested in books about a girl who sets out to save her country and in doing so finds something totally different.- OOPS!!- I said to much, you will have to read it to get more info!!!
great fantasy book
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-07-26
Review Date: 2005-07-26
A great fantasy story of Meliara. She swears to her father on his deathbed that she will reclaim the kingdom, which was once her mothers, and she will reclaim it from the greedy King Galdran. This leads her village to a war against the king and will threaten the lives of the people and their homes. This is a great book for fantasy lovers and people who love stories about court life.
Pretty good YA fantasy
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-11-14
Review Date: 2005-11-14
I have to agree with the editorial reviews above; this book is somewhat predictable and the plot is a bit trite (when a male & a female character bicker throughout the whole book, we all know what's going to happen at the end, right?). However, the characters are well-developed and the world is richly detailed, with a unique culture and customs.
As a 20-year-old English major and a connoisseur of young adult lit (it being the only section of the university library I can find my way around in), I'd recommend it for fans of YA girl-oriented fantasy. Anyone who likes Tamora Pierce, Donna Jo Napoli, Gail Carson Levine, or Robin McKinley should be satisfied with this series.
While this book has more action, I preferred the sequel, Court Duel. It's a bit hard to find unless you know what you're looking for - it's very hard to find on its own, but can be found bundled with Crown Duel in one volume, confusingly titled Crown Duel. It appears Amazon has finally cleverly changed it to "Crown Duel (Originally Published as the Two Books Crown Duel and Court Duel) (Firebird) (Paperback)," which clarifies things. It provides a satisfying conclusion to the story.
As a 20-year-old English major and a connoisseur of young adult lit (it being the only section of the university library I can find my way around in), I'd recommend it for fans of YA girl-oriented fantasy. Anyone who likes Tamora Pierce, Donna Jo Napoli, Gail Carson Levine, or Robin McKinley should be satisfied with this series.
While this book has more action, I preferred the sequel, Court Duel. It's a bit hard to find unless you know what you're looking for - it's very hard to find on its own, but can be found bundled with Crown Duel in one volume, confusingly titled Crown Duel. It appears Amazon has finally cleverly changed it to "Crown Duel (Originally Published as the Two Books Crown Duel and Court Duel) (Firebird) (Paperback)," which clarifies things. It provides a satisfying conclusion to the story.
Really Good!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-07-20
Review Date: 2005-07-20
I love this book. Mel is strong, but believable. You can really relate with her even if you don't always think she is doing the right thing. I could not put this book down, and i did not want to!It is very well written and by the end of the book you feel like you have known Mel your whole life. As if you were there when all these things happened. Great,Great,Great Book!
Court Duel the sequel, is just as good!
Court Duel the sequel, is just as good!

The Last of the Really Great Whangdoodles
Published in Hardcover by Julie Andrews Collection (1996-12-16)
List price: $16.99
New price: $6.99
Used price: $5.00
Collectible price: $16.99
Used price: $5.00
Collectible price: $16.99
Average review score: 

My daughter LOVES this book!!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-22
Review Date: 2008-02-22
Last year, my daughter read this book and came home saying it was the best book she had ever read. She recommended it to me. At first, I was a little bit skeptical. I thought it was just a little fairytale for children, but I was wrong. My daughter began learning and sharing new and healthy lessons with me that she had learned from the book. Now, I can't wait to read it.
Excellent read!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-20
Review Date: 2008-02-20
I read this to my 7yo son and 8yo daughter. I enjoyed it as much as they did!
Great fantasy read
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-08
Review Date: 2008-01-08
This book is a great display of imagination and creativity...but my dictionary does not have any entry for "whangoodle"...then again, it also does not have an entry for "disestablishmentarianism". My 10-yr old daughter & I love reading this, and I've noticed my 14-year old son listening in as well!
The Last of the really Great Whangdoodles 30th Anniversary Edition
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-14
Review Date: 2007-09-14
I brought this book for my god daughter and i wanted to read it first so she was able to come to me to talk about the book. It is a wonderfully well written book that allows the reader to open their minds to pure imagination, where nothing can stand in your way. Julie Andrews Edwards has produced an amazing book that i would recommend to any age group! Even us big children at heart. The use of words is very different from what you see now a days and she hasn't tried to 'dumb it down' for children it talks to them as though they were they stood in front of the professor learning his teachings. The book was brilliant fun to read and i can not wait till my god daughter starts to read it.
A delightful tale
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-17
Review Date: 2007-08-17
I would say that I'm very much like Professor Savant. I need a dose of the imagination of a child to help me along the way. The Last of the Really Great Whangdoodles was the kind of book I would have loved reading as a child. I would have read it over and over again savoring each nuance of color and flavor that this book has to offer. As an adult, I feel that there are some lessons in the story that seem a bit forced but the concept that the imagination is a powerful tool is a good reminder for kids of all ages.
It is the story of the three Potter children who meet Professor Savant at the zoo one day and then later again on Halloween night. He tells them about a mysterious creature called the Whangdoodle. They're not sure whether to believe him or not. But he offers to train them so they can go to Whangdoodleland and meet the last of the Whangdoodles.
The professor teaches the children how to perceive and imagine more deeply than they had before. Lindy, the youngest, learns most quickly. But soon they all put on their 'scrappy caps' and take several journeys to this land of imagination. They find many wonders and a few dangers along the way.
I was worried that the book would falter in the end. But it was quite an interesting way of wrapping things up. The message voices many of the questions we have about life now even though the book was written more than 30 years ago.
This is a well-written book full of wonderful detail and an engrossing story. I recommend this for any child and more than a few adults who need to revisit the imagination of their childhood.
It is the story of the three Potter children who meet Professor Savant at the zoo one day and then later again on Halloween night. He tells them about a mysterious creature called the Whangdoodle. They're not sure whether to believe him or not. But he offers to train them so they can go to Whangdoodleland and meet the last of the Whangdoodles.
The professor teaches the children how to perceive and imagine more deeply than they had before. Lindy, the youngest, learns most quickly. But soon they all put on their 'scrappy caps' and take several journeys to this land of imagination. They find many wonders and a few dangers along the way.
I was worried that the book would falter in the end. But it was quite an interesting way of wrapping things up. The message voices many of the questions we have about life now even though the book was written more than 30 years ago.
This is a well-written book full of wonderful detail and an engrossing story. I recommend this for any child and more than a few adults who need to revisit the imagination of their childhood.

The Repair the World
Published in Digital by Amazon (2007-12-24)
List price: $0.00
New price: $0.00
Average review score: 

Adds a new perspective
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-19
Review Date: 2008-02-19
This excerpt does a great job revealing the realities of war. It provides the perspective of the ones on the front line and does a wonderful job displaying the uncertainties that go along with warfare; however, it was a bit hard to follow at times, and it seemed a little "jumpy". Overall, great job!
A Question Of Decency
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-27
Review Date: 2008-02-27
I was an undergrad theatre major at the University of Iowa when Peter was a grad playwriting student there. His plays were entertaining, often darkly funny, grounded in a strong sense of narrative, and most of all intensely focused on ethical concerns... in particular the fundamental question of how to be a decent person when faced with untenable choices. It seems appropriate that he would turn his attention to the current Iraq war, which unfortunately provides many ways to explore that question on both a macro and micro scale.
I've only read the excerpt provided online here, but I was very engaged by the story and curious to find out where the war would take these fictional people. I found myself hoping that the character of Ryder finds a way to retain his humanity in a dehumanizing situation. More than that, I hope that Peter's work gets the chance to reach the wider audience it deserves.
I've only read the excerpt provided online here, but I was very engaged by the story and curious to find out where the war would take these fictional people. I found myself hoping that the character of Ryder finds a way to retain his humanity in a dehumanizing situation. More than that, I hope that Peter's work gets the chance to reach the wider audience it deserves.
Situational Deconstruction
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-22
Review Date: 2008-02-22
I want to read more, to find out where Peter Ullian's deconstruction of situational ethics comes to rest, or if it does at all. Regarding comments about gratuitous sex and violence in Ullian's narrative: first of all, there isn't really any sex. The male characters think about sex constantly, which is what most men do in real life. As for the violence - exploding arms, dead kids - that sort of insanity happens every day in Iraq. It happened every day in Vietnam. I'm sure it's happening all over the world as we speak... and plenty of times there aren't even any American troops involved.
Okay, here's my armchair review:
With incongruous detachment, Ullian depicts an existence where "real" is a trainwreck of people and processes that don't belong together, and "ideal" is a faraway abstraction that propels the world like an invisible puppetmaster. Soldiers allegedly sent to free the Iraqi people from a tyrant train to do so by watching porn and listening to death-metal (apparently, that's typical in reality - during the Gulf War, Slayer was used as a soundtrack for Marine training maneuvers in Saudi Arabia). The only in-depth discussion among the characters is about country music. Cross-cultural understanding? Forget it. Would any of these guys bother to learn Arabic or read about the Five Pillars of Islam? I don't think so. The people they've been told they're freeing are "impassive, inscrutable" (from narrative). In a situation requiring immediate action, the unit leader lets his mind wander into random associations and memories, to the point where the "embedded" female journalist accompanying the unit has to render medical attention to another soldier.
I want to know where Ullian is going with this. The absurdity of existence? The ultimate subjectivity of moral/ethical frameworks? The pointlessness of nationalism? Is there a political agenda? Is the message here that everyone just bad and clueless? I'm curious now.
My first of two beefs with Ullian's prose is that his characters' dialogue is a little too Pynchon-esque: affected overemphasis and a deliberate lack of contractions. My second beef is that the characters' memories are less, well, personal than they could be. If Ullian is trying to convey his views on politics and society through the recollections of characters, and sometimes it's a little stilted.
Overall, I was intrigued and I want to read the rest of it.
Okay, here's my armchair review:
With incongruous detachment, Ullian depicts an existence where "real" is a trainwreck of people and processes that don't belong together, and "ideal" is a faraway abstraction that propels the world like an invisible puppetmaster. Soldiers allegedly sent to free the Iraqi people from a tyrant train to do so by watching porn and listening to death-metal (apparently, that's typical in reality - during the Gulf War, Slayer was used as a soundtrack for Marine training maneuvers in Saudi Arabia). The only in-depth discussion among the characters is about country music. Cross-cultural understanding? Forget it. Would any of these guys bother to learn Arabic or read about the Five Pillars of Islam? I don't think so. The people they've been told they're freeing are "impassive, inscrutable" (from narrative). In a situation requiring immediate action, the unit leader lets his mind wander into random associations and memories, to the point where the "embedded" female journalist accompanying the unit has to render medical attention to another soldier.
I want to know where Ullian is going with this. The absurdity of existence? The ultimate subjectivity of moral/ethical frameworks? The pointlessness of nationalism? Is there a political agenda? Is the message here that everyone just bad and clueless? I'm curious now.
My first of two beefs with Ullian's prose is that his characters' dialogue is a little too Pynchon-esque: affected overemphasis and a deliberate lack of contractions. My second beef is that the characters' memories are less, well, personal than they could be. If Ullian is trying to convey his views on politics and society through the recollections of characters, and sometimes it's a little stilted.
Overall, I was intrigued and I want to read the rest of it.
Joseph Heller meets Garth Ennis
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-19
Review Date: 2008-02-19
Ullian has a talent for balancing the absurd and the tragic, to grimly wry effect. His cast of warriors, juiced on action movies, porn and video games, would seem like some out-there postmodern creation if they weren't so obviously reflective of the America they came from. Instead, the author has created a narrative of soldiers as products of the American culture they have come to spread. Ullian's portrait is ambivalent-- there's no denying the dark edge of his soldiers' sex-and-violence media mikvah in preparation for battle, but the men themselves remain reflective, human and sympathetic.
Would Work Better on the Big Screen
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-18
Review Date: 2008-02-18
To Repair the World by P. Ullian opens with an argument of over what qualifies as 'real' country music. This debate introduces two of a host of characters, several with 'classics' names. To have a Ulysses, a Cassandra and Achilles on one mission together screams doom.
The settings, while as realistic as I can imagine them being for never having been in a war zone, fought for validation with the comical nature of the dialog. This wasn't funny ha-ha stuff, but really bordered on forced soudning. It read, in fact, very much like the interplays of Joseph Heller's 'Catch-22'. If the author means to update that story for contemporary times, more than 'insert Iraq detail here' needs to occur. The vibe of 'Catch-22' may be timeless, but it was a commentary and reflection on the times it was produced not just a darkly-humorous accounting of the absurdities of war life.
As I read through the excerpt it felt as if the author was inconsistent with portraying this story as serious or satirized. When I felt it leaning one way, it'd go back the other. This really hit home when Luther's arm was blown off and Curtis struggles with whether to stop the vehicle to tie a tourniquet. Curtis then goes on this drawn out political and moral thought line, while Luther is bleeding out. This was just too awkward given the uncommitted tone to that point.
Overall, though the author clearly is a talented writer, his attempt at putting his own modern stamp on a familiar tale just didn't sit right with me.
The settings, while as realistic as I can imagine them being for never having been in a war zone, fought for validation with the comical nature of the dialog. This wasn't funny ha-ha stuff, but really bordered on forced soudning. It read, in fact, very much like the interplays of Joseph Heller's 'Catch-22'. If the author means to update that story for contemporary times, more than 'insert Iraq detail here' needs to occur. The vibe of 'Catch-22' may be timeless, but it was a commentary and reflection on the times it was produced not just a darkly-humorous accounting of the absurdities of war life.
As I read through the excerpt it felt as if the author was inconsistent with portraying this story as serious or satirized. When I felt it leaning one way, it'd go back the other. This really hit home when Luther's arm was blown off and Curtis struggles with whether to stop the vehicle to tie a tourniquet. Curtis then goes on this drawn out political and moral thought line, while Luther is bleeding out. This was just too awkward given the uncommitted tone to that point.
Overall, though the author clearly is a talented writer, his attempt at putting his own modern stamp on a familiar tale just didn't sit right with me.

Mark of the Lion : A Voice in the Wind, An Echo in the Darkness, As Sure As the Dawn (Vol 1-3)
Published in Paperback by Tyndale House Publishers (1998-09-01)
List price: $35.99
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Used price: $21.94
Collectible price: $45.00
Used price: $21.94
Collectible price: $45.00
Average review score: 

Love, Love, Love!!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-09
Review Date: 2008-05-09
I could probably write a book about this series of books! In fact, my book club just finished talking about the second one last night! These are great Christian fiction literature. Rivers ties the characters together so well, and really does NOT make the characters too "fictionalized". You can really see the struggles that they go through, it could be real.
I really love all three of the books... probably my favorite Francine Rivers books.
I really love all three of the books... probably my favorite Francine Rivers books.
Mark of the Lion
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-25
Review Date: 2008-04-25
This series is amazing! Could not put them down. No one would be disappointed with this read, for sure! Francine Rivers takes a fictional story and makes it tug at your own Faith! Reminds you of God's amazing Grace and Love. Worth the read!
These 3 Books are a MUST read (and MUST own-for me!)
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-18
Review Date: 2008-04-18
This is one of the best Christian Trilogies I have ever read!!!
In order, the books are:
(1)"A Voice in the Wind"
(2)"An Echo in the Darkness"
(3)"As Sure As The Dawn"
If you are looking into these books for the 1st time, my advice is... stop everything and go get them right now! I ABSOLUTELY INHALED all 3 books in record time. (I'm talking, so intense that I was up till 3 & 4:00 in the morning more than a few times!) I can not say enough about how great these book are. I am so sad that I am finished with them! All three books are so well written and I feel like I know the characters personally.
I feel like I can read about Hadassah to no end. I LOVED her character development and you can truly FEEL her love for Marcus and you can FEEL her pain through her trials. I borrowed these books from my friend, and I now plan to go out and buy a set for me to own, re-read & share. They were just too good not to pass around and recommend to others. In the last book, I was surprised that I became just as attached to the relationship of Atretes and Rizpah as I did with Hadassah and Marcus.
Francine Rivers is now one of my new favorite authors, and I am on my way to read Redeeming Love, which I have heard SO MUCH ABOUT!
God's Blessings to Miss Rivers- I look forward to many more of her books!
In order, the books are:
(1)"A Voice in the Wind"
(2)"An Echo in the Darkness"
(3)"As Sure As The Dawn"
If you are looking into these books for the 1st time, my advice is... stop everything and go get them right now! I ABSOLUTELY INHALED all 3 books in record time. (I'm talking, so intense that I was up till 3 & 4:00 in the morning more than a few times!) I can not say enough about how great these book are. I am so sad that I am finished with them! All three books are so well written and I feel like I know the characters personally.
I feel like I can read about Hadassah to no end. I LOVED her character development and you can truly FEEL her love for Marcus and you can FEEL her pain through her trials. I borrowed these books from my friend, and I now plan to go out and buy a set for me to own, re-read & share. They were just too good not to pass around and recommend to others. In the last book, I was surprised that I became just as attached to the relationship of Atretes and Rizpah as I did with Hadassah and Marcus.
Francine Rivers is now one of my new favorite authors, and I am on my way to read Redeeming Love, which I have heard SO MUCH ABOUT!
God's Blessings to Miss Rivers- I look forward to many more of her books!
Speechless
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-23
Review Date: 2008-03-23
A friend gave me the first book "A Voice in the Wind" and I literally could not put it down once I started. I finished it in about 2 days. While reading that one,I knew I HAD to have the remaining two books. These are the absolute best I have EVER read, and I've read hundreds of books. The characters are ones that will stay with you a lifetime, they are so real. I never thought that a fiction book would impact my Christian walk the way these books have.
These books are a must read for anyone.
These books are a must read for anyone.
Best series I've ever read
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-22
Review Date: 2008-03-22
The first time I read this series, I stayed up all night to finish the first and second books. In the second book I cried until my eyes were puffy and my throat was sore the next morning. The second time I read the series, I discovered so many things I had missed, cried until my eyes were puffy and my throat was sore the next morning. The third time I read the series, I skipped straight to my favorite parts and cried some more. If I had another boy, I'd name him after Marcus...
Even though Hadassah is so close to perfection, her character is an inspiration to me.
Even though Hadassah is so close to perfection, her character is an inspiration to me.

Der Prophet
Published in Paperback by Patmos Verlag GmbH & Co KG (2001-09-01)
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Average review score: 

A pedestal on life
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-06
Review Date: 2008-05-06
I picked up this book later in life after many family hardships befell me. Rather than looking to religion or self help books an honest and humble friend read versus from this book to me. Having loved poetry and free verse most of my life I was struck with vivid beauty in the simplicity of the words that graced my ears that night. Kahlil Gibran in his day was renowned for his prose and how he carried it with the same simplicity that met my ear that night. In his finest work he left an indelible mark on my soul, not just for his words but how his words and their importance can change to the reader throughout their life. Regardless of religion, social preference or upbringing his words have the ability to stir the soul and to channel emotion to a strong degree. Once a gift for my late mother in her dying days it remains not a pillar of strength but a pedestal on life. Not a road map but a way to look at your surroundings when the path before you seems clouded. It gives you not direction but focuses on finding a clearer path. I've read several of Gibran's other works since then but this stands the test of time. If I could ever call any writing a masterpiece, this would be it, for I still read it and still draw from it every time I pick it up.
Timeless
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-03
Review Date: 2008-05-03
I've just recently been introduced to Khalil Gibran's work, and I am very thankful for it! His words are profound and thought-provoking. I find myself reading his lines over and over -- there's more to ponder everytime. Not only is his writing beautiful, but truly meaningful.
A Classic
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-01
Review Date: 2008-05-01
One of the most profound books I have ever read. You can learn alot about love, life and relationships after reading this book. Very insightful.
The Prophet and then SOME!!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-29
Review Date: 2008-03-29
When I first started writing poetry at age 12 or 13, I was encouraged to read other poets. Something I refused to do because I thought it might influence, "My Style"...
:)
OK, so I was hard headed... I later was introduced by a Brother In Law to Kahlil Gibran and it was like finding a kindred soul. I now totally encourage any one that want's to excel in poetry to read the greats. And you won't find many of the caliber of this man!!! His words sing from the page both in his poetry and in his short stories! I love "Martyr's To Man" (It's been a while but some of the words are still singed in my brain... And I think it truly speaks of the time we are living in now more than ever... From memory so not verbatim...
Are you a soldier?
Who must forsake wife and children?
And go fourth into the fields of battle?
For the sake of greed
Which your leaders miscall duty?
Than you are a martyr to man!
There's more but the gist of what I am saying is if you love poetry and you haven't read any Kahlil Gibran you're missing out on one of the greatest poets to ever live!
And if you write poetry, I firmly believe Kahlil Gibran should be recquired reading!!!
Not that you will feel you have to plod your way through it...
You too, will fall in love with his immense gifts!!!
Sincerely,
And best wishes to all
Chase von
Your Chance to Hear The Last Panther Speak
:)
OK, so I was hard headed... I later was introduced by a Brother In Law to Kahlil Gibran and it was like finding a kindred soul. I now totally encourage any one that want's to excel in poetry to read the greats. And you won't find many of the caliber of this man!!! His words sing from the page both in his poetry and in his short stories! I love "Martyr's To Man" (It's been a while but some of the words are still singed in my brain... And I think it truly speaks of the time we are living in now more than ever... From memory so not verbatim...
Are you a soldier?
Who must forsake wife and children?
And go fourth into the fields of battle?
For the sake of greed
Which your leaders miscall duty?
Than you are a martyr to man!
There's more but the gist of what I am saying is if you love poetry and you haven't read any Kahlil Gibran you're missing out on one of the greatest poets to ever live!
And if you write poetry, I firmly believe Kahlil Gibran should be recquired reading!!!
Not that you will feel you have to plod your way through it...
You too, will fall in love with his immense gifts!!!
Sincerely,
And best wishes to all
Chase von
Your Chance to Hear The Last Panther Speak
Eloquent
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-21
Review Date: 2008-03-21
I read this about a year ago and can't recall a great deal of the book. From what I do recall it was like a poem all the way through. While the writing was beautiful, I found it ambiguous and befuddled with meaning that I could not identify with. When Gibran speaks of God, I cannot identify because I have since abandoned those philosophies. It is thus difficult to revisit them in this book. I have the feeling a may have missed something great about this book. Indeed, I pulled wisdom from parts, but rather than go back and read it again, for now, perhaps I will move on to another of the many books out there that are enlightening and worth reading. Someday, I would like to read this again and dig deeper.

Les Miserables
Published in Kindle Edition by Fictionwise Classic (2003-09-25)
List price: $3.39
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Average review score: 

One of my favorite stories!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-25
Review Date: 2008-04-25
There is no doubt that Hugo can be quite long winded in telling this story, but it is worth every second. A classic story of human suffering, kindness, cruelty and redemption.
A Contrarian View of Les Mis
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-20
Review Date: 2008-03-20
Oh,I think that those of you who swoon over this novel, for reasons that I fail to comprehend completely , will not take my comments kindly.
While I grant that Les Miserables holds a reader's attention in spite of himself, I should point out the glaring defects in this work. No, it is not the lengthy digressions. David Foster Wallace is so much more irritating in that regard. Victor Yugo's magnum octopus simply is littered with characters that are pure ideals of good, evil, misfortune, piety, etc. One cannot travel more than fifty pages without encountering some anectdote that has no resemblance to anything that ever happened on earth, outside of a moralist's mind.
Give me the near-hack writing of Balzac or even the long-windedness of Dickens with his sloppy sentimentality at times ruining his comedy. Huge-Go simply took his banal messages to humankind too seriously.
Come to think of it, maybe his pre-modern sociology mixed with romance is what so appeals to the progressive wing of modern romanticists. That and a good score and grandioso staging.
While I grant that Les Miserables holds a reader's attention in spite of himself, I should point out the glaring defects in this work. No, it is not the lengthy digressions. David Foster Wallace is so much more irritating in that regard. Victor Yugo's magnum octopus simply is littered with characters that are pure ideals of good, evil, misfortune, piety, etc. One cannot travel more than fifty pages without encountering some anectdote that has no resemblance to anything that ever happened on earth, outside of a moralist's mind.
Give me the near-hack writing of Balzac or even the long-windedness of Dickens with his sloppy sentimentality at times ruining his comedy. Huge-Go simply took his banal messages to humankind too seriously.
Come to think of it, maybe his pre-modern sociology mixed with romance is what so appeals to the progressive wing of modern romanticists. That and a good score and grandioso staging.
The Most Beautiful
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-04
Review Date: 2008-03-04
Simply the most beautiful work of art I have ever been exposed to...anything beyond the brevity of this statement is an attempt in vain to "review" genius.
Every Christian Should Read This Book
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-01
Review Date: 2008-05-01
I have read this incredible work of art several times and never cease to be amazed by the enormous impact it has on me. The first time I ever read it, I cried off and on for about three days, I was so moved. Victor Hugo tapped into something profound when he penned this story. It is long, yes, but I find that every little rabbit trail Hugo goes down has a very important point. I can just read the first chapter and feel humbled and challenged by his description of the way the bishop lived his life for God. It is better than most Christian devotionals I have read. Most people think of this as a somber story and indeed in many ways it is, but I am always surprised how much humor is infused into it as well. I have said it to many people and I say it here: every Christian should read this book. It is a perfect fictional example of how Christ can change anyone and of how believers should relate to their fellow man. I have even given it as a wedding present, considering it an excellent guide to living selflessly for another person. I challenge people to read it and see if they are not in some way changed.
What it means to be truly human
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-03
Review Date: 2008-03-03
A masterpiece of a novel, complete with numerous detailed sidetrips to the battlefields of Waterloo, a strict convent, the Bastille, and even the sewer system of Paris. Victor Hugo uses his hero's resolution of many conflicts between conscience and reason to show what it means to be truly human.
The characters are immortal, the plot is second to none, and the writing is absolutely superb.
I wish there would be six stars to give.
The characters are immortal, the plot is second to none, and the writing is absolutely superb.
I wish there would be six stars to give.

The Care & Keeping of You: The Body Book for Girls (American Girl Library)
Published in Paperback by American Girl (1998-09)
List price: $9.95
New price: $5.53
Used price: $2.86
Collectible price: $10.00
Used price: $2.86
Collectible price: $10.00
Average review score: 

Great Book!!!!!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-06
Review Date: 2008-05-06
This is a great book! It touches on important subjects in a gentle yet informative manner. My daughter is soon to be 10 and we are reading it together. I wish I had this book when I was growing up!!
My Step Daughter Loved it!!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-28
Review Date: 2008-04-28
I got this book along with the two feelings book from American Girl for my 12 years old step daughter and she loved it...Her mom really hasn't sat down with her to discuss her body changes and the importance of how things will not happen over night...we found it helpful to let her read it first and then come to us with any questions...she found the book especially helpful for her upcoming braces and how to care for them, she takes it every where with her...THANKS AMERICAN GIRL this book is great!!!
Thank goodness for this book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-23
Review Date: 2008-04-23
The Care & Keeping of You: The Body Book for Girls (American Girl Library)
The best guide I have ever seen in helping explain the facts of life! Made having "the talk" much easier. Excellent examples of problems girls face. Does not just explain the changes in the body, but changes in perception, peer pressure, even what size of pads to buy. Covers all the changes they go through, hair, shaving, diet, self perception, and sleep. My daughter has read it actively for the last three nights, which has opened the door to a great conversation on all the ways her body and life will change with puberty. I wish my mom had it!
The best guide I have ever seen in helping explain the facts of life! Made having "the talk" much easier. Excellent examples of problems girls face. Does not just explain the changes in the body, but changes in perception, peer pressure, even what size of pads to buy. Covers all the changes they go through, hair, shaving, diet, self perception, and sleep. My daughter has read it actively for the last three nights, which has opened the door to a great conversation on all the ways her body and life will change with puberty. I wish my mom had it!
PARENT'S LITTLE HELPER
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-23
Review Date: 2008-04-23
THIS BOOK IS TRULY A PARENT'S LITTLE HELPER! I GAVE IT TO MY 10 YEAR OLD TO HELP EXPLAIN HER PERIOD.(YES, SHES ONLY 10. AND YES SHE JUST GOT HER PERIOD!)
THAT BOOK HAD AN ANSWER FOR EVERY QUESTION MY CHILD ASKED.
THANK YOU VERY MUCH, "AMERICAN GIRL!" YOU ARE A LIFE SAVER!!
THAT BOOK HAD AN ANSWER FOR EVERY QUESTION MY CHILD ASKED.
THANK YOU VERY MUCH, "AMERICAN GIRL!" YOU ARE A LIFE SAVER!!
Great conversation starter!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-19
Review Date: 2008-04-19
Initially picked this up at the library to introduce my 8 1/2 year old daughter to the subject of her developing body. She read it cover to cover several times and we needed to buy it because she wanted to be able to use it as a reference book! This was the easiest way to introduce the subject and initiated hours of conversation between us. Highly recommended!

Seductive Poison
Published in Hardcover by Doubleday (1998-11-03)
List price: $23.95
New price: $76.83
Used price: $4.24
Collectible price: $23.95
Used price: $4.24
Collectible price: $23.95
Average review score: 

Insider's view of the rise and fall of the Peoples Temple
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-28
Review Date: 2008-04-28
This book is an insider's view of the rise and fall of the Peoples Temple. Ms. Layton was one of Jim's most trusted aides and as such knows more about what went on in the temple than the average member. She describes how she got sucked into the cult, her activities after being sucked in, what life was like in Jonestown, and how she came to see the truth and escape. At the end of the book she gives updates on many of the people who were significant to her, whether they survived or died, and, if they survived, how.
I give it 4 out of 5 stars only because I read the book Escape right before this book and it was a more riveting read.
The book is autobiographical in nature. Ms. Layton talks about all the things she was involved with in the Peoples Temple - the illegal bank accounts, her first time being raped by Jim Jones, how and when Jonestown went from a paradise to hell on earth (when Jones came, it completely changed), and the continuous brainwashing from when she first came to the temple to when she finally escaped. The escape itself completely absorbed me and it was hard to put the book down. Ms. Layton also gives insights into Jim Jones, his charisma, and his character.
I was only 7 1/2 years old when Jonestown occurred and the book helped fill in so many details that I had never known. I recommend this book for anyone who wants to know more about Jim Jones and the Peoples Temple.
I give it 4 out of 5 stars only because I read the book Escape right before this book and it was a more riveting read.
The book is autobiographical in nature. Ms. Layton talks about all the things she was involved with in the Peoples Temple - the illegal bank accounts, her first time being raped by Jim Jones, how and when Jonestown went from a paradise to hell on earth (when Jones came, it completely changed), and the continuous brainwashing from when she first came to the temple to when she finally escaped. The escape itself completely absorbed me and it was hard to put the book down. Ms. Layton also gives insights into Jim Jones, his charisma, and his character.
I was only 7 1/2 years old when Jonestown occurred and the book helped fill in so many details that I had never known. I recommend this book for anyone who wants to know more about Jim Jones and the Peoples Temple.
Very compelling and insightful
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-25
Review Date: 2008-04-25
Something I always have a hard time grasping is: how does a person get sucked into something so clearly unhealthy, and what keeps them in? It's so hard to understand because it's such a gradual process, and many of us feel we are perhaps too "smart" to get hooked into any kind of cult. In reality, it takes months or years for cult brainwashing to reach levels where it really does feel impossible to escape, and even highly intelligent people are caught up - this is not easily conveyed in ANY medium, be it a 2 hour documentary or a 300 page book.
But Layton takes a really good shot at it, and does an excellent job. The first two chapters of the book are somewhat slow and give background information on Deborah before she even finds out about the Temple. They describe her troubled childhood, and help understand how she could view the Church as a positive force in her life. Then, in great detail, she recounts how Jones continually manipulated, re-divided and controlled all the people within his organization. You really feel the stress and fear of the people trapped within. She makes it easy to understand everyone's plight.
Some things really struck me about the book. One thing I liked was Layton's strong desire to tell the truth. I felt it shine through in her measured descriptions of events, honest retelling of her less-than-perfect childhood, and disinclination to "play the victim" or sensationalize her experiences. I also liked that she didn't attempt to provide historical information on events she didn't experience herself - like the Church years before she joined, or the actual events of Nov. 18 in Jonestown where she wasn't present.
I also really appreciated the fact that this factual memoir was still interwoven with a good message. The parallels Deborah drew between her experiences and those of her Grandparents in WW2 concentration camps were interesting. I really liked the way she pointed out the choice she makes in what to share with her daughter, compared with what (and how) her mother shared with her: it helps to reassure that Deborah's experiences were not in vain.
For anyone interested in the history and facts behind life in the People's Temple, this is an important read. It's the most detailed account I've yet heard, and the story itself is quite riveting. I do not know how well it would serve someone who knew nothing about Jonestown whatsoever, but as a supplement to e.g. a documentary (or some other very historical look at the People's Temple), this makes an excellent read.
But Layton takes a really good shot at it, and does an excellent job. The first two chapters of the book are somewhat slow and give background information on Deborah before she even finds out about the Temple. They describe her troubled childhood, and help understand how she could view the Church as a positive force in her life. Then, in great detail, she recounts how Jones continually manipulated, re-divided and controlled all the people within his organization. You really feel the stress and fear of the people trapped within. She makes it easy to understand everyone's plight.
Some things really struck me about the book. One thing I liked was Layton's strong desire to tell the truth. I felt it shine through in her measured descriptions of events, honest retelling of her less-than-perfect childhood, and disinclination to "play the victim" or sensationalize her experiences. I also liked that she didn't attempt to provide historical information on events she didn't experience herself - like the Church years before she joined, or the actual events of Nov. 18 in Jonestown where she wasn't present.
I also really appreciated the fact that this factual memoir was still interwoven with a good message. The parallels Deborah drew between her experiences and those of her Grandparents in WW2 concentration camps were interesting. I really liked the way she pointed out the choice she makes in what to share with her daughter, compared with what (and how) her mother shared with her: it helps to reassure that Deborah's experiences were not in vain.
For anyone interested in the history and facts behind life in the People's Temple, this is an important read. It's the most detailed account I've yet heard, and the story itself is quite riveting. I do not know how well it would serve someone who knew nothing about Jonestown whatsoever, but as a supplement to e.g. a documentary (or some other very historical look at the People's Temple), this makes an excellent read.
The Inner Workings of a Cult Life and Death in Jonestown
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-23
Review Date: 2008-04-23
I have never read a memoir that was this honest or this terrifying. Deborah Layton was a member of the People's Temple for 7 years. She was one of Jim Jones trusted few. This is a true "insider account" of what happened.
Ms Layton has the rare ability of pulling the reader into the story. It allows you to feel and understand the working of a cult from the inside out.. You see the path that led her to Jones and the bravery it took for her to leave. As a confused and rebellious adolescent Layton was attracted to Jim Jones' religious movement for its radical teachings on inter racialism and social justice. As a member of his inner circle, she saw things that made her secretly question him, though she remained faithful to his socialist vision. Layton paints a graphic picture of how Jones exercised confusing emotional, sexual and physical manipulation and abuse. This mixture of love, fear and a sense of purpose, the sense of working for a greater good, kept her there for seven years and kept others there until the end.
In December 1977 Layton (along with her Mother who had also joined) traveled to the new headquarters in Jonestown, Guyana. Upon arrival they discover that the residents were enduring a living hell. The conditions were appalling. Constant middle of the night suicide drills followed by 16 hour work days in unbearable heat. People are near starvation. There is a constant fear of being labeled a "traitor" and the punishment that would follow.
With no money, passport or way of contacting anyone on the outside Layton finds a way to escape. It's heart pounding and terrifying. My hands were shaking as each new obstacle unfolded itself. She returns to the United States with dire warnings, trying to get help for her sick Mother who is still there. (Layton's Mother died of cancer a few days before the "mass suicide". She died with no pain killers. They were confiscated upon arrival in Jonestown and given to Jones) No one believes the people inside are being held hostage by the infamous Jones and his growing madness.
Only months after her escape, the Jonestown Mass Suicide/Murder occurred. Deborah Layton was one of the few who escaped. Her story is told in an honest and insightful way. It's a riveting, nail biting, heart pounding, stay up all night book that reads like a novel.
Ms Layton has the rare ability of pulling the reader into the story. It allows you to feel and understand the working of a cult from the inside out.. You see the path that led her to Jones and the bravery it took for her to leave. As a confused and rebellious adolescent Layton was attracted to Jim Jones' religious movement for its radical teachings on inter racialism and social justice. As a member of his inner circle, she saw things that made her secretly question him, though she remained faithful to his socialist vision. Layton paints a graphic picture of how Jones exercised confusing emotional, sexual and physical manipulation and abuse. This mixture of love, fear and a sense of purpose, the sense of working for a greater good, kept her there for seven years and kept others there until the end.
In December 1977 Layton (along with her Mother who had also joined) traveled to the new headquarters in Jonestown, Guyana. Upon arrival they discover that the residents were enduring a living hell. The conditions were appalling. Constant middle of the night suicide drills followed by 16 hour work days in unbearable heat. People are near starvation. There is a constant fear of being labeled a "traitor" and the punishment that would follow.
With no money, passport or way of contacting anyone on the outside Layton finds a way to escape. It's heart pounding and terrifying. My hands were shaking as each new obstacle unfolded itself. She returns to the United States with dire warnings, trying to get help for her sick Mother who is still there. (Layton's Mother died of cancer a few days before the "mass suicide". She died with no pain killers. They were confiscated upon arrival in Jonestown and given to Jones) No one believes the people inside are being held hostage by the infamous Jones and his growing madness.
Only months after her escape, the Jonestown Mass Suicide/Murder occurred. Deborah Layton was one of the few who escaped. Her story is told in an honest and insightful way. It's a riveting, nail biting, heart pounding, stay up all night book that reads like a novel.
A haunting tale
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-26
Review Date: 2008-03-26
I recently saw Deborah Layton discussing her experiences with Jim Jones and the People's Temple on PBS. I was really struck by this attractive, intelligent, and articulate woman who seemed nothing like what I'd imagined someone involved with the People's Temple would be. I guess I had somehow imagined they were all, well, kooks and wierdos. I've long been intrigued by Jonestown, and could never wrap my brain around how 913 people could be duped into mass suicide, so I quickly bought Deborah's book, Seductive Poison. I found it to be one of those rare books that whenever I got a few minutes to spare, I just had to pull it out and devour a few more pages. The book is richly written and gives deep insight into the People's Temple movement and the sad tragedy that unfolded in Jonestown, written by someone with firsthand knowledge. One aspect that I found so moving about "Seductive Poison" is that Layton really humanized the people of Jonestown. These were good, decent folks who were terribly deceived and manipulated by an evil madman. They weren't the kooks I'd imagined, but rather people I think I genuinely would have liked, had a lot in common with, and would have been friends with. Fortunately Deborah Layton was eventually able to see through Jim Jones' lies and find her way to freedom. The story of her final escape from Guyana is as tense and heart-stopping as any action movie, yet profoundly sad, and ultimately hopeful as she emerges from the lies and manipulation that once held her. Sadly, so many others at Jonestown were unable to find that freedom. Seductive Poison is a haunting journey, and will cause you to understand the human loss of the Jonestown tragedy in ways that will linger with you for a long time.
A different kind of terror
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-12
Review Date: 2008-02-12
Gosh! I doevoured this book in this last carnival holiday! It's really amazing and one of the most shocking stories i've ever seen. It's interesting to check out how more than 900 ppl are led outside their habitat and slaved by a weird guy... as someone once said'"it's the hypnotized being led by the f**cked up". Also I can imagine the paranoic state the writer was into as soon as she leaves jonestown. JJ had this belief of them being followed by government agencies so much ingrained in thei followers head.
There's a movie called "bug", by th same producers of "the exorcist" that also shows a girl being converted to the reality of a paranoic guy she's never seen before ... the end is also shocking.
There's a movie called "bug", by th same producers of "the exorcist" that also shows a girl being converted to the reality of a paranoic guy she's never seen before ... the end is also shocking.
Books-Under-Review-->Arts-->Celebrities-->A-->5
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Related Subjects: Affleck, Ben Allen, Woody Anderson, Gillian Aniston, Jennifer Arquette, David Aykroyd, Dan Adjani, Isabelle Allen, Karen Anderson, Kevin Andrews, Julie Ann-Margret Alley, Kirstie Astaire, Fred Applegate, Christina Azaria, Hank Astin, John Astin, Sean Andrews, Réal Autry, Gene Argento, Dario Ashton, Richard Allen, Joan Alda, Alan Alonso, Maria Conchita Atkinson, Rowan Alba, Jessica Adams, Joey Lauren Auberjonois, Rene Alaimo, Marc Ashton, Joseph Araki, Gregg Abbott and Costello Arbuckle, Fatty Andrews, Anthony Arness, James Aldred, Sophie Arquette, Patricia Andrews, Bethany Allen, Tim Agutter, Jenny Arquette, Rosanna Anthony, Lysette Ashley, Elizabeth Acker, Sharon Adams, Phil Adams, Stanley Appleby, Shiri Antonio, Lorenzo Andrews, Naveen Ashworth, Chris Akin, David Anderson, Loni Arkin, Alan Abraham, F. Murray Armstrong, Lee Angel, Vanessa Arden, Eve Alvarado, Trini Arthur, Jean Asner, Edward Acker, Amy Assante, Armand Anderson, Richard Dean Ana-Alicia Affleck, Casey
More Pages: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 201 202 203 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 211 212 213 214 215 216 217 218 219 220 221 222 223 224 225 226 227 228 229 230 231 232 233 234 235 236 237 238 239 240 241 242 243 244 245 246 247 248 249 250