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great reading for buffy fansReview Date: 2001-12-19
This Book is AwesomeReview Date: 2002-06-12
Great, but before you buyReview Date: 2001-12-30
But otherwise, it's great. This is my favorite guide to BtVS, and I've looked at all of them.
Staked Gold.Review Date: 2000-06-12
It slays me (Corny, I know....)Review Date: 2000-04-21

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A dark and suspenseful novel of high-stakes betrayalReview Date: 2007-06-10
Held my Attention!!Review Date: 2007-03-08
the trap he became entangled in. Thank you for a great book!
Author Peter Scott Harmyk is taking on real issues in his new novel, Stalkerazzi.Review Date: 2007-02-07
Stalkerazzi
By Peter Scott Harmyk
Hardcover
Publisher: The Outlet Press (September 15, 2006)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0975351427
ISBN-13: 978-0975351420
Author Peter Scott Harmyk is taking on real issues in his new novel, Stalkerazzi. Follow Christian, a good hearted aspiring writer, who enters the Hollywood scene thinking about the glitz and glamour that we so often see on T.V. After meeting and becoming friends with a top Hollywood Star, Daemon Negranni, Christian soon realizes that the being famous isn't all it's made up to be. There is a dark side to this powerfully glamorous life and Christian is soon caught in the middle of the Hollywood nightmare. Who is stalking Daemon Negranni? Will Christian survive the ups and downs of the Hollywood scene? Will the experience change or break him?
The book is chock full of betrayals, lies, menace, mystery, and misfortune. How could this fabulous lifestyle be so dark and dangerous? Stalkerazzi is a wonderfully written mystery, a true page turner. Wonderful for a raining or cold day, you should take an entire afternoon to read it, because you will NOT want to put it down.
Author, Peter Scott Harmyk, has done a fabulous job in not only writing about a hot topic in today's news, but also bringing a trueness to this fictional piece. Peter Scott Harmyk is a graduate of the S.I. Newhouse school at Syracuse University, and Franklin Pierce Law Center. Leaving the legal profession for the lure of Hollywood, Harmyk worked in the TV and film industry until first publishing "Say Good-bye to Johnnie Blue" in 2000. An extreme cyclist and private pilot, Harmyk's greatest thrill comes from story-telling. Stalkerazzi is his third novel. Also available from the author, his best-seller,"A Wind Through Paradise" (Outlet Press, 2004).
THE REAL INSIDERReview Date: 2006-11-21
You'll find out as you take an emotional ride into a web of deceit and manipulation. If you want to see the TRUE ending of a man-made fairy tale ... the one that never gets reported ... then this one's for you!
StalkerazziReview Date: 2006-12-05

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The Best Review Yet of Kourtney HowardReview Date: 2005-12-07
Full House the Substitute Teacher
By: Cathy East Dubowski
Michelle Tanner is your normal average girl. She's really nice and cool. Michelle loves to spell.
When Michelle gets to school she has a sub. So she asks her friends if they want to sink the sub. So when they take roll they all say the wrong names. Then after a few more pranks he quits and makes Michelle the teacher. Then she had to teach three kids how to spell their spelling words. When she gets home she tells her dad what a good day she had.
Michelle Tanner's school
Michelle and her class pull pranks on the substitute.
I loved this book because it took me on a lot of adventures.
The Best Review Yet by Kourtney HowardReview Date: 2005-12-07
Full House The Substitute Teacher
By:Cathy East Dubowski
Michelle Tanner is your regulare avrage girl.Shes smart and realy good in spelling.Shes realy nice to her friends and is cool.
When Michelle gets home from schoolshe tells her Uncle Jesse,that she is going to have a substitute teacher for the next few days.So he tells her how they would always try to sink the sub.So she tells her friends about that. Now they want to do that so they switch names. When he calls role they all say the wrong names. Then after a few more pranks, Mr. Kalowskie quites and makes Michelle and Lee teach the class. Then she has to teach three second grade kids how to spell their splelling words. When she gets home she tells her dad what a great day she had.
Michelle Tanner's school
They have a sub and they pull pranks on him.
I love this story because it was entertaning and takes you on alot of adventures.
Never trick a substitute teacherReview Date: 2004-06-18
Awesome Book!!!!!!!!!!!!!!Review Date: 2001-10-15
Michelle thinks that their substitute teacher is bad.Review Date: 1999-05-16

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Great Read for Industry Insiders and AllReview Date: 2006-11-22
Dawn Steel died in 1997Review Date: 2005-07-24
The kind of advice your best girlfriend would give you...Review Date: 1999-09-16
must-read stuff for women in the work placeReview Date: 1998-06-15
A Trip to Hollywood!Review Date: 2005-03-10
The book, according to the inside cover, was written "For every woman (or man) who knows there's a great person in there dying to escape, but lacks the confidence or tools to truly express oneself...for every woman trying to get out of the typing pool...for every woman who wants to be valued for cherishing her role as a mother...for corporate vice-presidents who are as sick as Dawn Steel was of wanting to be one of the boys...for every woman who, just as she conquers the next step, wonders, "so what do I do now?" Dawn Steel offers hard-won insights to help accelerate the trip, eliminate some of the angst and pain, and create a spirit of optimism and hope."
Dawn Steel's book is fun--it makes you cry, it makes you angry, it makes you cheer when she succeeds. It makes you sad when one more job is lost, but over it all, it makes you realize your own potential. You realize that others have had those wild entrepreneurial schemes, and that they have gone out and did them! Dawn sold amaryllis as "penis plants" and created the advertisement headline to "Grow Your Own Penis. All it takes is $6.98 and a lot of love." Now, when you read about someone who comes up with such ideas, you just got to love her...right?
Dawn's life is anything but normal and traditional. Her book opens as she overhears in the "second-floor ladies' room in the Administration Building at Paramount" that "She's dead." While her first reaction is to paraphrase Mark Train, "The reports of my death had been greatly exaggerated," she shares that it actually "took another six months for them to kill" her.
From Paramount to Penthouse, to Columbia, to selling her own ideas, Dawn tells all of us that we can survive anything--being fired, having someone come in over or under us in the corporate ladder and sabotage us, being chased out because of being pregnant, or being referred to as "The Queen of Mean" in newspapers.
The life of Dawn Steel started in 1946 and as her story is told, Dawn highlights for the reader what was happening at that time. These little references takes us back through our own lives and we live her life along with her as songs like "Zip-a-Dee-Do-Dah" that year, on through to Whitney Houston's "I Wanna Dance with Somebody" in 1987, play through our minds. She helps us recall how the last thirty or so of our lives have gone, and you find you quietly do a comparison of where you could be if you had dared to "risk."
Underlying the story line of her life, the glamour of working at major motion pictures and for "men's magazines," Dawn inserts, casually, but effectively, all the lessons learned in these fascinating arenas. So in the midst of learning about the problems of making the movies, Fatal Attraction or Flashdance, or while negotiating or going to events with Harrison Ford, John Travolta, Sylvester Stallone, Eddie Murphy, et. Al., Dawn drops in her sage advice, like:
Sometimes you have to accept that there are bosses and colleagues whom you can never turn around. Instead of going home frustrated and torturing yourself and the people around you, move on and find another way. There are people with whom you pass a point of no return and you should give up on them...
You can't let your competition sway you. On of the most important things I learned is that you must be willing not to get it. You must be willing to let go. Then it will come back to you...or
Set your boundaries ahead of time. Set your appetite ahead of time. Then be ready to let go...I learned my job by doing and watching...
As these little nuggets sink in, you realize that this book is about power, personal power. But after all she accomplished, Dawn Steel closes the book with an image..."I had this image of my mother. She was going off to work, dressed in one of her suits. She had to go to work. She had to take care of her family. She didn't have a job with a fancy title, or a plush office, or her own parking space. The guard didn't know her; in fact, there probably wasn't even a guard where she worked. She didn't have a hundred calls a day to define her status. She wasn't looking for anyone to rescue her. She wasn't looking for power. My mother did what had to be done because the power was already in her." And Dawn shares her own realization that she, too, didn't want to look for power anymore...that it had been there, inside her, all along.
This book makes you feel good. It's definitely written for those in the business world, but is written from such a personal slant, where even how potty training for your daughter is handled during the work day, that you don't realize until you've completed the book how it has elevated your spirits and challenged you to look at your life and use that power that is there within us.
Take a trip to Hollywood with Ms. Steel--you'll have a wonderful time!

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Best Mystery by a woman authorReview Date: 1997-08-06
Wow, what a page-turner!Review Date: 2001-03-20
WHAT A WRITER!Review Date: 1998-09-04
Stay up all night book!Review Date: 1999-09-21
EXCELLENT!!! I recommend her to all my customers!Review Date: 1997-09-05

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A great book for one of cinema's great moviesReview Date: 2001-05-02
This has to be a great book on the 1998 blockbuster film. It contains information on all subjects from the film's genesis to final production. Hundreds of lavish photographs and drawing make it even better. It includes interviews with the cast and crew.
However, for people looking for a good book to read, ignore this. The information skips back and forth. One moment they are telling you about how the film began. Then they are telling you about how the special effects were made. Then they are telling about the genesis and so forth. But the lack of definite timeline does not at all hurt the story of the most overcritized film of all time. As Michael Bay said "There is nothing wrong with entertaining people."
Amazing!!!Review Date: 1998-07-29
wonderful accompiant to one of my favourite movies!Review Date: 2001-12-07
will last & the fotos are GORGEOUSE! it explains a lot
the stuff behind the scenes & how it was done. more than
just a quickie movie-tie-in. it is worth having on it's
own!
Bad movie, good bookReview Date: 1998-09-25
ARMAGEDDON IS 1998'S BEST SUMMER MOVIE!Review Date: 1998-08-24

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Orson Welles BookReview Date: 2007-07-01
A Great Director's Independent YearsReview Date: 2006-11-05
McBride necessarily describes the problems that beset Welles immediately after _Kane_, when Welles could no longer get anything close to the full control of a film which he had practiced on his first movie. Still wanting to make movies, he left Hollywood to continue in Europe. McBride makes the case that contributing to Welles's decision for self-exile was his fear that he would be called to testify in the Communist witch-hunts. Welles loved shooting films and he especially loved editing them (as anyone who has seen _Kane_ can tell). There are plenty of pictures Welles worked on whose footage has been lost, but many others have the footage saved by fans or by creditors, and they frequently propose bringing out a finished version, hiring someone to pull the scenes together into a finished movie even so long after Welles's death in 1985. One producer mentioned she'd like to see a particular film screened not as an unfinished work by Welles, but as a film the way he might have finished it; but she says, "Finished by whom? Who can you substitute for Orson Welles?"
McBride does not go deeply into Welles's inability to finish things. Certainly it was attributable in a large part to Welles's way of skin-of-his-teeth filmmaking, whether or not it was some deep-set psychological disability. Welles could have written a magnificent autobiography, but when he got advances for such a work, he always returned them to the publishers. McBride writes, "Welles was deeply ambivalent about reminiscing, perhaps because he would have had to address issues he usually found too painful or delicate, such as his sexuality, his family life and some of his more traumatic experiences in Hollywood." Some of the stories of incompletion here, however, are extraordinary. His finished negative of _The Merchant of Venice_ was simply stolen from Welles's production office in Rome. The Iranians held funding for his meditation on filmmaking in the sixties, _The Other Side of the Wind_, and then the Shah was overthrown. "It's hard to imagine a movie career more littered with sensational catastrophes than mine," Welles admitted. He seldom admitted that he was the source of the less sensational catastrophes; a cameraman who worked with Welles late in his career said that Don Quixote was never completed because Welles "moved around too much, stuff got lost." For sensational and unsensational reasons, the losses recounted here are staggering. Nonetheless, McBride shows that they cannot be blamed, as some critics say, on Welles's being lazy or dilatory. The decades were filled with work for him, and he was pounding out a manuscript for a brand-new project on the night he died. As an independent filmmaker, Welles may have never fully lived up to his potential, but with a record of films that includes _Touch of Evil_ or the supremely weird _Lady from Shanghai_, his pattern of incompletion must be a minor sin. Much of McBride's personal account comes from his being an actor in _The Other Side of the Wind_ (of course, never finished) as were such droppable names as John Huston and Dennis Hopper. McBride's story won't re-make Welles's post-1950 career, but it isn't just a story of loss and lost opportunities; it is one of real movie history and at least some genuine artistic success.
Orson Welles? A legitimate force of nature!Review Date: 2008-08-21
But the case of Wells is particularly worthy to pay attention, because he embodied like nobody else the status of Shakesperian tragic personage, his ceaseless mind, his countless projects that never became materialized, the enormous efforts he had to do to make a film without abdicating in his ethic principles.
His devotion and everlasting admiration by Griffith, his sharp opinions, profane irreverence, mordacious opinions, his gastronomic excesses, among other singularities gained him respectable and unsaid enemies who neither didn't share nor understand his vision of the world. It's not easy to fit his hat, but the true of the case is he appealed to many filmmakers around the world, (Fuller, Casavettes, Allen, Saura, Almodovar, Waters, Loach, Huston, Roeg among so many others) to make the humanity would be aware (and I borrow a famous Buñuel's statement) we are not living in the best of the possible worlds. A biography that will absorb you from start to finish.
This excel essay allows us to approach the creative universe and the effervescent mind of a propulsive human being, who refused to accept outer impositions, filming what he wanted along his lifetime.
"A filmmaker is really great when the camera is an eye in the mind of a poet."
ORSON WELLES
Its value thus is twofold: as a biography for Welles fans, and as a history of film industry operations and politics.Review Date: 2006-12-11
Diane C. Donovan
California Bookwatch
Fascinating and informativeReview Date: 2007-03-06
This book taught me a lot about a man whom I admired and feared. He was rather scary from the perspective of a ten year old, but he often took time to have me sit with him while he taught me card tricks. I am so grateful that these stories are now available for everyone to read. Thank you Joe for your commitment in documenting what no one else ever has and sharing these wonderful stories.

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Fantastic!!!!Review Date: 2005-06-19
Awesome!Review Date: 2003-06-17
This movie is the best of its genre...Review Date: 1999-04-19
The best transcription of the relationship between M & FReview Date: 1998-10-27
Buy This Book!Review Date: 1999-10-30

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Lola and Charlie--great team again!Review Date: 2008-07-20
The books have a gentle way of covering values and Charlie is the ideal model of a big brother. I have even used him as an example with a bossy older sibling with "I wonder how Charlie would have handled this?"!
The DVDs are great, making the stories come to life. No fancy graphics, no intricate or soupy sweet over dramatizing here! Just a simple story line with that great little "english" accent we all try to imitate later!
As always Amazon ships quickly and efficiently!
bright and funny - but excellent for kids Review Date: 2007-09-29
Lola, who is ever such a little bit, not quite naughty is the little sister of Charlie. Charlie helps look after her, but sometimes it is not that easy becasue she is very small and very funny. Charlie makes a rocket using recycled junk, and wins a prize at school. He asks Lola not to play with it. However Lola waits until charlie is gone out and starts playing with her imaginery friend, Soren Lorensen. Soren suggests that they use the rocket to play with the elephant and two hyenas (who has hyenas in their games!!!!!!) The rocket breaks and when Charlie gets back Lola is left to explain what has happened to the rocket. It is very funny watching Lola talk to Soren Lorensen and finding new excuses, you can really hear the child's voice. In the end Lola is forced to fess up and everything is fixed up and ok.
I love Charlie and Lola Books, and also Lauren's other books on Clarice Bean (gorgeous!)The illustrations are amazing, a mixture of appealing child like art and collage. There are some great interlinking pictures with the text for early readers too.
A wonderful series and great on DVD too.
children just love Charlei and LolaReview Date: 2007-05-12
Every child can relateReview Date: 2007-03-09
The cutest kids ever!Review Date: 2007-08-24
In fact I first heard this book read to the girls by their teen-aged brother, and the experience brought a smile to my face.
Lola's impulse control is not great, and in WHOOPS! BUT IT WASN'T ME she again tries Charlie's patience -- this time by breaking his handmade, prize-winning rocket. But the details of the story aren't so important as the gentle example for little ones. Kids see that Lola is loved no matter how outrageous she is, and Charlie models patience, negotiation and resourcefulness. Nice lessons slipped in with a fun story.
Lauren Child's sweet stories and delightful illustrations charm children and adults alike. This is my favorite (so far) of the Charlie and Lola books.


this is the the best most helpful guide to locations!!!Review Date: 2003-11-07
Lots of fun infoReview Date: 2003-08-26
I Love this BookReview Date: 2003-07-24
I also like that the guide is lightweight and easy to carry around, and the map is not a huge embarrassing pullout so I don't look like a tourist when I whip it out.
I think anyone who loves movies and entertainment (and NYC) should get this guide.
Sex and the CityReview Date: 2003-07-14
Great guideReview Date: 2003-08-27
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There are a few problems like lack of pictures, not covering the full 7 seasons of Buffy and no coverage of Angel the series. But these few problems do not detract from how great fans will find this book.
while this may be too much for a casual viewer, i'm sure all buffy fans would want to add this to there collection!