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

Clubs
Trucks
Published in Unknown Binding by Trumpet Club (1992)
Author: Byron Barton
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Used price: $0.24

Average review score:

Awesome Book for Toddlers Who Love Trucks
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-31
Review by Sherry North, Author, Because You Are My Baby

When my son was 2, he could not get enough of this book - he asked for it every day and even carried it with him in the car. Of the many truck books for young boys, this one is especially appealing for a few reasons:
-Simple, bold illustrations are easy to look at.
-Just one sentence per page makes the book great for short attention spans.
-In very simple language, the book introduces different kinds of trucks and their purpose. (Oil truck, bucket truck, cement mixer, etc.)

Besides appealing to toddlers, I think this would be an excellent choice for boys who are beginning to read on their own.

Cute truck book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-27
We like this one... story is pretty cute, great drawings. Good book for toddler boys... my son enjoyed it from 18 months on.

great book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-12
Love this book for a 1, 2, or even 3 yo. Both my boys love(d) it. We just bought it as a gift.

Tops with Toddlers
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-18
We have about a half dozen Byron Barton board books, including this one, and they're tops in our house. I started buying them for my not-quite-4-year-old when he was about 9 month old. Then he loved to look at the pictures with me. Now, he and his little brother (18 months) both love them still. We have shelves and shelves of books, but these come out regularly for story time, particularly this one, Trains, Boats, and Planes. Highly recommended!

A great book for your little truck lover
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-05
This little book is sturdy and uses vibrant colors to catch your little ones attention. The text is very simple, but there is a truck on every page! My two year old wants this one read over and over!!

Clubs
Abby and the Mystery Baby (Baby-Sitters Club Mystery)
Published in Paperback by Scholastic (1997-02)
Author: Ann M. Martin
List price: $3.99
New price: $31.03
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $15.50

Average review score:

BABY POWER!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 1998-11-28
I never really liked Abbey when she came into the BSC but after this book it really shows that Abbey has the power of a mum,a babysitter and a good freind all rooled into one!

Amazing Ending!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 1998-08-22
I'm not going to tell the ending because it would ruin it for anybody who hasn't read it.For the people who have all of the questions are all answered.Anybody who has read a Baby-Sitters Club Book definitly has to read this one

Mystery #28
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2005-05-10
When Abby comes from school one day and finds a baby on her front porch, she's completely mystified. Where did the baby come from. And why did they leave it at the Stevensons' front porch. Abby's mom convinces the authorities to let the baby, whom the family dubbs Eli, stay at their house. Abby and the BSC Needs more ansewrs for Eli!

Abby and the Mystery Baby
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 1999-08-19
One day, Abby (a BSC member) comes home to find a baby on her front porch. She naturally calls the police, but the police have no idea where the baby came from. It's up to Abby and the rest of the BSC to discover the origin of the mystery baby, whom Abby, sister Anna, and mother dubbed Eli. The truth about the baby is startling, yet pleasing to Abby and Anna.

This book was incredible!
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 1998-08-11
Abby and the Mystery Baby was really, really good. One of my friends gave it to me, and I couldn't put it down. It has an incredibly surprising ending, and you would never know that Abby's mom was in on the whole thing!!!

Clubs
America Cooks: The General Federation of Women's Clubs Cook Book
Published in Hardcover by Putnam Adult (1967-10-25)
Author:
List price: $16.95
Used price: $64.99
Collectible price: $115.00

Average review score:

A wedding gift
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-12-09
This was a wedding gift from my Aunt in 1968. And although everyone thought it was a cheap gift, it is probably the only (except Grandma's silver) gift that I have treasured. I use this cookbook over and above any cookbook I own. It is dog eared and the binding is taped and I've actually lost part of the index but it is irreplaceable. I am also looking for a replacement and that's how I ended up here. I would love to get 3, a new one for me and one for each of my daughters. And hopefully it'll be a gift that they will cherish for 37 years! Thanks Aunt Mary.

Walnuts Watermelons and the wisdom of Seranne
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2003-05-31
I appologize for the Nesreddin Hoca pun, but it is fitting. If I had but one cook book, I would save this one. My parents bought theirs in the 70s at a street sale in New York for 3.50. Now they sell for [much more]. If you have one, keep it. If you find one, buy it.

The book covers the standard american fare, but without the cheesy gimmicks of many modern cookbooks. At the beginning of each section, there is an explaination of what to signs the food should give you as they are cooking. This, I feel, as one who is wraped in a world of doubts is extremely valuable. And the recipes are well portioned, easy to follow, and frankly good eating. My figurative lanuage fails me.

The Best Gift
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2001-12-13
My mother gave this book to me more than twenty years ago, and it is still my favorite reference for recipes. Some of the best meals that I am "known" for have come from this book, and I couldn't live without it in the kitchen. It's battered, and covered with food splatters, but I treasure it.

One Of The Best Cookbooks I Own
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2001-09-21
I bought America Cooks over 20 years ago through a book club.
I treasure it for the multitude of good recipes it contains. I am now on my second copy. The first has been "loved into tatters". In fact, it's held together with duct tape. Now I've retired that one for the new one. Fabulous Book.

Test of Time
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2004-03-26
My Mother first ordered this book when it came out in 1967. Being the family cook, she then gave it to me. I have been through three of these books, and even though I have many cookbooks in my kitchen, this is the one I rely on the most. You can find a recipe for almost everything in there! I absolutely LOVE it.

Clubs
The Ascent Of Rum Doodle
Published in Hardcover by Book of the Month Club (2002)
Author: W.E. BOWMAN
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Muddling through in the best tradition of the Empire
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-18
"For most people, it appears, RUM DOODLE is the funniest book they have never heard of." - Bill Bryson, in the Introduction to THE ASCENT OF RUM DOODLE

Even if you've never climbed, or thought in your life to climb, an Asian massif, THE ASCENT OF RUM DOODLE is worth a couple of hours of your time. The book's author, W.E. Bowman, an English civil engineer, himself never ascended anything more challenging than the gentle slopes of England's Lake District. RUM DOODLE is, according to Bryson, a parody based on the Ascent of Nanda Devi by H.W. Tilman (1937).

Rum Doodle is a forty-thousand foot peak in the fictional country of Yogistan. The narrative of the assault on its summit is told in the first person by the British expedition's leader, who's known to the reader only by his walkie-talkie pseudonym, Binder. (The time is presumably the mid-1950's when the volume was first published - no sat phones here.) The six others on the ascent team are: Burley, the commissaryman, Wish, the scientist, Jungle, the route-finder, Shute, the photographer, Constant, the translator, and Prone, the physician. It should come as no surprise that each is either incompetent or otherwise unsuitable for the mission. Binder himself is as about an unheroic and ineffectual as can be imagined; he has no concept of the leadership qualities required for an expedition on which the greatest dangers not posed by the mountain itself are the horrific, panic-inciting concoctions served up by the chief cook, Pong. Indeed, it's Binder's utter cluelessness that is the lynchpin of the story's humor.

I would politely disagree with Bryson that THE ASCENT OF RUM DOODLE "is the funniest book (most people) have never heard of." In my opinion, that honor goes to The Complete McAuslan by George MacDonald Fraser, which is, most assuredly, the most laugh-inspiring book I've ever read. But, THE ASCENT OF RUM DOODLE, at 171 pages, is a quick read in a small package amenable to inclusion in a backpack for the hike down into the Grand Canyon last week. During a longer than expected stop at Indian Gardens on the Bright Angel Trail, it, between the arrival of the mule trains, proved a most amusing, four-star diversion while I awaited someone ascending on foot from Phantom Ranch.

You'll laugh out loud
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-08
The Ascent of Rum Doodle is a "laugh out loud" book. It is a cult classic among climbers as it parodies climbing books from the 50's. The dry, understated British humor is a perfect fit for a story of a clueless, ill-fated climbing venture in the Himalayas. The foreword by Bill Bryson sets up the book very well.

Very silly British humour - one of the funniest books I've ever read
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-10
This deliciously absurd, very short book can be enjoyed in a few hours. But the real pleasure is in reading it again to pick up the jokes missed first time. The story of an incompetent group of British amateurs and their attempt to climb the world's tallest mountain (the forty thousand and a half foot Rum Doodle), it is told in the first-person by the hapless expedition leader, Binder. Much of the humour comes from the contrast between Binder's stoical optimism and the disasters which he describes. Rum Doodle has been a classic word-of-mouth hit in the UK. Written in the 50s by an unassuming railway engineer who led a quiet, unassuming life, this flash of genius could easily have remained unread had it not been discovered and championed by Bill Bryson, the US author and Anglophile (who has written the foreward to this edition). If you like Monty Python or the UK version of The Office, you will love Rum Doodle.

This Book Cracks Me Up!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-07-03
This book is one of my all-time favorite books! I was first introduced to "Rum Doodle" by my dad, Dee Molenaar, who himself had been a member of several mountaineering expeditions in the 50's and 60's. The Ascent of Rum Doodle brims with humor and a unique take on the world of high altitude climbing. I don't know if Bowman himself was a mountain-climber or not, but he certainly seems to understand the dynamics and personalities that sometimes are part of a mountain-climbing expeditiion.

Sir Edmund Hillary Meets Monty Python
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-18
There was a period of time a few years back during which I ate up the literature of British exploration like candy - the tragic story of Robert Scott in the Antarctic, the thrilling survival adventures of Sir Ernest Shackleton, and the like. These yarns had in common their Britishness - a bizarre combination of courage and, frankly, foolishness (Scott thought he could get to the South Pole on PONIES and died in pursuit of that belief, accompanied by some people who had never even been south before, while the Norwegian Amundsen sensibly took dogs and experienced skiers and beat him to the destination).

Fortunately the British have a world-class capacity to poke fun at their own foibles, and that is what "Ascent of Rum Doodle" is all about. It parodies a (fictional) expedition to ascend Rum Doodle, a 40,000-foot (!) mountain somewhere near Everest

Expedition Leader Binder narrates his own story. In the spirit of the literature he parodies, our hero Binder never once falters in his belief of the superiority of his crew and the indomitability of the British Spirit. This, despite his crew consisting of a geographer (who is unable to negotiate the London bus system), a doctor (who is always sick), a climber (too overcome by "lassitude" to get out of his sleeping bag), a native cook (so disastrous that the team attempts to leave him behind on the mountain), and a photographer (who does not capture a single shot during the entire expedition.

This hapless crew are babysat by thousands of native porters, who at one point must condescend to actually carry the British crew (fortified by the many crates of medicinal champagne they have burdened the porters with) on their backs.

Did I mention they accidentally climb the wrong mountain??

It's apparently a kind of cult classic among people who actually do this kind of adventuring (not just armchair folk like me), but it's a quick and funny funny read, so even if "frostbite" has not been a factor in your reading choices up to now, you should have a go at this one. A humor classic that should be better known in the U.S.

Clubs
The Baby-Sitters Remember Super Special #11
Published in Paperback by Scholastic (1994-07)
Author: Ann M. Martin
List price: $3.95
New price: $6.40
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $9.95

Average review score:

awesome book
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-07-19
since we all know what this book is about already I want to take this opportunity to express where I see each of these baby sitters 15-20 years later:

claudia and stacey living sharing a fancy apartment in new york with claudia being an art teacher, jewelry designer or fashion photographer; or stacey and claudia getting into fashion design and starting a line together

kristy coming out of the closet(come on we all know she's gay!) and playing sports in women's teams, or becoming a social worker

Mary Anne becoming an animal doctor

Dawn becoming trailer trash and marrying a rich old yuppie

mallory becoming a book writer of some sort or a journalist

jessi becoming a famous broadway star in local ballets and musicals and also doing some hip hop and becoming a back up dancer for a famous artist

shannon becoming an astronomer or a drama teacher

Logan being in college for 10 or more years and being all pimped out and the ladies man


there you have it, remember THIS

cool!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-07-17
The teachers at SMS have assigned homewqork to do over the summer. How mean! Plus, the essay topic is so boring: What i Did this Summer. If Kristy were teacher, she'd choose something much more interesting. Like writing about your most vivid memory. Which get the Baby sitters thinking....

The Book is Great!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2002-04-01
This book is very cool.The baby-sitters are at Kristy's house for a sleepover and they have to think about there mosst vivid memory. All of the baby-sitters tell about there memories, Stacey tells about tough times in New York, Dawn tells about her paents divorce, Jessi tells about her baby brother,and all different times. If you buy this book, you will enjoy it and never put it down. Enjoy!

my favourite super special
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2004-06-25
I remember the day I received this book as a gift from my cousin as an addition to my already huge baby sitters club collection. It was the original copy with the gold cover and the baby sitters club necklace included with it. The baby sitters club are having a sleepover and are remembering their most vivid memories. Kristy talks about her first baby sitting job, Claudia talks about her first art class homework at school, Stacey talks about how badly she was treated when she was diagnosed with diabetes, Dawn talks about the divorce and moving to Stoneybrook, Mallory talks about meeting her favourite book writer, Jessi talks about the birth of squirt, Logan talks about meeting Mary Anne, Mary Anne talks about a fun weekend with her friends, and Shannon talks about a snobby new girl at school. They are all written descriptively and beautifully, my favourite ones to read about were Kristy's, Claudia's, Stacey's, Mallory's and Shannon's. I also like how not long after this book, Ann M Martin started the Portrait Collection BSC books in which each member writes their autobiography, the 8th grade ones anyways.

WONDERFUL BOOK
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2001-07-30
I very much enjoyed reading this book. Ms. Martin thought of a wonderful idea-- each member of the BSC remembering something that happened in her/his life. This way the author could tell us about each character, but for once not going by a chronological order like she usually does.

There were some chapters that I liked more and some chapters that I liked less. For example:

I found it strange that when Dawn's parents were getting a divorce, their conversation with Dawn and Jeff was almost identical to the conversation Stacey's parents had with Stacey when they were getting a divorce, back in the book "Welcome Back, Stacey!". It couldn't be (or could it?) that all parents who get divorced say the same thing to their kids, and that all kids whose parents are getting divorced react the same. This is the place for creativity, or else the readers get bored with the same material.

Speaking of the same material, there was another disturbing thing in the book. Logan's chapter. Logan described the time when he just met Mary Anne. I believe this story was frightfully unecessary since it is already described in great detail in book #10: "Logan Likes Mary Anne". The only difference is that this time it's from Logan's point of view instead of Mary Anne's.

I liked Stacey's chapter. In almost every book she explains about her diabetes, and the awful life in New York when she was first diagnosed with the disease, but only in a few words. In this chapter she gave us the story like it was happening in the present, full with emotions and feelings. I was very sad to see how bad her life was.

Kristy had a good chapter, too. She described her first baby-sitting job ever, when she was in the fifth grade. For one thing, she was so adorable as a ten year old! I enjoyed that. Secondly, writing about Kristy's first job is interesting since she's the founder of the club.

I also enjoyed reading Jessi's entry. She describes the time when Squirt was born. I liked reading about her life in Oakley, NJ, since she hardly ever talks about it. The author picked a good topic for Jessi because I, for one, am tired of hearing about ballet. I'm also glad Ms. Martin didn't choose to write about the move from Oakley to Stoneybrook because she'd just stick to how her family was run down by the white neighborhood, and them being black. The author chose something special.

Mary Anne's chapter was also fun to read. It was a simple story, but nice. And not depressing like about her mother's death, or her father's strictness (much).

Mallory's entry was fun , and Claudia's was incredibly touching.

I recommend this book. It is wonderful and deserves five stars.

Clubs
Daughter from Afar: A Family's International Adoption Story
Published in Paperback by Writers Club Press (2002-09-18)
Author: Sarah L Woodard
List price: $12.95
New price: $7.70
Used price: $1.17

Average review score:

daughter from a far
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-02
very good book, could not put it down, great insite into what goes on the the adoption process

Daughter From AAfar
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-20
This is a good book for anyone interested in international adoption. It goes through her personal story and the process of adopting from another country.

Great read!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-24
I loved this book, the writer has a positive outlook on life. She explains things about adoption very well. One of the only books that I have read where the adoptive couple are not infertile but just feel the need to have a child through adoption. Intresting read!

Adoption
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-07
When I read about the author first meeting her baby in China I cried, on the bus. I couldn't believe how emotional this moment must be. I can't wait to be able to adopt a little baby girl.

such a sweet story
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-07-20
The author dealt with the issues of adoption with a lot of tact and was honest about some of the negative things that her family went through, from bureaucratic delays to their daughter's health problems. I was fully resigned to the fact that it would be a totally sappy story, but surprisingly it was just sweet but not overly emotional, so that's a plus for me. This book is informative not just for those in the adoptioin process (which I am not) but anyone interested in child welfare in general, or just a nice story about becoming a mother. All of the profits go towards the non-profit organization that the author founded so in addition to enjoying this book I am happy to be helping her cause.

Clubs
Dead Magicians Club: Maps
Published in Paperback by The Independent Press (2003-12)
Author: G. D. Morrow
List price: $14.00
New price: $14.00

Average review score:

High Fantasy in an Unexpected Form
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-07
It is rare to find an author who refuses to conform to the cliches of the genre and has the unmitigated gall to blaze a new trail, critics be damned! Gordon Morrow is such an author. His passion for his characters comes through in living color through their very human interactions. A vision of his particular fantasy world comes across to the reader as vibrant, alive, and different. In "Maps" he starts us expertly on a multi-book journey with an unusual combination of classic adventure and surprising twists.

An excellent first novel -- please keep them coming, but much faster! =)

A must own!!!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-10-21
MAPS is an absolute delight! Morrow knows these characters so well that he describes them in expert and loving detail. The story is funny, exciting, and incredibly fun to read. The characters are so real that you have little choice but to fall in love with each of them. They fight, they feel, they make love! Morrow has captured the most important element of story telling: truth.

The truth he captures is the realness of his characters. The story is brilliant, the settings are amazing, the action is gripping, the romance is sweet as nectar, and everything just clicks. But it is the "realness" of Gar and Treva and everyone that makes this a wonderful novel that should be read again and again.

I can't recommend this story enough! If you are a fan of fantasy, a fan of fiction, or even a fan of great art - this book is a must own!

All I can say, Mr. Morrow, is that I hope volume 2 is available for purchase soon. I feel like a junkie who needs a Harebell fix now!

Please let your publisher know that I would be more than happy to preorder DMC volume 2 as soon as possible. Want my credit card number? :o)

Pure genius!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-09-24
This book is filled with action, comedy, and romance from start to finish. I can't get enough of it. I eagerly await book two, and I shall read anything this man writes. This book kept me intrigued long after finishing it. I recommed this book to any who enjoy a good and invigorating novel.

No wussy magic users here
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-16
Not since Terry Prachett had a I had a good laugh in a fantasy story. Gordons characters are enjoyable and user friendly (you'll get a new meaning of THAT term after reading this) and don;t hold back on anything. I thoroughly enjoyed this read and as this being the first (of many adventures) for these characters, I look forward to reading more adventures with the Dead Magicians Club.

Review for Dead Magician's Club
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-04-16
DMC: Maps is a great book for lovers of humor and fantasy. The characters are very fleshed out and the story is very vivid. You'll feel you're there with the characters the entrie way.

Clubs
Grant takes command (Essential classics of the Civil War)
Published in Unknown Binding by Book-of-the-Month Club (1994)
Author: Bruce Catton
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New price: $26.50
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Collectible price: $20.00

Average review score:

A Hard-War General
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-19
In the weeks before General David Petraeus - widely regarded as the most operationally and strategically brilliant of today's ground generals -- took command of Multi-National Forces - Iraq, a friend told me he was reading Bruce Catton's classic "Grant Takes Command: 1863-1865" about that earlier US general who took charge of a war at its most critical point. I and several others piled on and eagerly devoured this book. Two weeks later, we met to discuss our observations. Mine are below. I would bet you a paycheck that General Petraeus -- himself a formidable scholar as well as distinguished soldier -- has read this book more than once and probably even perused it before assuming his new post. "Grant Takes Command" offers timeless insights into the art of command and remains relevant for several reasons that should resonate today.

I found that several myths about General Grant were just that: myths. The first that Catton debunks is that Grant was not a political general. In one of his first chapters titled "Political Innocent", Catton lays out clearly that Grant understood that the Civil War was an extension of politics, and that certain personnel decisions in his Army would inevitably be affected by this. Thus, Grant's handling of Generals McClernand, Sigel, Butler, and Banks - all of them troublesome, of dubious competence, but politically useful at different times throughout the war -- was at once skillful, politically deft, and necessary. When they had each imploded after their political usefulness had been expended, they were thus easily discarded. To fire them when they were politically useful would have strained civil-military relations.

Grant also believed in the mission completely. This included the elimination of slavery and the re-election of President Lincoln in 1864. This was no small matter in 1863. The democrats had been making overtures to Grant in 1863, and several recent commanders of the Army of the Potomac -- most famously George McClellan -- had leapt into the political arena. Lincoln felt Grant out through mutual friends before appointing him to command the Union armies. For his part, Grant did his own maneuvering to ensure that Lincoln won re-election in 1864. Grant not only gave Lincoln battlefield victories, but also ensured that soldiers of the Army of the Potomac had the opportunity to vote. One of the most skillful uses of "controlling the message" occurred after Cold Harbor and the bloody siege of Petersburg, when Union soldiers might have become demoralized at their high number of casualties. On the eve of the election, Grant ordered 100-gun salutes to celebrate the victories of Generals Sherman and Sheridan down south and out west. Catton points out that these "salutes" brought home to the Union soldiers the aura of the juggernaut of their armies inexorably closing in on the doomed Confederacy. Grant clearly understood the nature of the war he was involved in and took the action he needed to to get the job done.

Grant further understood that a great team of commanders was better than a team of great commanders. Great teamwork always beats great talent. Grant had worked very well with Generals Thomas and Sherman when he commanded out west, but with the exception of Hancock, he did not have as skilled commanders individually in the Army of the Potomac. But Grant did foster good teamwork in his army, and looked for this quality in his selection of key subordinates. In my opinion, this proved to be decisive. Grant kept and provided the required supervision for generals such as Meade and Burnside, but found little use for the self-seeking and overly critical generals such as Hooker and Smith, despite their comptetence. Most important was the relationship Grant fostered with his Commander-in-Chief, President Abraham Lincoln. Lincoln was much more involved in the military details of the Civil War than his own statements would indicate, and his oft-quoted remark that: "Grant doesn't tell me his plans, and I don't want to know" belies his own political skill at handling his best general and imposing his political will on the battlefield. It was the "marriage" between Lincoln and Grant, more than anything else, that saved the union. Catton's masterful work shows this quite clearly, and thus retains its great relevance for civil and military leaders.

Highly recommended
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-05-20
This is a very readable, engaging study of the last two years of the Civil War, in which General Grant is taken from his command in the west, to the "big show" as commander of the Army of the Potomac. He is shown to be a determined, relentless leader willing to fight the war of attrition that ultimately led to the destruction of the Army of Northern Virginia. He proved to be more than a match for General Lee, who was confounded by Grant's steadfast leadership and willingness to stand tough, despite the losses of thousands of men. Grant was a very different kind of leader than his predecessors.

I also liked the way Catton developed the personal side of Grant.

This is a terrific book for those who want a straightforward history of the latter part of the Civil War, without embellishment or political bias.

At Last, A Winning Commander for Lincoln
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-01-03
"Grant Takes Command" is the second of two volumes by Bruce Catton on Grant's Civil War service and the third of a trilogy on Grant's military career (beginning with Lloyd Lewis's "Captain Sam Grant"). However, this volume can easily be read by itself. Catton picks up the story in the fall of 1863 with Grant's successful raising of the siege of Chattanooga, following which President Lincoln picks him for a third star and command of all the Union armies.

Grant is the latest in a long line of Union commanders, most of whom have been badly beaten by General Robert E. Lee and his Army of Northern Virginia, and none of whom have been able to bring superior Northern resources effectively to bear on a slowly weakening Confederacy. In fact, as Grant takes command, the war has not yet been won and could still be lost.

Grant will be the commander that Lincoln has long sought. Lincoln's telling exchange with an aide, repeated by Catton, lays out why. Grant is the first general to take the supreme command who will work in harness with Lincoln and in full acceptance of Lincoln's constraints as President of a democracy in the midst of a civil war. Grant is prepared to take full responsibility for the conduct of the missions of the armies, and without setting up an alibi in advance for possible failure. And as it becomes apparent in the course of Catton's absolutely superb narrative, Grant understands the terrible math. Lee and his army are too proficient to be easily beaten; great persistance will be called for. Grant grasps the essential truth that Lee's army is the Confederate center of gravity and the corollary that Lee's requirement to protect Richmond ultimately limits his ability to manuever. Further, Grant is able to cause the Union armies to work at a common design, denying Lee the ability to reinforce Virginia from other theaters of war. The result will be a long, grinding, and exceedingly bloody campaign stretching from 1864 into 1865, as Lee's army is slowly bludgeoned to death.

Catton's narrative does not spare Grant his errors; in the 1864 campaign, Grant underestimates both Lee's abilities as a general and the difficulties of conducting campaigns on such a massive scale. Grant has to learn the job of Army commander in chief on the move; the unnecessary casualties of Cold Harbor and the repeatedly failure to flank Lee out of position in Virginia are proof of the learning curve. But Grant's great gift is his refusal to be deterred from his objective. He pins Lee at Petersburg and uses the Union armies of Sherman and Sheridan, among others, to destroy the Confederacy's ability to make war.

"Grant Takes Command" was first published in 1960, and the details of the history of the Civil War have evolved since then. However, Catton's prose has stood the test of time. This is a truly magnificently told story on an epic scale and a highly recommended treat for the Civil War enthusiast and the casual reader alike.

This One, Too
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-09-30
Was Ulysses S. Grant a drunk? Did he win the Civil War simply by burying Robert E. Lee under a wave of superior manpower and resources? Bruce Catton addresses these questions, and many others, in GRANT MOVES SOUTH and its companion volume, GRANT TAKES COMMAND. Taken together, the two books chronicle Grant's Civil War experience.

I've read a lot of history, but I confess to being relatively ignorant about the American Civil War except in a very general sense. I've always been interested, I just never got very far into it. These two books are my first real foray into the subject. Both are very well researched and documented, while at the same time being very readable. Catton demonstrates a thorough knowledge of the facts as well as a genuine insight into Grant's character. The result, for me, was an experience that was at once informative and enjoyable.

What does Catton have to say about Grant's alleged drunkeness? Clearly, Catton is an admirer of Grant, but it's an admiration born of respect for the man as revealed in his personal records and actions, as well as in the record left by people who knew him. To get his take on this and other criticisms of Grant, read these books.

Conventional wisdom has it that GRANT MOVES SOUTH and GRANT TAKES COMMAND are definitive works on the subject of U. S. Grant's Civil War career. I certainly won't argue with that perception. If you have a deep interest in Grant or in the Civil War in general, they are "must haves". Beyond that, though, if you have just a casual interest, this is still great reading material. I highly recommend both volumes.

Remarkable!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-01-10
The second in a two part study of General Ulysses S. Grant's Civil War leadership, Bruce Catton has written a vivid narrative following the enigmatic Commander in Chief of Union forces through the final year and a half of the war.

This work won the Pulitzer Prize. Read it and you will appreciate why. It is a remarkably good book, excellently crafted, clear and precise. This one is truly well worth your time.

Clubs
The existence and attributes of God
Published in Unknown Binding by Sovereign Grace Book Club (1958)
Author: Stephen Charnock
List price:

Average review score:

A product of the Enlightenment
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-26
While Stephen Charnock was a Puritan, this book is a product of the enlightenment.

For its time, this is a well written and quite thorough work on the attributes and existence of God. Charnock's comment on the existence of God (among others), "I shall further promise this, that the folly of atheism is evidenced by the light of reason" supports that the context of his thinking is the age of enlightenment - the age of reason. This is not necessarily a negative - in fact it is a positive in that it is an answer to the enlightenment providing strong arguments that one can be a person of faith and still be a person of reason - because God is a God of reason. In effect he turns the tables on his detractors and argues that to not believe in the existence of God is, to in fact, lack reason.

The attributes covered are:

God as Spirit; (followed by a chapter on spiritual worship)
The eternity of God;
The immutability of God;
God's omni-presence;
God's knowledge;
The wisdom of God.

On the existence of God he argues against atheism. The approach Charnock takes is to first assert and prove the existence of God, then relate what his his attributes are based on his existence. If he exists then he is spirit, he is omnipresent, he is eternal, immutable, and wise, etc.

Due to the context and age of the work - the reader will need to translate it in to the present and tweak it a bit to make it applicable for the 21st century - not that it is not applicable but that we are not in the enlightenment age anymore. One will need to absorb what is said, turn it over inside and then present it to others in a way they will receive.

Stunning Doxology To An Awesome God
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-23
This is a rare privilege. To own a Puritan from the 17th Century's work, is really an honor. The author of this book knew nothing of computers, lexicons, cd-roms, - all the modern gadgetry we have at our disposal. Yet he still exceeds in literary excellence, theological consistency and God-honoring exegesis compared to publications that are available from modern wisdom and prudence. He was chaplain to Oliver Cromwell.

'But what if the foreknowledge of God, and the liberty of the will, cannot be fully reconciled by man? Shall we therefore deny a perfection in God to support a liberty in ourselves? Shall we rather fasten ignorance upon God, and accuse Him of blindness, to maintain our liberty?' pg450

The chapter on 'The Goodness of God' is so beautiful. It inspired and reinvigorated me. The Puritans held such a high view of God. Everything they did and said was Theocentric. The fruits of their labor was produced under great trials, and yet this only seemed to spur them on to greater holiness. And so their legacy reaches our day and their spiritual vigor inflames our hearts anew.

A huge book and collosal work.


the best for knowing God
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-05-07
I have been looking for an excellent book to help me understand and get some insight into the attributes and nature of our God. This book definitely does the trick and make me really satisfactory. I do give it a 5.0 rating because of its excellency and in depth. One thing you should know of is the dated English style of the author. It was written in the 17th century, so it is somewhat difficult for me, especially as a foreigner, to read and understand his writing. From what I have read, the author had done an excellent work. I highly recommend this book for everyone who want to know God better and better.

A Gem
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-26
Mr. Charnok's logic is impeccable, his prose beautiful, his inspiration Godly and the value of his contribution beyond measure. My only regret is that the publisher decided to single space the small type of this large corpus. This generated eye fatigue for my aging optical organs. However, as testamony to the works greatness I found the discomforts were far outweighed by the spiritual rewards. I plan to purchase a copy for my pastor. It will enrich the lives of the layman and set fire to the words from the pulpit.

Wow
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2006-05-13
Words really fail to describe how breathtaking this book is. Not mainly because of the author, but because of the subject - God himself. I can't think of any book I've read that has left me more stunned and awed by God and his majesty. Charnock was a Puritan, so this book may be cumbersome to those unaccustomed to Elizabethan English. But if you can handle the KJV, you can handle this. It is also a comprehensive book - long, despite the fact that the chapters are really just lengthy meditations put in a sermonic form. Characteristically Puritan, Charnock begins each chapter with the exposition of a text, then develops its "doctrine," bridging into a lengthy theological study on one of God's attributes, finally ending on the "use" or application. The application sections are especially helpful and heart-searching, but really all of it is good. Though, I must confess I've not read it all (this book must be 1200 pages long!), I've benefited from the hours I've spent in these pages. No human author will ever write an exhaustive study on the character of God, but I can't imagine anyone coming closer to it than Charnock. This is a powerful, powerful book!

Clubs
The Fishing Club: Brothers and Sisters of the Angle
Published in Hardcover by The Lyons Press (2006-05-01)
Author: Bob Rich
List price: $24.95
New price: $3.17
Used price: $0.01

Average review score:

a great gift
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-06
My fiance had seen this book recomended in one of his fishing magazines, so I got it for him for Christmas. He LOVES it. He said it is a great and easy read.

The Fishing Club with Bubba
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-07
Reading this book has given me a new perspective on fishing; the memories with family, great friends or even the solitude when alone in the quiet of the winding rivers. I marvel at the stories of Bob's closest friends, many of whom are famous through their accomplishments and others including Bob who have demonstrated the importance that fishing with family and friends have on a prominent business man. I enjoyed the stories, the awesome pictures especially that beauty of a 13 pound brown trout "caught" by President George H. W. Bush while fishing with Bob and Mindy Rich. The retrospect of his thoughts in his conclusion conveyed all the feelings we as anglers have when we think of our passions for fishing and sharing those fond memories with our closest friends.

Well done Bob!

The Fishing Club
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-05-16
This book is a classic, a quick read full of great tales. It's fascinating to read the life of the anglers featured in this book and Bob did a fantastic job keeping the reason for the love of fishing until the very end. Anglers and non-anglers can easily connect to the reason we love sports and other hobbies. This book is inspirational, thought provoking and a lot of fun. A MUST READ!

To Fish is to Dream...
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-07-27
Not that author Bob Rich asked, but to me fishing is about dreams: the dream of catching a fish, and the dream about it after I do.
"The Fishing Club" set me to dreaming about fishing past and future through his cast of famous (and near famous) anglers. Rich's characterizations of the fisherfolk and their fishing DNA is fresh and thoughtful stuff, hence this new book is a very enjoyable read.
Enjoyable enough, in fact, for me to hope for more.

Fishing Club
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-05-31
Really cool book. I was intriqued by the different backgrounds and stories of the fisherman profiled. It really hits home how universally loved fishing really is. Bob seems to be able to capture the essence of each of the anglers. There is hope for us amatuers afterall!

Dan Holthaus


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