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A Great Response to the DaVinci CodeReview Date: 2007-02-06
Exposing the LiesReview Date: 2006-04-18
Exploring the Da Vinci Code with the dvd is absolutely great for exposing the lies of the book by Dan Brown.
Lee even includes the FAQ and Evidence for the identity of Jesus based on discussions with real historians in this area of history.
I recommend everyone get this and use it to share the truth with followers of Dan Brown of those duped by him.
The Case Against the Da Vinci CodeReview Date: 2006-05-07
This curriculum was put together with "seekers" in mind. "Since the primary audience for this guide is the not-yet-convinced seekers, the ideal place to use Discussing the Da Vinci Code is within the context of seeker groups." (10) The emphasis is group discussion such that if the proposed schedule is followed participants will spend about 17 minutes watching the DVD and 43 minutes conversing per session.
The DVD and discussion guide are broken down into four sessions in which Lee Strobel visits some of the historical locations utilized in The Da Vinci Code and interviews contemporary scholars. In the first session, the topic of historical analysis is discussed with historian Paul Maier. The second session poses the question "Can we trust the four Gospels?" to New Testament scholar Scot McKnight. Strobel interviews Kathy McReynolds in session three about the role of women in Christianity and Jesus' relationship with Mary Magdalene. The final session deals with the divinity of Jesus with scholar Mark Strauss.
Considering the proposed "seeker context," the discussion guide is very well done. It provides great questions for discussion while provided many quotes from scholars, Dan Brown, and facts throughout the booklet. In the back of the guide are several appendices that recommend further resources, state the facts, and give arguments for the true identity of Jesus that is affirmed by historic Christianity.
While it's neat to see Lee Strobel "on location," he doesn't really engage the sites he visits, so that seemed somewhat pointless. Strobel is more known for his investigative journalist approach, which he applied well on the DVD. He asks good questions that provoke good responses form the reputable scholars.
The DVD also has some promotional trailers, which could be shown to get people interested in joining the discussion group. The graphics and navigation of the DVD are extremely well done. The DVD together with the group discussion guide make Discussing the Da Vinci Code a thought provoking curriculum that will be useful for seekers and curious Christians alike.
Really great information. Great Discussion materialReview Date: 2006-05-27

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Great for tweens.Review Date: 2008-10-27
Mismatched maybe?Review Date: 2007-01-20
Hannah Montana Box SetReview Date: 2007-01-12
NICE SET UPReview Date: 2006-12-09

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A great book to accompany the movie.Review Date: 2007-06-05
Essential Guide: A welcomened understatementReview Date: 2000-04-19
A visual feast for dinosaur loversReview Date: 2001-01-29
The book is a visual treat. Disney used cutting-edge techniques to bring the creatures of "Dinosaur" to life, and the book captures each animal splendidly. The soft fur of the lemurs, the bony neck frill of the styracosaur, the fierce teeth of the carnotaur--all the details are vivid and memorable.
The book's effectiveness is, however, compromised by the fact that the authors seem unsure of their purpose. Is this book supposed to be a guide to the fictional world of the movie, or to the real world of dinosaurs as science understands them? For example, the book is filled with scientific-sounding observations like "Herd dinosaurs are highly social animals, and during the nesting season the lake is the center of their bustling community." Sidebars with titles like "Cretaceous Life" add to this pseudoscientific flavor. But as far as I know, there is no evidence that dinosaurs spoke English or formed multispecies families with lemurs, as depicted in this film! This flaw aside, this book is a treat for kids who loved the movie, or who love dinosaurs in general.
The best of the Disney's Dinosaur booksReview Date: 2000-06-04

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Very InformativeReview Date: 2007-10-21
For those of us who have never read, nor care to read, the multitude of Doctor Who novels in existence, A History of The Universe can act as sort of Cliff Notes that we used in school when assigned to read a long and tedious novel but had no desire to. The plot of each story is briefly outlined on the timeline at the year in which it takes place. Therefore, we can "cheat" by finding out what happens without actually picking up the book. Parkin makes it simple to determine which events come from television, and which come from the novel by using a differentiating typeface as a distinguishing feature. He uses lightface for tv and boldface for the novels. What can be simpler?
THE UNIT ERA:
This is a bugaboo era for Doctor Who pendantics. It's impossible for the UNIT stories to be pinned down to a definite year. From all accounts, these stories were originally meant to take place in the near future. In a 1969 interview with Jon Pertwee, he reveals that the Doctor would be exiled to earth "in the 1980's". (p. 286, A History of The Universe) Yet this very well could be misinformation. No specific date is ever pinpointed within the third Doctor stories themselves, although Jo comes so tantalizingly close in Day of The Daleks as she explains to the Controller what time she is from. Irritatingly, the Controller stops her after "Sept. 12", as she has already told him the year, (off camera, of course!).
In Pyramids of Mars in what appears to be a throw-away line, Sarah claims she is from 1980, which would suggest a near future setting for previous UNIT tales since Pyramids was produced in 1975. However, in Mawdryn Undead, a very specific date of the Brigadier's retirement is given, 1976. Adding to the confusion, the time zones in which Mawdryn takes place is 1977/83, contradicting all previous attempts to date UNIT stories and throwing that proverbial monkey wrench in the lives of many pendantics.
So take your pick. As Parkin suggests, take the facts you like while ignoring any that contradict your argument. There is no perfect way to assign specific years to UNIT stories. Therefore, Mr. Parkin cops out by listing the UNIT entries on his timeline as 1970s earth, but qualifies this by stating that they likely occur anywhere from the late 60s to the early 80s. A cop-out, but perhaps a wise cop out, as he allows each individual reader to accept or deny facts as that reader so chooses. Personally, I would rather ignore a throw-away line like Sarah's, which if removed from the script would remove absolutely nothing from the premise of the story, than to ignore the Mawdryn time zone which forms the whole basis for a story. Also, a near-future setting can be interpreted with a broad brush stroke. "Near future" literally can mean ten, five or even one year down the road. One month, or even one day, can technically be the near future. Plus, it is much more convenient to think of UNIT as a contemporary early 70s setting, with a possible slight near future variance, because virtually the whole era smacks of early 70s, from the fashions, psychedlia ... and the fact that miles, yards and feet are still used as measurements, Britain not yet switched to the metric system.
Like Lance Parkin, I will not force my opinion on others. I can only suggest that you weigh the contradictory facts of this era against one another and form your own opinion. That is precisely what Parkin is attempting to do by not assigning specific years to the UNIT era. To exert his opinion as the correct one would take away from the non-critical aura of this book.
Appendix: I do realize that this book is from 1996 and outdated, and it has been recently updated to include events of the new series. However, at the risk of irking fans of that series, to me true Doctor Who ends with the classic series. My personal taste for Doctor Who suffers its cataclysmic demise at the cataclysmic demise of the Colin Baker era, but I can accept events of the McCoy era as well as the novels as part of the Whoniverse. While the new series may be fun and exciting to some, to me it's just not the same. The Whoniverse begins and ends with this version for me.
The Quintessestial Dr. Who Reference bookReview Date: 2002-02-12
This book deserves an award - thanks Lance. RECOMMENDED!!!
Parkin surpasses himself with this work of metafictionReview Date: 1997-01-28
A true labour of love from Lance Parkin!Review Date: 2002-04-21
In addition to incorporating the NAs and MAs, he uses his own conjecture in various places, but those are few. For example, in The Masque Of Mandragora, the Doctor says that it will return to Earth in five hundred years, 1992. He assumes that if it did, it must have been defeated once more. The text for the televised adventures is done in a normal font, the NA and MAs in bold, and his own conjecture in a slightly thicker bold-italic. The footnotes after each event or story is explained in detail on the sides of each page. It's easy for stories that explicitly state the date e.g. Silver Nemesis takes place on 23 November 1988, but what about stories like Delta And The Bannermen, which takes place in ?4287 AD? Parkin gives arbitrary dates, but the interesting thing is, the last two digits are equal to the digits the show came out, 1987. The Caves Of Androzani, which came out in 1984, is given a date of ?2884.
There are seven sections in the book: Prehistory, Known History, Contemporary, the Near Future, which we're in right now, Colonisation, the Earth Empire, and the Far Future. Although a history of the universe, there is clearly an Earth-bias especially in the Earth Empire section. Yes, the Earth follows the model of the British Empire, from rise to collapse, as was mentioned in the TV story The Mutants.
There are explanations of the Great Old Ones, the powerful beings such as Fenric, the Animus, and the Great Intelligence, in the Prehistory section, as well as known astronomical theory such as the Big Bang and Galaxy formation hypothesis, and the variability of races that sprang up.
My favorite part is probably the period we're in right now in the book, with technological gluts, environmental disasters, shifts in the ozone layer, severe overpopulation, goth-apocalypse culture, and civil wars. All this takes place 2001-2009, and I sometimes wonder that given the corporate mindset of industrial countries, if this science-fiction will become reality.
One
peeve I have is the dating of the Patrick Troughton/Jon Pertwee era UNIT stories, a sore point between Who fans. I belong
to the faction that puts them the year or the year after the story came out on TV. Others put them in the future. Parkin
merely dates those stories (1970's UNIT-- This last New Adventure covered here is
Happy Endings, where Bernice gets married to Jason, and the last Missing Adventure is Sands Of Time, the sequel to Pyramids
Of Mars. It's important to note that around the time this book came out, Virgin Publishing's rights were set to expire in
May. A handful more of New and Missing Adventures came out, too late to be incorporated into Parkin's book. That also meant
there could never be a second edition of the Universe book, also published by Virgin. What I wonder is, now that BBC books
has the rights to new Who stories, will they come out with their own Who universe guide, thereby invalidating Lance Parkin's
painstakingly crafted work? It would be a shame if it did. Why not incorporate the New/Missing and the current new adventures
in a future book? For now, this will do just nicely.

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What a Wonderful Dreaming story...Review Date: 2006-06-24
Hope you Enjoy! If you liked this, you may like;
1. The Perfect Man movie novelization
2. Just My Luck movie novelization
AND
3. Cars the junior movie novelization
Jordan
Overall grade* A-
DreamerReview Date: 2006-06-06
DreamerReview Date: 2005-12-02
Cale Crane is a girl that lives on a horse farm but has no horses in it. The Cranes family didn't really own horses for a long time. Cales father was a trainer of Thoroughbreds. One day during a race a horse named Sonya fell and broke her leg bone called cannon bone. The people in the race was about to put the horse to sleep until Cales dad says that they could nurse the horse back to health. Cale really likes the horse and wishes that she could race again. Sonya was on a wheelchair for a long time. Finally, when the wheelchair is of, Cales dad trains the horse. Something really unusual happens. Could the horse race again?
Corinne's ReveiwReview Date: 2006-01-26
Cale Crane lives with her family on a horse farm with no horses. Her dad trains racehorses. One day one of the horses has an accident on the track. Everyone thinks that they should put the horse to sleep but Cale convinces her dad to nurse it back to health. The horse's name is Sonyador, which means Dreamer in Spanish.
It takes a while but Sonya's injuries heal. Cale and her dad start training Sonya to race again. Along with her dad's friends, Balon and Mandolin, they start training Sonya.
The book has a lot of exciting race stories, twists and much more. Cale thinks Sonya can win The Breeders' Cup. Sonya has enough experience as a racehorse to qualify for consideration by the judge's panel, but Cale has to convince them to let Sonya run in the race.
The rest you have to find out on your own. There is a lot more exciting events that I haven't told you about. So to read `'Dreamer"" to find out.
On a scale of one to ten I give this book a ten. Anybody who likes animals or horses would like this story. Also if you like to laugh you would enjoy this book.

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The truth sets one freeReview Date: 2007-11-22
Fans of Moore will welcome an opportunity to get to know him betterReview Date: 2005-11-08
A Pleasingly Intimate PortraitReview Date: 2005-07-21
Dudley Moore and this book rate a "10"Review Date: 2005-08-24
I wanted to laugh again, and again at Dudley, the comic.
But the author, fellow musician Rena Fruchter, carefully weaves in the pain and suffering in this short man's too-short life:
"The tragedy is that Dudley Moore had so much left to do, to give, when his life was taken from him at the age of 66," she writes.
And an extra dimension for an author and even for a friend--Dudley spent the last five years of his life with Fruchter and her family. She held his hands when he died in March, 2002, with some of his own music playing in the background.
But Fruchter is able to give us a balanced portrait of this complex man, his four wives and ups and downs along the way.
I kept wanting more of the sheer joy of Dudley, which fellow comic Eric Idle touches on in the Foreward --where he thanks Dudley, or "Dud" as he calls him, "for just being you."
It is often written that one has to suffer a lot to be truly funny. Dudley followed that path. We thank him for all the laughter and music, and are glad to read in this excellent work that toward the end Dudley learned to accept himself and found strength and awareness...and also peace.
We miss you Dudley and thank you Rena for preserving so much of the man and his life in this book.


To talk aboutReview Date: 2008-09-25
World Things And HumiliationReview Date: 2008-08-19
Bring this book on the airplaneReview Date: 2008-09-02
There's a good dose of the irresistible subjects here, some sex and crime and wealthy women cavorting, but this is mostly a book for people who like to travel, who are drawn to international politics and are intrigued by the way people from different countries react to each other in stressful situations. The characters are developed sparingly except for the dandy-imperialist who's strangely compelling, and the irresistibly plotting Marina. Actually, there's as much about Mexico City and Mexicans as there is describing most of the central (American) characters, which is appropriate because this is a plot-driven novel with short chapters, short paragraphs and everything always going on to the next place and scene. Sometimes it seems like it's going too fast, especially toward the end when you want the book to stretch out instead of rushing to a close.
On the other hand, when stepping back, it's notable how much serious thought got squeezed in. Obviously some of the intellectual weight connects with imperialism and whether people stand for the countries they came from or not, or whether people even connect to countries anymore. But there's also a lot about people, just normal people, and what we believe in, and about our resentments and envy and our superiority and fears of inferiority. Finally it's a powerful book, exciting to read and interesting to think about. Most important, it stays, keeps coming back and pulling at you.
I'd call this book enthrallingReview Date: 2008-08-06
There's also a kind of love/lust story which gets to you because it's funny. It's kind of jolting too, all this heavy imperialism stuff going on and then right through the middle shoots this comedy-romance (imagine Hugh Grant chasing a woman around in the middle of a PBS documentary).
The author obviously lives in Mexico and it shows with little details, you know those kinds of things world travelers love talking about at parties, but it's not so pretentious here in a novel when it's wrapped up in a plot. It's like background music that's always there and then once in a while you really notice it and it's curious, it kind makes you want to visit the place and see for yourself. (There were some pictures and youtube videos when I checked the book's website)
Just a quick general point, it's really a fast read because of the action but also because of its roomy pages. It's nice to see paperbacks getting published here the way they do in Europe, without compacting everything into that tiny type printed on the flimsiest and cheapest sheets anyone could possibly find.
This book is pretty unique, I don't think it's another version of something, but I suppose it could be called an international literary thriller. Probably people who like Eco's The Name of the Rose, or Fowles' The Magus, or Tartt's The Secret History, or The Dante Club or Graham Greene(Our Man in Havana ), or Milan Kundera (The Unbearable Lightness of Being) will like this. The author is a philosophy professor--Decadence of the French Nietzsche, Isolated Experiences--and that shows, but not in a bad way.
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A fabuous and fun reference.Review Date: 2000-06-09
The only reference book I've ever read cover to cover!Review Date: 2000-02-08
Gebert's insight and humorous approach makes it a delightReview Date: 1999-06-12
A must have book for anyone who loves movies.Review Date: 1998-09-27

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Pretty darn goodReview Date: 1998-04-09
An incredibly illustrated book!Review Date: 1998-07-05
The last in the series.Review Date: 2001-12-03
Great intro to Star Wars.Review Date: 2001-12-02

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not perfect, but very goodReview Date: 2003-08-05
a must-read for a who fell in love with Terms of EndearmentReview Date: 1996-12-29
As good as the first one!!Review Date: 1999-02-25
Out of his many, one of his best.Review Date: 2003-09-08
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