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Outstanding book for all ages!Review Date: 2002-05-12
This book is amazing and wonderful!Review Date: 2000-05-14
The BESTReview Date: 1999-10-29
one of my all time favoritesReview Date: 1999-09-25
Too much to dream...Review Date: 1999-05-23

FUNNY!Review Date: 2004-03-11
has loved amanda since she was 1 second old.You will see how much
penelope loves amanda and how she should be amanda's best friend
to why amanda should eat lunch with penelope!Discover what it is like to film a episode of the amanda show to what is in amanda's
garbage to how penelope tries to break up amanda's friend ship
with a girl named Annie.
this book is soo funny and i hope you like it!!
Amanda Rocks!Review Date: 2000-10-13
This book is THE BOMB!Review Date: 2000-10-14
More AMANDA PLEASE!Review Date: 2000-10-14
I love Amanda, PleaseReview Date: 2001-04-24

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You Are There....In The ShadowsReview Date: 2008-12-07
The complete screenplay by Christopher Nolan and David S. Goyer is worth the price of admission. Though there is not a need to have seen the movie in conjunction with reading the screenplay - or vice versa - it is a great way to compare the original vision with what was (could be) accomplished when more people had scissors - and the purse strings - to splice and dice.
The storyboards drawn for the picture - By Martin Asbury and James Cornish - adds a dynamic dimension. The interview with Nolan provides a special insider's view on his vision.
Even if a person is not a Batman fan, the front row look into the making of the film should be of interest to anyone who has even a mild interest in the sweat and (plenty of) tears that goes into the process.
Excellent ScriptReview Date: 2008-08-31
It has interviews (Goyer's is really short but Nolan's is substantial and informative) and artwork. The artwork is good if you wanna see how people in the industry do shot-by-shot scenes. Buy this book if you like reading scripts. Otherwise pass.
A Quality Product Without The Hype of High-Color Gloss PhotosReview Date: 2008-02-19
Go behind the Bat!Review Date: 2005-10-12
very, very good movie!Review Date: 2005-10-22

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Laugh Out Loud Funny and Clever MysteryReview Date: 2008-09-13
This is the second work I've read by Dave Jeffery. Whether you read his novel "Finding Jericho", which delivers an educational and serious message or whether reading his more light-hearted work as with "Beatrice Beecham's Fearsome Feast", he tells his stories with a unique whimsical style. I have yet to get through his novels without laughing out loud at least ten times not including chuckles and smiles in between.
In "Beatrice Beecham's Fearsome Feast", Beatrice and her family move to a small and cliquish coastal town called Dorsal Finn due to her father's job loss. There, they will live with Beatrice's seventy-seven year old and very wise Aunt Maude to help with her Chocolate Emporium.
Beatrice dreads the move but finds unexpected acceptance there with her new found friends the "Newshounds." Together, with Beatrice being the leader, they embark with two hundred year old clues to uncover secrets surrounding the sunken "Charlotte Elizabeth." From there the reader is lead on a journey of clues; I guessed the answers to some of them ahead of time and other times I didn't but the pointing path kept me enthralled throughout the story.
Beatrice is exceptionally intelligent, inquisitive, and forthright. She is also respectful of her family which is a refreshing attribute for a twelve year old protagonist. She is also a gifted cook which leads her to the fearsome feast.
The author, Dave Jeffery, is a gifted story-teller who knows how to develop sensible and quirky characters that we can laugh at without making fun of. The town librarian and historian, Agnes, comes to mind. She has a botched hearing aid and Jeffrey takes her dilemma into a wave of laughter for the reader. You will understand the "wave" pun when you meet Agnes in the story.
I liked this story. It is not only for young adults but for readers of all ages.
I was impressed that there was not one profane word throughout the story. The characters all had something to add and did so without vulgar enhancement. The author's clever wit shines to the last page. I give "Beatrice Beecham's Fearsome Feast" five solid stars.
Kathy Flanary Nelson
A romping adventure!Review Date: 2008-02-21
Can she do it? Not without a bounty of close calls, perilous consequences, and finding the right time and place to use her cookbook treasures, clues from a desperate matriarch long dead.
Beatrice Beecham is delightful, scrappy, and the most exciting thing that has happened in Dorsal Finn for a long time. Dave Jeffery has created a tale that's intelligent and fun from start to finish, and full of surprises. This is one romping adventure!
Simply Delicious!Review Date: 2008-04-17
The story was exciting and certainly kept me gripped. I also greatly enjoyed the imaginary conversations that Beatrice had with Jamie Oliver and some of the other well-known British celebrity chefs. This is despite the fact that I'm not particularly into the cooking show genre or a big follower of any of those guys. The various plotlines (like the Fearsome Feast competition and the mystery of the Charlotte Elizabeth) were cleverly interweaved. Apart from the story, the characters are also engaging, especially Beatrice herself. The secondary characters are also quite well developed.
One of the few down sides for me was that the Epilogue was rather unsatisfactory and made the ending feel slightly untidy. On the whole, I prefer books to end with a sense of proper closure, although there should certainly be some scope for creating anticipation for the next book in a series. Speaking of which, I look forward to sampling Beatrice Beecham's Fete of Fate, which has just come out.
The other thing that bothered me was the somewhat high number of typos, which were a little bit distracting. But I'm sure a good copy-editor can fix that. ;-)
All in all, I found this book to be simply delicious and recommend that everyone put it on their reading menu! Pukka! :-)
A Great ReadReview Date: 2008-02-24
Fills the coal scuttleReview Date: 2007-04-10
But there's adventure afoot: treasure with anagram clues, villains (including the notorious Chorley brothers), reenactment of an historic masque (shades of Edgar Allan Poe), a past murder uncovered and, last but not least, the "fearsome feast" in which entrants concoct hideous entrees (the one that can't be eaten by the notorious Vladimir Karlof wins). "A tale's not worth tellin' if it's not told right!" proclaims Aunt Maud. And this one abounds in treasures of its own. For example, the Aunt's little comments "...she's as reliable as a one handed alarm clock" and unobtrusive bits of psychological insight-- when Beatrice feels like a stranger in her new bedroom, Aunt Maud tells her about her own experience as a child in a strange bedroom when she was transported into the country during the bombing of London during World War II, "But I think the real reason I didn't want it to be mine. I was scared that if I accepted it then I would never see the world I knew ever again."
There are four very short surreal chapters from a second person point of view that may be confusing to young readers since we don't know who the "you" is and the cinematic ending seems unnecessarily complicated to me. But overall this is a great feast with course after course of satisfying dishes. It is the book as treasure hunt. Or like Aunt Maud would say, a story that "fills the coal scuttle."

A Pictorial ReferenceReview Date: 1999-11-27
A treasure-trove of poster art and American popular history.Review Date: 1999-11-08
A Wonderful Pictoral History of Film GreatsReview Date: 2001-01-11
A must-have "sequel" to the five-star "original!"Review Date: 1999-11-19
Another fine collection!Review Date: 1999-11-09

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Sweet, Tender "Blue's Clues" Counting BookReview Date: 2008-03-06
Very cuteReview Date: 2007-12-03
Good BookReview Date: 2007-02-25
Great way to teach numbersReview Date: 2006-08-13
Great for the little onesReview Date: 2005-09-25
have increased.

Fundamental issue!Review Date: 2004-08-21
Nevertheless the legend and the comentaries are really easy going . As a guide to discover new an unknown tresaures of the story of the cinema .
Recommendable.
For the film fanaticReview Date: 2001-01-03
A Great Introduction To The World Of Cult MoviesReview Date: 2000-12-10
Mr. Peary's approach to cult movies is respectful- this in contrast to other books of the "Bad Movie catalog" bent. At the end of his comments about "Plan 9 From Outer Space", for example, he came to the defense of Ed Wood. He pointed out that Mr. Wood managed to get his message, critical of American nuclear build-up, past the censors and into the theaters. Most other filmmakers at that time just went with the political flow.
Thanks to Mr. Peary's tutelage, I sought out such diverse films as "Aguirre, the Wrath of God" (artsy, passionate), "El Topo" (bizarre, egotistical), "42nd Street" (musical... not my style, but I enjoyed it), "Kiss Me, Deadly" (pure noir), and "Behind the Green Door (`nuff said). If you want to put some excitement in your experience of cinema, this book is a great way to begin.
The first of three of my favorite film books.Review Date: 2004-01-19
This expose of 100 films was one of the firsts along with Jonathan Rosenbaum and J. Hoberman's MIDNIGHT MADNESS to delve into what makes a movie a "cult movie," and Peary does a spectacular job. Unlike some surveys which focus more on indiscriblable oddities such as David Lynch's ERASERHEAD, Peary wonderfully widens the cult criteria to include a whole array of film-watching experiences. From schlock like PLAN 9 FROM OUTER SPACE to high art like THE RED SHOES, Peary's historical overview and analysis within an ever changing pop cultural landscape is consistantly readable and on the money. Every conceivable genre gets their due -comedies, westerns, horror, musicals, film noir thrillers, kung fu epics, pornography- and, like them or not, all are made to seem wonderfully relevant and alive. Even if you disagree with Peary's opinions, afterwards you're just begging to run to experience these movies from a different angle. This is film criticism at its best.
For my money, the best series of books for the film fan!Review Date: 2001-05-01
Many film texts are dry treatises that absolutely drain the rollercoaster vicseral joy that a film can bring. Not so with Peary's excellent series. Peary manages to legitimately relate the true art that is cinema while at the same time exploring what makes so many great films live as a part of our very extistances.
I have read and re-read this book several times and each time, I have discovered a new insight into a favorite film or been directed to a new reference point. Peary is very careful to point to other film scholars and film titles that can enhance a film cutlists experience. In deconstructing each film, he also includes fascinating tidbits of information such as interviews with the film makers, insights into the creative process and backstory history.
Especially fine are his explorations on "It's a Wonderful Life", "King Kong", "Singin' in the Rain", "Rio Bravo" and "A Hard Day's Night". He successfully argues in all those cases that superb entertainment does make great art.
Do I agree with every one of Peary's opinions? Do I enjoy every single film included in these three books? Of course not! But Peary does give vallidation to all of us who could be classified as true film geeks. Since these books are as of this writing all out of print, I with the strongest terms possible urge you all to seek them out. You will not be dissapointed!


Another Excellent S:aab book!Review Date: 2000-12-08
It is also faithful to Morgan and Wong (the Producer's) vision for S:AaB, which is a relief.
The characters show how young and inexperienced they are, as adults and yet they manage to survive and work together to complete their mission.
This S:AaB book is well worth the cover price and is a great read for anyone who loves S:AaB or just loves a good military story.
Demolition WinterReview Date: 2000-10-07
Demolition Winter was great. It had all what the Show Space: Above and Beyond had. Danger, action, romance, humor...everything. The only thing that troubles me is that the characters seems differnt. Shane is all the sudden angry and let it go out on the squadron, Damphousse (the Engieneer) know less than Wang about planes and stuff...and McQueen is all smussy. This is not our Ty. But the book is nevertheless good. And Nathan has never been better.
AWSOMEReview Date: 1999-11-04
If you liked the series, you'll love the book.Review Date: 1998-07-30
An Excellent SAAB Sniper-Mission Novel!Review Date: 1999-04-27

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A good guide to real Hong Kong CantoneseReview Date: 2009-01-03
I recommend this book for language students in Hong Kong; it would also be useful for police officers and social workers.
Note: Some of the words covered are not suitable for children.
Excellent! Long over due. A few mistakesReview Date: 2008-01-21
There are a few mistakes in the book, however, but not a big problem. For instance, some characters that actually can be written in Cantonese are left "blank" (indicated by a square).
I recommend this book 100%
So THAT's what I've been saying all these years!Review Date: 2007-03-27
Nicely written. VERY colloquial (ie a lot of swearing included)Review Date: 2006-11-04
hk.style
outstandingReview Date: 2005-10-04
Cantonese is difficult anyway, and has very few good books for those learning the language, in contrast to Mandarin.
well done to the authors and publishers for sticking it out, anyone seriously studying Cantonese will need to learn the wonderfully rich and varied slang, and this really is a serious and valuable work, also rather amusing..thank you!.

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Good book that kids will loveReview Date: 2003-05-17
Digimon digirocks!!!Review Date: 2002-04-25
Listen Up Parents!!!Review Date: 2001-07-17
Digi-Know?! digimon rocks...Review Date: 2002-03-24
HOW TRUEReview Date: 2001-11-18
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