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Happy to say that a long imaginery journey has ended. Review Date: 2008-01-05
The Final BrickReview Date: 2007-10-23
Another excellent book by John WheelerReview Date: 2007-07-07
This book is mostly a series of question and answers - John has a very simple and loving way - he's very patient but also unfailingly catches the questioner as they fall back into the mind, into the sense of "I" - John gently directs them back and continuously reminds them of what they are.
John is one of the most "respected" authors writing about Advaita or NonDuality today - a student of Bob Adamson - he has gone beyond the mind and resides in the clear presence awareness of which he speaks and points to. To be more clear - he shows that there is no one to go anywhere, no one to achieve or attain, nothing to do but BE WHAT YOU ALREADY ARE.
All of his books are very highly recommended.
i was teetering, wheeler tipped me over and into the poolReview Date: 2007-03-14
Shook my foundations and made me take another look at the easily overlooked obviousReview Date: 2007-02-04

for silent movie loversReview Date: 2008-06-10
A great tribute to Silent Film!Review Date: 2008-03-19
Must-have book for silent movie fansReview Date: 2008-03-01
Beautifully illustrated bookReview Date: 2008-01-10
A Sumptuous Book on the Silent EraReview Date: 2007-12-31

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My daughter LOVES this book!Review Date: 2003-06-06
Already a "must" in our bedtime routineReview Date: 2002-11-29
I MUST HAVE READ IT 100 TIMES!Review Date: 2002-09-22
Wonderful nightime wind down bookReview Date: 2002-06-26
An excellent bedtime storyReview Date: 2002-08-09

Used price: $4.25

Awesome Price for 6 Books!!Review Date: 2008-07-23
Hands Off!
And the Winner Is...
SpongeBob and the Princess
Ice-Cream Dreams
Bubble Blowers, Beware!
The Great Snail Race
These retail individually for $3.99 or $4.99 each, so this set is an awesome deal.
We bought a set for our house & a set for a birthday party gift. SpongeBob lovers will all be glad to have these. Great for ages 4-7. My boys are 6 and they just love them. They like having them all in one box. They are great for the boys to practice their reading skills.
great product at great priceReview Date: 2008-06-10
Spongebob Box of BooksReview Date: 2008-03-18
My DS4 and DS8 just love these booksReview Date: 2007-12-28
A nice set of books to have on hand.
Spongebob fans only...Review Date: 2008-05-16
For the price... it is a must-have for every Spongebob lover out there.

Used price: $18.88

Nice to Have AgainReview Date: 2008-01-30
This Star Trek Calendar was out of this worldReview Date: 2008-01-18
Awesome CalendarReview Date: 2008-01-14
another great Trek calendar for '08...Review Date: 2008-01-07
the star trek calanderReview Date: 2007-12-24

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Exciting and worth every penny!Review Date: 2008-07-03
Movie QualityReview Date: 2008-05-15
Amazing! Perfect!Review Date: 2008-01-27
Fun - should have been an episode!Review Date: 2007-05-11
The author did a fantastic job and would love to see more from them.
The story continues with the book "Cost of Honor" and picks up right where this one leaves off - it was just like watching a two part episode.
Fun read.
I LOVE THIS BOOK!!!!!!!!!!!!!Review Date: 2007-04-15
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Touching the very strings of our soul's harp...Review Date: 2005-05-11
It took me a while to become fully immersed in the book due to its unusual beginning. The very first page tells of the death of Tusker Smalley, which, in fact, is also the end of that elegiac psychological novel. As I read pretty much the same description of the very same episode at the end of the book, I felt something totally different. Since Tusker was already a friend of mine, his ways not just a weird old man's habitudes, his life not merely a consecution of events, but the result of unfavourable circumstances and crucial decisions, his death grieved me deeply.
The divergence between the story and the plot draws us into a mazy time puzzle, which we have to arrange for ourselves. We are shown into the all-embracing socio-historical setting both before and after the Independence in 1947 through the eyes of Mr and Mrs Smalley, their servant Ibrahim, and the manager of the hotel where they live, Mr Bhoolobhoy. The various perspectives contribute to the comprehension and comprehensiveness of this fading Anglo-Indian portrait of a whole civilization in miniature.
The character of Lucy Smalley is similarly developed through a number of retrospections. In her imaginary conversations with the young Englishman Mr Turner she looks back with bitterness on the days of the raj, most of which pass under the sign of the imposed British hierarchy. Just when she achieves the aspired position of Colonel's Lady "the old hierarchy collapsed and a new one, the Indian one, took its place". Thus, nothing changes for them because the new race of sahibs and memashibs places them as far down in the social scale as the Eurasians in the days of the raj.
The changes brought about by the Independence estrange Lucy and Tusker even more than before. The lack of communication cuts them off from one another and makes them live separate lives under the same roof. He has a rude awakening when he realizes that the huge rise in the cost of living in England prices them out of the home market and they must stay on in India. This leads to his "personality change", as Lucy calls it. She, for her part, is terribly lonely because in this new world she has become "a black sheep in reverse exposure". She fears the moment when her ill husband will pass away and she will be destitute because, `She would be alone in a foreign country. There would be no one of her own kind, her own colour, no close friend by whom to be comforted or on whom she could rely for help and guidance."
Staying on is not a novel of action, but one of contemplation and speculation. Its very title implies passivity. It however, turns out to be misleading for in Tusker and Lucy's case staying on in India requires strong will and endurance. In fact, this paradox makes Tusker and Lucy analyze and reconsider their lives; makes them realize that their happiness was sacrificed part because of circumstances, part for habits' sake. The profundity of their psychological portraits, the moving episodes, even the purifying humour turn this novel into a quest for our own inner selves. Thus, even though the end of Staying On is well-known from the very first line, it still strikes us with its poignancy for we have changed our perception and have turned into Tusker and Lucy's best friend who knows all they've been through,
So when Lucy sits on her "throne" in the bathroom, appealing to Tusker:
...Tusker, I hold out my hand, and beg you, Tusker, beg, beg you to take it and take me with you. How can you not, Tusker? Oh, Tusker, Tusker, Tusker, how can you make me stay here by myself while you yourself go home?
what I hear is the echo of the record Lucy loves best, Chloë:
Oh through the black of night, I gotta be where you are. If it's wrong or right, I gotta go where you are. I'll roam through the dismal swamplands, searching for you. If you are lost there let me be there too...
Excellent, Most recommended. Review Date: 2006-05-10
Defective construction of bookReview Date: 2005-08-30
Self-DeceptionReview Date: 2004-04-20
Paul Scott portrays Mr. Bhoolabhoy in hilarious terms. Mr. Bhoolabhoy functions as management at his wife's place of business and also considers himself Tusker's best friend. Just before his death Tusker Smalley fired his servant Ibrahim. Ibrahim had been fired on other occasions by either Tusker or his wife, Lucy, but of course in this instance the action is final.
The Smalleys are the last of Pankot's permanent retired British residents. Hearing of the death of Colonel Layton in England, Lucy commences to write to Sarah Layton. It is learned subsequently that Sarah married Guy Perron and a friend of theirs, David Tucker, is scheduled to visit Pankot and complicates the action by causing Lucy to make provision for his stay under the circumstances where she does not truly understand Tusker's careful stewardship of the couple's rather limited resources.
Through the memory of Lucy the book circles back to the earlier incidents of Mabel Layton's death at Rose Cottage, the fate of her house guest, Barbie, and the residency of Tusker and Lucy at that abode. Mr. Bhoolabhoy has always felt that Lucy's presence in Smith's dining room makes the place seem less seedy. In the end Mrs. Bhoolabhoy sells out to a consortium and Tusker dies clutching the notice to quit prepared by his dear friend, Frank Bhoolabhoy, the management of Smith's Hotel.
may even get you to tackle the Raj QuartetReview Date: 2000-10-01
The year is 1972 and the Smalleys have stayed on in Pankot, India even after Independence in 1947, less out of love of the country or it's people, than out of financial need and sheer spite on Tusker's part. Where the upper class Brits were able to just scamper home, the Smalleys represent the folk of the middle class, who felt that they had invested something in the colony and now deserved to get something out of it. As he explains to Lucy:
I know for years you've thought I was a damn' fool to have stayed on, but I was forty-six when Independence came, which is bloody early in life for a man to retire but too old to start afresh somewhere you don't know. I didn't fancy my chances back home, at that age, and I knew the pension would go further in India than in England. I still think we were right to stay on, though I don't think of it any longer as staying on , but just as hanging on, which people of our age and upbringing and limited talents, people who have never been really poor but never had any real money, never inherited money, never made real money, have to do, wherever they happen to be, when they can't work anymore. I'm happier hanging on in India, not for India as India but because I just can't merely think of it as a place where I drew my pay for 25 years of my working life, which is a hell of a long time anyway, though by rights it should have been longer.
But now, with Tusker's health in decline, Lucy has increasing concerns about her own future. As is, they have led a pretty precarious existence for the past 15 years, having been reduced to living in a hotel, the new owner of which is a ghastly Indian woman, who married the manager, Mr. Bhoolabhoy, one of Tusker's few remaining friends. The author etches a finely detailed portrait of his characters and in particular of the difficult marriage of the Smalleys. Tusker is an irascible curmudgeon straight out of an old British barracks. Lucy has been disappointed that their relationship did not fulfill her romantic ideals. These strains are exacerbated by the daily indignities they must now suffer as the last seedy remnants of the departed British Empire, looked down upon by the very natives they once lorded it over. In the final scenes of the novel, two letters are written which will change these peoples' lives, for better and for worse.
This is a very funny and ultimately a deeply moving story. The Smalleys are a couple the reader won't soon forget. I liked it so much, I think I may finally heft that colossal Quartet off of the shelf and give it a go.
GRADE: A-

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Cute StoryReview Date: 2007-09-18
Good book for children starting school.Review Date: 2007-09-04
I do feel that there are too many words so I summarize and skip some parts.
Very cuteReview Date: 2007-08-01
So cute!Review Date: 2007-06-28
I bought this for my daughter the summer before starting kindergarten and she loved it. I read many "going to school for the first time" books that summer and this was a favorite.
Perfect for your kids starting school or going back!Review Date: 2005-09-15
The book also goes through lunchtime, naptime, and recess. At the end of the book she tells her friends that she will see them tomorrow, which really was great for my daughter. She loves the fact that she has a bunch of friends.
I have another book about Strawberry. "Sleep Over" is the title and its also a favorite of my daughters. Get them both- you won't regret it.

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Collectible price: $11.45

It's just so money, baby.Review Date: 2001-11-19
Mah-velous!!!!!!Review Date: 2000-10-09
A magnificant screenplay and movie!Review Date: 1999-09-07
This book is so MONEY, and you don't even know it - YetReview Date: 2000-09-20
A movie to live by.Review Date: 1999-07-15

Used price: $1.10

Welcome to Fairytopia (Stickerific)Review Date: 2005-10-09
5 stars isn't high enough!Review Date: 2005-06-13
YOU KNOW YOU WANT IT!
A MUST READER!Review Date: 2005-06-13
Nice coloring bookReview Date: 2005-08-20
Should be Book Of The Year!Review Date: 2005-06-13
Does she looooove to read?
Well if she is those two things, than this is the book for her. I got this book as a gift and I just keep reading it and reading it. I can't put it down! Come on moms, you have to get this book for your special little girl! ENJOY!
Believe me,
Dina Rollander
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I remember first reading this and I could feel that this was the beginning of the end, and surely enough it was. During this period I was packing up to move to the Northwest and decided I needed to meet this Mr. John Wheeler on my way. Meeting him was like meeting god himself. This guy was completely sure of himself, clear and is a true living example of every reading I've studied over the years. It was obvious that something much deeper was going on under the surface of this man's voice.
After meeting John Wheeler and going over his teaching for a few months I went back and forth between having it and not having it, which is really impossible because there is neither. But following the advice in this book and questioning everything that came up, it finally is clear. No self. Very simple really.
If you are ready for the end of your journey the teachings in this book are sure to help you on your path, or lack there of. He is clear and direct, and this is the next best thing to actually meeting a "person" who has "it". What seperates his book from others really is his adamance on the fact that "you" don't exist, there is no you and there never was. He pounds this into your head page after page after page. I remember talking to John about this, saying I never finished his book because he just kept repeating himself page after page, which he agreed. But this is what the "person" needs. So many many other books are all over the place and really make up a whole philosophy and idealogy about an enlightened person and the spiritual life. For years I rememeber trying to mimic the way "i" thought an enlightened person should act. But enoug of that. Wheeler goes straight to the source of the problem, the "I", the self. Eliminate this and you're done. In the words of many others before me, "no self no problem". Wheeler shows you how to see this which is already here.