X Books
Related Subjects: Xuxa
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Used price: $16.98

Ka-click...it is so very nifty!Review Date: 2003-07-21
Worship the comic!Review Date: 2002-10-10
It's Pretty Darn Nifty!Review Date: 2002-03-25
The writing is sharp, funny, clever, funny, and lots of other words for funny. Sluggy Freelance is compelling, with the neverending storyline that makes you rave more. As Torg and Riff battle and befriend aliens, and try to fight off their pet bunny you become so much a pert of it that you can't let go... This book is bound for a title as not just a comic classic, but a classic comedy/tragedy/soap opera/addictive drug.
Ka-click...it is so very nifty!Review Date: 2003-07-21
Book 1, still my favoriteReview Date: 2002-07-24

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Even more than I had expected.Review Date: 2007-04-16
R.E.A.L.Review Date: 2007-03-24
Surprisingly ImpressedReview Date: 2007-03-03
Well, a very good one in fact. My favorite part of it was that he didn't restrain himself from sounding intimate. He would describe how he was living with nothing and then he had bought a little bouncy ball and that was the shiznit! lol I love that. He appreciated the small things. He still had a heart and needed love no matter how roughed up he was. I got mad respect for him and I feel his story was genuine. DMX did not try to make the projects seem cool or anything. I had a picture the entire time reading it. Dark, gloomy, dirty streets and bad vibes. I recommend this book. Seriously, just read it with an open mind. WOW.
Tough LifeReview Date: 2007-01-12
The book belongs in the garbage.Review Date: 2007-12-03
He spends too much time on the earliest years of his life which are uninteresting. He doesn't really cover the parts of his life that most people are interested in. He doesn't talk much about the actual business of music. He doesn't talk about how his life changed with the music business success. He doesn't talk about how he grew as a person or what he learned from his incarcerations. Did he spend his time in jail doing anything positive? Or was his jail time just fighting people and rapping about it?
I do appreciate his talent, but not his messages. There were alot of DMX songs that I used to listen to. After reading this book, I see him more vividly now. I see him as a horrible person who I would want nothing to do with. He isn't a person that should be celebrated, he should be ashamed for the life he has led.
You shouldn't buy this book. You shouldn't even borrow it. It's a waste of time to read, there are much better, more positive things that you could be doing with your life.

Used price: $9.16
Collectible price: $19.95

Great Intro. to PoetryReview Date: 2008-04-15
Endlessly valuable!Review Date: 2008-01-21
We use many of these poems as writing prompts for our own poetry in the classroom. The resulting poems are exiting, high-quality pieces the children and parents treasure. I would also recommend the Kenneth Koch-edited books "Rose, Where did you Get That Red? Teaching Great Poetry to Young Children" and "Talking to the Sun". The former gives lesson ideas, while the latter is a beautiful anthology of poetry paired with great works of art from the Metropolitan Museum of Art.
5-year old LOVES this bookReview Date: 2008-01-08
W E L O V E T H I S B O O K !!!!!!Review Date: 2007-12-07
Poetry speaks to children indeed. Although this book is actually meant for younger age lkie my 7-year old sister, my two older brothers (11 and 12) seem to also enjoy it, especially the CD recording. I highly recommend Poetry Speaks to all kids in the age group from five to ten. For slightly older kids I highly recommend Why Some Cats are Rascals, Book 2 - a collection of touching stories from the world of cats.
Bringing Poetry To KidsReview Date: 2007-06-14

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Just... wow.Review Date: 2005-06-16
CLAMP, you are too mean.
That last line without the "kun" in it just felt... slightly upsetting, but all in all, the translations were pretty decent.
"That line" made me cringe a tad, but I suppose there's worser ways to translate it.
If you're a Tokyo Babylon fan, or X fan, or Subaru and Sei-chan fan, read it.
And yes, you will most likely cry.
The volume is infamous for a reason....Review Date: 2005-09-04
Anyone who has ever belived that there was anything other than blank emotions or hate between Subaru-kun and Seishiro-san will shed at least one tear in this volume. Anyone who read Tokyo Babylon will be bawling. Without the honorifics, I admit, i did shift a little in my seat and definitely lessens the impact of "that line", (but my convoluted mind changed it into the intimate lack of honorifics, instead of Viz being dumbasses) but it still makes me cry.
We once again see Hokuto, Kakyo of course, angsting over her. man i love this girl, she rocks, of course. she makes a speech, in her dying moments to Seishiro-san (Kakyo's dream, of the past) about love and how there's hope, and how she could never hate him and puts her trust in him, and oh man, it made me cry.
DoE Kamui's talk with Kakyo is worth seeing too. The use of the word "special" causes confliction with me. In this context, it should be something much stronger than "special", but it strikes a memory of a TB scene where Hokuto-chan tells Seishiro-san that he is "special" to Subaru-kun, and there, the word is supposed to be "special", so confict on word choice there.
This volume is dedicated to my two all-time favorite CLAMP characters, Subaru-kun and Sei-chan, and their story, which began in Tokyo Babylon, continued in various volumes, which always made my heart clench, and finally ended here, in a very tearful moment, and lots of sakura petals (what else?) during the fight. (their story "continues" in a way in later volumes, you'll have to read 17 and 18 to know what i mean)
Even though their aren't any really happy moments (though the goofy smile never leaves Sorata's face...), and evil!Hinoto makes my skin crawl, and the majority of the book made me cry (Subaru-kun sitting in a dark room clenching the blood-spattered jacket around him, and kissing the marks on the back of his hands...*cries all over again*), this is definitely my favorite volume of the 18. Anyone who has made it this far, whether reading it w/o buying it, or buying all the volumes, one by one, has to own this volume. Any Tokyo Babylon fan should own this volume. period.
Wonderful job from CLAMP, passable job from VizReview Date: 2004-11-22
Luckily, I do not see a need to attack Viz for their translation. Others may see things differently depending on how Americanized or directly translated they like their manga to be. X is my favorite series, so I will not deny that I tend to be harsh on Viz. That having been said, here's what I thought:
Content-wise, this book couldn't be better. While it does center on just two characters, it is very worthwhile and doesn't drag on in the least. The overall mood is out to get you shocked and crying (and darned if it doesn't succeed), so don't expect tons of fluffy stuff here.
Translation-wise, this is, as I said in the title, passable. Not horrible, but probably won't meet the standards held by hardcore fans. Allow me to say this: the dialogue is much less ambiguous. The sound effects kind of seem to be mocking the artwork, but maybe that's just a recent revelation of mine. Finally, one page is left unflipped and if you're observant/know the pages of this book like the back of your hand, you'll notice and probably cringe.
There are some good points, though. As I said, I'm biased against Viz, so I'm being tough. After reading this book twice, I only found one minor grammatical error and as far as I know, the dialogue is mostly translated correctly. Of course, the artwork is just brilliant as always (and, may I argue, better than usual?).
To be honest, I rather like Viz's translation of "that line" (for those who don't know what I'm talking about, you will and how it's translated probably won't matter). Overall, I'm satisfied.
Final word: Go out and get this volume. It's a must-have.
X/1999 is great!Review Date: 2003-08-17
Sayonara, Sei-chanReview Date: 2004-11-14
How to review it....
Let's simply say I sobbed like a baby all the way through. Viz finally did a decent translation job, keeping all the heart, feeling and utter and complete angst that makes this the greatest of all volumes of X nearly as fabulous as it was in its original printing across the pages of Asuka comics.
From the trauma that graces the pages (no, not a single freaking happy moment in this one... save Sorata's goofiness at the end. He's a great spirit-lifter, even though after Hinoto's cameo you just shudder seeing his grin. GAH!) to the beautiful detail splayed across every page, this one's always been impossible for me to put down.
SEE what I mean that the fight in the anime should've been MUCH longer, seeing how many pages it takes up in this volume? Their fight went on forever across the comic's pages! Yeesh.
And such a horrible, yet fitting end... *cries herself silly*
To enjoy - Kamui smiling (WOW!), Sorata flopping his hair like mad, Nokuro looking very very bish, Girl-talk between Arashi and Yuzu that's so sweet it nearly made my teeth rot with its sugary goodness in a fine way, Kamui at Subaru's feet gripping his hand like the uke onna CLAMP's all but turned him in to, wind-caught trench coats EVERYWHERE, Seishiro's best-ever defense against ofuda, HOKUTO-CHAN! in her final moments, Kamui jumping off the roof of a Geo Metro (I'm a Metro owner, so I laughed myself silly seeing that. Thanks for the giggle, CLAMP!)...
Seishiro's side story with all of its incest and wrongnes with its pretty flowers and snow...
And the unforgettable conclusion on the drama that started with the very first pages of Tokyo Babylon.
Sayonara, Sei-chan.
And as for Subaru... no worries. We'll be seeing him again. *runs off before she blows spoilers everywhere*

Used price: $12.35

Brilliant, affecting and totally unforgettableReview Date: 1999-07-14
TOTALLY BEAUTIFUL!Review Date: 1999-06-18
lack of substanceReview Date: 2007-10-19
Like many attorneys, his arrogance and feeling of superiority are balanced by his lack of intellect and closed-mindedness. The results are one that is worthy of your pity. He is a repugnant individual who wears the cloak of a victim.
Avoid this and any other "works" of this revolting "author".
BTW
please note that all of the reviews are from "a customer" save two. Mr. Carney was probably the "customer" that gave his pathetic work all of the 5 star ratings
SpellbindingReview Date: 1999-07-28
"Superlative Chronometer"Review Date: 2001-06-11
Among the back cover hyperbolic platitudes, John A Williams, who incidentally is another author who never received the level of acclaim warranted by his body of work, proclaims SM is "Ellisonesque," well-intentioned praise I find to be a huge boulder no Black author should be obligated, inadvertent or not, to lug up the mountainside. Carney's novel of a Harvard educated Wall Street attorney who is pointedly reminded on a daily basis that he is Black and out of his assigned element does share some thematic similarities with INVISIBLE MAN but that is where the comparisons end. Mr. Ellison was a great writer; in this first novel Carney demonstrates he is a talented one. Ellison's book is a challenge to read and interpret. Conversely, SM is easily approachable, primarily devoid of the oppressively complex grammatical structure and deeply contemplative metaphors endemic to the earlier work. That is neither denigration of Carney's style nor an inference he assaults the reader's intelligence, he simply does not attempt to cloak his ideas in literary erudition.
At it's core, this is the story of the Black man's perpetual struggle to achieve pyschological balance and socio-economic security in an often openly hostile environment. With a backdrop of jazz, Carney unfurls a story of relationships and the determinism of true love. Franklin D. Moore, the protagonist is on a journey to self-awareness bordering on existentialism that commences at age 14 in 1963 and continues to evolve *after* the book's denouement in the late 1970s. The trials, tribulations and epiphanies he encounters and experiences are equally as relevant to the Black individual of the present as they were in the 70s, 50s, 30s or 1870s. However, unlike the INVISIBLE MAN where the protagonist ends up enlightened but inextricably encumbered, Franklin Moore is cognizant of the encumbrances yet optimistically enlightened.
All in all, a book not to be overlooked.

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Very useful bookReview Date: 2000-04-19
There is only one thing I would ask for in a new edition: A little more on Web-graphics. I can recommend a couple of other books with almost the same approach as this one: "The CorelDraw Wow Book", by Linnea Dayton, Shane Hunt and Sharon Steuer and "Corel Studio Techniques", by David Huss & Gary Priester. They are also great.
Excellent technique book even for a beginner in Corel DrawReview Date: 1999-05-07
Great book, thorough and well-writtenReview Date: 2000-03-06
Highly recomended!
It's an easy to use bookReview Date: 1999-06-29
a rereview from an eight month perspectiveReview Date: 1999-06-10


An excellent and informative bookReview Date: 2008-01-14
Very Well WrittenReview Date: 2008-01-20
It's HUGEReview Date: 2007-10-09
All the gory details of how a Mac OS is put together from Mach to Cocoa are covered and then some. The author is a hard-core expert who put a lot into this book. Well worth the price!
Amazing workReview Date: 2007-12-31
This reading gave me the satisfaction of understanding the inner working of Mac OS X which now make my work as a software engineer much easier because I know what is going on.
The book is well balanced in that it cover all the different aspects of the operating system without getting into unecessary details.
One small complaint is that the chapter describing the hardware architecture focus on PowerPC systems. I would of course have rather have a detail explanation of the Intel platform. Maybe in a second edition.
The one and only OS X reference tome.Review Date: 2007-12-11
Like it's cousin, the MS ResKit, it's dry, concise, and may scare off some folks. And like the ResKit, it's just as essential as a learning tool and reference book rolled into one.
I've seen many reviews that talk about this book as a book for programmers. I don't believe that for one second. I've heard many references to the old days when all admins were programmers and heard tell of greybeard hackers who are equally proficient at both coding and admin work. This book does a similar job of blending the lines between the two tasks, illustrating concepts and giving examples using C and scripting as well as using human readable english. As a non-coding UNIX and OS X aficionado, I look forward to broadening my knowledge of both programming and unix administration as it applies to OS X via this awe-inspiring book.

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Tango is so worth the effort of learning and doing.Review Date: 2007-02-03
This is one of the best of many books on the subject of life transformation experienced by a very large number of people outside of Buenos Aires.
Highly recommended.
However, it has even greater meaning when you have attempted the Argentine Tango.
So, hug a partner and dance with your heart.
Abrazos!
Tango dancers will smile with understandingReview Date: 2007-01-17
comparison of female/male energy to tango is a thought provoking, but compelling theory filled with accuracy. I couldn't put this book down .
It's About the ConnectionReview Date: 2005-12-20
I recommend this book to anyone, either you are dancing tango or not; it's short and very easy to read. And if you don't find a nice dance technique suggestion in it, you might find something that would be applicable in your every day life in a relation with your significant one or friends, or colleagues at work.
Understanding the Power of BalanceReview Date: 2005-05-16
As the result of "feminism", we can enjoy a fairer balance of power with men, but what femininity is still remains a complete mystery to us. The book dares to praise passivity, surrendering and following, and reminds us that those words can still carry derogative connotations. At the same time it tells us about male and female energies present in each one of us and with that, it frees us of limiting patterns of behavior.
Dancing Tango is a beautiful way to play, rehearse and observe how we are as women and men. The Tao of Tango refers to it in a provocative, measured and grounded way.
Valeria Solomonoff
Tango performer, teacher and choreographer
Co-founder of TangoMujer
www.valetango.com
Dance Tango, Be WholeReview Date: 2006-01-17
On the surface, Tango is rooted in the sensuality and seduction that goes on between a man and a woman. But deeper things are going on. As Ms. Seigmann discovered, it is a conversation "in some language of the soul that resided in some part of me I never knew existed."
Drawing on key principles of Taoism, Ms. Siegmann shows how all people, whether men or women, are mixtures of characteristics that are either yang (masculine) or yin (feminine), and in order to be successful, in either Life or in Tango, each person must have these energies in balance within themselves. Yet in our post-Feminism world, this is rarely the case, for either gender. Johanna Siegmann discovered, as have many others, that learning to tango is much more than learning a new dance.
In order to dance tango properly, whether we are a man or a woman, we must be in touch with both our halves, both the confident masculine part, and the sensitive feminine part. Per Ms. Siegmann, "True happiness lies in the mutual embrace of both our [masculine and feminine] energies." Only when we can draw on both these qualities will our tango have the deep character for which it is so justly revered. In a real sense, it is a journey of self-discovery and healing. We find that, whether interacting on the dancefloor or in a Life relationship, having our energies in balance promises nothing less than a resolution of the age-old "battle of the sexes."
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JUST ONE MORE CHAPTER HONEYReview Date: 2001-06-20
Magnificent Medical ThrillerReview Date: 2001-04-24
all nighterReview Date: 2000-11-04
Loved this book!Review Date: 2000-08-24
Fragile XReview Date: 2000-06-22
Dr. Rice has artfully created a single story to the many which cleverly exposes the harsh and ruthless realities of Managed Health Care: a structured business whereby the decisions of physicians are compromised for the sake of capital gain.
Fragile X is the story of Molly Loomis. She is a young woman who by the wicked hand of Managed Health Care is wrongly surgically stripped of her God-given right to bear children. She is not, however, stripped of the keen, instinctual qualities that are ever-present in a woman's heart, being and spirit.
The characters are real: men and women who speak their truths with passion. And as I read, it was the courage of the characters, whose journeys to prevail, served as my hope for a future free of the pervasive predominance of Managed Health Care.
It is for a very personal reason that I find Fragile X to be so compelling. It is for the sake of my mother's struggle that I pray the masses embrace this captivating literary work for its overall precision.
I watched as my mother, in her last years of life experience the injustice and inhumanity of Managed Health Care. After receiving her last rites, my mother with her seemingly lifeless seventy-two pound frame, defied tremendous opposing odds and survived her battle with pseudomonas (a deadly bacterial disease of the lungs). From this point on in my mother's life she depended on an oxygen concentrator to breathe. After many months of red-tape, it was determined that the level of oxygen which ever-flowed through yards of clear tubing and into my mother's lungs, which was necessary for her quality of life as well as perpetuating it, did not meet administrative criteria. My mother was denied coverage. My mother was denied oxygen.
Thank you Dr. Rice

Used price: $5.00

funny and facinatingReview Date: 2006-08-09
Even if you haven't been let go from Hustler, you will love this book!Review Date: 2006-11-14
Thank God Allan Lives!Review Date: 2006-08-05
Forward 27 years, I'm sick at home listening to Howard Stern and Allan is a guest promoting his book. What a second, Allan is alive and he worked at Hustler for the better portion of his adult life. This is a book I have to buy immediately.
The book is darn funny. His nearly two decade journey from being a punk rock proofreader during the early days of the Reagan administration to help saving the 42nd President's rear makes for a great read. Thank God that Allan lived to bring us this special gem through his Canadian/SoCal/Punk Rock eyes.
Buy it today, so you can eventually say the book was so much funnier than the movie (wonder if Woody will reprise his role?)
Hey, I really did buy it for the articles!!!Review Date: 2007-02-05
The first half of the book is probably the toughest on his character (and interestingly he doesn't spare himself much). He was abusing drugs, women and himself, paranoid that he would be fired on a daily basis, and basically existing hand to mouth on his low wages (dating a girl at one time because she owned a VCR!). At a certain point time (after a particularly scaring DUI incident) he gets cleaned up and doesn't even drink. It's somewhat downplayed, but his success at the magazine soars at this point.
While he bashes almost everyone, (name dropping Dennis Hopper, Frank Zappa, who at times were friends of Flynt or connected to the magazine, and he cares for neither), he is particularly nasty to his fellow inmates at the asylum and of course hardest on his pyscho boss, Larry Flynt. (Once again these people probably deserve even worse criticism), but it would be nice to hear a more good tales (he admits at one point that his staff - when he rises to power - was actually a good one).
Comparison's have been made to Hunter S. Thompson, and while I think these are somewhat accurate as far as characters and subject matter, that should not indicate that the writing (and or editing) is nearly in that league. The book feels a little flabby (and repetitive near the end), and probably could have been 50 pages shorter.
Another complaint is no photos - it would be nice to know what some of these people looked like. The great cover art is by Daniel Clowes but there are no further illustrations (that would have been better than photos!)
Besides all the juicy gossip about the mag there is also some poltical stuff that is very fascinating (as they destroy one Republican senator's career, defend Clinton and try to trash Bush (Jr.). If you've ever read the magazine this book will be of interest to you. Even better on the porn industry itself is "The Other Hollywood: The Uncensored Oral Histroy of the Porn Film Industry" by Legs McNeil (also reviewed by yours truly).
Hilarious, Crazy Book!!Review Date: 2006-12-23
Related Subjects: Xuxa
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