W Books
Related Subjects: Weber, Bob White, Mack Ware, Chris
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Stages of faith and human developmentReview Date: 2008-03-06
A Book for the JourneyReview Date: 2008-04-06
I was first given this book about 18 years ago when I found myself at odds with the faith in which I was reared. I had doubts in high school as I could no longer tolerate the literalism and simplicity of the churches I attended. I lived with the dissonance for several years. Eventually, the dissonance was so unbearable, I sought the help of a counselor.
The counselor heard my doubts and lent me this book. I read that there are different stages of faith. I realized that my doubts stemmed from growth. I realized the conflicts were the conflicts of maturity not of "back-sliding."
Now, as I see young people struggling with their spiritual growth, I talk with them and, if I feel it appropriate, I give them a copy of this book.
Still very usefullReview Date: 2007-01-11
Christian lifecycleReview Date: 2007-01-10
Stages of Faith: The Psychology of Human DevelopmentReview Date: 2007-05-15

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Wonderful Story!Review Date: 2008-08-08
This is the story of a family of five. The father, Derek Holloway, is a famous golf pro, the mother, Crystal, a past beauty queen are divorced. The three children, Cameron, Charlie, & Ashley, spend every week with the other parent.
Brought together over the concern for their middle daughter's troubles at school, they meet with her teacher, Lily Robinson, also Crystals life long best friend and godmother to the kids, to discuss her needs. After the meeting, Crystals car won't start and Derek gives her a ride. An unfortunate accident takes the life of both parents. The kids are now at the mercy of Derek's younger brother, the rakish & wild Sean.
Lily's loyalty to the kids and to her best friend, as well as her genuine love for them, throw her and Sean together into a oneness of mind, to bring a normal life to these hurting kids. The result is a journey of discovery and passion. (No explicit sex scenes, as is true with most of her novels, which I appreciate.)
This is an awesome account of how love can heal and how it's OK to move on after losing a loved one. It is refreshing to see how life can change for the better in the aftermath of such devestation. It is so beautiful to watch how love heals and changes EVERY character in this book! Wow! What a great story!
The only problem you will have here is some of the repetition that Susan is known for. Read through! It is a great story! Full of passion, pain, victory, and more!!
I HIGHLY recommend this book!
Susan Wiggs does it againReview Date: 2007-10-03
I've recently started reading her books, and playing catch up, I can't believe I've missed her. Her characters are memorable and she makes you feel them and you actually believe that you know them.
Give the book a try, you won't be disappointed.
Great read!Review Date: 2007-03-21
Wonderful, Heartwarming TaleReview Date: 2008-05-09
A freak fatal car accident kills a famous golf pro and his ex-wife, who are driving away from the elementary school, where they had met with the wife's best friend and third-grade teacher of their daughter. The teacher, Lily, had given them bad news that their middle child, Charlie, could not read at grade level. Now, Charlie, her older brother Cameron and baby sister Ashley are tragically orphaned.
In a surprise development, custody of all three children is given to the golf pro's surviving brother, "bad boy" bachelor brother Sean Maguire, a golfer in his own right, but one who has no discipline. Lily, who loves the children dearly, is appalled and determined to make sure the children are given everything they need.
The rest, as they say, is history...very predictable, but so sweet, so unassuming, and as mentioned above, SO REAL, that the story just makes the reader melt. Highly recommended.
Wonderful ....Review Date: 2006-09-03
This book focuses on Lily, a school teacher who is content with the way her life is. She is planning to go to Italy for the summer after school's out. Suddenly, her best friend and ex-husband is killed in a car accident, and she finds herself taking care of Crystal's three kids along with Crystal's former brother-in-law, Sean. Sean is a former pro golfer who was kicked out of golf for cheating. Now teaching other people how to golf and bartender at the local golf course, Sean all of a sudden finds himself guardian with three kids, Cameron, a teenager, Charlie, a third-grader and Ashley, the two-year-old. Both Lily and Sean's lives were disrupted by the tragedy and together, they pull the kids through the darkest moments of grief.
It is a wonderful humane story about loss and love, friendship, dreams and hopes. It is a story that takes you to another world where things are still possible ~~ and yes, it is very predictable, but Wiggs make the trip fun anyways. This is a perfect reading for those times when you have a few hours to yourself ~~ and want to relax. She's a good storyteller and one that I plan to keep an eye out for.
9-3-06

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A Wonderful Way to LliveReview Date: 2008-10-02
A Perfect New England Garden...Review Date: 2008-07-22
Tasha Tudor's Garden - Beautiful book!Review Date: 2007-07-24
Inspiration for GardenersReview Date: 2007-01-04
a beautiful womanReview Date: 2006-07-24
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Pack your bags for an exciting adventure in time!Review Date: 2008-01-07
Join Joe, Fred, Sam and Anna (Joe's sister) as they travel back to ancient Egypt through a book that lands them in quite a situation. The problem is that they need that same book to get back home, and they lost it!
There's non-stop adventure and some wonderful history that may well encourage young readers to seek out more information about this period of Egyptian history.
Recommended!
Egypt...... in time warp landReview Date: 2006-01-26
Time Warp Trio Tut TutReview Date: 2005-12-12
The Excititng MysteryReview Date: 2003-02-04
The best book everReview Date: 2002-12-17

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A maddening, frustratingly realistic novelReview Date: 2008-03-21
Professor Laurana's questioning opens doors and others shut. And in a town in which people teach each other to keep quiet, we have to wonder what is being taught. It seems that this society is reduced to primitive survival instincts. Only someone like Laurana can break the vicious circle of crime, but Laurana's emotional vulnerability--his sensitivity to literature--is considered a fault. There are clearly characters who do not like anyone asking questions. And there are two characters who are philosophical and analytical, but their ability to understand human psychology disables Laurana's investigation. It's as though too much belief in moral ambiguity can stop a criminal investigation.
While this novel is a comment on Italian or Sicilian society and politics of the 1960s, this setting could be anywhere in the world. We all must be vigilant that through silence and acquiescence, our world does not become like the one Sciascia shows us.
A small gem of wonderful writingReview Date: 2008-02-16
This is a highly literate and entertaining read that will encourage most readers to seek out other titles by this terrific author.
Well written mysteryReview Date: 2006-11-13
"Justice is a steady and enduring will to render unto every one his right Review Date: 2007-08-06
The Latin phrase "suum cuique tribuere" or "to each his own" is one of the three fundamental maxims of the law laid down by the Emperor Justinian. The peculiar interpretation of that phrase in Sciascia's native Sicily forms the emotional core of his brilliant "To Each His Own."
"To Each His Own" begins with a double-murder. A local pharmacist, Manno, receives a death threat in the mail, compiled with words and letters cut and pasted from a newspaper. The pharmacist laughs it off. He considers the letter to be a joke and although these threats are usually taken seriously in his town, Manno leads a blameless life and simply cannot believe anyone intends him harm. So he goes off hunting the next day with his friend Dr. Roscio and, without further ado, both Manno and Roscio are shot dead in the woods.
A police investigation follows but it is doomed to go nowhere. Sciascia paints a very explicit portrait of a society in which everyone knows (or suspects) everything but says nothing, certainly not to the local police. The general consensus (on the surface) seems to be that Manno was killed by a jealous husband and Roscio was an innocent bystander. The matter would have ended there but for the curious intercession of Professor Laurana. Laurana is a history and Italian teacher at the local liceo (high school). He walks into the pharmacy where the police are reading the anonymous letter and quickly spots a clue. The police dismiss his information out of hand. Laurana, however, driven by what appears to be no more than a desire to solve a puzzle, decides to follow up on the clue. In short order he seems to have solved the mystery. Laurana is oblivious to the fact that his musings on the crime pose more of a threat to the murderers than a typical local police investigation. Events play out to their natural conclusion, and in Sciascia's Sicily natural conclusions are not quite so neat and tidy as say in Agatha Christie's parlor room England.
The enjoyment to be found in reading "To Each His Own" is not the mystery itself. The fact of the matter is that, for Sciascia, solving a mystery doesn't require great insight. Rather, it simply requires a willingness to actually see that which is self-evident. As blind as Laurana may be to the danger he puts himself in, he can see well enough to understand why Manno and Roscio were murdered and who murdered them. Laurana's problem is not that he knows more than anyone else in town, Sciascia makes it clear that the actual events do not seem a surprise to anyone. No, Laurana's problem is that unlike everyone else in town, he doesn't bother to hide his knowledge.
Sciascia's writing is both precise and enjoyable. He seems to have a keen eye and affection for his native place, but that affection does not diminish, but likely enhances, the despair he feels for a culture in which silence is golden and in which "to each his own" does not bring to mind Roman traditions of equity but, rather, the critical importance of minding ones own business. "To Each His Own" is a cynical, but highly-entertaining piece or work.
Highly recommended. L. Fleisig
Il ciascuno il suoReview Date: 2006-11-14
Rich, ambiguous characters fill the novel and leaves one wondering who is considered intelligent and who is considered an idiot in Sicilian terms. It also leaves one wondering what exactly is the crime: the killer or the one that deems himself the investigator? Is it the one who deals in politics or the one breaking the law of "omerta"?The novel explores the mafiosi as an institution, as a family, what it is in the government, the church, the peasant village.
Sciascia's novel is a page-turner for both those who want an easy read detective thriller and also for those wanting to dig deeper into the story's message.

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Left BehindReview Date: 2005-09-15
Please let me know what to do #813-835-9192.
Series for adults now rewritten for teensReview Date: 2004-12-26
Wonderful Books!!!Review Date: 2005-03-23
Yes, these books are from a Christian perspective, but even a non-Christian would enjoy the good reading.
The Young Trib Force Fights BackReview Date: 2003-04-19
The Underground ends with a cliffhanger, making the reader want to read the next book to see what happens and how or if the characters survive. The story is continued in book #7, in which installment the reader discovers how the character who is caught in #6 fares.
Christian propaganda? Yeah Right!Review Date: 2005-03-04
Mark says that it is "ludicrous" to believe that the world would go into chaos if all the Christians disappeared. Yeah right! Let's see millions around the world disappear at the same time and withount warning and not have chaos.
I think Mark's accusations are what's ludicrous. "An evil religion perpetuated by zealous idiots"?!? Give me a break! Christians are as normal as anyone else.
In the Bible, the book of Revelation takes about "20 pages" because it only gives enough information to understand what is going on. These books are much longer because they put the situation into real life situations.
As for the quality of the book? A different reviewer mentioned this and I feel the same way. The time line is screwed up compared to the adult series. From what I remember, there WAS no Global Community before the treaty signing.
All of the kids series books that I have read are good, but not as good of quality as the adult books. I personally think that the authors lost some of their good writing style by continuing the adult series so long, and it is showing up in the kids series.

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Brilliant!Review Date: 2005-11-26
Wonderful, terrific, best poem book of all timeReview Date: 2005-04-30
feelin blue, read this bookReview Date: 2005-04-30
Look out Shel Silverstein there is a new poet in town.Review Date: 2005-04-30
The best doggie poop poem book ever!Review Date: 2005-04-30

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100 AND HEALTHYReview Date: 2006-05-03
BOOK IS FILLED WITH OVER 800 DOCUMENTED SCIENTIFIC
DOCUMENTATIONS
POWERFUL
ARNIE STROM
Safe Natural Solutions Without DrugsReview Date: 2006-05-03
This is one very good book!Review Date: 2006-03-25
A Must To ReadReview Date: 2006-02-16
100 & HealthyReview Date: 2005-06-03
obviously well researched. I was so impressed, I searched out
some of the products and have found them to be extraordinary.
We need more books of this nature.

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Future actressReview Date: 2005-10-19
Anson Y.'s book review. HK.< Why do I have to have this part? >Review Date: 2005-07-14
And I forget to tell you, this is also a very great book!
An Exellent Series of all agesReview Date: 2006-11-28
I suggest that you read the first and second book of the series so you will understand it a little bit more.
This is an awesome book!Review Date: 2005-03-11
An Amazing BookReview Date: 2004-09-04
All of the Abby Hayes books are written in two kinds of print, black print and purple lettering. The black print is the author telling us the story and the purple lettering is Abby writing in journal. I love this series because I can relate to what she is going through. I think girls that keep journals would like this book a lot

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Something for everyone in poetry!Review Date: 2005-09-27
Absolutely lovelyReview Date: 2004-09-06
I personally prefer poem anthologies where the poetry is from a mix of poets, not just a collection of one poet's work. Americans' Favorite Poems will give you some very famous favorites, and also might surprise you with the works of lesser known (but still wonderful) writers.
What I also loved about this treasure of a book was the comments. Robert Pinsky compiled the poems that people from around the US sent him and printed their comments as to why each poem was their favorite. Reading the comments of all these people - firefighters, students, forest rangers, doctors, homemakers, basically people from all walks of life - is often very moving, entertaining, or surprising (you'll see some of your best loved poems from new and delightful angles). You get a feel for why people love poems as they explain that love, that attachment to a particular poem, in their own words.
Illustrates What Poetry is Really AboutReview Date: 2001-07-31
I must say that my favorite selection in the book was "I May, I Might, I Must" by Marianne Moore mainly because of the reason behind its selection. The only complaint (it isn't much of one) I have about the book is that my favorite "I Thank You God for Most This Amazing" by ee cummings didn't make it, but hopefully, there will someday be a Americans' Favorite Poems Volume II, and it will.
Representative of Americans' taste in poetry?Review Date: 2002-07-13
[sigh]
I'm also suspicious of a "project" that doesn't seem to have been announced widely before it began -- it can't be representative of ALL Americans since all Americans obviously didn't know about it.
All that said, it's a great collection. Through it I met several new poets (new to me)and I certainly enjoyed the ones I was already familiar with. It made me curious, too, about just what the American taste in poetry truly would be. I suspect it would include Ogden Nash and Edgar Allen Poe.
No. I don't think it's representative of the poetic taste of the American public and I don't think it should claim to be so, but I do think it's a great overview of popular poets and a superb collection of poems.
"Americans' Favorite Poems" Is My Favorite Poetry Anthology!Review Date: 2003-07-17
I found so many of my own favorites in this extraordinary collection. I was also introduced to many wonderful new poems, I might never have read. And some of the comments from the folks who submitted the poems, are as moving as the poetry itself. The book emphasizes the pure joy of reading poetry. And poetry appreciation is alive and well in America!
There is Anna Akhmatova's "The Sentence," submitted by a woman from Georgia who remembers her brother "who returned from Vietnam, a broken man of 21," when reading this poem; and Margaret Atwood's "Variation On The Word Sleep," "the most beautiful love poem I have ever read," writes a woman from Queens, NY; Lewis Carroll's "Jaberwocky" is included, with the comment, "Where else can you find a tale of danger, adventure, triumph, and jubilation - all so utterly wrapped in nonsense?" There are wonders printed here, by Ranier Marie Rilke, Alexander Pope, Sir Walter Raleigh, Sylvia Plath, William Shakespeare, Wallace Stevens, Dylan Thomas and Allan Ginsberg...and so many more. It must have been a difficult task, indeed, to select 200 poems from so many worthy submissions.
I recommend this anthology to poetry lovers everywhere, and also to those who do not care for poetry. This collection may change your mind.
Related Subjects: Weber, Bob White, Mack Ware, Chris
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