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Publishers Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

Publishers
Clear Springs: A Memoir
Published in Hardcover by see notes for publisher info (1999-05-31)
Author: Bobbie Ann Mason
List price: $25.00
New price: $7.27
Used price: $4.81

Average review score:

So Pleasant
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-07-15
I'd never read any of Bobbie Ann Mason's work before reading Clear Springs for a book club. I believe I may be missing out if her other books are like this one. There is a warmth to her story that makes it a real pleasure to read. Mason's language, too, is comfortable and highly readable. Her rhythms, especially, give a real richness to her prose. I highly recommend this.

Pure Mason
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2002-12-05
Indispensible to serious readers of Mason's fiction, this memoir is true to family and community life in Western Kentucky (despite what other reviewers might say).

Wonderful!
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2004-07-23
Bobbie Ann Mason has done a wonderful job with "Clear Springs". I did not grow up in Kentucky in the baby boom generation, but I did grow up in rural southern Missouri just after it, and this story is so very like what I was familiar with. Ms. Mason is of my mother's generation and except for the disfunction there are many similarities between this story and stories my mother has told. My family reminded me of the older Masons and not the disfunctional Lees. The isolation of rural life, but the joy in many ways that come from it. The curiosity of the outside world, but the fear of it. She relates that Clear Springs hadn't changed much since the Civil War and she was correct in that. The world that slowly evolved for most Americans changed before this rural generation's eyes. A Great book!

The author remembers and revisits her Kentucky home
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2002-10-06
I'm an appreciative fan of Bobbie Ann Mason's short stories, about rural people raised with traditional values now somewhat at sea in a world of consumerism, pop culture, and a new morality. Young adults, whose parents would have stuck with a marriage come hell or high water, now divorce and drift through relationships. Their parents tied to the land and other life-long occupations, Mason's post-war generation is less rooted, freed of conventional beliefs, but often at a loss about what to believe in. Most striking as America grows increasingly urban, Mason's people continue to inhabit a rural landscape -- more worldly than their forebears, but not more sophisticated.

While some readers of Mason's stories and novels may have been puzzled by the point of view in them (ironic? matter of fact? sentimental?), this wonderful memoir should do much to clear up that ambiguity. Here a reader is introduced to the world of day-to-day experience that these narratives have emerged from. And you can begin to see how the matter of fact, ironic, and sentimental blend into a perspective that is distinctly rural American. The strongest individual (who is surely the source of many of Mason's fictional characters) is without doubt her mother, a remarkable woman with a quizzical sense of humor, a colorful manner of speaking, and a long view that comes of witnessing much of the 20th century at first hand.

A list of highlights in this book would go on for pages; there's just so much to savor and enjoy. There's Mason's own unsophisticated childhood (barefoot summers, crushes on pop stars, rock and roll fandom), the making of the film "In Country," and the continuing transformation of the rural Kentucky environment from horse-and-buggy days to the invasion of agribusiness -- a huge processing plant has sprung up across the road from the family farm.

I recommend this book to anyone who has enjoyed Mason's fiction. It is rich with thoughtful and well-observed detail reaching back across three generations of family history.

The way it was, for some of us, in childhood...
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2003-05-24
When writing a memoir, authors are advised to write the first draft as if everyone is dead - and then to prune the damaging parts in subsequent rewrites. Perhaps Mason pruned a bit too much. This otherwise lovely and affectionate memoir of how it was to grow up in a small, working-class town in Kentucky in the 40s and 50s is a bit long on respect and caution - and a bit short on grit.
Otherwise, I loved it. I grew up in Kansas in the 50s and can relate to the pace, small-town values, and lack of danger (except from the "evil Communists" and "the bomb") that Mason portrays as such inherent parts of her roots. Her language, esp in the first part of the book focusing on her own childhood memories, is rich and multi-layered and pulls readers into every scene right along with her. In the rest of the book, she uses the techniques of creative nonfiction to weave a background narrative that spans the lives of three generations of women within the community.
A worthwhile read; it won't change your life, but it might make you think, and it's certainly a pleasant trip to take with this accomplished author.

Publishers
Death by the Riverside
Published in Paperback by New Victoria Publishers (1990-10)
Author: J. M. Redmann
List price: $9.95
New price: $6.00
Used price: $5.25

Average review score:

Just Amazing
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-08
This is the first book in a series of four. A fantastic series indeed.
Without a doubt one of the best series that I've read. Filled with the drama and mystery that accompanies every PI book, we learn that the real mystery here is Micky Knight. Who is she, and will she survive,.. not just the latest job thats been brought to her door, but her own demons as well. She's flawed and human. Not a superwoman,.. just a woman trying to make it thru the day to day of her life.
And the New Orleans setting truly makes this book. I can't picture Micky anywhere else.
I felt like I was there,.. every painful step of the way.
The author has given us a gift with this series.

Good reading
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-09-20
I found that this book held my attention and left you wanting more and not able to put it down for long periods. A good author for those who are not true book worms like myself.

REAL SUBSTANCE
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2003-09-02
If you are getting bored reading the same old tired detective/mystery stories, pick up the Mickey Knight series. As a previous reader wrote, you'll find mystery, romance, comedy, steamy sex, and plenty of action in the Mickey Knight novels. The author has created a strong character with depth, who is very human and vulnerable. Let me say this: MICKEY IS NO WIMP! The supporting characters are richly developed throughout the series and you'll care about them all. The author makes you feel as though you're moving through New Orleans with Mickey. I loved all 4 books and can't wait to see what comes next. Don't miss this top notched series. It is THE BEST written detective series featuring a lesbian.

A lesbian mystery that is also great literature
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2002-12-05
This book (and the other three in this series) are the best written mysteries I've read. The characters are well developed, the plot is twisted and interesting, and the psychological drama is intense. This is a dark story that goes far beyond the plot of a simple cliff-hanger mystery.

Here comes Micky Knight
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2003-08-10
It's all here murder, mayhem, hot sex and beautiful women. This is the first in a series of four murder/suspense/mysteries featuring PI Michelle Knight.From the beginning when Knight is hired to help Karen Wentworth expose her ex-fiance, who is dancing at a gay bar, I was hooked. We have a police detective, an assistant DA and a doctor all linked to Mickey in some way and very important to the plot. Redmann knows New Orleans and shares it with us, albeit the seamier side. The story moves and takes the reader with it. We care what happens to our PI and her friends and the people who get pulled into the criminal happenings. Watch what happens with Cordelia James and her involvement with the happenings. And then read Deaths of Jocasta, The Intersection of Law and Desire, and Lost Daughters.
It's time for another Micky Knight book. Top drawer!

Publishers
Death Strike (Left Behind: The Kids)
Published in Mass Market Paperback by Tyndale House Publishers (2000-02-12)
Authors: Jerry B. Jenkins and Tim LaHaye
List price: $5.99
New price: $0.01
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $10.00

Average review score:

Left Behind #8 Death Strike
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-05-23
This book is about four kids, Judd, Vicki, Lionel, and Ryan. They are going through the last seven years left on earth after the Rapture. None of them have parents because they were either taken during the Rapture or they died. They have all become Christians and are beginning the fight towards the antichrist, Nicolae Carpathia. Their pastor Bruce was just killed in a bombing in Chicago, and now they have to face the future without parents or a pastor.

I thought this book was very good. It helped me become a better Christian and better believer of Christ. This book would be good for people who are Christians or people who want to learn more about the Rapture and about being a Christian. Reading this book helped me to be more aware and know more about the Rapture also. I think the lesson is to accept Christ before it is too late because you never know when your last day will be.

Series for adults now rewritten for teens
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2004-12-26
I have always enjoyed the adult series of Left Behind books. The kids books are just as good. The kids interact with the characters from the adult series, experience the same events, etc. However, since the main characters are teens, these books can appeal to younger readers. So far, the stories haven't had the ups and downs that the adult series has had. The adult series has books that are a lot more boring than others. The kids series seems to be good in every book. These are not for really young kids, but would be appropriate for young teens. I enjoy them and I am an adult.

I give 5 stars to all
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2002-02-19
I like to read a variety of books, but since I have come upon the adult and kid's series of left behind, I just can't really get into another book until I know I have read the last one of both series.

Hooked on Left Behind
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2003-10-11
Death Strike is the 8th book in the LBTK series, and probably the most crammed, adventure filled book, in the whole series to date (#32, and counting).
We last left off with Vicki being taken back to Northside Detention Center. After a run-in with trouble, Vicki is left injured within the first few pages, and recieves word that there is someone that would like to adopt her! Who could it be, and will she want to go with them? Also, Vicki finds friendship within a girl named Janie, but wonders if she will ever believe the truth.
Meanwhile, back home, Judd, Lionel, and Ryan are left amazed through the teachings of Pastor Bruce Barnes. With new security measures being brought up within Nicolae High, can they really risk bringing back "The Underground", since they have witnessed the trouble it can bring?
With the return of a new friend, Judd decides to travel to Israel with Bruce, but when a mysterious illness strikes the pastor, the Young Trib Force is left to deal with the loss of a great friend, and the disapperance of another. World Word 3 begins, and it's going to be a rocky ride.
Truly a favorite in the series, Death Strike delivers and really set the standards I've put the series up to. Always suspensful, and always inpirational, this series is one that you can't afford not to read.

The Young Trib Force Faces War
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2003-05-21
This eighth installment in the series about a group of teens struggling to survive the Tribulation and spread the Truth of the existence of God to a world caught in the Antichrist's web of deceit is one of the most exciting in the series so far. Death Strike starts one year after the events of book 7. The Antichrist's regime has gained complete control of the world, decieving people into thinking that Nicolae Carpathia is the savior of the world. The young Trib Force sees this man as he really is - the most evil man on Earth. They are determined to resist the power that this regime has over the world.

Vicki Byrne, now 15 years old, is still detained in the detention center, where she has been fighting for her life for one year. Judd, Lionel, Ryan, John, and Mark are continuing their undercover ministry at Nicolae High. Judd, now 17 years old, sets a new goal that could put the entire group in the greatest danger yet. At his graduation ceremony, he proclaims the message of the Bible and how to recieve God's salvation. He is dragged out of the ceremony by Global Community gaurds and given no credit.
Then conflict arises, the rise of a rebel group fighting against Carpathia's regime triggers war and Judd, Mark and Vicki, who finally makes it out of the detention center, are almost killed by a sudden attack of GC soldiers against a gathering of Militia rebels.
Then global catastrophe strikes. When the GC military bomb the Militia's nike base, World War 3 begins, leaving the young Trib Force fighting for their lives. As GC fighter planes soar over Chicago dropping bombs on buildings and neighborhoods, the kids desperately search for Mark, whom they fear is dead. They find him, barely alive, but alive nonetheless. But the kids are given a heartbreaking challenge when one of their closest friends is killed by the bombings.

Book 8 in the Left Behind Kids series is one of the most suspenseful books in this series so far. It kept me on the edge of my seat to the very end, and the cliffhanger ending left me hanging. I highly reccomend this series to anyone.

Publishers
Devils Of London
Published in Paperback by CARROLL & GRAF PUBLISHERS (1996)
Author: Huxley
List price: $12.95
Used price: $8.45
Collectible price: $79.98

Average review score:

The urge to self-transcendence
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-24
I was fascinated by Huxley's use of this story as a way of trying to explain his thoughts on "man's deep-seated urge to self-transcedence, of his very natural reluctance to take the hard, ascending way, and of his search for some bogus liberation either below or to one side of his personality" - as revealed by our dependecies on religion and in joining mass movements like fascism or communism, as well as sexuality and substance use and abuse.
In Chapter Three he focuses on the religious aspects of these tendencies to "desire - and desire, very often, with irresistable violence - the consciousness of being someone else."
In the Epilogue ["In amplification of material in Chapter Three)"], he expands on these ideas by discussing substance use and abuse: "Alcohol is but one of the many drugs employed by human beings as avenues of escape from the insulated self." He adds to this the use of "From poppy to curare, from Andean coca to Indian hemp and Siberian agaric, every plant or bush or fungus capable, when ingested, of stupifying or exciting or evoking visions....seems to prove that, always and everywhere, human beings have felt the radical inadequacy of their personal existence, the misery of being their insulate selves and not something else.."
He then continues with the "crowd delirium" of mass movements:
"The professional moralists who inveigh against drunkeness are strangely silent about the equally disgusting vice of herd-intoxication - of downward transcendence into subhumanity by the process of getting together in a mob." leading to "The final symptom of herd-intoxication is a manical violence. Instances of crowd-delirium culminating in gratuitous destructiveness, in ferocious self-mutilation, in fratracidal savagery without purpose and against the elementary interests of all concerned, are to be met with on almost every page of the anthropologists'textbooks and - a little less frequently, but still with dismal regularity - in the histories of even the most highly civilized peoples."
His concluding sentence: "Every idol, however exalted, turns out, in the long run, to be a Moloch, hungry for human sacrifice."

This book is not merely an historical essay describing the lurid details of the events at Loudun [other books on the subject do that job], Huxley covers far more ground and delves far deeper into the experience of being human than that; it can be disturbing at times, but also illuminating.
Huxley's own later use of psychedelic drugs [mescaline, and, as has been said, LSD while on his death-bed] - which he describes in "The Doors of Perception" [1954] - indicates that he was still trying to reach an understanding of self-transcendence - in a more positive light.

Modern Master of Prose
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-08
It is the early 17th century in Loudun, France. The local parish priest, Urbain Grandier, has become embattled in various local rivalries with civic magnates and ecclesiastical officials. He makes powerful enemies among them but they are helpless to action against for the moment. Both sides are determined to see victory and religious sanctity takes a back seat to revenge and personal gain. Against this backdrop an altogether remarkable occurrence takes place; the inhabitants of the local covenant experience an extraordinary case of mass possession by demons. The head of the covenant, Saeur Jeanne des Anges, experiences the worst of the possessions and under an exorcism conducted by Jean-Joseph Surin she, or the demon within her, places the blame squarely on the shoulders of Urbain Grandier. The moment his enemies have waited for has arrived.

For those who are fans of Huxley's fictional and non-fictional works this book is not one to be missed. Although it falls into the category of non-fiction as it tells the story of a historical event in 17th century France, Huxley uses his creative powers and imagination to make the tale come alive. Granted historians may have an issue with taking such liberties in writing about a historical event, but Huxley's goal is not `pure' history, a pretty questionable term in itself, but rather to tell the story of a remarkable event with all the drama and suspense that it deserves.

His account of the mass possession in Loudun is backed up by an admirable amount of research. It is clear that Huxley's knowledge of both the time and place extend far beyond the details of the story and serve to enlighten his account. His understanding of human psychology as plays a prominent role in this book. It goes beyond a simple recounting of historical events, which as interesting as they are does not in itself make the book a unique one. It is Huxley's continual fascination with the human mind that really makes this book special. After setting out the basic historical framework for the story, he attempts to reconstruct the psychological factors that played a large role there. After examining the individual characters from the Loudun saga, Huxley takes the time to reflect and draw conclusions about humanity in general and what drives people to believe themselves possessed and the further implications this has.

Whether one agrees with the validity of conducting a sort of psychological analysis of historical figures hundreds of years removed from us and then in turn using those conclusions to draw wider ones about humanity or a time period in general, this book is an immensely interesting read.

How could one nun possess a nation? Just blame old scratch
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-07
Huxley has written a wonderful study of witchcraft,demonic possession and social commentary that is an historical cornerstone.Both religion and psychiatry are carefully intertwined in this lengthy novel.Set in France, it explores the human condition at that time.Greed,jealousy,revenge and theatrical performances are core themata.The inquisitional pressure coupled with political appeasement on the local,state and national level are explored.Mad nuns teased by repressed sexual needs and the subsequent outcomes are discussed. The careful documentation of the interplay between religious fervor and satanic influence are revealed in this exacting book.The twisted motivations of maladjusted individuals and the harm they can cause,the somatic possibilities and manifestations,coverups and intrigue are deftly and intellectually examined and detailed.The horrors of torture,self mutilation and sexual deviation as viewed as deviate for the times, gives one a sense of being voyeuristically one of the crowd.Watching the nuns perform their tricks,allegedly possessed by devils for the benefit of the church is amusing.Sister Jeanne,Father Grandier and Father Surin are all players in the game of gods love,human sexual needs,demonic possession and rather kinky goings on in the nunnery.It's a regular satanically,sexual soap opera with much guilt, regret and tragedy at the end.Any fan of Huxley needs to read this if they haven't already.Fans of the origins of psychopathology will marvel at the many mechanisms of defense used as justifiers for actions that were over the top for a pre-enlightened world.For witchcraft afficionados this is required reading.Again, it is a long read but worth it for purely historical anaylysis of the crypto religious/sexual linkage that to some degree is still present today.A must read for lovers of this subject matter.

Especially now, when we really need it...
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-25

HOW does a book this important come to be out of print?!!

No matter. Used copies can be had here for very little. Buy one and read it.

The Devils You Say
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2006-05-21
One of the joys of reading is how one subject can lead to a serendipitous find. Having recently come across a brief reference to the early 17th century barking nuns of Loudon I went in search of a more detailed exploration. In Aldous Huxley's book I found all that I sought and much more.

Urbain Grandier, the local parson of Loudon, is a very naughty cleric who partakes much too much of the sensual world. One morsel happens to be the daughter of his best friend. She becomes pregnant with unhappy consequences for many people. Grandier manages in this way of behavior to alienate nearly every important Catholic in Loudon as well as make an enemey of Richelieu.

When Grandier spurns the local prioress, Sister Jeanne, she claims demonic possession at the hand of Grandier as do 2 of her nuns. Grandier may have been guilty of many sins, but demonic possession was not among them. Exorcists are brought in as much too destroy Grandier as to throw out the devils (7 specific ones inhabit Sister Jeanne alone). The exorcists produce devils in 14 more nuns. The public exorcisms provide great entertainment, reviving the local tourist industry, but eventually produce the trial of Grandier, who in due turn is burned at the stake. The story continues when the Jesuit Surin arrives to finally successfully exorcise Sister Jeanne's demons.

Huxley's 1952 work explores the psychological aspects of demonic possession and exorcism, sometimes brilliantly against the backdrop of the madnesses of his own time. Liberal rationalists had "fondly imagined" an end to persecutions of 'heretics'. Instead, as he observes "from our vantage point on the descending road of modern history, we now see that all the evils of religion can flourish without any belief in the supernatural, that convinced materialists are ready to worship their own jerry-built creations as though they were the Absolute, and that self-styled humanists will persecute their adversaries with all the zeal of Inquisitors exterminating the devotees of a personal and transcendant Satan...In order to justify their behavior, they turn their theories into dogmas, their bylaws into First Principles, their political bosses into Gods and all those who disagree with them into incarnate devils. This idolatrous transformation of the relative into the Absolute and the all too human into the Divine, makes it possible for them to indulge their ugliest passions with a clear conscience and in the certainty that they are working for the Highest Good."

In the last third of the book he explores the nature of Sister Jeanne's possession, the possession of her exorcist Surin, and the manner of her recovery. The modern mind has some difficulty here. Clearly Surin and possibly Jeanne believed in the reality of demonic possessions (it is worth noting that many learned men, including those behind Grandier's fall and most Jesuits did not believe in the authenticity of these possessions). At the same, Jeanne is also play-acting at times as she concedes in her own subsequent writings. They believed in the Devil, they believed in possession, but understood that the Devil could not overcome the will of the possessed. Huxley paints a poignant, if oddly amusing, scene when he describes how Surin ordered Jeanne's devils to discipline themselves - in other words to flagellate Jeanne. Two of the devils lay on the whip with gusto, but Balaam and Isacaaron abhorring pain, would barely swing the whip and yet the possessed Jeanne would scream in agonized suffering.

An absolutlely fascinating read by one of the great minds of the 20th century.


Publishers
E.B. White: Charlotte's Web/ Stuart Little/ Trumpet of the Swan
Published in Hardcover by HarperCollins Publishers (1972-09)
Author: E. B. White
List price: $48.00
New price: $37.99
Used price: $3.50
Collectible price: $48.00

Average review score:

moral fables, set in the modern age
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-14
these books are a delight to read. i first read them to our sons (the oldest is now 40). this set is for my grandson. charming, well written stories, all with an underlying moral.

Classics
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-04
These books are classics. I bought them for myself, but plan to read them to my children as they grow older. I had read "Charlotte's Web" in grade school. It was a pleasure to read the others!

Authentic Children's Books -
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-03
So many kids books are written so poorly, and with such poor structure and weak story lines, they make it hard to convey any sense of flow or emotion to your kids. To pick up these classics reminds one of the golden age when authors wrote stories with meaning and impact. Glowing descriptions, scene setting introductions to chapters, polite conversations recorded in proper English, all this is the heritage of EB White and these books. Highly, highly recommended - your kids will not want to stop reading and listening...makes bedtime each night a joy because they can't wait to find out what happens next.

The Trumpet of the swan
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-03-20
Louis is the main character and he is a swan. He can't talk to other swans. Sam Beaver, a boy takes Louis to school, where he learns to read and write. But this isn't work to other swans and actually Louis was in love with the beautiful swan, Serena, and she spurns hin because he was defective. And Louis's father, the old cob, does a difficult thing. He stoles a trumpet so his son would be able to win his love. Louis wins on his love and pay the trumpet money.

The Triple Crown of White's Fictional Work
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2004-07-13
My 6-year-old daughter and I throughly enjoyed all three stories.

Most Creative Story: The "Trumpet Swan" because of the way White takes the reader to different places and settings through the eyes of Louis the Swan.

Most Profound Story: "Charlotte's web". Of all my years of education it took this simple book to grasp a real appreciation of nature and the web of life.

Funniest Story: "Stuart Little". Most of us have on more than one occassion laughed ourselves to tears upon reading, hearing, or watching some funny event. My last time occurred when reading about the trials and tribulations that Stuart had to endure in order to wash himslef in the morning (Picturing him swinging a mallot to turn on the hot water was for me hysterically funny!). I found the Stuart Little of this book much more cute and amusing than the one in a recent movie with the same title.

Publishers
Edward the Emu
Published in Paperback by HarperCollins Publishers (Australia) Pty Ltd (1992-05)
Author: Sheena Knowles
List price: $7.00
New price: $5.95
Used price: $0.03

Average review score:

Absolutely Fantastic
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-07
book! The pictures are wonderful, and the story itself is sweet and simple with lovely rhyming. My son loves it! He is now 3. If I could just give a 1/4 star less I would. I still believe this is a book worth adding to your children's home library. The only problem I found is the illustrator decided to draw a lioness instead of a lion. His roaring lion has no mane. The story indicates a lion in 'his den.'

Fabulous for little kids
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-11
My kids and i loved this book. The illustrations are great, the rhyming is fun, and the story is adorable. You'll love it.

A Good Story Made Great By Sensational Illustrations
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-21
A bored emu named Edward in a zoo envies his seal neighbours and decides life would be a lot more exciting as one of them. He hops the fences of both enclosures in this poorly designed zoo and lives life as a seal. The customers and staff at the zoo aren't the brightest and don't notice any difference between him or the other animals let alone return him to his own enclosure so he's all set being a seal. Only he overhears a member of the public say that his favourite animal is a lion so Edward decides to hop the fence again. Hanging out with the lions (who don't eat him for some reason) someone else mentions snakes are their favourite so he decides to become a snake. Is it really a desire to be different Edward is after or is it something else. Read this book and find out!

The illustrations are very well done with minute attention to detail resulting in very realistic colour sketches. My only criticism is that it would be nice if Edward had visited a few more animals but that's the only bad thing I have to say about this book.

There's also a sequel available called Edwina the Emu.

Valuing Oneself
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-11
Edward the Emu is sick of being an Emu, so he tries out being a few other animals at the zoo, only to discover that the visitors have many favourite animals.
The story is told in a lovely verse and the illustrations are one of the best I have seen in any children's book. Edward The Emu is funny and engaging with a simple message of valuing oneself.
Highly recommended.

Such an adorable story!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-21
Edward the Emu is just a precious story with the funniest illustrations! My kindergarten students love this book! It is one we keep out all year and read lots of times. Edward makes us all laugh, especially when he is trying to be a snake, they think that is a really funny thing for an Emu to be a snake! You will enjoy this book.

Publishers
El Libro de Oro de la Cocina Mexicana
Published in Paperback by Libra Publishers (1999-09)
Author: Libra
List price: $14.25
Used price: $10.69

Average review score:

UN LIBRO PARA QUIEN LE GUSTA SABOREAR EL BUEN GUSTO DE LA COCINA
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-10-24
Es un recetario muy buena con ingredientes naturales para mantener una salud sana y riquisimo en proteínas. Se te hará agua la boca..

CONOZCO TAN BIEN ESTE RECETARIO,
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2003-08-12
QUE TAN SOLO CON VERLO, SE ME HACE AGUA LA BOCA!
Ahora que se casa nuestra hija,este libro será, en apariencia, el regalo mas modesto que reciba...PERO EL MAS VALIOSO Y EL QUE DISFRUTARA MAS !

ESTOY CASADO CON UNA MEXICANA BELLISIMA
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2003-05-04
QUE DICE ( EN BROMA ) QUE ME CASE CON ELLA PORQUE GUISA MUY BIEN...
Lleva tres años enamorándome con los platillos de este libro

LO que prepares con este recetario,
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2003-05-04
es UN EXITO..
En mi casa, ya vamos en la cuarta vuelta. Hemos probado todas las recetas Y TODAS SALEN BIEN Y SABROSISIMAS!

SOME FRIENDS RECCOMENDED THIS BOOK
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2003-05-13
as the best in authentic Mexican Cuisine.
That's why I bought it for.
But now, I DON'T CARE FOR THE NATIONALITY! IT'S JUST THE BEST, THE MOST SIMPLE RECIPES AND THE BEST FLAVOR...

Publishers
The Essential Neruda: Selected Poems
Published in Paperback by City Lights Publishers (2004-04-01)
Author: Pablo Neruda
List price: $16.95
New price: $9.56
Used price: $7.29
Collectible price: $16.95

Average review score:

A New Translation
Helpful Votes: 17 out of 17 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-03
"I became saturated with his poetry and began to translate his poems. Although there were many beautiful existing translations, many others did not flow as I felt they should and I often had interpretive differences with them." ~ Mark Eisner, translator

"The Essential Neruda Selected Poems" is the best translation I've read so far. The words are alive with beauty in a way that feels authentic to the heart. You can immerse yourself in the poems and emerge with a sense of wonder.

"Leaning into the evenings I throw my sad nets
to your ocean eyes."

Mark Eisner has captured the soul of Pablo Neruda's art and perhaps even enhanced the creative majesty of each poem. At times the poems can make you feel a little breathless as if you have happened upon a new discovery or secret revelation.

"And the air came in with orange-blossom fingers
over all those asleep:
a thousand years of air, months, weeks of air,
of blue wind, of iron cordillera,
that were like soft hurricanes of footsteps
polishing the lonely boundary of the stone."

The imagery is at times so vivid, as if you were transported to each scene. Pictures flash across your mind and you can almost catch the scent of the ocean or see the colors vivid and pure. Angels and death dance through the poems with equal ease and at times the words are heavenly or earthy and dark.

"Full woman, carnal apple, hot moon,
thick smell of seaweed, crushed mud and light,
what obscure clarity opens between your columns?
What ancient night does man touch with his senses?"

If you are new to the poems of Pablo Neruda then this would be an excellent place to start. The poems present many facets of the poet unlike other books that simply reveal his romantic nature. While I seem to enjoy his love poems best, I can say that this experience gives a more wide-ranging portrait of Pablo Neruda.

~The Rebecca Review

Pure
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-04
It's difficult to read Neruda and remain intact.

"Of all that I was, I bear only these cruel scars,
because those griefs confirm my very existence."

More than just a great intro-awesome even if you already have some Pablo
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-25
I got The Essential Neruda when it came out in 2004. I already loved Neruda, and have the old Selected Poems edition (which unfortunately ends at 1968, and some of the translations are just plain flat) plus the 20 Love Poems, Residence on Earth, Canto General, and some of the odes. But the translators here (former US Poet Laureate Robert Hass just won the Pulitzer!) just bring Neruda so alive, and the selection of poems just captures his whole range of 'the many Pablos'. So when I came here today to buy one as a gift, I'm pleased by the reviews of how great an introduction to Neruda it is, but I want to stress how great it is as a book to keep going back to again and again. Actually, to quote the great writer Ariel Dorfman on the back cover of the book:

"What beter way to celebrate the hundred years of Neruda's glorious residence on our earth than this selection of crucial works - in both languages! A splendid way to being a love affair with out Pablo or, having already succumbed to his infinite charms, revisit him passionately again and again and yet again."

A wonderful place to start with Neruda
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-17
Gorgeous work. Neruda is my all time favorite. A beautiful book to give as a gift or to get some started with Neruda.

what's the big deal?
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 17 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-08
This would be my first introduction to Pablo Neruda, and I must say I'm a bit disappointed. Not that Neruda isn't a great poet, the Nobel Prize and critical acclaim prove the contrary, but perhaps the translation could use some more work.

I picked this copy up noticing the name of Robert Hass', the translator and author of the Essential Haiku, on which he did a great job. Unfortunately, Eisner is the editor of the majority of the poems. The analogy to Eisner's translation would be like what Zondervan did to the bible in their NIV. It's not a bad translation, but it's moderned up a bit. I would have appreciated a more King James-like translation of Neruda's poems as I could infer a lot of missed nuances that appear to be in the original Spanish on the opposite page. A lot of the translations lack the depth and texture of what a great poet should have, and sometimes it feels like I'm reading a different poet altogether.

For instance, a line "Hermano, hermano!" is translated as "Hermano, hermano!" in the English, though it could have plainly been have translated as "Brother, brother!" considering the second "hermano" is not capitalized. Perhaps this was Neruda's original intent, but there is no way to tell as there are no footnotes.

Poetry is about texture, a poet's voice, and brilliance in how the artist uses his words to paint; this translation doesn't do enough to convey the voice of Neruda, but merely makes it accessible to new readers of not only Neruda, but also poetry.

Publishers
George Shrinks
Published in Hardcover by HarperCollins Publishers (1994-11)
Author: William Joyce
List price: $24.95

Average review score:

George Shrinks
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-15
My three-year old grandson loved the book. The story is good and the art is exceptional.

George Sponge SKi's!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-10
As an artist I tip my hat to William Joyce! I read in an earlier review someone saying it is done in simple watercolor but thats not watercolor unless its watercolor pencils. Such meticulous detailed work even as George ventures down the railing of the stairs he passes a depiction of "Sunday afternoon on the Island of Le Grande Jatte"! This book is a prize the story line is so cute the text is perfect for age 2-6 and the adventure and art are unforgettable. No wonder PBS made it into a show!

The cutest kids book ever!!!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-24
I loved this book. It was so cute. I thoughtit was good for every one. It was about a kid who wonders about how it would be if he was shrunken and when he was sleeping he actully shrunk. But he had to do some chores and they were the simplest things like watering the plants or feeding the goldfish turn into the biggest adventure.

George Shrinks
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-20


I gave this book a five because a little kid name George has a dream of him being small like a "teddy bear". When he had the dream he was in his bed sleeping, his mom left a note of chores and he was doing the chores. The "scary" part in the book was when the cat sees George and thinks his is a toy and the cat tries to put his claw on him ,but George runs and hides from the cat. This book is great and I think William took a long time doing the cover and pictures and I say the book cover and pictures are really beautiful. I love this book because he had a dream that was weird that he was small and that he had to do big chores. I would recommend this book because it is a cute book for a 1st and 2nd graders I think they will love it because all of the cute pictures and the funny pictures they would love to read this book a lot of times and I would like to some day read it again because it would be so nice to read it over and over.

must have
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-07
I love this book and give it over and over to all the children that I care most about

Publishers
Glory Lane
Published in Hardcover by Severn House Publishers (1991-12)
Author: Alan Dean Foster
List price: $18.95
Used price: $34.14

Average review score:

Gloryous book for the sci-fi geek inside!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-20
I have read Alan Dean Foster's Star Wars books and was told to try out some of his non-Star Wars books. I tried Codgerspace but was unimpressed. Nonetheless, I decided to plug through this highly rated book.

Plot:
Seeth is a punk rocker. Kerwin is a college student. Miranda is a blonde bombshell. This trio meets up with Arthwit Rail, an alien in possession of Izmir, a strange being that no one is quite sure of. When Rail is chased by Oomenians who want Izmir back, the three humans are whisked away to a wide expansive world possessing more aliens than imaginable, shopping sprees beyond imagination, science this world has only dreamed of, and a five-way war over the strange thing that keeps tagging along. Will these three humans survive and who will gain control over Izmir?

Good:
AMAZING! This is a positively awesome book. From the characters, to the plot, to the pacing, to the science, there is very little that is wrong with this book.
From the moment that we meet Seeth, I was hooked. Seeth was an absolutely awesome character, portrayed perfectly. Not quite good and completely different from the middle-class ideal, Seeth is such a convincing persona, he outshines his other two counterparts. Miranda actually acts like a ditz (most of the time--see below) and Kerwin is a nerd in a new sense--non-science (i.e. physics, math, that kind of stuff).
Next, the plot was perfect! Each action led to the next, was unique but not confusing and was overall amusing. Watching how the three are introduced (Kerwin and Seeth in the bowling alley, Miranda and the two in the car Rail steals), how they land on an alien world, how they shop, what they have to do to make money, all these little incidents are absolutely perfectly intertwined to make a completely satisfying story.
The pacing was also perfect. Not too much time is spent on Earth, no large gaps occur in time, and Foster doesn't get bogged down in long expository scenes that serve only to explain every detail that the audience doesn't get (which, by the way, Foster again does perfectly). I enjoyed how they understood so much more than the humans (although I did get tired of the human downplaying).
Lastly, the science! And boy, is there a world of science. From new alien species that defy the almost-human aliens to the new spaceships to the unique spacetime wormholes used by the Halets, the aliens actually are aliens! I loved the new battle warfare (between computers!) and the hard-core explanations (like the missing 30 - 40% mass of the universe). But the science isn't so concentrated and focused that the story is missed.

Bad:
Two characters are absolutely plain. Miranda took a freshman physics course and talks like she can compete with alien knowledge? Yeah, right. I have taken sophomore physics, and I wouldn't hold my own next to an alien's superior knowledge of physics. And I am supposed to believe this ditz can spout freshman physics and sound intelligent? This just undermines the shallowness of her character.
Next, I loved Seeth's viewpoint. I was so disappointed when the view went to boring Kerwin. Yes, it is interesting that he is a sociology (I think) major, but really, not much goes on in his head other than being jealous of Seeth over Miranda or mad at Seeth for something he said. What about Seeth? What about Miranda? What about Rail for goodness sake? Why would I want most of the book, which concentrates on three, not one, major character to be told solely from one being's point of view?

Dialogue/Sexual Situations/Violence:
Seeth has quite a foul mouth (being a punk and anarchist after all) and so do several other characters, but "fortunately" the language is reserved to da**, he**, and sh**. Miranda is sleeping with her boyfriend in the back of the van. Seeth can think only of sleeping with Miranda. Violence is very tame, with the exception of the Oomenians shooting at fleeing Kerwin, Seeth, and Rail.

Overall:
After reading Codgerspace and being only minimally impressed with the story, I really did not want to read another book from the author for a while. But, it sounded interesting and my sister told me I should, so I did. And that was a great choice. I was impressed--I was more than impressed, I was shocked. Even with a few minor qualms (the viewpoint change and some characterizations), Glory Lane is an awesome, awesome science fiction book and I think that all sci-fi fans should read this one. Five stars easily.

Fun sci-fi
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2004-11-02
The book is about three misfit Earthlings that unwittingly get caught up in a chase around the universe to obtain a very mysterious object.

This book is a wild ride and its actually funny! It has great characters and a story that gets bigger and more intriguing with every page. It is one of a handful of books I've read more than once. Don't let the cartoonish cover scare you away... though the book is quite silly, it is actually very thought-provoking and will open your eyes to the lighter side of contemplating the universe and our place within it... something we all really need a bit of. Great for kids or adults.

So fun & funny I had to find it again!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2001-10-14
My best friend gave me this book years ago and I loved it so much I wore it out! I lost it recently and had to get a new copy. You will enjoy this hilarious romp through the universe. It was everything I'd want in a science fiction novel!

A fun romp
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2005-09-05
When punk rocker Seeth rescues someone from arrest at the local bowling alley, it all seems like a harmless lark. But, when the cops turn out to be murderous aliens, Seeth and the bookworm Kerwin soon find themselves running for their lives. Accidentally picking up airhead style-queen Miranda, they set off for the stars on the adventure of a lifetime!

This is quite a fun little book. Shift your brain into neutral and suspend your disbelief as you will quickly find a universe filled with extremely odd creatures doing extremely odd things, while the situation becomes odder and odder. I mean, this is not Isaac Asimov teaching a lesson, instead this book is a fun romp through all sorts of strange adventures. By the way, did you realize that the most important thing in the universe is shopping? Well, get this book and learn more!

I liked the book, with the single glaring exception of...
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2005-05-15
...all three human characters. They do not grow. They remain petty, impudent little pests and I found myself wondering why the other races tolerated the human species if this was all the better that they were going to meet!

Seriously, the actual sci-fi was top-notch. There were a multitude of worlds and species that were well-done. But, it was marred by the inclusion of a punk rocker, a geek and a ditzy blond who continued to bicker, and sometimes actually fistfight with one another, no matter the situation. I wish he'd haven given that aspect of the story a rest.


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