L Books
Related Subjects: Lenore Love and Rockets Lady Death Lobo Life in Hell League of Extraordinary Gentlemen Legion of Super Heroes
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CaterpillarsReview Date: 2008-09-15
Best Caterpillar BookReview Date: 2008-09-14
Caterpillars of Eastern North AmericaReview Date: 2008-09-07
I returned itReview Date: 2008-07-06
The Whole StoryReview Date: 2008-07-06

This book is HILARIOUS!Review Date: 2008-06-09
One of the best fairy tales ever!Review Date: 2008-06-05
Adorable!Review Date: 2008-05-10
An enjoyable book for kids and the parents reading itReview Date: 2008-02-14
Hysterical fractured fairy taleReview Date: 2008-02-10


Great RemindersReview Date: 2008-09-29
Great gift for yourself or for others.
Peaceful, Gentle, Loving Review Date: 2008-09-13
Awesome! A must have!Review Date: 2008-09-04
She has done it again! :)Review Date: 2008-08-01
Highly recommended! Thank you, Louise!
I Can Do It CDReview Date: 2008-07-28
Not what I expected.

Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $20.00

Incredibly useful & practical booK!Review Date: 2007-06-09
I have been using it in counseling others for 18 years & it gets great results for next to nothing when compared to years of expensive psycho-therapy in which one doesn't necessarily know if he or she is going to get better.
Get this book & enjoy!
A classic!Review Date: 2007-04-13
It Works!Review Date: 2007-02-06
Best self-help book ever!Review Date: 2006-08-15
Complete nonsenseReview Date: 2008-02-11

Used price: $34.96

Leo Hoffman reveled in SILENT LIES and DECEPTIVE INTENTIONSReview Date: 2008-07-10
Each book stands on its own merits but it is a very rich experience to read SILENT LIES first follwed by DECEPTIVE INTENTIONS.
Awesome readReview Date: 2008-03-19
Historical fiction that has it all - romance, mystery, dramaReview Date: 2008-01-09
Leo is drafted into the military and when he returns to post-war Budapest, realizes that his life of privilege is over. Through his job as a hotel concierge, he meets some ruthless men who set him up as the fall guy for a crime to be committed in Paris. When he comprehends what he has done, he escapes to Shangai, a place that asks no questions. Instead Leo realizes that even in this place of criminals, he can't escape his past. Trying to protect his wife (or is it to protect her image of him?) he keeps his shady business a secret from her, thus "silent lies".
The amount of research that went into writing this novel is evident because of the accuracy of details. You feel as if you are there. There is also a beautiful, tragic love story within these pages.
This fast-paced book has a sequel that is coming soon - I can't wait to continue reading this story. I need to find out what happens!
Silent Lies is captivatingReview Date: 2008-01-11
Singing Hills Book Group
Book Selection for Jan. 2008
Wonderful novelReview Date: 2008-01-10
M L Malcolm writes with a beautiful style and her descriptions make the reader visualize the scenes and background just as if one was actually part of the story.
Thank you, M L Malcolm for sharing your literary talent and creating a wonderful story interlaced with historical facts.

wodehouse forever!Review Date: 2008-07-24
Nice collection of Jeeves & Bertie storiesReview Date: 2008-04-23
What ho!Review Date: 2008-03-22
Carry On, Jeeves is a great starter book for those who are intimidated with the amount of J&W books available (or rather, don't know where to begin). The first story in this book is about the first day Bertie Wooster met his personal gentleman (or valet, if you prefer), Jeeves. The stories easily stand on their own; with the exception of characters being mentioned or being part of the plot, the book is not a novel you have to read front to back. Consider it a literary sitcom, where new scenarios and conflicts arise with each story you read.
My favourite bit about reading Carry On, Jeeves was the last story of the book, where it takes a refreshing twist and is narrated by Mr. Jeeves rather than Bertie Wooster. It was great reading from Jeeves's perspective.
Lots of chuckles throughout and a few hardy laughs. Overall a perfect read.
A Capital CollectionReview Date: 2007-01-20
As Richard Usborne notes in his invaluable guide, Plum Sauce, five of these stories appeared earlier in My Man Jeeves (1919). Two of the stories there told by Reggie Pepper are here transformed into Bertie's ruminations. Carry On Jeeves was the next collection following the ten stories in The Inimitable Jeeves (1923), and Wodehouse was on a roll. Here's Bertie's first engagement to Florence Craye, and his first encounter with her younger brother, Edwin, the Boy Scout, who rapidly renders unsafe house and home. Enter Biffy and Bingo Little, later fixtures in the Wooster ouvre. Here also Bertie pens his oft- mentioned "piece" for his "good aunt" Dahlia Travers, and her struggling paper, Milady's Boudoir. The last story in this collection is somewhat questionably narrated by Jeeves, but Wodehouse fortunately reverted to telling tales in first person Bertie in the later shorts. Some of these tales also found their way into the Jeeves and Wooster TV shows with even more riotous results. All in all, a capital collection.
Carry On, JeevesReview Date: 2006-06-28
all of P.G. Wodehouse's books involving Jeeves and Berty Wooster
should be thoroughly enjoyed by every one.

Goosebumps fan's favoriteReview Date: 2008-04-25
A story of a young girl's experience at summer camp. Her peer problems seemed bad enough for her to think of faking her own death, but then her plan backfires and she almost drowns. Then she starts seeing things that cause her to act strange and increases her peer problems.
It is not my own interest and I feel kids today have enough strangeness in their lives without these scary things to wonder about, but perhaps they appreciate the safeness of their own world after reading about a more scary one.
My first goosebump that started my reading of the seriesReview Date: 2008-04-10
youth fictionReview Date: 2008-02-23
EerieReview Date: 2007-11-16
I was pulled into this book as I was reading it. It is an eerie tale that gave me shivers as I was reading it. I loved this book and thought that it was one of, if not THE best of the books in the series. Anybody who loves a book for children and who loves a good thrill should buy this book because it is a great thrill.
I am totally fumed that they didn't make an episode out of this masterpiece of a Goosebumps book!!
Blood Curling StoryReview Date: 2007-04-17

Used price: $9.88

Fun for all!Review Date: 2008-10-02
This is the best book ever!!!Review Date: 2007-10-28
This book is my favorite because it's packed with all kinds of things to draw. Gumball machines, people in action, animals, trucks, planes, you name it.
You really can draw your own little world.
This would be a great gift with some paper and markers for the young budding artist.
My friend's son LOVES Ed Emberley!Review Date: 2007-09-27
osaReview Date: 2007-09-15
Ed Emberley's Drawing Book: Make a World (Ed Emberley Drawing Books)Review Date: 2007-07-12

Used price: $3.98

Very scary!by,SP from North BoulevardReview Date: 2007-11-21
Not To bad...Review Date: 2006-09-12
Wow! This is the best Night of the living dummy Goosebumps book ever Review Date: 2007-02-10
Creepy! Review Date: 2007-01-12
As we join them, the twins are exploring the house across the way from theirs when Lindy discovers a ventriloquist dummy in the construction dumpster...even better he appears to be in excellent shape. To Kris' horror, Lindy keeps the dummy, which Kris initially distains as stupid, gross, and boring. Shortly after finding him, Lindy manages to gain some skill and when her act becomes popular with their classmates...popular enough to get her some gigs doing birthday parties with her act, Kris decides that she too MUST have a dummy. Her parents initially rebuke her, dummies are expensive and try to get the girls to share which outrages Lindy...she becomes quite cruel toward her sister calling her a copy cat and really wanting this one thing for herself.
When their father manages to conveniently stumble upon a second dummy in a second hand shop for a good price, it seems like the problem is solved...but Lindy is still angry at her sister for trying to steal her thunder and begins to pose the dummy so that it appears to be alive, frightening her sister terribly...when the secret is revealed, Kris is crushed...but shortly after the dummy DOES come to life and the twins are left without their parents support (they are just fed up with talk and whining about the dummies to hear a single thing more about them). Will the girls be able to stop Mr. Wood? Will he make them his slaves? You'll have to read to find out...what you get is always different than what you expect with these stories, and Night of the Living Dummy is no exception, it does have a signature "got ya" moment at the end.
Overall, Night of the Living Dummy is well written and the characters are simple but adequately written. The girls are sympathetic in some instances and not in others...there are times in the story when you think they are getting what they deserve for the way they behaved...but in the end, you want them to pull out of it and save themselves from Mr. Wood. At the very end, just when you think it's all going to be ok, boo...an abrupt shock at the end and the story is over, leaving the reader wondering how the girls will get out of their predicament...this one reeks of sequel, which I understand there are several of. I give it five stars, this is much better written than some of the other books I've read in the series and for taking something that's already kind of creepy (the dummy) and making it horrific several times over.
He's No Dummy!Review Date: 2006-02-15

Lad, a dogReview Date: 2008-01-26
I will never forget how I discovered this book...(actual review on the second paragraph)Review Date: 2007-10-21
For the REAL review: I HIGHLY recommend this book as well as all of Terhune's dog books to everyone young and old. It changed my life dramaticly and I am very thankful for the day I found the book. But, this book is different from Terhune's other books. Not the best, but in my opinion, the very most special. After all, it IS Albert Payson Terhune's firt book and the first book of his I read.
A Dog Story to RememberReview Date: 2007-01-16
"Reading about Lad, a Dog by Albert Payson Terhune fired my desire to own a dog, not just any dog but a faithful tawny collie who would keep me company, lick away my tears and save my life (it might have been from falling through the ice or from that car speeding around the corner or maybe from our cantankerous cow with the cock-eyed horn. Terhune's book series was based on the very real Sunnybank Lad, "a thoroughbred in body and soul."
I also found Terhune's books very satisfying reading and couldn't get enough of them or of Thomas Hinkle's horse stories.
One of the great dog books ...Review Date: 2008-01-08
Books about a dog...Review Date: 2007-03-02
His way of writing, (though repetitive in terms and phrases from book to book- a relatively minor point, for the writing is evocative, even if repetitive) is nevertheless easily on a par with many 'good' modern authors today, and is therefore of more merit, than perhaps when they were first written!
As Chronicles of history (the era when cars were first being mass-produced & made available by the 'monthly payment with interest scheme,' so burdensome to modern life) when gentlemanly conduct and lady-like manners were not 'chauvinistic,' all of Terhune's books would make a very nice study of American mores and morals of the 1910-1930's era, especially for boys aged 9-12. Where he [Terhune] shines most evocatively, is in giving that sense of awe and wonder, as one looks with love and affection on a dog that many consider the noblest examplar of the breed as a whole!
What was also pleasant to read, is the honest way in which Terhune describes how literate, intelligent, and societally well-to-do [white] folks looked upon the world, their neighbors, the rise of crime as a mobile menace with the advent of said motorcar (and thus, Terhune makes an eloquent 'apologia' for limiting, rather than expanding[!] mass transportation from inner city to outer suburbs in modern metropolises!) with a frankness that is woefully missing today. In short, when needed, Terhune, like almost all men of his era, is willing to 'call a spade a spade.' Some might call his use of terms for some of the less seemly characters he portrays, 'racially insensitive,' but that is only because we have been brainwashed into thinking civility and crassness are interchangeable cogs on a multicultural wheel!
I, for one, found this utter frankness of Terhune and his overt masculinity (in his descriptions of events and persons) a breath of fresh air- especially after the 'Illegal Alien May First walkout of 2006,' Hurricane Katrina and the Superbowl, the Million Man March, and all the other 'minority grandstanding' one has to endure in this "PC" mad era. Terhune's evocation of an era that should come again reveal that civility, proper manners, respect for property, life, and livestock on a working farm or kennel, are things that any child (or adult!) could/should take a lesson from. Along with Knight's "Lassie-come-home,' these books (in their original issue, and not in modern reprints, which clearly would be 'santized' for 'modern dumbed-down readers') are now prize possessions in my antiquarian bookcase. I will return to them every year, (and read them to my children, whom I homeschool!) to read of a lifestyle, a culture, that once defined what it is to be free, noble, and American. IF I could put it into the fewest words possible, I would say Terhune writes of: Man, dog, and nature. If one could sum up Terhune, these three qualities shine through resplendently in all of his works. I can honestly say, that, for a work of fiction, I am a better man for reading them.
Related Subjects: Lenore Love and Rockets Lady Death Lobo Life in Hell League of Extraordinary Gentlemen Legion of Super Heroes
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