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

V
Will Our Love Last? : A Couple's Road Map
Published in Hardcover by (2000-05-15)
Author: Sam R. Hamburg
List price: $23.00
New price: $7.02
Used price: $4.93

Average review score:

A smart look at relationships
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-10-10
According to the author, there are 3 dimensions necessary for a successful relationship. They are:

1 -- the Practical dimension
This is about how well you live and work together.
Are you a morning person or a night person?
Do you want the air conditioner on or off?
Do you want to decorate in a minimalist modern style or a cluttered country style?
These may sound like petty, insignificant issues, but on a daily basis, if you and your partner are way off on this dimension, you could easily grate on each other's nerves.

2 - the Sexual dimension
This goes beyond sexual attraction to include sexual style.
Do you like quiet, missionary style sex or loud, try-every-position-imaginable sex?
Do you like sex once a day or once a month?
If you and your partner are way off on this dimension, then both of you will feel frustrated. The partner who wants less sex will feel like a spoilsport and the partner who wants more sex will feel like they are on a sex diet.

3 - the Wavelength dimension
This is about the meeting of the minds.
Are you for or against abortion?
Is your humor quietly witty or loud and raunchy?
Are you interested in politics and keeping up with current events or does that stuff bore you?
In an ideal world, we would all be able to kindly accept each other's differences in values and opinions. In reality, though, when someone disagrees with a value we hold dearly, we tend to think that person is naive, crazy, or stupid...and respect goes out the window.

According to the author, dissatisfied couples are couples who only have one or two of these dimensions present.
If the practical dimension is missing, then living and working together with this person on a daily basis will lead to constant bickering. If the sexual dimension is missing, then you will feel frustrated and bored with your sex life. If the wavelength dimension is missing, then you won't be able to relate to your partner on an intimate level.
If a couple has all three of these dimensions, then they have struck gold and will likely have a fulfilling marriage. That's not to say you and your partner have to be twins (some difference is healthy because it allows you to grow and makes the other person interesting) but just close enough so that the ratio of good times outweighs the bad times. I agree with the author's outlook and consider this book to be a smart look at relationships. Highly recommended.

This Book Saved Me From Marrying the "Wrong" Person
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-19
This book helped me understand why I couldn't say yes to someone who seemed like the perfect spouse for me "on paper" and to most of my family and friends. It clearly lays out the most important aspects of compatibility and helped me realized that my little issues with my ex-boyfriend were actually significant problems that would have led to a less than harmonious problems. It also helped give me the confidence to walk away from the relationship even though most above mentioned family and friends couldn't understand why I would do so. A couple of years later I met someone who I am very compatible with and now we have two kids and a very happy marriage. I often recommend this book to single friends and all have benefited from reading the book. Definitely the best $15 I have ever spent!

Married? New love? Looking for love? You should read this
Helpful Votes: 15 out of 15 total.
Review Date: 2000-12-03
The author presents a fairly straightforward theory of how he's seen compatibility relate to long term marital happiness and stability. He breaks it down to three areas: practical, sexual and wavelength. I've thought a lot in the past about the way I relate or don't relate in relationhships, but reading this book I had a number of "aha" moments where I felt like this makes real sense. I've discussed his ideas with a number of friends and the consensus is he's right on. The great thing is that after you read this I'll bet you'll feel compelled to talk about these ideas with friends and more importantly your lover. It's an easy, accessible read that I would see as invaluable to people looking for love or married for years.

Most useful relationship book I've found...
Helpful Votes: 17 out of 18 total.
Review Date: 2005-12-27
I've read a lot of books on relationships, compatability and love. This book was the most practical, straightforward, realistic and helpful. What impressed me most about this title was the author's ability to simplify a very complex topic. He also considered dimensions of compatability that are often difficult to define, but that are crucial to forming a good long term relationship. The author also included deceptively simple exercises for couples that allowed them to access not only their thinking about a particular area of compatability, but more importantly their felt sense of it. In short, this book helps cut through confusion in the area of love. It is well worth the cost and it is quite different that most books of the same genre, which I have often found to be very similar to each other. It is clear that this author has many years of experience counseling real couples with difficult compatability issues. I also appreciated that the book did not include too many case studies or examples. I have found many case-study approach type books to read more like a novel than a helpful tool to work with a problem, perhaps this is a personal bias. In short, this book is a very useful tool for understanding an existing relationship or as a benchmark guide for dating compatability. It also achieves its goal without a lot of unnecessary text or redundant stories about other couples.

not sure yet how useful this book is...
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2005-04-05
since I am just beginning to apply it to my current situation. But after reading it, I certainly see where some past relationships have gone wrong.

And the basic theory does make intuitive sense: Hamburg focuses on physical issues, practical compatibility (day-to-day teamwork) and what he calls "wavelength compatibility" (that is, broader ways of looking at the world, and similarity of opinions on big issues such as religion). As he points out, if your prospective mate flunks on all three criteria, further communication and hard work will only make it clearer that he or she is not a good match.

My only real quarrel with Hamburg so far is his suggestions about which issues couples must resolve before being married. For example, he thinks that a couple should decide before marriage whether to have a "traditional marriage" (i.e. one where the male earns most of the money) or a more egalitarian mrriage. I am not sure that one can know in advance how "traditional" one's marriage can be; presumably most reasonable couples would move towards a less traditional marriage if the spouses' earning power is roughly equal, but towards a more traditional marriage if one spouse's economic contribution turns out to be minimal.

V
Your Father's Voice: Letters for Emmy About Life with Jeremy--and Without Him After 9/11
Published in Hardcover by St. Martin's Press (2004-09-01)
Authors: Lyz Glick and Dan Zegart
List price: $22.95
New price: $0.01
Used price: $0.01

Average review score:

Thank you.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-21
I continue to be intensely interested in everything I can possible read about 9/11 and have found nothing that has matched the author's description of what the victim's families have experienced.

If you are curious about how the site in PA was examined and the nature and extent of what the government revealed to the families, this is a great book to read.

Kudos to the author for revealing her personal experiences because it is evident that she is a private person by nature.

Jeremy Glick; A True Judoka, Always a Mench
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-18
This is a must read for all judo players. It gives an inside account of how judoka Jeremy Glick faced with certain death made decisions to lay down his life to save many others. The story focuses on Jeremy's personal growth as a boy starting judo at age 6 and eventually winning the collegiate nationals. Jeremy was a real mench with a passion for living. He was a devoted husband, loving father, and successful sales executive with a terrific sense of humor. The ultimate goal of judo is to continually seek the perfection of one's character which Jeremy strived for.

Inspiring, heartfelt & heroic
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-30
This is the best book that I have read in a really long time. I was moved by Lyz's honesty and heartfelt emotions about losing her husband on 9/11. Even though one could possibly not imagine what she felt on that day, it gives you a little insight to her story, her husband and her daughter. Her daughter will be so thankful that she made this memorial of her father. Lyz's daughter Emmy is so lucky to have such a strong role model in her life in both her father and mother. This book is a real example of true love, life and loss. Not only is her husband a hero but she is as well.

Beautiful Book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-08
This is a Wonderful Book.It has background of Lyz Glick and Her Late Husband Jeremy Meeting,falling in Love,Colledge,Marriage,the baby Emmy and the Hijacking leading to Jeremy's death.I highly recommend this book.

Very Heartwrenching and Inspiring
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-11-02
I was very anxious to read this book since I read an article on a Reader's Digest magazine about a year ago and so I requested my local library to buy it. I read it in a week, I am pretty sure I could've read it in two days if it wasn't because I have a lot of homework. All I can say is that I loved "Your Father's Voice". It is very well-written and moving.

Lyz Glick carefully tells the story of her life with Jeremy and her life once Jeremy was gone. She walks us through every memory she kept. She shares with us the weakest moments of her life after her husband's death, but she also states the importance of her and Jeremy's daughter in her life.

I have to applaud Liz Glick for managing to tackle such an enourmously emotional and personal subject with such grace. This book put thoughts in my head of what it would be like if I had to face the same reality she encountered, and I have to confess it brought me to tears often. What happened to her and to anyone whose loved ones were killed that horrible day is something you don't wish to anyone. Like I said I can't imagine enduring the things she went through.

I was totally blown away by this book. I undoubtedly recommend it. It's the kind of book you should have on your coffee table. You will see it is very hard to put it down.

vgxoxo@hotmail.com

V
Antología de Autoestima y Amor (The Best of Self Esteem and Love)
Published in Mass Market Paperback by Encuadernacion Geminis S.A. DE C.V. (2001-09)
Author: Gabriel Hoffman
List price: $15.99
New price: $15.99

Average review score:

EL AUTOTISMA Y EL AMOR
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-10-11
Pero si nos hundimos emocionalmente, NUESTRO MUNDO PERSONAL VA A RESENTIR LAS CONSECUENCIAS !
ESTE LIBRO, HERMOSO DESDE SU DISEÑO HORIZONTAL Y MUY BIEN ESCRITO Y PENSADO, TE ELEVA SOBRE LA SUPERFICIE CONTAMINADA Y TE CONDUCE A DIMENSIONES HERMOSAS DE ESTIMA PARA TI MISMO:Si:PORQUE ERES UN LUCHADOR

LO QUE NOS IMPIDE SER FELICES, TENER EXITO Y
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-08-05
TODO LO BUENO EN LA VIDA... ¡Es la falta de autoestima y amor a nosotros mismos!
Eso es lo que nos pesa en el corazon como si fueran cadenas..
LIBERATE... ESTE LIBRO TIENE LA LLAVE !
Te enseña cuanto vales !
FABULOSO !

PINTA UN PAISAJE HERMOSO EN TU CORAZON
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2003-07-02
Eso es lo que hace este inolvidable libro !
Te da estimacion para ti mismo y hace que te sientas feliz con el mundo que te rodea

Si no te amas a ti mismo
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2003-05-18
y te estimas, con todos tus dones, NO PUEDES AMAR A NADIE...
Y NADIE PUEDE AMARTE!
Eso es lo que hace este libro: Te enseña A AMARTE Y A ESTIMARTE EN TODO LO QUE VALES!
Y TE DEMUESTRA QUE VALES MUCHISIMO !

Lleno de inspiracion IMPACTANTE
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2003-06-16
QUE REALMENTE TE HACE VALORARTE A TI MISMO !

V
Autumn from the Heart of the Home
Published in Hardcover by (2004-08-31)
Author: Susan Branch
List price: $25.95
New price: $16.78
Used price: $15.56
Collectible price: $51.90

Average review score:

Autumn! Celebrate with this wonderful book!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-08
If you are a Susan Branch fan, chances are you already have this wonderful book. "Autumn" delivers the season with no holds barred. The inside of the book is covered with warm oak leaves and acorns ~ a perfect hint as to what is inside! From seasonal decorating and party hints to the delicious recipes, the celebration of Autumn is all here!

The Cranberry Apple Crisp and the Pumpkin Cheese Cake are two of our favoites. Both easy to make and scrumptous! All hand-written, Susan has included short stories and wonderful illustrations in the warm,toasty autumn colors. This book is a must-have for anyone who simply loves autumn!

How I'd like Autumn to be
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-27
Susan Branch has the knack of making the ordinary truly extraordinary. Forget Nigella, she is truly the first domestic goddess. This book oozes charm and comfort, I can smell the fermenting orange and gold leaves and hear the drizzle lightly pattering away on the front porch whilst I'm warm and cosy with my recipes indoors. Such is the power of this book, as I live in a country that doesn't even have an Autumn to speak of! The recipes are lovely but they are almost secondary to the feelings and creativity this book inspires with it's beautiful rustic drawings and charming thoughts in Susan's familiar swirling script. A delight as always.

Enchanting
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-11
I admit, autumn is my favorite time of year. The cooler weather, just perfect for sweaters. . . the leaves of crimson, copper and gold. . . the sweet-tart taste of an apple pie fresh from the oven. . . . Susan Branch does a beautiful job of capturing the essence of autumn through her stories, recipes, decorating ideas, and charming illustrations. This is a book to be savored, and it makes a lovely gift as well. Here's hoping that Susan creates books on spring and winter as well!

I love this!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-02
What an excellent cookbook. And it makes a wonderful gift. The recipes are wonderful and the artistry in the book is delightful! I personally use this and have given several as gifts. Practical recipes. It is fun just to sit down and read it!

Susan Branch at her best
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-17
Autumn is my favorite season and this could well be one of my favorite cookbooks. As with any Susan Branch book, the illustrations are delightful. The recipes are great, too (and not only for the autumn season).

This is a book that will lift your spirits on a gloomy day.

V
The Backbone of the World: A Portrait of a Vanishing Way of Life Along the Continental Divide
Published in Hardcover by Amazon Remainders Account (2002-05-14)
Author: Frank Clifford
List price: $24.95
New price: $8.71
Used price: $5.44
Collectible price: $24.95

Average review score:

Grandiose title becomes worthwhile read...
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-28
The Backbone of the World is a collection of random vignettes recording the author's experiences along America's continental divide. From the boot heel of New Mexico to Canada's Alberta province, Frank Clifford finds no shortage of eccentric, hardscrabble westerners with which to commune. Although ostensibly exploring the newly commissioned (and largely conterminous) Continental Divide Trail, the author actually spends little time on it. He prefers to alight sporadically in places collateral to the divide - the story becoming less reminiscent of a "backbone" and more of a vertebra here and a vertebra there.

And there's a larger problem with this appellation, as well. One assumes that Clifford derives "The Backbone of the World" from the Blackfeet name for an area in Glacier National Park, yet, in socio-geologic terms, it seems overly hopeful to apply it to the continental divide as a whole. The world is a big place and Clifford singularly fails to defend the distinction. Indeed, he completely ignores it. Why such a lofty claim when the author's protagonists are so quintessentially local (so local, in fact, that they inhabit only the eastern front)? In the absense of an answer, the reader is forced to conclude that Clifford has bestowed the honorific merely because it sounds good.

Lest I criticize too harshly however, the book's subtitle is right on the money. Frank Clifford meaningfully portrays a vanishing way of life. He has filled his book with people of extraordinary character from which he extracts stories disarmingly genuine. In fact, it is this talent that saves the effort from becoming a run-of-the-mill travel book and compels me to award it 4 stars. The Backbone of the World is recommendable, if somewhat arbitrarily constructed. For a more immersive experience regarding life along the divide, I recommend Leaning on the Wind by Sid Marty.

I wonder what Edward Abbey would think....
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-08
Clifford writes with too much evenhandedness and too little anger to suit me about what's happening to The West. Even so, there's no doubt that he cares deeply about what's being lost. This book ought to be required reading for anyone who crosses the state lines of NM, CO, WY, ID or MT.

This is a goodun
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-11-29
I don't give 5 stars and it's not about me so I seldom toss my twopence in but, this is well-written and easily worth the used price listed. You can get the drift from the other reviews. Fine book, Mr. Clifford! thank you.

The dark side: insightful and honest
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-07
Anyone interested in reading about the glamorized West - artist retreats in Santa Fe, Denver socialites, ski resorts in million-dollar-home settings - will probably be disappointed in this book. Frank Clifford instead takes the reader to isolated outposts where people are just barely surviving: a sheep rancher north of Vail who lives in a ramshackle trailer; one of the last residents of Jeffrey City, WY, who is sick from years of working in the now-closed uranium mines and is too poor to see a doctor; a park ranger in Yellowstone hellbent on stopping illegal hunting practices along the park's isolated boundary; a trapper in New Mexico who sometimes goes six months without human contact; a Canadian environmentalist fighting a losing battle against gas and timber companies; a group of Blackfeet Indians trying to maintain ties to their ancient culture on their reservation near Glacier NP; a ranch family in southern New Mexico frightened of the drugs and violence along the border.

A few things unite most of Clifford's subjects: a fierce independence; a hatred for governmental interference, especially when it interferes with their livelihoods; and a similar disdain for "outsiders" who they feel look down upon them as inferior people, hicks, and want to impose restrictions on how they can and should use the land (i.e. environmentalists). Clifford, who is a journalist from California, must be commended for not taking a position for or against his subjects (he realizes both sides have valid arguments) and for becoming one of them, even if it's only for a short time (he rides horses with his subjects, helps them with their cattle and sheep, etc.). The book will definitely take the wind out of the sails of anyone who pictures the West as merely a drop-dead beautiful mountain backdrop to be enjoyed while sipping red wine on a dude ranch porch. This is the real deal, the other-side-of-the-tracks picture where people count pennies to survive the year and every cow or sheep lost to a grizzly bear or coyote means they go a little bit deeper into debt. It's an eye-opening book - one of the best on the West of today that I've come across. Highly recommended.

Never Seen the Spring Hit the Great Divide...
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-28
Never seen a hawk on the wing... for the many Americans that the lyrics of this old Jerry Jeff Walker song apply, Clifford's book is a marvelous remedy. As he explains in the prologue, he undertook the book in conjunction with the development and opening of the Continental Divide Hiking Trail. But his book is less about the physical panorama of the scenery along the Divide, as it is of the hard-scrabble existence and diversity of people who hold on to the "old-ways" of life along the Divide. Some of Richard Ford's books like "Rock Springs" serve as a wonderful fictional compliment to Clifford's work.

Clifford has a journalist background; he is able to find very real people truly "hanging on," even if it means going around the sign in Catron Co. NM that says: "Visitors not Welcome. Trespassers will be shot."

In the "boot heel" of New Mexico he interviews a descendant of a polygamist Mormon sect that fled the United States in the late 1800's so they could continue to practice their beliefs which had recently been outlawed. These "higra" Mormons were, if anything, too successful in Mexico, and were eventually driven out by Pancho Villa, with some settling along the border line, back in the States. Clifford has done his background work on this area, quoting Cormac McCarthy's "Blood Meridian."

At the other end of the trail he rides horses with the Blackfeet Indians along the Canadian border, conveying insights into the reservation life, and he rides with a radical environmentalist, of the "Monkey Wrench" variety. In between, there is a National Park Ranger who fights the poachers at Yellowstone; the miners dying from the effects of their work in the uranium mines of Wyoming; documenting the extent of work that cattlemen must do to make a ranch viable in these arid lands; the Hispanics of Northern NM who have their own laws, and strongly resist outside intrusions; and a hippie-like shepherd struggling in Colorado, whose method of castrating his sheep you will never forget.

I felt myself savoring each vignette, and wished the author could have spent an entire month with each of his subjects. He has the knowledge to cite various literary, historical, and political antecedents to each situation. As others have noted, the book's title is a bit of an overreach, but if America is your whole world, so be it.

And excellent summation of one of the book's central themes is: "This strange legacy of socialism is one of the abiding ironies of the West. No region of the country is more devoted to the myth of rugged self-sufficiency, none more dependent on federal largesse, and none more contemptuous of the hand that feeds it." (p 159)

An excellent read for those who live along the Divide, and for those who don't.

V
The Baker's Dozen Cookbook : Become a Better Baker with 135 Foolproof Recipes and Tried-and-True Techniques
Published in Hardcover by William Morrow Cookbooks (2001-11-01)
Author: The Baker's Dozen
List price: $40.00
New price: $22.32
Used price: $16.33

Average review score:

An Excellent Invitation to Baking. Buy It!
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2006-01-21
`The Baker's Dozen Cookbook' lists at least 14 authors on the cover, the proverbial baker's dozen of 13 plus editor, Rick Rodgers, a very notable cookbook author in his own right (see, especially, his `Kaffeehaus' on Austrian coffee and pastry shops).

On the surface, this looks like just another collection of recipes by famous bakers. Three years ago, before I started reviewing cookbooks, I would not have even given it credit for that. Now, however, I recognize at least eight of the thirteen principal authors (Flo Braker, Marion Cunningham, Carol Field, Fran Gage, David Lebovitz, Alice Medrich, Peter Reinhart, and Lindsey Shere) as world class experts in one or more fields of baking. This puts the book in the same class as one of my very favorite baking books, `Baking With Julia', a Dori Greenspan written and edited collaboration of the great Julia Child and over 20 baking experts. But in many ways, this book may be even better than the Julia Child volume.

Not only is this a collection of recipes, it is a true collective effort based on an informal gathering of West Coast bakers seeking to explore issues in baking. In this mode, the enterprise takes on the aspects of the `Cooks Illustrated' magazine, where lots of different ways of doing the same thing are evaluated. One of the first and most interesting revelations was the fact that all these leading baking experts went home and made an angel food cake and when they all compared their results, no two came out the same, in spite of the fact that they were all using the very same recipe. The first lesson I take from this observation is that simply carefully following a good recipe does not guarantee success in baking. All sorts of epherema such as the ambient temperature and humidity are important to so many baking techniques.

Now, if you happen to own books from each of these authors, this volume becomes a bit less valuable, as I am sure there will be a lot of overlap. Even so, I found some unique things in here, for example, a recipe for making use of my just purchased Madelaine molds other than making Madelaines.

Like the Julia Child collaboration, this is sort of a `tasting menu' kind of book, which exposes you to all the different types of baking at a very high level of proficiency, and you can see behind the scenes at how these bakers think about their recipes and ingredients.

If you are new to baking, I highly recommend this volume and the `Baking With Julia' volume. I am especially happy with the latter title, as I have always produced superior results when using its recipes.

Recipes always come out wonderful!
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2003-10-20
I was looking for a book that gave me information on how foods react to each other and why. This book does that and more. I particularly enjoy the first section. It calls itself a glossary but should be renamed encyclopedia. Everything from what percentage of chocolate liquor makes bittersweet chocolate bittersweet to what situtations baking soda is prefered over powder and why. The preface sections of each chapter are also filled with a ton of information that I have never seen in any of my other books. The section on high altitude cooking is also probably the most in depth published. To top off the interesting information are recipes that so far have not failed. I have made several of the cakes and they have been delicious and beautiful. There are only two things that would make this book better: pictures and weight. Even if there was a very tiny picture of each of the recipes it would be nice to be able to see it. Early on in the book they talk about how measuring by weight is so much better but most of the recipes are not by weight. How hard would it have been to put both cups and weight in each recipe. This book combined with "The Professional Pastry Chef" by Bo Friberg gives a pretty thorough decription of what you need to know to bake.

Stellar Baking Book!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-06
Short and sweet, I've been a home baker for a lot of years, and I'm so grateful to this book for helping me to solve problems I've encountered during those years and up until this book never found a satisfactory answer to!

Since buying this book my angel food cakes are heavenly and my flans are beautifully caramelized to name just a few areas where their tips and techniques were exactly what I was seeking!

Simple enough for a first time baker and thorough enough to help a seasoned baker! Get it!

Excellent, Kudos!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2005-07-25
If you want to become a better all-round baker, get this book. It is packed with education, instruction, advice, and expertise of 13 top bakers. Yet, it unpretentious and very practical. Let me be honest, I simply could not make an edible pie crust until I got this book...shingles and tile I could make but not a crust. No longer is this the case. It is compiled well and clearly communicates its baking principles.

I am happy with my purchase, BUT....
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2006-12-14
I am happy with my purchase, but I noticed some mistakes. For instance, when making the Buttercream frosting, the book states that you should put a heatproof bowl in and inch of water in a skillet. The proper way to heat the egg mix is to put it in a heatproof bowl, then put the bowl in a large sauce pan or stock pot of simmering water. Do not over fill the pot, you only need to have maybe the bottom 1/3 of the bowl in the water,
and then follow the instructions listed in the book. I did this technique in culinary school, so I knew what to do. Someone not familiar with the technique may run into problems. The other thing that I noticed that when you look at the recipe list for the Choc Buttercream, the recipe asks for 2/3 cup of water, but in the execution only 1/3 cup of water is used.
However, having said all of that, I used the classic buttercream, the choc buttercream, the rich chocolate cake, and the fav buttercake. I was happy with the taste of all 4. Especially the choc cake. It was moist, and SMELLED so much of chocolate. I gave the cake away to my freind for her office Christmas party, but I had fun eating the leftover batter.....LOL.
There is a huge amount of information on technique in here as well. I have not read it all yet, the way it is set up you can pick and choose what you will read when you need it. There is also useful sidebar information with each recipe. Each recipe has the authors name next to it, so if you are a fan of one particular person, you can flip to their recipe.

V
The Beatles: 365 Days
Published in Hardcover by (2005-11-01)
Author: Simon Wells
List price: $29.95
New price: $18.34
Used price: $6.82

Average review score:

If you're a Beatles fan, it's a MUST-have!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-22
Received it as a gift and it sits on my coffee table (always viewed by guests). I bought it for my stepdad who said "It's a great toilet book--I read an entry every day."

Perfect for Collector or a Gift
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-27
I purchased this as a gift for a friends 15 year old daughter (who has become a huge Beatles fan). When she opened it up, her eyes said it all...she absolutely loved the photo's and the captions for each picture. I thought it was literally one page/ picture for each day of the calendar year...so I went to look for June 15...and it wasn't there, but there were about 4 pages on June 8. So it does add up to 365 days and crosses the years from 1964-1970, but if you are like me and wanted to see what the Beatles were doing on your birthday, you might not get to find out. But it's a great book and a great gift.

Love it!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-12
Absolutely stunning! Beautiful and personal photos that covers all four with stunning acuracy.

Exquisite!
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2006-06-17
This book is an absolute treasure and worth every penny of the steep price I payed for it.The pictures are large and extremely high quality and most of them are in vivid color.Another wonderful thing is the fact that they are in chronological order,almost day by day from the end of 1962 to 1970.This is perfect for students of the Beatles because it gives an accurate visual history of the band to suppliment all of the written histories.This leads me to another important point.Anyone with eyes knows that not only is the music great but The Fab Four were indeed VERY nice to look at!And I don't think you have to be a woman,as I most certainly am,to notice that!This book is alot of fun.Because of the date order you see that Paul is wearing the same shirt almost two days in a row on their 1966 American tour!Wonder what happened?! Didn't Neil get to the local cleaners?No clean shirts left?I bet Paul was less than thrilled.To see their clothing styles change every 6 months or so is also interesting.The pictures of the concerts are fantastic especially the color ones.Some of them are large closeups.It also includes some of Bob Whiticker's beautiful photos.He took some of the best pictures of the Fabs and I don't mean the silly Butcher shots.This book should be in every Beatlemaniac's collection.

Photo album
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2006-02-24
Excellent book with hundreds of rare photos.
High quality paper.
Recomended.

V
A Beginner's Guide to Changing the World: A True Life Adventure Story
Published in Hardcover by (2005-05-31)
Author: Isabel Losada
List price: $24.95
New price: $7.17
Used price: $5.29

Average review score:

Humorous, inspiring, gripping, fun - but with an underlying message: Save Tibet!
Helpful Votes: 21 out of 22 total.
Review Date: 2005-08-31
A Beginner's Guide to Changing the World is an amazing book.

Ostensibly a book about a woman (author Isabel Losada) who decides to do something to help the people of Tibet (the Chinese should be ashamed of themselves for what they've done to that peaceful country!), A Beginner's Guide is a book for anyone who longs to LIVE life to its fullest. It's a book for people who yearn for adventures, yet never take the first step toward making them happen.

It isn't just for people interested in Buddhism, either. It's a fun-to-read, inspiring book that anyone, of any religious faith, could embrace and enjoy.

Written in a breezy conversational style, A Beginner's Guide is a tale told wonderfully and joyfully. It recounts Ms. Losada's adventures in Tibet, revealing a side to that country's people the Chinese don't usually let people see. If you'd like to see Tibet, but don't have the time or money (or government permission) to go there, A Beginner's Guide to Changing the World is the next best thing.

I wholeheartedly embrace Ms. Losada's desire to help the people of Tibet. I think what happened (and is happening) in that country is just as terrible as anything that happened to the Jews in Nazi Germany. A Beginner's Guide to Changing the World is one woman's attempt to come to grips with the enormity of the situation and to do something about it. (And you'll never believe what kind of things she dreams up to do about it!)

But, again, this book is not heavy-handed or dire. This is one of the most joyful and positive books I've come across in a long time.

I strongly recommend Isabel Losada's book A Beginner's Guide to Changing the World.

Loved it!
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2005-10-18
I loved, loved, loved this book. It was exactly the right book for me. I almost didn't buy it, though. I'm on a must-resist-book-buying sort of budget, but my husband pointed this book out to me at the bookstore. After reading the "Ten Indispensable Things You Need to Change the World" on the back flap, I knew I had to buy this book. (#1 is "A cupboard. To put your TV in." Something I know I should do but don't.)

The book is structured around the author trying to get a better grasp on the serenity prayer, which she has carried with her for years:
"Grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change
The courage to change the things I can
And the wisdom to know the difference."

That first bit is where I get stuck. I feel this immense responsibility to devote my life to "changing the world" but I just end up feeling overwhelmed (duh, can you imagine?) and frustrated when I see that there's no silver bullet solution to anything. This book spoke to me in a way that no one ever has. No matter how many times someone has said to me "There is no silver bullet" or "You can't change the world in a day" or whatever, I nodded in agreement but didn't really agree. Deep down, I truly believed that there is a silver bullet and I just had to find it.

But this book taught me that though there may be a silver bullet out there, devoting your life to finding out what it is isn't nearly important as *doing* something that brings you joy and makes you feel as if you're contributing something to the solution. I don't want to ruin the ending, but I will if I say much more than that.

I just really, really loved this book. It's exactly what I needed to read. Thank you, Isabel Losada, wherever you are.

Being herself
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2005-09-07
This book talked much about what we already knew about the plight of Tibet, Tibetans, and Dalai Lama. Still, I'm continuously pilfering through books written about Tibet lest I forget human's propensity to do atrocities against their fellow human beings. Whilst we think that sacrifices made during World War 2 would remind people not to resort to violence to resolve issues, it happens yet again in our lifetime. Examples are everywhere namely Iraq occupation or revolution depending which sides you are on. The irony of the whole thing is that the main power that ended World War 2 would be the aggressor in this instance in the name of profits. From this book, it's obvious that Isabel has a pure heart and she asked quite rightly why we are actually penalising Dalai Lama when he's the one who preached non-violence to overcome obstacles. She also said it quite rightly about fighting might with right. Cynical readers might be worried that this book is one-sided, China slamming. It's actually not like that at all. Isabel pointed out also that the ways activists were dealing with issues might be at the wrong footing or rubbing China the wrong way. Ultimately, Isabel just shared with us her experience of trying to help Tibets, Tibetans, and the Dalai Lama. It's funny, heart-warming, and straight to the points at times. For those readers that want to know about those three main issues and yet, don't want to read a dry book, I guess this is a book that you can try to get your hands on. It's quite an enjoyable read, really.

Tibet, monks and a lot of laughs...
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2005-09-06
In A Beginner's Guide to Changing the World Losada decides to devote a year of her life to a worthy cause in an attempt to see whether an individual can make real changes. Her chosen cause is the Tibetan situation. This makes the book sound incredibly serious, but what I like about Losada's style is her way of communicating as if she & you are sitting in the room together & she's chatting to you personally. She is a very witty writer & what could be a dry and depressing topic is actually very funny at times, whilst not losing sight of the serious objectives.

The book is divided into three main sections. In the first part Isabel Losada recounts her decision to travel to Tibet & see the situation at first hand. This reads as an exciting travelogue & paints at times an amusing and then touching picture of Tibet & its People. In the second section back at home in London, Losada contemplates the possible ways she could support the Tibetan cause, culminating in planning a daring publicity stunt promoting the Dalai Lama's peaceful stance against violence at a time when the world had embarked on the `War on Terror'. In the third section of the book Losada is invited to Dharamsala to meet His Holiness himself.

You can expect to experience the full range of human emotion as you read Losada's account. At times she is laugh out loud funny, at others you'll be outraged by the callous treatment of the Tibetan people by the Chinese occupiers. You'll find yourself sharing Losada's frustration in her search for a way to make a difference and her excitement and nerves in mounting the stunt. Then there's the anticipation of meeting His Holiness- I had a tear in my eye & felt I was in the room with them.

(...)

A humorous, charming, and sincere account of an individual's attempt to change the world
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2005-08-25
Isabel Losada wears many hats: single mom, writer, traveler, and now newly christened activist. Journey with Losada as she tells of the seemingly endless trials and tribulations as a wannabe activist fighting for the religious freedom of Tibet. Interesting choice. Yet when the author explains her reasoning behind backing this particular cause, readers will fall into her line of thinking with a natural acceptance simply because Losada is so charming and sincere. Her expression of sadness over the rising regularity of terrorism worldwide is so commonly felt, so consistently lamented, that when Losada poses the premise of fighting the war on terror with nonviolence, it makes sense. Who then is the leading proponent of nonviolence? The Dalai Lama, of course. Losada determines that he's the man for her --- and on this basis Losada begins her story, her journey toward social activism.

Making use of the famed serenity prayer, Losada divides her text into three main sections. Part One: "Grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change..." Recognizing that she has never done much besides navel-gazing, Losada decides to invest some time in protesting outside the Chinese Embassy, a not particularly auspicious beginning. Next, the author starts investigating, interviewing, and finally traveling to Tibet. Waking up in Kathmandu, Losada details in comical fashion the advice passed along to her from a girl in the know from Tibet: Never squat down in the bushes on the Nepalese side of the Himalayas. Leeches have a way of attaching themselves. Before you know it, you're pouring with blood.

Sounds enchanting. Not to be daunted, Losada repeatedly hears the warning of altitude sickness, which can kill you. More seriously, though, were the injunctions to take extreme care in how one speaks to the Tibetan people regarding their loyalty to the Dalai Lama. And never, ever, hand out photos of the Dalai Lama as they're illegal. Losada does indeed travel and immerse herself in Tibetan culture where she sees both beauty and evil side by side, incongruously thriving together. Hard to accept.

"The courage to change the things I can..." comprises the second part of Losada's tale as she begins making advances in practical activism without much initial success. From approaching the Free Tibet Campaign organization to requesting and receiving an interview with a member of Parliament, from setting up a company, a website, to delving into the nitty-gritty of fundraising via parachuting for donations, Losada makes even the most dreary activities both humorous and sobering.

Finally, in Part Three, "And the wisdom to the know the difference..." Losada's journey becomes at once more introspective and profound as she receives an invitation to meet with the Dalai Lama. It is this portion of the text alone that will likely bring the most fascination to readers. Losada takes her time to carefully unfold the details of this once in a lifetime encounter and the results are most satisfying.

While Losada communicates with regular dashes of humor and wit, she likewise is serious about making a difference in the world. Even the most socially complacent readers will glean tips on how vital doing "one's bit" is to a better, safer, more peaceful world. As the Dalai Lama so succinctly states, "If the individual acts, society is changed."

--- Reviewed by Michele Howe

V
Blacksad Volume 2 (Blacksad)
Published in Paperback by IBooks (2005-09)
Author: Juan Diaz Canales
List price: $12.95
New price: $6.00
Used price: $5.40
Collectible price: $19.95

Average review score:

It may seem "Furry" but its a well composed literation of society
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-22
It may seem "Furry" but its a well composed literation of society>
The Blacksad comics have wonderful art design to them and a well developed story and well composed characters. I know some people cringe at the thought of "furries" but this doesn't really go there, it touches on society issues using anthromorphic characters as archetypes and stylization. Especially in this volume where the artic animals have organized a KKK-like organization.

Astounding Art, but Too Short
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-11
"Arctic Nation" is the second of the Blacksad graphic novels. (And, disappointingly, the only one still in print in English; due to publisher issues, the first is out of print and the third was never finished). Blacksad is a detective in a world of anthropomorphized animals - he's a black cat with white around his muzzle.

The art is frankly amazing - Guarnido is a great artist, and he flexes his muscles here. The anthropomorphic characters are drawn in a realistic style that works perfectly, and the book is worth buying for the art alone. The story itself is a Noir one, set in a decaying neighborhood being taken over by racist thugs; fur color is used as the dividing line, while species is usually used as a shorthand to help define the characters.

The translated dialogue is fine; while nothing special, it matches the noir mood and isn't clunky or wooden. The main problem with the book is the pacing - it's too fast. The book is only 56 pages, and they cover a lot of ground. The art is obviously time-intensive given it's quality, but it still would have been better to have a little more breathing room in the book. The storyline and characters are good and have hints of depth, but never have time to reach the level of the astounding art.

"Arctic Nation" is a great book; I just wish it was longer.

BEAST GRAPHIC NOVEL EVER
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-01

This is a masterpiece. The illustration is unparralleled and the story is a thriller. Have read many graphic novels and seen many illustrators but there is nothing like this out there. Too bad it is so hard to come across, US publisher went bankrupt, perhaps can be found on international sites (French, spanish, German). Buy this book and see for yourself, you won't be able to look away.

Why haven't you bought it yet?
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-05
I went to art school, and one of my teachers introduced me to this artist. If an art teacher is showing you something, you tend to pay attention, especially if it has an excellent storyline as well. Its not meant for kids, but it does have sort of a film-noir-esque feel to it. Its not so much animals acting out people roles in a detective story as much as it is people who just happen to look like animals in a detective story. Not one of the people i showed it to could give it a poor review. So its worth it.

The most refreshing comic series in years!!!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-02-22
I found this book at my library. I thought it was Batman on the cover at first, but a closer inspection revealed it to be a cat. I checked it out that very day, and spent all night reading it again...and again...and again.
All I can say is "WOW!" Mr. Canales's story is so engrossing, and Mr. Guarinido's pictures are wonderfully done. I feel a personal connection to Blacksad and his search for Natalia Wilford's killer, but mostly to Blacksad himself. When I showed it to my aunt, she said he looked like Stacy Keach. Thing is, I don't know who that is.
That aside, this is a wonderful book, and I heartily recommend it!!

V
Bone Volume 6: Old Man's Cave
Published in Paperback by GRAPHIX (2007-08-01)
Author: Jeff Smith
List price: $9.99
New price: $4.00
Used price: $2.36
Collectible price: $26.99

Average review score:

Good Service
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-07
This product was received in a timely manner and in excellent shape. Was very satisfied.

Love this Book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-12
My son fell in love with this books. Its a good way of having him improve his reading skill...

A secret sacrificial moonlight ceremony threatens them in another fine Bone presentation.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-04
Book 6 of Jeff Smith's graphic novel Bone series, Bone: Old Man's Cave features a showdown between the Hooded One and the valley folk - and Bone and Phoney Bone at the center of controversy. A secret sacrificial moonlight ceremony threatens them in another fine Bone presentation.

More Fun, More Adventure!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-07
I can see why Bone is so popular! This volume is truly a great continuation of the series. The plot continues to become more complicated and intriguing, and the characters are still as likeable and endearing as ever. I can't wait to read the next volume!

really good
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-20
I'm a fanatic of bone products, so i think they are the most wonderful things i have ever bought.


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