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An insider's look at the art worldReview Date: 2004-04-16
Way more than a beach read!Review Date: 2003-04-17
A superb study of love and obsessionReview Date: 2003-07-07
Genny Haviland met artist Slade Gabriel in her father's gallery when she was 17. They became lovers, an affair that lasted for only weeks in reality but survived for the rest of Genny's life in her heart and soul. They meet again twenty years later, only to have Gabriel learn he has fallen victim to rapidly advancing Alzheimer's. Knowing he could not bear to live without his art, Genny agrees to help him commit suicide.
But a missing letter results in her arrest for murder, and a grief-stricken Genny has no inclination to fight the charge. Instead, as the trial proceeds, she reviews the past, the present and the relationship that has defined her emotional life, looking for an answer that may defy explanation.
In her latest novel, M.J. Rose explores yet another aspect of the relationships between men and women and how those relationships can define us even more than we define them. Child of a distant mother and a father whose love carries strange, twisted undertones, the young Genny is ripe for the kind of intense, all-encompassing passion she finds with Slade Gabriel. She is at once sympathetic and irritating, stubbornly clinging to the loss of her lover as if it will somehow compensate her for the greater loss of the emotional connections she never had -- or allowed herself to have.
FLESH TONES, however, is more than simply a study of one woman's overwhelming need for enduring love. It is also about creativity, and how the truly great artist will always have one small part of his or her soul they cannot share no matter how deeply they love another. Written with powerful emotional intensity and a clear, discerning eye for both the glories and the agonies of both love and passion, Flesh Tones will resonate with anyone who has ever loved what they can never completely have, but it will also provoke tough questions in those who have not.
A sexy and suspenseful novelReview Date: 2003-05-30
Searing, and semi-erotic...Review Date: 2003-08-19
Enjoy!

Collectible price: $35.00

The other DimaggioReview Date: 2000-08-11
yankee stadium from the eyes of a batboyReview Date: 2000-09-03
The other DimaggioReview Date: 2000-08-11
dimaggioReview Date: 2000-08-09
A COMPSSIONATE DIMAGGIOReview Date: 2000-09-07


Must Read not just for ExecutivesReview Date: 2008-06-25
Well DoneReview Date: 2006-04-22
Insightful !Review Date: 2005-02-23
You Can Successfully Be a Corproate LeaderReview Date: 2004-03-15
Jennings cites numerous companies who have carved out success while still remaining true to their customers, their employees and their values.
Not surprisingly, few of these companies are ones that so called pundits regularly review.
As the other reviews have noted, these companies are very successful financially, but they get there by asking the really pertinent business questions, and not by hiding behind an air of executive invulnerability. The leaders are real leaders, more focused on growing the company, serving customers, and doing right by employees.
What vividly differentiates these companies from the "name brands," is that in the "name" companies, executives are more concerned with their own compensation, preserving their own existence, and with profits at all costs, than long term success.
The questions you should ask yourself after reading this book are, "Where have all the leaders gone?" and "Why don't all companies follow many of Jennings' researched best practices?
After that, I would run, not walk, to one of these companies and see if you can start at the bottom and learn what it's like to work in a real company.
On the lean culture of cost leadership firmsReview Date: 2004-08-02
Business magazines often glorify top executives by telling about the grand strategic plan behind the success. This little book shows us a different story. It provides insight to the many seemingly small traits of the lean culture that only works because they taken serious by the organization and used in combination. These are the 11 traits required for the leader of a highly productive enterprise: attention to detail, high moral fiber, embracing simplicity, competitiveness, long-term focus, disdain for waste, coach leadership, humility, rejection of bureaucracy, belief in others, and trust.
I'm sure you're really not impressed of this list. Neither am I. But try challenging some of the advice. Humility? When was the last time you saw a big company using this as a standard. When you hear the story of many head offices visited in this book, you'll understand humility. Often you'll find a very simple and humble office building for a huge company. No art on the walls! No lavish entrance hall! In these companies, you don't find huge corporate staff creating immense bureaucracy and all sorts of information requirements from their operating companies or business units. These organizations do actually "walk-the-talk" on lean - unlike many fad-driven major firms who's paying lip service to a lean culture.
PERSISTENCE is a word missing from the 11 traits, though attention to detail and long-term focus do include some of it. They never lose sight of their BIG idea or focus. It includes their performance measurement. "Everyone who works for SRC gathers once a week in their respective lunchrooms and takes part in a review of the business's financial performance for the previous week. By DOING IT WEEK IN WEEK-OUT FOR MANY YEARS the exercise has also become a system".
Okay, I'm sure that the book's research on productivity could have been better. And some of the firms reported on may experience difficulties, though most are still flourishing. But don't read this book for the hard stuff. Read the soft issues that over time usually turn out to be the hardest to beat.
I agree that it resembles "In Search of Excellence" to some degree, but remember that this book is on the lean culture of Cost Leadership firms (my interpretation, not the author's).
Peter Leerskov,
MSc in International Business (Marketing & Management) and Graduate Diploma in E-business


"Death and Taxes, .........but they left out Recession"Review Date: 2008-07-03
Michael Bini
Your own pocket survival guideReview Date: 2008-06-22
This book is a tool kit of sharp ideas born of practical experience, that will positively influence the health and bottom line of any business in times of recession.
I have run several small businesses, and I wish such wisdom had been available to me earlier. While written in an easy to read style that cuts through the normal jargon, it none the less delivers powerful solutions without having to be a Marketing Specialist. Mr Hart does that for you!
Recession Storming is a book that looks at the challenges and issues during recession, and provides practical strategies and tactics that will help businesses to survive and prosper.
The vast range of information in this book and realistic to-do lists, deliver no nonsense advice that can be implemented immediately. It will maximise your opportunities and deal with specific obstacles, objections and scepticisms businesses face in times of recession.
I found the book extremely relevant in the current climate, and delivers great value for money.
Highly relevantReview Date: 2008-06-18
Good tips on how to compete in recessionary marketsReview Date: 2008-06-18
The book is well organized in five sections. The first section covers
understanding the business environment during a recession or down-market and its impact on your business. The next four sections present strategies for maximizing your profits, revenue, or market share through leveraging a business's existing customers, pricing strategies, and the development of new products and new markets.
I enjoyed reading this book and found it thought provoking, informative, and full of pertinent real world examples supporting each strategy. Its value is as a primer or survey of competitive techniques rather than an exhaustive textbook. I recommend this book to anyone responsible for establishing or implementing strategy in a business facing a down market or aggressive competition (sounds like most businesses today!)
I Loved This Book!Review Date: 2008-06-08
I highly recommend this book to anyone who wants to help their company not just survive but thrive (except my competitors who I hope never read it)!

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Best of that genreReview Date: 2007-12-17
Farolitos and chamisaReview Date: 2007-07-02
I have not been back there in thirty years. Santa Fe has been taken over by the rich and the entitled and they have squeezed the soul out of what we knew growing up there, though there is plenty of beauty and spirit left to be sucked dry by the commercial people. But if you want to know the siren song of Santa Fe, read this book. Sagrado is, indeed, Santa Fe. This was what it was like there even in the 1960's and 1970's.
I mean, where else could you have that unforgettable horse AND world-class opera AND the mountains AND the humility of entertaining the Native Americans by just being white people on the Plaza?
I read this book, I can smell the pine wood burning in the farolitos, and the breeze in the chamisa after the Summer afternoon cloudbursts.
An All-Time Coming of Age StoryReview Date: 2007-05-06
Now a good review (recommendation) doesn't have to be long, so let me give you a few lines of description. A boy moves from Alabama to New Mexico during World War II, and while his father is away in the war, the boy finds friends and a home in the small mountain town of Sagrado. One of his new friends is an sculptor who carves stone heads and places them on a hillside.
On the great book cover: Sometimes book covers actually decline in quality with the many printings of a book. This has happened with "Red Sky At Morning," but remember you are buying the book for the story.
Another example of the decline in a book's cover is seen in the early cover for "Summer of Night," by Dan Simmons.Summer of Night (Aspect Fantasy) The 1991 "Warner Book" edition has a window with a cut out. Through the window you can see some boys riding their bicycles at night. When you open the book, you see a mysterious school in the background.
The later covers of "Summer of Night" were not half as mysterious or fun.
My copy is literally falling apart, I've read it so much. Review Date: 2006-04-16
Rather than boring the reader with a bunch of obnoxious capers and hijinks, Bradford envelops you in his characters' community, and it's this day-to-day banality (which turned me off so much the first time) that really draws you into the story. Josh's adjustment to Sagrado takes time, but when it comes it's so natural and amusing that you're almost completely unprepared for the sobering conclusion of the story.
I had no idea the book was so loved until I read these reviews. There are so many special moments in the story - the big wet snowfalls that ruins Chamaco's fiesta, the horribly backward residents of La Cima, the refreshing "white trashiness" of the Cloyd sisters, even Parker Holmes tearing an elk sandwich apart with his teeth.
I wish these characters existed in real life, and I wish I could be their friend.
Wonderful ReadReview Date: 2006-07-20
Josh, as the narrator in "Red Sky at Morning" is a 17 year old high school senior at the end of WWII. His dry wit mad me laugh right out loud several times. I loved his sensibility and humor. The cast of characters in this book reminded me of some of the characters in "A Prayer for Owen Meany" by John Irving.
This is one of my favorite reads of the year, so much so I will probably hunt down a hard cover edition for my collection.

Used price: $15.10

Great BookReview Date: 2008-07-05
Best All-Around SAT Book--I had all my SAT Students Read itReview Date: 2007-11-07
i would give 6 stars if I canReview Date: 2007-04-23
BEST SAT review book out thereReview Date: 2007-01-26
IF YOU BUY ANY SAT BOOK--THIS IS THE ONE TO USEReview Date: 2007-12-09
None of those really worked.
Until I stumbled upon RocketReview. Everything in this book was SO USEFUL and fun to read too (it reads like a story that the author is narrating, not a boring textbook), with practice problems along the way, crucial tips, and an interactive CD.
I HIGHLY RECOMMEND THIS BOOK...if you are skeptical, just look for it at the library or something and read a chapter. The study tips are strange at first, but once you read his explanations into why they work--BAM. You understand how to not only take a test, but do math problems the easy way without all those complex calculations, save A LOT OF TIME on those long boring reading passages, etc.
I spent about 8 months trying to raise my SAT and took many practice tests. I had reached a plateau at around 2050-2070, and my parents were disappointed. I googled SAT prep books and bought this book and in just a month of studying over the summer (just reading the book, about an hour each day and doing everything it told me too--not very difficult), I raised my SAT score which I took in October by ***100 points*** which puts me in the range of all the colleges I am applying to as a senior now (Ivy Leage-level, etc). Before, I thought the Critical Reading section was IMPOSSIBLE. After reading this book, I found it to be really straightforward, pretty easy, and sometimes fun.
Get this book--it is a MIRACLE worker

Used price: $11.15

BreathtakingReview Date: 2007-12-03
Beautiful bookReview Date: 2007-09-25
Great Horse Lovers BookReview Date: 2007-05-23
mistical and inspiringReview Date: 2007-03-11
Spirit HorsesReview Date: 2007-02-15
Repetitive photographs and sparse text.

Used price: $0.16
Collectible price: $19.99

No Sin is UnforgivableReview Date: 2007-03-23
However, maybe Sam knew that. (And I'm sure she did). I just think it could be more clear. It is completely your choice wheather to NEVER accept Jesus, therefore if you are WILLING to avoid the point where you hate the Holy Spirit and never WANT to come back into the grace if GOD, than you shall be saved! The LORD is wonderful. Sam's letters are great and empowering. Jesus loves Sam spreading HIS WORD.
"THE" Teen BibleReview Date: 2003-07-22
Better than Christian RockReview Date: 2003-10-29
OMIGOD, this bible, like, ROCKS!Review Date: 2004-03-01
Makes you WANT to read the Bible...Review Date: 2004-04-27
Definately recommend to any pre-teen or teen!

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Collectible price: $10.78

Delightful!Review Date: 2008-02-17
Beezus and Ramona (along with Henry Huggins and the rest of the gang on Klikitak Street) were part of my childhood. 40 years later, they were just as appealing to my own son. And don't tell anyone -- although we bought these audiobooks when he was about 8, at 12 he still likes to put these on ocassionally and listen. Why? In large part because of Stockard Channing's masterful performance here. Her rendition of Ramona is EXACTLY how we imagine this impish little creature would talk.
I highly recommend these books, both because of the delightful stories and characters that Mrs. Clearly created for us, and because Stockard Channing has brought them to life so perfectly here. The stories are reminiscent of simpler times and will take parents back to their own childhoods while providing toddlers to tweens with good, wholesome entertainment.
We listened on road trips, and unlike certain kids entertainment (a certain purple dinosaur comes to mind), you won't want the kids to wear headphones to preserve your sanity. You'll want it on the main speakers for everyone in the car to enjoy.
Five stars!
Wierd names, good bookReview Date: 2007-07-07
TOTALLY ANNOYING LITTLE SISTER!Review Date: 2007-05-29
Something for big sisters to relate to!Review Date: 2007-05-19
Clever, funny, and irresistibleReview Date: 2008-02-01
Nine-year-old Beatrice "Beezus" Quimby has always been a quiet soul, content with spending her time embroidering pot holders, helping her mother do the sheets on Saturday's, and reading the countless books she checks out of the Glenwood Branch Library on a weekly basis. Unfortunately, her four-year-old sister, Ramona, is the exact opposite of her. Ramona has one thing on her mind, and that's making as much noise as possible, and driving the whole family out of their mind. Beezus can't stand it, especially since the responsibility of taking care of Ramona, and ensuring that she behaves, is often delegated to her, so that her parents can get their work done. Ramona, however, refuses to obey Beezus. Unless, of course, she's reading one of her favorite books - The Littlest Steam Shovel, or Big Steve the Steam Shovel - to her. But even that doesn't keep Ramona occupied for long. When Beezus is in the midst of creating pictures for her art class, Ramona is there to cause a mess, and challenge Beezus' imagination. When Ramona is offered two marshmallows as a snack, she uses them as powder puffs, as opposed to putting them in her tummy, where they belong. During checkers games with Beezus' pal Henry Huggins, Ramona destroys the checkerboard, and wreaks all sorts of havoc - even some involving Henry's beloved dog Ribsy. In Beezus' eyes, she can't win - even when it's her birthday. But as she gets older, and learns more about her mother's relationships with her siblings, Beezus begins to realize that, as obnoxious as Ramona is, she's still her sister. And even though she may become angry at Ramona for her crazy antics; she still loves her - just not all the time.
I fell in love with Beverly Cleary's RAMONA books when I was five-years-old, and now that I have decided to re-read them, I'm finding that I can't help but fall in love with them all over again. I feel as if I have reverted back to my five-year-old self, and can actually relate to the mishaps that continually take place during both Ramona, and Beezus' lives. Beezus is such a fun character, who seems wise beyond her years, and is serious to a motherly extent. Ramona, on the other hand, is carefree and impossible to handle. Her wacky thoughts, and determination to always have her way is humorous; while some of the debacles she finds herself in are downright cringe-worthy. Cleary has penned a book here that is essential to read aloud to both older and younger children. The message of love is clear on every page, and truly helps to bring siblings together. Clever, funny, and irresistible.
Erika Sorocco
Freelance Reviewer

Read it!Review Date: 2008-06-29
Enjoyable story of a friendship spanning across several decades of American historyReview Date: 2008-05-22
Jillian and Lesley were both born in 1948, and so they were teenagers in the 1960s, when they struggled to make sense of issues going in their world going on at that time, namely Vietnam. Throughout the book, Macomber does a nice job of working in historical events. Vietnam figures heavily into the plot, but other events, such as the American Legion convention and the advent of the computer age, affect the characters as well. Sometimes these inclusions were a bit predictable or even contrived (eg, one letter contained the postscript "my land, what is the world coming to that people are tainting headache pills with cyanide?"), but even so, they added interest to the story.
This was the first book I read by Debbie Macomber, but it won't be the last. Although this book is likely to appeal mainly to women, Macomber injects a genuineness and warmth into her story that goes beyond "chick lit," and I look forward to discovering what else she has to offer.
LOVED LOVED LOVED This book!!!Review Date: 2008-02-16
I highly recommend this book!
An Enjoyable Story of the Value of Friendship Review Date: 2006-12-31
Lesley grew up the oldest of 6 kids in a working class family. Her dad spent more time out of work than he did employeed, and her mom had to learn to live with him and all his faults. Jillian, the only child of Judge and his wife, grew up in the lap of luxary. And yet, through time and completely different circumstances, they stayed friends. This book encompasses decades in the lives of the 2 friends, through marriage, children, divorce, death and war. At times a little sappy and at times very touching, I found this book very enjoyable.
Incredible StoryReview Date: 2006-06-10
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