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

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Dance, The: Moving To the Rhythms of Your True Self
Published in Audio Cassette by HarperAudio (2001-09-01)
Author:
List price: $24.00
New price: $1.43
Used price: $1.49

Average review score:

The Dance: Moving to the Rhythms of Your True Self
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-02
I am a clinical therapist and use this book to inspire adolescent and young adult women in their journey! This entire trilogy is priceless for anyone who is interested in being blessed by watching another soul "unfold" and take flight! I love hearing about Oriah's metamorphasis... i can see her "grow up" throughout her trilogy! Watching her go full circle in her discoveries touches my heart and inspires my soul. She is human and she is courageous enough to share her story. I recommend you read all three... The Invitation, The Dance and The Call. Thank you Oriah!

her spirit moves you
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-12
Within the pages of this beautiful little book, the reader finds magic, truth, beauty and healing.

As an author, Chinese Medicine & Healthy Weight Management, and healer, I recommend this book highly to my patients and friends, as well as to you.

Soul Desires
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2005-05-31
Words themselves can become acts of beauty that awaken and strengthen our commitment to living our soul's desires. ~Oriah Mountain Dreamer

Oriah Mountain Dreamer blends daily existence with spiritual insight. She survived a violent marriage, chronic fatigue and living almost next door to her ex husband when he remarried. Her life is a study in patience, emotional turmoil resolved and survival of the most open heart.

The start of the book contains a poem and then each chapter is an expanded vision of the elements contained in a part of the poem. After the poem, Oriah dives right into a retelling of her life, the conflicts she has experienced and how as a spiritual teacher, she too struggles to maintain emotional equilibrium. There is a subtle comfort in knowing that if Oriah can survive her life, then we can too.

This is the beauty mingled with the various stunning insights Oriah has while trying to unburden her heart and pull us out on the dance floor of life. She loves to read and a number of the books she mentioned where books I had just recently read. She quotes Rainer Maria Rilke and Rumi. She discusses Daniel Ladinsky's translations of Hafiz. Her "headed for home" comments made me think of Kahlil Gibran's The Prophet.

Throughout this work Oriah focuses on connecting, serenity, joy, an authentic lifestyle, living with passion, retaining energy and focus, being honest and finding happiness within the complex. She also provides meditations on worthiness, surrender, slowing down and letting go.

This is not a five-step or a ten-step program, it is more an unfolding of experience through an exploration of Oriah's life experience. She has struggled, she has survived. She also knows there are no quick fixes and that many self-help programs are no match for real-life situations. Sometimes there is no easy way out of the pain and you have to endure heartache to learn your greatest lessons.

"Take me to the places on the earth that teach you how to dance,
the places where you can risk letting the world break your heart,
and I will take you to the places where the earth beneath my feet
and the stars overhead make my heart whole again and again."
~ Oriah Mountain Dreamer

What did I love most about this book? The section where she talks about her ultimate fantasy of reading in bed with the man she loves. Yes, this book is mostly about Oriah, or the people she has met throughout her life, but the way she draws on her inner wisdom is by experiencing life and dancing with difficulty.

~The Rebecca Review

Mastering the beauty of words
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2005-07-03
The Dance is a great book. I enjoyed it from the first page to the last. Oriah is not just a writer; she is an artist, with a new perspective on life, and on events. Her thoughts flow smoothly, as if you were reading something you wrote, or something you already knew to be true. I am going to say it again, she is an artist.

Some parts of the book, you won't help but read out loud to someone you care for. I did that with my mother, and some other times with a friend of mine. Both of them want to borrow the book.

This book will help you dream, and here I will quote something from the author, as she wrote "To dream is to create the stories of how we live our lives, and these are the stories our children's children will remember. I write with as much honesty and frankness as I can, because I want to offer stories of being present with what is. I recite poetry when I speak, because I want offer beauty and the power of art to remind us of who and what we are. I share personal stories, because I want to cocreate a story of intimacy and cultivate our capacity for compassion in dealing with out human failings. I tell love stories because I want to learn how to love well." (p151)

I will buy The Call, and I know it will be as good as the Invitation and The Dance. And hopefully one day in the future I will make it to one of Oriah's retreats.

Poetic and Practical
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2005-05-05
Several years ago I listened to the audio version of this book and I thought at the time that it was a nice diversion, but just typical New-Age feel-good stuff. Now in my 50s, when I listened to it again recently I was stunned by how powerfully honest the author is and how her poetic honesty brought strength and character to her message. This is not a "how to . . ." book. It is more likely to impact the reader who is a mature spiritual seeker (Christian or otherwise) who feels bogged down by mundane daily living and, like many spiritual seekers, tripped up by trying to DO before really knowing how to BE. That is no small distinction. This book addresses real issues like chronic illness, divorce, raising children, mid-life love, finances and regret all from a practical perspective that helps the reader assess where she is and where she hopes, someday, to be. Mountain Dreamer doesn't give formulas or pat answers--she even amusingly describes hearing a motivational speaker who's message sounds good, but doesn't ring true in any lasting, practical sense. The book is about both inner and outer balance, cutting yourself some slack while still holding yourself to standards of character that have meaning for you personally, and about offering the reader an opportunity to stop for a time and check his own spiritual development against his dreams. Her passage describing meeting a "significant other" thirty years after a teenage crush, and the clarity he was able to bring to her regarding how essentially true to her young self she had remained is priceless. The reader can find peace and hope merely by acknowledging having faced the issues discussed, and being willing to ask how they mattered.

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Dear Zoe
Published in Paperback by Plume (2006-04-25)
Author: Philip Beard
List price: $13.00
New price: $0.01
Used price: $0.01

Average review score:

Beautiful Story
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-29
Beautiful story about how a family deals with the loss of someone they love. Excellent writing and character development, I was sucked in from the first chapter and was crying by the end of the book. I would highly recommend this book to anyone that has lost someone close to them.

Thank you!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-22
Thank you for this wonderful, wonderful book. I wanted to stop reading it because I was afraid I'd be too sad but I couldn't stop once I'd started.

Dear Zoe
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-20
Dear Readers --- If you want to spend a few days curled up with a book that may change your life, then "Dear Zoe" is, hands down, the paramount choice. Have a full box of Kleenex nearby, though; I became a human waterfall while reading this book, empathizing with this young girl and her pain. I saw so much of my ownself in her, even though it has been decades since I was that age. Yet, I too went through the soul-shifting lifechange that was 9/11. I know my worldview will never again be the same after that day. I can distinctly recall thinking that was the beginning of the end of the world, and I spent the whole day on the phone gathering my husband and girls to come home so we could die together. God, how quickly we forget! I/we lost an innocence, a groundedness that day. We took so much for granted. This book reminded me, however, that one terrible occurrence, such as the death of a loved one, can shift one's world in much the same way. Additionally, my husband and I have raised three daughters, and I saw so much of each of my own girls in these three. A note for the author: Mr. Beard, you somehow managed to insert yourself into the psyche of a 15-year-old girl and you were right-on with frightening precision. I felt my own past exposed and I don't know how you did it, but seeing you do it was redeeming. Kudos to you and yours for tapping into and laying bare for us, the readers, the angst of a teenage girl! Lastly, I do not often buy books to keep; I usually read from the library. However, this is one book I will buy to keep on my shelf and to loan out to loved ones, with the only request being that it come back to me so that the cycle can continue.

Maybe "Z" is the Shape of Everyone's Life
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-22
"Maybe 'Z' is the shape of everyone's life," writes Philip Beard. "You're going along in what feels like a straight line, headed for one horizon, the only one as far as you know, and then something happens..."

But my zigs and zags were few in Philip Beard's slim novel, "Dear Zoe." On this level of writing, it's smooth sailing. Beard is a skilled writer, and his style is seamless enough that he accomplishes the very difficult writer's task - not only of crossing genders in this first person narrative by a female, but with the voice of a very young female - all of 15 years old. And he does it convincingly.

So convincingly, in fact, that I felt myself as reader engage as I should, that is, to lose awareness of self and surroundings, soon immersed completely into the storyline and characters. "Dear Zoe" is a letter, written across time, from one sister to another. Zoe, however, will never read this letter. Zoe is gone, killed in a car accident, and this letter is, perhaps, how older sister Tess copes with her loss, her grief, even her guilt.

This extended letter is about Tess but also about her extended family. It is family like any: not without its dysfunctions, not without its baggage and broken places, with elaborate wounds and still healing scars. When a member of a family unexpectedly dies, everyone grieves, each in his or her own way and own pace, and it can at times meld a family together, at others rip apart. Beard portrays all of this messy and zigzagging process, but without any melodrama, always sensing when to draw the appropriate line.

Then comes the true test. Nearing end, the storyline veers into an event in American history that is almost impossible to mention without imploding into melodrama. When I realized the backdrop this author was setting up for his story, I nearly winced, but, wait, what's this? Oh, my. Beard makes it work. Work so well, in fact, that he accomplishes the individualizing of something nationally, even internationally shared, and brings it down to one heart, one life, one experience, felt by one person at a time. This personal tragedy is of a size, immense and miniscule at once, that each reader will be able to absorb and comprehend, and through comprehending the miniscule, the immense suddenly gains full impact. Just as numbers that trail off into endless zero's at some point become incomprehensible, so perhaps we as human beings cannot truly comprehend tragedy unless it happens one soul at a time, passed gently on from one hand into the next.

Having accomplished this feat, the author, and "Dear Zoe," has earned my highest recommendation.

Courtesy of Teens Read Too
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2006-10-20
On September 11th, 2001, nearly 3,000 people lost their lives in numerous acts of terrorism against the United States. Even now, five years later, people still ask the question, "Where were you on 9/11?" I remember watching, on that fateful day, news coverage that left me horrified, aghast, and haunted. Where was I on 9/11? At work, on a day that started out like any other and quickly turned into one that no one will ever forget.

If you asked Tess DeNunzio, the fifteen-year-old girl at the center of DEAR ZOE, where she was on 9/11, she'll be quick to tell you that she was at home with her younger half-sister, Zoe, waiting for the school bus like any other day. Except for that one moment, when she let her gaze wander elsewhere, and Zoe ran into the street, into the path of an oncoming car. For Tess and her family, 9/11 is a day they'll never forget.

DEAR ZOE is Tess's letter to Zoe, her way of healing from her sister's death and coming to terms with the changes that have taken place in her extended family. This isn't a story about September 11th, 2001, in the ways that most of us have come to view that day. As Tess puts it, "...just like all the people who go to New York and cry over the rubble. I want to tell them all to go home. I want to tell them to go home and hold their children or their lovers or their parents. I want to tell them that they are using that place as an excuse to be sad and afraid when there will be reason enough for that in their own lives if they just wait."

According to recent facts, nearly 150,000 people die every day. That's about 1.8 people every second. And yet no one seems to remember the other 147,000 people that died on 9/11. That includes myself. Until reading DEAR ZOE, I had never stopped to consider that there were other people around the world who were grieving for lost loved ones who had
nothing to do with an act of terror.

Thanks to Mr. Beard, I now have a new way of looking at that day in history. I also have the story of Tess and Zoe, which will stay with me for much longer than it took for me to read the book. Love, loss, regret, and forgiveness mingle within the pages of DEAR ZOE to form a story that, quite possibly, you'll remember even five years later.

Reviewed by: Jennifer Wardrip, aka "The Genius"

News
Desperate Voyage (New Windmill)
Published in Paperback by Heinemann Educational Publishers (1969-01-01)
Author: John C. Caldwell
List price:
Used price: $27.18

Average review score:

Shows what a person will do in the name of love!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-08
John Caldwell was in love. So in love he bought a less-than-adequate 29 foot sailboat to sail thousands of miles across the Pacific (from Panama to Sydney, Australia) to be with his new bride. On his way, adventure and obstacles ensue, and he really shows what he's made of throughout the story.

What a great book! A real page-turner. You will have a hard time putting this one down. I know I did!

A Story of a Plucky Screw-up with a Penchant for Survival
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-02
John Caldwell, a young American who served in the Australian air force and the US merchant marine during WWII, found himself at the end of hostilities stranded in Panama. He had no way to get back to Australia and his new wife Mary.

With more pluck than brains Caldwell, who had not done any small boating, buys a small sailboat (about 29 feet) with the idea of sailing to far off Australia--more than 8500 miles of open Pacific. First he learns how to maneuver his boat in and around the islands off Panama, with many hilarious screw-ups. Finally he sets off across the ocean. He has a tiresome voyage to the Galapagos Islands, again with many screw-ups, some of which almost cost him his life and nearly wreck his sailboat and disable his auxiliary engine. After the Galapagos the sailing goes better as he has wind and current with him and only some 8000 miles left to go. Then about half way there, between the Marquesas Islands and Samoa, Caldwell is hit by a terrible hurricane that destroys his rig, nearly sinks his boat, and forces him to jettison all of his food, water, navigation equipment, and supplies. His prospects for survival, not to speak of getting to Australia, are remote. Fortunately he had an almost indestructible craft, and that was his greatest piece of luck.

Under jury jig and near death from starvation, he eventually fetches up in the Fiji Islands. He is nursed back to health by the kindly natives and soon makes it the rest of the way to Australia by hitching rides on boats and planes, and is reunited with his beloved Mary. They apparently have lived happily ever after (or at least until the late 1990s), even founding and running a resort in the Caribbean.

Desperate Voyage is a wonderful and wonderfully engaging story. Caldwell writes so well and so engagingly that this book is really hard to put down. I thoroughly enjoyed it. You cannot help liking this plucky screw-up with a penchant for survival. Of course, I feel somewhat guilty enjoying this tale so much--after all it is mostly about screw-ups, disaster, pain, and close brushes with death most of which resulted from Caldwell's rashness and carelessness. Caldwell's voyage is not one to emulate. But as A.J. Mackinnon says in his masterful The Unlikely Voyage of Jack de Crow (another boating story full of screw-ups) "No screw-ups, no story." Certainly if Caldwell had been an accomplished yachtsman and as careful as we boaters are supposed to be, there would have been nothing here to laugh and cry about. Also when reading Caldwell's tale I was reminded of Mackinnon's admission: "Of course, I exaggerate for effect." How much has Caldwell exaggerated to enhance his tale? No one knows, but I sincerely doubt that he really drank his engine oil in order to assuage his hunger when he was starving.

Personal challenge
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-18
More than thirty years ago when my young family were avid deep water sailors, I read many survival and adventure stories written by those who had had narrow escapes. John Caldwell's vivid tale of his struggle to return to his Australian lady love following his release from the Navy at the end of WWII still stands out in my mind. This year, as I home school my grandson and encourage him to develop innovative thinking, determination and loyalty, "Desperate Voyage" once again comes to mind. One of your other reviewers remarked that Caldwell "had no literary pretentions," but his book is, nevertheless, well worth reading for Caldwell's own humor and durability in the face of disaster. I am happy once again to add it to my library on my grandson's behalf.

Desperate Voyage
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-05
This was a very insightfull book of one man's sailing adventure to return to his true love. I was very moved by this book as I have visited both Costa Rica (from where he starts his adventure) and where he finally found his perfect island in the West Indies. Both sailers and non sailers will love his humour and love.

Excitante lectura
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-03
Un relato extraordinario. Te quitará horas de sueño y alimentará tus sueños. (¡Y tus pesadillas!) Aunque no es una lectura recomendable para quien no tenga ya un buen nivel de inglés, la naturalidad y sencillez del relato te atrapa con su ritmo y su fiebre. Desde luego, peca de evidentes y numerosos excesos y fantasías completamente inverosímiles, como pescar y subir a bordo a un tiburón vivo de varios metros que termina destrozando el barco o comer cuero de zapato frito con aceite de motor, lo cual parece un poco excesivo incluso para el proverbial mal gusto culinario que atribuimos a ingleses y sajones. Pero la tensión y la viveza del relato es tal que eclipsa cualquier defecto. Gran viaje y gran libro. Apaga la tele y disfrútalo.

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Dialogues With The Devil
Published in Mass Market Paperback by Fawcett (1981-12-12)
Author: Taylor Caldwell
List price: $2.50
New price: $149.95
Used price: $18.47
Collectible price: $129.00

Average review score:

Taylor Caldwell
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-25
Dialogues with the Devil is a fantastic voyage into the correspondence between Lucifer and Michael. The characters opinions and perspectives seem so real and tangible. Taylor writes wonderfully and never becomes dull when expressing ideas.

Overall a terrific book!

Dialouge with the Devil
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-02
Taylor Caldwell is a first rate entertainer and while entertaining she manages to massage the imagination --- very enjoyable, thought provoking read. Most books I pass on after reading - few are kept - kept this one.

It isn't all black and white...
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-28
This book presents the thought that nothing is wholly good or bad. Most people have their own ideas about good and evil, God and the Devil. However strong those feelings are they may blur while reading this book. Reading the 'dialogues' I agree with what's presented then find this is the Devil's dialogue. It brought me to scrutinize my spiritual ideas and beliefs, and to reinforce that even the 'badman' is not wholly bad. Let us look for the good in us all and be honest enough to see the bad in ourselves.

If you are interested in Religion this is for you
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-07-15
Beautifully written as all the works form Taylor Caldwell an unbelievibly
inspired. Apparently it was dictated to Taylor by Archangel Darios. I don't know but is the kind of dialogue that you cannot miss if you are interested in Religion

A lot of questions answere
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2004-11-21
This is a grat book for all of those who are seeking for answers about how evil came to be and why God has let it endure through the ages. This book is not intended for a mind that is too sketptical about religious matters. The person who reads this book should read it with and open mind, and be ready not to embrace what is been said, but to think about it, question it, and embrace it or reject it if he/she feels like doing so. Factual or fiction, it is up to reader to decide it. For me, it has helped me spiritually. If someone would like another great book from Taylor Caldwell I would recomend "I, Judas" and "The Romance of Atlantis." You wont regret it, these titles will be in you private library forever.

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The Diaper Diaries: The Real Poop on a New Mom's First Year
Published in Paperback by Workman Publishing Company (2003-04-07)
Author: Cynthia L. Copeland
List price: $8.95
New price: $0.01
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Average review score:

Side splitting funny!!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-02
Every time I read this my eyes well with tears from laughing so hard! Every mom, young or old needs this book. The comedy is side slipping and so true. With the stress of parenting someone needs to poke fun at these events and changes. I order several at a time so I can hand them out to friends. Don't think twice... get this book!

Favorite Baby Book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-06
I love this book. I read it when I had my first child and picked it up again when I was pregnant with my second. It is a must for any parent. Lots of truth and humor. It is jam packed with little tidbits that make me laugh out loud!

A humorous look at motherhood
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-22
I read this book during the final weeks of my first pregnancy. There are a lot of anxious feelings during this time and it was great to take a break and laugh for a while. Some of the stories made me laugh so hard I had tears in my eyes. The only downside was that some of the things that were supposed to be funny were actually a little depressing. The section about your body after pregnancy is a great example. I've been looking forward to having my body back so it was a little disheartening to hear about your body after pregnancy even from a humorous source.

Otherwise the book was light-hearted and gave me a lot of laughter. I thoroughly enjoyed reading it.

Much needed humour and perspective!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-10-10
I received this as a gift from a friend, and it had me laughing for hours. I would recommend for any first time parent that needs a laugh, especially moms on bedrest who could use fun read. I loved The Diaper Diaries!

An ideal shower gift
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-06-17
My husband bought this for me right after our daughter was born. It offered me a few much-needed moments of laughter in what was occasionally a very intense and overwhelming time. I especially love the part about what it's like the first time you try to get your baby to the pediatrician's office.

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Different Strokes: The Lives and Teachings of the Game's Wisest Women
Published in Paperback by Adams Media Corporation (2001-03-01)
Author: Mona Vold
List price: $12.95
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Average review score:

Different Strokes: The Lives & Teachings of the Game's Wisest Women
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-26
Two books are tops for those who love the game and choose to continue learning how to play it well: this one and Every Shot Must Have a Purpose: How GOLF54 Can Make You a Better Player The stories, experiences, tips, and memories are superbly inspiring. Worth re-reading every year!

Loved this book!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 1999-09-09
I don't play golf but I LOVED Ms. Vold's book, read every word, hated to have it end! I would recommend this book to anyone whether they play golf or not.

Top Book on Women's Golf
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 1999-10-27
This book has it all....contemporary history of women who love the game and made the LPGA what it is today, nostalgia, technique and lots of food for thought. Any woman who has a passion for golf must read this one. I seldom read a book more than once...I'm on my third time through in less than three months. Do yourself a favor by buying it and keeping it near your nightstand to refer to again and again.

A unique gallery
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2001-04-03
"If a person has any greatness in them, it comes to light , not in one flamboyant hour, but in the ledger of their daily work." Beryl Markham "West with the Night"

The women Mona Vold writes about in her book, "Different Strokes", are national treasures worthy of any reader's time. And although the common thread of their journeys is the world of golf, the passion of their hearts, the clarity of their minds and the strength of their voices both dig deeply into and transcend that rich and humbling game.

Without reservation, I highly recommend this wise and thoughtful book.

Inspirational reading for all golfers
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2001-02-17
Fun to hear what the other half has to say about the game. Great stories a good read for any golfer. Not to sure about the technical information. You might want to purchase GOLF IS A WOMAN'S GAME to set you straight on that. Both books really elevate women's golf.

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The Dragon of Lonely Island
Published in Paperback by Candlewick (2002-04-01)
Author: Rebecca Rupp
List price: $5.99
New price: $1.19
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $10.00

Average review score:

homeschooling mom of 2
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-11
My husband found this book at our local library and we started reading it to our 5yr old and boy were we all pleasantly surprised. This book is fantastic, sweet and intriguing, once you start reading you can't stop. My daughter even goes back and rereads the book all by herself now.

a kid's review
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-15
This is a very interesting fiction story about three kids who go to an
island and explore it, then they find a three-headed dragon. I like it a
lot! It is very intriguing.

The Dragon of Lonely Island
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-06
This is from my son:

I give this book five stars because the kids use their imagination. I enjoyed the adventure on the island and the mysterious key that unlocks the secret room. I would like to visit the kind-hearted golden dragon's island because of the magical dragon's stories. All the childeren seemed to have learned lessons from the stories. My favorite scene was the silver-eyed story. Find out why...

Best Book
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-02-16
The three Davis children Have to go to lonely island. Where thay find a cave and they find a great big dragon! They visit the dragon alot. Each time they meet a new dragon. It is a three headed dragon and each time they go to the cave they meet a new head and each head tells them a story.

Best Book
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-02-16
The three Davis children Have to go to lonely island. Where thay find a cave and they find a great big dragon! They visit the dragon alot. Each time they meet a new dragon. It is a three headed dragon and each time they go to the cave they meet a new head and each head tells them a story. I give this 5 stars because I love dragons and the writer did a good job of writing this story. I love this book and I hope you will to.

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The Embrace of a Father: True Stories of Inspiration and Encouragement
Published in Hardcover by Bethany House (2006-04-01)
Author: Wayne Holmes
List price: $14.99
New price: $0.94
Used price: $0.39

Average review score:

The Embrace of a Father
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-08
This book achieves the dual purpose of showing the ideal traits of a human father while also, through them, exhibiting the many facets of God's love for each of us. The author has done an amazing job of eliciting from others, both famous and relatively unknown, glimpses of a very wide variety of characteristics of a good father/Father. Each story is unique, and each is short and readable, tempting the reader continually to move on to just one more chapter.

This book makes a great gift for Father's Day, or for a new father, or for many other occasions. It could also give a young woman some characteristics to look for while dating and considering a father for her future children.

A great gift for the men in your life
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-14
What Holmes has masterfully done is collect true stories of fathers who have made a difference in the lives of their children by who they were (their character) and what they did (their behavior).

It includes the stories from famous people like James Dobson, Bruce Wilkinson and Rick Warren, along with many who will be unfamiliar to readers, but whose stories are touching.

Life lessons are shared in categories like: A Father's Wisdom, Discipline, Forgiveness, Embrace, Fellowship, and Comfort. The stories are not always ones of victory. Dobson's for example is one where he was humbled on a mountain slope. After facing a day of trying to teach his two young children to climb, he was confronted by a young woman who was mentally retarded. Her behavior on the ride up the mountain on a flatbed truck drew sly smiles and looks of disdain. But her father put his arms around her, held her close, and demonstrated unconditional love.

Dobson's point: how many families would be healed if we simply demonstrated unconditional love for one another?

The reader will find 50 stories that will teach, encourage, inspire, and sometimes convict.More importantly, the reader will gain specific examples of how we can change our thinking and behavior to be a more positive influence on our children and grandchildren.

Armchair Interviews says: This would be great Christmas gift book for any father or grandfather.

CELEBRATING THE ROLE OF FATHERHOOD
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-09-17
Following up on his successful series, The Heart of a Mother, The Heart of a Father, and The Heart of a Teacher, Holmes has become a master at compiling stories that encourage and inspire.

Our generation has become almost fanatical about reality TV, memoirs, and blogs--we enjoy seeing REAL people live out their dreams and walk by faith. In this book of 53 treasured narratives, you'll laugh, cry, and be reminded of how powerful and important a father is to his family.

Holmes has blended a skillful mix of writers, including many well-known favorites, such as James Dobson, Rick Warren, Bruce Wilkerson, Phillip Yancy, and Kevin Leman.

For busy men who don't think they can take the time to read a whole book, these bite-sized slices of human drama will captivate them and remind them of their significant roles.

What better gift could you give your man than to remind him he's making a difference in the lives of those around him?

-- Christian Women Online Book Buzz

A deep belief in the rightness of Christian fathering forms the theme
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-06-24
Special gift book, useful resource volume for speakers and teachers, engaging devotional, all these things and more, everyone will enjoy The Embrace of a Father. Herein you'll find more than fifty accounts about all types of Christian fathers - equitable, just judges; dads who manage to love no matter what; the poor, inventive, reticent fathers capable of making dreams come true; proud, kind, and desperately determined ones; godly, teaching fathers; and everyday heroes. Some of the authors are well known, for example, James Dobson, Philip Yancey, Gary Smalley, Dr. Debra Peppers, and Helen Polaski. Most of the writers are like you and me: parents, missionaries, youth pastors, teachers, Scout leaders, and retirees. A deep belief in the rightness of Christian fathering forms the theme binding all these stories and writers together. For further reading, a closing chapter lists the authors' bios and other writings, if any.

It's hard waiting for the next volume in this series to be published. Pastor, author, and speaker, Wayne Holmes selects widely varying, interesting, and significant stories. Other titles in this series include The Heart of a Father, The Heart of a Mother, and The Heart of a Teacher. All of them make enjoyable, instructive reading. - Donna Eggett, Christian Book Previews.com

ANOTHER MASTERFUL COLLECTION
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-07-05
Wayne Holmes has done it again. Where does this guy find these stories? He has an unfailing feel for the tale that warms, charms, touches, and uplifts. I don't think you could read all the way through the collection without your eyes misting up occasionally, coupled with smiles and chuckles. This is a book to savor!

News
The Epistle to the Romans (New International Commentary on the New Testament)
Published in Hardcover by Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Company (1996-08)
Author: Douglas J. Moo
List price: $60.00
New price: $32.35
Used price: $30.39

Average review score:

Excellent Resource
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-23
This is by far the most thorough exegetical work I've found anywhere on the book of Romans. It is a masterful commentary full of pertinent insight and many nuggets of considerable import. My only negative critique is that this commentary is not more Pastoral. It is extremely useful (read "invaluable") for scholars, theologians, seminarians, etc., but is not nearly as easily digested and presented for Pastors or Sunday School Teachers or Church Bible Study teachers, etc. I only wish Moo had included more pastorally, but nevertheless this is a magnificent work and highly recommended for anyone wanting to understand Paul's message to the church at Rome. I would recommend that perhaps some other commentaries be included (even such trustworthy classics such as Calvins or Luthers).

Simply the Best
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-08
Dougas J. Moo has written the greatest one-volume commentary on the Book of Romans!

Two other books by Moo on Romans are also helpful:
1. Encountering the Book of Romans: A Theological Survey (Encountering Biblical Studies)
2. Romans: The Niv Application Commentary: From Biblical Text to Contemporary Life

Tremendous Commentary, But More for Advanced Students
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-18
This commentary is probably the most exhaustive and careful study of Romans I have ever read (and I have read quite a few books on Romans). Douglas Moo stresses that the overarching theme of the letter to the Romans is the Gospel of Jesus Christ. He says that Paul wrote Romans for a number of reasons: to defend his gospel against those who were accusing him of saying things like "Let us do good, so that evil may result." He also wrote to show that both Jew and Gentile are in equal need of the gospel, and that one cannot boast against the other. Paul also wrote to galvanize support for his mission to Spain (Romans 15).

Romans 1-3 shows that both Jew and Gentile are lost in sin without faith in Christ. Romans 7 shows the futility that Paul and other unsaved Jewish people in general experienced under the law, and Romans 7:24ff depicts deliverance through salvation in Christ.

Romans 8:29 means that God foreknew us in relationship, not that God foreknew that we would believe in Christ (I disagree, but this is Moo's viewpoint, and he argues cogently).

According to Moo, Romans 9 speaks of God choosing certain individuals to be saved because of His own purpose and grace, and not because of any faith he foresaw in His people. Jacob I have loved means "Jacob I have chosen," and Esau I have hated means "Esau, I have not chosen."

In a tour de force of careful argumentation, Moo shows from Romans 9-11 that God is not through with the Jewish people, and that "all Israel" in Romans 11:25-26 means that all the Jewish people alive at the time of Christ's return will be saved.

Romans 12-15 has ethical material found in a number of other Pauline epistles, and Romans 13 was written because Paul wanted to show that submitting to governing authorities was part of the pleasing will of God mentioned in 12:2 (although he leaves open the possibility of Christians responding to the government when it goes against the clearly expressed moral and ethical will of God.

The list of people in Romans 16 doesn't make for the most scintillating reading, but it shows that Paul's missionary ventures were not solo performances. He relied on others, both men and women.

What else can I say except that this is an awesome commentary. The heavy duty Greek stuff is mostly in the bottom as footnotes, but this is still a commentary I would recommend mainly for pastors and educated lay people. Moo's NIVAC offering on Romans may be a better choice for beginners.

I do not quite agree with the Calvinistic interpretations of Romans 8:29 and 9:22, especially since 9:30-10:21 make it clear that faith plays an important part of the process. In my opinion, God does not choose apart from his foreknowledge of the human response, and I think Romans 9:30-10:21 brings this out.

But otherwise, this commentary is exhaustive (and exhausting if you try to read it in a short period of time!) and extremely helpful. Thumbs way up!

John th Baptist
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-12
Moo's commentary is good not excellent. I find he tends to chase rabbits. I would have prefered to have read more of his own thoughts on the verses as to so many different opinions of others. Over all he has done a good job, but I would not say his commentary is better than Hodge or Cranfield or some of the other older commentaries on Romans.

Excellent and balanced
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-11
Moo is officially classed as a dispensationalist, however, it is known that he disagrees with a lot of traditional dispensational thought, as he is more progressive than most. For one, he is post tribulational in end time thinking, and believes in the 'now and the not yet' of the Kingdom. This book clearly shows that.
I am not a dispensationalist at all and yet I was amazed at the clarity and balanced thinking of this commentator. As he, himself states - he believes more in 'fullfillment' theology. And that's where this book is at especially in the murkey waters of ch 9, 10 and 11.
If he was as dispensational as one reveiwer above says, then Fee or the NIC committee would not have had him, as the niether the series or Fee are at all dispensational.
What Moo does do is bring traditional reformed / replacement thought toward a more Christocentric understanding of Israel as a people, who together with gentiles form God's one fulfillment people, and yet he also deals with the traditional dispensational thought that says Israel are God's earthly people and the Church His heavenly people ( or less in some cases).
I think Moo deserves credit for this book - it is outstanding, and will hopefully clear up a lot of the terrible dispensational mess in the West, and bring Christocentric fulfillment views rather than dual covenant views into people's understanding.

News
Every Pitcher Tells a Story: Letters Gathered by a Devoted Baseball Fan
Published in Hardcover by Crown (1999-09-29)
Author: Seth Swirsky
List price: $25.95
New price: $2.37
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $25.95

Average review score:

This Is Why Baseball Is America's Pasttime
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-03
Delightful book in which the game's greatest pitchers, and some who yearn to be great, tell in their own words their memories of the game, still America's pasttime.

The first person, unedited memories make this book especially readable.

Anyone who questions why baseball is the great American game need only read this book to understand.

Baseball romance
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2000-07-13
This book creates an air of baseball that few books allow. From star to skunk, it includes them all. But the stories from their own letters is all that surround baseball -- the aura itself. Great reading.

AWESOME!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2000-06-10
This book is great! It's a quick read but fascinating! The photographs are excellent and the handwritten replies give you a really cool perspective on the players. This book is one you will keep on the coffee table, so you can always pick it up and read a letter--especially the one regarding Shoeless Joe Jackson--it's touching.

All Baseball=It's all good!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2000-05-10
I'm a huge baseball fan..I love anything and everything about it. I got this book for Christmas and I read it in less then a day. It was so addicting! I mean the stories in it are truely wonderful ( Turk Wendall...wild! lol ) I love to read stories of the greats and the players of today, the book has a great mixture of both! It's an awesome book and one you will cherish forever! I really recommend it ( A LOT! ) Baseball 4ever!

"EVERY PITCHER TELL A STORY"
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2004-02-24
"EVERY PITCHER TELL A STORY"

Seth Swirsky is a Beverly Hills sports memorabilia collector who has spent a lifetime writing to baseball players and keeping the many letters and notes sent to him in return. "Every Pitcher Tells A Story" (1999, Time Books) is a compilation of those letters. While many of the athletes are not pitchers, Seth has a special fondness for moundsmen.
"But the tales that pitchers tell stand out above those told by all other players," Swirsky writes. "A pitcher stands alone on the mound..." Swirsky has compiled letters by pitchers in the Hall of Fame, and by pitchers the average baseball fan never heard of. His letters go back as far as Walter Johnson, but also includes such modern non-luminaries as Turk Wendell.
Superstar Steve Carlton writes that he went silent because the press was "breaking the trust that came with their access to the players." Roger Clemens refers to himself as "ROCKET". Cy Young's almost-indiscernible handwritten letter states that baseball cannot be learned "overnight." Cy spent about 30 years in the big leagues, so he ought to know. Bill "Spaceman" Lee probably sprinkled too much marijuana on his pancakes the day he wrote his chicken-scratch letter to Swirsky. Other letters of note include one from Dick Nixon on the Vice President's stationary; a once-classified order from O.S.S. boss "Wild Bill" Donavan directing catcher-turned-spy Moe Berg to capture a Nazi rocket scientist (Berg was later confused by a movie producer with the "Three Stooges" Moe); and self-publicity from "Ball Four" pitcher/author Jim Bouton.
Perhaps the most interesting is the1923 typed correspondence on letterhead saying "BASEBALL," in which Commissioner Kenesaw Mountain Landis crushes banned "Black Sox" star "Shoeless Joe" Jackson's desperate hope for re-instatement.


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