E Books


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

E
Awesome Bill from Dawsonville
Published in Kindle Edition by HarperCollins e-books (2006-10-17)
Author: Bill Elliott
List price: $19.95
New price: $9.85

Average review score:

love nascar
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-15
the book was great son and husband read it fast shipping and in good shape

great book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-07
this is a must read for the bill elliot fan and nascar fans

awesome bill from dawsonville
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-22
i am reading the book and so for i have enjoyed it very much and i am finding out what a hard time bill had in his racing career

Bill's own story finally
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-14
It was very interesting to read Bill's own story on NASCAR racing and his career. He has not ordinarily been to loose with his words in the past, so it was refreshing to get his views and opinions first hand. He was generally very complimentary towards his fellow competitiors, but was quite critical of NASCAR concerning the safety issue and the death of Earnhardt. A good read from one of racings finest and classiest drivers.

A must read
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-03
All I can say is...AWESOME BOOK. On a scale of 1 to 10, it's a 15.

E
Bedford Handbook 6e cloth with 2003 MLA Update and ix visual exercises
Published in Hardcover by Bedford/St. Martin's (2004-03-25)
Authors: Diana Hacker, Cheryl E. Ball, and Kristin L. Arola
List price:

Average review score:

review
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-15
The Bedford Handbook
I was satisfied with my order, and was delivered as it said

good
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-04
i ordered it and got it in a very good condition and in time. customer service is awesome. my blessings. keep up the good work.

definately a help!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-10-31
this book is good for when you're writing essays and you can't remember a certain format or something and you can flip through the book real quick for examples of essays, outlines and thesis statements, although I wish i had the cd version of it so i can always have it with me instead of toting around the book. they could have made the format of the book better.

for instance i remember seeing a book called "A Writers reference" both are MLA format and one came from my community college and just the way its put together is better over all than this one.

An Excellent Guide
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-28
The Bedford Handbook is an excellent guide for anyone enrolled in a college English course. The book gives details on correct grammar usage, as well as descriptions of different essay styles. The book is very helpful to me with my English class.

Hacker lite, but not light enough
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-02
Diana Hacker has an English comp book for any possible usage, she grinds them out every few years. My college requires me to use this book as a handbook. That is unfortunate.

Of course, this book provides a basic explanation of English composition, grammar, documentation, and document design and critical reading. However, the attempt in this case is to present something that is lighter than Rules for Writers, a full scale manual that is sufficient to use as the only text for a college composition course or as a full writers reference, and her Writers Reference, which is a good handy handbook that is inadequate as a full course book, but is great as a rule book to be used by students taking a course using another text.

Usuing this book, I have had to create supplements from web material for issues that I expect to be covered fully in a college handbook such as the requirements of formal writing.

To be sure there are interesting illustrations and graphics and like her other books, the text is intimately linked with the enormous online network that Hacker and her publishers have created. It is not an awful book to use, but I would prefer Rules for Writers, Jane E. Aaron's Litte Brown Handbook, or Writer's reference.

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Beyond the Ashes: Cases of Reincarnation from the Holocaust
Published in Paperback by A.R.E. Press (Association of Research & Enlig (1992-09)
Author: Yonassan Gershom
List price: $14.95
New price: $8.00
Used price: $2.00
Collectible price: $12.99

Average review score:

Classic read in the rebirth literature
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-16
This is not a perfect book, but adds greatly to reincarnation literature in general. It is rather quirky, but the breadth and the issues discussed ability to allow thoughtful reflection makes up for any of its limitation.

It is also interesting to me that other blond Nordic types believe they had perished in their last life in this recent European tragedy. Though I haven't taken advantage of his services, I believe the Rabbi author provides a cost effective therapy for individuals who fall in the above category!

A breakthrough in holocaust literature!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-24
Well written, thoughtful, insightful, fascinating. I have read much on the holocaust, am not Jewish, and don't know enough about Jewish spirituality. I was thrilled to find much in this book that I did not know, and that helped my understanding immenseley. I don't know why I am so drawn to this particular period in history. Reading this book did help me to understand that there may very well be a good reason that I do not yet understand. I do know that I was born in Frankfurt Germany in 1953 - as an American citizen, but the energy of that time period haunts me more even as I grow older. I don't think I was Jewish - but I do think I was there, and I definitely think that I was somehow traumatized, as a child, in that time period by what was going on.

This book weaves a lot of my interests together nicely. More and more the things I am interested in that seem to have nothing to do with each other in reality often do. It can be such an experience to simply follow wherever the Spirit leads. You simply never know where it is going to take you.

Rabbi Gershom delves into Jewish spirituality in order to identify those things that are remembered by individuals who are NOT Jewish from past lives. This is more likely to validate their experience, because they have no knowledge of things that would make perfect sense to someone who is raised as a Jew. It is only by explaining these things that the stories could then make sense to the reader, Jew or no.

I consider this a pivotal book in my reading lexicon. Thank you, Rabbi, for writing it.

The Survivor: An Anatomy of Life in the Death Camps

A Compelling and Compassionate Work
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2006-05-04
I highly recommend this book-but I warn you, it isn't an easy one to read. This is a Holocaust study-with the same gruesome imagery described by Primo Levi and others-but related by dozens of people. And all the memories originate in past lives and their sudden ends.

Rabbi Gershom is a compelling and compassionate writer. He tells an engaging story of himself becoming the unplanned recipient of these dramatic past-life recollections. He seems a worthy vessel of such privileged information-honest, humble, and caring-if you or I had similar terrible secrets to share, we might pick someone like him to tell them to.

A fascinating aspect of this report-and one that lends it validity-is that so many of the people who recalled these Holocaust deaths had no cultural basis to support them. Many are Gentiles in this life, but brought forward the beautiful Jewish rituals and customs as well as the far-less-pleasant flashbacks.

One especially valuable chapter is a meditation on Healing the Karma of the Holocaust. There are a number of interesting ideas that branch out from the central concept of this book-the possibility, for instance, that many who died during WW II are reincarnating now-and Rabbi Gershom gives them all thoughtful consideration.

Through the Holocaust, Hitler and his henchmen succeeded for a time in bringing hell on earth. And yet, as I read this book, I saw a light shining in the darkness. Here were hundreds of those murdered innocents, alive once more, telling their stories. If these reports are true, then, in the deepest sense, the Nazi "experiment" of Jewish liquidation was an utter failure. Not only did they not extinguish the light of Judaism, but they failed ultimately to extinguish the individuals they killed, too.

At any rate, if you can handle the subject matter, Beyond the Ashes offers a vision of soul-expansion and healing, and I urge you to give it a try.

Richard Salva--author of Soul Journey from Lincoln to Lindbergh [UNABRIDGED]

Simply Brilliant
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2005-10-04
Now I read a lot and many of the books I read would not get me up and write a review. Well, this amazing book did.

I don't know much about the main topics in the book - Judaism and reincarnation - but I am open to learn new. Openness will be in some way acquired in order to fully appreciate this book and its message.

I did not get the feeling the author is trying to sell me something. Remarkable when dealing which such highly emotionally charged topics.

This book was fantastic approach both to Judaism and the idea of reincarnation. It was written in such soft, forgiving and wise way that truly moved me.

If we read to learn, this was a great lesson.

A Reply to the Author
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2005-11-22
Dear Rabbi,
I read your book many years ago, and happened upon these reviews as I was looking for the book, having recommended to my students. I certainly would fall into the lose category of 'new age' as I run an intuitive training program in Austin, Texas.
I recommended this book to my students because I found it incredibly insightful about the thought processes, patterns and meaning of reincarnation. I'm saddened to hear that some supposed 'new age' thinkers made such offensive, antisemitic remarks.
I think there is a natural, but unfortunate, tendency for many people to blame the victims of hideous crimes. To conclude that the souls of those lost in the Holocaust where there due to their own misdeeds is simplistic, unkind and I believe entirely inaccurate. It reminds me of stories I have heard from Indian, where a certain population of Hindu zealots maintain that those who are poor are suffering because they have 'bad' karma.
In fact, it is my belief that allowing others to suffer cannot ever be justified, and is in itself creating negative karma for the person who judges others unworthy.
Bad things happen to good people all the time. We know that millions of Holocaust victims were good people - many of them children, like Anne Frank.
I just wanted to say that this book has had a profound influence on my own views and my work, and to apologize for misdeeds of my fellows.
The New Age is not a set movement, and certainly has no definite doctrine. I hope you realize as well that we have both positive and negative influences in our community, as exist in every spiritual movement. I will continue to recommend your work to my students, and hope your schlorship will continue.

Sincerely,
Lindsey Scott-Ipsen
Director,
Center for Intuitive Studies, Austin

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Cheapskate Monthly Money Makeover (Debt-Proof Living)
Published in Mass Market Paperback by St. Martin's Paperbacks (1995-03-15)
Author: Mary E. Hunt
List price: $5.99
New price: $22.63
Used price: $1.98

Average review score:

Very good
Helpful Votes: 12 out of 17 total.
Review Date: 2002-12-17
I really like Mary Hunts books I find them a lot more useful than books like the tightwad gazette which is way to extreme.Mary Hunts books are full of good useful information.

Solid Advice, Albeit Very Basic
Helpful Votes: 14 out of 14 total.
Review Date: 2005-01-19
This is a good, solid, book covering the "basics" of money management. It can be said that Mary Hunt is just reiterating philosophies of money management that have been preached over the decades, if not centuries. Better, more comprehensive, readings include "The Millionaire Next Door", "Your Money Or Your Life", "The Complete Tightwad Gazette", and "The Richest Man In Babylon."

That being said, this book did introduce me to one innovative idea of which I have incorporated into my financial arsenol. It's what called the "Freedom Account". The Freedom Account is a fantastic tool devised by Hunt to manage payment of irregular,
non-monthly bills. The concept is not new, but Hunt's system is definitely the best I've ever come across.

My philosophy on reading books has always been that if I can get just one great new idea, then the investment in time and money is worth it. I can assure you that if you decide to buy this book, the "Freedom Account" system alone is well worth the investment.

Another Great Book!!!
Helpful Votes: 14 out of 14 total.
Review Date: 2002-07-25
I subscribe to Mary's CheapskateMonthly.... and highly recommend both her website and most of her books. I have read and reread the books of hers that I own, of which this is one. If you're having finacial difficulties, get this book and subscribe to her newsletter - you can do this online or through the mail. I swear it's been the best money I've ever spent. And I have actually started to see a difference in my finances.

If you're broke or having money problems, buy this book now!
Helpful Votes: 37 out of 39 total.
Review Date: 2003-04-08
Has worrying about money or paying your bills ever kept you up at night?

Me, too. Until I found this book.

About 7 years ago, our family was suffering from unbelievable money problems. Depressed and confused, I decided to stop by the bookstore and browse the personal finance section. There was only one problem. I didn't have twenty or thirty dollars to buy money management advice. I decided to get Mary's book and could not believe how many great examples and strategies she gave for reducing debt.
By following Mary's instructions, our family quickly began reducing our debt and wiped out almost $ 20,000 of credit card bills within a few years.
Her book is my money "Bible" and like scriptures in a holy work, I have highlighted paragraphs on almost every page that give insights into a subject that had always been beyond my control.

This book saved my marriage and brought me peace.
I highly recommend it. . . to everyone.

Good, but I've read better...
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2005-01-20
This is a good book for a great cause: getting and staying out of debt. However, after reading it, I liked Dave Ramsey's Money Makeover and Financial Peace University MUCH better - more thorough, great ideas, and fabulous examples of how a little money can grow w/ time - which this book, CM, is lacking.

E
Chemin de ronde: Memoires (10/18 [i.e. Dix-dix-huit])
Published in Mass Market Paperback by Union generale d'editions (1976)
Author: Katia Granoff
List price:
Used price: $31.68

Average review score:

Gritty Fat City
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-20
Fat City is a short book, so I'll write a short review. You can get a plot synopsis from the other reviewers. This is high-quality noir territory. It is 180 pages of boxing, booze, lousy jobs, poisoned relationships, and flophouse squalor. It perfectly captures the characters' desperation and hopelessness. If you are looking for a tough, lean, gritty read, then look no farther.

Knockout-Must Read
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-10-22
Fat city is a book that took place in Stockton California in the 1950's that follows the broken lives of several men who are brought together from boxing. This book is written by Leonard Gardner, a boxer himself during the 1950's. As you read through the pages a story of the lives of different men unfolds.
Billy Tully is an out of shape boxer who gave everything up because of long losing streak and the painful divorce with his wife. Living off of almost nothing he decides he wants to go back and try to fight. While training he meets a young boy named Ernie Munger who has a natural talent for boxing. Ernie wants to be a boxer so bad that he trains day and night letting nothing get in his way. In the middle of his career he gets his girlfriend pregnant but tries his hardest to stay in the life of boxing. While following the characters in their lives this book goes though the struggle of each man and illustrates how they react to their failures. In this story the women are the cause of problems between all of the unhappy boxers; a problem that cannot be fixed.
Some chapters in the story are dedicated to small parts of other men's lives such as the trainer and the opponent, letting you understand the story from both sides. Although these men are brought together by boxing the book is about these men doing what they can do to survive. From boxing to farming this book accurately covers the actions taken to survive. Although the book can be slow at parts over all it is a quick read.

An amazing literary work
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2005-02-22
I read Fat City sometime in the mid-sixties, when it was first published, and was immediately captivated and envious of Gardner's powerful style and talent. If you appreciate and admire Hemingway or Steinbeck you will likely feel the same about Gardner, who, unfortunately, has not published anything since. Perhaps this small gem of a book was the only one he had in him. Even so, this novel is a remarkable accomplishment and may well become an American classic. What intrigues me the most in this work is that Gardner gets it all down right--the sights and smells and sounds of the seedy streets and flophouses; the drifters and dingy diners; the sweaty gyms, barsweeps and whores and how it is to work as a stoop-laborer in the fields, especially the true-to-life characters inhabiting the pages. Fat City is simply a well-crafted execution of art throughout and is as pleasurable to read now as when I first picked it up years ago.

A minor masterpiece
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2005-05-31
Short novel, published in 1969, about two boxers, Billy Tully, who is 29 and down and out, and Ernie Mugger, who is 18 and up and coming, two versions of the same man, in some respects. Terrific skilled prose, short chapters, switching points of view between these two main characters and an assortment of other minor characters. The author takes you inside the characters' deepest despair or elation. How simple the author makes it look, one thinks, reading this book. But of course it is not. The prose is precise and honed, and looks easy only after who knows how many drafts. There are only 18 or 19 short chapters, and much of the novel is dialogue. But somehow one comes away with a panoramic view of Stockton, California, this woeful place, and the people the inhabit it - the immigrant fruit pickers, the bartenders and bar girls, the hobos on the street. The descriptions are compact and dead-on. About Billy Tully's hotel room: "All his neighbors had lung trouble." One could quote sentences from this book almost at will, the prose is so spare and perfect.

That the author never published another book, and that this was his first, is incredible. To write this cleanly and confidently, he must have practiced and studied for years. Yet to never do it again.

One of the great novels
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2005-02-20
This is one of my all time favorite novels. It beautifully captures the desperation in the lives of its characters and does it in a style that is a model of grace and economy. The deeply insightful portrayal of the painful relationships between the men and women, who inhabit it's world, is one of its many pleasures.

Gardner is a great novelist, just on the strength of "Fat City," the only entry in his oeuvre.

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Dying Was the Best Thing That Ever Happened to Me: Stories of Healing And Wisdom Along Life's Journey
Published in Hardcover by Sunshine Ridge Publishing (2006-07-01)
Author: William E., M.D. Hablitzel
List price: $24.95
New price: $12.25
Used price: $12.24
Collectible price: $25.00

Average review score:

Inspirational
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-30
I have been fortunate enough to know Dr. Hablitzel. This book is a wonderful gift. I would recommend it for everyone. Dr. Hablitzel not only cures illnesses, he also teaches us lessons on how to live.

WONDERFUL

Could not put it down!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-30
I just finished reading this book, which never left my hand across a span of 4 hours. I traveled alongside William on a journey of his life stories from his career. An absolutely fascinating book, chaulked full of raw emotion and stories of healing. This book will leave you deep in thought and rejuvenated, ready to make the best of the rest of life. A must read in my opinion!

Better Than Chicken Soup
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-03
This is a must read book for anyone working in health care and anyone who is experiencing a health care crisis in their personal life. The book will touch your heart and bring tears to your eyes more often than the original Chicken Soup For The Soul. And it is better written than Chicken Soup.
The book shares stories of the courage patients have when they face the challenge of dying from disease. Each story will teach you about the strength of the human soul and leave you celebrating life. This is a book about the celebration and joy to be found in the experience of disease. The book illustrates that disease is actually a gift that teaches us many valuable lessons. We should not be afraid of the gifts we are given, but embrace them.
You will want to buy more than one copy so you can share the hope with those you love.

Powerful and mystifying
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-31
Dr. Hablizel is a story-teller of the first degree and the people and places he brings to life on his mystical and mysterious journey through medicine will stay with you long after you've turned the final page.

A unique, sensitive collection of life and death experiences encountered by physician William Hablitzel
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2006-09-12
"Dying Was the Best Thing That Ever Happened To Me: Stories of Healing and Wisdom Along Life's" is a unique, sensitive collection of life and death experiences encountered by physician William Hablitzel. In his view of death as the great teacher and enlightener, Dr. Hablitzel embraces the "uncomfortable duality" of being "both a physician defeated by death and the witness enriched by it (p. 10)." This luminous book of journeys with the dying has all the elements of the greatest teachings about life's meaning. Finding miracles in the everyday events, listening to the science, learning to overcome fear, embracing the unknown in death, and the miraculous process of human growth are all themes developed in these chapters and stories. Bridging the gap between science and faith, "Dying Was the Best Thing That Ever Happened To Me" is inspirational literature of the finest grade -- and especially recommended for medical and health-care professionals, as well as non-specialist general readers, who must deal with end-of-life issues with respect to their patients or families.

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Fingerprints- Book 6: Revelations
Published in Kindle Edition by HarperCollins e-books (2001-12-18)
Author: Melinda Metz
List price: $4.99
New price: $3.99

Average review score:

BEST BOOK EVER
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-12-12
Im not gonna write a summary b/c u can read the others! i just wanted to say taht this book is soooo freakin awsome. Its soo good, and im SOOOOOO GALD About Rae and Anthnoy getting 2ghter!! like oMG, ive been waiting for that to happen! and one thing how could u guys have not known who eles was after Rae!!! lIKE OMG IT WAS SOOOO OBVIOUS, OR MYB IM JUST RLY GOOD AT SOLIVING STUFF LIKE THAT!! WELL ANYWAYS IT WAS RLY GOOD< GO AND READ IT A>S>P

Amazing
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2004-10-28
This is one of the best series I have ever read. It has a twist of suspense/mystery as well as romance. Rae's ability to hear thoughts through a single fingerprint helps her find out the true secret of her mother. It will also help find who is out to kill her. I couldn't put these books down, I read book 1 - 7 in less than 2 weeks, and i guarntee you will too!

Rae Was Ready to Get On With Her Life...
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2003-07-31
Steve Mercer, the scientist who enhanced the psi abilities of people like her mother, and herself, was finally dead. Rae was definitely ready to put all of this behind her and to move forward. The first step towards being normal again was to get back together with Marcus. He doesn't make Rae feel anywhere near the same as Anthony, but Yana and Anthony totally betrayed her trust and so she is ready to go with someone safe, someone normal. She feels like she has succeeded when she and Marcus are voted Moonbeam King & Queen, but Anthony destroys the evening by telling her that someone still wants her dead.

Anthony wishes that he could relax now that Mercer is dead, but he knows that the danger to Rae is not over. For one thing, someone painted Unclean all over her locker in red and then passed out flyers about Rae's mother all over school. Anthony is trying to protect Rae, but she can hardly stand to be around him.

When Yana shows up, begging Rae for help, Rae really wants to turn her down flat. But when she finds out that Yana's dad wants to send her to Fair Haven, a mental institution, so that she will be out of his way, Rae knows that she has to do something. She could hardly stand to be in that place and can't bear to see someone else locked up there. What Rae doesn't know is that she is in the middle of another deadly game - and this time, Rae's life is the prize...

Book #6 in the Fingerprints series was another great book. The tension is really building and everything is starting to come together and make sense. A lot of my questions were answered here and it is now time for Rae to start making some plans instead of just reacting. Too bad that she seems too stupid to connect the dots! That was my only complaint about this book, that Rae didn't seem able to put the clues together so she was totally clueless near the end of the book. I know that she is smarter than that! Anyway, hopefully you have read the first 5 books in the series so you know what is going on, and, if not, I would highly recommend reading them first. For the first time, there is actually some closure at the end of this book, but we know that Rae's story is far from over. Keep #7 ready to find out what happens to Rae & Anthony next!

never what it seams?
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2002-08-11
This book is grat it has so many turns and twists rea is finally back with marcus but then her secret about her mom is reavealed and marcus is embaresed of her on top of that yana's dad wants to get rid of her but douse he the end changes everything and let me give you a hint the 6th book ends almost like the fourth think about it!
I loved it and I hope you will to its the person you least expect

So far, the best in the series
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2004-06-28
I love all the Fingerprints books, but the last few have been a bit disappointing. But REVELATIONS is a breath of fresh air for the series, it never had me bored.

Rae Voight is mad at her two best - and pretty much only - friends Anthony and Yana. They went out behind her back, and it tore her apart...they "betrayed" her. But on the birght side, she's back with her old boyfriend Marcus, and doesn't want anything to do with Anthony or Yana. Anyway, one day Anthony spots something that he feels Rae needs to know about - a message was written on her locker in red paint, and he thinks it's a warning. When he goes to tell her, she brushes him off, definately letting him know that she isn't interested in what he has to say.

After a while, Rae forgives Yana (she's still mad at Anthony, though) and they start to hang out. That's when Yana tells Rae something really important: Yana's dad is trying to get her put into the same institution that Rae was in after her "episode." Even though Rae isn't very happy with Yana, she decides to help her. But when Rae and Yana run off to escape the doctors, they find themselves in a very dangerous situation.

REVELATIONS is definately my favorite book from the Fingerprints series. The best part? We finally find out who wants Rae dead. A must read.

Overall rating - A+

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FIREMAN'S WIFE, THE
Published in Hardcover by Hyperion (2006-03-08)
Author: Susan E. Farren
List price: $16.95
New price: $3.35
Used price: $1.50
Collectible price: $16.95

Average review score:

"I Am A Fireman's Wife"
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-21
Loved this book. It was past around for the wives of the fire academy to read. With my brother on for a few years, I thought I knew a lot about what this journey would entail. But this book was insight, funny, heart wrenching. It was a easy, quick read. I will know give this to all the new wives entering this department. It really opens you eyes on what to expect, from the shift to your husband's second family. Worth your time.

I am a Fireman's wife
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-29
This is one of the best books that I have read! Susan really knows how to express what all fire wives feel. This book made me laugh, cry, and say "yep, I've seen (heard, felt, done) that!" so many times. I think anyone married to a fireman would love this book. I really appreciate the awareness it has given me. I only wish I read it sooner. As a 9-year fireman's wife myself, I highly recommend it!

A Must For Every Firefighter's Wife!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-07
This book was given to me by my firefighter fiancee soon after he proposed. What a Godsend! I consider this my "bible". Susan summed up the feelings we as wives have about our firemen husbands and does it in a funny, thoughtful and wonderful way. I recommend this be required literature for every fireman to hand out when they decide to propose!! LOL. Thanks Susan for sharing our side of the story!

Easy to relate to.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-20
A funny, insightfull, and often scary look into the life of a firefighters wife.

First at bat....homerun!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-07-21
It doesn't matter whether or not you're a fireman or a firefighter's spouse, you will get a kick out of this book. By the time you're half way through The Fireman's Wife, you'll be in love with this family. Susan's writing is personable and informative about the pride and pitfalls of being in fire service. Applicable to anybody with a loved one serving the public and risking their life for the rest of us (fire, police, military, etc.). Hopefully we'll see more from this inspired author. Bravo

E
Holy the Firm
Published in Kindle Edition by HarperCollins e-books (2007-10-09)
Author: Annie Dillard
List price: $9.95
New price: $7.96

Average review score:

My favorite book of all time
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-25
This has been my favorite book ever since I read it in 1994. Its perfection is other-worldly. If you are a Dillard novice, better to start with "An American Childhood," to get a sense of the author and her style. It is about growing up, experiencing wonder, becoming fully alive. "Holy the Firm" borders on a spiritual meditation; some of my friends have found it too abstract. Whatever you do, steer clear of "The Maytrees," Dillard's most recent book--it doesn't measure up.

A small, rather opaque work of beauty.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-10
Annie Dillard is a creator of writing that frequently works like poetry trapped in prose's body. This little offering, in three jewel-like parts, is rather like her more extended "Pilgrim at Tinker Creek": a gorgeous and unflinching experience of the natural world, an angry wrestling with the problem of suffering and a theological discussion in light of these two other preoccupations. The theology in "Holy the Firm" is thus grounded in trauma and reality but expressed in heady, spinning, sometimes impenetrable language that highlights the mysteries within her subject but at the same time obscured for me what attitudes of the heart or mind she had come to at the end of her struggles. I finished the book still feeling rather angry myself and, perhaps unsurprisingly, unsatisfied.

Recommended (especially the hilarious description of Sunday in a small Episcopalian Church).

Spiritually terse observations that can fling away logical and humanistic dribble.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-15
In Holy the Firm, Annie Dillard certainly can not be accused for excess verbiage. Her little book, consisting of less than eighty pages, is a thoughtful and sometimes intense investigation into the soul. One can almost imagine her staring deeply at a flowing river or a particular kind of tree and genuinely seeing Divinity in and around it, authentically feeling it and being transportated to the nether reaches of the unexplained. Yet, it is a good place or moment where nothing can touch you or hurt you. It is the zone where you have that elongated, never ending epihany. However, in Holy the Firm, she has that exact moment or moments, citing a couple of specific occasions and or happenings: a moth engulfed in a candle flame, a child severely burned in an airplane mishap and lastly, a baptism on a chilly day on a beach. Her stabbing gaze and visual processing is an inherent endowment for us all but very seldom used, sad to say. Each example that she bethinks, on the surface, looks violent and harsh and horrible. But behind that mask of the unpleasant, there is profound cheer at the transformation of the perception, of soul development, and yes, of course, of the logical, humanistic and psychological plain of thought processing, filtering and transforming. The essay, in no uncertain terms, conveys a kind of WOW factor that says, I don't really know how this whole thing operates, but isn't it amazing nonetheless? The deity of God has to be here, right in front of our very eyes, every moment, every instance, every half second. Holiness is under a rock, in people, in nature, in moments (good and bad), one giant gelatinous glob with so many tags and definitions attached to it. But only the Holy makes it cohesive and function. This work is not so little in its implications and gratitude. There is a majesty here, an august celebration. And we're all in it together, a gem of a book!

Awe, sarcasm, hope and despair
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-02
This is a gift from Annie Dillard. She share her struggle with the question of "What kind of God would let --- happen?" Whose responsibility is it? Do we matter one whit to God? Dillard shares her pain, her longing for truth, her disappointment, her faith with grace and soaring language. It is a short book but is definitely not an easy read.

Ponder the definition of Holy the Firm, as believed by esoteric Christianity. "It is a created substance, lower than metals and minerals on a 'spiritual scale,' and lower than salts and earths, occurring beneath salts and earths in the waxy deepness of planets, but never on the surface of planets where men could discern it; and it is in touch with the Absolute, at base."

"Does something that touched something that touched Holy the Firm in touch with the Absolute at base seep into ground water, into grain; are islands rooted in it, and trees? Of course."

Then there is Dillard's description of the risk of losing someone you love.
"And you can get caught holding one end of a love, when your father drops, and your mother; when a land is lost, or a time, and your friend blotted out, gone, your brother's body spoiled, and cold, your infant dead, and you dying: you reel out love's long line alone, stripped like a live wire loosing its sparks to a cloud, like a live wire loosed in space to longing and grief everlasting."

Spilling the Beans
Helpful Votes: 21 out of 21 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-06
While attending Western Washington University I had the great good fortune to take a poetry class from Annie Dillard. My own poetry was abysmal and she gave me this advice, "writing is like prayer; you sit and listen for the still small voice." She had won the Pulitzer prize for Pilgrim at Tinker Creek and was in the process of writing Holy the Firm while at Fairhaven College at Western. She read us the bits about the moth and the flame. This is her slenderest book, but the one in which she most takes her own advice. It's prose that reads like poetry.

This is a book that makes me think that everything else I've ever read was only approximate use of language to convey some idea. In this book it seems like every word is carefully chosen, as if it comes from some place of meditation, of listening to a still small voice. It's a very human book, for all the sparks of the divine. By another accident I heard her read from it at the University of Washington. The final passage seemed to rise to a climax and hang in the air. No one spoke, no one left. It was one of those magical moments. Holy the Firm is all one piece and can be read through in one sitting as one experience. It's very much a writer's book, and I see most of the reviews are by writers finding some echo in a fellow writer. Some reviewers have put much better than I what it's about. I merely suggest that Dillardians (and other readers) may enjoy this oft-overlooked book.

E
Hot Shots and Heavy Hits: Tales of an Undercover Drug Agent
Published in Hardcover by Northeastern (2004-05-26)
Author: Paul E. Doyle
List price: $26.00
New price: $28.20
Used price: $5.50
Collectible price: $26.00

Average review score:

Kept waiting for the excitement
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-18
While the story chapters in the book are individually interesting, they somehow don't make a whole. The book feels choppy, as if it needed additional narrative to make if flow more smoothly. I expected, based on other reviews, to become immersed in the life of a narcotics officer. Just a average read.

One of the Good Guys
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-09-13
I truly enjoyed this book. Paul Doyle's experiences were something that needed to be put on paper and published for the world to see. Although the names and the places may change, the core root of the drug world remains the same. In reading this book I found that other than the bell bottom pants and silk shirts, the happenings of the underground drug world are in so many ways similar today. The difference being the technology used and the way the intelligence is gained. I bought this book at a fair where the author was present and signed my copy. I spoke to him for a few moments and told him that I worked for a police department in a neighboring town and that my husband was also a police officer. He suggested that I read it and have my husband do the same. This book was a real page turner and I wasn't able to put it down until I was finished. I was truly impressed with his compassion for people which can easily be lost in the investigative and enforcement field. He points out that he actually had to become 'one of them' in order to take some of these criminals down. It was a different day and age. God Bless Paul and the guys that he worked with. It's not a job for the meek and mild.

Superlative tale telling- and guess what- it's all true
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-02-17
Paul Doyle delivers edge of your seat excitement. Poignantly related, this warrior served as an undercover drug agent in the seamy sixties and seventies, in Boston's most rag-tag blighted neighborhoods.What is most refreshing is the lack of moral ambiguity in this narration.While remaining compassionate to the true victims of drugs- the addicts themselves, Paul Doyle mercilessly hunts down the perps on the top of the food chain, the major dealers and manufacturers- in an effort to staunch the flow of the drug epidemic.
I really enjoyed the book, my hope is that if it does get made into a film that the director has as subtle a touch as the memoirist.

Outstanding! Opened my eyes - a must read
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2005-07-30
Read this book at the advice of a friend and it is a must read for every caring American. Opened my eyes to the sacrifice some people are doing on our behalf and opened my eyes to a life most of us cant imagine. These folks do it for us and then in the end the Author takes us on a learning experience about where the drug money goes and who is behind it - the terrorist connection. He also lets you know the solution to cracking the incredible drug problem in this country lies in our families and not in Washington. Read it

Hot Shots and Heavy Hits: Tales of an Undercover Drug Agent
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2005-07-24
Excellent. Didn't want to stop reading until I was finished the book.


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