K Books


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

K
Anybody Can Do Anything
Published in Paperback by G K Hall & Co (1999-08)
Author: Betty MacDonald
List price: $21.95
Used price: $12.50

Average review score:

But Nobody Is Funnier Than Betty
Helpful Votes: 19 out of 20 total.
Review Date: 2002-02-27
I discovered Betty MacDonald when I was about twelve years old, after checking The Egg and I out of the Carmichael Branch library here in Sacramento, about 22 years after it was first published. My parents had mentioned that the egg ranch Betty lived on with her first husband in the 1920s, which she writes about in The Egg and I, was located some miles from the place where we lived in Washington state, in the late 1950s. Furthermore, they had actually taken a day trip with friends to look at the old place, sometime after the book and the movie of the same name came out in the 1940s.

This familial connection, however faint, to an old, famous book and the movies it inspired, piqued my childish mind, and I eagerly started reading about life on a chicken ranch on the Olympic Penninsula. I fell in love with Betty's easy, friendly, hysterically funny, down-to-earth yet somehow elegant prose, and immediately checked out her other autobiographical books: The Plague and I, Anybody Can Do Anything, and Onions In The Stew.

In all of her autobiographical books save Onions In The Stew, Betty uses the first chapter to presage her theme by describing her experiences as a child in a large, boisterous family, in loving and extremely funny detail. In Anybody Can Do Anything, Betty describes life with her family and her two young daughters, Anne and Joan, in Seattle after she has left her husband and the egg ranch behind. The Depression is on, and Betty, now a single mother, struggles with her large and interesting clan to make ends meet, somehow finding a lot of laughs and funny adventures, often with her exuberant sister Mary, the inspiration for the book, along the way. Anyone who is interested in what life was like in Seattle in the 1930s, in witty character descriptions, and in a personal glimpse of how families coped with the "Great Depression", will find this book fascinating, not to mention frequently hilarious.

Betty, I miss you and the way you used to make me laugh out loud--I was sad when I finished reading Onions In The Stew for the first time and then realized it was the last autobiographical book you wrote: the tuberculosis finally caught up with you in 1958, when I was only four years old, still living in Washington, not far from your home on Vashon Island. I re-read your books many times as I grew up, even visited Vashon Island, and often wished I could have met you and your family. It's silly, but I've always felt a sense of loss at never having known you, because I am sure you must have been a marvelous friend. Your sense of humor had a profound effect on me, and inspired me in my earliest writing attempts. It's been many years since I've read your books, but I've never forgotten your irrepressible, bona-fide funniness. Wherever you are, thank you!

Great Book
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2003-11-05
My husband is one of Betty's nephews.All of the sisters had an incredible wit about them - probably because of their mother Sidney Bard. She did a wonderful job raising her children with out her beloved husband Darcy. It's too bad the children and grandchildren didn't learn lessons from Betty's books. She would be sad to see the way the family turned out.

Great gift for women
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2002-07-30
It's just so heartening to know that others love Betty MacDonald's books as much as I do. I've been giving Anybody Can Do Anything as my female gift book of this year.

After she dumped the bum. . . .
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-31
we get the story of what she and the children did with themselves.

Her father had been a mining engineer, and although he died fairly young he had been able to save quite a bit; her mother had come from a 'good' East Coast family--not REALLY rich, but apparently quite well off. Betty and her siblings had grown up in large houses with music and dance lessons. However, the Great Depression reduced the family's portfolio to wastepaper. The children had never been taught to actually *do* anything, and actually going out to work for a living was something that they (especially the daughters) had never thought that they would have to do.

The story of how they scrambled to make ends meet during the 1930s would have been grim, but the Bard family despises self-pity above all other faults, and Betty is able to find humor in any situation.

After women having to work to survive during the 1930s, and having to work in the 1940s when all the men were off to war, is it any wonder that the women of this generation and their daughters wanted to retreat into domesticity during the 1950s?

Treasure Worth Digging For
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2004-05-21
This book is hard to find, so if you get the chance, snap it up!
This is a hilarious account of the author's life post-"Egg & I."
Betty moves from the chicken ranch back to her family's home in Seattle.
Sister Mary, undaunted by the fact that Betty has no experience, eagerly launches Betty's business career and social life.
The mishaps that ensue are absolutely hilarious.
Skillfully written, this book makes the Depression a laugh riot.
BUY IT!
I only wish that Betty had written more books.

K
The Bake Shop Ghost
Published in Hardcover by Houghton Mifflin (2005-07-25)
Author: Jacqueline K. Ogburn
List price: $16.00
New price: $6.74
Used price: $1.00

Average review score:

Yummy Story - Not Sure about the Cake
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-18
I agree with most of the reviews in that the story and illustrations are both excellent. My four year old, who typically wanders in and out of family story time, is the real test and she sat giving her full attention for the duration.

Of course my children immediately wanted to make the delicious recipe in the back - which sounded like a great plan to me. Therein lay the problem. My husband gave up looking for buttermilk powder at the store and I had never heard of it myself. I suffered sticker shock when I made a second trip only to discover the obscure ingredient had a hefty price tag of $6.50. If money is no object for you then that's wonderful. The bummer for us is that our budget does not allow for such a pricey item to be used once or twice then take its place on our shelves until I find it expired years later. Maybe it's a favorite family recipe? Otherwise I hope they substitute with a different cake on future editions. Meanwhile, we will have to make our own substitution as after reading the book you almost have to make cake. It is that good.

Recommended
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-24
For me this book is about the values of sharing and kindness. For that reason I have a great esteem for "The Bake shop Ghost" . Another book that I very much recommend for the same reason is a new series by B. Nowiki titled "Why Some Cats are Rascals". I am very much impressed with the first book of that series.

Recommended
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-24
For me this book is about the values of sharing and kindness. For that reason I have a great esteem for "The Bake shop Ghost" . Another book that I very much recommend for the same reason is a new series by B. Nowiki titled "Why Some Cats are Rascals". I am very much impressed with the first book of that series.

Love this book
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-27
Great story. My daughter orginally brought a copy of the book home from the Library. I liked it so much I bought it for myself. The cake receipe is pretty darn good.

Lots of fun regardless of age
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-19
I have a two year old, a five year old, and a 37 year old (wife) who love listening to this story as much as I love reading it to them.

Miss Cora Lee Merriweather is the town baker extraordinaire. She passes away and the whole town cries knowing that her recipes are gone with her. "Corra Lee didn't have any family so the Merriweather Bake Shop was sold".

Several bakers eagerly attempt to set up their own shop on the old premises but are promptly scared away by the ghost of Cora Lee until several years later a feisty and determined young baker by the name of Annie Washington arrives to call the bake shop her new home.

This is a delightful warm story of friendship, and determination. The two characters don't budge an inch until Annie pleads to the ghost and asks what she can do so that she could have the place in peace. The challenge is on: "Make me a cake . . . like one I might have baked, but that no one ever made for me." Annie bakes and bakes never finding anything just right, until one day she finds something out about the ghost that leads her to make that one special cake that no one ever made for her.

The drawings and the colors are wonderful and they help give this story its warm glow. You will have lots of opportunities to make different voices from Cora Lee herself to Frederico Spinelli and all the other characters in between. There is nothing scary in this story and there is no stress on the death part. She just passes away one day. My five year old is into asking those questions but my two year old just loves the voices and the story in general right now.

Besides, if you are a dad, you can also get a Ghost Pleasing Chocolate cake out of the deal-recipe is included, and it turns out quite nicely.

K
Borrow Smart Retire Rich
Published in Paperback by BSRR Publishing, LLC (2007-12-01)
Author: Todd K. Ballenger
List price: $19.97
New price: $19.47
Used price: $15.97

Average review score:

Ok info but leans towards making mortgage lenders money
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-27
I think you could use the ideas in the book without taking them so far, and making the mortgage companies so much money.

Manage your liabilities as well as your assets
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-16
Everyone always pay attention to the management of their assets, few people realize the management of their liabilities can create as much or more wealth. Being a mortgage lender who for 25 years encouraged everyone to pay their mortgage off as soon as possible I have in the last few years learned that is not always sound advice. The financial planning revolution in the mortgage industry has accelerated in the last 5-6 years as a result of planners such as Douglas Andrews ("Missed Fortune 101") and Ric Edelman ("Ordinary People, Extraordinary Wealth" among his many) showing the industry and the public that in most cases paying your mortgage early is a bad strategy. We all think that we want to be "mortgage free" and for the most part this is because our parents and grandparents have always advocated this. This thinking goes back to the depression where banks could foreclose on a house even if the payments were current. The banks did this because they had to have liquidity to fund the run on cash from stock investors facing margin calls.

The basic premise is to use only a small part of your downpayment on the mortgage and invest the rest. The government allows you a tax savings that subsidizes your mortgage payment and you have the rest of your funds to invest in a side account. This account will grow and through compounding will increase to a point that in most cases far before the mortgage term is up you have sufficient assets to pay the loan off in a lump sum. However it is wise to keep that liquidity and let it grow. Besides the investment growth you are keeping your funds liquid in case of a financial emergency. If you lose your job or your house is destroyed by nature (Katrina) you have funds to live on because the bank won't loan you money against the property in either case. By being liquid you can weather whatever situation arises.

While financially carrying a large mortgage is the smart thing to do I have many clients that say peace of mind is worth more than the wealth growth or liquidity. Regardless of the financial advantages, to many people peace of mind is more valuable than additional money. No matter how you feel you owe it to yourself to investigate the options and make up your own mind. I have seen a lot of people totally change their mindset from this book and the others I mentioned.

If I had only known...
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-12
The subject that most intrigued me in this book was the discussion about Effective Percentage Rate. It's amazing how considering the home as an investment can change your strategy and overall wealth creation over time.

I wish my family would read this book! They don't realize how they are throwing away countless opportunities to enhance their financial plan and protect their assets. I know they would benefit from the tables within the book that illustrate how choosing a loan strategy can dramatically impact the accumulation of assets over time.

Managing my equity in my real estate makes a Huge difference in my wealth!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-11
As someone who truly cares about financial independence, this book educated me on how I can take advantage of my real estate holdings and increase my wealth. Using a counterintuitive way of thinking really opened my eyes. Utilizing these simple strategies of leverage, liquidity, tax savings and arbitrage will increase anyones balance sheet. If you are serious about keeping your hard earned money, and don't want to transfer your wealth to financial institutions, you must read this book. People who understand interest earn it, people who don't pay it! Make sure you understand this simple concept as explained in this book.

CHUCK OLIVER'S REVIEW OF BORROW SMART AND RETIRE RICH
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-11
Definitely a must read for anyone seeking to become financially sophisticated in his understanding of how real estate, particularly his home, functions in terms of overall wealth creation.

In this country, we are taught to consume rather than conserve. With the looming threats of the government eventually eliminating social security and corporations no longer offering pensions, we need to protect our future and you can do this more confidently by following the 7 Steps to Borrow Smart and Retire Rich!

The "7-Step Borrow Smart Solution" is an exciting process that provides all of the necessary tools for deciding how best to finance your home. Most people don't realize that there are things to consider other than interest rates and loan fees.

Reading this book will help you to tear down the wall of financial misconceptions acquired in your life, and will give you new knowledge and the confidence to apply what you have learned in a more practical way in order to obtain the results you once thought impossible.

I want my clients and my fellow advisors to understand how owning your home can affect many areas of one's net worth and that there is a new and better way to evaluate one's financing decisions. I've learned ways to increase my family bank safely and conserve it by following the tools provided in this book.

Many fortunes,
Chuck Oliver
CEO American Equity Advisory Group
The Chuck Oliver Team

K
Dancing in Limbo: Making Sense of Life After Cancer (Jossey Bass/Aha Press Series)
Published in Hardcover by Jossey-Bass (1995-10-09)
Authors: Glenna Halvorson-Boyd and Lisa K. Hunter
List price: $38.00
New price: $21.64
Used price: $6.89
Collectible price: $36.95

Average review score:

Waiting for your old life to return?
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-01
Honest talk about the aftermath of cancer treatment when every one expects you to return to 'normal.'

If you are wondering when you will feel normal again, or when you can go back to your old self, this book is for you. The cancer experience is something that most people just don't understand, even close family and friends unless they too have gone though what we have (even if they were right there beside you). These authors are the real deal, been through the 'war' and will discuss issues that you will not get any place else, written an honest and straightforward manner. They have walked the path, stood in our shoes, this is not just someone talking to you who thinks they understand, they do get it.

Reading this book meant so much to me after my cancer treatments. I wish I could personally thank the authors for writing this book from the bottom of my heart. I have read just about everything out there and this book is absolutely the best.

you are not alone
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-26
many of the feelings that I though were unique to me about my cancer, aren't unique at all. I started highlighting each sentence that applied to me. I was shocked at how much was highlighted. It doesn't matter that these women are describing a completely different cancer than mine...the emotions were the same

So true!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-22
This should be in every dr.'s office for a surviving cancer patient.
All the denial you have comes flooding over you & you see the real truth.
It's so good to know you're not alone. Even though you've survived & you don't think you have any issues, you really do under all the bravado. I read it in 1 sitting. The authors are very forthcoming in all they discuss, & are survivors themselvs so they know what they are talking about.

THE book for life after cancer
Helpful Votes: 12 out of 13 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-06
When you visit the health section of your local bookstore, you'll find a plethora of information about getting through a cancer diagnosis, and very little about how to adjust to life after cancer. As the founder of a cancer support group, I believe that survivors are leaving our hospitals in droves - unprepared.

When a cancer patient "graduates" from treatments, she might exit the hospital floor amidst claps, cheers, and balloons. Her loved ones can finally breathe a huge sigh of relief, for she is out of the worst danger. Everyone wants to celebrate and get on with LIFE!

But the feelings inside the patient leaving the crisis behind may be those that she never expected: anxiety, fear, uncertainty, confusion. She leaves the constant medical care that has saved her life. She leaves attachments that grew when she was under incredible stress. She enters a world where everything is okay, but she doesn't feel okay. What does she do next? What meaning can she add to her life after all of this? How does she make sense of everything that she has learned because of cancer? How does she relate now to her healthy friends when she feels tired, hurting, different, or disabled? These are the issues cancer survivors dance with for the rest of their lives.

This book addresses, in a personal and realistic way, the effects of cancer on our lives - after treatment is finished. The authors interviewed dozens of cancer survivors and received the candid responses that you'd expect from those who have been through it all and want to help others.

One of the most interesting parts of the book for me was the discussion of how people handle trauma psychologically. It helped me understand the different approaches we each take to cope and make sense of a cancer crisis. I am now more accepting of others who view their cancer experience in a different light than I view mine.

I also came to a deeper awareness of how my cancer affected my loved ones, how the process of dealing with diagnosis and treatment is so different for them than for the patient. This showed me why my loved-ones may not fully understand, or want to think about, what life *after* cancer is like for me.

As an osteosarcoma survivor, the one negative thing I can say about this book is that when I got to the end, I realized there is one chapter missing. It applies to those of us who are dealing with significant physical disabilities or pain after cancer. But most survivors don't necessarily face this challenge, so I understand why the chapter isn't there.

If you love someone who is finishing treatment, or if you have finished treatment within the last few years, I urge you to buy this book. It may be more expensive than the other books out there, but it is SO worth it. This is the perfect cancer graduation gift! Just giving someone this book shows them that you understand their battle for a full life doesn't end with treatment. I wish I could give it to every survivor I know.

A great guide to life after cancer
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-05
I'm finding lots of answers to the many questions I have after finishing chemo for Non Hodgkins Lymphoma. Even family members would find this book helpful too. It's reassuring, honest and comforting reading about getting back to "life" after such a life changing event.

K
Ernie Pyle's War: America's Eyewitness to World War II (G K Hall Large Print American History Series)
Published in Hardcover by G K Hall & Co (1999-07)
Author: James Tobin
List price: $26.95
Used price: $6.44

Average review score:

amazing story, wonderful details
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-26
This is a fascinating book, and this from a reader more into fiction than historical biography - but the best fiction writer would be hard pressed to come up with a character like Ernie Pyle.

A page turning look into World War II from someone who could have been your neighbor but was far more than what you would have expected.

I have no idea why a modern rendition of this story has not hit the big screen - it seems a natural, captivating story that would educate as well as entertain.

a life-changing read
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-19
this must be THE book to read on war - what it's really like in all of its aspects - his description of the beach, after D-Day was gripping and haunting and it has stayed with me many years later -

and how he relates the everyday and ordinary in war -

and how, in any group or organization, it's often a small percentage of the people who are carrying the load - that's just one example of the many insights and truths in this book that relate to all of life, not just life in a war zone -

and it is a great book for anyone to read - a stunning life achievement for ernie pyle -

America's Link to the Front Lines of World War II
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2004-01-08
James Toban has written a stunning book in "Ernie Pyle's War: America's Eyewitness to World War II". Toban has succeeded in giving readers the rare opportunity to see the human frailties concealed within one of America's greatest and most valuable World War II correspondents.

James Toban present a picture of the complex Ernie Pyle; a man that entered the World War II carrying only a broken Remington typewriter and a deep desire to describe the life and hardships of the horrific world of the infantrymen to the American public. The reader will learn of the contradictory Ernie Pyle. The Ernie Pyle who despised war, but who could not stay away from the physical and emotional anguish of battle. The Ernie Pyle who loved his wife, but who continually left her behind to travel to the front lines. Ernie Pyle, the seemingly frail and terrified journalist who demonstrated his bravery by traveling to the front lines to be with and write about "his boys". Ernie Pyle, a genius for writing about the common soldier, but who needed constant reminding that he was the best at what he did. His articles became legendary and the hope and news link for Americans with loved ones in the front lines.

James Toban's "Ernie Pyle's War: America's Eyewitness to World War II " is a must read for World War II readers and all readers who wish to know about the human spirit and about a plain old fashion brave American.

Ernie Pyle Lives Again In This Wonderful Biography
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2003-08-17
About the only complaint I can offer about this outstanding biography is that the title is slightly misleading. Ernie Pyle's years as a war correspondent are the subject of about three-quarters of the narrative, which is appropriate. It was the period in which he did his greatest work and achieved international fame. But this is more than just the story of those pivotal years; the first 25 percent of the text is an excellent overview of Pyle's childhood on an Indiana farm and his pre-war adventures in journalism, including a six-year stint in the thirties and forties as a kind of Charles Kuralt in print. Pyle and his wife roamed across the nation in their car, and he wrote about the people he encountered along the way--ordinary people, the sort who don't usually find themselves the subject of newspaper articles.

When the war came, Pyle knew he had to answer the call to go overseas. But thankfully, he realized that he didn't need to provide the same sort of coverage every other journalist was doing. He would let them handle the stories of the grand strategy, interviewing the generals and prime ministers. He would tell the story of his average Joe, now transformed into G.I. Joe.

James Tobin has a wonderful gift for storytelling and description. He introduces us to Pyle and the key players in his life so vividly we feel that we know them as flesh-and-blood individuals. He quotes from Pyle's works liberally enough that we get a true sense of the man's unique gifts, but not so much that the flow of the story bogs down.

This is an almost perfect biography of one of the true greats of 20th century journalism.--William C. Hall

Ernie Pyle's War: Thorough and Entertaining Read
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2003-11-17
"Ernie Pyle's War" by James Tobin was a thorough read. Tobin described Pyle down to the very last detail, uncovering almost every aspect of his life. After reading this book, the reader had a clear view into Pyle's mind and was able to recognize the feelings he possessed about his professional and private life. The way Tobin intertwined Pyle's messages home with biographical details along with interviews of acquaintances, made this story an easy read. "Ernie Pyle's War" earned five "stars."
Tobin's style of writing was one reason this book was so effective. He used partial quotes from Pyle to title his chapters, which brought an immediate sense of intimacy to the story. Tobin began the book with a chronological introduction to Pyle. This style of writing, although typical for biographies, was well suited for this story and not at all cliché. Readers were able to become acquainted with Pyle as a young man and then mature along with him as he grew into an established adult. By describing Pyle as a young man, readers were able to understand more clearly why he was the way he was as an adult.
Tobin used vivid descriptions to paint a picture of Pyle in the minds of the readers. This was an important aspect because Pyle's physical demeanor was one of the main problems and/or benefits in his life. As a child and young adult, his size hindered his relationships. But, as a war correspondent, the people saw Pyle as more of a hometown boy rather than a studious journalist. This added to his success as a war correspondent.
After transitioning into Pyle's career as a war correspondent, the story line became more tedious. Pyle was in and out of combat and the surface facts of his life were boring. Tobin, understanding the paleness of biographical data, used Pyle's messages home to spice up the story. Like most people, Pyle's life was not what it seemed to be. Besides leading a "glorified" life as a war correspondent, he had major problems at home. Tobin showed the audience this by weaving together Pyle's biographical information with the messages he sent home. This gave the reader a sense of what Pyle was actually feeling. Using these messages instead of his columns allowed reader's to see the "real" Pyle.
Tobin uncovered personal feelings about his professional and personal life, which gave the reader a feeling of empathy toward Pyle. Showing that he did not feel like an outstanding reporter, let readers see Pyle was human. Tobin successfully showed the man behind the pen by opening up Pyle's mind to the audience. He did this by using Pyle's own letters and messages home that contained intimate details of his life. Without the added touch of Pyle's actual writing, the story would have failed to be as successful.

K
Ghetto Sorrows
Published in Paperback by C&K Publishing (2005-10-03)
Author: Keisha M Horton
List price: $12.95
New price: $7.58

Average review score:

A MUST READ!!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-29
Ghetto Sorrows is a MUST READ. This is the first book I read by Keisha Horton, so I'm just going to say, GO GET IT!!!! Keep doing what you're doing Ms. Horton, look forward to reading more from you....

WHERE IS THIS AUTHOR AT NOW??????
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-30
It took me forever to get a copy of this book--but it was well worth the wait. This book had me hooked from the first to the last page. This was a great story. What I want to know is why isn't Keisha writing anymore!????

"Been used, abused, and served like hell..."
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-06-10
Carmen is a young woman that is a true rider or die chick and is indeed loyal to the game even til the very end. She's a statistic in the system as a ex-convict and society as a young girl that was blind to a man's selfish request that threatens her dignity. But, despite, the wrong that has been done to her, she still strives to live a better life and not let life's unfair treatment determine her destiny. Upon release from prison, she has her eyes on the prize, but we all know that life has so many crooks, corners, and turns that if not careful, we can be detained. Her obstacles are realities in the faces of her life-long, loyal best friend, China, that's caught up in so much sheistiness with her 'man' and her drug habit, her old love, and her new love, of which she has no idea of his true intentions. Her loyalty seems to be her achilles heel, because she can't seem to let go of the past and where she has been to see what's right before her very eyes.

Ms. Horton has did an excellent job in her urban literary debut. I enjoyed this read and highly recommend it. If I have to make a prediction, I would say with a great amount of confidence, that we will be seeing bigger and better things in Ms. Horton's future! Major props Ms. Horton! Congrats! Continue to mesmerize us with your Ghetto Tales!

Where you're at may determine where you are going
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-15
Carmen held it down for her man like only a Bonnie would do for her Clyde. With her release just moments away, Carmen decides that she will walk on the positive side of the track and become a better person. No longer trying to wear the latest fashions and run the streets, she wants bigger and better things for her life.

China is use to the fine life of hot cars, clothes and stacks of money thanks to her drug lord boyfriend, Frank. Awaiting Carmen's arrival she knows things will get hotter than ever and they can reap the benefits of being a hustler's wifey.

Ghetto Sorrows is a down to earth and heart wrenching book of friends, love and the hustle. This is definitely a five star piece.

Deserving of more stars
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2006-02-27
In Ghetto Sorrows, Keisha M. Horton tests the strength of the friendship of China and Carmen. Carmen, recently released from jail, wants to avoid the lifestyle that landed her there in the first place. China on the other hand, with her friend away managed to sink deeper into the streets. Can Carmen convince China that the streets mean her no good? Or will China lure Carmen back to the streets?

Ghetto Sorrows is an excellent debut and a must read.

K
Grandpa's Ghost Stories
Published in Hardcover by Margaret K. McElderry (1978-08-01)
Author:
List price: $13.95
Used price: $74.86
Collectible price: $74.88

Average review score:

A wonderful Halloween-time Book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-03
I remember this book from when I was in kindergarten and always being scared, but loving it all the way through. It was filled with all the creepy images and stories that I could ever want, and when Daddy would read it to me in the fall it just put me in the immediate Halloween spirit. Witches, monsters, magic, ghosts, and everything else that any little kid would want in a scary book fill these 32 pages.

This story deserves a 5 out of 5, for its nostalgia, ability to invoke a spooky feeling, and overall fantasy and storyline.

I finally found it!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-07-13
My sister and I used to read this book together all the time as kids. About 2 years ago we started to think about it again, but our copy was long gone by then. We have been trying for 2 years to remember the title, and have been searching online relentlesly. I can't believe it, but today I finally found it!!!!! I bought a copy from another site, and I can't wait until it comes. And the thing is, I have not seen my sister in almost 2 years, and she is coming in to visit tomorrow! Hopefully it will arrive while she is still here, so we can get together with our children and read it once again! I highly recommend this book. If you share it with your children I guarantee they will someday share it with THEIR children!

Classic
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-12-14
I read this book in Kindergarden and have never forgot it through all these years. I hope to own a copy soon. The only book I remember from back then.

Magical Book
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2002-08-23
I read this book when I was in elementary school. I am now 25 years old, and I still remember this book. Over the years, I have found myself thinking of this book now and then and wishing I had a copy of it in my possession.

This book was a special friend of mine. It was there for me on rainy days, sunny days and very sad days. I can recall once being very sad about something, and remembering that I had checked the book out from the school library (I often did), and I lay down on my bead and curled up with this book. I can remember my sadness vanishing instantly as I was pulled into the spooky, yet delightful magical world of Grandpa's Ghost Stories. The tears that first fell on the pages of the book were certainly the last ones of the day for me.

Because of this book, I have always LOVED rain storms and thunder and lightening storms, they actually make me feel cozy.

No other books in the world have ever had this kind of effect on me, with the possible exception of the Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark trilogy.

It is very tragic that this book is no longer in print, and I anxiously await the day that it is available again at a reasonable price.

I highly recommend this book to absolutely anyone, but especially to anyone who enjoys a good, spooky tale. This is a treasure. Do yourself a BIG favor and discover it for yourself and for your children.

Genius! A true Classic!
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2001-04-22
I believe I speak for everyone on this list, when I say this book is one of the best, if not the best children's books of all time. For me, and many others (at least on this review board) this book was a life changing experience. I find my experience with the book is quite similar to most of the others on this page. I found the book in my elementary school library, and loved it. I checked it out every time I could get the chance, and read it over and over. I highly recommend this book, for all ages. The stories are wonderful, the illustrations are fantastic... A true classic!

K
Harry Potter y La Camara Secreta
Published in Hardcover by Salamandra (2004-03)
Author: J. K. Rowling
List price: $33.55
New price: $51.00

Average review score:

para jóvenes
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-19
este libro es muy bueno, como todos los de la serie, por supuesto. se lo recomiendo a los padres que quieren tener a sus hijos leyendo libros en lugar de estar pegados al nintendo wii!

Harry en espanol!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-03
English is my first language and as an adult I love reading the Harry Potter books. Because I'm learning Spanish, who better to practice on than Harry?! I purchased all 5 in the series available. The book arrived in excellent condition and very quickly. Quite pleased with my purchase experience.

Wrong review (above)
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2002-12-03
I just LOVE this book, and all the harry potter books. I wanted to say to Eric J Justice, who wrote a review above, that your review was incorrect. It DIDNT have a mistake; saying QUE TE TENGO DICHO es right. In fact, im pretty sure what you said was right too. But anyway, anyone who hasn't read this should, but read the SORCERER'S STONE first, because it's really best to read them in order.

A Great Learning Tool
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2001-12-10
I'm a high school student taking Spanish as my foreign language. I decided one day to buy Harry Pooter y la Cámara Secreta to help with my Spanish. Though some of the words aren't what I'm use to I still understood it and it helped my Spanish greatly. Many of the higher level Spanish classes are reading this also. For students taking Spanish this is a great way to help with your Spanish. It puts your knowledge to use and it helps you to remember things better. They're just as great as the English version!

Decente
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2002-05-09
Aconsejo no prestar demasiada atención a las críticas que se quejan del vocabulario castizo en contraposición al vocabulario americano. No hay prácticamente nada que un lector castellanohablante educado no pueda entender, y el castellano utilizado en el libro es adecuado para la trama.
La traducción en sí, exceptuando algún resbalón con el subjuntivo, es gramaticalmente correcta. No conozco el original en inglés.

El argumento abunda en lo descriptivo, con un ritmo de la acción lento durante casi toda la obra, concentrando la mayor parte del desenlace en los últimos 3 o 4 capítulos. La sensación de desasosiego que algunas críticas mencionan en este sentido es leg?tima.

En general, la obra es medianamente entretenida y contribuye a adquirir vocabulario.

K
The High Frontier: Human Colonies in Space
Published in Hardcover by William Morrow & Co (1976-12)
Author: Gerard K. O'Neill
List price: $8.95
New price: $5.50
Used price: $3.60
Collectible price: $15.00

Average review score:

Almost 30 years older...but not wiser
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-21
I read this wonderful book as an undergrad in the seventies. I found out about O'Neill from Stewart Brand's journal of the time, "The Coevolution Quarterly". O'Neill was the outer space guru of the age, just as John Lilly was the inner space pioneer. I assumed, as an enthusiastic youngster, that there would be millions of humans living at L5 by now. Unfortunately, we have a government run space program that, like any government bureaucracy, is inefficient and at the mercy of inferior minds (Congress and the White House). Nevertheless, this book is a good read and shows what one professor and a handful of grad students can come up with. For present day forward thinkers, review the ideas of Bill Stone (Stone Aerospace).

A review of reviews
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-12-19
I'm writing this review of the review dated September 8th 2001, wherein the reviewer challenges us readers to implement the ideas of O'Neill's book RIGHT NOW.

I wonder if anyone took that challenge, or if we were all distracted by what happened 3 days later?

Looking back over the past 4 years, I think, like the other reviewers who have written since that fateful day, that those events and their consequences show us that getting off this planet, and what we will learn from the effort, is an idea that becomes more imperative day after day.

If anyone is involved in a "mini-biosphere" project called for in the September 8th, 2001 review, or knows of such, please e-mail me with contact info.

Congratulations to all who can see beyong the curve of our Earth, to the endless horizons of space.

Not Thrilling, but Fascinating
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2004-09-02
This book paints a fascinating and telling picture of the future of mankind as the author sees it. In explaining how humans will consume the Earth and eventually spread out into space, he also provides compelling evidence for Fermi's paradox: If alien civilizations exist, where are they? I recommend this book for those who are interested in the potential course of human civilization, especially those wondering where overpopulation is going to drive technology.

The Classic!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-04-28
This is the classic proposal for the human expansion into space by the originator of the idea himself, Gerard O'neill. In it, he shows how space settlement could be done using boring 1970's technology.

A very good and thought provoking read, it is the ONLY space book that presented a plausible way for the rest of us (not just the "experts" and scientists) could go move into space in style AND the only one to show a semi-convincing way to pay for it all (space-based solar power).

dream
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2003-07-28
For those who dream of colonising Mars a hundred years from now, and the far stars in the distance, a thousand years from now, this book is a must read. For this is a world among the stars achievalble today. A land oif endless resources and land available for all to live well, and start over.

And should be required reading for all High School science students.

This is not Star Trek or Mobile Suit Gundam, this is for real.

I first came upon the first edition of this book back duirng my high school days in the public library. Everyone needs a good dream every now and then to rest their souls upon should they choose to study a nightmare.

And though I was not able to comprehend the vision, in the beginning, the dream did take root. And I firmly do wish for more books on this subject to be written. COLONIES IN SPACE by T.A. Heppenheimer being the only one I have found so far.

Dr. O'Neill envisions a world of endless resources built from the moon. And it can be achieved.

K
Honor Bound (Star Trek: I.K.S. Gorkon, Book 2)
Published in Mass Market Paperback by Star Trek (2003-12-01)
Author: Keith R.A. DeCandido
List price: $6.99
New price: $3.91
Used price: $2.75

Average review score:

Honor Bound
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-28
Another great book that deals with the Klingons.
Years ago I had quit reading Star Trek, but now I am back.
This is very original work and very interesting to read.
You have a long running space battle and an equally long running ground battle, and every crew member is important and well developed by the author. Very fun to read.
Worf and Martok make a very brief appearance, but that is what I like about this series, it is wholly original with very good characters and both the men and women have equal parts.

BATTLE!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-12
There's nothing I love more than Klingons heading into battle. Even the phrase, "It is a good day to die," makes me smile whenever I read or hear it.

"Order" Restored
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-18
With all of the proper introductions taken care of in "A Good Day To Die," Keith R.A. DeCandido's second I.K.S. Gorkon book, "Honor Bound," wastes little time on catching up the reader and dives right into the battle between Captain Klag and his allies in the Order of the Bat'leth and the honorless General Talak and his legion. With so much fighting going on (superbly illustrated in DeCandido's written word), you'd think that there would be little room left for character development. However, the reader gets to learn even more about Klag, Dorrek, Kurak, Leskit, Toq, B'Oraq, Goran, and even a few of the Children of San-Tarah as the battle on land and in the stars gets more violent and savage.

DeCandido cleverly intertwines combat sequences with flashbacks (especially in the mind of Kurak) and keeps the action at a quick pace. The bulk of the story is the actual battle, but DeCandido ties up everything nicely in the end and leaves the reader hungry for more in the third installment of the Gorkon trilogy, "Enemy Territory."

For anyone interested in "Star Trek" and especially those who love the Klingons, I highly recommend the I.K.S. Gorkon book series. Be sure to read "A Good Day To Die" in order to get a solid basis for the entire trilogy.

DeCandido hits back to back home runs
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-02-28
Brad R.A. DeCandido should write every novel focusing on Klingons from here on out. He not only incorporates characters from the televised Star Trek Series (TNG and DS9), but creates his own characters that are thoroughly Klingon and very intriging. I believe KRAD has a better feel for Klingons than any other Star Trek novelist.

Captain Klag has just lost San Tarah though honorable combat after judging the Children of San Tarah as honorable foes in the previous novel "A Good Day to Die." However, the PetaQ General Talak has ordered Klag and his crew to violate their word and surrender their honor as Klingons. Klag decides to call on the Order of the Bat'leth, the age old association that Chancellor Martok has once again commissioned to be the champions of honor within the empire. The resulting battle is one that Klingons will sing operas of for at least a generation.

The writing in this work is of high calibre. The battle scenes are described so vividly, you can picture the ships and subspace eddies in your mind. The San Tarah are developed as a fascinating species who not only have a strong warrior ethic and are highly effective fighters of their own, but as the denoument of this story will show, they also place a very high premium on honor and integrity.

This was a great read and I can't wait to get to installment three "Enemy Territory."

A Review of A Good Day to Die and Honor Bound
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-11-03
The first two books in Kieth R.A. Decandido's new Star Trek series, The I.K.S. Gorkon, are, in reality, one story. These two novels follow the adventures of the Klingon Defense Force ship Gorkon and her captain and crew as they embark on a new mission:


"to explore strange new worlds...
to seek out new life and new civilizations...
...and to conquer them for the greater glory of the Klingon Empire!"

In the beginning, the reader finds himself witnessing the honoring of a ship's captain and the rebirth of an Order. That captain, called Klag son of M'Raq, is being inducted into the esteemed Order of the Bat'leth, an Order devoted to honor and duty and the precepts of the greatest Klingon to ever live: the Emperor Khaless, who created the Klingon sword, the bat'leth, from a lock of his own hair after throwing that lock into a volcano.

More than this, though, Klag and several other captains are ordered to enter a system called Kavrot to find worthy planets on which to plant the Empire's flag. Klag and his crew find such a planet, but then things take quite a change. The natives of this world, called San-Tarah, wish to compete in contests to decide their fate. Should the Klingons win, the San-Tarahns would willingly cede themselves to the Empire. Should they lose, Klag leaves and no Klingon will ever set foot on the planet again.

Of course, nothing is ever so simple as this. Inevitably, there is treachery afoot. Klag's superior does not think much at all of this contest or of the captain himself. What happens to Klag and the San-Tarahns? Read and find out.

This reviewer found the first two books of the I.K.S. Gorkon series to be fast-paced, fun, and very funny at times. It was also very "real", which is not always easy to portray in a sci-fi setting. The characters and their motivations, for the most part, were believable and this reader shouted "'Qapla!" with every success and consigned the villains to Gre'thor every time the crew of the Gorkon met any kind of defeat. The writing was wonderful, with very few editorial mistakes. The settings were vivid, to the point that the reader could feel the grass and smell the blood, hear the battle and taste the smoke and fire in the air, could almost feel the touch of a bat'leth or mik'leth handle wrapped around his fingers. If you like sci-fi novels, and specifically Star Trek novels, pick these two up. You'll be in for a rare treat


Books-Under-Review-->Arts-->Literature-->Authors-->K-->23
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