Poetry Books
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Collectible price: $49.99

Wonderful for ToddlersReview Date: 2008-01-20
BEST NURSERY BOOK EVER!!!Review Date: 2004-02-08
The Tall BookReview Date: 2002-12-02
Yes, indeed, get THIS back in print!Review Date: 2003-08-17
Best Nursery Tales book everReview Date: 2002-04-03
The shape of the book is easy for little hands to manage, the pictures memorable, and the stories are told well and brief; perfect for the pre-schooler it's designed for. There's not another one on the market that can hold a candle to it.

Used price: $5.17
Collectible price: $15.95

Great book!Review Date: 2007-10-18
Super FunReview Date: 2007-08-02
Great fun!!Review Date: 2005-09-04
They've Got RhythmReview Date: 2005-04-29
Love it!! Great for toddlers.Review Date: 2006-01-06

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Sweet storyReview Date: 2008-01-18
Puffin is perfect!Review Date: 2007-11-22
So engaging, my 3-year-old memorized it!Review Date: 2006-06-20
An upbeat story told with energy and gustoReview Date: 2003-10-06
I need this poemReview Date: 2001-01-12

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Chuck Berry Chuck BerryReview Date: 2006-12-26
Vast beautyReview Date: 2003-04-09
A virtuoso verbal performance.Review Date: 2003-09-25
Few Better This YearReview Date: 2003-04-08
SmartSmartSmartReview Date: 2003-03-27


The Thing About This Book Is...Review Date: 2003-10-24
Each piece stands as its own monument to drivel, but taken as a whole, this collection is a masterpiece of unbearable whimpers obliterating unwritten truths. You could learn more about love in a whorehouse. Or a crackhouse, for that matter. My god, whose idea was this wretched tome? And aren't there laws against this kind of tripe?
O.K., the piece by Michael Burke is a gem, but its luster is lost in this tar-black bucket of muck. And who invited that Edward Underhill guy to throw in his two cents' worth? That floundering piece is a miasma of asinine cliches unparalleled in the history of western literature. It would have made more sense to me if the writer (hah!) had presented it in Esperanto. If he is the same Underhill who works as a waiter at that little bistro on Lunt Avenue, he should focus on his tables and leave writing to those whose literary background goes beyond Bazooka Joe bubble gum wrappers.
That's the best and the worst, and the rest aren't worth mentioning, so I won't.
Anyway, buy this book. The Michael Burke piece is worth the few dollars. When you are done with that, maybe you can test my theory and translate Underhill into Esperanto. Just imagine - quantum literature in a universal language. The possibilities abound.
Good Things in a Pretty PackageReview Date: 2000-09-15
Armed for BattleReview Date: 2000-11-23
A Good Book To Curl Up WithReview Date: 2000-10-21
Hallmark Doesn't Live Here AnymoreReview Date: 2000-09-28

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excellent little poetry bookReview Date: 2000-11-14
UntitledReview Date: 2000-10-15
a reviewReview Date: 2000-07-14
A ReviewReview Date: 2000-07-14
Things Thought but never SaidReview Date: 2000-07-07

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Collectible price: $22.00

Through Death to LifeReview Date: 2000-04-21
Anyone in the throes of losing a loved one can catch an early glimpse of their inevitable future and their future past in enough time to use their understanding to enhance their experience of caring for their loved one and to gain assurance that healing will follow after grief.
I put this book in a class with "tuesdays with Morrie", for its insights, sensitivity and ability to console. As a therapist, I will definitely recommend this book to my grieving clients.
I knew Ron's wife Patty and I'm sure she is smiling down on him with pride.
This book is a gem.Review Date: 2000-04-18
An intimate look at a terribly long and difficult journeyReview Date: 2000-05-16
We were neighbors of Patty and Ron from 1969 until 1978, raising kids and playing bridge. Then we knew each other casually. Readers of this book get an intimate look at one man's journey through death to life.
Final years of a beautiful marriage - a truly amazing story!Review Date: 2000-04-26
We were neighbors of Patty and Ron from 1979 until 1988, as we raised our kids and played bridge. Then I knew them casually. Thanks to Ron's book, scratch casually and substitute intimately. Ron is one fantastic man!
Through Death to Life by Ron GriesReview Date: 2000-07-07

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Collectible price: $22.00

Memorable MemoirsReview Date: 2007-05-25
Memorable Memoirs
Amos Lassen and Literary Pride
Michael Klein is an award winning poet and should win awards for his wonderful memoir "Track Conditions". It is both shameless and fascinating. After he followed his lover to an Ohio race track, Michael Klein began a three year career as a groom in the world of horse racing. He managed to bond with the 1984 Kentucky Derby winner, Swale. However he was plague with alcoholism and deeply concerned about his relationship with his lover which was on the skids as well as memories of having been abused as a child. His memoir is a story written from the heart and it is a tale of resilience. Using the race track as a metaphor for life, he shares his joys and his pain.
This is some of the most beautiful writing I have ever read but that does not mean that Klein does not get down and gritty. He holds nothing back as he illuminates his life. His life is not a pretty story--it is filled with excesses--but even so it is beautifully rendered. Here is an honest recreation of a life that is compelling.
We read as Klein succumbs to alcohol and enters a depressive state over lost love, dependency and casual random sex. It is never easy to read coming-of-age stories that are filled with pain but this is a coming-of-age story not to be missed.
It is likewise a story about horses and with the equestrian background we read about a relationship between tow men that are in the midst of deterioration.
The world of horse racing is a homophobic place but Klein managed to survive it and move up along the circuit as a groom. He discovered an affinity for horses and loved them as they loved him. We get to look into the world of horses and learn things that the average person never knows. He refers to the secrets of the world of horses as "racetrack society. The world of horse racing is a gritty and unreal world but it is not just that world that Klein tells us of. He writes of how little was available to a young homosexual with very limited means.
Written in the past tense, the memoir puts a distance between reader and writer from his beginnings until 1984 with quite a shocking ending. Klein makes no evaluations or judgments--he leaves that to the reader.
It is Klein's openness that makes this book so good. He defies the usual conventions of narrative and he is a writer to be cherished. The book is unique and very special and in no way follows the styles of other coming out stories. It is harrowing tale of redemption written by a poet in prose. The chapters are short and amazing and we realize early that there is little chance of resolution to be found. It is not a tell-all memoir--rather it is a half-told life and has something for everyone. It is not a book just for gays but rather a small life story that looms large.
Beautiful, simply beautifulReview Date: 2004-08-28
pure blues and blissReview Date: 2003-10-08
donaldahearn@hotmail.com
The best gay memoir everReview Date: 2001-04-07
A Different Kind of Horse Story: A Million Big StarsReview Date: 2006-04-24
In an age where honesty in memoir seems to be a rare commodity, TRACK CONDITIONS is probably one of the most honest, compelling, and underrated books in print.
A fascinating glimpse into author Michael Klein's downward spiral into alcoholism, lost love, dependency, and casual sex, this lyrical memoir is not an easy read-never easy to read about another person's coming-of-age psychic pain. But this memoir is a must-read.
A real-life thoroughbred horse story, from a former groom's point of view, this memoir focuses on the deteriorating relationship between two young men in the midst of their own personal crises.
In 1979, Klein, a confirmed New Yorker, desperately followed his lover Richard Coatney into the homophobic underworld of thoroughbred racing, beginning his career as a horse walker at River Downs in Cincinnati and working his way up to groomer at Belmont, Churchill Downs, and Pimlico.
Among all the empty booze bottles and one-night stands, Klein discovered an aesthetic affinity for horses, in particular one special--and well-known--thoroughbred, precipitating the author's final downfall and then leading toward his eventual salvation--and this memoir.
Klein leads the reader into a world rarely ventured into by the average horse track bettor: vivid descriptions of lame horses being cruelly euthanized and the casual doping of horses for monetary gain. At the beginning of chapter three, the author summarizes, from his perspective, the visible and invisible aspects of "racetrack society":
"There are people you see all the time: the barn help, the trainers, the exercise crew, the men and women who deliver hay and straw and feed. And there are those you see only rarely, if at all: the jockeys, the parimutuel clerks, the owners, the starting-gate crew. Two worlds: the training world and the racing world."
Ironically, from the reader's perspective, the visibility/invisibility paradigm is directly the opposite from the author's.
And Klein offers insights into worlds which are largely invisible to most of us: in addition to the gritty side of thoroughbred racing, he also reveals the limited options available to an impoverished young homosexual, also a poet and rebel, of the late seventies and early eighties.
First published in 1997, the memoir's main narrative covers the author's racetrack life, from its inauspicious beginning to its shocking 1984 denouement, with some interspersed flashbacks to his abusive and incestuous childhood and Manhattan life with Richard.
While revealing vivid and harsh details about his life, the author maintains a psychic distance from the reader through his dispassionate use of the past tense; moreover, he does not editorialize from the perspective of the forty-something memoirist.
He simply unfolds his story, leaving judgments, analyses, and evaluations up to his readers.
The distance works well; the author never whines or asks his audience to feel sorry for him. He simply presents "in-your-face" statements and facts, like them or hate them.
It doesn't matter what the reader thinks; in the end, Klein, with a metaphorical kick from his equine friend, triumphs.
There is beauty and poignancy in Klein's spare prose, yet glimmers of humor add some comic relief, for example, when he describes some of the other grooms and other track people and recounts some his late mother's family stories.
I recommend this book for both gays and straights--anyone who appreciates a well-written life-story, no matter how down and gritty.
I own the 1997 hardcover edition, and it is worth every one of the twenty-two dollars that I paid for it.

Used price: $4.29

A KeeperReview Date: 2008-05-24
Excellent Intro to PoertyReview Date: 2007-07-29
Beautiful BookReview Date: 2003-04-19
The Tree is Older Than You Are: A Bilingual Gathering of PoReview Date: 2001-08-07
Beautiful Words and Inspiring Art!Review Date: 2001-09-07

Used price: $0.01

Amazing! Mr. Gaiman - please do more of these audio plays!Review Date: 2006-08-03
Gaiman got gameReview Date: 2002-11-08
The two plays in this package provided my wife and I the best entertainment we were going to get while being stuck in 8 hours of traffic. Finally I got my wife to pay attention to Neil's stuff (she refused to read Sandman)and she dug it.
If you like books on tape, this is better. If you like reading Neil's work, you'll like it even better this way.
Neil, if you're reading this...can we have some more of these?
Two tellings of disturbing (and enjoyable) tales...Review Date: 2004-07-12
"Snow Glass Apples" was a re-telling of Snow White with a ghastly vampiric twist, and from the voice of the Queen, who is anything but the Disnified villainess we've come to know and loathe. Snow White is herself a disturbing figure, and all in all, this was a very enjoyable re-telling of a classic, if a tad gruesome in its telling and conclusion.
"Murder Mystery" I found quite wonderful - it is a tale that includes the investigation of the first murder ever - an angel has been killed, and another angel is called to investigate. The B-plot story, however, just plain didn't make sense.
If I had to break them into two parts, "Snow Glass Apples" would get a '5' and "Murder Mystery" would get a '3.' Hence the '4.'
'Nathan
Seeing Ear TheatreReview Date: 2003-02-03
Murder Mysteries is expertly presented and the twist at the end is a surprise to say the least.
Snow Glass Apples is a shivery fairy tale which cuts to the core of good vs. evil and that some things aren't always what they seem.
Gaiman got gameReview Date: 2002-11-08
The two plays in this package provided my wife and I the best entertainment we were going to get while being stuck in 8 hours of traffic. Finally I got my wife to pay attention to Neil's stuff (she refused to read Sandman)and she dug it.
If you like books on tape, this is better. If you like reading Neil's work, you'll like it even better this way.
Neil, if you're reading this...can we have some more of these?
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