Novels Books


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Novels
The Kingdoms & the Elves of the Reaches II (Keeper Martin's Tales, Book 2)
Published in Paperback by Reagent Press (2002-04-01)
Author: Robert Stanek
List price: $14.00
New price: $5.35
Used price: $1.67

Average review score:

It's a fantastic book to read
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-24
Better than Potter and Narnia! I love this series as much as my kids (ages 16, 13, and 10) and this is the book when I knew this would be my favorite series for a long long time. Robert Stanek doesn't have flowery prose but he does have incredibly great writing. The characters and the world are what I loved the most, but I also love all the twists and turns. Like Harry, Hermione and Ron, you can't help but love Vilmos, Adrina and Seth. But the incredibly good cast of characters doesn't end there. There's also Emel, Myrial, Xith, Galan and more. The villains come out in this one too. With the evil shapeshifting queen making many appearances. Bravo Robert on a job well done.

Even better than the first one!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-17
My library carries this book on Playaway and it was recommended to me by the librarian as "an entertaining, well-written fantasy story for all ages." I found out the book was also highly recommended by Voya and is something of a pop phenom as it is also mentioned in "Complete Idiots Guide to Elves and Fairies" and "Ancient Art of Fairy Magick".

I enjoyed listening to the story so much I decided to buy the book. The audio was wonderful and I loved how the characters came to life and the reading was excellent. Like the audio, the book is of exceptional quality with its dozens of full-page illustrations and illustrated end notes.

This second book continues right where the cliffhanger in the first book left off. Again, the story revolves around three central characters: Adrina, Vilmos, and Seth. It tells their story as the story of their imperiled worlds unfolds. Adrina is a young princess who has everything and nothing. Vilmos is a mischievous village boy. Seth is a powerful warrior elf.

As with the first book, this second book has many twists and turns that make for wonderful reading. Stanek continues to show a strong command of language and excels at building mystery and intrigue. The reader can't help but feel they are right there in this rich fantasy world. You feel for Adrina as she starts to see the world in new ways. Your heart wrenches for Vilmos when he is chased by shapeshifters called wolmerrele. Your gut aches when Seth is betrayed.

Stanek has a knack for writing strong prose. There are enough details to see everything that's going on but not so much the story is bogged down. The dialogue continues to be excellent as well and it's one of the reasons the story works so well in audio.

I highly recommend The Kingdoms and the Elves of the Reaches II (Reader's Choice Edition, Keeper Martin's Tales Book 2) (Keeper Martin's Tales) but don't miss The Kingdoms and the Elves of the Reaches (Reader's Choice Edition, Keeper Martin's Tales Book 1) (Keeper Martin's Tales). You need to start with the first one to understand the story.

I also recommend

The Kingdoms and the Elves of the Reaches III (Reader's Choice Edition, Keeper Martin's Tales Book 3) (Keeper Martin's Tales)

The Kingdoms and the Elves of the Reaches IV (Reader's Choice Edition, Keeper Martin's Tales Book 4) (Keeper Martin's Tales)

Over all an excellent series and like C. S. Lewis's Narnia this is one story everyone should read at least once in their life. If you are looking for a good read or listen, I don't see how you can go wrong with this one.

Astounding Read For All Ages
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 32 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-16
The second volume in Stanek's popular "Keeper Martin's Tales" continues the story begun in The Kingdoms and the Elves of the Reaches. Vilmos the unlikely mage and Xith, his mentor, are journeying toward destiny while Adrina, the young princess of another land, is caught up in the struggles to save her people as she journeys south. Seth, the leader of the elves, is in trouble, and all hope for him and his people seems lost.

Stanek's skill as a wordsmith shines in this one. There is a large cast of characters and complex story lines, yet the clear thoughtful prose makes the plot easy to follow. Readers must be familiar with the first novel before beginning this sequel.

Preparing for a Storm
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 35 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-10
Stanek definitely has outdone himself in the second installment of his Quartet. Overall, The Kingdoms and the Elves of the Reaches 2 was a great second installment to the set, staying true to the series and providing decent plot development. It did give more details into the storyline than The Kingdoms and the Elves of the Reaches but it still kept the reader hooked! I loved all imagary and description. Dean and I could sit and read it for hours you should get the Audio books as well the narrator really helps you feels the emotion the author is trying to convey.

BEST series of the decade
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 32 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-29
To sum it up in one word: AMAZING!!! I discovered this author about four years back when I read his "The Kingdoms and the Elves of the Reaches #1." I've since read everything he's written and have multiple editions of each. My favorite editions of the illustrated ones - all of the illustrated ones are top shelf.

Many reasons to like a good Stanek novel have been pointed out in the reviews. His prose is spare yet his descriptions are sharp. He is a master storyteller and able to create whole worlds and whole characters. The plots of his books are well paced with many twists and turns.

In this book, the many threads finally come together fully and the reader finds out exactly what's happening (at least part of it). Adrina meets back up with Emel. The elves arrive. Vilmos gets to use his magic. Lots more. I was surprised when I got to In the Service of Dragons and found some of the things foreshadowed here come to fruition.

Highly recommended.

Novels
Last Days of Summer: A Novel
Published in Library Binding by (2008-06-26)
Author: Steve Kluger
List price: $22.00
New price: $22.00

Average review score:

I'm heartbroken
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-13
My introduction to Steve Kluger was with "Almost Like Being In Love." The format threw me for a bit, but, once used to the manner in which the author was to tell his story, I went on to enjoy this delightful story. Next came this book..."Last Days of Summer." I found the author's website and wrote him an e-mail; I was about thirty pages short of the book's end at that moment. I sent another e-mail after finishing the book, heartbroken by the story's ending, yet having thoroughly been moved by spending time with such wonderfully fleshed-out characters. Read the book...no, I'd go so far as to say, "Read anything by Steve Kluger." He's a great storyteller...combining both humor and pathos expertly.

Good, breezy read
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-27
What's the difference between a Young Adult (YA) and a regular ol' adult novel? In this case, only a few words and phrases. Otherwise, this book contains all of the standard YA elements.

The wisecracking loner main character? Check. (Though he becomes less of a loner as the story progresses.) The dysfunctional but eccentrically entertaining family? Check. The unlikely good influence with issues of his own? Check? The Tragic Moment? Check. Only a sprinkling of f-bombs and other salty language keeps "The Last Days of Summer" off high school library shelves everywhere. It's like something Avi would write, only earthier.

This is not to say that it's a poor or childish book. Far from it. The notes & letters format, the imminently likeable characters, and the breezy plot pull you in quickly, making it hard to put it down. Nothing really happens that you didn't expect would happen, yet the ride in so enjoyable that you won't mind.

One thing that really annoyed me was that all of the letters, notes, and whatever used to create the book are written in the same sardonically streetwise style. The two main characters writing similarly is understandable, since their similarity is what brings them together. But Wilke-supporting conservative schoolteachers and busy US Army commanders writing report card comments and internal memos in the same style as witty young Joey Margolis? It's a stretch.

But that's a minor quibble. Overall, I enjoyed this book a lot and would recommend it to anyone who doesn't mind just a little coarseness about the edges.

Tossed the Bookmark
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-20
Been reading Last Days of Summer for a couple of months now. Don't use a bookmark in order to lose my place every time I pick it up. I don't want to finish it! It's that good and I'm going to miss it like a great old friend, when it's read.

Oddly enough, the rereading works pretty well. "Last Days" is filled with so much humor, charm, silliness and stats that I find new life in every old chapter I misread - although misread is the wrong word. I do it on purpose.

It's about baseball. It's about the 40s, Broadway with Merman, coming of age in Brooklyn, Hollywood pin-ups, coping with bullies, FDR and Eleanor, The Green Hornet, The Shadow, Reese and Di Magio, and resistance to blending concurrent American cultures. But, mostly, it's about baseball, serving as father-figure for growth.

I still don't know where fantasy ends and reality begins here - or how it`s combined. But, that's why I won't finish. I don't want the world that's been created for me to be explained just yet. For now, I just want to continue living here for as long as I can.

Mr. Kluger, thank you! And MKA, thank you for finding it for me.

Great book!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-08
This is one of my favorite books. I usually don't read a book more than once, but I've read this one a couple of times. I recommend it highly.

Most Enjoyable
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-21
I can not remember when I enjoyed reading a book so much. I probably should not have been reading it while working out at the gym. I was getting some very odd looks as I laughed aloud.

The book takes place from 1940-42, formative years in the life of Joey Margolis, an extremely precocious 12 year old Jewish boy growing up in Brooklyn. He is a prolific letter writer and an even more prolific schemer and wiseacre. Joey decides that he is going to get the NY Giants' new third baseman and phenom, Charlie Banks, to take him on a road trip and the scheming letters begin. The entire book is in the form of letters to and from the characters - including FDR and his press secretary. Eventually Banks becomes something of a big brother to the boy and the wisdom that is interchanged in the letters between the 24 year old and 12 year old is priceless. Joey even gets the young Protestant star to stand in for his father at his Bar Mitzvah!

This is not the typical book about being Jewish in Brooklyn in the 40's. Those are merely props to the story and in the relationship. It is about a wonderful relationship. What starts as pure hilarity becomes poignant. Most amazingly, the poignancy does not diminish the hilarity and laughter will continue until the last few pages. Although the ending is a bit predictable, it could not have ended any other way.

Once you pick this book up, you will have a hard time putting it down. It will carry you laughing all the way until... Highly recommended. Sometimes you just have to wonder why a book is not a bestseller.

Novels
The Sunne in Splendour: A Novel of Richard III
Published in Library Binding by (2008-05-16)
Author: Sharon Kay Penman
List price: $26.95
New price: $26.95

Average review score:

A Wonderful Read
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-10-07
Dealing with complex issues, a distant time, and unfamiliar (to me) names, this author knocked it out of the park. This book is absorbing from its first page to its last. While managing to tell the not-uncomplicated story of the Wars of the Roses, the author creates compelling, even sympathetic, characters. Her research is obviously well-done, as her descriptions of everyday life in that long-ago time were vivid and fascinating.
I loved this book.

The Sunne in Splendour
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-23
15 years ago a friend loaned me this book and I fell in love with this talented author's writing. After this book I read everything available by Sharon Kay Penman and then began to read anything to do with British medieval history.

Penman painstakingly researched her subjects and brought them to life as no one else could. I fell in love with Richard who as a 5 year old boy lost in the woods proved his absolute loyality to his older brother. This is the brother who would become Edward IV. He was willing to say he was in the wrong rather then get his shining brother, "Ned" into trouble with their mother.

He faced the horrors of war, the loss of his father and brother in a brutal massacre and he became a great, loyal, honorable man. I despise the stories that claim he was a hunchback with a withered arm. As if any man who could fight with a broad sword and lead men into battle would be anything less then a strong fighter in his own right.

The years that Richard suffered to prepare both mind and body to be worthy of a great knight are proof that he had to be in superb condition. But the lies that Henry VII put out were believed by Shakespeare and used to malign him further in history.

It's such a wonderful tale of love, battles, defeat, glory, men who fall lose everything & fight their way back, wonderful women and the greed of the Queen's family that helped bring down the dynasty.

I can't believe it has not been made into a movie. What is wrong with Hollywood? We see so many movies with men and armor fighting with broadswords. Everyone loves these stories. Will someone wake up?

I have 2 favorite books and this is one of them.

Worth every tear
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-13
I loved these characters, and thanks to Sharon Kay Penman, wanted more for these people than life had given them. When fiction, history and life can so perfectly mesh, a true and rare treat is waiting for you to pick it up and read it.

One of my many favorites
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-08
I read this book about 25 years ago and am pleased that I am enjoying it very much again! She writes very well. In the meantime, I have becomes convinced by reading new studies of the subject, that she has the wrong guy killing the "Princes in the Tower", but she's such a good writer and builds her story and "case" very well, so I am going to enjoy it anyway!

Bravo!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-20
I bought this book for my Kindle and am besotted with it.

I read it then read it for the second time without pausing and am now more than half way through a third reading. It is intoxicating and addictive. The language is glorious, the ambience exact and the characters full bloodied and three dimensional. Ms Penman seems to have used Kendall as her primary source and what excellent use she has made of his biography of Richard! I am left wordless with admiration at the skill with which she weaves the complex strands of the dynastic civil wars into a coherent tapestry of such great beauty.

I would recommend this book to any reader hunting for a richly detailed and thoroughly engrossing tale. It is quite truly one of those "couldn't put it down" books which come along only too rarely in today's world. My only complaint is that more of Ms Penman's works are not available for the Kindle. I would like to have her complete collection available to carry around with me to read whenever I chose.

Novels
My Soul to Keep
Published in Hardcover by Harpercollins (1997-06)
Author: Tananarive Due
List price: $24.00
New price: $15.00
Used price: $1.99
Collectible price: $45.00

Average review score:

You Won't Be Able To Put This Book Down!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-06
This book was fabulous! I couldn't put it down! I finished it in 2 days (stupid work! I'd have finished it in 1 day if I didn't have to go!!). I've always seen books about immortals as vampire, gross, bloody books. This one is not that way at all. It's cleverly written, everthing has an underlying meaning. While you read, keep notes on facts...you will have "aha!" moments later!!

Great Concept. Great Story.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-27
My Soul to Keep grabs you and moves with descriptive style as if you are one of the characters. There are several stories within the story that end up intertwined later. The Jazz musician, the slave , the Ethiopian, the professor, the perfect husband and the immortal all of these characters were David also known as Dawit.There are bumps and bruises along the way with murders to cover up his "immortality", David was loved and was "Mr. Perfect" where did it all go wrong? When he fell in love and wanted to give the gift of life to his wife and child? Or when his wife stumbled on the mysterious death of his daughter Rosalie?

There were hints from "Grandpa" who's always eating a Whopper. When looking back on it I think the author used Grandpa to soften the anticipated, almost expected, blow of Kira's death. This was definitely painful to witness. I was frustrated with the speed of the unfolding. I wanted more time with Kira and to offer advice to the characters on how they could save her. Almost yelling at the book! I lost track of time reading the final chapters and couldn't put it down until I was finished.

The story leaves you hanging with several lose ends. What is Jessica doing sharing the living blood with terminal children in Africa? Was she in mourning over Kira and wanted to help as many kids as she could? Why was she so short with David when he came to visit? Will she go after him soon? I think she will. The new child seems even more powerful and superior then his immortal parents. Knowing that there is a sequel is comforting. B/c there are several more stories to be told.....

Overall it's a very good book. I would put it in the top 10 for sure. I can't wait to start the sequel.


Amazing Work
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-08
Due is an amazing author and I can't wait to see the film adaptation of this book.

The Horror
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-24
Filled with deep spiritual questions, these Tananrive Due horror novels (The Between, My Soul to Keep, and Living Blood) make my blood run cold and give me real goose bumps. It takes alot to make that happen.

An all-time favorite
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-13
I am an avid African American fiction & non-fiction reader. However, I never could get into sci-fi-type novels. My Soul to Keep changed my mind forever. I was hooked before the end of the first chapter, and read it in one night. I wanted more...and got it later. During that first read, I experienced so many different emotions: happiness, fear, anxiety, etc. That's a rare thing for me.

I think the problem with the other books that others would compare M S to K to was that the basis of the stories were unbelievable to me. Tananarive Due did an excellent job of making the story believable (at least to me) and taking me on a journey that had me addicted. I cannot wait for the third installment to come out in June!

Novels
Salamandastron: A Novel of Redwall
Published in Mass Market Paperback by Ace Books (1994-04-01)
Author: Brian Jacques
List price: $7.99
New price: $0.89
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $10.00

Average review score:

Great!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-30
At one time, this was my favorite redwall book. It was also the first redwall book I read all of. In this book, the fearless badger lord Urthstripe the Strong leads his army of long patrol hares in a battle against the cruel Ferahgo the Assasin. Read this book, it's great!

Different Size than others
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-04
While the book itself is very good (according to my 12 yr. old son), the size is different than the rest and he likes things orderly (especially since there are so many in this series) so we ended up going out and purchasing the same book, but by "Ace" publishers so they would all fit on his bed shelf.

The Book of Salamandstron
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-16
The Book of Salamandstron



Salamandstron, written by Brian Jacques in 1992 and published in 1993, is the fifth book in the Redwall Series. Like all Redwall books, Salamandstron is an animal adventure saga, which picturesquely describes a stunning tale set in medieval times. Intently, because of the strength of the story line, the reader will continue on through the book, like a bookworm, to find out what happens in the end When finished the person who examines this book, will have perused 391 obsessive pages, which, as interpreted, would have taken the reader through the world of Redwall.



Since the book, at times, tells five different stories, there are several different main characters and several antagonists. The first main character to be introduced is Lord Uthstripe the Strong, the Badger lord of Salamandstron, a mountain fortress. The Badgers lords of this massive mountain are mysterious characters. They are fierce fighters and reckless worries, who at times can be possessed by the terrible blood wrath and kill all in sight. Uthstrip's adopted daughter Mara, at the beginning of the book, was not content with her life at Salamandstron. The military fortress was strict and forcible, and Mara did not like her restrictions. Samkin, a young squirrel, contentedly lived at Redwall Abbey. In the beginning he was very mischievous and many times because of his carelessness, almost caused serous injuries. Ferahgo was an evil, cruel, pain-causing tyrant, who was the assassin weasel and chieftain of the horde of corps makers. Cruelly he Murdered Urthstripes parents and caused Urthstripe and his albino brother to be separated. Ferahgo's son Klitch was just as evil and crafty as his father. Fighting against each other, both wanted control of Salamandstron. Another enemy (although not a living creature) gets introduced about half way through the book. A terrible sickness called Dryditch Fever takes hold of the Abbey. It almost wipes out all. Although the characters all have different story lines within the book, each one is tied together in the end.



Opening at Salamandstron, the story begins with gloom. From the first, as Urthstripe reveals his anxiety for Mara with the words "Any sign of Mara yet?" it tells of Mara's discontentedness with the strictly ruled life she is living. It opens with her gone on one of her frequent run-a-ways. When she returns after two days absence from the mountain she brings two vermin, one of them Klitch, who falsely befriended her. Urthstripe throws the weasel and his companion out of the mountain, and Mara becomes so angry that she runs away for good. Accidentally (at Redwall) Samkin finds the skillfully crafted sword of the Legendary Hero, Martin the Warrior, but two stoats evilly steal the magnificent sword. The vermin were part of Ferahgo's horde but deserted. Samkin and Arula (Samkin's mole friend) chase after the stoats because the sword, which they took, represents the spirit of Redwall and could not be lost. They met some peculiar friends. Back at the Abbey Dry Ditch Fever broke out. Everywhere, from Salamandstron to Redwall Abbey trouble seemed to be taking hold of the good guys.



As the book continues the troubles grow worse. Mara, after being chased by Ferahgo's horde, escapes, but was betrayed into the hands of King Glagweb, the head of a cannibal toad tribe. Unfortunately she and several shrews, which were also caught, were going to be served up at a special occasion. Back at Redwall Thrugg, a brave otter set out on a journey to the mountains of the north to try to find the Icetor Flowers, which will cure any sickness. Sadly, however he gets trapped. Attacking him, a horde of crows in a pine forest almost overwhelmed Thrugg and his little friend baby Dumble. Samkin and his mole friend Arula were still persistently chasing after the vermin who stole the sword, when, one died of Dryditch fever and the other was killed by Ferahgo's tracker rats. The head of the trackers took the sword and headed back to Ferahgo's horde, but Samking and Arula still followed. They followed to get back the sword, they followed for their friends at the abbey, and they followed to slay the takers of Martins legendary blade. At Redwall Abbey, as dry ditch fever took victim after victim, all but two or three animals were stricken. At Salamandstron there was great famine because Ferahgo who besieged the mountain somehow destroyed or poisoned all the mountains food. Will Redwall Abbey be wiped out, or will Thrugg get back in time with the Icetor flowers? Will Mara and her friends be eaten or will they find a way to escape? Will Samkin retrieve the great sword? Will Salamandstron hold out? To discover what happens, READ THE BOOK!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!



If The book Salamandstron is amazing it is because it seizes and holds the readers attention. Having a good story line, this book is extremely well written. Undoutedly, another reason this book is so good is because Brian Jacques uses very descriptive adjectives and excellent verbs as illustrations for every scene. The story builds up suspense. Throughout, it never contradicts itself. The story is very vivid. Salamandstron is not just a book, which might be ok to glance over; it is a must-read saga.

Amazing Adventures
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-09
What would you do if you were being attacked by an army of vermin, or your abbeys most prized possession, or if your abbey was being threatened by a deadly disease? Would you defend yourselves, find an antidote, or would you go after the possession? Well that is exactly what the charaters in this story did. This little world is filled with badgers, hares, vermin, mice, moles, shrews and squirrels. Also thisworld is also filled with a volcanoe, woods, seas, dunes, lakes, rivvers and enormous mountians.

In this fantasy a bagder named Mara left her home because her strict father was always punishing her. When she left, her friend ccame along with her. His name was Pikkle. On their journey they met two vermin who became frineds with them so they woild lead them to Salamandastron )(Mara's fathers fortress). There had been many rumors that there is a great fortune somewhere inside the volcanoe. So now the vermin were going to attack the fortress. Another two vermin acted as if they were lonely travelers (but they really weren't) and went to Redwall and the Red wallers accepted them. They tricked the Redwallers and stole the sword of Martin the Warrior also killing one of the Redwallers. When the vermin escaped one of them died of a deadly disease. He got the disease while at Redwall and now the Redwallers are at great risk.

What will happen to everyone? Will Salamandastron survive? Will the Redwallers perish? Will they get the sword back? This book was relly good and every time it would sound good, it would change to someone else. I would really recommend this book to anyone who enjoys fantasy, action, and adventure. This is the fifth book of the 17 book series.

-Peyton

Salamandastron
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-12-09
I like salamandastron for many reasons.0ne is the book has lots of action .the bookis writen by Brian Jacques.This book is fantasy because animals have human abiltys.brian writes many more books.

Novels
A Grief Observed
Published in Leather Bound by Easton Press (2003)
Author:
List price:
New price: $111.95
Used price: $40.00
Collectible price: $750.00

Average review score:

Not, "When Bad Things Happen to Good People"
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-10
Lost a child. C. S. asks me to work very hard. I can't do it. Kushner gets to the heart of grief.

Best book for grief
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-31
This book obviously already has plenty of praising views, but I read this book and found it so great that I can't live with myself if I don't write a review. Coming from a kid who grieved a traumatic death, this book *IS* the book to buy if you're grieving, want to understand death, or want to find a book to help out a confused friend (no matter what age) who's grieving. It's worth the price.

Deep
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-05
I am new to the genius of CS Lewis. I read the Narnia series as a kid, but have not read books for years, until recently. This book was deep, and full of the genius Lewis is known for. He expresses the pain of losing his wife, and the questions that those who mourn often work through, but are too guilty to express publically. The work is awesome, and may help some who are going through similar feelings of greif. Skip the aknowlegement at the beginning by Madeline Engle, I am not familiar with her writing, but have heard the name. I am surprised she was chosen to write the aknowlegement, but it is an amusing contrast to Lewis' intellect and spiritual understanding. The aknowlegement exudes an attitude of confidence in spiritual issues, yet reveals a cluelessness and spiritual blindess found largely in todays new age books. It does not belong in a CS Lewis book.

Raw and true
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-18
CS Lewis looks death into the face; he does not flinch and does not console himself with platitudes. He had lost the love of his life and his pain is palpable to the reader. This is a raw and honest book but it is not at all depressing: At the end of the book, Lewis begins to recover: his wish is simply that, on his own death bed, his lover will come back to him and give him the consolation of seeing her face again.

A Book of Great Beauty and Intelligence
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-23
Although Lewis was, of course, a renowned and devout Christian, this book will speak to anyone who's lost someone with whom they shared real love. All of the questions, angers, and doubts that fill the mind during the numbing time following great loss are shared in the first person, generously, by Lewis. This is, I think, a beautiful, powerful, and deeply healing work.

Novels
The Prospect of My Arrival - Amazon Breakthrough Novel Award Finalist
Published in Digital by Amazon (2007-12-31)
Author: Dwight okita
List price: $0.00
New price: $0.00

Average review score:

The Prospect of My New Arrival
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-05
The story is very unique. It allows your to explore a new and mysterious world yet also helps you think and try to understand more about life. Whether life could be simple or complicated, you feel like you are interacting in the voyage of the story. -by Sokhom Cheng

An Amazing Piece
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-01
This was one of the most exciting tales I've read in recent years. I can't wait to read the whole thing!

Intriguing Prospect
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-01
In The Prospect of My Arrival Dwight Okita deftly lures the reader into thinking about whether freedom to choose one's parents would result in a happier human being and a society that is happier and better adjusted. Given the current state of our violent, mean spirited society, it is certainly an intriguing notion. Dwight's fast moving plot and interesting characters are reason enough to want to finish this reading. However, just as one settles into enjoying the vivid descriptions and dialogue, Dwight slips in an interesting thought or not so subtle critique of society. I already have visions of a blockbuster movie! Great job, Dwight

a voice both fresh and consistent
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-01
I've been a fan of Dwight Okita's writing for a long time -- in fact, I published his play THE RAINY SEASON in my anthology ASIAN AMERICAN DRAMA: NINE PLAYS. His novel, THE PROSPECT OF MY ARRIVAL, bears both the freshness and the consistency of Dwight's voice. Marked with a lyric humor and a realism about the world, a gentle wit and an honesty about sexuality, THE PROSPECT OF MY ARRIVAL doesn't just read smoothly -- it makes readers feel smoother over the course of the reading. PROSPECT affirms our common humanity even as it glories in how unique we all are.

Bravo Dwight .
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-31
Dwight Okita's story of Prospect whose pre-birth choice of family is a brilliant way of showing us the connection we so often miss which could lead to more pleasure , more hope- even love - in our lives. Dwight has a gift of creating an image with which one can almost merge and be lifted to a higher level of understanding.It is a great story!

Bravo,Dwight!

Ms. Diane Korhonen

Novels
Electra Lucas: Crisis in Space
Published in Digital by Amazon (2007-12-20)
Author: Keith Zabalaoui
List price: $0.00
New price: $0.00

Average review score:

Pioneers aboard the HOPE
Helpful Votes: 14 out of 20 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-09
Some of the best adventure stories are about pioneers leaving all that's known and embarking on a new life. "Electra Lucas: Crisis in Space" is that kind of story. A massive ship, the HOPE, carries passengers and crew to establish the first off-Earth colony in the Alpha Centauri system. While the colonists and crew are deep in cryo-sleep, an eight-year-old boy wakens and fends for himself on the ship for five years.

When the ship's systems arouse the captain and crew, they follow the boy's trail. There are many questions to be answered: what did the boy smuggle into his sleeping tube and why was his cryo-sleep aborted? Does he have a companion on the ship? What will he be like after five years alone? Will the welfare of the new colony be at risk? Why are the colonists leaving Earth?

This opening from author Keith Zabalaoui reads like the adventure story it clearly is. As in the best sci-fi, the technology is woven seamlessly into the story. The HOPE is a collaboration by forty-three nations and carries everything needed to establish a self-sustaining colony; I was fascinated by the eco-domes, eight complete ecosystems tended by hovering robot-drones. So much more to be learned about this future-world -- I wish I were reviewing the entire book and not just an excerpt.

However intriguing the premise and plot, this opening owes much of its success to Zabalaoui's crisp, allusive writing. All the reader's senses are engaged: "The ship's intercom trilled... " "...the colors, the smell of the loam laced with pine and dampness, and the myriad sounds of life..." Leading the way to the lost boy, "the drones ... floated like glowing breadcrumbs in the sky." The characters are well-rounded for this early stage of the story and I look forward to seeing how they deal with their predicament.

Premise, plot, characters, terrific writing -- and a fifth star because I wanted this story to go on and on.

Linda Bulger, 2008

Riveting sci-fi story! Can't wait for more!
Helpful Votes: 17 out of 22 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-08
Wow! What a gem of a story about the future and space travel. Electra Lucas: Crisis in Space gripped me from the first sentence and pulled me through the story as smoothly as ... well, as a spaceship gliding through outer space. Wondering what significance William's "lucky charm" would have on the colossal enterprise these space travelers were embarking on kept me riveted. I couldn't read fast enough! I needed to know if the boy was in danger. Was the ship in danger?

Even though warned that nothing could be in his "cold-sleep tube" with him, the eight-year-old boy innocently brought a shiny, dented object aboard. Could his action imperil the success of Earth's first attempt to colonize another planet? What is this strange object? Why is William released from his cryogenic sleep before the appointed time? Why do the ship's emergency wake-up routines start reviving Hope's senior officers before their time? And how long has it been between the boy's release and the officers'? What do they find on awakening? Something has occurred, but what? Has the ship been compromised? Is the colonization in jeopardy? But most important to me: Is William okay? Will he be the same boy or has he been changed somehow?

I'm intrigued by this excerpt from Author Keith Zabalaoui's fascinating, smooth-paced novel. He shows a lot of promise and will someday be a force to be reckoned with in the literary field. His plot is truly imaginative, creative and original; his dialog sincere and realistic; his description dramatic and inspiring. One example: "The shiny object, itself still cold, glowed fiercely--so brightly that the veins and bones in the boy's hand could be seen clearly. But there was no one awake to witness what was happening--no one conscious to see the brilliant red light that was now beaming out of the capsule, illuminating the whole cryonics bay with an eldritch glow."

How's that for high drama! And if that isn't enough, wait until you read about the elite military unit called the Wild Ones. The ship's security officer hails from that unit and has "zebra stripes." But you'll have to read for yourself to learn what that means and how it came about, a fascinating story in itself.

Zabalaoui gives minute details about the ship that bring the scenes to life. He has the usual assemblage of crew who seem like caring people. He's fleshing them out as the story moves along, but it's too early in the book to tell if he manages to deviate from the stereotypical ship's captain, doctor and other crew members. If this sample of his writing is any indicator, I have a feeling his characters will all come alive with their own personalities and characteristics. I already empathize with William, his mother and the captain ... to the point that I can't wait to read the finished product. I hope this book is published--soon!

Electra Lucas: Crisis in Space is for young adults, but I know many adults who think this has potential to be among the best sci-fi novels on the market.

Reviewed by: Betty Dravis
author of: The Toonies Invade Silicon Valley

Finally a both plausible and gripping Science Fiction story
Helpful Votes: 20 out of 34 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-08
This exciting, captivating, and intelligently narrated Science Fiction story pulled me right in just within just a few paragraphs.

I loved this story for a lot of reasons; one of them being that the story was scientifically believable. Travel faster then the speed of light, hyper space jumps, travel backwards in time, and similar "Space travel cheating" might be fun if you don't know much about Science, but can be irritating and boring if you do. Zabalaoui displays true imagination and creativity when he comes up with an interstellar space travel concept that is scientifically plausible and still tickles your imagination. This makes it possible to relax so that you can allow yourself to become absorbed in the story.

Zabalaoui describes interstellar space travel as it actually might happen a hundred or a few hundred years from now, and that was one of the reasons this excerpt was so enjoyable. The ship seems to be travelling at a speed of about 30% of light speed which indicates to me that Zabalaoui understands Astro-Physics. In my opinion the best Science Fiction is scientifically plausible. Zabalaoui also succeeds in creating a sense of awe with his entertaining and grandiose descriptions of the ship, the domes, and the systems. I found the descriptions of the gigantic space ship with all its features and controls to be mesmerising and delightful.

The other reasons I loved this story was the clever and intriguing plot which grabbed my attention instantly, and the way Zabalaoui was able to make me strongly empathise with the characters. I simply had to find out what would happen next. Once you start reading this story it is impossible to stop.

***************************SPOILER ALERT***************************
**However, the plot details divulged below are already mentioned in other reviews**

The story begins with a frightening drama when an eight year old boy awakens prematurely while in cryogenic sleep and ends up wandering the space ship totally alone for five years. Eventually the systems awaken the senior officers when an alarm is set off. They soon discover that the young boy has been alone on the ship for five years, but they don't know where he is. They begin searching for him and awaken his parents. As a parent myself, I could imagine the tremendous helplessness and worries that the parents must have experienced when they realized that their boy has had to survive on his own for five years without any contact with other humans. What has happened to their little boy and where is he?

When this story is finally published I am going to be among the first customers.

Excellent!
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-18
Imagine a space ship built specifically for colonization on another planet, one that could be taken apart in space and reconstructed on the planet below. A space ship so large people move about on trams, with almost all species of insects and animals from Earth on board. And people who can take on animal characteristics, such as a man with zebra stripes and fur. Where people are put to sleep in cryotubes for the duration of the trip. But what if there's an intruder on board for five years, roaming the space ship while the other human inhabitants sleep? What would happen to this lone person? How would they survive?

This is absolutely one of the best Amazon Shorts I've read to date. Zabalaoui creates his futuristic world in such a realistic fashion it is easy to imagine becoming part of it. His visual imagery and colorful descriptives enhance this thrilling plot, which leaves the reader hungry for more. Highly recommended.

Wonderful hard sci-fi debut from a promising writer!
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-05
Earth is taking its first steps into deep space. The Hope, the most advanced ship ever built but still called The Forlorn Hope by some pessimistic wags back on earth, is carrying Earth's first interstellar pioneers to Alpha Centauri. The scientists and their families on board, as yet deep in a cryogenically induced suspended animation, are on a one way no return trip to establish earth's first colony outside of our own solar system. As the basis for a sci-fi novel it's a simple enough idea - a cynical potential reader might even say mundane and too often repeated. But Zabaloui has opened his story with an exciting flourish that will grip a reader by the lapels and haul him head first into a superbly written and entirely gripping hard sci-fi introduction. One of the cryogenic sleep tubes has failed and young William Bonnie, only 8 years old when he entered cold sleep, awakens and finds himself alone on the ship. Five years later, the computerized systems awaken the Hope's senior officers who are shocked to discover that an eight year old boy has been wandering the ship alone for five years. The excerpt ends as Bonnie's frightened but absolutely determined mother attempts to find the boy who, now thirteen years old and possibly mentally unbalanced as a result of his long time alone on the ship, may not even recognize his family.

First time author Zabaloui seems to have already mastered the basic writing dictum of "Show, don't tell". His descriptions of the ship, the mechanical failure, the bio-domes and the environmental controls are wonderful and are bound to delight any hardcore sci-fi geek to his very toes. I was especially fond of Zabaloui's unique idea of genetically enhancing the members of an elite military unit called "The Wild Ones" - an increase in their speed, endurance, perception and toughness was engineered by the addition of certain animal genes which also, of course, altered their appearance in rather startling fashion (I could already picture what a movie director and his special effects team might do with this. It brought back very happy memories from a time long, long ago and a place far, far away. Do you remember the bar scene in the first "Star Wars" movie?)

If the purpose of an opening chapter in a novel is to hook the reader, draw him into the story and provide an overall framework for the story to come, Zabaloui has certainly succeeded. No doubt about his writing skill - he's already proven that. Now if his imagination is up to the task of providing a novel length plot that is up to the standard of the opening chapters, then Zabaloui will have a winner on his hands. I'm in and I'll certainly be in the line to buy a copy of the finished story when he's found his publisher.

Highly recommended.

(P.S. I'm just dying to ask Mr Zabaloui if the similarity in his young hero's name to the original name of Billy the Kid was intentional).

Paul Weiss

Novels
The blue castle;: A novel,
Published in Unknown Binding by Frederick A. Stokes Co (1926)
Author: L. M Montgomery
List price:
Used price: $57.00

Average review score:

I give it 4 1/2 stars
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-10-08
I am a faithful L.M. Montgomery reader; I've read all of the Anne and Emily books many times over. I've read many of Montgomery's other works, too - but I hadn't read The Blue Castle. I bought it on recommendations I read here.

First off, I was pleased that I wasn't just reading another "Anne" or "Emily" book, as much as I love them. The Blue Castle is truly different. The story is clever and very interesting. It was also refreshing that the heroine, Valancy, isn't a writer (also the case in the Pat books)! ; ) But, I felt that Valancy is the most self-absorbed "good" character I have ever read; everything (except that one instance, when she stepped out of herself to care for the dying girl) is about Valancy to Valancy. I take away half a star for how annoying that is!

Also, for anyone who is at all weak-willed, I highly recommend this story; to see how badly a life can be wasted when all a person cares about is what other people think of them!

My All Time Favorite Book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-21
This book is by far my all time favorite. It is not like the Anne of Green Gables series to me, although I love those. It is a seperate and sweet story of someone who is forced to see life in a completely different light when death is thrust upon them. I can relate to the character in a very personal way so this book moves me to want to be more of myself. Maybe that is why I love it so much. I find the light humor and the romance to be enchanting and I recommend this book to anyone that I meet. It is short, but I like that part too. It moves me every time I read it.

My favorite book of all time.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-12
"Spoilers, read at your own risk"

I can't even explain in words how this book touched, inspired, and warmed me.

A middle-aged old maid, Valancy Stirling, had problems with her heart. Because she doesn't want to raise a fuss, she visits the doctor which none of her relatives go to, and gets a check-up with him.

But the doctor gets news of his son being injuried in another town, so he rushes out the door, leaving poor Valancy alone, wondering again what's wrong with her.

The next day however, Valancy recieves a letter telling her that she had a uncurable heart disease, and if she takes care of herself, she will live for one more year.

Valancy is crushed. She has never really had a life, because of her over-bearing family, and a shy nature. She has never even been kissed, never loved anyone, and never actually BEEN loved.

So Valancy decides to make the most of the life she has left. Leaving her home, she goes to her friend Cissy Gay's house, and house-keeps for Cissy and her father. Valancy buys pretty clothes, and stops wearing stiff, ugly hair styles. She begins to become happy, loving Cissy, and being loved by her.

Barney Snaith, the supposed criminal of the town, (whose only real known crime is that he keeps away from society) becomes the object of Valancy's love. She wishes she weren't dying because of him, but she knows he probably wouldn't love her anyway.

Then Cissy dies of consumption (tuberculosis) and Valancy's relieved family expects her to come back home and act like a prim, boring person again. But instead, Valancy shows Barney Dr. Trent's letter, and asks him to give her one happy year, and to marry her. He agrees, and Valancy is more embarrassed then she would have been if he had said no.

The next day, they marry and go to Barney's island. The Stirling family is horrified, and give up on her completely.

Then, a surprise ending, and horrifying truths shatter Valancy's dreams, only to bring them back together again in a satisfying, well written ending.

L.M. Montgomery's Masterpiece
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-15
I cannot praise this book highly enough. Having read everything that Montgomery ever wrote, I can say that I believe "The Blue Castle" to be her finest work. It has such a sweet story, filled with wry humor and depth of feeling, not to metion the gorgeous descriptions of the Canadian forests and lakes. (I always wonder where the mosquitos were for the duration of the novel.) There are so many other reviews here that charmingly describe the plot and characters that one will encounter that I shall not add to them, but only say that this is one book you should not miss reading!

:D
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-07
Though I love Anne, Emily, and Pat, I also love Valancy. I feel hands down that this is the best book LM has ever written, at least for adults. I felt myself so angry for Valancy at first for the way she is treated, but it was so awesome to see her stand up for herself and become happy. You go girl!

Novels
Musashi
Published in Hardcover by Kodansha International (1995-07-14)
Author: Eiji Yoshikawa
List price: $35.00
New price: $19.99
Used price: $15.01
Collectible price: $35.00

Average review score:

An epic journey that is way too epic.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-03
Books this long need to be way more interesting or it turns into a slog, I don't care how fast you read. This one really bogged me down. I am not saying it was not a good story, it just needed to be way shorter and keep moving a lot faster.

ultimate swordsman
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-10
As a high school student, I first encountered this character in a series made up of five books. At the time, each book was released weeks or even months apart. I was so enamored with the story that I finished each book before the next one was released. But I eagerly anticipated each installment. It was like being hooked on a daytime soap. But mind you, this is no soap opera. This is perhaps the most captivating story I have ever encountered. I am pleased to find this edition contains the whole set in one book. If you are a fan of sword fights that begin with but an intent in the mind of the combatant coming to an end in the deceptively tranquil plains of feudal Japan, look no further. This story reminds you that however perfect the sword is as a tool for killing, the deadliest weapon remains the swordsman and not the sword. Musashi is the ultimate swordsman and his story has all the elements of an engaging epic containing betrayal, honor, struggle, unrequited love, death and much more. The duels of the sword depicted here are like nothing I have ever read or seen or heard about before back then as a high school student and now as an adult. Printing quality and paper quality is excellent as befits a treasure of literature.

Musashi
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-17
Great story!! Full of action and wonderful details so you really feel like you are part of the story. My son who does not like to read cannot help but enjoy this one. Just when he seems a little bored the author has something exciting. A great read for boys or men.

This book is a master piece!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-19
I read this books while I was in the senior high school, approximately twenty years ago, but until now the story is still clinging in my mind and it refused to forget it because this is a best novel I've ever know.Extremely worthy to own it. It seems that Eiji Yoshikawa did a great deal of works to perfecting it.

A wondrous and highly satisfying novel
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-17
I read Musashi 15 years ago, and I remember it vividly. It's such a sweeping, wondrous novel, I'm surprised it's not more famous than it is. I became a bit of a Yoshikawa fan from this, and visited his home, preserved as a museum, outside Tokyo. A beautiful serene place. Musashi, in retrospect, was highly inspirational to me as a writer, in terms of pacing, character development, and raw storytelling. I recently bought a copy for a fellow writer, who has samurai themes in his works, and I'm sure I will continue to gift this novel to my friends. Enjoy!


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