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Related Subjects: Nabhan, Gary Paul Nash, Ogden Nashe, Thomas Nelson, Marilyn Neruda, Pablo Nye, Naomi Shihab Nabokov, Vladimir Nin, Anais Neri, Kris Nicholson, Peter Nesbit, Edith Ngugi wa Thiong'o Norris, Robert W. Nicholson, Geoff Novalis Novo, Salvador Nooteboom, Cees Newman, Amy Niland, D'Arcy Narayan, R. K. Nassise, Joseph Nichol, B. P. Nasaw, Jonathan Nottingham, Theodore J.
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Jewel KingdomReview Date: 2007-08-02
Cool!Review Date: 2005-09-27
The book that begins the series.Review Date: 2002-10-19
A review from a little ruby princessReview Date: 2002-08-25
Good values for allReview Date: 2001-08-13

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Great ReadingReview Date: 2007-06-01
Sally Goes to the BeachReview Date: 2007-05-23
Not your average children's book!Review Date: 2005-11-20
Great! Review Date: 2005-09-21
It's a Dog's LifeReview Date: 2002-04-25

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What a joyful experienceReview Date: 2008-04-28
Inspirational!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!Review Date: 2008-02-09
Meeting MyersReview Date: 2007-05-02
Seven things that steal your joyReview Date: 2006-10-15
very helpful for ChristiansReview Date: 2006-06-14

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Love this book!Review Date: 2006-07-04
Snappy Little NumbersReview Date: 2004-06-01
Great books for ANY age!Review Date: 2000-06-17
We love Snappy Books!Review Date: 2003-06-17
Great BookReview Date: 2002-04-05

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Somebody's LoverReview Date: 2008-03-21
Jace Jackson has spent the last three years since the death of his oldest brother doing his best to take care of Taylor, his brother's widow. Three years in which he has watched and wanted Taylor with every beat of his heart. When he sees Taylor at a bar being hit on, enough is enough. Jace carries her out of the bar and into his truck where with one kiss, they become so much more than just friends.
"Somebody's Ex"
Randi Anderson has managed her entire life to get herself into mishaps that make her father angry at her. Finding herself stranded on the side of the road without gas, Randi realizes once again she has forgotten to do something. As luck would have it, David Jackson comes along and offers to drive her into town. To repay his generosity, Randi offers to cook him dinner, and while the dinner she prepares is not as tasty as she hoped, the company is sinfully sexy and oh so naughty.
"Somebody's Wife"
Mitchell Jackson's life changed with the death of his brother. No longer the happy-go- lucky man of three years ago, he worries and watches every penny. Dreams he and his wife Connie shared are no longer feasible in his eyes. His marriage has taken a downwards slide which Mitch is unsure of how to get out of. Lucky for him, Connie knows just what to do to make their marriage new again.
I love when authors write a compilation of stories about the same family. The Jackson family consisted of four sons; Lou, the oldest, is now deceased. Somebody's Lover is not so much three novellas about each individual living brother but about the family as a whole and how each of the brothers copes in the aftermath of their oldest brother's death. In each separate story, Jasmine Haynes takes the reader on a journey of how each brother learns to cope, in his own way, with the loss of his older sibling.
Jace felt guilt. David became angry and tried to take Lou's place. Mitch became so obsessed with providing for his family that he forgot life's little joys. It took strong women to bring these men out of their doldrums and back to the living. Taylor, Lou's widow, had her own guilt to contend with - she found herself loving Jace, Lou's youngest brother, more than she ever loved Lou and that was hard for her to deal with. It took the action of David, and his anger, to make her see that life is short and needs to be lived with the one you love. And she loved Jace uncontrollably. David was used to loving and leaving his conquests. Randi became so much more in a matter of days that David almost didn't know how to handle it. When he sees her being treated a certain way by her father, his first instinct is to make her do what he wants her to and deal with her father in the way he thinks best. When she balks, he has to soul search and come to realize that love is so much more when there are no stipulations. Out of the three women in Somebody's Lover, I think Connie was more emotional than the others. She loved Mitch. They had dreams for their family but somewhere along the way, when Lou died, those dreams died too and Connie refused to give them up. She was anything if not tenacious.
Somebody's Lover was excellent. Each story was sensuous, beautifully written and some scenes were combustible. Jasmine Haynes did a wonderful job bringing real emotions to the characters. Somebody's Lover is definitely a keeper!
Talia
reviewed for Joyfully Reviewed
Somebody's LoverReview Date: 2007-10-03
Too Hot To HandleReview Date: 2007-09-21
This book is about three brothers...one as sexy as the next and each story centers around a brother and theres a great ending that wraps up all three storylines.
I'm not going to get into the storylines other reviewers have done that already, but if your looking to read a burning anthology I highly recommend this book.
One Wicked Anthology- The Best Yet!Review Date: 2007-09-21
In Somebody's Lover, Jace Jackson has loved Taylor for almost half his life. Though she married his eldest brother, Lou, and is now widowed three years later, Jace still suffers from guilt over his brother's death. He blames himself and therefore does not think he deserves a woman as beautiful and wonderful as Taylor. Until the night he spies her in a pick-up bar, Jace has never thought to do other than help care for her and his brother's children. Once he sees her trying to pick up a man, and tastes one kiss from her, all bets are off, and Pandora's Box is opened. He can't hide his feelings any longer, though he knows his family will never accept he and Taylor as a couple, he can't help but love her with everything he is.
Not only did Jace and Taylor burn up the pages with their hot and steamy love scenes, the romance drawn by Jasmine Haynes was so beautiful, I found it hard to put the book down. Jace was a hero among heroes, and gave everything he had to Taylor. His guilt and self-condemnation was heartbreaking and brought tears to my eyes many times. Somebody's Lover is a lovely and poignant story that will live in my memory for a very long time.
In Somebody's Ex, Randi Anderson returns to Willoughby after a failed marriage, trying to pick up the pieces of her life and her self-esteem once again. Her father and her ex-husband have viewed Randi as stupid and treated her as if she can do nothing right. Running out of gas on the side of the road, she meets David Jackson, after he almost runs her over with his truck. A nice "normal" guy, she begins to fall hard and fast, but has no use for a man who wants to control her, like her father and ex-husband had done. David will have to overcome his feelings of anger over Lou's death in order to move on from always being "the careful one-the responsible one" in the Jackson family. It will take almost losing Randi for David to get his head on straight...
Somebody's Ex is a charming story of two people and their discovery of love and trust as well as their own self-worth in the most unexpected places. David and Randi were fabulous characters, both dealing with feelings long buried and denied. Using a mix of wit and laughter, the author transformed the initial lust they shared into a beautiful love story. Romantic and emotional, this story had it all; I loved it!
In Somebody's Wife, Connie is afraid she is losing her husband Mitch. She wants a baby in the worst way, while he is obsessed with pinching pennies. Though married for ten years, they are still in love, but lately they have been fighting much more than talking or making love. When Connie visits a sex toy shop in the neighboring town, she has plans to shake up her marriage and make Mitch unable to resist her any longer.
Though I started out not liking Mitch or Connie's characters from the previous stories, I soon began to see how Lou's death had affected Mitch as well as Connie. Connie was a very self-centered individual who seemed to be all about "me-me-me", while Mitch seemed like a money-obsessed cold fish. It soon became apparent how wrong I was; this couple as well as the other two really burned up the pages, and showed that even the most successful marriage can grow stale without a little freshness added sometimes, and how misunderstandings and not talking to each other can breed resentment and distrust.
Bravo, Ms Haynes, SOMEBODY'S LOVER has earned a place on my "Keeper" shelves. Running the spectrum of emotions, this book made me cheer for the underdog, cry for the heartbreak, and sigh over the sheer romance of the stories and characters. This is a beautiful and poignant book about a very realistic tragedy and its effects on those closest to the victim.
Lettetia Elsasser
5 Klovers - Courtesy of CK2S Kwips & KritiquesReview Date: 2007-09-21
~Somebody's Lover~
Widowed three years earlier, Taylor knows the Jackson family can never accept another man in Lou's place as her husband and she accepts that. Still, she is still young, and three years is a long time. She longs to be something more than somebody's mother - she needs to be Somebody's Lover, if only for one night. Dropping her kids off to spend the night with their Grandparents, she drives out of town to a singles bar, where she wastes no time in both getting drunk and meeting someone.
When Jace sees Taylor in the bar wearing a leather mini-skirt and high heels, no less, his jaw drops. And when he sees a strange man putting his hand on her knee, the red he's seeing is not just her lipstick! He has loved her from afar from the first moment he saw her, but hid his feelings for his brother's wife for years. But she'll turn to another man over his dead body!
Although I loved each of the stories in this collection, Somebody's Lover is probably my favorite. Taylor was a wonderful leading lady, trying to balance single parenthood with her needs as a vibrant woman. Her resignation to live the rest of her life without a husband, out of respect for her husband's memory and his family was admirable, if somewhat misguided. Lucky for Taylor, the answer was in her own backyard, so to speak...
Jace. I could say so much about Jace. For me, he is what made this particular tale my favorite. His internal struggles are palpable, with his guilt over his brother's death, his anguish over the deep love he has long harbored for his brother's wife, and his torment at the thought of her turning to another man now that his brother is gone. I've said before that there is nothing better than watching a sexy Alpha Male clashing with a woman who can match him, but now I think perhaps watching him fight his own needs and desires in an attempt to do what he thinks is right is even better! Pair that situation with a woman who can stand up to him, and you have the best of both worlds, as with Somebody's Lover.
~Somebody's Ex~
David Jackson has never met anyone quite like Randi. She's beautiful, quirky, and completely unexpected. She has a way of catching him totally off-guard that reaches his guarded heart faster than he can blink an eye. But he's determined to keep their liaison at the level of `fling'. Too bad his heart doesn't agree...
In spite of the pain both of the lead characters have to work through in Somebody's Ex, this was an absolutely delightful story! Randi is truly a breath of fresh air, and it is easy to understand from the get-go just why David finds her so hard to resist, and even easier to understand why he falls so hard for her.
Throughout the story, each repeatedly brings each other joy in a variety of ways, both in and out of the bedroom. J But more importantly, each gives the other the strength to work out their most troublesome issues, proving that together they can get through anything.
~Somebody's Wife~
Mitch and Connie Jackson have been married for years. Mitch has always been a worrier, but since Lou's death, that worry has spun out of control. His concern over how to provide for another child has interrupted their love life for months now, as he fears they may accidentally conceive. Connie is determined to find a way to spice up the bedroom to the point where Mitch can't resist her, and finds some very creative ways to do it!
I'll just say it - I am not usually drawn to stories about a marriage that has gone stale, or is on the rocks. That said, I really loved Haynes' third story in this collection, Somebody's Wife. In fact, having enjoyed this one so much, I'll not be so hesitant to give other books with a similar theme a chance in the future.
Connie was ingenious in her efforts to seduce her husband Mitch. Her efforts are amply rewarded in the bedroom, but their problems lie deeper than that. Before the story is over, both Mitch and Connie learn that sometimes the goals in your marriage evolve and change, and that both members of the partnership must learn to adapt and compromise together if they are to keep their marriage alive.

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Like Sunday dinner with a favourite uncle...Review Date: 2004-03-11
Barry has been a regular poster for years on a bbs I moderate. One Sunday he gave us the gift of an essay. The following Sunday, we were given another. After the third Sunday, this became our Sunday custom, like Sunday dinner with a favourite uncle.
Like the best of your uncle's stories, listened to drowsily on a full stomach, these tales are short and packed full of strange people, distant places, and unfamiliar times. Whether grounded in the past or flung off into distant space, they are attention grabbing.
Some of the essays and poems contained in this volume are personal, some are from common experience, some are poignant, and many are fantastic in their scope. All are thought inducing -- whether complete with moral or left up to the reader to sort out what exactly the story meant to him or her.
From cute to moving to powerfulReview Date: 2003-01-20
An open letter to N. Barry CarverReview Date: 2002-12-08
Because, for a brief moment in time, our cleaning lady at work thinks I'm one of the most brilliant writers she ever met. Until she found out I'm not - and you are.
Even though she hasn't met you yet.
Here's what happened; I printed The Bad Man for last Saturday's reading, and the printer kinda didn't print it straight enough for me, so I discarded it and printed another one which came out fine. One night last week, our cleaning lady was emptying my wastebasket, when she noticed the copy I discarded. Something extraordinary made her want to read it, which she did, and again, and again. She re-read it so many times, she nearly had it memorized.
I was working late last night, and she happened to see my in my cubicle doing cubicle-type things. It's the first time she and I met and talked, and she just went on forever how much she loved the story and how talented she thought I was - until I (red-facedly) admitted it was you who wrote the story.
See? Even in a wastebasket, Sunday Best still shines!
Brilliant writer - wonderful actorReview Date: 2002-09-25
I didn't know anybody else in the place but Carver's voice connected us all as he took us into the minds of his characters and walked us around unexpected realities.
As his words filled the air with the mundane but unforgettable details of his father's last hours, there was not a dry eye in the house.
A little sigh of disappointment was heard when Carver announced he was done for the night. I believe half the people present got a book to take home. As they imagine the stories read by Carver, they won't be disappointed.
A real powerhouse on the writing and in performance. Exceptional.
Good book and nioce guy.Review Date: 2002-03-10
They really are good reading.

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Excellent!Review Date: 2008-05-06
Great overviewReview Date: 2008-04-18
Well researced, sufficiently deep, and very readableReview Date: 2007-10-24
I've been talking to everyone I know about this little gem, because it is so darn readable, and so relevant. Yesterday my local paper ran a story about filtering software the local library may soon install. And this morning I finished the book after reading about the cases that are directly tied to this course of action. So I can speak more intelligently about this issue, and I can read the paper with a more informed perspective.
Many of the cases are introduced by discussing a logical framework that parallels the facts of the case. The case is then introduced, and the arguments and reasoning that drove the court are discussed. Wow, that makes it sound really boring. But on the contrary, its a fun read and each chapter is short and encapsulated. Highly recommended.
Things I should have learned in high schoolReview Date: 2007-11-11
A good overviewReview Date: 2007-08-06
What this book does is give a general audience something to think about. Thirty-four somethings to be exact.
The author goes over the cases with broad brushstrokes. The prose is easy to understand and consciously avoids the legalese that would turn off most readers. Instead, the purpose is to get the reader thinking about the ramifications of each case and how it affects our lives (for better or for worse) today.

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KennethReview Date: 2007-01-20
Behind the scene with refreshnig honestyReview Date: 2006-06-30
Marie Kirouack
Part autobiography, part history of the Met, and part stories about the performersReview Date: 2006-07-26
The 2005-2006 budget was $221 million. The Box Office receipts were $101 million, the endowment of $300 million provided another $18 million, parking and commons revenues provided $10 million, and the support from the Federal, State, and City governments was only $375,000! Where does the other $92 million come from each year? 125,000 private donors, 2/3 of whom live outside New York City, provide donations ranging from $60 to more than $500,000 and total $80 million. The 300 members of the Metropolitan Opera Club provide another half-million, and the board members each provide substantial contributions to the met each year. I found this fascinating and quite a different mix than I had expected.
The author, Joseph Volpe, has run the Met for the past 16 seasons, but has worked at the met for more than four decades. He joined as a carpenter and worked his way up from the back of the house to operations. While he showed great skill in getting the shows on stage, he was passed over more than once for the job of Managing Director because of his blue collar background. But after floundering through some poor appointments, Volpe got the job. He admits that his personal style is more, well, frank than most other arts managers and the scowl on his face on the cover photograph (and in some of those included in the book) let us know that he is all about getting the shows on stage and at the highest level rather than getting us to love him as a person.
Volpe came to love opera while working at the Met. True, his grandmother had him listen to "Cavalleria Rusticana" with her when he was a child, but it was getting the magnificent sets to work and to hear the great singers, choruses, and see the dancers, costumes, and even the guests, that got him to see what grand opera is truly about and fall in love with the greatest of all art forms.
The book is part his own biography, part the history of the Met, and part about the great singers he has worked with while at the Met in his various capacities. The book has dozens of interesting photos from all the eras of the Met and the stories of the singers are well chosen and very entertaining. Pavarotti, as you might expect, provides some wonderful anecdotes when he is trying to help Volpe lose weight and includes Volpe in his "yoga" lessons.
The book is quite a pleasant read and I enjoyed it a great deal. It is interesting to hear about the whole of the opera company including everyone it takes to make the shows rather than just the great soloists. Coming from a blue collar background myself, I enjoyed hearing about the working guys and gals that make the show work for those fabulous artists who create the great music with their voices and hearts. The magic wouldn't be nearly as powerful without all those sets, costumes, lights, and the performers on the chorus or the dancers.
Recommended!
Tough LoveReview Date: 2006-07-13
But as in the phrase beloved of behavorial psychologists, his was a "tough love." He started as a carpenter at the Old Met with but a passing interest in opera, but by the time he left, music infused his very blood with a passion for his work and the people who populated the space he called home.
The autobiography details the years, the failed marriage, the battles with superstars, the triumphs and disappointments with a candor perhaps unique in this type of memoir, where the authors tend to be either diplomatic or, as with Sir Rudolph Bing, unrelentingly acerbic.
Volpe tells his story in lean, plain-spoken language that reveals the inner workings of the gargantuan Met and makes that place of mazes and convolutions an environment the reader can understand.
Joe Volpe (after reading the book, it's hard to think of him as Joseph) dragged The Met kicking and screaming into the 21st century without violating the traditions that surround opera, and his book is refreshing, entertaining and revelatory.
It should be read by anyone interested in opera, politics or the big business of show.
The House of DivaReview Date: 2006-07-24
From the start it's clear that Joe Volpe is not a man to be crossed lightly. Tough as nails (and nails were part of his business) he rises from an entry level position to the top job...and reveals much along the way. There's just enough "dirt" in this book to tickle the senses of the reader and anyone who has ever been in opera knows exactly what Volpe describes...in order to be associated with opera personalities it is sometimes required to act like one.
The longest chapter in "The Toughest Show" is devoted to Volpe's firing of Kathleen Battle and one can just see the steam building in the author's ears as he amasses stories of misbehavior on the part of the "embattled" diva over a period of years. Finally, he acts, much to the delight of the cast and crew. It's a juicy chapter and one of the best in the book. While Volpe offers reflections on just about anyone with whom he has come in contact, he reserves the nicest comments for conductor James Levine and (whom he calls the "Siamese Twins") tenors Luciano Pavarotti and Placido Domingo. Without these three would there be a present-day Metropolitan Opera?
There are occasional bouts of self-serving given over to by the author and often he feels a need to defend himself based on some past controversial decisions, (which I found rather astounding given the fact that he is departing the scene) but what makes "The Toughest Show" such a wonderful book is the comprehensiveness of the Met story. It's not only onstage and backstage but everywhere else, too. "The Toughest Show on Earth" is the greatest guided tour around. It's a terrific read and Volpe deserves much credit not only for this book but for a lifetime of service dedicated to one of the nation's treasures...the Metropolitan Opera.


Murray Rothbart and moneyReview Date: 2008-04-15
Keep this book handy, you may want to read it again some dayReview Date: 2008-03-25
Initially, the author postulates a fictional country with a monetary system based strictly on the gold standard and, to some extent, silver. He then explains, in layman's terms, how such a system would function and shows that it would be completely stable, self-correcting and inflation-free. He then introduces paper as "warehouse receipts," and demonstrates that their introduction wouldn't damage the system unless, by some means, more warehouse receipts were printed than there was money in the warehouses (banks) to back them up. He goes on to describe how such an expansion of the currency might be accomplished through central banks and explains how it might be done in such a way that the general public would no longer even make the connection between the warehouse receipts, now termed "money," and the supposed gold reserves. Finally, he analyses and assesses the economic impacts of such an inflation of the paper money supply on the society itself and on its interactions with other nations.
Following that, the author walks the reader through the various international agreements which have been consummated by governments down through the years in their efforts to allow government sponsored inflation while still maintaining some semblance of a stable international monetary system. Each agreement is evaluated and the reasons for its ultimate failure are identified.
Finally, the author offers his insight into the future if the nations of the world continue going in the economic direction they have chosen.
Thoughtful readers will likely see that Rothschild was right in the early 1800s, when he observed that there are very few people who "really understand the true value of gold." And he or she might easily conclude that there have been far too many economists since that time who didn't understand its value in a monetary system either; but that, sadly, too many politicians did. For it is obvious, from this reading, that the determined efforts of these men over the years to dissociate paper script (Dollars, Francs, Pounds, et. al) from money (gold and silver) have time-after-time led the nations of the world to the brink of economic disaster.
In any event, even if one can't recall the past, doesn't believe the author's analyses, and can't accept his forewarning; this book certainly provides food for thought and sheds a great deal of light on the mechanisms by which the U.S. government, in particular, and other governments, in general, manipulate their money supplies. For those reasons alone, it is well worth reading and, quite possibly, re-reading.
We still have new legal gold coins in this countryReview Date: 2008-01-23
And recently a few people that still use the real money were hauled into court by the IRS for using those coins at face value to pay wages and purchase things. You see the problem was that in real [gold] money no one earned enough to have to share with the IRS and that greatly upset the IRS. So the IRS filed charges on a few people, a total of 176 counts and the jury failed to convict on even one because we do in fact have a dual money system in this country and the accused had done nothing illegal. It's simply not their fault the Federal Reserve [Fiat money] system is failing to hold its supposed value and has caused inflation at a current level of over 16 to 1, and still rising. Look it up, the court case, if you want a good insight into the current and very real story of the huge differences in our two monetary systems, both of which are doing exactly what people have been writing about for years..
What is Money?Review Date: 2007-09-24
Excellent Inroduction to the Gold StandardReview Date: 2008-01-31
Rothbard starts off by saying, "Few economic subjects are more tangled, more confused than money. Wrangles abound over "tight money" vs. "easy money," over the roles of the Federal Reserve System and the Treasury, over various versions of the gold standard, etc. Should the government pump money into the economy or siphon it out? Which branch of the government? Should it encourage credit or restrain it? Should it return to the gold standard? If so, at what rate? These and countless other questions multiply, seemingly without end...Of all the economic problems, money is possibly the most tangled, and perhaps where we most need perspective." This book will provide that perspective, informing you how money arises in a free-society, why the 'gold standard' should be in practice, and how government policies destroys currencies and harms individuals in society.
If you think the "gold standard" is simply about tying Federal Reserve Notes to gold, then this is a must read book. It will show you that much of what you believe about the gold standard is not true. If, on the other hand, the gold standard seems to make theoretical sense, but you are looking to understand it better, then this is a great source.
Either way, this is a non-technical, easy to read treatment of how a government monopoly on money hurts individuals and why a gold standard works with free people. Definitely worth the couple hours it will take to read and digest this 50 or so page introduction on the 'gold standard', so the next time you espouse heterodoxy amongst friends, you will be able to explain why this is the case succinctly and clearly.

Used price: $5.78

I love this book, And I'm A guyReview Date: 2005-05-20
rewardingReview Date: 2005-01-25
Finally, I got rid of that wired up feeling all day and feeling great. Look for it on the net by googling "s o yfee".these dudes actually have good taste in music. i really can't believe they did this. a truly unique book
Win Her is a winner!Review Date: 2005-01-16
Overlooked courtship element gets a fair (and funny) shakeReview Date: 2004-05-24
Some great ideas in a very funny bookReview Date: 2004-05-14
Related Subjects: Nabhan, Gary Paul Nash, Ogden Nashe, Thomas Nelson, Marilyn Neruda, Pablo Nye, Naomi Shihab Nabokov, Vladimir Nin, Anais Neri, Kris Nicholson, Peter Nesbit, Edith Ngugi wa Thiong'o Norris, Robert W. Nicholson, Geoff Novalis Novo, Salvador Nooteboom, Cees Newman, Amy Niland, D'Arcy Narayan, R. K. Nassise, Joseph Nichol, B. P. Nasaw, Jonathan Nottingham, Theodore J.
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