Non-fiction Books
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Related Subjects: Sacks, Oliver Reed, John
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Charmed Life
Published in Paperback by Random House Books for Young Readers (1989-09-23)
List price: $2.95
Used price: $0.95
Average review score: 

Not Free SF Reader
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-03
Review Date: 2007-09-03
Great Fantasy Young Adult, but mediocre for Jones
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-05
Review Date: 2007-05-05
A young boy, Cat, must deal with his crazy and selfish older sister Gwendolyn who is obsessed with her own magical powers. Certainly much slower and less exciting than Jones' Howl books (read: more for children), but still has her enchanting and seemingly effortless style that captures a world where "magic is like music". Jones is always a good read. The characters are mysterious and thoroughly enjoyable. Gwendolyn is ambiguous and silly and selfish and delightful. Cat is an innocent; Chestomanci is Jones' typical ambiguous and passive wizard. The imagery of magic, particularly Cat's matchstick nine lives, is absolutely delicious. Grade: B
Diana has done it again!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-02-17
Review Date: 2006-02-17
I am constantly on the lookout for new fantasy reads, because not only is it difficult to find a truly lasting (and by "lasting" I mean you think about it all the time, read it again and again, and gulp down every one of the author's other books) fantasy story, but if you do that author is usually what they call A Lofty One-Piece Wonder who writes one astonishingly beautiful story, gives it to the world...then settles into retirement and ignores all letters posted to them begging for a sequel.
Ah, not so with Diana Wynne Jones.
Hearing about her was actually an accident. I had picked up the book "Inkspell", the sequel to a book I'd enjoyed very much (Inkheart) and saw, on the back, that there was a quote on the back from "Diana Wynne Jones, author". For fun, I wandered over to the J's. Only a few Diana books were there -- THE MERLIN CONSPIRACY, ARCHER'S GOON, and -- the book that forever endeared me to this amazingly talented author -- EIGHT DAYS OF LUKE.
Having five dollars just aching to be spent and about that many minutes left till we had to go, I bought it on a whim.
And inhaled it that night.
I was going through withdrawls. NEED -- MORE -- DIANA -- WYNNE -- JONES -- BOOKS!!!
I got back to Borders and began to scrounge the shelves. Hmmm. "Chronicles of Chrestomanci". Looked okay -- not as good as I'd thought "Eight Days of Luke" was, but -- what was?
I read a little, put it down. Read a little more, and -- couldn't stop.
I am now on Book II, "The Lives of Christopher Chant".
I think you understand what I'm trying to say. Buy this book -- and while you're at it get "Eight days of Luke", too.
Rating: Very Good
Ah, not so with Diana Wynne Jones.
Hearing about her was actually an accident. I had picked up the book "Inkspell", the sequel to a book I'd enjoyed very much (Inkheart) and saw, on the back, that there was a quote on the back from "Diana Wynne Jones, author". For fun, I wandered over to the J's. Only a few Diana books were there -- THE MERLIN CONSPIRACY, ARCHER'S GOON, and -- the book that forever endeared me to this amazingly talented author -- EIGHT DAYS OF LUKE.
Having five dollars just aching to be spent and about that many minutes left till we had to go, I bought it on a whim.
And inhaled it that night.
I was going through withdrawls. NEED -- MORE -- DIANA -- WYNNE -- JONES -- BOOKS!!!
I got back to Borders and began to scrounge the shelves. Hmmm. "Chronicles of Chrestomanci". Looked okay -- not as good as I'd thought "Eight Days of Luke" was, but -- what was?
I read a little, put it down. Read a little more, and -- couldn't stop.
I am now on Book II, "The Lives of Christopher Chant".
I think you understand what I'm trying to say. Buy this book -- and while you're at it get "Eight days of Luke", too.
Rating: Very Good
A Charmed Surprise ...
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2006-07-14
Review Date: 2006-07-14
"Charmed Life" is my first Diana Wynne Jones book (I know, I know ... I'm a little late) and I'll openly admit I came to her work through Miyazaki's amazing film "Howl's Moving Castle". Imagine how stupid I felt when I realized that I had been missing out on one of the best writers of our age. While it starts off slowly, Jones's first Chrestomanci book is still a grand, magical, yet simple adventure that sweeps the reader off their feet into a quirky yet solid world that readers will enjoy again and again.
Eric, a.k.a., Cat Chant, is a small and passive boy who thinks that he has no magical powers unlike his sister Gwendolen. Gwendolen is an ambitious, spoiled, and powerful girl who dreams of controlling the world. One day, when their parents die in a tragic boat accident, Gwendolen's powers attract the attention of the dapper and eccentric Chrestomanci. Chrestomanci is an enchanter, and a nine lived one at that, so that means he controls and governs all magic in the twelve related worlds. Chrestomanci seems to take an interest in Gwendolen, so he invites her and Cat to live in his castle.
When they arrive at the castle, both children dislike it at first. But Cat, being the passive boy that he is, quickly makes friends with Chrestomanci's two children even though he's absolutely frightened to death of their father. But Gwendolen has other ideas. She hates the fact that she has to learn maths and history instead of magic in school, and she is absolutely appaled that Chrestomanci doesn't take notice in her powers. Soon, Gwendolen sets out on a war of wills and magic against Chrestomanci and his castle, and Cat is unbeknowingly caught up in the whirlwinds of his sister's dangerous ambitions.
Jones is brilliant in her prose and writing. She easily writes with a sense of whimsy, while at the same time fleshing out realistic characters and villains. Cat is passive at first, but he soon grows a spine and stands up against the one thing that holds him back (I won't ruin the surprise). Jones' magic is an everyday and casual part of life for the characters, but it comes in second to their emotions and the overall story. The story takes so many surprising twists that shocked and surprised me, I was literally biting my nails towards the end wondering what would happen next.
"Charmed Life" is a delightful and charming surprise. While not a grand and sweeping epic, it will still sweep readers off their feet with the simple and quiet humor, magic, and sheer enjoyment that Jones so evidently finds and puts into her work. This book is not to be missed, and I can only end with saying how foolish I feel now that I didn't find Diana sooner.
Eric, a.k.a., Cat Chant, is a small and passive boy who thinks that he has no magical powers unlike his sister Gwendolen. Gwendolen is an ambitious, spoiled, and powerful girl who dreams of controlling the world. One day, when their parents die in a tragic boat accident, Gwendolen's powers attract the attention of the dapper and eccentric Chrestomanci. Chrestomanci is an enchanter, and a nine lived one at that, so that means he controls and governs all magic in the twelve related worlds. Chrestomanci seems to take an interest in Gwendolen, so he invites her and Cat to live in his castle.
When they arrive at the castle, both children dislike it at first. But Cat, being the passive boy that he is, quickly makes friends with Chrestomanci's two children even though he's absolutely frightened to death of their father. But Gwendolen has other ideas. She hates the fact that she has to learn maths and history instead of magic in school, and she is absolutely appaled that Chrestomanci doesn't take notice in her powers. Soon, Gwendolen sets out on a war of wills and magic against Chrestomanci and his castle, and Cat is unbeknowingly caught up in the whirlwinds of his sister's dangerous ambitions.
Jones is brilliant in her prose and writing. She easily writes with a sense of whimsy, while at the same time fleshing out realistic characters and villains. Cat is passive at first, but he soon grows a spine and stands up against the one thing that holds him back (I won't ruin the surprise). Jones' magic is an everyday and casual part of life for the characters, but it comes in second to their emotions and the overall story. The story takes so many surprising twists that shocked and surprised me, I was literally biting my nails towards the end wondering what would happen next.
"Charmed Life" is a delightful and charming surprise. While not a grand and sweeping epic, it will still sweep readers off their feet with the simple and quiet humor, magic, and sheer enjoyment that Jones so evidently finds and puts into her work. This book is not to be missed, and I can only end with saying how foolish I feel now that I didn't find Diana sooner.
A wonderful beginning to an exciting series
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2005-10-05
Review Date: 2005-10-05
This story and the next ("The Lives of Christopher Chant") are easily the most complex and interesting stories in the Chrestomanci series, and really the ones that the rest hang upon, because they really explain who and what the "Chrestomanci" is, and the role he plays in the fascinating universe Diana Wynne Jones has created. This is fantasy at its best, well written and very inventive, with characters that seem both familiar and bizarrely unique. It is, I suppose, not life-changing fiction but it keeps you there and makes you care and gives an opportunity to wonder. (It is no accident that Hayao Miyazaki based his latest film - Howl's Moving Castle -- on one of Jones' novels: they seem to have imaginations that operate on the same wavelength; like him, she is endlessly inventive and capable of a sublime blending of the supernatural and the ordinary, and loves finding magic in machines, and has an obsession with cats.)
The basic premise of the "Chrestomanci multiverse" is that every time there is a major event that "changes" the world, the world actually divides into two alternate realities, one in which the event occurs and one in which it doesn't. Somehow, though, while the possibilities might seem infinite there are a limited number of possibilities that resemble the one Chrestomanci inhabits enough to warrant his general attention and concern. Within each major world variation, there are nine alternates (don't ask why just nine) that are apparently unified because they have the "same" people doing different things in them. It sometimes happens, though, that an individual within one of those realities has no parallel in the others, and so the "lives" that would belong to the other realities actually belong to him or her. Such a nine-lived individual has powerful magic and becomes a likely candidate for taking over the position of the British-hired Chrestomanci (think a mixture of Rowling's Minister of Magic for an indication of his range of responsibilities, with Head of Hogwarts for his overall competency).
Speaking of Rowling, some have compared Jones to Rowling and there are some interesting parallels -- so many that it is hard not to think that Rowling had at least read some of Diane Wynne Jones' stories. Still, I don't agree with others who say Jones is a better writer than Rowling. There is a way in which she is: for her elegance of prose, her compactness of style, for the overall simplicity and completeness of her stories. Still, I think that Rowling is superior because what Jones doesn't try to do Rowling does very well. Jones creates another world whose basic features are similar to ours, but is different in specifiable ways. In that sense it is pure fantasy, a work of the imagination that she can tinker with and alter in various stories but is basically self-contained and organized in such a way that each story can be really complete. Rowling fits her story of another world into THIS world and sets herself with what seems to me a much more difficult task of accommodating her fantasy to the unknown and improbable and strange and unfinished character of any story set in this real world. The edges in any such story are unwieldy and it is a real tribute to Rowling (though in no way a criticism of Jones who has other aims) that she can wield them so well.
The basic premise of the "Chrestomanci multiverse" is that every time there is a major event that "changes" the world, the world actually divides into two alternate realities, one in which the event occurs and one in which it doesn't. Somehow, though, while the possibilities might seem infinite there are a limited number of possibilities that resemble the one Chrestomanci inhabits enough to warrant his general attention and concern. Within each major world variation, there are nine alternates (don't ask why just nine) that are apparently unified because they have the "same" people doing different things in them. It sometimes happens, though, that an individual within one of those realities has no parallel in the others, and so the "lives" that would belong to the other realities actually belong to him or her. Such a nine-lived individual has powerful magic and becomes a likely candidate for taking over the position of the British-hired Chrestomanci (think a mixture of Rowling's Minister of Magic for an indication of his range of responsibilities, with Head of Hogwarts for his overall competency).
Speaking of Rowling, some have compared Jones to Rowling and there are some interesting parallels -- so many that it is hard not to think that Rowling had at least read some of Diane Wynne Jones' stories. Still, I don't agree with others who say Jones is a better writer than Rowling. There is a way in which she is: for her elegance of prose, her compactness of style, for the overall simplicity and completeness of her stories. Still, I think that Rowling is superior because what Jones doesn't try to do Rowling does very well. Jones creates another world whose basic features are similar to ours, but is different in specifiable ways. In that sense it is pure fantasy, a work of the imagination that she can tinker with and alter in various stories but is basically self-contained and organized in such a way that each story can be really complete. Rowling fits her story of another world into THIS world and sets herself with what seems to me a much more difficult task of accommodating her fantasy to the unknown and improbable and strange and unfinished character of any story set in this real world. The edges in any such story are unwieldy and it is a real tribute to Rowling (though in no way a criticism of Jones who has other aims) that she can wield them so well.
Clan Cave Bear/valley/mamoth 3
Published in Hardcover by Crown (1986-10-06)
List price: $55.85
New price: $190.00
Used price: $59.86
Collectible price: $98.00
Used price: $59.86
Collectible price: $98.00
Average review score: 

Amazing & totally fascinating saga!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-06
Review Date: 2006-08-06
I have read the 5 books of the series at least 10 times each, in German and in English, I am so fascinated with the story. The characters are absolutely captivating, and there is so much suspense and drama, you seriously can't put the books down when you start reading them. In the very first book, the little girl Ayla will capture your heart, as you go on this journey with her when she is growing up, and she turns into this beautiful and intelligent woman - i bet about every male reader would love to be with her and get to know her, whereas female readers will envy her and want to be like her. But it's not just her, all the characters have so much depth to them, and it is so easy to picture them in your mind, as they come across as very real. I grew to love each and every one of them, including all the animals as well. This is a great story about love and friendships among people & animals, and a story about survival in harsh conditions and encountering and fighting enemies. A story about a time when great discoveries and inventions were made, a truly fascinating era.
This is my favorite story of all times, and I know I will read all the books again someday. So if you are just bored and are looking for something very good to read - this is it! Too bad the fourth and fifth books - The Plains of Passage & Shelters of Stone - aren't included with this package, but I guarantee most people who pick up those books and read them will probably read them as well, since it is an ongoing story, and you can't wait to see what is going to happen next. I can't wait for the last book to come out... hopefully that is going to happen soon.
This is my favorite story of all times, and I know I will read all the books again someday. So if you are just bored and are looking for something very good to read - this is it! Too bad the fourth and fifth books - The Plains of Passage & Shelters of Stone - aren't included with this package, but I guarantee most people who pick up those books and read them will probably read them as well, since it is an ongoing story, and you can't wait to see what is going to happen next. I can't wait for the last book to come out... hopefully that is going to happen soon.
One of my all-time favorites
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2005-01-05
Review Date: 2005-01-05
Unfortunately, I read them so long ago, I'm not sure I would want to read the next one because I have lost track of the story lines by now.
The Earth's Children series
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2002-05-27
Review Date: 2002-05-27
Each book does as promised, stand alone, and also as part of the larger story it melds into a great whole. I waited impatiently for each book as it came out, and because of the many years wait for The Shelters Of Stone, I was somewhat dissappointed in the book, because in my opinion all it really did was do a further buildup for the final book in the series, and I am so afraid that there will be another extended waiting period and let-down, but over-all I have to give the series a huge thumbs up and say that this series is definately part of my "Keeper" and "Re-readable" list and is now part of my personal Library.
please finesh the series soon
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2003-02-01
Review Date: 2003-02-01
the clan of the cave bear lay around our house for several years. i passed it by many times thinking it would not be my kind of book. at last due to the urging of my wife i began to read clan of the cave bear! from that time until i had completed all five of the books in the earths children series,i absolutly could not put them down.i have read many book series. but never have i been carried away so by an author.the depth of auels research will pull at a very primitive and forgotin place in your being.however i must warn you! when you have completed the series thus far the knowledge of the as yet unwriten or at least unpublished climax to this series will leave you feeling incomplete!! so please Miss Auel finesh the series soon
Fifth book!
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2002-04-29
Review Date: 2002-04-29
The author planned to write six books in the Earth's Children series, and I hope she sticks with the plan. However, I wanted to answer the question about which everyone seems to be confused--the fifth book. Its title is **SHELTERS OF STONE** ... . Anyway, the first four books are not only completely absorbing plotwise, but Ms. Auel's obvious research into the history of the periods about which she writes adds to the value of reading her books. Don't wait! Read the first four as soon as possible--at least in time to get a copy of her unpublished paperback.
The End of Eternity
Published in Mass Market Paperback by Del Rey (1986-04-12)
List price: $3.95
Used price: $1.88
Collectible price: $199.00
Collectible price: $199.00
Average review score: 

Not Free SF Reader
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-04
Review Date: 2007-09-04
Harlan is a technician and works for a political sort of organisation called The Eternals. They minister to time over tens of thousands of centuries, and try and keep it running with a minimum of adjustments.
People being what they are, Harlan decides to make a minor fiddle because of his feelings for a woman.
People being what they are, Harlan decides to make a minor fiddle because of his feelings for a woman.
The dangers of too much caution and avoidance of risk-taking
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-11
Review Date: 2007-04-11
I probably first read this classic sometime in the late 1950s; certainly, it's the earliest time travel novel I can remember reading. Andrew Harlan, a native of the 95th century, is a Technician in Eternity, a member of a corps of self-appointed guardians of reality that exists outside of ordinary time. It's a highly stratified society and Harlan is a member of the caste that actually effects changes by making the "Minimum Necessary Change" at the selected point in time and space. Then he meets a woman outside of Eternity with whom he falls in love -- sort of -- and takes it upon himself to protect her from a Change planned for her continuity. Of course, it's a far more complicated matter than that, as Harlan finds out the hard way. In fact, the very existence and survival of Eternity is at stake. But maybe it ought not to survive. The writing seems a bit sappy now, a bit turgid, but styles and tastes change. The basic "time patrol" theme, however, has been riffed on by scores of subsequent novels and short stories. Some points seem rather naive to us now: The enormous size of the "computaplexes," even thousands of years in the future, a voice recording device that's still large enough to require a storage case and a separate microphone, and so on. (It's always surprised me how many Golden Age authors failed to anticipate the minute size of electronic devices so short a distance in their future.) But ignore all that and just enjoy the story for what it is.
What goes around, comes around
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-21
Review Date: 2006-03-21
Isaac Asimov has written a brilliant glimpse into the fragile psyche of man. In our neverending quest for knowledge and to seek the unknown, we take chances. In Asimov's future we have The Eternals to keep us safe from ourselves. The Eternals manipulate the timeline by altering any dangerous situations that may harm mankind in the long run. This creates a dichotomy as mans adventurous and sometimes self-destructive basic need to break free clashes with our conservative desires to play it safe. Asimov explores the end results of this clash with the central character Andrew Harlen. Harlen is the catylist as he unwittingly is played by both sides in a fascinating chess match of truly epic proportions. Some of the aspects of this story were later explored in Spielberg's "Minority Report", as in preventing future events from happening before they can do harm. The best Science Fiction is the kind that really makes you think and this book most assuredly does that.
This Book is Why I'm a Time Travel Fan
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-04-22
Review Date: 2006-04-22
Time travel is a great, speculative sub-genre of scifi. Although mildly dated this is book highly worthwhile. Asimov's storytelling and imagination are legendary due to works like this.
This is why they call Asimov "the master"
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2005-10-20
Review Date: 2005-10-20
The End of Eternity is a brisk and totally satisfying thought experiment that poses the question most other time travel books don't even ask: why would you even want to alter events in time? Asimov concludes, correctly, that the life of a species should unfold the same way an individual life unfolds; without the beneft of hindsight. A decision made in hindsight, it turns out, is not superior to the original - it's just wrong for different reasons.
The Foundation series was just OK, Pebble in the Sky and The Currents of Space were downright boring, but this is the type of story that earned Asimov the title of master. Read this book.
The Foundation series was just OK, Pebble in the Sky and The Currents of Space were downright boring, but this is the type of story that earned Asimov the title of master. Read this book.

These Old Shades
Published in Mass Market Paperback by Fawcett (1980-01-12)
List price: $1.75
Used price: $4.19
Collectible price: $10.00
Collectible price: $10.00
Average review score: 

Lushly romantic, both light and dark
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-27
Review Date: 2007-12-27
I did not think I could like a May/December romance. I was wrong. The hero is dark - he needs redemption. He finds it in a sprite of a heroine who needs to save someone. It's wonderful.
another great Heyer book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-02
Review Date: 2007-12-02
True to Heyer's style, this regency romance has humor, mystery, and romance. The romance is clean enough for your teenage girls and sophisticated enough for your grandmother.
Rake Defined and Domesticated
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-13
Review Date: 2007-09-13
I was introduced to Georgette Heyer by my graduate school roommate. The men around us were so unsatisfactory that we escaped into GH's Regency world whenever we could. These Old Shades, along with Frederica, are my favorites - and I've read about 50. If you read GH's first novel, The Black Moth, you will find all of the major characters from These Old Shades (excepting the exceptional Leonie) in earlier incarnations and with different names. In The Black Moth you'll learn the history between Davenant and Avon.
Anyone with an ounce of romance will stay up all night to finish These Old Shades. The Duke of Avon may think that he is simply using Leonie to exact revenge but chapter by chapter you see the small signs of change. I mark the change when he sends Leonie home from a men's club, but of course from the first night that she is in his hotel/palace he protects her by charging the butler to let her bathe alone. The dramatic scene in the drawing room, where Avon does get revenge - but for Leonie and not for himself - is one of the best written scenes in any period novel. I would rank it up with Elizabeth's refusal of Darcy for heart-stopping effect.
I have wanted for so long to see this book made into a film. Audrey Tautou would be an excellent Leonie. And maybe Clive Owen could do Avon - but I hear Jeremy Irons' voice whenever I read Avon's lines. And for those reviewers who can't grasp the clothes and manners of l'ancien regime - just look at Watteau and Fragonard's paintings and let yourself imagine how a nobleman could kill without conscience and also wear lace and silk, write poetry and support scientific explorations. It was a fascinating time, broader and more dramatic than our present day.
I've just convinced myself to re-read These Old Shades - for perhaps the 8th time.
Anyone with an ounce of romance will stay up all night to finish These Old Shades. The Duke of Avon may think that he is simply using Leonie to exact revenge but chapter by chapter you see the small signs of change. I mark the change when he sends Leonie home from a men's club, but of course from the first night that she is in his hotel/palace he protects her by charging the butler to let her bathe alone. The dramatic scene in the drawing room, where Avon does get revenge - but for Leonie and not for himself - is one of the best written scenes in any period novel. I would rank it up with Elizabeth's refusal of Darcy for heart-stopping effect.
I have wanted for so long to see this book made into a film. Audrey Tautou would be an excellent Leonie. And maybe Clive Owen could do Avon - but I hear Jeremy Irons' voice whenever I read Avon's lines. And for those reviewers who can't grasp the clothes and manners of l'ancien regime - just look at Watteau and Fragonard's paintings and let yourself imagine how a nobleman could kill without conscience and also wear lace and silk, write poetry and support scientific explorations. It was a fascinating time, broader and more dramatic than our present day.
I've just convinced myself to re-read These Old Shades - for perhaps the 8th time.
Another great Heyer book
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-16
Review Date: 2007-11-16
This Heyer book has it all. A little bit of mystery, a lot of humour, and romance.
Justin Alastair is the Duke of Avon and he is the hero in this story. He is jaded and has lived a life of hedonistic pleasures and vices. He is always coolly aloof, never one to indulge into a fit of temper, and has the most dry sense of humour that is very amusing. He is not known as the kindest of gentlemen, being known by his peers as "Satanas" (or Devil), he has quite the black reputation.
While in France, by chance he comes across a young boy in the back streets of Paris as the boy is being chased by his older brother. The Duke takes pity on the boy and buys him from his sibling and takes him to his residence near-by. Needless to say, the boy is no boy but a girl, the heroine named Leonie. The heroine is quite young, in comparison to the hero, but her mischief and innocence is captivating. Her charm is her youthful exuberance and honesty and unaffectedness.
Alastair sets up the "boy" as his page and as the story unfolds it becomes clear that the Duke did not take Leonie in out of the kindness of his heart, but that he has other more ulterior motives in mind. Namely, to use her in his game of vendetta against another, a French nobleman he crossed paths 20 years before.
Though I've read this type of plotline before (the innocent and young heroine, masquerading as a boy, being saved by the hero), what makes this novel different is the secondary characters and the feel of the novel (as if it has been lifted straight out of mid/late 18th century France and England).
One of my favorite secondary characters is Lord Rupert Alastair, younger brother of the hero. Rupert is an irrepressible young man, very passionate and always ready to joke and make fun. He acts as comic relief and on more than one occassion I found myself laughing aloud at his behavior and words.
Anyways, this is a great book to start out with Heyer. It is fast moving and you'll find it hard to put down once you start reading!
Justin Alastair is the Duke of Avon and he is the hero in this story. He is jaded and has lived a life of hedonistic pleasures and vices. He is always coolly aloof, never one to indulge into a fit of temper, and has the most dry sense of humour that is very amusing. He is not known as the kindest of gentlemen, being known by his peers as "Satanas" (or Devil), he has quite the black reputation.
While in France, by chance he comes across a young boy in the back streets of Paris as the boy is being chased by his older brother. The Duke takes pity on the boy and buys him from his sibling and takes him to his residence near-by. Needless to say, the boy is no boy but a girl, the heroine named Leonie. The heroine is quite young, in comparison to the hero, but her mischief and innocence is captivating. Her charm is her youthful exuberance and honesty and unaffectedness.
Alastair sets up the "boy" as his page and as the story unfolds it becomes clear that the Duke did not take Leonie in out of the kindness of his heart, but that he has other more ulterior motives in mind. Namely, to use her in his game of vendetta against another, a French nobleman he crossed paths 20 years before.
Though I've read this type of plotline before (the innocent and young heroine, masquerading as a boy, being saved by the hero), what makes this novel different is the secondary characters and the feel of the novel (as if it has been lifted straight out of mid/late 18th century France and England).
One of my favorite secondary characters is Lord Rupert Alastair, younger brother of the hero. Rupert is an irrepressible young man, very passionate and always ready to joke and make fun. He acts as comic relief and on more than one occassion I found myself laughing aloud at his behavior and words.
Anyways, this is a great book to start out with Heyer. It is fast moving and you'll find it hard to put down once you start reading!
If You Like to Laugh Read This
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-16
Review Date: 2007-10-16
I realize that Georgette Heyer is a woman's author, but I still feel compelled to suggest this to anyone who likes to escape into wonderful humor regardsless of the reader's sex. Many years ago my wife picked up a book by this writer, read it in one night, and insisted on getting everything else available. After being kept awake by her night long bouts of laughter, I decided I could either get angry or join the fun. This book was so good that I smuggled the sequel {Devil's Cub, which I heartily recommend) onto the subway in a plain brown wrapper and amazed the other riders by rolling off the seat by the humor of the book. Is it roamntic? I don't know, maybe. What I do know is if you don't find the characters and events of this book funny, your sense of humor needs some serious help. Get yourself a paper bag and enjoy yourself.
If I Never Get Back
Published in Hardcover by Crown (1989-12-30)
List price: $18.95
New price: $6.27
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $18.95
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $18.95
Average review score: 

Best baseball novel ever
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-23
Review Date: 2007-08-23
This is a book I've read several times. I'd like to know where Mr. Brock found out so much about Charlie sweazy, Asa Brainard et al, to make these characters come alive the way they do. There were a few political issue editorials Darryl brought into the story. But these surely do not detract from the book. I wish I had Andy Leonard as a brother as well.
You will hate to see the end of this book as it is entertaining(and historically accurate) from first page to last. As I said earlier, it's my favorite baseball book and one of my favorite of any genre.
You will hate to see the end of this book as it is entertaining(and historically accurate) from first page to last. As I said earlier, it's my favorite baseball book and one of my favorite of any genre.
Best Ever
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-03
Review Date: 2007-07-03
This is one of the greatest baseball novels ever written. If you like baseball,time travel,romance and "rooting for the good guys" this is a book that will never get old. I'm sorry they never made a movie if it. However I doubt Hollywood could do it justice. Superb!!!!!!!!!!
One of my favorite time travel novels
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-18
Review Date: 2007-05-18
I love time travel novels and I love baseball; so this is one of my all-time favorite books. I enjoyed reading how baseball was played in its infancy and learned things that I never knew. A great book!
A home-run time-travel novel
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-05
Review Date: 2007-05-05
Note: I made some Mormon angry because of my negative reviews of books out to prove the Book of Mormon, and that person has been slamming my reviews.
Your "helpful" vote is greatly appreciated. Thanks
A very short review is not necessarily a bad review. You don't want to re-tell the whole story. I try for the hook that will make a person want to read this book. In my opinion, you should read long reviews after you read the novel. Read a short review first.
I love this novel! A modern man goes back to 1869 and joins the Cincinnati "Red Stockings" baseball team. He falls in love and also introduces many new ideas, including the selling of hotdogs and bunting. He also finds a treasure. A super fun mystery and time-travel story.
Your "helpful" vote is greatly appreciated. Thanks
A very short review is not necessarily a bad review. You don't want to re-tell the whole story. I try for the hook that will make a person want to read this book. In my opinion, you should read long reviews after you read the novel. Read a short review first.
I love this novel! A modern man goes back to 1869 and joins the Cincinnati "Red Stockings" baseball team. He falls in love and also introduces many new ideas, including the selling of hotdogs and bunting. He also finds a treasure. A super fun mystery and time-travel story.
Baseball History at Its Best
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-31
Review Date: 2007-01-31
I don't usually like "fantasy" books, but this one is exceptional. It's sort of like Harry Potter: you suspend disbelief on about page 15, and from there on it's a joyous, rollicking ride! The author did a magnificent job of researching his subject and all the other historical events that he interweaves in his story. The hard part was when I was down to 25 pages or so and knew that it was all going to end. I didn't want it to end! Wonderful book for baseball fans, those who enjoy Mark Twain, and historical buffs.

War of the Twins (Dragonlance Legends, Vol. 2)
Published in Mass Market Paperback by Wizards of the Coast (1995-02-21)
List price: $6.99
New price: $2.48
Used price: $0.01
Used price: $0.01
Average review score: 

great series
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-19
Review Date: 2007-01-19
An excellent book and a great series quickly sent by seller very happy
the review
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-10-26
Review Date: 2005-10-26
This book was great. It was a little difficalt because it went back and fourth between the characters and things that went on in the past. This book is a gory one so it would be good for 7th grade and up. It tells the tall of the twins very good. but only read it if you read the first one time of the twins.
One of the best books in the Dragonlance saga
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-04
Review Date: 2006-11-04
War of the Twins is one of my absolute favorite books to come out of the Weis-Hickman machine. Mind-bending concepts of time travel and of the future locked in place combined with world-altering events makes for a dramatic and intense read that will keep you up late at night. It is also perhaps the most emotionally tense book in all of Dragonlance. The interactions between Raistlin and Caramon and Crysiana and Tas are fantastic. The strange love triangle between the brothers and Crysiana makes for interesting reading and also helps the reader really appreciate the emotions of the characters. Of all the characters, Raistlin in particularly really starts to reveal his true self: merciless and determined. While at times you feel like Raist must be starting to actually feel for the people that love him, it is quickly revealed that he only cares about his ultimate goal. Caramon comes into his own in this book, leading an army and realizing that he doesn't need his brother in order to live his own life. Crysiana doesn't evolve too much in this one but does grow in her sense of purpose and in her faith. Tas kind of gets left by the wayside for much of this novel, but comes back for dramatic impact on the overall story.
The only complaint I can think of is that the Dwarfgate wars were sort of skimmed over, not revealing too much detail as far as the actual battles are concerned. The leaders of the various armies and factions could have been better fleshed out, especially Kharas and the leaders of the plainsmen and hill dwarves. These are minor regrets thought and Weis and Hickman leave much to the reader's imagination which probably enhances the overall effect of the story. They focus on the main characters and the emotional battles they are going through, and that would have been taken away from some if they had included too much detail about the side stories and characters.
Overall I'd say this is one of the more mature and grim of the Dragonlance novels, without very much humor at all and a lot of tense and dark moments. The vivid characterizations of the book sold me. I'd recommend this entire trilogy to anyone in for a good emotional story.
The only complaint I can think of is that the Dwarfgate wars were sort of skimmed over, not revealing too much detail as far as the actual battles are concerned. The leaders of the various armies and factions could have been better fleshed out, especially Kharas and the leaders of the plainsmen and hill dwarves. These are minor regrets thought and Weis and Hickman leave much to the reader's imagination which probably enhances the overall effect of the story. They focus on the main characters and the emotional battles they are going through, and that would have been taken away from some if they had included too much detail about the side stories and characters.
Overall I'd say this is one of the more mature and grim of the Dragonlance novels, without very much humor at all and a lot of tense and dark moments. The vivid characterizations of the book sold me. I'd recommend this entire trilogy to anyone in for a good emotional story.
A classic heroic fantasy
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-09-30
Review Date: 2005-09-30
Dragonlance series is beyond doubt one of the best known and loved works of heroic fantasy. Written with an exceptional honesty and story-telling talent, it sparkles with the authors' love for their characters and the world they created. The Twins Trilogy is a dark tale following all the patterns of heroic fantasy, but it still manages to be fresh and exciting like the best folktale. Raistlin remains one of the most striking tragic characters eagerly awaited to reappear in subsequent Dragonlance novels.
FANTASTIC!!!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2004-06-06
Review Date: 2004-06-06
The Legends Trilogy- the Time of The Twins, the War of the Twins, and Test of the Twins, is the sequel to The Chronicles Trilogy- Dragons of Autumn Twilight, Dragons of Winter Night, and Dragons of Spring Dawning, which brings to life the ultimate battle between Good and Evil in the magical World of Krynn. The books are so incredibly well written that the reader feels that they have been transported to another plane of existence and are actually present among the characters, seeing what they see, feeling what they feel, sensing what they sense. The authors Margaret Weis and Tracy Hickman have truly outdone themselves and have presented us with a masterpiece of literature the likes of which we have seen only in JRR Tolkien's work and RA Salvatore's The Dark Elf and Icewind Dale trilogies. Duty, honor, bravery, magic, dragons and heroes are all about. One should seriously start thinking about maybe turning them into movies...
Down These Mean Streets
Published in Paperback by Vintage (1991-01-02)
List price: $12.00
New price: $7.99
Used price: $0.97
Collectible price: $75.00
Used price: $0.97
Collectible price: $75.00
Average review score: 

Forever a classic
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-11
Review Date: 2007-08-11
Down These Mean Streets is the story of Piri Thomas' journey into adulthood. The book is set in Spanish Harlem in the 1940s. The author's writing style is refreshing and lyrical. He uses some Spanish words here and there(readers might find the glossary in the back of the book helpful), and kicks in a few slang words as well, which makes the dialogs that much more genuine.
Piri struggles through poverty, family troubles, and desperately wanting to belong. He fights with being a dark skinned Puerto Rican during a time when racism was strong, and trying to find his place as neither black nor white. Piri did some not-so-good things in his life, being in a gang, drug addiction, and armed robbery among other things, but throughout it all it is easy to tell that Piri is a good guy at heart.
Overall, this is a captivating story. You might find yourself wondering what you would have done faced with the same situations. I even found myself rooting for Piri at times. This book is still a very accurate depiction of "the hoods" of New York, despite being published for the first time about 40 years ago.
I was sad to have to finish the book, and in the end I felt like I knew Piri. I look forward to re-reading this book over the years. It is truly a classic. Everyone should read it. Anyone can find something in the story that they will be able to relate to.
Piri struggles through poverty, family troubles, and desperately wanting to belong. He fights with being a dark skinned Puerto Rican during a time when racism was strong, and trying to find his place as neither black nor white. Piri did some not-so-good things in his life, being in a gang, drug addiction, and armed robbery among other things, but throughout it all it is easy to tell that Piri is a good guy at heart.
Overall, this is a captivating story. You might find yourself wondering what you would have done faced with the same situations. I even found myself rooting for Piri at times. This book is still a very accurate depiction of "the hoods" of New York, despite being published for the first time about 40 years ago.
I was sad to have to finish the book, and in the end I felt like I knew Piri. I look forward to re-reading this book over the years. It is truly a classic. Everyone should read it. Anyone can find something in the story that they will be able to relate to.
an exciting nonfiction book!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-28
Review Date: 2007-06-28
This book really told me what it was like to live in Harlem in the 40s. The discrimination and racism is real and raw (although Mr Thomas does get a little jaded and think all white people are bad). The way he describes coming off heroin is realistic, colorful, and explosive. This whole book is very alive, as a memoir. It was funny to see the slang they used back then!
One of the best memoirs ever written
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-10
Review Date: 2007-05-10
I've read this book more than a few times and have taught it to different level readers a few extra times. There was one high school student who came to me after the book was done and told me, "This is the first book I ever finished." Even if it's not the first book you've read, you'll find writing that is fearless, honest, and powerful. You won't forget it, and if you're really lucky, you'll get to share it with someone else.
I will always love this book
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-12-28
Review Date: 2006-12-28
Grabbed it off my english teachers shelf junior year of high school, loved it so much I never gave it back. This is an amazingly wonderful book. Vivid writing style...I could see every last detail in my head. It was like a movie in my brain. Love it.
We recommend this book
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-12-07
Review Date: 2006-12-07
Book Review: Down These Mean Streets
We recommend this book because Piri Thomas wrote the book in a way that you can visualize the story. This book is interesting because it talks about a young Latino's life growing up in the streets of Harlem New York in the 30's. However Piri the main character in the story gets discriminated throughout his young life for being a black Puerto Rican. We think this book has some strong scenes suitable for children under 13. Little by little the story gets interesting to the point where you don't want to stop reading. To conclude, this story is a good autobiography to learn from
We recommend this book because Piri Thomas wrote the book in a way that you can visualize the story. This book is interesting because it talks about a young Latino's life growing up in the streets of Harlem New York in the 30's. However Piri the main character in the story gets discriminated throughout his young life for being a black Puerto Rican. We think this book has some strong scenes suitable for children under 13. Little by little the story gets interesting to the point where you don't want to stop reading. To conclude, this story is a good autobiography to learn from
The Windflower
Published in Mass Market Paperback by Dell (1984-05-01)
List price: $3.95
Used price: $37.13
Average review score: 

Truly a Treasure
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-27
Review Date: 2008-03-27
A voracious reader since childhood. I became fan of romance novels in my teens and AT LEAST 2500 books later, The Windflower by Laura London sets the standard for which I judge all romances.
I found a sadly tattered copy this book in my local library 1985. I couldn't find anything from my favorite authors that I hadn't already read. I chose this book very reluctantly because I was concerned that it might be another boring and irritating bodice-ripper type of romance. I was completely blown away to discover an extremely well-written, wonderfully detailed, charming, poignant, humorous, witty, and sensual book. I found all of the characters interesting and memorable. Yes, the hero could be aggravating sometimes but I imagine that the relationship would lose its interesting complexity were he the easy-going type.
No, it's not the classic type romance novel but rather a story about a sheltered young lady whose world is turned upside down when she ends up a captive on a pirate ship due to tricks of fate. It is about how she and the hero deal with their attraction and discover love (albeit with difficulty). It is equally about how she adapts and matures in her new world and how her new world is affected by her.
I've had the good fortune and privilege to read all of Laura London's (Sharon & Tom Curtis) books. I am awed by their talent. They are truly artists and I also feel that they must be very special people.
I found a sadly tattered copy this book in my local library 1985. I couldn't find anything from my favorite authors that I hadn't already read. I chose this book very reluctantly because I was concerned that it might be another boring and irritating bodice-ripper type of romance. I was completely blown away to discover an extremely well-written, wonderfully detailed, charming, poignant, humorous, witty, and sensual book. I found all of the characters interesting and memorable. Yes, the hero could be aggravating sometimes but I imagine that the relationship would lose its interesting complexity were he the easy-going type.
No, it's not the classic type romance novel but rather a story about a sheltered young lady whose world is turned upside down when she ends up a captive on a pirate ship due to tricks of fate. It is about how she and the hero deal with their attraction and discover love (albeit with difficulty). It is equally about how she adapts and matures in her new world and how her new world is affected by her.
I've had the good fortune and privilege to read all of Laura London's (Sharon & Tom Curtis) books. I am awed by their talent. They are truly artists and I also feel that they must be very special people.
Thank you, Sharon and Tom Curtis
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-25
Review Date: 2007-06-25
I can't figure out how to write to these authors, so I'd like to use this review to thank them for writing such a beautiful and thoroughly enjoyable novel. I never read a book quite like this and since the Curtis' don't seem to be writing anymore, I doubt I ever will. The characters in this book are absolutely unforgettable. I can't get them out of my mind. Raven was funny and brave and Rand - I'd love to see his harsh exterior melted by a woman of his own - and Cat is just hauntingly beautiful. Bravo, Mr. and Mrs. Curtis!
Wonderful book!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-23
Review Date: 2007-12-23
This is one of those rare books that manages to be sweet and touching and exciting all at the same time. It is such a page turner, and when you finish it there is a feeling of let-down, like you know you are never going to pick a book quite as lovely as this one again. At least not one with pirates in it! Real, blood-thirsty, knife-in-the-teeth, take-no-prisoners, offer-no-quarter pirates. This has got to be the best pirate romance book ever written.
The closest I ever found is "Passion's Ransom" by Betina Krahn. If you are a Windflower addict searching for another hit, that's where you should look.
The closest I ever found is "Passion's Ransom" by Betina Krahn. If you are a Windflower addict searching for another hit, that's where you should look.
Totally Satisfying
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-31
Review Date: 2007-07-31
Wow, every now and then I come across a romance novel that has everything I want in it. A great hero and heroine, adventure, love, some misunderstanding, a little humor, bad boys, etc. The Windflower was one of the few. It made me feel for ALL of the characters. I don't think I have ever cared so deeply for multiple secondary characters, and it makes for a deeper reading experience. Overall, this book was wonderful; I mean really perfect, the ideal romance novel whose formula has never been dupliacated.
The romance is actually not as prominent in this particular romance novel as in others, but it doesn't detract from the read at all. One thing I really liked was the subplots don't feel forced unlike many other romance novels; they are enjoyable.
My advice for you is to find it; it was a rather hard book to track down, but it was so worth it. It is one of those novels you think about even after several weeks, and one where you can still remember every character's name because they mean something to you. An exceptional book.
The romance is actually not as prominent in this particular romance novel as in others, but it doesn't detract from the read at all. One thing I really liked was the subplots don't feel forced unlike many other romance novels; they are enjoyable.
My advice for you is to find it; it was a rather hard book to track down, but it was so worth it. It is one of those novels you think about even after several weeks, and one where you can still remember every character's name because they mean something to you. An exceptional book.
NOT A ROMANCE!
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-06
Review Date: 2007-08-06
OK, so maybe I'm just cranky because I plunked down $25 for an out of print paperback-- expecting one of the best romances ever written. I'm so annoyed that I don't know who I want to slap first--- the people who recommended this book, the authors, or Devon.
In my dreams, I'll line up all of them a La "Airplane" and have a go at them.
First off, this is NOT a romance! The 'whateveritis' between Devon and Merry could probably fill up oh, all of 4 chapters, maybe 100 pages of the book. It's lame, limp, passionless, full of distrust and so much of the heroine being hogtied with either ropes or verbal manipulation, you think you're reading some kind of the twisted tripe from the 70/80's(OK so this book WAS written sometime around then). That may explain it.
Like others have said, there are entire chapters where they don't even speak to one another. The relationship between the 2 actually becomes something that sorta looks like a relationship in the last 2 chapters. The rest?
Is about Merry and EVERYONE else on the ship. EVERYONE--- Cat, Raven, Morgan, The Crew etc. Heck, half the Caribbean for that matter. But Devon and Merry? Erm, not much. Very little...dang near nothing. Not enough for me to see why she 'loved' him and why he 'loved' her. Like others have said, this is the first 'romance' that I've read where I wasn't sure who the heroine was supposed to be with, even 2/3's of the way through the book. I assumed it was Cat for about 3 chapters, then Raven....but then the author would have Devon reappear to scowl, kiss Merry, fondle her a bit as if to say "NOPE! He's the one!"
Thank you, I was very confused until those moments. But by then, I disliked Devon so much, I was really hoping that he'd croak and maybe Cat would get the job.
Secondly, when you finally get to the "romance" part of this "NOT A ROMANCE", you are so annoyed with Devon's on going coldness, manhandling and mistreatment of Merry, plus the manner in which they are not only married, but the marriage is finally consumated that you feel....well...ah...
I personally was FURIOUS! The book is pretty much about someone who has every choice stripped away from page one by either relative, circumstance and at the very end husband.
OK, for that total slap in the face of freedom, I hated the book.
Lastly, what makes this book beautiful is NOT THE ROMANCE! But the prose, the imagery, the characters, the research etc. Mostly---The story inside the story. These factors are what make this book beautiful and great. And why I gave it two stars instead of one.
However, I disagree with others, I would never, ever ever ever ever ever pass this book on to others as an example of a 'Great Romance' novel. Because, it's not a romance.
In my dreams, I'll line up all of them a La "Airplane" and have a go at them.
First off, this is NOT a romance! The 'whateveritis' between Devon and Merry could probably fill up oh, all of 4 chapters, maybe 100 pages of the book. It's lame, limp, passionless, full of distrust and so much of the heroine being hogtied with either ropes or verbal manipulation, you think you're reading some kind of the twisted tripe from the 70/80's(OK so this book WAS written sometime around then). That may explain it.
Like others have said, there are entire chapters where they don't even speak to one another. The relationship between the 2 actually becomes something that sorta looks like a relationship in the last 2 chapters. The rest?
Is about Merry and EVERYONE else on the ship. EVERYONE--- Cat, Raven, Morgan, The Crew etc. Heck, half the Caribbean for that matter. But Devon and Merry? Erm, not much. Very little...dang near nothing. Not enough for me to see why she 'loved' him and why he 'loved' her. Like others have said, this is the first 'romance' that I've read where I wasn't sure who the heroine was supposed to be with, even 2/3's of the way through the book. I assumed it was Cat for about 3 chapters, then Raven....but then the author would have Devon reappear to scowl, kiss Merry, fondle her a bit as if to say "NOPE! He's the one!"
Thank you, I was very confused until those moments. But by then, I disliked Devon so much, I was really hoping that he'd croak and maybe Cat would get the job.
Secondly, when you finally get to the "romance" part of this "NOT A ROMANCE", you are so annoyed with Devon's on going coldness, manhandling and mistreatment of Merry, plus the manner in which they are not only married, but the marriage is finally consumated that you feel....well...ah...
I personally was FURIOUS! The book is pretty much about someone who has every choice stripped away from page one by either relative, circumstance and at the very end husband.
OK, for that total slap in the face of freedom, I hated the book.
Lastly, what makes this book beautiful is NOT THE ROMANCE! But the prose, the imagery, the characters, the research etc. Mostly---The story inside the story. These factors are what make this book beautiful and great. And why I gave it two stars instead of one.
However, I disagree with others, I would never, ever ever ever ever ever pass this book on to others as an example of a 'Great Romance' novel. Because, it's not a romance.
JUNIPER
Published in Hardcover by Knopf Books for Young Readers (1991-05-21)
List price: $13.99
Used price: $1.25
Collectible price: $13.99
Collectible price: $13.99
Average review score: 

the story of juniper.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-09
Review Date: 2006-08-09
After reading Wise Child I was very happy to discover Juniper. It is the story of Juniper and how she became a doran after enduring her teaching from Euny. The story is well written like Wise Child. I recommend reading this book especially if you enjoyed Wise Child.
A jouney of self-discovery. Not as good as Wise Child, but well-written and still wonderful. Recommend, especially as a sequel
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-23
Review Date: 2006-08-23
The prequel to Wise Child, Juniper is the story of Ninnoc, know as Juniper, a medieval princess sent to apprentice under her godmother. Juniper leaves her friends, family, and the comforts of her father's small palace to live with Euny, her grandmother, in a small cold shack on the edge of the kingdom. Under Euny's care she toils throughout the day, eats little, and sleeps poorly, all with the promise that, in time, Euny will teach her the knowledge and ways of a doran, the women of the world who live alongside the rhythms of nature and use their skills and magic to help others. While Juniper spends a year and a day at Euny's shack, her father's castle comes under attack by her aunt, and evil sorceress who wants the kingdom for herself. Juniper's first task as a doran will be to use her powers and what Euny has taught her to defeat her aunt and save her father's kingdom. While I prefer Wise Child, Juniper is also an engrossing, worthwhile read. Many of the same themes are present, especially the concept that nothing worthwhile comes without a price. Juniper's story is darker than Wise Child's: Euny is a tough task master and Juniper's aunt is a more immediate and threatening foe. In exchange, the elements of magic are larger and more visible. While perhaps not as enjoyable or as skillfully crafted as Wise Child, Juniper provides interesting backstory and continues to examine the path of a doran--how they learn, what their purpose is, and what trails they must face. I recommend this text, especially as a prequel to Wise Child.
Despite the similar storyline, Juniper is very different from its sequel, Wise Child. Both stories are about young women who live with a doran, working hard and suffering in order to learn from her and train to be dorans themselves. However, Juniper deviates from Wise Child's focus on the nature of love and family: unlike Wise Child, Juniper comes from a stable and loving home. Rather, Juniper's story is about assessing one's own skills and finding one's own path, even if that path takes you far away from the comfort and desires of your youth. This theme of self-discovery is worthwhile and interesting to readers of all age groups: it's instructive and comforting to the young, and reminds older readers that the sacrifice and reward of self-discovery is never really over.
Perhaps the biggest difference between Wise Child and Juniper is the role of magic in the books. In Juniper, magic plays a much more visible role and doesn't fit into the world as we know it quite as well as it does in Wise Child. Talking animals, transforming sorcerers, and magical items all transform the visibility and role of magic. While not as extreme as it could be (there are no dragons here), magic is more obvious and harder to explain in this book. As a result, the story is a little more distant and harder to identify with than Wise Child, making for a less sucessful book. Juniper's story is more exciting, with a more physical and exciting climax, but on the whole it isn't as successful or as enjoyable as Wise Child.
Nonetheless, Furlong writes in a clear, readable style, her characters are realistic and easy to identify with, an the lessons contained within the book are worthwhile and personal. It is a fitting companion to Wise Child and contains many of the concepts and themes that make that book so wonderful. As a prequel, this book successfully provides backstory and characterization that should interest anyone that has read Wise Child. I do recommend this text, primarily but not only as a sequel, and I like to come back to it every couple of years.
Despite the similar storyline, Juniper is very different from its sequel, Wise Child. Both stories are about young women who live with a doran, working hard and suffering in order to learn from her and train to be dorans themselves. However, Juniper deviates from Wise Child's focus on the nature of love and family: unlike Wise Child, Juniper comes from a stable and loving home. Rather, Juniper's story is about assessing one's own skills and finding one's own path, even if that path takes you far away from the comfort and desires of your youth. This theme of self-discovery is worthwhile and interesting to readers of all age groups: it's instructive and comforting to the young, and reminds older readers that the sacrifice and reward of self-discovery is never really over.
Perhaps the biggest difference between Wise Child and Juniper is the role of magic in the books. In Juniper, magic plays a much more visible role and doesn't fit into the world as we know it quite as well as it does in Wise Child. Talking animals, transforming sorcerers, and magical items all transform the visibility and role of magic. While not as extreme as it could be (there are no dragons here), magic is more obvious and harder to explain in this book. As a result, the story is a little more distant and harder to identify with than Wise Child, making for a less sucessful book. Juniper's story is more exciting, with a more physical and exciting climax, but on the whole it isn't as successful or as enjoyable as Wise Child.
Nonetheless, Furlong writes in a clear, readable style, her characters are realistic and easy to identify with, an the lessons contained within the book are worthwhile and personal. It is a fitting companion to Wise Child and contains many of the concepts and themes that make that book so wonderful. As a prequel, this book successfully provides backstory and characterization that should interest anyone that has read Wise Child. I do recommend this text, primarily but not only as a sequel, and I like to come back to it every couple of years.
Definately read this...
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2005-02-21
Review Date: 2005-02-21
If you have read Wise Child...(I don't know, I read Wise Child first--I don't know if that's out of order or not)...anyway, this is a great book to go along with Wise Child. The books are imaginative and fun to read, and I'm not even a kid anymore...she just makes them fun for all ages to read...I highly recommend this book...
I hope this helped you...
I hope this helped you...
zen
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2004-10-26
Review Date: 2004-10-26
I picked up 'Juniper' in my local used bookstore a few years back, in the mood for a simplistic YA fantasy. I had never heard of Furlong, nor had I read 'Wise Child'. I just thought it looked interesting.. and it was!
While in some ways this book is rather formulaic, (girl apprenticed to priestess type, has to save various people or things), in others it is extremely unique. I love the Zen feeling-- half of the time Furlong is not concerned with adventures, but rather simple, engaging illustrations of Juniper's day-to-day life. The feeling is mostly restful and peaceful, with an edge of excitement that shows through now and again. A very good read for people of all ages who are looking for a simplistic, beautifully-drawn, more-to-it-than-meets-the-eye book.
While in some ways this book is rather formulaic, (girl apprenticed to priestess type, has to save various people or things), in others it is extremely unique. I love the Zen feeling-- half of the time Furlong is not concerned with adventures, but rather simple, engaging illustrations of Juniper's day-to-day life. The feeling is mostly restful and peaceful, with an edge of excitement that shows through now and again. A very good read for people of all ages who are looking for a simplistic, beautifully-drawn, more-to-it-than-meets-the-eye book.
Good for reading to your children
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2005-01-27
Review Date: 2005-01-27
I'm a guy (you know the drill - testosterone has me rooting for the robots in the terminator movies) with 3 young daughters and so story time for me can be it's own kind of hell, overpopulated with too many thoughtful ponies, joyous princesses and other terrors from the Id.
Juniper at least is a story that can engross a child while being satisfying to the adult reader. I never once had the urge to plunge my head through the sheetrock in the bedroom whereas when forced to read stories like the Pony Pals, that's all I can think about. The wise women in Juniper are are a bit too knowing and all seeing, the plot a bit formulaic but other than that, it's a story of growing up, persistence against adversity good and evil, courage and adventure and some things in between. Same holds through the rest of the trilogy: Wise Child and Colman though they're not written in order.
I suspect that these stories catch the mind of young girls more than boys and are aimed more at a female audience. I don't know if I would have read it by myself, but with mission to read to my daughters, it was an enjoyable journey. I could see adult women enjoying this for it's own sake. In any case the books of this trilogy are well above the average children's fare for girls or for boys. Definitely worth the price of admission.
Juniper at least is a story that can engross a child while being satisfying to the adult reader. I never once had the urge to plunge my head through the sheetrock in the bedroom whereas when forced to read stories like the Pony Pals, that's all I can think about. The wise women in Juniper are are a bit too knowing and all seeing, the plot a bit formulaic but other than that, it's a story of growing up, persistence against adversity good and evil, courage and adventure and some things in between. Same holds through the rest of the trilogy: Wise Child and Colman though they're not written in order.
I suspect that these stories catch the mind of young girls more than boys and are aimed more at a female audience. I don't know if I would have read it by myself, but with mission to read to my daughters, it was an enjoyable journey. I could see adult women enjoying this for it's own sake. In any case the books of this trilogy are well above the average children's fare for girls or for boys. Definitely worth the price of admission.

Make Way for Ducklings (Picture Puffins)
Published in Paperback by Puffin Books (1976-09)
List price: $4.99
New price: $1.00
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $10.00
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $10.00
Average review score: 

"She taught them how to swim and dive"
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-04
Review Date: 2008-01-04
This book is simply sublime. I had it as a child, got it for my own children over 25 years ago, and now am buying a copy for my new grandson. Everything about this book is wonderful!
Classic Picture book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-20
Review Date: 2007-11-20
This classic picture book details the lives of the Mallard family in the Public Garden of Boston. This is an excellent read for kids of all ages, and is a good introduction to Caledecott books.
A love letter to Boston
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-07
Review Date: 2007-08-07
Mr. and Mrs. Mallard explore all the nooks and crannies of Boston and the Back Bay, before settling on the perfect place to raise their family. A true love letter to the Boston of 60 years ago (complete with Irish cops!), it is a classic that speaks to people from everywhere, and families worldwide, on the love and nurturing that parents show for their children.
A classic for a reason
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-25
Review Date: 2007-06-25
This book was read to me, and I read it endlessly to my little sister and my daughter. Now I am reading it to my great-nephew, age three and a half, who fell instantly in love with it. He always lets out a little "whew!" of relief when Mrs Mallard and the ducklings make it through the gates of the Public Gardens. After about the fourth reading (there were two on that particular day) we went to a little park nearby where he insisted on playing out the story with me, complete with Mr and Mrs Mallard's dialogue. It is a ritual now.
This is an astonishingly involving book for small children. There is a practical but manageable level of threat (of traffic, which is very real and genuinely important for three and four year olds) with the assurance of adult help when it is needed, and the constant reassurance that they are being looked after. And adults can read it forever without getting bored!
This is an astonishingly involving book for small children. There is a practical but manageable level of threat (of traffic, which is very real and genuinely important for three and four year olds) with the assurance of adult help when it is needed, and the constant reassurance that they are being looked after. And adults can read it forever without getting bored!
Great value
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-15
Review Date: 2007-02-15
This is the turtle back book. It is glued and stitched. It should hold up. If this book is going to get alot of use spend the few dollars more and get the turtle back.
Books-Under-Review-->Arts-->Literature-->Authors-->Non-fiction-->6
Related Subjects: Sacks, Oliver Reed, John
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Related Subjects: Sacks, Oliver Reed, John
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The eldest also gets a bit peeved at being thrown in with the young brats, too.