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for lovers of VoltaireReview Date: 2006-02-28
The genius was also a world class author!Review Date: 2003-11-22
He is a great story teller and has a great sense of humour too.
Is Life Good?Review Date: 2007-06-04
A classic mustReview Date: 2003-06-04
Decadence and disillusion? Must be French LitReview Date: 2005-05-21
Candide is well-written, and sprinkled with cute and clever irony. I also enjoyed the references Voltaire makes to his personal enemies in Candide. However, the optimistic theory that prompted this satire has been rejected, which leads me to believe there isn't much purpose for this book any longer. Really the only reason left to read Candide is to become 'culturally literate', I suppose. Don't get me wrong; the ultimate message of this book is a good one. However, I hope readers don't think Candide's lesson must preclude optimism all together, or love, or friends, or God. That fact is obscured to make a literary point.
The only interesting question that remains to be asked from this book is: why does such cyncism accompany 'enlightenment'? Both French and American societies are rife with it after all, so much that I doubt even Voltaire could manage much of a smirk. All he could do would be to join the choir and tend the garden he has sown.


Fabulous MysteryReview Date: 2008-07-26
Amazing!!!Review Date: 2008-07-14
From Colin's cousinReview Date: 2008-06-12
All joking aside; I can't put this book down. It's fun, easy, and interesting reading. I'm actually looking forward to the bus ride to work tomorrow so that I can keep going!
Luv you Colin,
Cousin Jen
mind bogglingReview Date: 2008-05-29
Not what I expected...Review Date: 2008-05-27

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Pastor Charles Stanley's Christian LivingReview Date: 2008-07-25
Excellent bedtime spiritual snacks!Review Date: 2007-10-03
Excellent Reference BookReview Date: 2007-09-20
Dr.Stanley has hit a homerun!Review Date: 2007-07-30
Excellent God Inspired Text, to help build up Christians in a trying timeReview Date: 2007-07-09
We are all growing everyday and it is our choice how we grow depending on what we feed our minds.
This book is a must have for every Christian family, and I highly recommend it.


Hidden cards of melancholic entanglement....Review Date: 2008-07-20
The powerful melancholic narrative in Trevor's 'CHEATING AT CANASTA is often unsettling and complex, but at the same time evocative and finely crafted.
These stories stay in your mind, the harshness of their conclusions, the solidity of them, strongly molded and resonating with fierce elegiac gravity.
Trevor is an eloquent storyteller and shines a probing light on elusive human intricacies and entangled relationships with a true master's touch!
Cheating at Canasta: Trevor wins again.Review Date: 2008-01-12
In the poignant title story, following his wife's death, while dining alone at their favorite Venice restaurant, a recent widower (Mallory) learns a lesson about marriage as a couple quarrels at a nearby table. In "The Dressmaker's Child," the life of an auto mechanic (Cahal) is changed forever when a child runs at his car with a stone on a dark rural road. In "Men of Ireland" an aging priest (Father Meade) is blackmailed by a fallen altar boy (Donal Prunty), now 52-year-old tramp. In "Bravado," 80-year-old Trevor brings fresh insights into contemporary life. These stories are nothing short of profound.
G. Merritt
A master of the short story . . . once againReview Date: 2008-03-30
And once again, I marvel over how Trevor seems to be able to write about anything, about anyone -- to weave a story out of the unlikeliest stray rags and scraps of yarn. Here, many of the characters are from the working class or lower rungs of the socio-economic ladder. Those who are not nonetheless are not among society's glamorous or smug. None of Trevor's characters (here or as far as I remember from his other works) would ever have expected their lives, public or private, to be worthy of the attention of a great writer or legions of sensitive readers. They are common, yet in Trevor's renderings they become uncommon.
A theme shared by all these stories is deception, even between two seemingly very close people. Yet the tone rarely is one of anger. Instead, it is one of gentle ruefulness, tinged with melancholy, at times approaching a world-weariness. The narrative is sparse, almost minimalistic. Yet Trevor's voice is so assured, so authoritative, but without ever being overbearing.
In truth, I can't imagine anyone who appreciates literate short stories not relishing the stories of William Trevor, including CHEATING AT CANASTA.
No Prozac in the water system here .... Review Date: 2008-01-31
There is no Greater Writer TodayReview Date: 2008-01-23
And so it is with the rest of this new collection. Readers of the "New Yorker" will no doubt rediscover old friends among the other stories, but this will hardly diminish the intense enjoyment of rereading.
This volume confirms it once again: there is no greater writer in our day than William Trevor.
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Warmed my heart.Review Date: 2008-04-07
Great Book!Review Date: 2007-10-05
A fully-matured and well-honed artistic vision of the human conditionReview Date: 2007-08-06
Extraordinary Review Date: 2006-07-16
One of my favorites this yearReview Date: 2006-07-22
I appreciated that the Panamanian setting is not overwrought, so that the reader isn't really presented a collection of stories about Panama. Henriquez writes about relationships. Her description of Panama is nevertheless clear and gripping, and makes for a truly enjoyable book.

One of his bestReview Date: 2006-03-08
Comstock is a Gold Mine of Fun Reading!Review Date: 2004-10-29
But I digress: All of us who read Louis L'Amour's Westerns have probably noticed that while all of them are fun to read, some are certainly better than others. I thought that Comstock was darn good, and certainly one of the best of his books set in California. If you enjoy a fast-paced, action packed Western, I expect you'll like Comstock. I recommend it!
"Comstock Lode" can be read over, and over, and over...Review Date: 2001-11-27
The main character is Val Trevallion, a young man of twenty-four with a harsh past. Both of his parents were killed when he was young and he has taken it upon himself to have revenge on the killers. He is a quiet man but very strong because of his work in mines. Though he has not had the best education, he is very smart. Grita Redaway is Val's friend from his past. Her parents were also killed by the same people who killed Val's parents. She is a very beautiful and an intelligent actress. She is independent though with a streak of stubbornness in her. Al Hesketh is the villain of the story. He is a cruel and wicked man, only thinking of himself and how he can become rich.
The story begins in Cornwall, England in the year 1859. Val is fourteen-years-old when his father and mother decide to move to America. His father wants to work his own mine in California. He saves enough money so they go to America by boat. When they reached Gunwalloe, the Trevallions decide to travel to California with another family, the Redaways. The Redaways have only one daughter, Grita, who is eight-years-old. A few days before they leave, Val's father goes to buy supplies a few miles away. Suddenly, drunken rustlers attack the wagons in which Val and Grita's mothers are in. The drifters kill the mothers then beat up Mr. Redaway. During the whole time, Val and Grita are hidden nearby; Val protecting Grita and shielding her from the sight. After they leave, killing Mr. Redaway, Val and Grita go find Mr. Trevallion. After the dead are buried, Mr. Trevallion, though heartbroken, decides to carry on to California with Val while Grita goes to live with her aunt. But on the way to California, Val's father is killed by the same men who had killed his mother. Val swears to have revenge on the murderers. Ten years go by, during which Val shoots two of the people who were involved in the murders. Val then realizes that he has wasted his life and decides to settle down and have his own mine in Virginia City, Nevada, where the Comstock Lode is. He gets good land and finds some silver in his mines. But trouble seems to follow him everywhere. He finds out that Grita is in big trouble, in which the remaining men who murdered his parents are involved.
Love this book, and is one of my favorite L'Amour books. Louis L'Amour is the type of writer that, whatever he writes, you'll know before-hand that you'll love them. "Comstock Lode" is no exception. Some other of my favorite L'Amour books are:
*North to the Rails*
*Sackett Series*
*Matagorda*
*Crossfire Trail*
...and this list can go on and on and on!
Smartly Written, Captivating NovelReview Date: 2006-05-19
Val Trevallion was a son of Tom Trevallion and his wife Mary, who lived in England until finding a large amount of gold and, moves to the States. While in Louisiana, Val's mother and the mother of another girl named Grita Redaway are brutally murdered by a group of shadowy characters, one of which Val will never forget the eyes of. Val and his father set out for the Wild West, but on the way there, his father gets murdered as well. A name on a gun gives Val a clue as to the identity of one man from the group of men that murdered his father and possibly his mother. Val goes to the Comstock where he is known as the toughest, most feared man around. While there, he will remeet Grita, a beautiful, budding actress and the memories come rushing back. His main mission: to kill those who killed his parents. But not everyone seems to be who they are, and Val has to come face-to-face with the man whose eyes haunted him years earlier in this edge-of-your-seat thriller.
i've read it several times and will read it again!!!Review Date: 2001-05-20
I have read many L'Amour novels and this one stands out because of its detail of the charactures. L'Amour explains why his charactures act as they do while still containing all of the typical content of most of his novels. If you read one L'Amour novel, read this one!!

Crazy LoveReview Date: 2006-05-26
What a wonderful read!Review Date: 2004-01-19
Crazy Love by David MartinReview Date: 2002-03-16
He's baaaaaaack! Take notice ...Review Date: 2002-03-14
I'll never look at animals in quite the same wayReview Date: 2002-10-31
Crazy Love is intense and romantic, and the animal characters as vivid as the humans. I guess it could be compared to Dr. Doolittle, Deliverance, Old Yeller. Martin's a master, always unexpected but not at the expense of his characters. He never cheapens them.

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What an adventurous dream!! Good story!Review Date: 2008-06-13
In "The Dreamer," Molly Parker has lost her father in a car accident exactly a year ago. In her dreams she is visited by a strange little girl who offers her help bringing her father back. Molly is introduced to Father Time, with whom she makes a bargain. If she finds and delivers a new crystal ball to Mother Time, she can have her father back. Molly begins an adventurous quest full of obstacles in search of Mother Time, along with her new and loyal friends.
I enjoyed this story very much. It's an easy read (as it is intended for all ages), and easy to follow.
My favorite of all, I have to say is Father Time, Mother Earth, Death, Chaos--all personified! There were many interesting fantasy characters. I loved the winged horses. I was particularly intrigued by Medusa who also makes an appearance in this story. I've always been fascinated by Medusa and her hair full of snakes (I'm terrified of snakes).
Overall, great story!
Great fantasy novel!Review Date: 2006-04-29
In his first novel, The Dreamer, McMillan has given us a splendid setting called The Realms of Timeless Wisdom. It is a place separate from our Earth, yet connected enough that with some help we, too, can go there-in our dreams. It is there that we go when we sleep or die. And, maybe more importantly, it is in this Realm that all the creatures of legend exist: dragons, flying horses, and giants to name a few. To make it a little more intriguing, McMillan hints at the possibility of other Realms, too. As one of the characters states, there are many Realms and Worlds.
Enter Molly Parker. She is a young girl from Littletown (on the planet Earth) whose father passed away in a car accident exactly one year before the book begins. Struggling with her loss, Molly has only one wish: that her father was still alive. Molly is then given a chance to see this wish come to fruition by Father Time, himself, provided she succeeds in the mission he has entrusted her to complete. It is this mission that remains central to the novel and sends the heroine off to battle evil in The Realms of Timeless Wisdom.
Though there are many facets of this book that I love, there are two that really stand out for me. One is that the book has some thought-provoking qualities. As a teacher I constantly find that I slip into Teacher Mode while reading and I ask myself, "How could I use this in the classroom?" Though many fantasy novels lack this type of educational quality, I could certainly see The Dreamer being used as a springboard for many discussions. Topics such as time and its uses, the possibility of life on other worlds, and what it's like to lose someone you love are a few that could be brought up while reading this book.
It is the topic of loss that truly puts The Dreamer into a unique group. In a day when most books seem to get their characters and families from shows like The Simpsons (where everything is sarcastic and dysfunctional), McMillan paints an opposite picture. The love between Molly and her mother Klara is tenderly portrayed and nurtured throughout the novel. We get to experience their pain over the loss of Mr. Parker, which in turn gives us a window to see that this was once (and in many ways still is) a very loving family. That, in today's market, is truly rare.
With all this in mind, I heartily recommend The Dreamer to all readers, both young and old. Matthew G. McMillan has written a wonder of a first novel. McMillan's novel has enough strange events in it to make Rod Serling scratch his head and enough fantasy to make Tolkien smile. Yet, like many of the classic young adult books, The Dreamer leaves one with the idea that hope is real, and life can (and will) get better even when it's rough. It's a great read and the thing that makes it even better is knowing that there will be more books to come!
Thomas Bolme, Jr.
an independent professional book reviewer
In the beginning...Review Date: 2004-08-19
"The Ghosts of Littletown": The Dreamer Book 1Review Date: 2002-04-28
A great book for all agesReview Date: 2002-03-22
I def. reccomend this book to anyone who likes fantasy. This book is good for all ages. I can't wait till the other 2 books come out.

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Excellent CollectionReview Date: 2008-02-27
stephen mitchell does it againReview Date: 2008-02-10
This book has enriched my life.Review Date: 2008-02-05
Beautiful poetryReview Date: 2001-10-03
A perennial favoriteReview Date: 2006-08-19

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A "must read" for birdwatchers, fanciers, and ecologists.Review Date: 2000-02-03
Literary and inspirationalReview Date: 1999-11-04
Romantic?Review Date: 1999-12-23
AwesomeReview Date: 1999-11-06
The Heart and Soul of Bird WatchingReview Date: 2000-01-20
This book is perfect for short reads -- great to pick up for a moment, either to refresh oneself or to share with a friend. It is a perfect gift for any bird lover -- I have purchased 6 copies to date!
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recommand with passion his works and especially Candide together with the other stories issued by the so prestigious Oxford
world's Classics -its a genuine pleasure