Reviews Books
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Used price: $0.01

Liked it -- mostlyReview Date: 1999-09-01
The perfect guide for any movie buff!Review Date: 2000-06-21
As entertaining as the films...Review Date: 2000-01-06
Funny, Witty, InformativeReview Date: 1999-07-26
Witty and irreverent, just like the girls themselvesReview Date: 1999-06-30

Used price: $14.64

Best Civil War Novel EverReview Date: 2001-11-22
A good historical novelReview Date: 2006-03-26
The title is apt since the story deals with the bitterness of my country split in two for four agonizing years.
Williams toggles back and forth between the Currain family matters in Virginia and North Carolina and the lead up and their involvement in the Civil War. Each chapter is given a time period so the reader can read outside sources of these time periods.
When the five Currain siblings learn their long-dead father is the grandfather of Abraham Lincoln, all are affected in different ways. Williams does a good job with the psychological aspect of each sibling's response and subsequent actions to this unfathomable news. Williams does an admirable job in his character profiles.
What is most interesting about this story are the elaborately detailed battle scenes. The author described these so well I was able to see the planning and execution of the "work" (battle)--north and south--in my mind's eye.
General James Longstreet plays prominently in the story and was a Currain family friend before the War. "Jeems" and his wife Louisa are a house undivided, as they give the reader a picture of what unity can accomplish.
The jubilation and angst Longstreet feels as he bears the responsiblility for the work he is given is palpable. His highs are quite high and his lows are very low. As he goes into the last work of the War and assists General Lee with preparations for surrender, we grieve with Longstreet. I wasn't expecting to cry when the surrender was made known to the barefoot and bone-weary southern soldiers.
A good long read. The author captures the easy elegance of the minority Southern wealthy and their journey to a new South four years later.
A postscript: Williams' sequel to this is "The Unconquered" which gives a greatly detailed picture of the Reconstruction, mainly in Louisiana and set in New Orleans. Another good read.
The best account of the civil war I have readReview Date: 1999-09-09
A Wonderful Civil War Epic NovelReview Date: 2000-03-21
much better than Gone With the WindReview Date: 1999-10-22

Used price: $24.47

Good USMLE, not great for a micro classReview Date: 2008-06-06
Med Students need thisReview Date: 2008-05-26
MICROCARDS are a mustReview Date: 2008-05-04
The Best Cards!Review Date: 2007-04-24
AWESOME!!!Review Date: 2007-04-02

Collectible price: $11.99

Who Wants to Laugh Out Loud? Review Date: 2006-10-19
What a clever, funny book that was clearly written from the heart. What a fresh directive. I could almost hear the author talking to me. I could almost "see" the people and nearly experience what was going on, the desciptions were so clear.
I think Im now a Millionaire Fan..
Now i tape all the shows to find J.E.'s show and watch it. -THANKS ALOT -
All i need to know now is.....what's next Millionaire Boy?
I was so excited...Review Date: 2002-12-15
Loads of fun!
A very entertaining read!
this is a book for everybody!Review Date: 2002-12-13
I enjoyed this book thoroughly! It was well-written and very amusing.
The author has a very comfortable style. It is really like he is talking right to you. There are inner monolouges to let you know what he is thinking at key parts of the book.
This was a very visual book, because the author's descriptions of people, settings, and activities were superb!
I had read other reviews of "Millionaire Boy" and questioned if people were really laughing out loud as they claimed.
I can atest to the fact that this is a very funny book and, yes, I DID laugh out loud. SEVERAL times!
I have passed the book along to other fans of WWTBAM and they have enjoyed it as much as I did.
I too am looking forward to the author's next book.
I think he has a great future ahead of him.
Have a game show fan or a Regis Philbin fan on your gift list?
This is a book for them!
But like I said at the beginning, "Millionaire Boy" really is a book for everybody!
Lots and lots of FUN!!!!Review Date: 2005-06-14
The perfect sitting by the pool book!
If you like Dave Barry, you'll appreciate the humor in this book.
Anybody know if the author has written anything else?
Dave Barry eat your heart out...Review Date: 2003-02-25

Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $16.00

Poor Layout for my favorite RW SeasonReview Date: 2003-09-01
Lots of Info You DIDN'T Know!Review Date: 2002-01-27
My favorite part about the book was the information about the Kelley/Danny and Melissa/Jamie "feud." With quotes from the sources themselves, it adds even more drama than was on the show! VERY interesting!
A must for fans of the real worldReview Date: 2003-02-02
You will really enjoy it!!
Good buyReview Date: 2001-07-25
The Truth Be ToldReview Date: 2001-04-16

ENDEARING FELINE WHIMSEYReview Date: 2006-11-16
A home run for a Chinese native and a cat lover!Review Date: 2005-10-16
SagwaReview Date: 2005-08-17
Siamese cat lovers....Review Date: 2004-01-11
It's a bit long for a bed time story, but really fun! Kids ages 8 or 9 and up may be able to read it themselves, but the beginners may have a hard time.
Beautifully written and illustrated book!Review Date: 2003-07-08

Used price: $7.56

Verb ReviewReview Date: 2008-07-06
They've done it again!Review Date: 2008-04-06
A Great ReviewReview Date: 2007-12-23
if you want to come over the intimidation of french verbs and tenses this book is for you.Review Date: 2007-10-13
Get this.Review Date: 2007-12-25

Used price: $0.39
Collectible price: $25.00

Videohound: Best resource book everReview Date: 2006-02-24
Excellent!Review Date: 2004-09-13
My only wish is that they'd put it out on CD-ROM!
Videohound's Golden Movie Retriever 2004 by CraddockReview Date: 2004-09-01
movie/presentation. Samples of rated movies are as follows:
o Castle of the Living and Dead
o Diamonds Are Forever
This volume is updated each year to reflect new acquisitions.
It is a good value for the price charged.
Necessary for any movie buff.Review Date: 2004-09-03
Best and most complete movie book ever.Review Date: 2004-07-04

Used price: $30.00

Essential for Student Law Review MembersReview Date: 2008-05-01
Pragmatic, clear, systematic, and without equalReview Date: 2007-09-08
Academic Legal Writing is also extremely systematic. Every aspect of the paper is taken into consideration, from the approach to research, to avoiding off-putting humor or politically charged language, time tables for submissions, and so on, even including how to draft letters to professors and law reviews asking them to look over your work and to consider it for publication.
Academic Legal Writing is really in a class by itself. That said, perhaps I can indicate its greatness by invoking a few other names. Academic Legal Writing is a perfect companion volume to Bryan Gardner's The Elements of Legal Style. It is as clear and concise and accessible as Marvin Chirelstein's Concepts and Case Analysis in the Law of Contracts, and it deserves to be as ubiquitous and is certainly as valuable, thoughtful, and comprehensive as Joseph Glannon's E&E Civil Procedure and Erwin Chemerinsky's Constitutional Law: Principles and Policies. If you know these books, you should be going "wow." If you don't, and you are going to law school, I advise reading all of them. (Also Getting to Maybe, which I never found compelling, but am in the distinct minority view on.)
I read Elizabeth Fajans and Mary R. Falk's Scholarly Writing for Law Students, which is also good and which Volokh recommends. Academic Legal Writing appears to be a very conscious next step beyond that book. In a perfect world, buying and reading both would be advisable. In the real world, I read Scholarly Writing once, Academic Legal Writing many, many times. Academic Legal Writing is your desert island pick.
Please do yourself a favor and read this book. If you don't, you will simply be doing all of your competitors a likely unrequited kindness.
One final note: Professor Volokh is a conservative of the thoughtful and sober variety. I am a liberal of the sort who avidly studies the Endangered Species List to see if "Thoughtful Conservatives" have been listed yet. This is not an issue: Professor Volokh's political beliefs are discernible in this book only by the most careful parsing: in some of his examples, he points out the misleading use of statistics in gun violence, an academic preoccupation of his. You could then do the math and figure out that he has at least one conservative leaning. Otherwise, his politics would be utterly inscrutable. And, frankly, this book would be on my bookshelf even if Professor Volokh had say, written a memo arguing that the Geneva Conventions were outdated and pointless. John Yoo, your path to redemption is clear.
Used Academic Legal Writing to earn Great GradeReview Date: 2005-02-08
Thus, going into my last semester of law school, I knew a lot about persuasive and analytical writing, but almost nothing about scholarly writing. I had avoided "paper classes."
Unfortunately, my desire to take a certain class was outweighed by my aversion to academic writing: I was in a class where the entire grade would be based on one paper. Thus, I turned to Volokh's Academic Legal Writing.
The date my paper was due severe formatting glitches caused me to lose 4 - 5 pages of text - the guts of one of my "Roman numeral" arguments. I spend several hours fixing the formatting that could have been spent doing final polishing. Although able to fix the footnotes, I never recovered that lost text.
Nevertheless, I earned the second-highest grade, missing the top score by only 2 points. In earning this grade I bested several law review editors, and many of the top 10 students.
Had I not read and employed the principles in Academic Legal Writing, I am confident I would not have done so well.
One principle I learned was to demonstrate to the reader early in the paper why the paper is necessary. The best way to do this is to show that your paper picks up where another article left off, or that your paper covers an issue previously ignored. Thus, I began:
"Although the federal bribery statute's scope is sweeping, covering conduct well beyond the "the most blatant and specific attempts of those with money to influence governmental action," it has been given scant attention. Legal scholars and political scientists are, in Professor Lowenstein's words, guilty of "sins of omission" for ignoring bribery. Little has changed since Professor Lowenstein's 1985 article. Thus, this Article seeks to fill one of the many gaps."
To those of you familiar with scholarly writing, making this point would seem obvious. But it was not obvious to me. Volokh's book taught me many things I did not know, and I suspect even experienced writers will learn something worth the investment of time and money in his book.
It's also likely that those of you fluent with academic legal writing learned things piecemeal. Volokh's work is systematic: You will fill in gaps of our own knowledge.
Go buy a book here.
Worth ItReview Date: 2006-07-11
Pragmatic, clear, systematic, and without equalReview Date: 2005-07-18
Academic Legal Writing is also extremely systematic. Every aspect of the paper is taken into consideration, from the approach to research, to avoiding off-putting humor or politically charged language, time tables for submissions, and so on, even including how to draft letters to professors and law reviews asking them to look over your work and to consider it for publication.
Academic Legal Writing is really in a class by itself. That said, perhaps I can indicate its greatness by invoking a few other names. Academic Legal Writing is a perfect companion volume to Bryan Gardner's The Elements of Legal Style. It is as clear and concise and accessible as Marvin Chirelstein's Concepts and Case Analysis in the Law of Contracts, and it deserves to be as ubiquitous and is certainly as valuable, thoughtful, and comprehensive as Joseph Glannon's E&E Civil Procedure and Erwin Chemerinsky's Constitutional Law: Principles and Policies. If you know these books, you should be going "wow." If you don't, and you are going to law school, I advise reading all of them. (Also Getting to Maybe, which I never found compelling, but am in the distinct minority view on.)
I read Elizabeth Fajans and Mary R. Falk's Scholarly Writing for Law Students, which is also good and which Volokh recommends. Academic Legal Writing appears to be a very conscious next step beyond that book. In a perfect world, buying and reading both would be advisable. In the real world, I read Scholarly Writing once, Academic Legal Writing many, many times. Academic Legal Writing is your desert island pick.
Please do yourself a favor and read this book. If you don't, you will simply be doing all of your competitors a likely unrequited kindness.
One final note: Professor Volokh is a conservative of the thoughtful and sober variety. I am a liberal of the sort who avidly studies the Endangered Species List to see if "Thoughtful Conservatives" have been listed yet. This is not an issue: Professor Volokh's political beliefs are discernible in this book only by the most careful parsing: in some of his examples, he points out the misleading use of statistics in gun violence, an academic preoccupation of his. You could then do the math and figure out that he has at least one conservative leaning. Otherwise, his politics would be utterly inscrutable. And, frankly, this book would be on my bookshelf even if Professor Volokh had say, written a memo arguing that the Geneva Conventions were outdated and pointless. John Yoo, your path to redemption is clear.

Used price: $9.51

Must have for a BONES addictReview Date: 2008-07-21
Just can't get enough of Bones? Here's more to love!Review Date: 2008-06-13
Great Companion!Review Date: 2008-06-09
Bones the Companion and Season 2Review Date: 2008-05-08
Bones Companion BookReview Date: 2008-02-27
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