Party The Books


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Party The Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

Party The
Arthur's Jelly Beans
Published in Paperback by L,B Kids (2004-03-01)
Author: Marc Brown
List price: $3.99
New price: $1.18
Used price: $0.12

Average review score:

Book Lover
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-15
My daughter loves books and especially Arthur books. I asked her if she would rather have Princess books or Arthur books and she said Arthur books. I was really surprised because she loves everything Princess. I love these books also. They are the perfect lenght and teach lessons. I got her two more for Christmas, I want to get her all of them.

My Son Requests This Book Often
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-09-01
Muffy is throwing a Spring Fling party! Arthur, Francine, Binky, Fern, Buster, Muffy, and The Brain play games like the Egg Push and the Bunny Hop (sack races). In each even, Arthur finishes last-and his friends tease him about being slow. The highlight of the party, however, is a huge solid chocolate egg. Whoever finds the most jelly beans in the Jelly Bean Hunt wins the prize! Will Arthur finish last again? Who will win the huge chocolate egg?

Beautifully illustrated in pastels and bright colors, Arthur's Jelly Beans is a fun book celebrating spring and Easter (although Easter isn't mentioned). On the back of the book is Arthur's Jelly Bean Game featuring a game board. All you need to play is a penny and a few jelly beans as game pieces!

Party The
Bargain Party: How to turn your next garage or yard sale into a clutter to cash bash!
Published in Paperback by PublishAmerica (2007-07-30)
Author: J.A. Wiggins
List price: $19.95
New price: $21.20
Used price: $15.00

Average review score:

Bargain Party
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-24
I have had many garage sales in my time, which I would have called successful, but no sale compared to the one I had after reading Bargain Party! This book is incredible! It takes the simple concept of a garage sale and turns it into a "party" that passerbys will want to stop for. I've never had the success of a yard sale until I experienced this book. I strongly recommend this book to anyone looking to have a yard sale in the future, you'll have more money in your pocket and be the envy of the neighborhood!
Enjoy!

FUN AND ENLIGHTNING
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-07
I HAVE HAD A LOT OF UNSUCCESSFUL GARAGE SALES, AND ORDERED THIS BOOK TO SEE IF I COULD LEARN SOMETHING. I WAS SO ENTERTAINED BY THE STORY LINE, I COULD NOT PUT IT DOWN. I DID NOT REALIZE HOW SUCH A SIMPLE IDEA OF A "PARTY THEME" COULD HELP ME MAKE MONEY, WHILE HAVING SO MUCH FUN IN THE PREPARATION. I AM PLANNING ON HAVING A "PART" SOON......CAN'T WAIT.

Party The
The Basic Symbols of the American Political Tradition
Published in Paperback by Catholic University of America Press (1995-03)
Authors: Willmoore Kendall and George Wescott Carey
List price: $14.95
New price: $12.50
Used price: $12.25

Average review score:

Letter from Independence Mall, Phil. PA
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2000-05-09
"It's probably the best thing George Carey ever worked on." "It's one of the most important books I ever read." "It changed the way I think about America." Willmoore Kendall's classic work, The Basic Symbols of the American Political Tradition, provides an understanding which can only be described as refreshing of the political and cultural tradition out of which the Philadelphia Constitution was forged, and The United States of America was founded. Basic Symbols seeks to determine what propositions and ideals America was founded upon, and is thus committed to, and whether these are the ideals currently accepted as true, and often presented as neatly summed up in the Bill of Rights and in that well worn understanding of that passage of the Declaration of Independence: "all men are created equal... ." Basic Symbols warns that the true tradition may seem anathema to some modern historians and Americans alike who wished it weren't so, but Basic Symbols sets out to present the truth anyway. This single volume of political science and historical inquiry handily challenges the traditional orthodoxy, or the ignorance, that surrounds the founding in a novel manner: by a close inspection of the facts, and more importantly, the application of the analytical method-the hermeneutic-of Erik Voegelin, to the facts. Kendall's book is almost worth the read just to see the theories and teachings of Erik Voegelin briefly explicated and then put into fruitful action, and if nothing else, Basic Symbols can serve as a spring board for further study not into debates about America's founding, but into the works of this important yet often overlooked historian. Kendall starts with the Mayflower Compact of (1620), and then examines the General Orders of Connecticut(1638), the Body of Liberties of Massachusetts Bay(1641), the Virginia Declaration of Rights(1776), our own Declaration of Independence(1776), the Constitution(1787-1789) and finally the Bill of Rights(1789). Kendall slowly teases out a common thread that runs its course, unfolds, and develops over this stretch of time and through these early experiences and experiments in self-government on this side of the Atlantic. Basic Symbols also tackles in this time span, and in the history of America since, a problem common to all political traditions: derailment. Basic Symbols identifies the Gettysburg address as a watershed in the political tradition of America, made possible by a partial derailment in the years preceding the Civil War. Today, the two incompatible traditions are still with us and their friction is at the root of much of our present day political discord; so much so that to ask and seek the answer to the question, "What is the tradition amongst us?" is the very reason why Basic Symbols was written. Rather than the rights-speak and emphasis upon rights that has grown out of the elevation of the Bill of Rights, and the tortured understanding of 'equality' that has sprung from the Declaration, Basic Symbols instead proffers a formidable, and well supported, alternative; the true tradition amongst us holds (or held) the supremacy of the general political will of the community; the legislature through which this is expressed in a very slow, careful, and deliberative fashion; a virtuous people from which these governing bodies are elected, and the concomitant conviction of a virtuous people in a higher law than that of any secular government. Basic Symbols notes that any mention of rights, any ethos of equality, etc., are nowhere to be found in our tradition as founding symbols; they were understood as only the possible concerns for the deliberations of a political community after the establishment of its aims and purposes. Thus, they are not the starting points from which the uniquely American order and tradition is defined. This explains why all forms of variants on "the common good," "better ordering and preservation," were the starting points for, and of paramount importance to, the drafters of everything from the Mayflower Compact to our own Constitution. And this is just to name a few of the most important points. Kendall does well to document and explain the meaning, significance, and importance of all the symbols he identifies as having a place in the American political tradition. The loss of many of the qualities the framers and the Federalist Papers thought necessary for the preservation of the republic and our liberty can leave some readers of Basic Symbols feeling as though the framers were not as wise as they are often made out to be; perhaps their underlying premises were wrong or have since been perverted, and the American experiment has proven to be a failure. Maybe you'll disagree with the tradition Kendall portrays, or deem it no longer relevant, but if you do read it, one thing is certain; you will come away from this book as Gary Wills describes how the crowd walked off from the Gettysburg Address: "...under a changed sky, into a different America."

Letter from Independence Mall, Phil., PA
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2000-05-16

"It's probably the best thing George Carey ever worked on." "It's one of the most important books I ever read." "It changed the way I think about America."

Willmoore Kendall's classic work, The Basic Symbols of the American Political Tradition, provides an understanding which can only be described as refreshing of the political and cultural tradition out of which the Philadelphia Constitution was forged, and The United States of America was founded. Basic Symbols seeks to determine what propositions and ideals America was founded upon, and is thus committed to, and whether these are the ideals currently accepted as true, and often presented as neatly summed up in the Bill of Rights and in that well worn understanding of that passage of the Declaration of Independence: "...all men are created equal... ." Basic Symbols warns that the true tradition may seem anathema to some modern historians and Americans alike who wished it weren't so, but Basic Symbols sets out to present the truth anyway.

This single volume of political science and historical inquiry handily challenges the traditional orthodoxy, or the ignorance, that surrounds the founding in a novel manner: by a close inspection of the facts, and more importantly, the application of the analytical method-the hermeneutic-of Erik Voegelin, to the facts. Kendall's book is almost worth the read just to see the theories and teachings of Erik Voegelin briefly explicated and then put into fruitful action, and if nothing else, Basic Symbols can serve as a spring board for further study not into debates about America's founding, but into the works of this important yet often overlooked historian.

Kendall starts with the Mayflower Compact of (1620), and then examines the General Orders of Connecticut(1638), the Body of Liberties of Massachusetts Bay(1641), the Virginia Declaration of Rights(1776), our own Declaration of Independence(1776), the Constitution(1787-1789) and finally the Bill of Rights(1789). Kendall slowly teases out a common thread--our tradition--that runs its course, unfolds, and develops over this stretch of time and through these early experiences and experiments in self-government on this side of the Atlantic. Basic Symbols also tackles in this time span, and in the history of America since, a problem common to all political traditions: derailment.

Basic Symbols identifies the Gettysburg address as a watershed in the political tradition of America, made possible by a partial derailment in the years preceding the Civil War. Today, the two incompatible traditions are still with us and their friction is at the root of much of our present day political discord; so much so that to ask and seek the answer to the question, "What is the tradition amongst us?" is the very reason why Basic Symbols was written.

Rather than the rights-speak and emphasis upon rights that has grown out of the elevation of the Bill of Rights, and the tortured understanding of 'equality' that has sprung from the Declaration, Basic Symbols instead proffers a formidable, and well supported, alternative; the true tradition amongst us holds (or held) the supremacy of the general political will of the community; the legislature through which this is expressed in a very slow, careful, and deliberative fashion; a virtuous people from which these governing bodies are elected, and the concomitant conviction of a virtuous people in a higher law than that of any secular government.

Basic Symbols notes that any mention of rights, any ethos of equality, etc., are nowhere to be found in our tradition as founding symbols; they were understood as only the possible concerns for the deliberations of a political community after the establishment of its aims and purposes. Thus, they are not the starting points from which the uniquely American order and tradition is defined. This explains why all forms of variants on "the common good," "better ordering...and preservation," were the starting points for, and of paramount importance to, the drafters of everything from the Mayflower Compact to our own Constitution. Kendall does well to further point out why the Bill of Rights was opposed to a man by the framers of the Constitution, lending only more support to his thesis. His analysis of the Declaration and the true meaning of "...all men are created equal..." places the Declaration and the Founding in a whole new light: the light of the American political tradition he identifies which provides a better explication and understanding of these documents, much like a better fitting solution to a puzzle. And this is just to name a few of the most important points. Kendall does well to document and explain the meaning, significance, and importance of all the symbols he identifies as having a place in the American political tradition.

The loss of many of the qualities the framers and the Federalist Papers thought necessary for the preservation of the republic and our liberty can leave some readers of Basic Symbols feeling as though the framers were not as wise as they are often made out to be; perhaps their underlying premises were wrong or have since been perverted, and the American experiment has proven to be a failure.

Maybe you'll disagree with the tradition Kendall portrays, or deem it no longer relevant, but if you do read it, one thing is certain; you will come away from this book as Gary Wills describes how the crowd walked off from the Gettysburg Address: "...under a changed sky, into a different America."

Party The
BBQ Bash: The Be-All, End-All Party G from Barefoot to Black Tie
Published in Hardcover by Harvard Common Press (2008-03-20)
Authors: Karen Adler and Judith Fertig
List price: $29.95
New price: $16.75
Used price: $18.32

Average review score:

Make Your BBQ Party Perfect With The BBQ Queens
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-30
You gotta love the BBQ Queens Karen Adler and Judith Fertig! I first met Karen at the 2007 HPBA Expo in Reno, NV where I interviewed her for my podcast show and then I saw her again earlier this year at the 2008 HPBA Expo in Atlanta, Georgia. In that YouTube video I shot from this year's conference, she told me about this new book that was coming out and now it's here. If you like BBQ (and what low-carber DOESN'T?!), then you will enjoy this very colorful and loaded cookbook. Yes, there are a bunch of recipes (not all low-carb, but all super delicious!), but there are also tips about adding just a little something extra special to whatever party event you are having around the grill. If you wanna BBQ right, then you gotta trust the BBQ Queens. :D

Lively BBQ Recipes for Summer
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-29
As always, you can count on Karen Adler and Judith Fertig (aka the Barbecue Queens) to remind you not to take cooking so seriously. You can have fun at the grill, and enjoy guests at the same time. The recipes in this latest romp through the back yard will allow you to do both. Some are fresh, some are tried and true, but all are well written, easy to follow and won't have you scanning weird markets to find obscure ingredients for esoteric dishes. In other words, you can find what you need at your neighborhood Kroger or Safeway to serve up dishes from this book, touted as "The Be-All End-All Party Guide, from Barefoot to Black Tie". My only exception to this cookbook is the ladies' advice regarding storing Frozen Margaritas, Frozen Cosmos, and The BBQ Queens' Royal Slush in the freezer. The instructions tell you to thaw them until slushy before serving. Unless Karen and Judith have a sub-sub-zero freezer, these drinks, given their alcohol content, should be pretty much slushy when you take them out. Alcohol simply does not freeze in the home refrigerator freezer. With that said, don't miss this cookbook, it will set your mind for barbecuing all summer long!

Party The
Beach Lovers Guide to the Perfect Sandwich
Published in Paperback by PublishAmerica (2004-01-28)
Authors: Linda Bostwick and Pat Hendricks
List price: $17.95
New price: $16.95
Used price: $7.06

Average review score:

Oh My GOODNESS!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-19
The ladies who wrote this book must have worked on recepies for years. Very good book for sandwiches! I highly recommend this book for all who like to try good food!

Great Sandwiches
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2004-03-23
The sandwiches in this book are delicious. The ingredients are easily found in your local grocery store and easy to assemble. I wish my mom knew about the children's sandwiches when I was little. The Chicken Boogie Boarders made with waffles instead of bread sounds great. I've tried some of the roll-up sandwiches such as the Smokey Turkey and the Greek Chicken for my work lunches. They sure beat the old bologna sandwiches I usually make! If you buy this book you won't be disappointed.

Party The
Bear's All-Night Party
Published in Hardcover by August House (2001-01-25)
Author: Bill Harley
List price: $15.95
New price: $9.52
Used price: $3.00
Collectible price: $15.95

Average review score:

family sing along
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-05-11
while I wish the music for the song were included, I made up a tune to sign and soon found my kids joining in. This is one library book we're going to buy.

An extravagantly illustrated modern fable
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2001-09-18
Bill Harley's Bear's All-Night Party is a children's book about the optimistic Bear who wants to throw a big celebration, despite the pessimism of the many other animals, who claim that "no one will come." It doesn't take long for Bear's dance, music, and song to catch on in this extravagantly illustrated modern fable about the importance of enjoying the moment. A lovely, lively picturebook superbly enhanced with Mellisa Ferreira's artwork.

Party The
Best Birthday Parties Ever!
Published in Library Binding by Millbrook Press (1999-08-01)
Author: Kathy Ross
List price: $24.90
New price: $24.87
Used price: $1.04

Average review score:

Very cute book
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2001-10-20
I thought that this book was great. We checked it out from the library and my six year old son has chosen the teddy bear party. He was not too thrilled with the bowls of porage cakes, but all the other ideas are great and really get the kids involved.

MElissa

Great Book!
Helpful Votes: 15 out of 17 total.
Review Date: 1999-12-26
This is a great book. I only got it yesterday, but it has lots of wonderful ideas. Although this is really a kids do it yourself book, it can also be used by parents, or party planners like myself. It has a pile of themes, and each one includes invitations party hats, crafts decoration, favor and games. Most of the party hats, favors and games are those you can make from paper and other things around the house. Most of the crafts can be used as games, and many can also be used as favors. I always like Kathy Ross's books, but this one was GREAT!

Party The
The Best Party Ever - A guide to Throwing a Large House Party
Published in Paperback by Climate Publishing (2008)
Author: Markus Taylor
List price:
New price: $24.95

Average review score:

Great guide, great read!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-10
I already knew Mark threw the best parties ever. But after reading his book from cover-to-cover, I now know that he's a pretty dang good author as well. The book is like a recipe for a great house party, and it is chock full of fun tidbits and hilarious anecdotes, so you can read it just for fun, as well.

I highly recommend the book if you want to throw a huge party without the worries, or even if you just want to know what that experience is like.

Relax and have fun at your party!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-20
In my parties of the past, I spent the whole time in the kitchen or running around looking for an item that was forgotten (wine opener, ice bucket, TP, special CD, etc).

This book has changed all of that. Everything is in place the day before the party and even gives me time for a little nap that afternoon.

Wow!!! This book is worth it's weight in gold.

Party The
The Best Sleepover Ever! #1: Angelina's Diary (Angelina Ballerina)
Published in Paperback by Grosset & Dunlap (2006-01-19)
Author: Katharine Holabird
List price: $3.99
New price: $0.15
Used price: $0.01

Average review score:

Great bridge between early readers and chapter books
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-11
My 5 year old daughter is really enjoying reading this book. She reads about 5 pages to me every night at bedtime. The book is written in a "dear diary" format and has an engaging plot with familiar characters. This book is more challenging than the typical 32 page early reader chapter books. There are some challenging vocabulary words. Some words are used repetitively. I noticed my daughter struggling to read certain words(audition, absolutely) but by the third time she saw the same word, she had mastered reading it, so that is a good thing! The pages are mostly text with some small black and white illustrations. Because of the "dear diary" format, its a nice bridge between the early reader books and more challenging chapter books. My daughter is going to have a real sense of accomplishment when she finishes this 75 page book!

My Daughter Loves It!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-10
It is a wonderful addition to her Angelina Ballerina books. She gets an inside scoop into Angelina's thought process. My daughter liked the journal that she has asked if she could start her own journal. A Must Buy for the Angelina fans.

Party The
Betty Bear's Birthday
Published in Board book by Grosset & Dunlap (1977-10-01)
Author: Gyo Fujikawa
List price: $4.95
Used price: $5.89
Collectible price: $40.00

Average review score:

Bedtime Book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2004-11-09
Both of my children enjoyed this bedtime book for uncountable readings. Great for learning different animals by their picture.

One Of My Childhood Favorites!
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 1998-10-28
Betty Bear's Birthday was one of my favorite picture books as a pre-schooler, and I am saddened to see that it is out of print. It's a very sweet story about a little bear named Betty who believes that everyone has forgotten her birthday until her friends surprise her with a special picnic. The illustrations are beautiful and remind me a bit of Japanese anime. If you are able to find this book, it's certainly a nice addition to any child's library.


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