Queen The Books
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Great puzzle bookReview Date: 2006-12-12
Solve puzzles to find the amulet.Review Date: 2006-03-14
You solve word, number, or other kind of puzzles and put the results together to find the amulet.
My kindergartner needed assistance with many of the puzzles, but enjoyed the process thoroughly; probably a second-grader could do them alone. Now we just read through the story with our already-solved clues.
A very fun book for a Knight's Kingdom enthusiast.

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Favorite BookReview Date: 2006-02-20
Continuation of the storyReview Date: 2006-03-15
Naturally, our knights find a way to defeat him. A new king is crowned at the end.
Fun for a Knight's Kingdom enthusiast.

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Great book! 9 year old son loved it!Review Date: 2006-03-24
Continue the adventureReview Date: 2006-03-16
The same story is told in "The Lost Kingdom", which is an 8x8 book, but this is a fuller version ("Lost Kingdom" glosses over some elements of the story, leaving you wondering sometimes). If you're choosing between the two, I'd recommend going with "Dark Fortress".
Fun for the Knights Kingdom enthusiast (although none of these are exactly great literature).

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Knowledge....but not as we know it, JimReview Date: 2007-12-13
"The Knowledge Book" is a welcome and highly recommended addition to academic library reference collections Review Date: 2008-01-04
"The Knowledge Book: Key Concepts In Philosophy, Science, And Culture" by Steve Fuller (Professor of Sociology at the University of Warwick) is an extraordinarily well written and organized interdisciplinary reference work focusing on the nature of knowledge. The underlying premise is that knowledge is intrinsically social. Deftly organized into more than forty alphabetically arranged entries on fundamental concepts at the intersection of philosophy and sociology (known in academic disciplines as 'social epistemology'), "The Knowledge Book" includes concepts associated with cultural studies, communication studies, information science, education, policy studies, and business studies. Of special note are the entries dealing with concepts originating in the field of science and technology studies. Each entry presents a succinct, self-contained essay providing an overview of the concept, along with suggestions for further reading. All entries are cross-references, enabling the reader to make connections and follow personal interests. Also available in a hardcover edition (9780773533462, $80.00), "The Knowledge Book" is a welcome and highly recommended addition to academic library reference collections and supplemental reading lists in contemporary philosophy, general science, and cultural studies.

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I found it difficult to put this book down.Review Date: 2000-09-12
Entering Attila's WorldReview Date: 2000-08-24

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A superb commentary on Canada - U.S. culture & politics.Review Date: 1999-07-21
Definitive Essay thet Presaged theGlobalization DebateReview Date: 2002-08-28
The book describes how Canadians have abandoned their traditional 'conservative' values in favor of the easy continentalist option of acquiring American wealth by accepting American values. The author describes how 1960s Gaullism in France was a reaction to the same forces. The same observations can be made today about the knee-jerk anti-Americanism in Europe and France in particular that is paradoxically based on the inherent attractiveness of American values. The American culture is becoming the world culture. It is dispossessing all other cultures that it encounters. This provokes a reaction among 'conservative' (which includes the globalization protestors who in this book's terms are conservative in respect to culture although they would see themselves as anarchistic, radical etc.) who fear that the cultures that they value are going to be lost to the forces of technic- `the one best way'.
I cannot do justice to this book which links these ideas into the flow of Western ideas. It shows the conflicts that of these differing sets f ideas in the works of philosophers and theologians. it does so in a manner that is very accessible to the general reader but has also provided a basis for research by professional philosopher's, political scientists etc. for the 37years since it was published.
This book is on a par with Jacques Ellul's 'The Technological Society.' It is a book that will be remembered and studied for hundreds of years. It uses as its starting point the issue of Canadian nationalism but its implications are universal. I wish that I could give it six stars.
Collectible price: $97.75

HER WAYReview Date: 2008-07-07
A great bio of one of the last great queensReview Date: 2006-06-23

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Excellent intro to PersiaReview Date: 2000-09-12
If I may respond to the reviewers, folk stories do not always follow the Hollywood goodguy-badguy plot. This story does have morales: We should not get attached to material things because they are not permanent, friendship is more important that diamonds, a little kid can come up with a great idea, great achievements are made by working together.
There is some truth to the legend too. A carpet dubbed as `Bahar of Khosrow' (spring of Khosrow), existed at the Palace of Ctesiphone which is referred to in Persian scripts as the `Arch Palace of Ctesiphone'. The carpet was 450 feet long and 90 feet wide, made for Sassanid king Khosrow and for this reason it was named `Bahar of Khosrow'. In the book, the king character is named "Balash", which was the name of five of the Sassanid kings.
One minor critique though, the Sassanid dynasty was pre-islamic. The illustrations in the book, both the architecture and peoples costumes, are obviously post-islamic. :-)
Visually beautiful, engrossing taleReview Date: 1999-11-04

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An important addition to any Medieval or Tudor libraryReview Date: 2000-03-05
Fabulous!!!Review Date: 2003-02-24
However I was pleased to find out that the letters were not hard to read and very interesting. Also, the author gives a lot of background info on each queen so that even a beginner could read this book and follow the names. She explains what's going on in each letter and that makes it much easier.
Well worth your money!
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Outstanding LettersReview Date: 2000-10-29
Thank you God Bless
Joshua Thompson
Outstanding LettersReview Date: 2000-10-29
Joshua Thompson
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