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Shadow The
A Shadow of Treason (Chronicles of the Spanish Civil War, Book 2)
Published in Paperback by Moody Publishers (2007-09-01)
Author: Tricia Goyer
List price: $12.99
New price: $7.68
Used price: $4.88

Average review score:

Her Best to Date
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-15
Fine, I admit it. I love history. Not so much the dry stuff like dates, etcetera, but even that can be fun if you learn the nuances and trivia behind it all. It's the personalities, the reasoning and the what if's that make it so enjoyable.

That's why I love Tricia Goyer's books.

Her most recent historical, A Shadow of Treason, is part of her Chronicles of the Spanish Civil War series. Tricia explains in the foreword that the Spanish Civil War was something she knew little about before doing her research for her WWII books. Like her, I find that time period to be fascinating.

The first book in the series, A Valley of Betrayal, beautifully set the scene. A Shadow of Treason picks up the story and takes the reader deeper into the lives of the characters, moving ever closer to the final part of the trilogy.

A Shadow of Treason finds Sophie Grace still in Guernica, Spain after General Franco, with the help of the Nazi's, has bombed and burned the historic village. Having already lost Michael, the fiancé left her safe home in Boston for, she finally has come to terms with her heart--she is in love with Philip Stanford, the American volunteer soldier in the Abraham Lincoln brigade who'd rescued her in her escape from Madrid. Just when she is ready to look forward to a life with Philip, Walt Block, the shady newspaper reporter who'd helped her get into Spain calls in a favor. A big favor. And he drops a bomb of his own on Sophie's dreams, making her choose between Philip and helping to save the people of Spain who she has come to love.

The twists and turns will keep you guessing. The intrigue will keep you reading. The beauty of Goyer's prose will keep you thinking about this story long after you finish the last word. She has hit her stride when it comes to word craft with this book--I believe it is her best to date.

As a stand-alone, however, I would not recommend A Shadow of Treason. You would lose too much of the depth and panorama of the story. By reading the trilogy in order, the story takes on a life of its own and you come to care deeply about the characters. If you have read A Valley of Betrayal, then grab A Shadow of Treason and inhale the senses-grabbing prose. If you have not read A Valley of Betrayal, why not? Get it now and travel along with unforgettable characters to a time that should not be forgotten. Then you will be ready for A Shadow of Treason.

Fascinating Look at the Cost of War
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-23

Tricia Goyer continues the story of the Spanish Civil war and paints a picture of sorrow, pain, fear and hope. As in any war, the loss is considerable, and the opportunities are endless for a chance to become a reluctant hero. Sophie went to Spain to find true love, and ended up finding real love while sacrificing her dreams and hopes for a greater cause.

As often in war, that cause becomes nebulous and hard to hold onto when faced with the belief and passion of the enemy.

Powerful plot, deep characters, vivid writing. If you like Goyer, you'll want to get a copy. If you like reading about obscure bits of history and overlooked wars check into this series.



Painting History in Vivid Strokes
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-16
For years now, Tricia Goyer has captured our imaginations with stark retellings of historical events. Using fiction as her canvas, she's painted the human drama of WWII Europe and the South Pacific. Her stories deal with national tragedies, while never forgetting the personal lives at stake, and that's what makes her novels so memorable.

In the Chronicles of the Spanish Civil War, Goyer gives us a largely unexplored setting. She educates while she entertains, even giving us a backdrop for a famous Picasso canvas. As I read, I found myself following, once again, the struggle of Sophie as she tries to use her talents for a good cause, as well as her struggle to discern who is telling her the truth and who is focused on treason. Torn between Michael and Philip, Sophie makes choices that will affect the outcome of the war. Along the way, she crosses paths with Spaniards, Moors, Germans, and Americans--many of them familiar from the first book in the series.

"A Shadow of Treason" weaves intricate threads of history and lives into a rich, impeccably researched novel, that accelerates toward a final showdown. I can't wait to read the conclusion to this wonderful series. Just as Bodie Thoene gave us a larger context for the Second World War's effects in her Zion Covenant Series, Goyer describes the political and social climate leading up to the outbreak of WWII. We see here the lines of fascism and communism, as well as the confusion that reigned in the minds of common people and the media.

I've read Goyer's non-fiction and found it to be wise and humorous, but as a fiction writer she is still one of my favorites in her genre. She crafts believable characters, conflicts, and settings, all under the umbrella of a deep yet never preachy faith.

Great Story
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-24
If you haven't discovered Tricia Goyer, you've missed a treat. In a Shadow of Treason, book two in her Spanish Civil War Series, Sophie Grace, who went to Spain to be with Michael her fiance, believes he's dead. After all, he died in her arms during a bombing raid. Then she learns it was all a farce. Michael faked his own death. Sophie has been recruited as a spy to find him and report back on his activities.
Sophie, who has fallen in love with Phillip, a man who doesn't hide secrets from her, and wouldn't deceive her, doesn't want to go. Michael may be alive, but he's dead to her.
Tricia Goyer does impeccable research, even interviewing veterans of the wars she writes about. Her settings are real, and her characters are so compelling she hooks the reader from page one.

Second entry in series another powerful winner
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-27
A Shadow of Treason by Tricia Goyer is the second book in the Chronicles of the Spanish Civil War. Painted Sophie Grace is back as is her love Phillip, and all the other characters Father Manuel, Deion, Jose, and even Michael has returned from the dead. Walt approaches Sophie and tells her a tale of stolen gold that could arm the Republicans in the war against the Fascist Nationalists, but the only person who knows where the gold is hidden is Sophie's ex-fiance Michael. To save Spain, she must reinstate herself in Michael's life and find out the secrets he's hiding. But to do so, she has to turn her back of new love Phillip. Walt also works behind the scenes to bring Father Manuel to Paris so the world can hear the truth about the German bombing of Guernica as well as reuniting Jose and Sophie. There are so many plotlines in this book, but Goyer handles all of these disparate, desperate characters with aplomb. Sophie's fear and distrust of Michael are palpable. The Spanish Civil War was a complicated era, but Goyer treats it with objectivity. No side was completely innocent, but the devastation done by Franco's Nationalists with the aid of the Nazi party was abominable. The one little complaint I had is why would Michael take pictures of the secret tunnel and then hide them away where Sophie could find them? Other than that loose end, the book zips along with heartbreak and suspense. Heavy clouds hang over the characters, but they cling to their faith in God and each other. I can't wait for the last book!

Shadow The
Shadow Star Vol. 1: Starflight
Published in Paperback by Dark Horse (2001-09-05)
Author: Mohiro Kitoh
List price: $15.95
New price: $2.99
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Average review score:

The sunny beginning to a relentlessly dark tale
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-03
Looking back on Shadow Star's first volume after I've read up to its eleventh, it really is amazing how misleading this series is. It's wonderful, deep, and unique--but misleading. It seems to start off as a shojo or magical girl tale, with some hints of Pokémon here and there. But once a few more characters are introduced, it plunges straight into the abyss and never really leaves.

Despite the fact that from a lighthearted beginning blooms an impossibly creepy and disturbing alien horror, the first volume of this wonderful series is great nonetheless. It tells the story of the energetic sixth grader Shiina Tamai, who discovers an otherworldly star creature while swimming off the shore of a small island during summer vacation. She names the flying, shape-shifting alien Hoshimaru and takes him home with her. On the flight home after an encounter with a sword beast that almost destroys her plane, and once she gets back to the city, Shiina quickly learns that Hoshimaru is only one of the dozens of psychic critters that have come to Earth. Her new, painfully shy friend Akira Sakura is also linked with one of these beings (called shadow dragons), and that not all shadow dragon owners are so kind... and many will not rest until they wipe out the laws of the world and rebuild the planet to their own liking.

From start to finish, it's a fantastic journey through the human psyche; every single one of the people with a shadow dragon is a fraught teenager with deep secrets and twisted desires. This shows exactly what kids would do with the power to kill, crush, slice, and blast their way through all of their problems.

Setting up the complex plot to come, in volume 1 Shiina is saved from drowning by a mysterious girl, she and Akira learn of each other's young shadow dragons, and a single boy begins devising a plot to bring down a nearby aviation company. Coupled with smart dialogue and a thin, sharp art style, here Shadow Star begins outlining some basic points while catching readers off-guard by its happy nature. As a satisfying opening that keeps you interested and exposes more key points than the manga, kicking off very complicated and mature stories rarely gets this good.

Getting the word out.
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2004-08-19
Shadowstar combines the cute with the disturbing. Kitoh's character designs are different from most other manga artists in a positive way. He employs views and perspectives that raise him a cut above other artists.
Take Tsuda's Karekano as an example. While I enjoyed the storyline, ideas, and character designs, the artist employs many still shots and head on or side views. Kitoh shows a wider repetoire techniques.
Through the series, I found the main characters realized and the mysteries compelling. If you like volume 1, 2-5 do not disappoint.

don't let the cuteness fool you, this is serious manga...
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2002-09-01
It starts out looking a bit like Totoro, begins to look magical girl, then takes a left and heads straight for the twilight zone. This is great manga with real characters. Shiina is lighthearted but determined but very unlike Sailor Moon. Akira is disturbing, she makes this series definitely not for kids! There are secrets behind secrets in this story and I can't wait to see more.

I really liked this
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2002-07-05
i really like this manga, its about Shiina a normal girl who gets rescued by Hoshimaru, a strange starfish thing. this manga can be dark at times, and a little grusome, but its also very light in parts, and cute. i really enjoyed reading this, and the next book, and i recommend it.

Special friends
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2003-02-03
A young girl named Shiina vacations in the summer with her grandparents and discovers a strange, star-shaped creature under the water just offshore. Swimming in an unsafe area, she nearly drowns, but the creature saves her and she secretly adopts it. Meanwhile, shape-changing "dragons" are making their presence known, causing chaos in the skies. And an older, disturbed girl Shiina meets in her kendo class may have a connection to her unearthly companion.

What does it all mean? "Starflight" provides the setup and introduces the characters, but answers will come later. SHADOW STAR begins like a lighthearted girl's adventure, but soon takes a darker turn. I am looking forward to seeing the mystery unfold in future volumes.

For those who have been following the serial in Dark Horse's SUPER MANGA BLAST, this collection reprints material from the first six issues.

Shadow The
Shadow Strategies of an American Ninja Master
Published in Paperback by Frog Books (1996-03-06)
Author: Glenn Morris
List price: $18.95
New price: $11.31
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Average review score:

buy it if you're a seeker
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-20
this and path notes are probably the most important and influential books i've read on the esoteric subjects of spirituality, meaning, self-exploration, enlightenment, kundalini, meditation, and the mysteries of life. If you seek you shall find; reading Glenn's books will take you one step closer.

Ruminations of a Ninjutsu Teacher....
Helpful Votes: 14 out of 14 total.
Review Date: 2003-02-13
Glenn Morris picks up where he left off in his first book, "Path Notes of an American Ninja Master" (1993). This is not an instructional book on ninjutsu per se (no pictures), although it is chok-full of Morris's further journey on the martial arts /ninpo path (Bujinkan style under Masaaki Hatsumi), anecdotes and interpretations of philosophy, both Asian, Occidental, and other. I found it similar in some ways to Robert Smith's book, "Martial Musings". Some of Glenn Morris's most interesting views he presents in Chapter 9, "Characteristics of Shugyosha Across Cultures" (page 169). Shugyosha he defines as a person who is searching for the truth...I have a feeling that this is what Morris is doing with his series of books.

There is also the enjoyably opinionated Chapter 11, "Mud and Water, Purity and Power" where Morris allows his biases against other well known (sometimes questionable) martial artists of our time, to hang out in the wind. Among them Harunaka Hoshino (originally known as Chi Yuan) who created his own ninpo art from Japanese karate and kobudo during the ninja boom, Choi Hong-hi of Taekwon-Do whom he lambasts as having earned only shodan (1st black belt) before his return to Korea from Japan (now, now--nobody promoted Hatsumi sensei to 15th dan), and Genbukan Ninpo's Shoto Tanemora, once a student of Ninja Great Masaaki Hatsumi (and others) whom he dismisses as "...another cop..." with robotic movements (page 244). Some of the criticisms are fair, some are not...Morris doesn't bother to share his sources.

I don't accept Glenn Morris's interpretations and claims concerning the many things supernatural/psychic which pepper his writings--but if I only read things I agreed with, I wouldn't be living! I am, I admit, a cautious skeptic. I find Morris to be overly generous in the way he doles out his faith, often optimistic in accepting theories and studies which have not been scientifically counducted or checked, although even he draws the line at things like Alien abductions (see Chapter 13, pages 312-316). On the other hand, his insights are honest, and personal. In sharing his beliefs, he hides nothing, holds back nothing. Reading between the (esoteric) lines without any adaptation or interpretation, I find much of the advice he offers on this volume to be homespun, and often sensible.

Morris seems a cross between a scholar-warrior and a pseudo-intellectual hippy. This book is entertaining and fun to read. You don't have to share the man's opinions or beliefs to enjoy his adventures. If you enjoy martial arts autobiographies, or reading the personal thoughts of other people, this volume is just the thing.

Yet another mind-expanding book by Glenn Morris
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2002-06-09
Glenn Morris furthers the subjects he originally touched on in his book "Path Notes," and also gives even more insights into his experiences with meditation, things that go "bump" in the night (as well as the mind!), and his experiences in the martial arts. His insights are useful in exploring the inner workings of the mind, the body, and the spirit, as well as expanding your knowledge of your OWN martial art, whether it be aikido, kung fu, karate, ninjutsu, or whatever.

And, to make matters even better, check out his reading list / bibliography for an even more intense mind screw! :)

A must read!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 1998-12-02
This and Morris' book Path Notes, should be read by everyone. I think the world would be a better place. He is the most inspiring author I have ever read.

Home run, again.
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 1999-12-24
This guy is just amazing. He comes back to answer all of the questions you had from the first book. If you miss these you are missing the chance to improve every aspect of your life. It makes it easier to laugh at all our demons. Mr Morris is uncanny in his observations and ability to relay such amazing information. Definate must for any one interested in martial arts, self-improvement or self-exploration.

Shadow The
Shadows of Trickle Creek
Published in Paperback by BookSurge Publishing (2006-01-25)
Author: V. W. Williams
List price: $19.99
New price: $17.99
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Average review score:

Riveting!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-12-05
I planned to read a chapter a day when I began this book. Well, throw that out the window -- it's not possible to put this book down. The story is compelling, humorous, and true to life. The characters are so real, I found myself casting stars to play each one when the movie comes out! I cannot wait for V.W. Williams' next book!

A must read
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-31
Shadows Of Trickle Creek is an excellent book with captivating characters and a plot that grabs you and won't let go. A true must read.

Great Read!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-06-12
This story pulled me in from the first paragraph. Great writing and descriptions make the characters come alive. Leavened by humor, the tension builds to a satisfying climax. I'm living in Texas and have lived in a small town and she nailed both, with kindness and humor. I hope this talented author keeps writing.

Thrilling Mystery set in East Texas
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-05-12
Shadows of Trickle Creek is Vickie Williams' stunning debut novel. Set in the Big Thicket of East Texas, the book is filled with details and skillfully written descriptions that showcase the beauty of the area and the author's love of Texas. The plot is intricate and fast paced and the characters are strong and yet very human. V.W. Williams is a new writer to watch out for and I'm eagerly awaiting her next release.

Keep up the excellent work!

Diana Driver

Personality-driven mystery-drama
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-05-12
Involving you immediately in its characters but slowly unpeeling their depth, this novel drives toward the gradual explication of a sinister plot in a small Texas town, but its real appeal is the grasping of different believable but iconic characters for self-respect. Not unlike Texas itself, it is vast and complicated but boils down to a few simple truths. Its two most enigmatic characters are an honest cop fleeing the chaos of his past, and a hard-working country woman attempting to discover hers, but they are complemented by insightful beef-jerky-tough older ladies and a town full of familiar personalities. As our publishing industry spirals into the increasing irrelevance of niche publishing and empty drama, it is refreshing to find an independent author with this much tenacity toward storytelling in its most vivid form.

Shadow The
A Short History of the Shadow: Poems
Published in Hardcover by Farrar Straus Giroux (2002-04-07)
Author: Charles Wright
List price: $20.00
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Average review score:

More Greater Romantic Lyrics
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2004-11-26
At the beginning of this collection, Charles Wright or his persona looks around his study and wonders "where to begin again?" Well he might ask. In his previous three books Wright compiled one of the most comprehensive long sequences since the Cantos, a massive work he calls the Appalachian Book of the Dead, though it has not yet been published under that title. A Short History of the Shadow, retaining the casually associative open-ended structure of the three preceding collections, concentrates on short poems that may be described as modern pastoral elegy informed by the cross-genre imperative M. H. Abrams has called the "Greater Romantic Lyric," a freely associative first-person meditation rooted in a particularized setting. Coleridge's "Frost at Midnight" and Wordsworth's "Tintern Abbey" epitomize the form; and Wright, their successor, is the most persistently Romantic of postmodern poets in his transcendentalism, courtship of the spirit of nature, and assertion of the primacy of imagination in the face of phenomena. He filters Coleridge through his love of ancient Chinese poetry, especially as recreated in the work of James Wright, giving his poetry a luxuriantly multicultural overtone. This new collection seems an extension of the material and methods of the Appalachian poems. It is not clear to me why it shouldn't form part of that sequence, since although its poems stand firmly on their own that's also true of those in Appalachia, Black Zodiac, and Chickamauga.

Wright's Mastery
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-07-27
This book isn't Wright's best, and pales a little after the volumes collected in Negative Blue. That it's still very, very good--perhaps the best book from any of the older generation SINCE Negative Blue--is a testament to Wright's power. I reccomend this book highly, but don't fail to read the rest of his books.

compelling
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-04-07
The sounds of this poetry are amazing. The music is unbound & sprawling. Wholly modern. Of all the Pulitzer Prize winners, Charles Wright is one of my favorites. This poetry is very idiosyncratic.

Full of wonder shared with human frailty
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2003-05-02
Chales Wright is an amazingly fine poet. How he is able to look and see things we fastscan everyday and in a mere few phrases turn that blink into quiet monument remains a wonder to all who read him. Read? No, luxuirate. Wright's strange friendship with death introduces us to dark rooms, hand held in his lighted clasp, and gives meaning to all the mysteries nature giggles about in the corner. He is able to pluck the most mundane of ideas and place them in a land of myth and history and encourages us to think? Yes. But also he encourages just to read his poems again and again..........along with the poems of others, he adds, smilingly. Continuingly recommended.

the latest from the master
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2002-05-23
"Every true poem is a spark,/and aspires to the condition of the original fire..." (from "Body and Soul II").

In this, Wright's fifteenth volume, the language--urgent and palpable--spills off the page like a shower of sparks. Not since Yeats has a master poet in our language seemed poised to enter such a rich and important later phase. Wright is unquestionably the top dog of our poetry, and in this book his fire shows no sign of dimming.

Personally I think that ths book (and fourteen others) are a must-read for anybody interested in what the English language is capable of.

Shadow The
Under Saturn's Shadow: The Wounding and Healing of Men (Studies in Jungian Psychology By Jungian Analysts)
Published in Paperback by Inner City Books (1994-04)
Author: James Hollis
List price: $25.00
New price: $17.97
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Average review score:

Truly insightful
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-21
This is an excellent book. Deep, insightful, authentic and helpful to all those who want to understand themselves better. Even though it is an analysis of societal and psychological issues that men have to face and struggle with, I believe that women will also find this book very useful.

Under Saturn's Shadow
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-19
Hollis hits the nail on the head. I found this book to be accurate on many levels and I will benefit from it the rest of my life. How I view my relationship with my father has changed and how I interact with other men will never be the same. This should be required reading for fathers of boys.

Understanding and appreciating men
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-10-12
Absolute must reading for anyone who wants to understand the meaning behind what boys and men do and the reason behind their behaviors. A must read for wives and mothers.

Short, hard hitting, and to the point
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-10
This book is roughly 135 pages. It covers a wide range of relatively complex ideas presented in a clear, well organized manner. Ever notice that when someone really understands something they don't need 300 pages to explain it?

This book challenged many of my ideas about my relationships with parents, my ex-wife, and my life choices (since childhood... I'm 36). I recommend it to anyone who is in this field or just on their own personal journey to have a greater understanding of men and their wounds / healing...

Enjoy

Painful but necessary reading
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-27
I am total James Hollis fan. I have now read four of his books and have found them liberating. Visit his website for a clue for why he is so effective - he is not 30 years of age with limited life experience. He commenced his training only after he completed another successful career in academia. Most would have been content to have lived the life he already had. He has the life skills and experience to help us all illuminate our lives.

The book concerns the burden of being a man, exposing some of the constricting myths that have made manhood so painful. It is a book about men but not necessarily only for men - my wife read it too and found it very moving. It is enriched by the signficant store of Hollis reading in poetry and literature. It is not an easy fix and like anything worthwhile requires your concentrated attention. Further, it is only a beginning rather than an end. Hollis says it himself when he quotes somewhere Jung's description of the psychoanalytical endeavour - it can provide insight but then there must come endurance and courage. You can have a vision of what you would like to be but then comes the fidelity to make that vision a reality.

I would recommend this book highly.

Rob

Shadow The
The Velvet Shadow (The Heirs of Cahira O'Connor #3)
Published in Paperback by WaterBrook Press (1999-02-16)
Author: Angela Elwell Hunt
List price: $9.99
New price: $5.37
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Collectible price: $10.00

Average review score:

The Best Yet!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-10
Book Three of the Heirs of Cahira O'Connor was my favorite of the series. I enjoyed the setting - the Civil War - and the development of Flanna's understanding of the real issues of the war. The aspect of a woman doctor in a time when they were not accepted was very well done. Love, loyalty, faith - it has it all...

Great Book Must Read
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2004-08-29
I love this book. Even though I'm just 15. I thought is had an amazing plot and a wonderful ending. The only reason I'm giving it 4 stars is because of the beginning. It was incredibly slow and boring. But I'm so glad I decided to keep reading!

What a wonderful story!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2002-05-23
This book is moving...I thought that it brought a new eye to the Civil War. Flanna is in Boston, studying to get her medical degree so that she can return to Charleston and help her father in his practice. However, the Civil War breaks out and Flanna is forced to figure out how she will get home. As in the other Cahira O'Connor books, she dresses as a boy and becomes a soldier.

I thought this book was very well written from beginning to end. The death of the professor is Kathleen's impetus to get back to work on the story of the heirs of Cahira O'Connor. What she finds leads her to wonder what HER role in this will be.

I highly recommend this book to anyone, but please read the other 2 books in the series first. This book will make you want to rush out and pick up the 4th.

Fantastic Historical Fiction Based During the Civil War
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-05-16

This book is the 3rd in "The Heirs of Cahira O'Conner" series. Although I haven't read the 4th, so far this one is my favorite. Not that the first 2 are not good, they are terrific, it's just that this one gripped me from the beginning. I read this 400 page novel in just 24 hours!

Flanna O'Conner is finishing up medical school in Boston when the Civil War begins. She longs for her family in Charleston SC and disguises herself as a soldier in her effort to return to the south. Although Flanna's character has depth from the beginning, her travels deepen her character and trust in God. This is a profound story of sacrifice, loyalty, and how the effects of this war dramatically changed so many lives. These people gave up virtually everything (their lives, family, homes, & work) for a cause they believed in.

Flanna's experience and what is shared in this book really brings significance to the heroism of those who served in the Civil War. The author does an excellent job of researching our country's culture and circumstances during the mid-1800s. At the end she writes two pages on her references. I had no idea that there were 400 women who actually did pose as men in order to serve in the Civil War.

What I love about historical fiction is that it gives me a heart for the people who lived during the time, and a desire to learn more. What a great way to learn about history!!

Hunt highlights women in history
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2000-05-24
Novelist Angela Elwell Hunt has done it again! Her exciting historical women's fiction series shines with complex stories of gifted women seeking to make a place for themselves in a world, dominated by narrow ideas of women as little more than man pleasers.

Velvet Shadow is the third in a Cahira O Connor series. Flanna O'Connor a Southern bell who defied convention to study medicine in Boston Mass on the eve of the Civil War. Her hopes to take her degree back to the south are shattered by the outbreak of war, cut off from her family she tries to enlist in the Army as a Doctor and prejudice turns her back.

This theme runs throughtout the story as the wealthy Bostonian abolitionists bemoan the fate of slaves, while mistreating their Irish servants. Her keen eye for hypocrisy in society is entertaining. I had not known that some freed blacks also had slaves. Her devotion to research illuminates the Zeitgeist (ruling ideas) of the times. When an aspiring politican pursues her to marry him and forsake medicine, Flanna, like her ancestor and many actual women in the Civil War impersonates a man to join the Union Army. She hopes to make her way home to the south and desert but her destiny as a Doctor calls her to steal supplies to treat the wounded, in spite of threat of exposure, court martial or worse. As a surgeon she becomes the Velvet Shadow who saves men who would have perished without her. Hunt has captured the misery and mismanagement of troops, supplies etc in this heartbreaking war that redefined the history of our country. Again, we are led through a series of heart breaks and changes the character must conquer to survive and thrive.

This book will spark your appetite to read the earlier books in the series that began with The Silver Sword, set in 1400's Anika of Prague must pretend to be a knight in order to escape unwanted attention of a nobleman's son. She plays in integral part in story of Jan Hus, burned at the stake for his religious beliefs.

In the second book, the Golden Cross opens in 1642 when Aidan O'Connor penniless after the death of her father at sea ekes out a living in the slums of Colonial Batavia while her spirit longs for artistic expression. A master cartographer recognizes her talent and senses God leading him to train her. Aidan enters the aristocratic world as apprenticing artist and is coached in fine manners of high born women. She longs to learn and become a wealthy artist to lift her friends from the web of wharf poverty and degradation. Aidan casts aside the brocade to masquerade as a cabin boy aboard the exploration vessel of Captain Tasman to pursue her dream. The voyage is fraught with danger, slaughter and brings Aidan to cling to God. Aidan's voyage leads to unexpected danger, treasure and you'll need to read the book to find out if she settles or succeeds.

As readers we learn in pursuing the talents God has placed within us, we can experience Kairos time creative expansion of time, versus everyday chronos time. This writer broadens my view of the past and gives inspiration to my future.

Shadow The
Walk in Shadows
Published in Paperback by Dominion (2003-10)
Authors: Nicholas Kaufmann and Brian A. Hopkins
List price: $15.00
New price: $41.45

Average review score:

Walk This Way Babeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2004-12-11
This is a very helpful book if you want to learn the trade of purse-snatching or if you've been a victim of petty theft. Walk softly in the shadows and carry a very big scissors. Dumb broads are always walking in the shadows with a big bag swinging off their shoulders. According to Mr. Kaufman, he's snatched more than 7,453 purses, mostly old ladies and cripples-hey, I'm not knocking him, I'm just saying. Looking forward to the sequel, "A Week In The Slammer," coming soon to a book store near you.

It made me sneeze
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2004-05-01
Walk in Shadows
by Nicholas Kaufmann,

"It was akin to having the hiccoughs and vomiting at the same time". (copyrite 1988 BS).
A few slops got smacked up the nostril leading to convulsions. I sneezed, rocketing the thumbtack out of my nose. A walk in the shadows, and then the likely stumble squishing the snail in the eye. Talk about blurred vision.
Upon seeing the title I thought it was a Charm(ed)ing title. No safe little morsels here. You ever get a lacrosse stick across the forehead? Yeah, me too; that is what these shadows are hiding.
Read 'em and weep ... er ... the shadows, that is, ... I have been summoned.

Brad (Author of Andy)

Horror has a new name, and it rhymes with Slick Bofftan
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2004-05-01
Check out Nick Kaufmann's collection to have your wits handed to you on a platter, carefully removed from you by his scintillating prose.

Terrific debut collection
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2004-12-18
Despite what some reviewers would have you think, it's really not very often that a debut fiction collection comes along that trumpets an exciting new talent (at least new to me). I've probably only read three so far in my life. The first was Soft and Others by F. Paul Wilson, then more recently there was Douglas Clegg's The Nightmare Chronicles. Now, add Nicholas Kaufmann to that list. With Walk in Shadows, he shows a sure hand at horror, from the psychological profile ("Not That Kind of Story") to the kinetic escape (aptly titled "Go!").

There are several highlights in Kaufmann's debut collection (culled from several magazines and anthologies of which mainstream readers have likely never heard), beginning with "The Jew of Prague." This story starts out as a simple jewel heist and turns into something else. The atmosphere is the strongest point of this story and Kaufmann layers it on with gusto. Similarly, "VIP Room" is the most disturbingly sexy story I've read since Dan Simmons' "Dying in Bangkok" (as published in Lovedeath) and that is mostly due to Kaufmann's skill at setting the scene properly.

Unlike many authors, who seem to tread similar ground over and over, Kaufmann doesn't write the same kind of story (although many of them take place in his Quick City); each has a different tone -- and, surprisingly often, a different voice -- from the preceding one. This allows him to excel as the first-person narrator, since his "author's voice" is completely absorbed into the character (one prime example is with "Better Off with the Blues").

The only story in Walk in Shadows that shows its obvious origins in a themed anthology (a tribute to Jack Finney's The Body Snatchers), "With Its Sleeves Rolled," is a weaker entry, although it does manage to achieve the unthinkable: making Senator Joseph McCarthy a sympathetic character and causing the reader to think of Communism in a new way. Kaufmann's characters aren't always the nicest people (like the assassin in "The Dead Stay Dead"), but he manages to make them easy to identify with. Even the gang members in "Street Cred" -- which takes hazing to a new low, adding zombies to the equation, with complete believability -- are somehow familiar enough to elicit empathy.

"Voir Dire" is original to this collection and is another highlight. I read it prior to my own jury duty and it gets the details right, but it's really about fear: the universal fear of being found out, because everyone has a secret they wouldn't like discovered, however small. I've also ridden in a taxi in New York, but luckily it was nothing like "Hail" (a double entendre dealing with taxis and the weather). I must admit I didn't care for the ending, but I was willingly carried along up until then. Only "La Bete est Morte" was what I would call mediocre, and that only because the "surprise" was entirely predictable (in fact, I hadn't realized it was a surprise until it was revealed) and, without that, there was little remaining. This is a small complaint because the story reads so well that it almost doesn't matter.

But all of the stories in Walk in Shadows are great reading. The only piece I actually regret reading is not even Kaufmann's doing; that honor goes to Brian A. Hopkins' rambling introduction, in which he talks about himself for several pages, saving only a few paragraphs for praising Kaufmann. Aficionados of new voices in horror would do well to pick up a copy. It is filled with imagination and natural storytelling ability.

Hey, there are no pictures!!
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2004-05-01
Last night I had sex with my boyfriend. His name is Jed and he's a mechanic. We didn't use no condom, so he told me that if I read this book while laying upside down on the couch, I wouldn't get preggers.

The thing is, they're aren't no pretty pictures to look at. Some of the words are real hard, like "shadows".

I borrowed a dictionary from Kyle, the sweet ol' pedophile that lives next door to me in the trailer park. Pedophile means that he's had sex with kids, but my mom says it's okay to talk to him because he's out of jail now, and the they wouldn't have let him go unless he was cured, right?

He's a sweet ol' man. Everytime I go over there he takes pictures of me with his digital camera. He espicially likes it when I wear my daisy dukes. Sometimes, I do housework for him in my bathing suit. He says it helps him with his arthritis.

He has this website with other girls on it, and they do housework for him in their bathing suits too. Some took off their tops while washing the shower. He says cuz they didn't want to get their clothes wet. Sweet, Sweet Kyle.

Shadow The
An Ancient American Setting for the Book of Mormon
Published in Hardcover by Shadow Mountain (1985-06)
Author: John L. Sorenson
List price: $16.95
Used price: $14.37
Collectible price: $20.00

Average review score:

Probable explanations for Book of Mormon Geography & Anthropology
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-01
Sorenson attempts to give geographic ruins in north-central America the place names from the book of mormon text, and attempts to explain ancient culture, linguistics and genetic heritage in context of the book of mormon text. He makes no excuses for his pro-Mormon point of view, in advocating the book of mormon as real history of a lost-people.

Interestingly, he claims the culture and language of a group of north-central aboriginal americans has left remnants of their existence, but only a whisper of these alleged lost-people can be seen today. From the POV of modern-day fragments of archeology, anthropology, linguistics and genetics he attempts to construct a "probable" explanation of book of mormon events.

This is a book about WHAT Mormons could or can believe, and NOT about WHY you should believe it, and definitely NOT an official Mormon church stance on the matter. Sorenson asks so many questions that cannot currently be answered, I'm amazed more books haven't been published to counter or support this work, since it was first published in 1985! I was desperate to read a counter to Sorenson's ideas but all that I could find were whiner-babies on internet forums opposing the Mormon church or Mormonism as a religion.

Let's have a real "counter-Sorenson" scholarly treatise to this book and see what it turns up!?!

In the meantime, this book is very compelling FOR the legitimacy of the Book of Bormon.

A Seminal work on the Book of Mormon
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-05
This is indeed a fine book that has been able to stand strong for over 20 years. It offers pioneering insights that have brought the Book of Mormon into new light and have set the trajectory of Book of Mormon studies into a new and exciting arena. Indeed, this is a must for any serious student of the Book of Mormon, and would make for a fine introduction for those interested in Book of Mormon studies.

Some of the amazing insights that Sorenson brings into view in this work is the idea of two separate Cumorah's - something which David Palmer followed up with brilliantly in his book "In Search of Cumorah" - the DNA issue, long before it was up in "Losing a Lost Tribe" and the likes of the same ilk, and the discussion on plants, animals, metals, etc.

So this book is indeed a seminal work and a must for serious students of the Book of Mormon. Absolutely brilliant!

Helping the reader see what the Book of Mormon actually says rather than what others claim for it
Helpful Votes: 16 out of 16 total.
Review Date: 2006-01-31
We all know a lot of things that aren't so. This may because of the way we receive knowledge from others. An individual bit of knowledge might have been garbled in its path to us, it may have always been nonsense, it might have been state of the art understanding that has since been supplanted, or it might be a decent approximation of reality. This book is, I believe, quite important because it is part of a serious effort to let the Book of Mormon speak for itself rather than imposing on it a mix of interpretations that come from certain hopes and guesses about what the Book of Mormon was actually saying without studying it thoroughly.

Sorenson first builds a map based upon the information provided in the book. This does away with the notion of the so-called "continental" view of the range of the Book of Mormon. He then shows us the very complex cultures in Meso-America and how things seem to have been in the centuries the Book of Mormon took place. While I have my own views and interpretations, I admire Sorenson for sticking to what the Book actually says and what the archaeological and anthropological evidence actually shows us. He doesn't try to get to the point of fitting it together and claiming that this is actually that or anything of the sort. That is a trap too many have fallen into over the years and it actually blinds more than it enlightens.

He compares what the Book of Mormon people say about their lives, the culture and its wars with the way the people of that region lived, adapted, and fought. Sorenson shows us how the rising population and the expansion of the Mayan kingdoms put pressure on the large mix of smaller tribes that "filled in the gaps". The author also helps us see quite clearly what was happening at the time of the end of Nephite civilization. This is a very interesting set of insights.

I think this is a terrific book. Yes, Sorenson is a believer (so am I). Still, this book does a very fine job of stating things on the basis of evidence. No, it does not provide a photograph of Lehi and Nephi on the beach holding the Liahona with the boat in the background. However, even if it did, non-believers would find a way to explain it away, and believers would still believe (because the belief comes from something beyond photographs).

The book has many helpful maps, illustrations, and photographs. It also has a very useful index.

Highly recommended.

An excellent anthropological analysis of the Book of Mormon
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-07-14
Notwithstanding the fact I disagree with Sorenson about his views on Quetzecoatl, this book is a MUST for Book of Mormon students as it presents an extremely plausible geographical and cultural setting for the events related in the text of the Book of Mormon. Sorenson discusses how the drumlin in New York is _not_ the Hill Ramah/Cumorah of the Book of Mormon, contrary popular Latter-day Saint belief, metallurgy, plants and animals, distances, cities, and so forth. The fact that such a thing is plausible bodes poorly for the anti-Mormon theory that Smith was a fraud and the Book of Mormon is an example of 19th centiry fiction.

Continued excellence since 1985.
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2004-03-20
Dr. Sorenson, along with FARMS, theories the most logical setting for the BoM by keeping its time and changing its space. Not since the discovery of the Joseph Smith Papyri has a LDS work been so penetrating as An Ancient American Setting. This book remains to be the cornerstone of the yet complete scientific translation of the Book of Mormon.

Shadow The
Beyond the Shadows of Summer
Published in Paperback by Infinity Publishing (PA) (2005-06-30)
Author: Jonathan Zemsky
List price: $14.95
New price: $8.93
Used price: $6.41

Average review score:

A great story with a mysterious, engaging ending!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-09-22
Through the eyes of this avid reader, a 4th grade teacher and a camp director for middle school age students for over 20 years, I can confidently say that not only will adults enjoy this book, but so will teens. Too often the subject of death/loss and teen angst is ignored or introduced at the end of stories (ie Bridge to Terabithia, Where the Red Fern Grows, etc.). Here is a refreshing book that deals with these issues from the first chapter. There is enough baseball, mystery and friendship issues/adventures to capture even a teen boys attention. Fellow teachers: this story has great potential for some in depth (middle/high school) classroom discussions and writings in areas such as; loss, bullying and love (romantic/family/friends). On top of all of this, a mysterious character and ending to challenge/engage even an adult's discussion group. I highly recommend this book.

Courtesy of Teens Read Too
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-30
Over a ten day period during the summer of 1955, fourteen-year-old James Sayer learns a lot about friendship, racism, family, death, and how forgiveness always comes at a price.

It's been over a year since James's younger brother, Brand, died. Brand suffered from a rare blood disease, and everyone knew that he probably wouldn't grow into adulthood. But Brand didn't die from his disease, at least not directly, and although no one else seems to blame James for his brother's passing, he certainly blames himself. His beloved brother's death has left a hole in his heart, and he's not the same happy-go-lucky teen that he once was. He no longer has any interest in baseball, which was an activity that he and his brother shared together. Drawing, another shared interest, has been pushed by the wayside, abandoned.

Until James gets a job working at the fair for the summer alongside his friend Costello, serving ice cream at Mr. Curren's stand. Along with their other friends, G-Man and Fizz, James hopes to spend the summer working hard, avoiding the baseball games that he'll inevitably be asked to join, and staying out of trouble.

Unfortunately, that doesn't work out as well as he'd planned.

First, there are girls. Namely, a girl named Paige, who he can't seem to get enough of, even though she irritates him constantly. Then there's G-Man and the girl he loves, Marie, which causes tons of trouble since G-Man is black and Maria is white. Then there's the group of bullies in town, led by Black-Eye, who likes to make trouble anywhere he can find it.

Slowly, though, James finds these strange days of summer changing everything he knows about life and love, of tolerance and diversity, and of blame and forgiveness. For James, these ten days during 1955 might just be the turning point that he's been waiting for.

Author Jonathan Zemsky has penned an emotional story that will take you back to the past, when tensions ran high and going to the fair was the highlight of any young boy's summer. With the sounds of baseball all around you and the smell of the fairgrounds drifting in the air, BEYOND THE SHADOWS OF SUMMER is a sweet, sentimental read that you're guaranteed to enjoy.

Reviewed by: Jennifer Wardrip, aka "The Genius"

A great book from a new author!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-15
I blew through this book in two days. Once you start you cannot put it down. It contains drama, tragedy, comedy and also a little supernatural. I absolutely loved it and I hope this author has many more like it in the future.

Too Bad It Had To End
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-11-09
When you read the brief description of "Beyond the Shadows Of Summer", you might mistakenly think that this is a story for adolescents or teens, but you'd be wrong. This is a book for men and women, boys and girls of all ages. Whether you're a teenager that can relate to the book or an adult that has this book conjure up memories, it is for everyone.

This is a story about first love, the tragic loss of a loved one, and the life altering experiences that you can go through due to both experiences.

The book, at 188 pages, is a quick read and after the first few pages, you'll be surprised at how quickly you get to page 188.

Having a teenaged son, I'm a few years removed from a lot of the experiences that the main character, James goes through...but thanks to the fine writing of Mr. Zemsky, I felt as if most of these experiences happened only yesterday.

The only negative I can think of, is that the book had to end.

Beyond the Shadows of Summer
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-09-26
Great storyline. The author manages to keep you entertained from start to finish. The characters are interesting and well developed which adds to the moral dilemmas that pop up throughout the book. An enjoyable read.


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