Clubs Books
Related Subjects: Collector
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Collectible price: $48.00

Title was all wrong....but it was an interesting readReview Date: 2007-12-19
Excellent book!Review Date: 2001-08-31
I was also thinking that this would be a great Oprah Book of the Month. This is the type of book that should be read once a year to refresh one�s perspective.
A Creative Life Journal!!Review Date: 2006-07-01
A Glimpse of the PastReview Date: 2001-07-12
Inspiring!Review Date: 2000-12-13


Tibetan Spaniel (Comprehensive Owner's Guide)Review Date: 2008-03-30
excellentReview Date: 2008-03-17
ExcellentReview Date: 2008-03-09
Well-written and comprehensiveReview Date: 2007-11-19
Wonderful details and beautiful pictures!Review Date: 2007-09-20
I love the pictures, but even better, all of the information is well-researched and breed-specific. A lot of dog breed books have a little bit about the breed and a lot that is generic - not this one. There's history, lifespan and health care information, grooming information, dietary specifications, dog care and training, and showing information, all of it well-illustrated with Tibbie pictures.
Ms. Cunliffe did a wonderful job on this book, and if you are thinking of getting a Tibbie, or already have one, this will be a great addition to your library.

Used price: $14.91
Collectible price: $44.44

complexReview Date: 2008-02-25
A great readReview Date: 2006-06-11
Childhood revisited...Review Date: 2006-06-10
Outstanding legacyReview Date: 2007-02-13
Love ThemReview Date: 2007-01-14


A Must for all Moving to TokyoReview Date: 2008-01-06
Should be Required Reading!!Review Date: 2007-12-05
Travelers to Tokyo must have this book!Review Date: 2007-11-26
All the specifics in one place!Review Date: 2007-11-26
Tokyo: Here and HowReview Date: 2007-11-25

Used price: $0.01

"Faces are Masks Enough..."Review Date: 2004-08-20
Anna is delighted and eager to please, which is how she gets caught up with initiation into the club known as the Society of Masks (or the Som for short). Started by Lindy's brother Jeremy Miller and including all of his school friends, the Som is designed to prevent bullies and provide comradeship, including all the codenames, secret passwords, elaborate rites and junk food feasts that you'd expect from such a club.
Of course, Jeremy didn't want his little sister to be a part of it, but his stepfather (who gives him the key to the abandoned factory in which they have their meetings) insists that they all be involved. And so Lindy is allowed, as is one of her friends, and Anna makes the vow of loyalty to the Som. At first she is happy - she's is accepted, she has a friend, and she's under the protection of the popular Jeremy Miller, who wears a golden mask at meetings and is known as the Goldmaster - she's in awe.
But a friendship with Lindy has its costs; she is manipulative, jealous, spiteful and extremely difficult to get along with. But Anna has been raised to keep her promises and be loyal to her friends - despite her reluctance; she is now a part of the Som.
And then things begin to go very bad. More people are initiated into the club - people that aren't school children and who control and bully the younger kids. On top of this, they never take of their masks. The Yellow Lord in particular makes life difficult for Anna, forcing her to do several menial chores about the place. Soon the youngest children are being forced to shoplift and work themselves to exhaustion. Anna wants to tell, but she can't - she's sworn an oath of secrecy.
Finally the catalyst comes - Anna stands up for one of the smallest members of the club and is labelled a traitor as a result. She is to be put on trial before the Som, and with more and more sinister goings-on at the factory, the Goldmaster himself under the influence of alcohol, and Lindy seemingly abandoning her, poor Anna is almost in a state of nervous collapse as the trial date moves closer and closer.
"The Trial of Anna Cotman" is absolutely riveting, shortlisted for the Carnegie Medal and a book that should be on every child's reading list. Vivien Alcock creates an incredible and realistic story, with perfect representations of bullying, insecure friendships, corruption and values among children, and the small seed of evil that can germinate in groups that rely on secrecy, control and unquestioning loyalty - in many ways it is a "Lord of the Flies" for younger readers.
Alcock creates many memorable characters, and I'm certain that almost everybody in their lives has known a Lindy; she is vividly portrayed as the girl on the playground who has to have it *her* way, who is never to blame for the misfortunes inflicted upon her, and who is a master at dissembling and fibbing. Likewise is the sad reality of her family - a distant mother, a woebegone stepfather and a perfect elder brother that is everything Lindy wants to be - and isn't. There are other perfect little portrayals of human character and behaviour in Tom Smith, the friendly best friend of Jeremy who tries to help, and Peter Elkin, the petrified boy under the power of the malevolent Yellow Lord. Speaking of which, the Yellow Lord is certain to give anyone nightmares...
Anna Cotman herself is a thoroughly likeable, intelligent young girl, who has been raised the best way, but put into the wrong situation. Taught to be loving and forgiving, she's the perfect tool for Lindy and the Som to manipulate, but eventually learning to stand up for herself and the injustices of the Som.
This is a terrific book, meticulously displaying the interactions between children and adults, the shadowy world that children can create for themselves, and the strength that they can display when faced with corruption of the system. Some of Alcock's insights into the ways and minds of children made me gasp with their accuracy - this is a woman that remembers what it was like to be a child and the hierarchy of the playground.
A book you can't put downReview Date: 2000-09-10
A kind of dark bookReview Date: 1998-08-13
"Faces are Masks Enough..."Review Date: 2004-08-20
Anna is delighted and eager to please, which is how she gets caught up with initiation into the club known as the Society of Masks (or the Som for short). Started by Lindy's brother Jeremy Miller and including all of his school friends, the Som is designed to prevent bullies and provide comradeship, including all the codenames, secret passwords, elaborate rites and junk food feasts that you'd expect from such a club.
Of course, Jeremy didn't want his little sister to be a part of it, but his stepfather (who gives him the key to the abandoned factory in which they have their meetings) insists that they all be involved. And so Lindy is allowed, as is one of her friends, and Anna makes the vow of loyalty to the Som. At first she is happy - she's is accepted, she has a friend, and she's under the protection of the popular Jeremy Miller, who wears a golden mask at meetings and is known as the Goldmaster - she's in awe.
But a friendship with Lindy has its costs; she is manipulative, jealous, spiteful and extremely difficult to get along with. But Anna has been raised to keep her promises and be loyal to her friends - despite her reluctance; she is now a part of the Som.
And then things begin to go very bad. More people are initiated into the club - people that aren't school children and who control and bully the younger kids. On top of this, they never take off their masks. The Yellow Lord in particular makes life difficult for Anna, forcing her to do several menial chores about the place. Soon the youngest children are being forced to shoplift and work themselves to exhaustion. Anna wants to tell, but she can't - she's sworn an oath of secrecy.
Finally the catalyst comes - Anna stands up for one of the smallest members of the club and is labelled a traitor as a result. She is to be put on trial before the Som, and with more and more sinister goings-on at the factory, the Goldmaster himself under the influence of alcohol, and Lindy seemingly abandoning her, poor Anna is almost in a state of nervous collapse as the trial date moves closer and closer.
"The Trial of Anna Cotman" is absolutely riveting, shortlisted for the Carnegie Medal and a book that should be on every child's reading list. Vivien Alcock creates an incredible and realistic story, with perfect representations of bullying, insecure friendships, corruption and values among children, and the small seed of evil that can germinate in groups that rely on secrecy, control and unquestioning loyalty - in many ways it is a "Lord of the Flies" for younger readers.
Alcock creates many memorable characters, and I'm certain that almost everybody in their lives has known a Lindy; she is vividly portrayed as the girl on the playground who has to have it *her* way, who is never to blame for the misfortunes inflicted upon her, and who is a master at dissembling and fibbing. Likewise is the sad reality of her family - a distant mother, a woebegone stepfather and a perfect elder brother that is everything Lindy wants to be - and isn't. There are other perfect little portrayals of human character and behaviour in Tom Smith, the friendly best friend of Jeremy who tries to help, and Peter Elkin, the petrified boy under the power of the malevolent Yellow Lord. Speaking of which, the Yellow Lord is certain to give anyone nightmares...
Anna Cotman herself is a thoroughly likeable, intelligent young girl, who has been raised the best way, but put into the wrong situation. Taught to be loving and forgiving, she's the perfect tool for Lindy and the Som to manipulate, but eventually learning to stand up for herself and the injustices of the Som.
This is a terrific book, meticulously displaying the interactions between children and adults, the shadowy world that children can create for themselves, and the strength that they can display when faced with corruption of the system. Some of Alcock's insights into the lives of children made me gasp with their accuracy - this is an author that remembers what it was like to be a child, and the very real existence of a playground hierarchy.
Wow :)Review Date: 1998-08-27

Used price: $6.98

A Hoot ...Review Date: 2002-11-12
Unbuckle Your Belt For This OneReview Date: 2002-11-08
Mel Brooks? Izzat you?Review Date: 2002-11-01
A Real Romp!Review Date: 2002-10-31
Funnier Than A Rubber CrutchReview Date: 2002-10-30


Winner 2002 "Ulysses" Award for Superior FictionReview Date: 2002-10-16
Incredible!Review Date: 2001-12-02
Pure GeniusReview Date: 2001-11-26
Confusing beautyReview Date: 2001-12-07
I found Maxwell Taylor to be an abhorrent protagonist, one that I could not ignore. I hated him, but I also was intrigued by him. He is an existentialist who isn't aware that it's out of fashion. He is a Modernist who doesn't know that post-modernism exists. He is a hedonist that blatantly expresses it. He is the Marquis de Sade in today's world. Maxwell Taylor is a vicious, unforgiving, and powerful figure. The only true criticism I give of this book is that he's too important, too powerful. None of the other characters are capable of competing, they fall into the backdrop even when a scene does not include Maxwell.
The setting of "A Wanton Gyre" is exploratory, it is not now or then, it is a jumbled collage of times. There is almost a mystical sense of time, a hallucagenic quality to the events, we read them as though they are simply happening. Like Maxwell, we don't seem to have the capacity to feel anything about them. This book captures the psychology of the main character so well it shrouds the entire work in his mood.
The plot of the novel is as the title suggests, great swooping gestures that never seem to go forward, but seem to circle the main theme like birds of prey, ready to attack at any moment. We read as he's arrested, then we read about his childhood, then we read about his arrest, then we read about a date he's recently had, then we read about his arrest. Yet, none of it seems out of place, it is the confusion, the clastrophobia of the protagonist in every word.
Book II breaks free, for the most part. It differs greatly from Book I, strutting forward in a clash of ideals and beliefs, between lawyers and victims, priests and atheists, men and women, between the reader and the writer. I think that is remarkable. I had a girlfriend read it and she couldn't go on, she grew so upset. And that is the genius of it, the book forces you to dislike it, to argue with the narrator, to question everything being said and described. And this is when you learn your limitations, can you see passed your own convictions and acknowledge the injustice? Can you accept the truth even if it makes you vomit?
"A Wanton Gyre" is such a well crafted chronicle that we will be studying it for years. It will continue to challenge us until we acknowledge the hypocricy in our own beliefs. We are not ready, I don't think.
A Wanton GyreReview Date: 2001-09-09

Used price: $26.91

excellent adventureReview Date: 2002-11-27
a look into the futureReview Date: 2002-11-21
A wonderful peice of allegoryReview Date: 2002-11-21
A wonderful peice of allegoryReview Date: 2002-11-21
Execellent new novelReview Date: 2002-11-20

Where Does the Brown Bear Go?Review Date: 2001-11-08
CozyReview Date: 2001-07-03
wonderful poetryReview Date: 1998-04-24
The second page ties in with the first page's
ryhme and it does that throughout the book and at the end of the story you realize that the animals are the child's stuffed toys and that they were out in the places where the child's imagination placed them and that they are all home now because the child has gone to sleep.
This book helps young children get ready for bed.Review Date: 1997-09-28
Rhythmic, repetitve text is fun to learn for young childrenReview Date: 1999-02-06

Used price: $21.51

God sent.Review Date: 2004-02-02
Excellent bookReview Date: 2000-09-28
The Wolf Boys' Club is great!Review Date: 2000-09-27
Very fast-paced!Review Date: 2000-09-26
The Wolf Boy's ClubReview Date: 2000-09-29
Related Subjects: Collector
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At times, it feels like a college student's writing. Other times, it's brilliant! I never got a sense of the character. She didn't feel 3-dimensional at all. What does she look like? Besides mentioning blonde hair, you just don't know. What values does she really have? What does she believe in her core? What are her parents like? They were in & out of the story so quickly.
Also, there are weird experiences such as tarot cards, ghosts directing her to dig up treasure, lighthouses shining (where there are no lights), etc....and it leaves a reader wondering if she'd dabbling in the demonic realm or something more Judeo/Christian-like such as angels....it's difficult to understand her story at this point. It's called a "fiction" book, but it's clearly based on her life.
I enjoyed the Spain section immensely. It felt real and true. Her boyfriend was interesting and well-described.
The Tarpon Key section seemed reallly bizarre. The characters and the references to the house "Mr. Too Faced" was hard for me to get past. I almost quit reading it because it was annoying for a few chapters.
But, I finished it & enjoyed it and would recommend it.