Fiction Books


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Fiction Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

Fiction
Always There
Published in Library Binding by Topeka Bindery (2005-07)
Author: Lauren Brooke
List price: $13.50
New price: $13.50

Average review score:

A MUST READ!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-28
THIS BOOK HAS MADE ME FEEL SO CHERISHED AND SECURE . IT'S SERIES HAS TAUGHT ME SO MUCH ABOUT HORSES AND HOW MUCH LOVE THAT I HAVE FOR THEM. IN THIS BOOK AMY IS GRADUATING AND LEAVING HEARTLAND FOR VIRGINIA TECH TO BE AN EQUINE VET. IT HAS SOME ROMANTIC PARTS AND LEAVES YOU HANGING ONTO THE QUESTION "WILL AMY AND TY GET MARRIED"? THE TRUTH IS THEY WON'T AND WORSE THAN THAT THEY WILL BREAK UP. IT'S VERY VERY SAD FOR THOSE WHO WERE HOPING FOR AMY AND TY'S RELATIONSHIP TO GO ON THAT INCLUDES ME BUT THEY JUST WEREN'T MEANT FOR EACH OTHER!!!

Awesome Series
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-19
I think that this is the best book of the whole series. Amy has graduated from high school and is preparing to leave for a four year vet program at Virginia Tech. But a new horse arrives, Fanfare. No one is telling her about the horse and act as if she is already gone. Then, Amy gets into a road accident with Fanfare. She is reminded of the accident that killed her mother. She struggles to make peace with her past. This is an awesome conclusion to the series. I can't wait for the new book, ''Beyond the Horizon''. I'm so excited to read more. Make sure you read this book!!!

Awesome Series
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-19
I think that this is the best book of the whole series. Amy has graduated from high school and is preparing to leave for a four year vet program at Virginia Tech. But a new horse arrives, Fanfare. No one is telling her about the horse and act as if she is already gone. Then, Amy gets into a road accident with Fanfare. She is reminded of the accident that killed her mother. She struggles to make peace with her past. This is an awesome conclusion to the series. I can't wait for the new book, ''Beyond the Horizon''. I'm so excited to read more. Make sure you read this book!!!

You Can't Get Much Better Than This
Helpful Votes: 34 out of 37 total.
Review Date: 2006-07-14
(If you want Luaren Brooke to continue the series past #20 say that my review helped you. Please.)

This is about the first Heartland book:
The Heartland Series is one of the best books that I've ever read. It is the story of a girl, Amy, and her happiness and troubles on her farm Heartland. Her mother dies in a car accident while trying to save a horse. Amy if left injured in the hospital. Once she recovers from her injureies she relizes that she was the one who caused her mother's accident. She refuses to come out from her room and see her friends and family. In order to try and get Amy back into life again her friends throw her a party. I won't tell you anything else because that would ruin the fun of reading it. But take my word for it and read this series.

The books in the Heartland series are:
#1 Coming Home
#2 After the Storm
#3 Breaking Free
#4 Taking Chances
#5 Come What May
#6 One Day You'll Know
#7 Out of the Darkness
#8 Thicker Than Water
#9 Every New Day
#10 Tomorrow's Promise
#11 True Enough
#12 Sooner or Later
#13 Darkest Hour
#14 Everything Changes
#15 Love is a Gift
#16 Holding Fast
#17 A Season of Hope
#18 New Beginnings
#19 From This Day On
#20 Always There
Special: A Holiday Memory

Do you want more Heartland books? Then rate this review high!

All the Heartland Books
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-06-06
This was the best series of books I've ever read!!! I am really rating the entire series, not just the last book, it was the best series of books I've ever read! The only thing I didnt like was that in book thirteen Darkest Hour Ty is in a coma at the end of the book and I couldn't stop reading until I had read the backs of the other books to the point that I figured out that he actually woke up at some point. And about Fanfare, why does Amy get mad at Ty instead of Lou, I mean, Ty was the one who would have actually told her. That doesn't make sense! But still, best series of books I ever read!

Fiction
Amelia Bedelia
Published in School & Library Binding by Topeka Bindery (1999-10)
Author: Peggy Parish
List price: $15.75
New price: $15.75
Used price: $1.31

Average review score:

Classic!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-21
I loved this one growing up. Really. Amelia Bedelia always choose the funniest possible interpretation of words, and her name rhymes! What's not to love?

The one thing I'd be concerned about is that a lot of the usages in this book are going to be unfamiliar to your young kid. I don't think many of us say "draw the curtains" anymore, and even if we do, we probably don't often talk about "trimming" steak (with or without lace!) or "dressing" chicken, at least, not around our kids. Maybe we should, but we don't.

So this book might be better saved for read-aloud time than read-alone time.

I read this when I was young
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-30
I remember reading these books years and years ago! I'm in 10th grade and it's been more 5 years since I was in elementary school and yet when I go work at my old school I go back and read them again!

Wonderful 'First reader' Book!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-10
A fun (and funny) book which will delight kids with Amelia's well-intentioned but mistake-laden chores. Kids feel empowered because they are 'smarter' than the character and are able to cheer her on. In the end, Amelia's good deeds overpower any mistakes she makes.

I recommend this book for any child who is beginning to read on their own!

We Love You Amelia Bedelia!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-09-22
This is surly a kids favorite since I was a little girl! We join Amelia Bedelia as she starts her first day of work for the Rodgers. They rush off shortly after she arrives, but they've left her a list of things to do. Should be a snap, as all the tasks are simple and clearly stated...but that's what you think...Amelia Bedelia begins completing each chore in quite a literal fashion...drawing the drapes and much, much more! Younger kids (1-4) will like the silliness of it and beginner readers and more savvy grade schoolers (5-8) will like that's it's simple and clever/silly too! I recommend it without reservation! I'm sure Amelia will be with us, teaching fine lessons about the words we use and the many means they can have for generations to come!

Draw the curtain
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-24
A great, witty book that my 4-year old loved. Made her think about the different meanings of words.

Fiction
The Arrival
Published in Hardcover by Arthur A. Levine Books (2007-09)
Author: Shaun Tan
List price:
New price: $54.99

Average review score:

Wordless Delightful Fantastical Tale
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-24
How does one best capture the experience of stepping into a new land? Of leaving everything behind? Of stepping into a new life? Of hopes? Fears? Dreams? Encounters? Especially when one has had to leave their family behind? The Arrival does just that. This is brilliantly crafted to tell a story which works on many levels (my children enjoyed this as much as I did - though we took very different things from the novel).

My favourite book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-08
I first found this book in a comic/anime/video game art gallery. It was so amazing that I had to buy it. I don't regret it at all. The story is so powerful, and the style in which it is told is so innovative!!! What's so cool is that anyone of any language can get through the entire book and understand it just as much as the last person. And just as the book itself says, it can be a more mature book for younger people, or it can be a more imaginative book for older ones; either way, it fits all ages.

This book evokes the immigrant experience
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-05
The Arrival
In this wordless graphic novel, through magnificent illustrations, Tan captures the disorientation immigrants may feel toward their new surroundings. It depicts the journey of one man who seems both accepted and rejected by his new country. The only writing is in an invented alphabet, which motivates the viewer to feel confused just like the immigrants must feel when they encounter a strange new language and way of life. A feeling of tolerance and acceptance is presented throughout the story and transcends race and ethnicity. The youngest readers and the most sophisticated will find this book interesting. This book is an excellent conversation starter in any mainstream or ESL classroom.

Incredibly thought provoking and yet serene pictorial work of art
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-03
What else can I say which isn't mentioned by others and that I've already summed it in the title of this review.

The quality of the book is fabulous...hardcover with good texture and layout. The art (computer art) is provoking and Shaun had mastered the saying "a picture tells a thousand words"

It brings the reader (viewer?) into the shoes of the immigrant visiting a "world" that is totally strange to him (as possibly depicted by the weird things he encountered) as what a stranger will feel as the reader/viewer will feel the same way too.

What more can I say, its a classic and a book worth collecting and keeping.

FOR THE GUESTS as much as FOR THE HOSTS
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-21
If you are a "Guest":

ANYONE WHO HAD TRAVELED away from their family, culture and land, will find comfort in this book. It provides with rich metaphors and imagery of departure, culture shock, misunderstandings, confusion, adaptation--you name it!--all of those experiences an immigrant or a long-distance traveler is going through.


If you are a "Host":

Likewise, ANYONE WHO'D EVER MET A FOREIGNER, and had difficulty communicating, or had ever occupied oneself with a thought of what it means "to arrive somewhere" and what an experience of arrival to a land of no known customs and language may be like--will also benefit greatly from this presentation.



Book presentation:

The medium of the story delivery through a series of pictures (wonderful illustrations in their own right!!!) allows for multiple interpretations of the content and is adaptable to any travel/immigration situation. The story itself has depth in its many layers, depending on whose side of it you are following: the Daughter's, the Wife's, or the Man's, or perhaps--some other character in the book :-)). Detailed illustrations make me return to these pages again and again, finding some new twist, or making new interpretations.

Both, children (as young as 4) and adults I have shared this book with, loved at least something about it. Younger children, unless familiar with the experience, will probably not understand all the complexity of it, however, the very idea of presenting these experiences through pictures allows them to stay with the story and enjoy it just the same. As far as adults, I cannot think of anyone whom this book may leave untouched or indifferent.

This is by far one of the most MOVING, THOUGHT PROVOKING, INSPIRING, and beautifully done books! I never stop hunting for good volumes out there, and this one is A TREASURE for book lovers and collectors alike.

Fiction
Baby Beluga (Raffi Songs to Read)
Published in School & Library Binding by Topeka Bindery (1999-10)
Author: Raffi
List price: $15.25
New price: $15.25
Used price: $9.95

Average review score:

A Great Classic
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-23
This book was an instant hit, and we have sung it many times each day for my 12 month old grandson. The board book form is especially important for a book so "loved" by toddlers.

Wondefully illustrated
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-18
While the song is adorable and the pages are nice and sturdy, what I really like about this book are the illustrations. They are vibrant and clear and my son loves looking at this book over and over again. He is 16 months, so it is easy for him to point out animals and ask what they are. I like how the whale goes from being a baby, to a larger whale in the book and how different pages are shown with different perspectives. One page has a view from where the bird is flying in the sky--so the bird is large and the whale is small because he is swimming in the sea below. Another page has a broad view of the icebergs, sea, sky and northern lights. I am very impressed with the clarity and creativity of the illustrations in this book--and of course the song itself is fun to sing!

gift for new mom's or mom's to be
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-28
I love this book and the accompaning CD. My grandsons who are now 13 had this book when they were infants, and were still singing the songs when they were 5. I gave it as a gift to my God Daughter, and this one was a gift for my first Great Grandson. Raffi writes stories and songs that children should grow up with. I am positive I will give this book and CD again.

Great book!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-30
This book is great even if you don't know the music. My little guy 'reads' along while listening to the Raffi CD, but you don't need the CD to enjoy the book. The pictures are terrific for the child and adult. My son insists on reading this every night at bedtime, and that's okay with me!

Songs to read books.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-19
My sister is a principal and highly recommeded this book for my grandchildren. THey love to read and sing so what better gift than to have it all wrapped into one.

Fiction
Beezus and Ramona
Published in Paperback by HarperTrophy (1990-05-01)
Author: Beverly Cleary
List price: $5.99
New price: $0.68
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $10.00

Average review score:

Beezus and Ramona
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-04
Beezus and Ramona is a good book! In this book, you meet Fred, Ramona's imaginary pet lizard. Ramona also happens to destroy a library book! How do you spell Ramona and Beezus? F-u-n, f-u-n, f-u-n! I'm not allowed to tell you anything else. So how do you find out about this? READ THE BOOK-NOW!

Delightful!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-17
Is there *anyone* on the planet who doesn't like Beverly Cleary's books and the wonderful characters she created?

Beezus and Ramona (along with Henry Huggins and the rest of the gang on Klikitak Street) were part of my childhood. 40 years later, they were just as appealing to my own son. And don't tell anyone -- although we bought these audiobooks when he was about 8, at 12 he still likes to put these on ocassionally and listen. Why? In large part because of Stockard Channing's masterful performance here. Her rendition of Ramona is EXACTLY how we imagine this impish little creature would talk.

I highly recommend these books, both because of the delightful stories and characters that Mrs. Clearly created for us, and because Stockard Channing has brought them to life so perfectly here. The stories are reminiscent of simpler times and will take parents back to their own childhoods while providing toddlers to tweens with good, wholesome entertainment.

We listened on road trips, and unlike certain kids entertainment (a certain purple dinosaur comes to mind), you won't want the kids to wear headphones to preserve your sanity. You'll want it on the main speakers for everyone in the car to enjoy.

Five stars!

TOTALLY ANNOYING LITTLE SISTER!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-29
Beezus really got annoyed with Ramona, she wrecked the art class, she bite into all those apples,etc. I would have probably screamed if I had Ramona for a sister! I like Beverly Cleary's books. I own this particular book of hers, and I read it again and again! It's awsome! I totally recomend it, along with Cleary's other awsome books!

Clever, funny, and irresistible
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-01
Ask any older sibling about younger siblings, and you'll get one common answer...they're A-N-N-O-Y-I-N-G. They steal your toys, throw tantrums, and constantly steal the spotlight. But, even the most perturbed older siblings know that, deep down, it's impossible not to love younger sisters and brothers - sometimes.

Nine-year-old Beatrice "Beezus" Quimby has always been a quiet soul, content with spending her time embroidering pot holders, helping her mother do the sheets on Saturday's, and reading the countless books she checks out of the Glenwood Branch Library on a weekly basis. Unfortunately, her four-year-old sister, Ramona, is the exact opposite of her. Ramona has one thing on her mind, and that's making as much noise as possible, and driving the whole family out of their mind. Beezus can't stand it, especially since the responsibility of taking care of Ramona, and ensuring that she behaves, is often delegated to her, so that her parents can get their work done. Ramona, however, refuses to obey Beezus. Unless, of course, she's reading one of her favorite books - The Littlest Steam Shovel, or Big Steve the Steam Shovel - to her. But even that doesn't keep Ramona occupied for long. When Beezus is in the midst of creating pictures for her art class, Ramona is there to cause a mess, and challenge Beezus' imagination. When Ramona is offered two marshmallows as a snack, she uses them as powder puffs, as opposed to putting them in her tummy, where they belong. During checkers games with Beezus' pal Henry Huggins, Ramona destroys the checkerboard, and wreaks all sorts of havoc - even some involving Henry's beloved dog Ribsy. In Beezus' eyes, she can't win - even when it's her birthday. But as she gets older, and learns more about her mother's relationships with her siblings, Beezus begins to realize that, as obnoxious as Ramona is, she's still her sister. And even though she may become angry at Ramona for her crazy antics; she still loves her - just not all the time.

I fell in love with Beverly Cleary's RAMONA books when I was five-years-old, and now that I have decided to re-read them, I'm finding that I can't help but fall in love with them all over again. I feel as if I have reverted back to my five-year-old self, and can actually relate to the mishaps that continually take place during both Ramona, and Beezus' lives. Beezus is such a fun character, who seems wise beyond her years, and is serious to a motherly extent. Ramona, on the other hand, is carefree and impossible to handle. Her wacky thoughts, and determination to always have her way is humorous; while some of the debacles she finds herself in are downright cringe-worthy. Cleary has penned a book here that is essential to read aloud to both older and younger children. The message of love is clear on every page, and truly helps to bring siblings together. Clever, funny, and irresistible.

Erika Sorocco
Freelance Reviewer

Wierd names, good book
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-07
If you have a little sister and think she's annoying, think again. Does your sister think Bendix is the most beautiful name in the world? Does she ruin your birthday cake--twice?! Sometimes little sisters are annoying, but Ramona is impossible! Beezuz, Roamona's big sister finds out that no matter what happens in her childhood with Ramona, they will think it funny when they grow up. I hope you'll enjoy this book!

Fiction
Cancer Ward
Published in Paperback by Farrar Straus & Giroux (1991-09)
Author:
List price:
Used price: $2.45

Average review score:

An incomparably rich and beautiful novel
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-13
So much serious stuff has been written about this famous novel that first-time readers may be surprised that the first of the two parts of the book is actually an easy read with a light touch and plenty of humour despite the utterly gloomy and sad premise: a group of cancer patients in a decrepit, impoverished cancer hospital. Not much action, but vivid and touching dialogues abound. The second half of the book is a bit more demanding, with lengthy philosophical reflections on life and humankind. But it's worth it: some of the most haunting and moving passages of modern writing are found here. When Solzhenitsyn lets his protagonist compare life to the rivers of Siberia "running into the sand", he may just have created the most beautiful metaphor of life ever put on paper. Please, do read this book.

Excellent book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-09
This book is written in the true Russian style. It's poignant and shocking and hard to put down.

Thinking about health care
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-24
The forward explains how the writer was treated in Tashkent for cancer while serving a sentence of forced labor exile. Post World War II Tashkent was cosmopolitan. The story takes place in February and March 1955 in a city like Tashkent. By then Stalin had died, Beria had been executed, and Malenkov had fallen from office.

The number of the cancer ward is thirteen. An official is to be treated for a tumor at the hospital. He resents the squalor of his surroundings. He consents, nonetheless, to undergo treatments. Dr. Dontsova has three residents. They call her Mama.

The bureaucracy insists that Dontsova dismiss indeterminate cases, cases where there is no improvement. Dontsova is troubled herself by stomach pains. Guilt she feels, though, is triggered by the existence of radiation sickness since she is an oncologist and radiologist. She cleans and shops and cooks for her family consisting of her husband and son.

One evening the male patients have an argument about moral perfectionism. It is claimed that Gorky, Stalin, and Lenin all thought that Tolstoy's doctrine was dangerous. Continuing their discussion, the male cancer patients are happy to think of traditional peasant remedies. Illness levels. The functionary and the exile are similarly situated.

Sickness provides respite from work and citizenly duties. Centers for treatment draw a cosmopolitan mix of people. Many people had lives interrupted in war service. Fairly detailed descriptions of the soviet medical system are given. Shortages of cleaning rags and other dysfunctions are common. Attempts to rationalize procedures and safeguard limited resources slow progress and create inefficiencies.

Oleg Filimonovich Kostoglotov, one of the points through which consciousness flows in the novel, resides in Ush-Terek, a virgin lands territory, and is a topographer but works as a land surveyor. The Ministry of Internal Affairs required that he live there. He was administratively exiled.

Pavel Nikolayevich Rusanov, the official being treated, strives to be optimistic as Gorky couseled. He looks forward to the visits of his wife, Kapitolina Matveyena. At first a geologist, Vadim, thought that Oleg Kostoglotov was a rude loud-mouth. (Vadim was collected, proud, and polite.) He saw that Rusanov was a standard sort of bureaucrat. Later Vadim discovered that Oleg was not arrogant. In fact, he was even generous.

Oleg discovered that after the world of the camps, exile could not be cruel. He was thirty-four and now too old too obtain a university education. He felt he could be content in exile if only he had his health. Oleg's good friends in Ush-Terek were a pediatrician and his wife. Oleg admired the chief surgeon at the facility. He had worked in the camps. Oleg picked up this piece of biography through the surgeon's choice of words. Oleg accused Rusanov of not being patriotic, of not having a love for country, but rather of wanting a fat pension.

Someone cites a writing of Lenin that an official should be paid a wage equal to the amount paid to a good worker. An older man tells Oleg that with his history he is fortunate since he has had to lie less. The man, a scientist, had been forced to follow the faulty teachings of Lysenko.

Dontsova had dealt with the ailments of other for thirty years. Now she has been diagnosed. She is to take sick leave and proceed to the Moscow Institute She makes her final rounds. Rusanov is released. He believes that he is cured. Oleg is discharged to recover from the treatment and to return to Ush-Terek. This is a masterpiece.

A masterpiece old-school Russian style...
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-20

No one writes a fat, sprawling, old-fashioned Russian novel quite like a Russian. To the ranks of Dostoyevsky and Tolstoy, you can add Solzhenitsyn and to novels like *The Brothers Karamazov* and *Anna Karenina* you can add *Cancer Ward.* In fact, *Cancer Ward,* like Tolstoy's slim but immensely profound *The Death of Ivan Illych* begins in much the same fashion: a married, middle-aged career man is suddenly confronted with the most immediate and terrifying thing of all: his own mortality.

Although in *Cancer Ward* instead of the self-absorption of bourgeoisie society, the setting is Soviet Russia in the two years after Stalin's demise. It's still a world of repression, imprisonment, suspicion, fear, lies, exile--and, most of all, the ever-lurking presence of death. These conditions are allegorized in the cancer ward itself, in the doctor's who must have faith in their largely ineffective treatment and--all appearances to the contrary--who never tell their patients the truth about their condition...which leads to the absurdity that Solzhenitsyn uses as the title of the first chapter of *Cancer Ward*: a patient sent to the cancer ward assured by his doctor that he has "no cancer whatsoever."

What is allegorized is a people who've been systematically brutalized into the deepest self-denial, terrorized into ignoring the cancer destroying their society.

But for all the allusions--evident or oblique--to the secret police, the Gulag, and the totalitarian state, as well as the impassioned outcries against Stalinism, *Cancer Ward* is about the universal and timeless problems of death, of faith, of freedom, and of how we should live our lives and what might give them meaning.

Like all the greatest Russian novelists, Solzhenitsyn tackles the biggest questions. *Cancer Ward* is a philosophical novel in the best Dostoyevskian sense of the term. Filled with passion, pathos, humor, and heart, as well as a vivid cast of memorable characters to embody every idea, every human emotion, *Cancer Ward* is a masterpiece and Solzhenitsyn a writer rare in our age who still dares to deal with serious things seriously and compels you, by the sheer unquestionable moral force of his conviction, to take them seriously, too.

This is perhaps the best book I've read in recent memory. Don't miss it.



Solzhenitsyn was right; New York Times was terribly wrong
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-07
It is almost unbelievable how the liberal elite in America covered Stalin's crimes until Solzhenitsyn's prophetic writings emerged. And not to be outdone, President Ford and Henry Kissinger refused to welcome the greatest writer of the 20th Century in order to placate the Soviets. May Solzhenitsyn rest peacefully in the assurance that one honest man changed the world. And may his literary works live forever.

Fiction
The Changeling
Published in Hardcover by The Lutterworth Press (1987-11-01)
Author: Zilpha Keatley Snyder
List price: $19.98
Used price: $14.45
Collectible price: $38.60

Average review score:

beautiful
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-20
This is perhaps my favorite book of all from my childhood. Periodically I reread it as an adult and my appreciation grows every time. It is so unassuming, like the character of Martha, but the themes are big: the meaning of friendship, the art of finding beauty in life, the winding paths of growing up. The characters could step out of the page, the emotions are deep and true, and the end is so simple and quietly heartbreaking, but at the same time the kind of sorrow that is full of life and joy and passion. ZKS was truly inspired when she wrote this. In my opinion it is perfect.

Girl book--not the giggly airhead girls, though
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-07
Those that are positive that this book is a fantasy and therefore will not be read by them really needs to think straight. No, this is not a fantasy, which did surprise me considering Ms. Snyder's passion for the weird. Instead, it is a book about those oh-so-classic themes of family, friendship, and growing up.

Snyder makes a wondrous world between two small-town friends who are as different as different can be. One becomes enchanted by the passion and creativity of the other, and this is a friendship that leads them through the changes of life.

It's touching and inspiring. A great girl book.

Evocative coming-of-age tale
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-21
There are some typical "teen novel" elements but overall this is a great story of friendship. Shy, awkward, overweight and sensitive Martha Abbott is a misfit in her own shallow and constrained upper-middle-class family, who take her for granted. Martha befriends the vibrant, imaginative, and outgoing Ivy Carson, herself a misfit in her own poor, wrong-side-of-the-tracks, criminal fringe family. Their sometimes-misunderstood friendship nurtures and sustains them over the years, and their imaginary games help inspire their own inner talents. Even through separation and quarrels, their bond remains strong, and the reader can see how much each owes the other as they grow. A touching tribute to both the power and joys of friendship and the imagination. A blessing to see it's back in print.

Thrilled to see it back in print!!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-18
This book gave me new ways of looking at the world, at myself and at my neighbors when I was 11 years old and read it for the first time. And the second. And the third... I don't think there are many American girls who could not identify both with Martha and with Ivy, in turns, as these tender characters vividly represent the dichotomy of female adolescence.

I have sought out, purchased and given away a number of copies of this book in recent years, and now that it is in print again I have just ordered two copies. One is for my friend's 14 year old daughter who lives overseas and has few options for books in English, and the other I will save for my granddaughter, who was just born. Her mother will re-read the book in the meantime (after I do) and we will both relive a wonderful experience which helped us cope with a most difficult time of life.

My #1 book ever
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-04-30
Recently, was at the book store helping my 10y son look for a book to read, I ran across a copy of "The Headless Cupid" I bought it and asked to order "The changeling" but they couldn't get it for me, So I turn to the internet (Got to love eBay) and found it. I read it as soon as I received it. I've ordered several more of Snyder's books as well. Maybe my kids will enjoy them as much as I have.

I was 12y. at the time I first read it. I wasn't a "reader" this was one of the first I had ever read that I didn't force myself to finish. I lost myself in the pages. I felt a huge connection to Ivy our life's were so similar, she had a better outlook on life one I longed to have. Since then I have read a fair amount of books but none ever touched me the same way.

Fiction
Charlie and Lola's I Will Never Not Ever Eat a Tomato Pop-Up (Charlie and Lola)
Published in Hardcover by Candlewick (2007-09-26)
Author:
List price: $18.99
New price: $7.50
Used price: $3.97

Average review score:

Great book, nieces (5 and 2.5) loved it
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-02
Charlie has to look after his little sister and give her dinner. Unfortunately, Lola is a very picky eater, and we have to sit through the entire list of things she won't eat. ESPECIALLY not tomatoes.

So he decides to "play a good trick on her" and tell her that all these foods she "won't eat" are really *different* and exotic foods that she's sure to love. (Are you sure you don't want these green drops? I'll eat them, then, they're very rare!)

Predictably (to us grown-ups), she gobbles all these foods up, and then turns the table on her brother by asking for the tomatoes (These? Are you sure you want THESE?) declaring that they're "moonsquirters" and saying "You didn't think they were tomatoes, did you Charlie?"

What's interesting is that this technique is actually recommended for both child and adult picky eaters. Oh, not the trickery, but the use of pleasant sounding names to make foods sound appealing. (And really, Lola wasn't tricked at all, was she?)

Cute Book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-25
Cute illustrations and clever text. May not change the mind of a dedicated vegetable-hater, but they'll enjoy it.

One of the Cutest Pop-Up Books Ever
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-16
I love this book. It is so cute and even convinces my three-year old to eat foods she doesn't want to!

Outrageously Imaginative!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-07
This book should be read by fussy readers everywhere -- and I have a few adults I know who belong in that category!

The illustrations are delightful, showing pictures of the food against interesting textures and colors. This book will have a positive effect on the fussiest eater.

Funny, heartwarming and highly recommended!

Charlie and Lola are great!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-23
I got this for my daughter, who absolutely adores Charlie and Lola and simply loves the TV episode that complements this book. The sparse text and colorful pictures made reading less intimidating for her, and for a paperback, the book is very sturdy and well put-together. Great book - I definitely recommend!

Fiction
A Christmas Dozen From the Christmas Story Pastor (Storyteller of the Heart, 2)
Published in Audio CD by Burt Creations (2001-04-19)
Author: Steven Burt
List price: $16.95
New price: $16.95
Used price: $10.17

Average review score:

NOT A GOOD BOOK
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2001-12-15
I didn't like this at all. Very poorly written. Many better books out there.

Year's Best Inspirational Book, Honorable Mention
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-04-17
On March 28, 2003 Writer's Digest announced that A Christmas Dozen won the Honorable Mention in Best Inspirational Book category of its Self-Published Book Awards. (author note)

Warms the heart and the soul
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2002-01-10
Steve Burt's stories are perfect reading especially at Christmas but heart warming the whole year. We will include each of these with the traditional "Twas the Night Before Christmas" reading during family gatherings. Great writing and touching themes to each of the stories for all ages.

A Gift for Us All!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2001-11-30
I find that my reaction to Steve Burt's stories in A Christmas Dozen, is always the same - a smile and a tear. A smile because my heart has been warmed and a tear because of the sublime beauty of the human spirit expressed in simple words. These stories are a delight and should be read by anyone, young and old, seeking a peaceful respite from the chaos of a hectic holiday season or from the normal hustle and bustle of everyday life. The few minutes you spend reading one of these gems can alter your mood for the rest of the day. Steve Burt has truly given us a gift to treasure!

Perfect - Perfect
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2001-11-29
Playing these tapes in my car gives me the feeling of having my own personal counseling session. The Story-telling and stories are supberb. While listening - you smile, giggle,laugh and cry. They are fantastic. I recognize areas, names and characteristics of many of the locals on the east end. Thank you Steve.

Fiction
Cinderella (Limited Edition): A Pop-Up Fairy Tale
Published in Hardcover by Little Simon (2005-10-25)
Author:
List price: $250.00
New price: $200.00
Used price: $53.00

Average review score:

Heirloom Quality Book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-08
This is one special book! The pop-ups are unbelievably beautiful...and so many of them! Handling this book will probably require supervision for the young reader but, with care, should be around to delight and entertain for many years. They didn't skimp on the story just to hi-light the pop-ups, either. It's complete and well told. Sharing this book with a child will make for some quality time spent together.

A beautiful book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-09
This is a beautifully done book. I think I've bought 5 copies already to give out as gifts. For pop-up book lovers, this is a must.

Pretty, but could be better
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-22
This book by Matthew Reinhart not in collaboration with Robert Sabuda leaves a little (a very little) to be desired. The illustrations are nice, but not as eye-poppingly beautiful as a book about Cinderella could be and the quality of the pop-ups are not as crisp as those in the books in which the Sabuda/Reinhart duo collaborated. There are several pages which do not close properly and the pop-ups needs to be manually adjusted before closing the book or the pop-ups will be squished. I have not found this problem in any book in which Sabuda has a hand. It could be just my copy. I'm just saying....

Great pop up book!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-27
I gave this to a friend of mine's daughter and my friend loved it more than her daughter. It's made so well, and I'm gonna buy some more of these to give out.

Art in a book!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-29
There are no words to describe how beautiful and awesome this book is. I was bitten by the pop-up bug when I purchased Robert Sabuda's Alice in Wonderland (Matthew's mentor). This book is equally as beautiful and I love that it is not a "Disney" princess book. The center page has Cinderella after her transformation in full ballroom attire with real ribbon and she stands about 5 or so inches tall out of the middle of the page. In the final pages you can actually watch the prince's hand place the glass slipper on her foot and pull a tab to watch them ride off in to the sunset. This is an amazing book and anyone the least bit interested in this book should not hesitate to puchase it. I guarantee you'll want to collect all of their books after seeing this work of art!


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