Journals Books
Related Subjects: Resources Personal
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Used price: $6.18

Excellent for Either a Boy or GirlReview Date: 2008-04-06
Eloise Wilkin Baby JournalReview Date: 2007-03-22
Beautiful!Review Date: 2006-06-01
Just what I was looking forReview Date: 2006-03-01


Page turning poetryReview Date: 2008-05-22
This is a book for everyone, if you don't already know, Emily Dickinson is one of the explorers of human nature, and every other form of nature.
Finally, my favourite poem is Revery.
Emily DickinsonReview Date: 2000-07-04
THIS IS ANOTHER GREAT ADDITION TO A WONDERFUL SERIESReview Date: 2006-11-06
Great introduction to Emily DickinsonReview Date: 2000-07-20
The introduction to this book gave a good synopsis of the life of Emily Dickinson. Also, I liked how some of the poems were mentioned by page number to check out in the book.
Visually, this book was on target. The illustrator was very detailed with the drawings. In one section of the book, Emily Dickinson writes some poems that were riddles. The drawings give you the answer to those riddles.
It was very helpful to find definitions at the bottom of each page for some of the poems that may have had more difficult words. I learned that a frigate was a medium-sized warship with sails and that coursers were graceful, swift horses or runners.
This book supports the ideas of reading and poetry. I will end this review with one of Emily Dickinson's poems, on page 44, to support those ideas:
There is no frigate like a book/ To take us lands away,/ Nor any coursers like a page/ Of prancing poetry/ This traverse may the poorest take/ Without oppress of toll;/ How frugal is the chariot/ That bears a human soul!
I love this seriesReview Date: 2004-12-14

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Purr-fect for any Emily or cat lover! Review Date: 2005-08-24
- it has thick pages so that they wont tear easily - hooray!
- there's a picture for each letter in the alphabet and the name of someone you know, for example - black birds - there's a picture of black birds and Emily.
- it's easy to carry
- it has a few pages for you to fill in and those pages say black thoughts at the top of each page
- once you've finished writing your family or friends number etc. there's 2 boxes, and you can tick one of them it says part of the posse, or part of the problem
- there's a line that says secret. You write down the secret that you know about that person.
- three pages of stickers - HOORAY!!!!!
but don't be fooled, each page has the same stickers.
So, if you get this book, get ready to be strange!
Now get strange, or get lost!
Emily The Strange, the stranger!
This black book is best!Review Date: 2004-07-20
It's pretty thick but I love the size. It's small enough to fit into a medium size purse. It's also very well made, the cover is very sturdy, and the address pages are thicker than I expected. So you don't need to worry about them easily tearing from the spiral binding.
This book is full of cute details, address pages are black and red with lines for the name and address, spaces for two phone numbers, e-mail, and best of all a space for this persons "secret" in case you were thinking of calling them up to blackmail them for a favor. And boxes to check this person as "part of the posse" or "part of the problem".
Alphabet separators are thick, and fully illustrated, with cat eyes on one side and a reason why emily thinks "black is best" on the other. Add pages in back for "black thoughts" and three pages of Emily stickers and this address book is perfect!
I recommend it for any girl as gift, even if the person has no idea who Emiy is. This book is THAT cool.
Buy this.....OR ELSE!!Review Date: 2004-03-26
A good buyReview Date: 2003-02-07

Used price: $0.57

I LOVED this book!Review Date: 2006-07-10
Well done!
A short but very inspirational book!Review Date: 2005-10-12
Emma's Journal will touch your heart!Review Date: 2004-01-29
awesome book!Review Date: 2003-12-26

Used price: $65.25

Evidence Based Symptom Control in Palliative Care : SystemicReview Date: 2004-04-24
Great reference for any new hospice nurse.....Review Date: 2007-08-05
Practice Guidelines in Palliative CareReview Date: 2007-02-13
Great bookReview Date: 2005-08-27

Used price: $7.77

Award-winning pies!Review Date: 2006-12-22
There are sections devoted to fruit pies, cream pies, and savory pies. There are instructions on how to bake a no-fail pie crust. There are many full-color pictures of the completed pies, too. All in all, it's a treasure! Add this to your cookbook collection and you won't be disappointed.
The best pie cookbook everReview Date: 2002-12-05
My copy of this book is over 20-years old. If there is ever a fire, I'm saving the Farm Journal pie cookbook.
PIE BAKINGReview Date: 2002-02-23
Great for seasoned bakers and beginners alikeReview Date: 2000-11-21
Used price: $50.00

Farm Journal's Best-Ever Recipes are still the best!Review Date: 2006-02-21
One of my all-time favorite cookbooks!Review Date: 2005-05-24
Plain and delicious recipesReview Date: 2001-09-02
This is the best cook book I have. Excellent recipes.Review Date: 1997-04-03

Used price: $8.22

A thoughtful reflection on a much-maligned regionReview Date: 2000-07-27
While other authors deal with the cultural significance of something like the meadowlands, Quinn takes the position of a passionate naturalist and friend of the meadowlands, describing in detail wildlife, regional ecology and geology, history of the area and the many pressures the meadows face today.
A must if you're a fan of urban ecology, New Jersey, or just well-written nonfiction.
Simply an incredible book---please read over my review!Review Date: 1998-09-15
The setting is the New Jersey Meadowlands, a wild and reedy tract located a mere six miles west of New York's Times Square. It is considered by many as nothing more than a "toxic wasteland," but is in fact home to a dazzling array of often overlooked plants and animals. While there is little doubt that many of the life forms that once thrived here are long gone, many others remain, and these are the primary focus of this book. Many, many species are discussed; far too many to list here. Suffice it to say Quinn leaves no stones unturned.
The book has three central parts, respectively called "Yesterday," "Today," and "Tomorrow." Each covers a different time period in the ecological life of the Meadowlands. There also is an "Introduction," a "Starting Point," an "Epilogue," a bibliography, an index, and an interesting sort of "hands-on" chapter called "Exploring the Meadowlands." This will be of particular interest to anyone who lives within traveling distance of the region. It gives helpful and experienced advice on enjoyed the Meadowlands firsthand through boating, fishing, hiking, and the visiting of local parks.
Quinn's text is thorough, complete, and offered in a beautifully poetic yet pragmatic prose, making the read that much more pleasant and inviting. A memorable example can be found right at the beginning of the introduction-"Six miles-and ten thousand years-to the west of Manhattan's Times Square lies one of the grandest environmental paradoxes on Earth. Here, beneath a sun often obscured by smoky industrial exhalations, a river of many bends makes its way to the sea." It is peppered throughout with the occasional personal anecdote, like the touching retelling of an experience an eight-year-old Quinn had with his beloved grandfather in the summer of 1946 called "Grandpa and the Red Herring" (page 36). The paperback version is 348 pages in length, and much to Quinn's credit, a great deal of it is made up of his thoughtful and well-researched text.
The author's artwork is perhaps the aspect of the book that most effectively haunts you. It is simple black-and-white ink sketches, but there is an emotional complexity to each that is hard to describe, yet easy to appreciate. Quinn's clever focus on the wildlife while making sure to almost always include some image from man's industrial intervention does a marvelous job of hammering the book's point home. A glaring example of this can be found on pages 124 and 125, where we see a lone kestrel perched on the peak of a weed, while in the background looms the vague but unmistakable figure of a pair of tractors and a group of hard-hatted workers. Somehow the lack of colorization adds to the feeling of both positive and negative, of humankind's destructiveness (both intentional and inadvertent), and of the wildlife's determination to go on.
John Quinn is no stranger to the region, having been born and raised in the Village of Ridgefield Park, which rests on the Meadowland's northern edge. According to the author bio, he has published ten other books on nature and science. A potential reader can be comforted and assured by the fact that Quinn's experience and sincerity are deeply invested into every word and every drawing. In this age of the slipshod, assembly-line product, here we find an honest and lovingly crafted work by a man who genuinely cares about what he's doing.
As a proud and concerned naturalist myself, I strongly urge you to pick up a copy of Fields of Sun and Grass.
A deeply stirring portrait of the meadows.Review Date: 1998-05-18
L. Charkey, Co-Director, Bergen Save the Watershed Action Network (Bergen SWAN); Administrator, Hackensack River Watershed Fund
Mr. Quinn has captured the soul of the MeadowlandsReview Date: 1998-05-27

Worth its weight in goldReview Date: 2005-03-03
The TextbookReview Date: 2006-07-20
Well worth the priceReview Date: 2003-08-25
Very interestingReview Date: 2002-06-06
Closets, bookshelves, hanging doors and windows, fireplace mantels, curved woodwork, etc.
All the chapters detail very well every project in a professional way: professional tools and methods to accomplish taks efficiently and economicaly. Do not expect a boring book to explain how to use every single tool or a buying guide.
This books goes directly to the target.
Great book to combine with other of the Taunton's books of the series "Build Like a Pro" or the "Traditional Woodwork : Adding Authentic Period Details to Any Home" of Mario Rodriguez.
The missing star is because of the lack of pictures in color.
Used price: $49.99

Still poetry in human formReview Date: 2007-05-15
Interior decorating of the heartReview Date: 2002-11-18
-Anais Nin, January 17, 1937
Diary opening with a visit to New York accompanying Dr Otto Rank. Searches for release from Rank. Back to Paris, Henry, Hugh, and to find Gonzalo More. Desriptions of interior worlds built for Hugh, Gonzalo, and Henry. Beautiful. Houseboat on the Seine, "Nanankepichu", Villa Seurat, Louveciennes.
ANAIS NIN BRAVERY SHE FREELY WROTE ABOUT EROTICISMReview Date: 2000-02-28
Exploring the Inner Bad GirlReview Date: 2002-09-08
What I believe is different about FIRE is that it reveals Anais's explorations and experiementation with her inner "bad girl" in a way that she had only just begun in HENRY AND JUNE and INCEST. In it she is still married to Hugh and involved with Henry Miller, but in FIRE she has a relationship with the famous analyst Otto Rank that takes some treacherous twists and turns. Her writing is as wonderful as ever. For the Nin fan, this diary is yet another must-read.
Related Subjects: Resources Personal
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Lovely, old fashioned illustrations, and just the right number of questions (not too many, not too few), plus lots of room for momentos and photos.