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

Washington
See Under: Love
Published in Paperback by Washington Square Press (1990-08-01)
Author: David Grossman
List price: $9.95
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Collectible price: $10.00

Average review score:

The most magnificent book I have ever read
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-07
If I would only have the joy to read one book in my lifetime, it should be See Under: Love.

See Under: Love took my breath away, moved me to tears and touched me in the tenderest reaches of my soul. It is brilliant, imaginative, engaging and humane. The way characters, themes and time wind into each other transport the reader to a place far beyond the mundane. I loved every word. Immediately upon finishing, I went back to the first page to reread. My second reading was more deliberate and careful, and I caught much that I had overlooked in my first pass. I am sure that I will reread it again and again.

I originally bought this book after Jonathan Safran Foer enumerated it in his "Five Most Important Books" for an August 2007 Newsweek piece. Foer called it, "The novel of the 21st century" though it was first published in English in 1989. I thank Jonathan Safran Foer for his own works and, here, this recommendation. And in turn, I hope that I can pass this rare jewel on to others. This is my first review (well, not really a review which is elsewhere on Amazon but a recommendation) but I am compelled to do so. Months after the reading, I find myself thinking about See Under: Love and feeling grateful that I experienced it. This is not an easy book to read but the rewards are multifold. And when you are done, read the transcript of a talk that the author gave for a San Francisco Symposium at http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0411/is_1_51/ai_85068470 for even greater insight.

David Grossman has taken the worst that man has to offer and spun it into a magical, magnificent ouevre which will touch you with the human spirit and make you proud to be alive.

Magnificent
Helpful Votes: 14 out of 16 total.
Review Date: 2005-03-25
Words fail. I beg anyone who has been considering buying into Jonathan Safran Foer's hype to instead find themselves a copy of this, the book from which he appears to have stolen most of his ideas, instead.

All hyperbole aside, this wonderful book has few equals. It demands attention, and reflection, and time, and it rewards those willing to invest those things in it beyond compare. Nothing short on a meditation the way our lives are impacted by the moral calculi of others, and the way our own actions reverberate throughout the generations.

A monument of Israeli literature
Helpful Votes: 27 out of 31 total.
Review Date: 2002-11-10
As an Israeli who have read it in Hebrew, I would like to add a few words. One thing: this book is entirely different if you read it in Hebrew. It losses a lot in the translation, and not because the translation is bad, rather that the combination of different layers of very special Hebrew combined with Yiddish, along with the cultural context, makes it a book that is an impossible mission for the translator. Of course, you can't ask someone to learn Hebrew just for this book (and this still won't be enough, because he has to be born again as an Israeli and grow up here to understand everything...), but the book has numerous universal aspects that can be translated, and it's still, even after the translation, a must-read.
And now, for the book itself (if there is such a thing the book itself...).
This is by-far the greatest Israeli book that I have ever read. I had one feeling that went along with me throughout the journey: I don't know how the hell he did. I just don't know. Like a magician that makes a trick you just can't figure. The scope. The depth. I cannot describe this book. It defies space and time. It is a masterpiece.

Impossible to describe
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-16
I don't think I am qualified to write a review of this piece of art. Think Toni Morrison on LSD, or maybe Falkner writing in Hebrew as Isaiah, composing in a way never before conceived, about of all things, The Hollocaust! I guess this most twisted example of human depravity requires such a book. However, if I had not read Mr. Grossman's beautiful love narrative, " Someone to Run With" I would not have known at first if it was a work of genius or a tale told by an idiot, and might not have hung in there long enough to declare it the former - 5 stars! However, a second reading may be required to understand the nuances.

Fantastic!!
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 13 total.
Review Date: 2003-01-19
One of the best novels I have ever read. Don't miss it!

Washington
The Wilde Women: A Novel
Published in Paperback by Washington Square Press (2008-04-01)
Author: Paula Wall
List price: $14.00
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Average review score:

Unforgettable
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-26
When I read the first chapter in the book store, I knew I'd buy the book. But, I didn't know if the author could keep up her salacious, witty pace. I'm happy to say that she did - and it got so, much, better. This is one talented woman - just google her interviews. She knows sexy women, the South, and storytelling. A must have, especially for saucy Southern women.

Funny and Sexy
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-13
Who would of thunk you could have a story that's both sexy and funny? The Wilde girls...and their mom...are a wild ride with equal amounts of comedy and drama. A good time guaranteed.

Funny and Sexy!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-07
What a great suprise! I picked this up on a whim the other day at the library. I opened it while waiting in line and was immediatley hooked from the first page! Don't miss this one!

I can almost see this book as a movie or mini series. The characters are so funny and so likeable. I laughed out loud too many times to count. Pick up this book if you want a quick, quirky read full of unforgettable characters.

Receives veteran Susan Ericksen's smooth voice
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-07
Paula Wall's THE WILDE WOMEN receives veteran Susan Ericksen's smooth voice and stage and screen background as it tells of sisters who have a taste for mischief and bad men. When one sister cheats with another's man, trouble begins which will lead to changes and danger.

ONE OF THE BEST I HAVE READ THIS YEAR. AMAZING BIT OF WRITING!
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-08
When Paula Wall published her first novel, The Rock Garden, I read it and loved it and felt it was by far one of the best novels of that year. I was quite fearful that Ms. Wall was one of those one novel wonders and thought "what a shame." Fortunately my fears were for naught! With this second offering I truly feel the author out did even her first work, which I have said, is one of the best. This is good stuff here folks!

At first glance, the author could quite well be classified as a regional author as her novels take place in a specific geographical area. But, like Ferrol Sams (Run with the Horsemen, the first of his wonderful trilogy), Ms. Wall transcends geography and produces a work that most people, if not all people, can relate to. She is simply an excellent, gifted writer and a true master story teller. If, after reading the first five pages, your sides are not hurting from laughter, then something has to be wrong with your sense of humor. This lady is funny. Her one liners are beyond a doubt some of the best I've read in years.

This is a novel of the depression south. It is not a "romance" novel, a "bodice ripper" nor is it a "historical romance." It is the story of a small town in the south during the depression years. Yes, there is an element of romance woven into the story, fear not, but this simply in not what this work is about. The author hangs her story on two sisters, which are great characters, but are only a small part of the novel as a whole. We meet page after page of vivid characters. The author has a skill which allows her to, in one paragraph, convince the reader that they have known a character all of their life. The twists and turns of this story are absolutely amazing and complicated, yet not so complicated that it does not all make perfect sense as you read on. Even though the story and plot are wonderful, they are almost over shadowed by the author's keen sense of character development. In this work we have probably at least a dozen story lines going and they are all wonderfully interlinked as are the quirky characters sprinkled here and there. The ending of this work...well, you just have to read that yourself, but trust me, it is great. Like another reviewer here, I recommend you go ahead and buy this one as you will no doubt want to give it a reread. I cannot wait for her next work to come out!

Recommend this one highly.

Washington
Woodward and Bernstein: Life in the Shadow of Watergate
Published in Kindle Edition by Wiley (2006-10-20)
Author: Alicia C. Shepard
List price: $14.95
New price: $9.99

Average review score:

Illuminating Even Without Cooperation
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-02
The irony here is that neither Woodward nor Bernstein would speak with the author, despite having made millionaires out of themselves over the past 30-plus years by insinuating themselves into other peoples' lives and putting everything they've ever been told by anyone about anyone else between book covers. A bit of a double standard. Still, this look at how Watergate affected these two reporters is an engrossing read and a first class research job. Many many intriguing revelations for anyone who follows journalism and those who still like to read about the Watergate scandal. It's all tied up with a red bow because of the revelation in 2005 that Deep Throat was former FBI official Mark Felt, a secret that Woodstein kept religiously for three decades. Woodward's latest books on Bush are a bit boring, but that doesn't come across here. His Belushi expose remains his best, but this book points out that Woodward never again went outside politics in his reporting. Too bad. He should.

A Must Read for Watergate Addicts
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-12
A MUST-READ FOR WATERGATE JUNKIES! We have all followed Woodward and Bernstein's careers through newspaper articles and the occa¬sional TV interview. Now Alicia Shepard has gathered all those data into a book about what Watergate did for them...and to them. It is a fascinating tale of young reporters who got sudden fame and fortune early in their lives, and how Woodward prospered while Bernstein foundered.
Shepard had access to their entire Watergate archives, and my only criticism of the book is its liberal quotations of that material. When "letters and telegrams" pour in from all over the country to them, it is not necessary to quote from so many. It slows down the narrative and you will find yourself skipping over most of these repetitive passages. All in all, it is a 266 page book that would have a much easier read at about 225. But if you love Water¬gate and all that came in its wake, pick up this book and read about how it careened the careers of these little reports to un¬known heights and depths.

The story behind the story (tellers)
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-12-16
When the five burglars bungled their bugging mission at the Watergate in June of 1972, they unwittingly changed not only our country's political history, but its journalistic one as well. Alicia Shepard has masterfully chronicled the successes and struggles, both professional and personal, of Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein, the men who blew the lid off Watergate, in this informative and enjoyable book. She recounts their investigation of the scandal, illuminating a new perspective through extensive interviews with their editors. She pulls no punches in exposing their triumphs and their failures in the ensuring three decades, in their reporting, their marriages, and even their relationship with each other. The result is an eminently readable book that will leave you feeling as if you have finally gotten the inside scoop on the men whose names are synonymous with Watergate.














The Definitive "Woodstein" Biography
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-12-11
Alicia C. Shepard has written what should become the definitive biography of Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein. Her book is scholarly without being pedantic and revelatory without being salacious. She skillfully shows how Watergate affected not only history, but journalism, and the lives of the two young men who doggedly pursued the truth. This book is must reading for anyone who wants to become a journalist, or who cares about what journalists do.

John DeDakis
CNN Senior Copy Editor, "The Situation Room"
Author, FAST TRACK
[...]

Iluminating Read
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-12-07
This book is a terrific explanation of the Kismet that brought Woodward and Bernstein together with the fortunate, and rare, backing of a committed publisher to chronicle truth in the midst of near-battlefield conditions. Read it and be amazed that it happened. Read it and be proud of journalism, many members of Congress, our courts and citizens reading, watching, and caring that our government, not politics, carried the day. It's so interestingly written that it shoved aside all the rest of the books on my "must read" pile.

Washington
Becoming Finola
Published in Paperback by Washington Square Press (2004-06-15)
Author: Suzanne Strempek Shea
List price: $14.00
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Average review score:

Great story, excellent read
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-27
I love Susanne Strempek-Shea's books and this is one of my favorites. It's kind of like "Under the Tuscan Sun" but takes place in Ireland.

Booley
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-10-21
This was an amazing book. I was shocked as I read it how alike this town Booley was to a town I visited last time I was in Ireland called Doolin. Both towns had a row of about 5 or 6 shops, one of wich being a pub, both towns have cliffs with a holy well only about a mile or 3 fields away, and both are on the side of a hill next to the ocean on the west coast of Ireland not to far from Limerick. I swear Shea must have visited Doolin before writing the book because she captured the spirt of the little Irish town to a key.
Now a word about the book, wonderful, it's a classic love story that every woman wishes she could experience while on vacation, or as they say in Ireland "on holiday"

A great venture into a new type of fiction...
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-18
I first got into Shea when I read "Hoopi Shoopi Donna," to which I could relate because I, too, grew up second-generation Polish in New England. Although the characters and plots varied, Shea's first four or so books tended to focus upon Polish-American twenty-something heroines, usually living in Massachusetts, humorously dealing with their old-country relatives.

In "Becoming Finola," however, Shea tackles an unfamiliar country, Ireland, and does it wonderfully. Massachusetts native (she couldn't totally abandon the old and familiar, could she?) Sophie accompanies her friend Gina on a three-month trip to Ireland for a change of pace after Gina's husband's death. However, Gina lasts all of one night, heading back to America and insisting Sophie stay. She does, and finds it surprisingly easy to fall into small-town Irish life -- as well as the spot left by Finola, a local legend who broke hearts when she abruptly fled the village three years earlier. Sophie all but takes over Finola's old life as she works Finola's old job, and falls in love with her old boyfriend. And then Finola comes back...

Captures the Escence of Travel after 9/11
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-01-14
Suzanne Strempek Shea must have been gone to Ireland during the Spring of 2002, when Americans began to go back to Europe, once we felt flying was safe again. First we went to countries where English was the official language - Ireland being the closest to US soil. We liked to be able to get on one plane, either in Boston or Baltimore, and get off in Ireland 7 hours later. We were worried about the dollar to Euro exchange rate and preferred that it be one for one, so we wouldn't have to "do the math." Shea must have gone to some of the Irish villages I visited, as she describes them wonderfully.
Not that anyone needs an excuse to go to Ireland, but if you're looking for more reasons to go there, read this book first.

Unforgettable
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-03-28
I read this book a few months ago and it's still fresh in my mind, which I consider the sign of a truly good read. Overall, the book was a good story, told in an utterly charming and fresh way. The characters and setting are so well/vividly written that you feel as if you could picture it and almost believe such a place and people exist (and wish that you could visit them). Enjoyable read and one I've been recommending to friends.

Washington
How I Got to Be This Hip: The Collected Works of One of America's Preeminent Journalists
Published in Paperback by Washington Square Press (1999-02-01)
Author: Barry Farrell
List price: $17.95
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Average review score:

Certainly hipper than I
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2004-10-12
I lucked into this book when it came out in 1999; my editor asked me to review it. I was previously unfamilliar with Farrell's work; now I am thrilled to see this book is still in print.

Farrell is a writer's journalist. This is not the sensationalist, info-tainment, "if-it-bleeds-it-leads" garbage you see on Fox News. He goes deep beneath the surface of his story, looking for the larger truths as much as the simple truth. Many of these truths hurt as much as they enlighten. He covers topics ranging from kite-flying to the Hillside Strangler with insight and style. His pieces on serial killers and rape victims are sensitive, yet they pack a serious punch.

This book is much more than a collection of amazing snapshots of recent American history -- it's also literature. No matter what the subject matter, his passion for writing shines through; no matter how gruesome a scene he describes, his style leaves you jubilant.

A magnificent collection by a finely focused journalist
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-09-29
Barry Farrell died too young, in 1984. This book will keep his memory alive for those who learned from his lapidary prose. I wish I could have been one of his students--but in a way, having read his work, I feel that in a way, I am.

A truly wonderful book
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 1999-07-27
I've been reading with enormous delight this collection of articles by Barry Farrell. It's a posthumous collection by a brilliant writer who died in 1984. What an unexpected thrill it was to discover this book's existence. It helps bring back to life an unfortunately neglected writer. I knew him briefly (too briefly) -- a fine guy. Barry Farrell's bracing journalistic style and humanity take the reader back to a better time in journalism when writers cared deeply about their subject matter.

Immersion journalism at its finest.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 1999-05-03
Barry Farrell is a name I didn't know before two weeks ago. Barrey Farrell is now a name I won't forget. As a young journalist, I think this book is an essential read for anyone considering a career in the field. But anyone interested in reading great stories that take a smart, comprehensive view of a subject will find just that in this little green book. Farrell is an angel of a writer. But what I admire more is his hard-nosed reporting. After reading some of these stories, for instance "Stalking the Hillside Strangler," it awed me knowing how much footwork had to go into such exquisite work. This book is a clinic on how to report and write, and I will turn to it often for inspiration.

Exquisite works by a writer's writer
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 1999-07-17
Certainly I'm not an objective reviewer. I attended Barry Farrell's classes at UC Santa Barbara in the 1970s -- and was, I believe, rather a disappointment to him -- but he nonetheless became one of my most important role models as a writer. What I've long regretted, however, was not having more of his writing on my bookshelf. Barry mostly published in magazines, and so it's been hard even for those of us who are devoted to his work to find and collect any significant fraction of his lifetime output. I own and cherish a few aging magazines featuring his writing, but these bits and pieces barely scratch the surface of his 30 fruitful years of shoe-leather journalism. This book, then, is a wonderful and long-overdue development. I had read perhaps a third of these pieces, and was delighted to discover them anew. The other two-thirds of the book was an absolute delight, each page a treasure of flowing language and unerring eye for detail. Of course, it also brought back to my ear Barry's voice, and images of him I'll always carry with me: coffe at the outdoor cafe in front of the library at UC Santa Barbara after class, or the time he cajoled Joan Dideon and John Gregory Dunne into visiting our small class of 12 or 15 students in the English Department's spartan conference room. So, take it from a blatantly partisan -- but completely sincere -- reviewer: buy this book! For heaven's sake, if you love great non-fiction writing -- if you are devoted to writers like Joan Dideon, John McPhee, the non-fiction of Wallance Stegner, and other master wordsmiths of our age -- you will not be disappointed.

Washington
Let Their Spirits Dance: A Novel
Published in Hardcover by Harper (2002-05-01)
Author: Stella Pope Duarte
List price: $24.95
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Average review score:

Great for the spirit
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-28
Vietnam stayed bottled up in me until I read this book decades after the war. I had a well of tears that had to come out. The book helped do that. The book is very touching, sweet, and startling. One family's journey to the Wall is a movie in itself and it should become a screen play. I hope people learn from this book. Every elected official should have to read it and those debate moderators ought to ask them if they have read it, especially if they are trying to run for the presidency.

So moving...
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-05
This novel was wonderful! I am still amazed at the author's ability to cover so many different difficult topics in a flawless manner. An amazing "tale" that needed to be told............

Score one for the teacher!!!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2004-03-01


Stella Pope Duarte's bio says she is a university instructor and a high school counselor. I'll bet she took a lot of writing and/or literature classes during her school years, because her debut novel is nothing short of a miracle, considering how publishers continue to release poorly constructed, poorly edited books.

From the first sentence -- "The passion vine bloomed until late November the year Jesse died."

-- until the last paragraph --

". . . No one knows if a spirit can balance on the point of a pin, or send light beams when we least expect. I looked down at the Wall. Light shone from it like a laser beam reaching us flying overhead. It's OK that I knew my brother wasn't coming home. I was supposed to. It got me to write this book, to tell his story to the world."

-- Ms. Duarte's elegant, mystical prose casts a spell on her reader.

Duarte weaves the story of a Chicano family torn asunder by the death of its beloved son/brother/cousin Jesse Ramirez during the Viet Name War in 1968.

Before he boarded the plane, Jesse promised his mother that she would hear his voice again. When she finally hears his voice one night, some thirty years after his death, she cannot rest until she visits the Viet Nam Memorial Wall to touch his name.

Jesse's family has not fared well since his death. One of his sisters, Teresa, is in the middle of a difficult divorce. Another sister can't find Mr. Right, although not from lack of effort. His brother is an ex-con trying to connect with his estranged son. His buddies who returned from the war have had their share of struggles, too.

Riding herd on this rag-tag group is Jesse's mother, Alicia Rodriguez. She alone has not lost faith and despite her fragile health and lack of money, she is determined to make the long trek to Washington to see the Wall.

I look forward to many, many more books from Stella Pope Durate. She's got all the skills necessary to teach us about quality writing and to entertain us for years to come.

Enjoy.

A story of one family's involvement in the Vietnam War
Helpful Votes: 17 out of 19 total.
Review Date: 2004-03-23
LET THEIR SPIRITS DANCE by Stella Pope Duarte

The debut novel by Stella Pope Duarte, LET THEIR SPIRITS DANCE revolves around a Hispanic family's trip from their Arizona home to the Vietnam Wall, in a journey where they question themselves, their beliefs, and remember the family member they lost to the Vietnam War.

School teacher Teresa Ramirez has held on to the knowledge, all these 30 years, that her brother Jesse knew he was not going to return from the Vietnam War. On his departure at the airport, he whispers to her that he will not be back, and to take care of their mother. This memory haunts her when they get word six months later of his death while trying to help out a fellow soldier who was shot down. Thirty years later, when Teresa's mother Alicia informs everyone she has heard Jesse call to her, Teresa is more than just upset, and wonders if her mother is hallucinating or if her mother truly has these powers where she can hear from the dead.

Then, in a surprising turn of events, they are informed that because of an error made by the government all those years ago, Alicia has $90,000 coming to her because of Jesse's death. This seals the deal - Alicia informs the family they are going to DC to touch Jesse's' name on the wall. It doesn't matter that Teresa is being sued by her husband's girlfriend for assault, or that Teresa is waiting to hear about her soon-to-be divorce from Ray. Alicia says it will all take care of itself, and that they are all to go on this journey together. Alicia's health is in jeopardy, but she is determined to do this, as the last thing she may do on this earth.

Duarte tells the story with flashbacks, the point of view coming mostly from Teresa, as she remembers her childhood with Jesse and her other siblings Priscilla and Paul, happy moments as well as sad moments that continue to bother her into the present. She remembers her father, who was unfaithful to her mother Alicia, a man that Teresa had no respect for. She also remembers the stories she heard from an old Aztec medicine man, Don Florencio, who talked about the ancient Aztecs, their heritage, about dead spirits and other things that Teresa wants to believe are true.

While the first half of the book is filled with mostly flashbacks and helps set up the story, the second half details the journey that the Ramirez family and friends take, as they drive in a caravan of vehicles to their destination in Washington. They become the favorite of the media, thanks to the help of nephew Michael and his computer, even garnering the attention of President Clinton. Relationships are mended and created as the trip ensues, while more and more people join the caravan, and when they finally reach their final destination, it is a moment of sadness and remembrance as they embrace those that have left them.

This reviewer enjoyed LET THEIR SPIRITS DANCE. The story of the Vietnam War and how it affected one family, as well as one group of people, the Hispanics, was eye opening. The ending was expected, yet it also was climatic in that one had waited so long for this journey to end. It was not truly a happy ending, but what made it happy was their realization that our loved ones are never really far from us, only separated by death. Teresa's story involved one's questioning of faith and religious beliefs, and reconciling one's past with the present. Her problems are resolved in a manner that surprised this reviewer, but it was a wonderful ending to her story as well as Alicia's journey in search of her son. Some readers may find the politics in this book to be opposite of what they feel, as Duarte does not hold back on her views of the war, told through the eyes of the characters in this story. Other than that, four stars for LET THEIR SPIRIT DANCE.

Well-Done Debut Novel
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2004-02-06
Stella Pope Duarte's is an excellent novel about the long-lasting effects of the Vietnam war on an Arizona family and how they finally come to face some of the devastation. The novel is narrated by Teresa, whose older brother Jesse, was killed in 1968. Thirty years later, her mother hears Jesse's voice calling to her and she ultimately decides that she must go to the Vietnam War Memorial Wall in Washington. The trip and the events leading up to it are difficult, bringing up painful memories of Jesse and their own lives before and after his death. The trip and what they find when they get there will change their lives completely. Let Their Spririts Dance is a satisfying, moving read.

Washington
A Lover's Mask
Published in Kindle Edition by Kimani Romance (2007-03-02)
Author: Altonya Washington
List price: $5.40
New price: $4.32

Average review score:

A Lovers Mast
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-14
This book was a disappointment for me. Although the plot of the book was good and interesting, the author introduced so many characters, many at the same time that I found it confusing and I had to go back several times to previous pages to see who the heck certain characters were! It took me three times the amount of time to finish this book as it normally would. It felt more like a text book than a romance novel. Could we keep the focus on fewer characters next time? Geeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeez!!!

ABSOLUTELY HOT!!!!!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-22
THIS IS MY 1ST BOOK THAT I HAVE READ BY ALTONYA WASHINGTON AND LET ME TELL YOU I READ THE BOOK IN ONE AND WENT BACK TO MAKE SURE I DIDNT MISS ANYPARTS :) BUT WOW THE WHOLE BOOK WAS AWESOME AND I WILL DEFINETLY READ THE OTHER ONE

Another Ramsey Hit!!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-22
AlTonya has a great recipe that blends romance, passion and suspense that makes a great novel. The Ramsey's have become one of my favorite family series. In this installation Fernando Ramsey and Contessa Warren hook-up and the sparks fly right off the page. Both characters hide behind their hard-up images, but once they get together, the real Contessa and Fernando are revealed. Their story is full of love, revelations, romance and lots of passion. She catches us up with Ramsey's that we already know (Quest and Quay) and she gives us a deeper look at the ones that we are waiting to find out more about (Yohan, Moses and a few others).

You know AlTonya had to throw a twist in there to keep us in suspense and begging for more. I am NOT too proud to beg either! I can't wait for the next book. Those Ramsey's are just YUMMY! Plus, I can't wait to find out the answer to the murder mystery.

I have a favorite scene that deals with my favorite Ramsey and 15 minutes! Be sure to pick up this book to find out what it is....

A Lover's Mask-A Joyfully Recommended Title!
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-12
Fernando Ramsey grew up believing that a woman was an object only used to satisfy a man's desire. With a father like Marcus Ramsey how could he accept anything else? His father is the master of manipulation and never treated his mother with the respect that she deserved. Nevertheless, Fernando yearns for a magical love that his parents never possessed. Fernando never thought he would find that kind of love until he met Contessa Warren. Here is a beautiful woman that is sexy-as-hell and vastly feisty - just the type of woman Fernando desires.

Contessa Warren is on a mission to discover all the dirty little secrets the Ramsey's have hidden in their closet. She is positive the family is tangled up in a scandal or two and she believes that she is just the person to uncover them all. However, there is just one problem with her plan - Fernando Ramsey. Contessa isn't sure how it happened; but she finds herself instantly falling under Fernando's alluring charm. Will Contessa be able to continue her quest to reveal all the Ramsey skeletons, knowing it could cause great disgrace to Fernando's family name?

With A Lover's Mask being the third book in the Ramsey family saga, I am finding it very difficult not to repeat myself over and over again about the superior writings of this series. Readers, if you are a huge fan of tantalizing suspense, deceitfulness, love, passion and countless shocking secrets then this series is just what the doctor order. I am simply amazed at AlTonya Washington's storytelling - each book gets better and spicier than its predecessor. I loved everything about A Lover's Mask! From the spectacular mystery to smoking hot sexual encounters. The sensational foreplay between Contessa and Fernando will have you going up in heated flames while the dramatic suspense will have you tangled up in a massive web. Just when you think you have figured everything out, Ms. Washington flips the script on you and throws you for a tale spin. To receive the full impact of the Ramsey clan, I would suggest reading each book in the order that it was release. However, if you just happen upon this fantastic novel first you will not feel at a lost because Ms. Washington gives great background details in A Lover's Mask.

Nikita Steele
Reviewed for Joyfully Reviewed

Deception and Truth Beneath the Mask
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-27
Ms. Washington has spun quite an ENGAGING series about a very wealthy and powerful African American family with MAJOR issues! She has masterfully integrated the heroes and villains within this BIG dysfunctional circle of family and friends. This series gives new meaning to the saying, "Keep your friends close and your enemies closer". To have to CONSTANTLY be on your toes like that with your own family! NOT being able to trust your own father or uncle. WOW!! Each installment to this series just gets better and better. Fernando and Contessa definitely heat up the pages of this novel with their sexy SIZZLIN' encounters. And the mystery and intrigue surrounding their budding relationship only aids in making this an even more intriguing page-turner. Will Fernando and County finally remove their masks and be truthful with each other before it's too late?!! Or will another couple be DOOMED to failure due to the many skeletons hidden deep within this family's closet?!! I am having a blast "watching" these scandalous secrets unfold before my eyes. And I CAN'T wait to get to the next installment to see what other tangled webs Ms. Washington and Ramsey's will spin for my reading pleasure!

Washington
A Lover's Pretense (Kimani Romance)
Published in Mass Market Paperback by Kimani (2006-08-01)
Author: Altonya Washington
List price: $5.99
New price: $2.57
Used price: $0.47

Average review score:

Truly Gifted
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-10
I really enjoyed this book. Ms. Washington has it going on when it comes down to her writing. She keeps you in supspense and just when you think you know whose who, guess what? You're wrong. I just pray that you continue doing what you're doing. You are truly blessed.

Lover's Pretense
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-09-10
Ms. Washington's love mysteries have a twist of their owns. They keep you guessing. When you think you have solved the plot, there is another mystery developing right under your nose. I can not wait to find out who really killed Ms.Black or did she kill herself.
Abxious in Okinawa, Japan

A Lover's chase
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-21
I loved this book, even though Quay was chasing Tyke I figured if he would have stopped she would have found her way back. But even thought I loved their love story I think Quest and Mick love story was the best in A Lover's Dream...

A Lover's Pretense-A Joyfully Recommended Title!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-20
Renowned rail designer, Tykira Lowery, has not set foot in Seattle since she left home for college years ago - all due to her painful breakup with Quaysar Ramsey. Out of the blue, the Ramsey Group contacts her with a challenging job offer that she can't refuse. Completing this major, multi-dollar task would make her already successful business skyrocket to a whole new level. Not about to allow a grand opportunity to pass her by, Ty decides to return to Seattle with her business team. She vows to maintain tight control over her emotions and uphold a professional relationship with Quay, or better yet, steer clear of him as much as possible. But, Ty quickly finds out it is much easier said than done to stay out of Quay's arms.

Quaysar Ramsey has been in love with Ty for a very long time; but, he has always been determined to keep her at a distance. Dangerous threats have been made against all the woman in his past and he is not about to endanger Ty's life. For years, Quay was able to stay away from Ty; however, when she returns to Seattle at the request of his twin brother, Quest, Quay finds it difficult to deny his raging desire to claim Ty as his own. Will the hardship from their devastating breakup continue to be a major obstacle between them? And, more so, if by a miracle Quay and Ty are able to reunite as a couple, will the demon from Quay's past resurface and cause major havoc, possibly ending Ty's life?

AlTonya Washington is back again with her sequel novel in the Ramsey family saga. A Lover's Pretense was just as hot and intense as its prelude. All I can say is WOW! I loved A Lover's Pretense! It seems as if each new segment in the Ramsey family series just keeps getting better and more exciting. Ms. Washington has mastered the act of teasing and torturing the reader until you find yourself rapidly flipping page after page, eager to see what will happen next. Even though the main feature in the phenomenal A Lover's Pretense was Ty and Quay's love story; it also revealed the person behind the murder mystery that carried over from the first novel; touched on up on Mick and Quest's life after marriage; taunted about the future love interests of more Ramsey men and developed another secret that stemmed from the original anonymity. Whew! Readers, if you admire a cocky, dominate, suave, compassionate, sexy-as-hell type of man - then Quay is THE man. Ty had a lot on her plate in her dealings with Quay, yet, she handled herself and Quay with class and style. Although Ms. Washington did an excellent job of giving great background information, I would suggest reading A Lover's Dream before tackling A Lover's Pretense because of the continuation of the suspenseful murder mystery and, more importantly, to experience the satisfaction of Mick and Quest's union. A Lover's Pretense is positively a Joyfully Reviewed Recommended Read!

Nikita Steele
Reviewed for Joyfully Reviewed

Totally Captivating
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-21
I am definitely CAUGHT UP in this series! Ms. Washington has once again created another page-turner with "A Lover's Pretense". The Ramsey men are once again quite a MEMORABLE treat. Quaysar and Tykira can't control the INTENSE sparks that are still simmering when they meet again after so many years apart. Quay is handsome, cocky, and quite the charmer, but he is also EXTREMELY loving and protective towards the women in his life (his mother, Tykira, and Mick). And despite his MANY flaws Ty knows in her heart that he is the ONLY man she'll ever love. But will his dark and mysterious past continue to get in the way of their chance at a happily-ever-after?!! You will be totally captivated by the mystery and romance in book two of this intriguing series.

Washington
The Malagasy Tortoise (Jim Morgan Adventure Series)
Published in Kindle Edition by New Line Press (2008-03-01)
Author: James Halon
List price: $9.99
New price: $7.99

Average review score:

Adventure with a Dash of Romance
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-27
James Halon will tickle your adventure-bone with this novel! His characters have an incredible depth to them, and the premise of his story is unique and fast-paced. Halon's main character Jim Morgan has wit, intrigue and sex-appeal. Morgan is today's James Bond without all the gadgets and far-fetched scenarios. See what happens when a Field Engineer is thrown into a life of spys, danger, and romance! Even Halon's 'bad guy' has been done originally and is a refreshing departure from the norm. I recommend this book to anyone who loves adventure with a twist of romance!! For Halon fans, be sure to check out his collection of poetry entitled "Poetry" by James Halon, too! You will glad that you did! This author is extremely versatile and has a firm grip on how to entertain a reader!

Move Over James Bond And Macgyver!
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2003-03-17
James Halon takes the spy thriller to a whole new level with his novel The Malagasy Tortoise. Engineer Jim Morgan has a knack for being in the wrong place at the wrong time and making the most of it. Fancy clothes, secret weapons, Bond girls, Morgan doesn't need them (well almost!)as he battles the forces of evil. Humor, witty dialogue, brilliant description, and imaginative situations keep this fast paced book clicking along.

The names Morgan, James Morgan!
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2003-01-20
James Halon has done an excellent job of mixing elements of intrigue, action packed adventure, and infatuation.Jim Morgan, like so many men, is carnially motivated by love - or lust (I'm not sure he knows the difference). His motto seems to be love the one your with. His overactive libido leads him into one disastrous scenario after another.
On his quest to find the rare Malagasy Tortoise in Madagascar, he finds himself torn between his recently reunited love, Eunice and the young, sultry, CIA agent, Sophie. Perhaps, the mysterious Tina Johnson would be a good distraction from this dilemma. What is a man capable accomplishing in the name of love? Jim Morgan, an engineer by trade, finds himself smack in the middle of a CIA covert operation. Car crashes, burning buildings, Russian prisons, is any woman worth the tortures he finds himself enduring?
This book is a great read for any audience. It's difficult to find characters portrayed so honestly. James Bond, he's not. Jim Morgan tries to be just as suave and sophisticated with the ladies. Instead, his charismatic wit and humor seem to be his strong point. In the end, like Bond, Morgan finds his share of love / lust.
This reader can't wait for the next, Jim Morgan Adventure!

WOW!
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2002-12-14
If James Bond was an Engineer and wore sweatshirts instead of tuxedos his name would be Jim Morgan... Well, maybe not. Morgan is a refreshingly unique character unlike the typical male protagonist. James Halon has conjured many wonderful characters in this book that take the reader on a bizarre quest for a rare tortoise. A quest that reveals multiple lovers, deadly spies and plenty to laugh at along the way. I look forward to Jim's next adventure and future dreams.

Character driven story.....
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2002-11-19
Author Jim Halon has managed to create characters that enabled this reader to feel she knows them personally. A very well crafted story with laugh out loud writing. The humor the author displays throughout is refreshing and uplifting.

Halon has a wonderful ability to place the reader "there"...with exceptional description, one feels like they're partaking of the adventure right along with Morgan. The fresh prose delights throughout the story. "My steak disappeared so fast that David Copperfield, the infamous illusionist, would have been awestruck, and demanding that I eat another so he could pick up on my trick."

I was gravely mistaken when I initally thought this was a "man's" adventure story. Halon has combined adventure with a hefty amount of humor and romance. This reader was quite impressed with his choice of female characters...strong-willed, intelligent, competent, attractive and independent. Don't expect a damsel in distress in this novel. Halon's female characters makes this particular female reader exceptionally impressed with what he created. All of them, including Morgan himself, are realistic and believable. I sincerely give this novel a five star rating, only because six wasn't available. Order a copy, curl up in a comfortable spot and prepare to be highly entertained! This author has great promise and I look forward to the sequel.

Washington
Murder on the Gold Coast
Published in Paperback by Silver Maple Publications (2005-07-01)
Author: Barbara Fleming
List price: $17.95
New price: $14.95
Used price: $7.00
Collectible price: $17.95

Average review score:

Whodunit?!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-18
Wow, I loved this book! For weeks I had been searching for a good mystery book and when I saw the reviews for this one I didn't waste any time ordering it. This story starts off with Harold Waterson, a wealthy businessman being murdered at the beginning of the story. The question is who shot him..why and why did he get murdered in the basement of people who claimed not to know him?

Barbara Fleming will have you guessing and assuming to the very last chapter. Once I got down to 100 pages left I stayed up all night trying to solve this murder case.

HIGHLY RECOMMENDED!

You won't be disappointed!

If You Love Murder Mysteries, Choose This Book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-05-18
Barbara Fleming's Murder On The Gold Coast: A Matthew Alexander Mystery is a murder mystery which offers delightful dialog, well-developed characters, a finely designed plot, and intimate insight into the process of a police department's murder investigation.

While the homicide detective's viewpoint is the primary viewpoint, what I found fascinating was how Barbara Fleming gives us a "look-see" into the work and involvement of a forensic specialist, district attorney, and police chief, among others, as Detective Lieutenant Matthew Alexander investigates wealthy Harold Waterson's murder in Washington D.C..

If you love murder mysteries, you'll thoroughly enjoy the experience of reading Barbara Fleming's Murder On The Gold Coast: A Matthew Alexander Mystery.

I enjoyed it and I am sure you will too.

More than a thrilling detective story
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-04-20
Detective Mathew Arnold investigates a murder in the home of his former girl friend, whose father persuaded his daughter to break off the relationship. The victim and several suspects are members of the upper crust of black society in Washington, D.C. Detective Arnold faces not only the stress of a personal relationship with a key suspect, but also intense political and social pressures in a high profile case that his superiors are anxious to close with a quick arrest. His character, perserverance and investigative instincts and skill prevent a gross injustice, and leave the reader with the challenge of figuring out who did it. As a dectective story, this is a thrilling piece of work with a convincing assortment of possible culprits that make the book difficult to put down. As a literary work, the author creates some fascinating characters and provides some interesting insights into the social milieux of the characters.
Fred J. Milligan, Westerville, Ohio

Murder on the Gold Coast
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-04-07
Murder on the Gold Coast keeps you wondering "who done it". Barbara Fleming's well written Matthew Alexander Mystery was a very good read.

Murder in Black and Gold
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-06-11
Murder on the Gold Coast brims with surprises and revelations. Barbara Fleming's intelligent writing sheds wisdom and insight into the human condition. With her uncanny eye for detail and a well-tuned ear for dialogue, even Washington, DC is a character full of energy and personality. Fleming's writing is by turns lyrically poetic and as staccato as a crime report. Matthew Alexander deserves a long career investigating the District's crimes. And Barbara Fleming is building a solid body of work from the capers of this cunning detective.

Murder on the Gold Coast is the newest installment of Fleming's Matthew Alexander Mystery Series. Someone has killed wealthy black real estate developer, Harold William Waterson, Sr., and, surprisingly, his Washington, DC social sphere encompasses a circle of people with motives. His elegant white wife is miserable. His son detests him. The black, beautiful Angela Bowman wants to end their affair. When Waterson winds up dead in the posh basement of Angela's parents, the three Bowman's maintain their innocence. While there is no hard evidence to implicate them, there is the matter of the murder weapon; that key piece of evidence - a 38-caliber revolver that emptied two slugs into Waterson's chest - is missing.

Matthew Alexander steps in to unravel this mystery, wrestling against the odds, frustration, and time. Matt's personal history with Angela enhances the intrigue; they might have married had her father found him worthy. In his current marriage to sultry Carla, his life balances romantic negotiation, administrative head-games, and brutally long hours. His witnesses balk, and his leads sometimes disintegrate, but his instincts seldom betray him. This sharp, handsome detective is cocky for a reason. He's good at his job.

Murder on the Gold Coast by Barbara Fleming
Reviewed by Chiquita Mullins Lee


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