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

Companies
Physiology (Saunders Text and Review Series)
Published in Paperback by W.B. Saunders Company (2002-05-08)
Author: Linda S. Costanzo
List price: $38.95
New price: $24.99
Used price: $5.00

Average review score:

Physiology Textbook
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-11-18
I received the book quickly and in perfect condition, and it has been extremely helpful in learning difficult concepts in human physiology. Thanks to this textbook, I've done well in the course!

You need this book!!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-11-09
Costanzo is the best phys book ever! It offers the material at the PERFECT level for medical school. Everything is explained very well and is an easy read. This is one book I would say READ THE TEXT! Another good point is that the text reinforces what you have already learned so it becomes thoroughly integrated in your mind. I used her 2nd edition for graduate school, and purchased her 3rd edition for medical school (the 2nd edition got destroyed). The new addition has some slight changes and more color which makes it more user friendly.

Amazing Physio Book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-01
It is one of the best books I've used in med school so far. It gets right down to the point, so you don't have to read through all of the fluff to find what's important like in other books. However, in the same respect, it's not overwhelming like in some texts where you read a paragraph and then wonder if it was even written in English. This is a must for any med student.

If you are in med school just buy this book and start reading
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-27
While drinking from the firehouse of knowledge this book is your best friend. It's really a must buy for any med student. Her other book is less helpful. Boron & Boulpaep (etc) take WAY too much time.

Great physio book
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-10
This physio book is great. It easily and effortlessly breaks down the physiology that occurs in the human body without getting too technical or clinical. It delivers the basics and little fluff. Great book to read.

Companies
Under Plum Lake (Lythway Large Print Children's Series)
Published in Hardcover by G. K. Hall & Company (1997-09)
Author: Lionel Davidson
List price: $16.95
Used price: $45.48

Average review score:

A Children's Novel Of Ideas
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-10-30
This is a strange book, because in a sense nothing happens. The hero, Barry, is taken to an incredible world under the sea where the hugely advanced predecessors of humans live in stunning surroundings, with unbelievable technology, and he learns many things about how they live. He's telling the story afterwards as a way of piecing together his erased memories and convincing himself that he's not, as everyone thinks, mad.

But who is Barry? I don't know. He's an almost entirely receptive character who just soaks it all up. His guide to Egon, Dido (a boy, in their long lifetimes, of 99, who takes him as a sort of pet), comes to love Barry and is distraught at having to send him back to the world above. But why? In their terms he's a primitive, but even to us he doesn't express any particular personality. He's just a vehicle to show us Egon and so Dido can expound at length on how utterly fantastic and perfect their world is. So although Barry experiences a lot of incredible things like ski-flying and dying/rebirth and matter transformation, there's very little drama in the narrative. He describes them unquestioningly, in dazed, almost druggy prose.

There's some beautiful language but about 90% of it is descriptive. Most paragraphs are a variation on "Dido told me all about X. It was amazing. He showed me Y. It created the most wonderful feelings of happiness that I can't describe. You've got to see Z, he said. It's incredible. Then we ate some wonderful fruit that was like various other earth fruits but much better." I enjoyed the ideas, but this way of writing is dull. And of the two characters, Dido is almost alien in his superiority and Barry is just a cipher. It was hard to really attach to them.

Adult literature has a genre called the novel of ideas and I think that really, this is what this is, but for children. It's not really a story; it's just a sort of development of a fantastical world. The world is stunningly created and I'd like to read a proper story set there, but this was more like a guidebook. I wouldn't say don't read it, though, because it's interesting and unusual.

dream, loss, and longing
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-01
This is my favorite book. When I think of it, I recall being touched deeply as a child and haunted ever-after as one can be after waking from the most precious of dreams, trying to relate that experience to the waking world and having no choice but to relinquish it. While this might be described as a children's fiction, I still cannot understand how Mr. Davidson could have invented this narrative experience without either strong inspiration from realms beyond this one, or (may I dare say) without having experienced such an unimaginable happening himself. I am very happy to find that this book is getting some recognition. May it continue to open imaginations to questions of what is tangible and what is possible.

Under Plum Lake
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-06-16
I ordered this book because of the reviews on Amazon.com - I like kids' books even though it has been a long time since I was a kid. I also liked Rose of Tibet by the same author. Under Plum Lake is pretty strange - it's the classic tale of the Garden of Eden, or Shangri-La, the protagonist is shown paradise and then shown the door, cast back into his normal life. However, it has a tragic effect on him - he can't function in his real world anymore because he longs to go back to the underwater paradise, it's all he can think about. Well-written, very colorful, sad and even stressful - also it seemed a lot like an LSD trip. By the way, one of my favorite books as a kid that I found again as an adult is Tom's Midnight Garden, although it is meant for a younger reader it is just as engrossing and evocative as Under Plum Lake.

Man I miss this book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-05-26
I read this book in [...] Now at [...] I still think about this book. This not only got me into reading for the first time ever, but it also let me know that it was okay to keep my imagination growing. At a time when it wasn't cool to play with toys anymore or dream about ridiculous things, this book kept me going. Great great book. As you will see.

The book that got my daughter reading ravidly!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2004-12-16
This book was one of my favorites growing up and my brothers absolute favorite! Now 36, I thought of it when I was telling my 10 year old what I read when I was younger. At that time, she wasn't interested in reading a lot. I bought this for my brother and she took it and read it first and hasn't stopped reading for the past year! Now we can talk about other realities and about not taking 'normal' definitions of reality as the only definitions. This book has really opened up her thinking (as it did mine!) She has now read about 15 novels since Under Plum Lake and we can make references to this book and laugh and really share some special moments.

Companies
365 Cats Page-A-Day Desk Calendar 2008
Published in Calendar by Workman Publishing Company (2007-06-30)
Author: Workman Publishing Company
List price: $12.99
New price: $16.95
Used price: $10.00

Average review score:

Cat Lovers
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-07
Do you know someone that can't live without cats? This is the perfect gift for them. The pictures are adoreable.

Cat Calendar
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-05
This calendar, I highly recommend for cat lovers. The photos are absolutely beautiful. I enjoy looking at it everyday. It makes me smile.
It is very well done.

Besty Daily Calendar for Cat Lovers
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-23
This is the second year that I've purchased this calendar, and it again proved to be a great buy. The pictures are large, bright, and very high quality. The cats in them are diverse and usually don't look like they have been posed. The cats are shown outdoors, lounging, playing, sleeping, or a variety of other natural activities. A great desk calendar to brighten up your every day!

superior quality cat calander!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-13
super quality, nice pictures..i look forward to coming to work to turn the pages every day.. yes my life is that mundane.

Best Cat Calendar Ever!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-10
I have been buying the 365 Cats Page a Day Desk Calendar for a lot of years. This year (2008) they changed their format. It is a honey! The pics are HUGE and adorable as ever. I am SO HAPPY! I purchased a different type of cat calendar (which shall remain nameless) and was so disappointed, I threw it in the garbage and ordered this online since I was too late to find it in a store. If you love cats, this is a MUST HAVE!

Companies
Black for Remembrance: A Novel
Published in Hardcover by Little Brown and Company (1991-01)
Author: Carlene Thompson
List price: $18.95
New price: $9.89
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $18.95

Average review score:

Best Suspense Novel Ever!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-09
I had read many of Carlene Thompson's books, and this one is by far the best book I have ever read!! Just when you think you have things all figured out, the book takes an unsuspected turn that leaves you still trying to guess who the villian really is. I can say this, I nearly dropped the book when the villian was revealed!! Carlene Thompson is by far the best author of suspense novels that there is!! Great Book!!

Suspenseful But Not Her Best
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-28
I love her books but the ending on this one was too contrived. She keeps you in suspense throughout the book and you don't want to put it down; however at the end, I felt let down.

Absolutely FANTASTIC
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-12
Have you ever read a book and had the ending freak you out so much that you threw the book across the room???
Well, that was my experience when I read "Black for Remembrance".
I am a very hard critic and rarely do I read a book that I can remember years later.
I have read an enormous amount of mystery/suspense and this is by far one of the best thrillers I have ever had the privilege of reading.
From the first page to the last, I was completely enthralled. There is not a slow part to the story.
This book will stay with you long after it ends. At least it has for me.
Carlene Thompson is a brilliant author.

I DIDN'T LIKE THIS BOOK
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-09-28
I GENERALLY LIKE CHARLENE THOMPSON'S BOOKS, BUT THIS ONE INVOLVED A SEXUAL PREDATOR, ABUSING AND MURDERING VERY YOUNG GIRLS. IT WAS SAD. HE DESTROYED THE LIVES OF TWO BEAUTIFUL LITTE GIRLS. THE BOOK WAS WELL WRITTEN, NO DOUBT ABOUT IT, BUT IT WAS DISTURBING. THIS BOOK TAKES PLACE 20 YEARS AFTER 5 YEAR OLD HALEY WAS FOUND DEAD. I HAVEN'T GIVEN ANYTHING AWAY. THIS SICKO IS NOT THE CURRENT MURDERER. AT THE END, WHEN YOU FIND OUT WHO IS, YOU'LL THINK HOW UNDERSTANDABLY SAD.

A GRIPPING AND SUSPENSEFUL MYSTERY...
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-12-03
This is another page-turning, suspenseful mystery by this author. Her fans, as well as those who enjoy books by Mary Higgins Clark, will not be disappointed. The author is clearly a master of this genre.

When Caroline Corday lost her five year old daughter Hayley to a murderous fiend she thought that she would never recover from the tragedy. Twenty years later, divorced from her first husband, Chris Corday, she is happily married to David Webb. The Webbs have a teenage son and an eight year daughter, Melinda. Caroline's now idyllic life is turned topsy-turvy, however, when she starts hearing the voice of her dead daughter.

Suddenly, everywhere Caroline goes, something happens to remind her of that terrible day twenty years ago. Moreover, people who were in some way connected with the case of her dead daughter start becoming murder victims. A bouquet of black silk flowers, accompanied by the same spooky message, is left for them upon their death. As this spate of events makes it clear that Hayley's death is no longer a thing of the past, Caroline does everything that she can to ensure that Melinda will not end up as a murder statistic.

The only question is: who is doing all these terrible things and why? Read the book and find out. You will find your self compulsively turning the pages of this well-crafted suspenseful mystery.

Companies
The Boomer Bible
Published in Paperback by Workman Publishing Company (1991-01-10)
Author: R. F. Laird
List price: $14.95
New price: $0.89
Used price: $0.37

Average review score:

brilliantly funny
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-05

Anyone aspiring to rule the world should be forced to read this book at the end of a "pointed stick".

It's also one the funniest books I have ever read. The first part of the book exploring world history through the lens that each great culture has had the absurd notion that they were (are) "the most chosen nation" is priceless.

I first read this book in the mid '90s. It's still funny and important. It's required reading for my teenage children.

SG

Second funniest book ever
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-09
The amount of work that went into this brilliant piece boggles my mind. Long, drawn out, stunningly comedic, the passages are cleverly cross-referenced to other verses, something akin to a thousand page inside joke. I have read exactly one book that I consider funnier than this one, that being Christopher Moore's "Lamb: The Gospel of Biff, Christ's childhood friend".

Boomers: Hate, Despise, Surpass?
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-06-17
The Boomer Bible begins with bad history: the kind of history that Boomers learned, but didn't pay attention to. It goes further into the invention of the Boomer culture: do what you want to, blame everyone else for what goes wrong. Finally, it ends with an invitation to surpass this most pathetic generation, knowing that while most of what they do is a mistake and misguided, they'll only blame someone else for it.

Read for enlightenment.

Meet a brand-new day.
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2003-12-30
I imagine many people have lifted "The Boomer Bible" off a bookstore shelf, given it a cursory flip-through, thought "weird", and put it right back. That's what I did -- but fortunately, a couple months later my mom saw it in the store while Christmas shopping and decided it would be a good gift for a weird kid. That was over a decade ago, and I still return to it regularly... sometimes for entertainment, sometimes for inspiration, and sometimes to dig for hidden treasure.

TBB can be read linearly, from front to back, just like any other book, and that alone is worth the price of admission for its immense variety of jokes, memorable turns of phrase, and observations about the often-unacknowledged dogma that permeates the modern mind. The "Past Testament" takes us through the history of the world and the bases of the "Baby Boomer" worldview; the "Present Testament" relates the story of Harry, a man of wealth and taste who inspires the Boomers to do all kinds of fun things; the "Book of Harrier Brayer" codifies the Boomer Way into a secular religion; and finally, a "Punk Testament" tells the story of some nobodies who react to the Boomer Way with crazy ideas.

When you've finished reading "The Boomer Bible", though, you've only finished reading it one way. There's a lot more to it, and if you enjoy puzzles, "The Boomer Bible" has countless hours of brain-teasers in store. (I should emphasize, though, that the book stands just fine on the merits of linear reading alone -- in my case, I had hardly any idea of the iceberg under the surface until I found discussions of TBB on the Internet, long after it had become my favorite book.)

The only reservation I have about recommending "The Boomer Bible" is that it might give some readers dangerous ideas. If you apply the Boomer Way properly this shouldn't be a problem, but if you fail to do so, don't blame me.

The Funniest Sad Book I've Ever Read
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2004-01-16
Laird has something to say about the human condition - and he says it with a striking amount of style and humor. Copying the format of an actual bible (books divided into chapters and verses, complete with cross-references) the Boomer Bible gives an irreverent and scorching account of every nation's history. The prose favors brevity and hilarity. Very quickly the reader gains the impression that we humans have botched it. From the very beginning we've been nothing but bad news, killing each other with pointed sticks and spending all our time inventing new ways of murdering one another. It's been the same all through the centuries; we're bad, bad, and worse. There's no reason to expect the future will be different, there's no point in changing, so why try? Or so says Harry, the Christ-like effigy that pops up in the "New Testament" portion. The Boomer Bible was poignant, touching, and so funny there were times I had to stop reading just to appreciate it. Praise is cheap, but this truly was an amazing book.

Why only 4 stars? The books meant to parallel the prophets of the Old Testament were just plain dry, and I suspect the author might have intended them to be skipped. I slogged my way through much of them hoping for something, but surrounded by the humor and significance of the rest of the book, they were a barren desert. I ended up skipping very many pages, though I hated doing so for fear of missing something.

I unconditionally recommend this book.

Companies
Eric
Published in Mass Market Paperback by Dell Publishing Company (1975-10)
Author: Doris Lund
List price:
New price: $8.75
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $11.99

Average review score:

This book as stayed with me
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-10
I read this book in adolescence and it has stayed with me since then--over 20 years. I have thought of Eric's story many times over the years, especially now that I have my own son. I think that I will read this book again and add it to my permanent collection. It is very touching albeit very sad.

It's not the story of how he died...it's the story of how he lived
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-27
Eric is the heartbreaking, inspirational true story of Eric Lund, a seventeen-year-old boy who is diagnosed with Leukemia just days before he is set to leave for college. This book is a memoir written by his mother, Doris Lund, about Eric's unwavering will to survive, and about how his cancer affects not only himself, but everyone around him.

When it's a story about a terminal illness, there can be no unexpected twist. As soon as I read the description on the back cover of the book, I knew basically how it was going to start and how it was going to end. But it's what happens in between that makes Eric Lund's life so interesting. What makes him different than many whose lives have thrown seemingly indomitable obstacles at them is that Eric refuses to give up. Even when the doctors, despite their greatest and heartfelt efforts, can offer only ominous warnings, it doesn't prevent Eric from living his life to the fullest. In this way, Eric isn't just the tragedy of a boy whose life deteriorates little by little. Instead, it is the motivational story of a man whose confidence, positive outlook, and exceptional will to live bring hope and joy to everyone around him.

Of course, Doris Lund doesn't leave herself out of the picture. A lot of the book is focused on her own hopes and fears instead of Eric's, on which she can only speculate in many instances. She is also honest about her rocky relationship with Eric and the difficulties that they sometimes had communicating, which is something that most teenagers and their parents can relate to. I couldn't help noticing that there are places in the book where Doris Lund interrupts the flow of her writing, perhaps with a misplaced or awkward metaphor, but then she quickly remembers that this story is beautiful and memorable on its own without too many fancy words and phrases to distract from it.

Even if you don't usually read this kind of literature, I still recommend Eric. It may be depressing, but it's not cynical, and it leaves you with the kind of hope that Eric held on to his whole life.

Elizabeth- Northern CA
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-12
I have probably read this book 8 times since it first came out. The first time I read it was shortly after my brother had been diagnosed with a form of leukemia. This book is a wonderful tribute by Doris Lund to her son, and I highly recommend it to anyone.

Moving Touching
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2003-10-28
This story is just a good read, and such a testimony of a young man struck with lucemia, his spirit his valor...emotions are stired to beyond words.

Sappily sentimental. Bored me to tears.
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 29 total.
Review Date: 2003-07-19
I hate to be the skunk in the five-star garden party, but I remember reading, or rather trying to read, this book when in high school some *cough* 20 years ago. I could barely get through it. Apparently I wasn't alone, because someone else had graffitoed on the (soft) cover, "This book sucks. Don't read it."

Sometimes I think there should be a moratorium on grieving parents writing about their dead offspring. Aside from one brief moment when Lund catches her son checking out girls in a hospital corridor or waiting room, I don't remember a single aspect of Eric's personality aside from "Mama's Little Angel." And although my memory is vague on this, I seem to recall the book contains a fair amount of delusional mumbo-jumbo about "God's will" ('scuse me while I barf).

If you want to read a superb book by someone who lost a child to cancer, read "Death Be Not Proud" by John Gunther. That book preserves every quirk of his late son Johnny's wry sense of humor and considerable intellect, and actually makes you regret that the son didn't live to take up the father's pen. Not only that, but Gunther deals with hard questions of mortality and loss without resorting to the kind of sticky sentimentality you'd expect from Oprah or the "women's channels" on cable TV. Cripes, even Marie Killilea's books about her handicapped (no, NOT "differently abled") daughter Karen are better than Lund's book.

The entire genre, for obvious reasons, is for the most part manipulatively mawkish, but that's what sells, I guess. If you have an "I Believe in Angels" bumper sticker on your car, Thomas Kincaide "paintings" on your walls, and every CD Whitney Houston ever recorded in your music collection, go ahead and order "Eric." You'll cry your eyes out and write a five-star review.

Companies
Happiness: A Guide to Developing Life's Most Important Skill
Published in Paperback by Little, Brown and Company (2007-01-05)
Author: Matthieu Ricard
List price: $14.99
New price: $6.50
Used price: $6.99

Average review score:

I Should Be So Lucky
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-11-15
I read this book during a bout of depression. It is proverbial that Conspicuous Displays of Contentment push the depressed into even deeper despair more effectively than anything else. Yet I didn't find this book infuriating; it didn't drive me to suicide. No, I enjoyed it immensely and finished it rapidly.

The ramifications of the subject matter are endless. What ancient and modern Western philosophers thought about happiness; what they thought in Asia. The social conditions conducive to happiness, the brain-states that coincide with it. Then what the author's own Tibetan Buddhist tradition has to say about happiness and mental afflictions.

You only have to glance at the design of this book to know you're not going to get any great depth. But that's fine. Always room for compact and lucid accounts of Big Subjects. If you want reams of detail about neurochemistry or Buddhist meditation practices, you can find that elsewhere.

I have only two complaints. One is that, as somebody who has suffered from life-long severe depression, I didn't find anything here that would help me to be happy. Everything here I have seen before, and it doesn't work. It may work if you're already happy, but then, well, you don't need it, do you?

I suspect the reason for this lies in my second complaint. The author tells of his famous father, of his upbringing in elite French cultural and intellectual circles, hobnobbing with luminaries and jetsetters. When he finds all of this... somehow lacking, he toddles off to a sheltered enclave of Ancient Eastern Wisdom, where he hobnobs with the Dalai Lama and endless Rinpoches... (To be honest, I'm not exactly sure how you "hobnob".)

My point is: you Would be happy, wouldn't you? A book about Happiness would be so much more convincing if the author were the child of a Haitian beggar, born with a speech impediment, and... we don't want to get into sick humour territory, but you get my drift. If someone like That managed to be happy, Then I would be impressed.

Amazing
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-29
This book by Mattieu Ricard really breaks down happiness. He differentiates between pleasure and happiness and how happiness is something that must be cultivated and practiced. Mattieu Ricard also gives a handful of in depth meditation exercises at the end of a few chapters. And he points out that you don't have to be a Buddhist monk to achieve enlightenment, but everyone can reach a better plateau of happiness.

How to be Happy :)
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-12
I've got to admit that the writing is so deep that sometimes I have to only read a couple of pages and then take a break. But don't let that deter you. Within 1 or 2 chapters I was feeling happier than I think I ever have. And this from a mildly chronically depressed person.

It does rely heavily on Buddhism but it IS a Buddhist writing it )). For the ultra religious, don't worry. He does not shove his beliefs down your throat. It is just his examples are from his life so that are flavored that way.

I would recommend this book to anyone interested i attaining happiness.

Happiness by Matthieu Ricard
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-13
Happiness: A Guide to Developing Life's Most Important Skill

This is the best book I have ever read on the subject of happiness. A real treasure.
Happiness is not a mystery but a possible goal for anyone who seriously wants to become a happier and better person. If you love science, literature and culture, Matthieu Ricard is the right guru for you.
A must read for everyone who loved his book "The Monk and the Philosopher".
A book you won't ever part with for you'll want to read in it again and again.

Inge Hohndorf

Change yourself for the better
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-06
This book has been written by the world's happiest person. Neuroscientists have conducted various tests on thousands of people including the author and have come to the conclusion based on scientific proof. It is therefore necessary to keep that piece of information at the back of your mind when you read the book.

Every word in the book comes out loud and clear as having been created by a truly happy and contented person.

Simply by reading the book and following some of the exercises that the author suggests, you can transform yourself from a tense and neurotic being into a joyful, stress free person.

Though the author is a Buddhist monk, this book is not about Buddhism nor does it attempt to convert one to that religion. This is a practical, down to earth method to learn to be happy.

Companies
Jambalaya, Crawfish Pie, File Gumbo: Cajun and Creole Cuisine
Published in Paperback by Beau Bayou Publishing Company (2002-11-01)
Author: Todd-Michael St. Pierre
List price: $11.95
New price: $5.98
Used price: $5.80

Average review score:

Jambalaya
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-03-25
Delicious recipes, humor, and insightful remembrances are just a few of the components that have made this book a top-seller for more than 5 years now! The "Hushpeoples" are terrific... "Hushpuppies so hot they hush peoples too." The "Fleur de Lis Chicken" & the "Pasta St. Pierre" are two more outstanding offerings in this celebrated and mouthwatering collection. I first discovered this title when it was featured in Cooking Light Magazine for a Crawfish Story, that included some of the Cajun Recipes from "Jambalaya," there was also a great review in the San Francisco Chronicle a few months back. And what a bargain too! At this price you can have all of the famous flavors and local color of South Louisiana without breaking the proverbial bank!

Pasta St. Pierre
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2002-03-21
The Pasta St. Pierre on page 28 is worth the price of the book, by itself. And the author suggest you throw in some candlelight and a good bottle of wine. Another recipe that was outstanding is the Hushpeoples, on page 94 (hushpuppies so hot they hush people too)We also really enjoyed the Coonass Cornbread!

A Cookbook With a Delightful Twist!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2002-04-16
I laughed out loud at a lot of the commentary in this book. One really funny example is the recipe on page 110 "Hotter Than Hell Sabbath Dip" (From a drag queen in New Orleans who claims to be the original Creole Lady Marmalade) Very campy, very southern, other recipes make reference to Tennessee William's "A Streetcar Named Desire" and there are so many with that distinctly New Orleans flair. This book shows the city and its cuisine from a new, refreshing angle and not the same old boring "BAM!"

Exellent..
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-15
You get a lot in this little book. Dozens of great recipes that include the essentials you likely are looking for as well as some creative recipes you won't get anywhere like his pasta st, pierre. In addition we get nice commentary, a bit of wisdom and some great poetry.

What runs through this book most of all is passion. This guy is passionate about his culture and his food! He is not just sharing recipes but a piece of himself and always with good humor.

He provides a great dry spice recipe that beats emeril's and is used often here and his shrimp creole that proclaims to be the "best ever" probably is!

The title is correct for gumbo and jambalaya are the heart of this book but instead of the typical gumbo-jambalaya recipes you may already own there are some you definitely don't own. Try the beef gumbo cooked in red cabernet. Out of this world..

Best Of The Bayou
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2002-04-28
The White Bean Creole Soup is good and so is the Mud Bug Salad. Nice collection!

Companies
Leave it to Psmith,
Published in Unknown Binding by George H. Doran company (1924)
Author: P. G Wodehouse
List price:
Used price: $7.00
Collectible price: $12.90

Average review score:

Always Wonderful
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-19
If you know Wodehouse, you love Wodehouse and this book will just confirm your feelings. If you don't know Wodehouse, read this or any other book and you will fall in love with him. Every book you read is like going on vacation.

Both sublime and ridiculous
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-09
I had only read one or two Wodehouse comedies, so long ago I don't recall precisely which ones. They were good. "Leave It to Psmith" is great. It won't be years until my next. (And my copy of "Leave It to Psmith" now goes to my 90-year-old mother.)

In addition to wonderful, loveable characters, laugh-out-loud narrative and dialogue, and a marvelously convoluted plot that almost defies summarization, the book also features semi-serious but still wryly and deftly expressed observations, such as: "What I like about the English rural districts * * * is that when the authorities have finished building a place they stop. Somewhere about the reign of Henry the Eighth, I imagine that the master-mason gave the final house a pat with his trowel and said, 'Well, boys, that's Market Blandings.' To which his assistants no doubt assented with many a hearty 'Grammercy!' and 'I'fackins!' these being expletives to which they were much addicted. And they went away and left it, and nobody has touched it since."

Yes, this is sheer entertainment, brain candy. But it also is superb and masterly. It is narrative comedy at its best.

No Title
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-04
This is an early sort of try-out version of his later masterpieces on Jeeves and Wooster. It was absolutely hilarious at times, with that wonderful upper crust stilted language Wodehouse was such a genius at, but at other times could be a tad plodding. Some romance here, which he would totally discard later. You can see Jeeves blooming in PSmith, and Wooster in Freddie Threepwood. Also Aunt Agatha in Lady Constance. But a marvelously convoluted plot, with all sorts of interwoven characters. and The Drones Club is here already.

Best Wodehouse book I've read
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-12
In my opinion, this is the best of Wodehouse, and I was pretty surprised at it.

The Last Of Psmith Is The Best
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-20
"Leave It to Psmith" was originally published in the U.K. on November 30, 1923 by Herbert Jenkins, and in the U.S on March 14, 1924 by George H. Doran. The edition I am reviewing is from "The Everyman Wodehouse" series published by Everyman's Library in the U.K., and for those in the U.S., you may be able to find the equivalent quality in "The Collector's Wodehouse" series which is being published by Overlook Press.

I did not have high expectations for this book, because I didn't think "Psmith in The City" was very good, but Wodehouse's writing clearly improved greatly over those 13 years, and the merging of the Psmith character with the cast at Blandings Castle was great chemistry. The character of Ronald Eustace Psmith (formerly known as Rupert Psmith and in both cases the P is silent), was much more interesting in this book than I found him before. He fits right in with the other Blandings characters such as Lord Emsworth, Freddie Threepwood, and a great foil for Rupert Baxter.

In this story, we have a diverse set of characters, all converging on Blandings Castle, and more than a few with the idea of stealing Lady Constance's necklace. Their motives are rather diverse, but whether they want it for money, freedom, or love, there is no shortage of people out to get it. As one would expect in any Wodehouse story, there is a fair amount of assumed identities and amazing coincidences which drive the story forward. Psmith, himself takes on the identity of Mr. Ralston McTodd, a poet from Canada in his pursuit of the beautiful Eve Halliday. The best part of the book, in my opinion, is the flower pot scenes, which is some of the funniest writing I have read in a long time.

As the second of the Blandings Castle novels, and the last of the Psmith novels, this was a great improvement on both of those series. The Blandings series would continue to grow from this point, and there are many more great stories in that series. I do not believe the character of Psmith appears again in any of Wodehouse's stories, but the fully developed Psmith that appears in this work does foreshadow such characters as Jeeves and Uncle Fred. If you didn't care for Psmith in the previous works, you may still want to give this one a try. This is Wodehouse at his best.

Companies
Liturgy of the Hours
Published in Paperback by Catholic Book Publishing Company (2000-02)
Author: Catholic Book Publishing Co
List price: $145.00
New price: $121.68
Used price: $105.00

Average review score:

Liturgy of Hours
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-11-05
I just purchased the full set of The Liturgy of Hours. If you don't know how "to pray as we aught" this is the answer. To think that you are joining millions of others who are praying the Liturgy at the same time. What a powerful prayer. I read the other reviews prior to purchasing the full set. I am so glad I did. If I hadn't been aware that there was a learning curve to reading the Hours I would have been very frustrated and would probably given it up as too hard. It definately does take some insruction to use it. Because of this I bought several books of instruction in the Hours. The very best is "The Divine Office for Dodos". What an outstanding book! If you are new to Hours you need to get this book also. Don 't mess with any other book.

A Beautiful, Inspiring Set of Volumes
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-09
Just think: with these four volumes, you'll be able to pray ANY of the prescribed hours, at any time and day of the year. Knowing that you're in company with millions of others doing the same thing is awe-inspiring and spiritually enriching. These are very easy to use so there's no excuse not to enter into the prayer life of the Church. Mass for me is made even better when I arrive early and read the Office. I personally find Night Prayer comforting and extremely nourishing-- it helps me get ready for the coming day, and soothes my conscience during the examination. If the set comes with the handy annual Index, helping you to find each day's prayers... all the better! Otherwise you can get that Index at a religious goods store-- it costs about three dollars.

Great Product
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-25
This product is preciecly what I needed. In addition to the four volumes of the Liturgy of the Hours (Advent/Christmas, Lent/Easter, Ordinary Time I & II) it included the St. Joseph Guide, the Supplement and inserts. This was just what I was looking for as I was heading off to seminary school.

The Liturgy Of The Hours
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-14
The set was very well priced and the shipping being included definitely helped the sale. Being a new item, it is in excellent shape. I have told others about this and recommended they look to Amazon first if they are interested in purchasing this set.

Liturgy of the Hours
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-10
Excellent edition. Easier to use than the one-volume Liturgy that the Daughters of St Paul put out. Comes with helpful accessories. If you can't afford to buy all four volumes at once, buying them one at a time is a great alternative.


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