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

Washington
A Girl in Parts
Published in Paperback by Counterpoint (2003-06-30)
Author: Jasmine Paul
List price: $14.95
New price: $0.47
Used price: $0.01

Average review score:

more than 5-star book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2004-12-01
This is a great book!! It is certainly an underrated novel, and should be on display everywhere books are sold.
The only bad part about the book is the ending, only because that means that I have no more to read about Dorothy!

I can't wait for the next book.

********cans of yoohoo!*********days working in the movie theatres********driving home with friends after graduating college********The Doors movie********zima********whiskey and the battlefield**********

%%%%%%%%%% you bet!!! %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%

I really can't wait for the next book, and the one after that, and the one after that......

LOVED IT!!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2004-05-25
I loved this book. The characters practically jumped off the page, they were so alive. I couldn't put it down. Great beach read.

Food for thought
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2004-05-14
This was truly an enjoyable read and I'm not a huge reader. I was hooked from the start and the character of Dottie continued to draw me in. Very revealing about how young female minds work - similar to An Egg on Three Sticks which I highly recommend.

Searing and endearing --
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2004-04-28
This book took me by surprise - I couldn't put it down. Narrator sounds like a real teenager who ages convincingly chapter by chapter. Both funny and heartbreaking. if you liked this book, you'll probably like "Feeling Sorry for Celia (J. Moriarty)," "Shadow Baby (A. McGhee)," and "Durable Goods (E. Berg)."

Underrated piece of work!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2003-01-27
I cannot believe that this book hasn't gotten the attention that it deserves. A Girl, In Parts is one of the most impressive debuts I've ever read. Jasmine Paul uses (apparently) simple language when she chronicles Dottie's growing pains. The realistic situations Dottie encounters -- sibling rivalry, hatred toward parents, crushes, experimentation -- as she grows from a precocious nine-year-old to an insecure adolescent are beautiful and poignant. I savored the final pages of this novel like fine wine -- I hated to see it end. I cannot recommend this novel enough. Book clubs would marvel at the excellent prose and sharp dialogue. A Girl, In Parts deserves a spot in every reader's library...

Washington
Going Downtown: The War Against Hanoi and Washington
Published in Paperback by Pocket (1990-02-01)
Author: Broughton
List price: $42.00
Used price: $2.50

Average review score:

An Important Book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-14
Several years ago I read Thud Ridge, and ever since I've wanted to pick this one up to learn more about the Turkistan incident and Broughton's court martial. This is an angry book, and not only is that anger rooted in feelings of righteous indignation, but there is also something of the old hunter in there, which is a forceful force indeed. I am struck by both Broughton's can-do, gung-ho attitude and the counterpoint of Air Force and Washington politics. While I am in sympathy with Broughton's criticisms of Johnson and McNamara, I am also leery of Broughton's mindset, which is after all that of a professional soldier. There is to me something incompatible between that professional mindset and what I believe American military culture is supposed to be about. The irony, perhaps, is you can't operate complex weapons systems like the F-105 with citizen amateurs, but you also can't have a democratic country along the lines of the American model with a military as professionalized as we had then (and have today).

Strike that. You can operate F-105 wings with citizen amateurs, but you can't get citizen amateurs to follow bad policies formulated by people like McNamara and Johnson.

The type of military that fought WWII was a thing of the past by Vietnam. Broughton and the operations people at that time were more in step with that WWII mindset than the professional machine that Johnson and McNamera exploited (and in the case of the Thunderchiefs and their crews) almost completely destroyed.

Broughton's actions during the Turkestan incident amounted to mutiny, and the way the generals went after him shows he sent a shock wave behind the closed doors in the Pentagon and the Whitehouse. Now one of their best boys on the track to General was kicking loose from their control, and they were worried more were going to follow.

Broughton sacrificed his promotion to General, took an early retirement, and spent nearly two decades going through doubt and bitterness afterwards, but through his mutiny and through leaving the Air Force he crossed over from being a professional soldier to becoming an American-who-had-fought-for-his-country. I'm not sure you can call a lock-step professional soldier a true American. Could be mutiny is at the root of our political identity? Reading Melville, Hawthorne and Jefferson, one might believe so.

I've also read Ed Rasimus's books on his experiences flying Thuds and Phantoms, which provide further evidence of the corruption possible in a professional military, especially a professional military that's cynically used as it was by politicians like Johnson.

What is striking about people like Rasimus and Broughton is their combination of intelligence, expertise, aggression and boy scout naiveté. That was one heck of a cultural shift we went through between 1945 and 1965.

Although Broughton is talking about the American military in the mid-nineteen-sixties, his story has implications for understanding the cultural shifts that are influencing us today. In 1945, America was a force for pluralistic Anglo-Western culture, and it roundly defeated the infection of authoritarian, militarized Germanic culture. In great measure, the success of the American military machine was due to its pluralistic and decentralized nature, which gave it operational flexibility and a culture of common-sense that was lacking among the goose-stepping Germans. The American military was in this sense an "Anglo-western" and "democratic" military. By 1965, however, in many ways our military resembled the professional Germanic military that, twenty years earlier, the American military had destroyed. By the same token, in fifty years our business, education, and healthcare institutions have also taken on the contours of the German model....

Going Downtown is an important book, both for understanding the contortions experienced by the American military in Vietnam, and for understanding what is happening in America today.

Captures the true spirit of a fighter pilot!
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 1999-10-16
This book captures the true spirit of a fighter pilot and why they are such special people. His war on Hanoi, waged with one hand tied behind his back by McNamara and President Johnson needed to be told. And he told it as only a fighter pilot could. You could be reading fiction, but it's real. Where do we get men that court death and face losing friends every day. Colonel Broughton is busy telling us about his fight with Hanoi and Washington. But, what also comes through is the daily struggle of men strapping on an airplane and doing their duty against great odds. The rules of engagement are discussed and how they affected the lives of those charged with enforcing them. Colonel Broughton had over 200 missions. He is a true American hero.

Going Downtown
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-10
This is an EXCELLENT book written by an amazing pilot about the mess that was Vietnam. So many pilots died as a result of the idiotic "Rules of Engagement" that clearly stacked the deck AGAINST our pilots. This book and "THUD RIDGE" tell the cold hard and ugly facts how Washington made our pilots fight with both hands tied behinds their backs. America would've been out of Vietnam victoriously in a few months if our soldiers had been able to what they have been trained to do, and NOT be told how to fight a war by a bunch of politicians.

Wish it went deeper
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2000-12-06
Like "Thud Ridge", also by Col. Broughton, "Going Downtown" reflects on the former fighter pilt's experiences driving USAF F-105's through the flack, SAM and MiG infested skies of Vietnam. Readers who missed "Thud Ridge' may remember Broughton's story appearing in the Yeagher biography - a decorated and venerable fighter-pilot, Broughton was loved by the men he led, despite the draconian restrictions placed on them by politicians. During one mission that Broughton didn't even fly on, two of his pilots received fire from a flak gun aboard a Russian freighter, and responded with their own cannon. Jaded by the experience in which his pilots were clearly in the right, Broughton removed the gun camera film from the noses of the involved F-105's, and destroyed them. A board of review composed of such noted officers as Yeager and Robin Olds cleared Broughton's men but did cite Broughton for destruction of the gun camera film, a move that effectively ended his career as a fighter pilot. Broughton hints at the incident - the "Turkestan Affair" in Thud Ridge, but apparently decided against saying any more. Having decided otherwise in "Downtown", Broughton must have decided that he didn't have enough for a new book complimenting the first. Theough "Turkestan" and its consequences take up the latter half of the book, the first part is a mixed gril, offering the USAF's painful transition to the early and crude jets, the complicated underpinnings of the Vietnam war and the cover-up over the Tonkin Gulf incident.

The problem is that much of this seems out of place here - especially the author's anecdotes about the Air Force's experineces with early jets between Korea and Vietnam. The jets, which are underpowered and have over-complicated fire-control systems kill more of their own pilots than the enemy, and some - like the F-103 and the F-107 - never make the cut at all. None of those planes ever appears in Vietnam, and certainly not in Broughton's narrative. So why does he bother here? It's as if he realized that he hadn't enough, apart from "Turkestan" that merited a new book, and quicly decided that, besides some anecdotes about the Veitnam airwar overlooked from the first book, he might as well just keep going back, and toss in soem historical background about vietnam and USAF for good measure. Concluding his survey of the famed "Century Series" fighter jets, Broughton says "something funny was happening in southeast asia." But it was nevr clear why he didn't begin with southeast asia and leave all that other stuff behind. It's important stuff, but would be of better use as something Broughton could reflecton while flying in vietnam - as more of a personal context than an historical one. Actually, Broughton sells himself short - giving equal time to all subjects when I'd prefer a whole book with him in the F-105. Considering that he flew the most pivotal missions of his career in that plane, it's incredible that my knowledge of it seems unchanged from when I first opened "Going Downtown."

Going Downtown
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2004-09-04
I was fortunate that a good friend gave me this book. One of the best damn books I've ever read. It should be part of civics instruction for every high school student because, in real life and dramatic fashion, it teaches us two great lessons. First, in a Republic such as ours, the voting citizen needs to be vigilant of the political use of our military. Vietnam was a tough lesson, costing 60,000 young Americans their life. Second, in times of peace in the military, the flotsam rises to the top. Again, it requires vigilance from the citizen, demanding our politicians provide the civilian leadership that will promote and nurture the warrior class.

We owe our freedom to warriors such as Jack Broughton, who during times of war, rise to the call. They understand loyalty, leadership and sacrifice. They are of the nature and fortitude to bring intense, ferocious focus to incredibly tough times when answering the call of duty. If Vietnam had been a real war instead of a political fiasco, Jack would be a well-known American Hero. Instead, he is just an American Hero, not well known, but like so many of his type.

Washington
Grave Talker
Published in Paperback by Washington House (2005-08-30)
Author: Linette Widen
List price: $18.00
New price: $14.40
Used price: $9.98
Collectible price: $18.00

Average review score:

Grave Talker
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-30
Magnificent....A moving awesome and accurate portrayal of a seventeen year old boy as he moves West in the 1800's. A real time adventure of legends, love and faith. A novel for all ages. For my take-----I loved it!

Additionally my wife Carol read this book and has the following comments:

Grave Talker by Linette Widen is a very enjoyable book which has all the elements that will leave you feeling sad and happy as you experience all of the adventures of this family in the late 1800's. Grave Talker leaves you wanting to know more about this family which is written in the sequel the Silver Womb.

A beautiful step back into time.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-11-27
This book was well written. The story line moves along nicely. Development of characters was excellent. Touches every range of human emotion. Can't wait to read the sequel. I highly recommend this book.

Excellent Book
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2005-10-29
This is an awesome book and it's VERY hard to put down. All you want to do is keep reading to find out what happens to Jim Foster next. I believe I reached every emotion possible during the course of the book. I can hardly wait for the sequel to find out what happens next.

Excellent book
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-10-24
This is an excellent book about a young man and the adventures he encounters while seeking to make a life for himself. It takes place around the turn of the century. It has everything: Action, romance, suspense, etc. and is exquisitely written. I highly recommend it.

A page turner
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-10-06
This is a wonderful story and hard to put down once you start. It touches on life and death, love and loss, while also taking place in an adventurous and historical context. Simply, a great read!

Washington
The Hopes of Snakes: And Other Tales from the Urban Landscape
Published in Hardcover by Beacon Press (2005-01-02)
Author: Lisa Couturier
List price: $23.00
New price: $6.00
Used price: $1.40

Average review score:

The Nature of the City
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-10-10
The Hopes of Snakes is a great collection of, well, tales from the urban landscape. As so many of us rush from appointment to appointment, spending most of our time in in cars or in front of computer screens, it is so refreshing to read these essays that remind us that nature and beauty are all around us. Living in the city, it is easy to overlook it. But Lisa Couturier's sharp eye and beautiful prose encourage us to take a closer look. I especially enjoyed the essay "Rediscovering the Potomac." Read it aloud -- it sounds like poetry!

Bill Diskin
Charlotte, NC

Nature Writer of the Year
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-15
Lisa Couturier writes with great power and sensitivity, pulling the reader in, teaching and thrilling and spinning a yarn like no other nature writer. Along the way, the words tumble together in new ways, and the charm and delight flows in a torrent. In the end, we are moved, we have learned, and we want more. I hope you will share my delight with this book, and share it with friends. I've bought about 30 copies that I've given away to people I knew would enjoy it.

This book is just so great that ZipcodeZoo.com named Lisa Couturier Nature Writer of the Year.

Poignant tales for our times
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-04-16
I live near an eight-lane freeway, and every time I hit the onramp, I look for the red-tailed hawk that can be seen most days scanning for his prey from his perch on a light pole. He would no doubt prefer better hunting grounds than this ice plant thatch that shelters suburban rodents, but after we humans filled in the nearby wetlands and covered the hills with house tracts, this is about all we've left for him. My daily glimpse of him is a vitamin to me, and a reminder that I don't have to travel to a national park to have an encounter with wildlife.

For readers who routinely seek soul-restoring encounters with all that is wild, Lisa Couturier's The Hopes of Snakes will be a tonic. To refer to this book as a collection of essays would create a far too stuffy impression of it. Part of the subtitle, Tales from the Urban Landscape, pegs it precisely: this is a collection of personal reminiscences, musings, meditations and analyses that make for darn good storytelling. The common thread that stitches together all of these tales with a seamless cohesiveness is Couturier's abiding respect for wild animals, many species of which are scorned and hated when they edge themselves back into habitats that were stolen from them by humans.

True to its title, there are uplifting tales here, not just of snakes, but of coyotes, turkey vultures, pigeon ladies, and many others. Nevertheless, this is not an anthology of sticky-sweet, cute animal stories. The overriding tone is one of reverence, not sentimentality. Even so, Couturier's poignance is often moving, and when you read "Take the Long Way Home," a posthumous letter of thanks to Mr. Boyd, Couturier's neighbor and mentor of her high school years, you just might find yourself shedding a tear or two.

Even in the deepest heart of a city, the animal world is all around us, as my freeway redtail reminds me every day. The Hopes of Snakes will help you rediscover, in case you ever forgot it, that despite all our collective efforts to turn wilderness into "civilization," humankind does not exist in isolation from our animal kindred.

A celebration of the underlying world of animals
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-06-07
Students of urban natural history and casual readers alike receive a celebration of Northeast urban wildlife in The Hopes Of Snakes & Other Tales From The Urban Landscape. Her thirteen essays observe urban animals from Manhattan skyscraper-dwelling falcons to mice who live on the subway tracks of New York. Wildlife has adapted to human habitations in surprising ways: hers is a celebration of the underlying world of animals which live alongside people.

Living with our fellow creatures
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2005-04-06
Lisa writes about her experiences with wildlife that occupy cities and suburbia and how they interact with humans. As Lisa writes, some animals fare very well while others do not.

Lisa's ability to capture small details about the cirtters with whom she interacts make her essays all the more endearing and important. Although accused of anthropomorphising about the surivivors of the Human onslaught, her descriptions present an important understanding of urban wildlife and enable many otherwise unknowing citydwellers the opportunity to engage with nature's cast outs.

As Julie Warner said in Doc Hollywood: "Most people are merely on the Earth, not a part of it." Lisa Couturier gives us the opportunity to experience first hand those rare species that share their world with the Human invaders.

Washington
The House of a Million Pets
Published in Hardcover by Henry Holt and Co. (BYR) (2007-09-04)
Author: Ann Hodgman
List price: $16.95
New price: $7.11
Used price: $7.13

Average review score:

Completley awesome.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-01
I REALLY loved this book. I like to read, but it's only sometimes that I find a book that I get hooked to. At first I just picked it out because it had a nice cover. I figured, since it was long and I was reading some other books at the time, that it would be another book that I would just get partway through. Reading about all these animals was so fun! Before this I had never heard of a bulbul or a sugar glider. It has cute illustrations too. I am definatly glad I read it and I think you will love it too!

Great Family Read
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-16
My whole family loved THE HOUSE OF A MILLION PETS. I gave it to my 14-year-old for Christmas and then all the adults in the house snuck it and read it while he wasn't looking. It is both touching and hysterically funny. The stories reminded me of Jean Shepherd's books. A great gift for the pet-lover in your life.

GREAT read-aloud book
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-16
Yes, this is ostensibly a children's book, so I started by reading it to my 9-year-old daughter one evening before she went to bed. However, it was so enjoyable that I couldn't resist continuing on my own. When I got to the chapter about the dogs I laughed so hard I thought I'd wake up the entire house. This book is simultaneously thoughtful and uproarious, practical and fun. It'll be the perfect kids' birthday present- I've already ordered several copies. Both my daughter and I can't wait to see what the author comes up with next!

Animals, humor, great illustrations - what's not to love?
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-06
Compared to animal lover and caretaker Hodgman, I'm a novice, with my dog and my beta fish, but her book is so inspiring, I'm thinking of getting a sugar glider or a white capped bulbul or maybe just a dachshund. Definitely not a baby bat, although I enjoyed reading about how she lovingly cared for one. This is a book I'll give my vet to keep in the waiting room. There's something for everyone in it, and it's hard to put it down, but when you do, you'll be smiling. The illustrations are precious; they work for readers of any age.

Delightful book about tame and wild pets
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-15
This is a charming book for all ages. The author describes her experiences with dozens of pets, from dogs and cats to prairie dogs, bulbuls, wild owls, and snapping turtles. The book imparts a lot of fascinating information, and at the same time is very funny. A great find!

Washington
The Last Chance Dog: and Other True Stories of Holistic Animal Healing
Published in Hardcover by Scribner (2003-02-04)
Author: Donna Kelleher
List price: $24.00
New price: $2.50
Used price: $2.28

Average review score:

A book for the holistic skeptic
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-13
I am the holistic skeptic in the title of this review. I picked up this book and figured it would be full of touchy-feely nonsense, but instead, I was enthralled. The case studies were entirely believable and the treatments were explained so well that the basic aspects of alternative veterinary medicine began to make sense. When I finished the book, I immediately began to explore educational opportunities so I could learn more than just the western medicine I'm familiar with (I'm a vet tech student). I even gave the book as a gift to a couple of friends because the stories were so wonderful and full of hope.

The only section of this book that I think should have been edited out was an odd description of the author sort of sashaying through her garden and listening to the plants talk to her or something peculiar along those lines. All the holistic medicine was professionally described and explained, and then the educational tone was tainted, in my opinion, by the peculiar fantasy passage. I think the book would be better off with those few pages removed, because it turned the author from "genius" to "crackpot" in my mind. I guess I'm still a bit of a skeptic about some stuff, but most of the book was excellent!

Last Chance Dog-Bird-Cat-Horse-Lizard-Snake-Tortoiseý
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2003-03-22
Okay, once I got past the 50's-textbook-cover design (which does an inadequate job of expressing the vitality of the book and its author), I discovered a dynamic, articulate animal advocate; a very knowledgeable veterinarian (both conventional and holistic, explaining acupuncture and the Chinese medicinal theory behind it, chiropractic, herbal & homeopathic solutions, and other alternative approaches); and a delightful storyteller. Her enthusiasm and personality fairly jump off the pages; her stories are well written and heartwarming/heartbreaking (18 chapters, 18 bouts of tears), and her advice is absolutely essential. The only challenge is keeping track of it all - I have tattered sticky-note bookmarks spewing from the book edges. She uses an interesting and effective structural rhythm: case stories followed by explorations of the medical issues and alternative medicine solutions each story brings up.

Dr. Kelleher is impassioned and opinionated (without ever judging or making me feel inadequate because, for example, I can't get my cats to eat home-cooked food), compassionate (her love of animals is glaringly apparent), brutally honest (revealing her heartbreaking frustration and despair at some cases), thoughtful and interesting (her embrace of holistic medicine is both well-reasoned while also quite intuitive as she tells the tale of her medical-intellectual-emotional-spiritual journey), and, at times, funny, like when she crawls around in a dirty crawlspace looking for her escaped tortoise muttering, "I am the worst tortoise mom in the whole world." By this point in the book, you can see her doing this and chuckling while a tear escapes the corner of your eye.

A great read: entertaining, heartwarming, informative, and ultimately hopeful. Any person owned by a pet will love (and benefit from) this book, even more so if your animal companion has medical challenges.

One of the Best Books I've Read
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2003-06-16
I read a LOT of animal-related books, and this is one of the very best. It is so well-written and engaging, that you can hardly put it down (although I had to often, just to process all the new information that Dr. Kelleher gave in each and every chapter). I have learned so much about holistic vet care from this book and really appreciate her knowledge and the way she shares it with us. Each chapter gives a beautiful, moving story about a particular animal and the health problems he or she has been going through, as well as the fears and frustrations that the animals' humans are experiencing. Probably most of us who have ever lived with animals have gone through those most difficult times, and I especially appreciated the love expressed by both Dr. Kelleher and the animals' caretakers in each instance.

I am now determined to find a holistic vet for my cats and am excited about starting them on the homemade cat diet that Dr. Kelleher gives us in the book (and, yes, there's a dog one too!). This is a must-have book for everyone who lives with an animal, and the stories are wonderful to read for all animal lovers.

For ALL animals!
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2006-06-12
If you are an animal lover, and are interested in miraculous stories of animal healing with alternative medicine -- YOU MUST OWN THIS BOOK! This is the best book on alternative healing I have seen. It is written in story form, very enjoyable to read and will have you crying with joy through the entire book at all of the animals' lives who were saved because this vet thought outside the box, and never gave up on an animal. I have taken this book to my holistic vet and we are helping a very sick cat of ours with the information we gleaned from it. He is getting better and would probably have had to be put to sleep if not for my having read this book. Thank you, Dr. Kelleher for your wisdom and compassion!

Engagingly narrated in a down-to-earth fashion
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2003-06-19
Written and compiled by holistic veterinarian Donna Kelleher, The Last Chance Dog And Other True Stories Of Holistic Animal Healing is a heartwarming anthology of stories about treating animals ranging from dogs and cats, to horses, turtles, birds, and more, through the application of alternative medicine. Engagingly narrated in a down-to-earth fashion, The Last Chance Dog is an engaging, entertaining, informative, and very highly recommended read for animal lovers everywhere.

Washington
Letters from Vinnie
Published in Paperback by Calkins Creek Books (2007-08)
Author: Maureen Stack Sappey
List price: $10.95
New price: $6.27
Used price: $3.39

Average review score:

A Great Theme
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-02-04
The book "Letters from Vinnie" is about a teenage girl who follows her dreams. She started sculpting and knew it was what she wanted to do in life. After sculpting a brilliant bust of President Lincoln's head, she entered a contest to sculpt a statue in remembrance of Abraham Lincoln. Though her lover Boudy wants her to stop sculpting and, marry him, she rejects the proposal because of her passion for sculpting. By winning the contest she gets $5,000 and decides to use it on a vacation to Europe with her parents. When things go wrong in Vinnie Ream's life she stands strong and fights her way through them.

Vinnie
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2002-03-15
THis is a great book for lovers of art, romance, and Civil War history. Vinnie is an intriging person that draws you in from page one- worth your time

A unique book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2000-06-18
I recentely finished "Letters from Vinnie" , a story of a young girl's letters from herself to her Counsin Regina. The time period is the time of Abraham Lincoln , and the subject on everybodys mind: Whether this war will end. Vinnie Ream , finds herself falling in love with sculpting and Abraham Lincoln himself. When she finally gets a grant to sculpt Mr.Lincolns head after his faitful death , all changes for Vinnie Ream. This book is based on true accounts and true characters.

A unique book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2000-06-18
I recentely finished "Letters from Vinnie" , a story of a young girl's letters from herself to her Counsin Regina. The time period is the time of Abraham Lincoln , and the subject on everybodys mind: Whether this war will end. Vinnie Ream , finds herself falling in love with sculpting and Abraham Lincoln himself. When she finally gets a grant to sculpt Mr.Lincolns head after his faitful death , all changes for Vinnie Ream. This book is based on true accounts and true characters.

A Journey Into History Youýll Enjoy Taking
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2000-10-17
History has always been fascinating to me.When I picked up the book, Letters From Vinnie by Maureen Stack Sappéy, I was transported back through time to Washington D.C. during the Civil War. There, through a girl's letters to her best friend, Regina I learned about Vinnie Ream, a high spirited, stubborn, head-strong individual. In the year 2000 with the advanced computers, e-mail, chat rooms, cell phones, and overnight rush delivery services, it's pleasant to read an author's version of a letter from a time period over one hundred years ago. The letters were composed so well that I actually began to believe that those letters were real and that I was Regina! You may not agree that learning about the hard life of an unwanted sculptress isn't the best plot for a book, but guess what? To me it is!

Washington
The MAN TO SEE
Published in Paperback by Simon & Schuster (1992-11-01)
Author: Evan Thomas
List price: $35.95
New price: $15.14
Used price: $1.00
Collectible price: $29.59

Average review score:

Book Changed My Life: You'll Love This Book!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-16
"THE MAN TO SEE" was a great book. Since I'm going to be attending law school this fall (of 2007), I thought it wouldn't hurt to read books by and about lawyers; man, am I glad I included Evan Thomas's "THE MAN TO SEE" because this is without a doubt one of the best biographies I have read in ages. Page by page, you feel caught up in a drama without end. The characters, adventures, and funny stories add so much luster to a larger-than-life figure. By the end of the book, I was sorry to see it all end; I felt like I actually new Mr. Williams! If you're interested in a good biography check out "THE MAN TO SEE." You won't be disappointed.

A great Book
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2002-01-07
This is one of the best biographies ever written. A wonderful piece about an interesting man.

A tremendous book
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2000-11-26
I have never been more absorbed by a book than by this one. Admittedly my interest was heightened by the fact that Williams was my criminal law teacher at law school, but I found this a fantastic book. Evan Thomas (did you know he is Norman Thomas' grandson?) paints Williams warts and all, and I found it a searing read. The account of Williams' deathly fight with cancer is most poignant. Anyone at all interested in law should read this book, and anyone interested in an amazing life will be enthralled by this account.

Excellent, Excellent book
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2001-09-05
This is one of the best biographies I have ever read. It is a great story about a great man. I read a lot of biographies and I can tell when the author is fauning over his subject - just read some of Robert Slater's books on Jack Welch. Thomas book did none of that. Thomas made you feel that he was giving an accurate and true account of Williams life. Of couse Thomas was helped by selecting a subject that was larger than life, a one of a kind person both in legal talent and raw personality. This book is right up there with "Vince", Michael O'Brien's biography of Vince Lombardi. Interestingly, Lomardi and Williams were very much alike - both very religious yet profane, and above the rest of their competitors in their chosen fields. They were also both like to drink, were emotional and quick to say exactly what they thought or felt about something. I recommend this book to anyone who likes to read biographies about great men.

A Magnificent Biography of a Fascinating Man
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2001-12-14
Take a fascinating subject-- Edward Bennett Williams. Add a highly-skilled author with remarkably deep interviewing and archival research skills-- Evan Thomas. Put in a lot of hard work. And presto-- you have Thomas' "The Man To See," one of the most thorough biographies ever written (I have read many hundreds).

Edward Bennett Williams was one of the most dynamic men of the 20th Century-- a great figure of destiny whose life would have seemed emptier had not Evan Thomas been his biographer. EBW was a self-made man in the days where one could still achieve that accolade. He was no spoiled yuppie of family money. Bright, hard-working, forward-thinking, compassionate and disciplined-- and a wonderful rogue!-- this was Edward Bennett Williams. Warts and all, Evan Thomas presents the larger-than-life lawyer who pioneered criminal law practice in postwar America, bringing the constitution into the 20th Century. He sought power for the purpose of doing good, after doing well. Thomas interviewed practically every living person with whom EBW had a conversation or situation.

I am re-reading "The Man to See" for the fourth time in ten years. It remains fresh and fun. What a brilliant book!

Washington
Mingering Mike
Published in Paperback by Princeton Architectural Press (2007-05-01)
Author: Dori Hadar
List price: $24.95
New price: $2.98
Used price: $2.96

Average review score:

greats stories exist without us knowing!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-08
The first time I hear of either Mingering Mike or Dori Hadar was when they both came to Amsterdam. Dori Hadar gave a lecture in the Academy of Architecture in Amsterdam, following the series theme "Amateurism". This book not only tells of a person's amazing power to create beatiful and original art, but also gathers material which is in itself a world to visit over and over again. I was very pleased to have bought it.

Mingering Mike is That Dude!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-21
I have been following Mingering Mike's intriguing story from the beginning since Dori and Frank discovered Mike's hidden gems. Let me say, I am still nothing short of amazed on this diggin' phenomenon.

Top quality stuff here, so don't sleep!

AMAZING BOOK!! BRAVO
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-17
I was so excited to finally see Mingering Mike's work in detail- as well as the scoop on this fascinating story. This book delivers- and features all of the charming words and whimsical creativity of a true outsider artist. Much like Henry Darger and his mystique- Mingering Mike's appeal lies in his dedication to his dream and the crafty ways he set out to acquire making it in the music business. The New York Times story on this kept me captivated and now I'm proud to own the final product of all this hard work! Kudos to Hadar and pals who made it possible...and of course mingering mike!

incredible
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-12
an unbelievable discovery which almost seems too incredible to be real. a socio-cultural time capsule of american history which gives us an incredible collection of work as well as the incredible story of it's discovery. this is outsider art at its finest! so earnest, heartwarming, and real. an AMAZING book! thank you dori and mike!

Wow!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-12
What an amazing book! Mingering Mike is a true superstar and Mr. Hadar has done a great job chronicling his (imaginary) career. Can't wait to hear the songs!

Washington
Never Walk Alone
Published in Paperback by The Large Print Book Company (2005-01-15)
Author: Paula Detmer Riggs
List price: $25.95
New price: $25.95

Average review score:

Excellent offering from a favourite writer
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2004-08-15
I've been a fan of PDR for years and years and think she creates the most wonderful characters. She's probably the master of the damaged hero (well maybe co-master with Gayle Wilson). Rarely has she disappointed me. I particularly enjoyed her latest offering because it was in the longer format that category fiction is denied.

This is a story of revenge, hatred, and old animosities made to come right by love, tolerance, reparation and forgiveness. By examining the heart and soul of a man tormented by a crime he perhaps did not truly commit (we are kept guessing), PDR is able to evoke the meaning of true love in both the sexual and non-sexual way. Rhys Hazard is a man who feels undeserving of love and comfort who has the great good fortune to meet a woman who can offer him both and by doing so achieves a level of love and completion for herself. Although events conspire against them, their regard for each other makes them complete.

Excellent story from a much admired author. Please can we have her next one soon?

Wonderful book!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2004-03-23
Well written and touching. I laughed and I cried and at the end felt wonderful!

Read this one, you won't be sorry.

NEVER WALK ALONE - A skillful blend of poignancy & passion!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-06-27
"Beloved, best-selling,romance author, Paula Detmer Riggs will win even more readers' hearts with her absolutely wonderful contemporary, NEVER WALK ALONE for Onyx in June 2003. Ms. Detmer Riggs known for dealing with tough issues in her storylines deftly handles several in this endearing novel. Millionaire mogul, Rhys Hazard decides to help save the flooded small town of Osuma, Washington by expanding his trucking empire there. Not intending to go there himself, Rhys is forced to return to his hometown and relive his tragic past when his trucking foreman is injured in a car crash. Rhys knows all about terrible car accidents since he caused one as a teenager which killed two young children and a schoolbus driver. Rhys was severely injured and sentenced to four years in prison. When bed-and-breakfast owner, Brina Sullivan first meets her new tenant, Rhys Hazard, she is instantly attracted to him despite his physical disability and brusque demeanor. Little does this divorced mother of two know that Rhys Hazard is really Mick Sullivan, her ex-husband's brother and the man responsible for her brother's death years ago. What a rare treat it is to find an author who is able to skillfully blend poignancy with passion. Like the Rogers and Hammerstein song, "Never Walk Alone" Paula Detmer Riggs' novel, NEVER WALK ALONE should become a classic!"
-Patricia Rouse, Rouse's Romance Readers Groups

A winning drama
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2003-06-12
To many of the residents of Osuma, Washington, the name Michael Sullivan means loathing. Fifteen years ago, he ran a red light, plowed into a school bus, and killed two students and the driver. Although he insisted the bus driver ran the light, Michael was convicted and served time. After his release his adopted father J.T. told him to leave town. An angry Michael never looked back.

Over the years, using the name Hazard, Michael built up a powerful hauling business, North Star Trucks, located in Phoenix. When his dad's company teeters on bankruptcy, he buys the firm to convert it into a northwest trucking firm. However, he is forced to take charge of the transition when his friend chosen to run the show is severely injured in a car wreck. In Osuma, Michael meets his young niece and nephew and the ex-wife of his brother. As the little girl hooks him, he and Brina Sullivan fall in love, but one of the three dead people from his accident is her brother.

NEVER WALK ALONE is at its best when the lead couple deals with their growing attraction to one another somewhat fostered by a little child who showers love on Michael. When the tale spins into a drug running intrigue, the subplot takes away from the heartfelt intensity of the prime theme of can Brina forgive the man she loves for killing someone else she cherished? Still this is a strong contemporary romance that leaves the audience to wonder if time can heal all wounds.

Harriet Klausner

Higly recommended, emotionally engaging book!
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2005-08-29
This was an outstanding and emotional story of forgiveness and of learning to forgive yourself. It's about overcoming childhood problems and mistakes and forging ahead to find love and happiness again. It's not just a sappy romance story though, there's quite a lot of mystery, sabatoge, adventure and revenge involved too. I respected Rhys from the outset and couldn't help liking Brina and all the secondary characters (except John, of course). Their story captivated me and they'll remain in my thoughts for days to come.


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