California Books
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One of the best P.I. series on the marketReview Date: 1997-10-27
Another winner from Maxine O'Callaghan!Review Date: 1998-08-05
The book is wonderfully plotted and filled with interesting (and, in some cases,menacing)supporting characters. Men and women will enjoy this book!
I encourage readers to look for the other books in the Delilah West series, as well as the two books about Anne Menlo.
A good readReview Date: 2001-01-24
On the way to the restaurant, Nicky and Delilah are kidnapped and they have to learn how to trust each other and work together to survive. Delilah is eventually let free but Nicky is held for ransom. Delilah knows that Nicky was left with neough food for only a few more days.
The second part of the book is about her struggle to figure out who has kidnapped Nicky and why so she can be rescued.
Delilah is a very likable character. She is honest about her shortcomings and has a sense of humor. But she is also able to be tough when she has to be and to accept the consequences.
There is very good character development between Delilah, Nicky and Erik. It has a twist at the end which makes you wish there was at least one more chapter.
This is the 6th in the series and there definitely will be a 7th.
Don't Start This Late At Night, You'll Never Put It DownReview Date: 1998-11-25


A Must-Have book!Review Date: 2008-01-12
Congratulations on a wonderful presentation!
MJ Franklin
The daily bible for healthy eatingReview Date: 2007-12-11
Eat Right - Your Life Depends On ItReview Date: 2007-12-11
A lot of suggestions to "Eat Right"Review Date: 2007-09-19

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Excellent California Travel GuideReview Date: 2006-03-08
Funny and TrueReview Date: 2006-02-15
Definitely worth dropping a few bucks for if you are planning on discovering what makes Californians tick. (Just remember, Northern and Southern California really are two different states, lol.)
Eccentric CaliforniaReview Date: 2005-12-20
Her detailed explanation of each place makes me want to pack my bags and go see them all.
Coming from Phoenix, AZ I have not seen or been too much in the Golden State, but with 2006 around the corner and a great book. My News Year's resolution is to travel and get coffee stains all over this fantastic read.
And to all you want to be PRICE IS RIGHT CONTESTANTS.
This author has hit the nail on it's head.
Not only did I stay at the Farmer's Daughter Hotel and was prepped with the best insiders information. I also started milking the cows about 4:00am just to become the:
Showcase Showdown Winner.
Yes, I said WINNER!!!!!!
I'm very excited to see more with this book in 2006.
Thanks for the great information on California.
Eccenric California - Don't believe the misconceptions.Review Date: 2005-10-31
California is known for it's cutting edge social conventions, and admittedly, many first originated in the Golden State (from Frisbees and motels to skateboards and drive in churches).
Clearly, author Jan Friedman has her work cut out for her, but she seems up to the challenge, discussing festivals and events, peculiar pursuits, museums and collections, "quirkyvilles" (towns with a twist), offbeat tours, unusual cuisine , kitschy attractions, and anything and everything else that is different to say the least.

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Informative info re edible wild plantsReview Date: 2008-09-21
If you are interested in wild plants, this is a good book for identification. The recipes provided are easy and delicious. I have already prepared Purslane (Verdolaga) in her recipe titled, "Verdolagas Con Queso" -- Excellent! There are many more I can't wait to try. Excellent book by Charlotte Bringle Clarke.
Truely a useful plant identifiction bookReview Date: 2000-07-13
dining in the wildReview Date: 2006-07-14
Enjoyable and useful guideReview Date: 2007-11-25
This would probably be one of the best books for an amateur to get their feet wet identifying plants because it limits itself to one topic and many of the easier species to identify. Plus you'll learn about how various plants they have been used in the past and continue to be useful today.
For example, to mention just one, ceanothus, of which there are about 40 species in California, was used both as a tea substitute and tobacco substitute by the early settlers. And it's easily identifiable by the three prominent veins on the underside of the leaf, as well as the small, pretty clusters of violet flowers. Most of the 40 odd species are low growing herbs or bushes, but the largest species can be a 40 foot tall tree.
Overall, a fine book and one that imparts a lot of fun, useful information.
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Excellent..........Review Date: 2007-11-01
Arguably the definitive work on the subjectReview Date: 1998-11-24
A puzzling tale well toldReview Date: 2001-03-14
Charles Ross wrote a fascinating book on this puzzling ruler, making as clear as the scanty and somewhat unreliable records allow the course of Edward's life and reign, and the various episodes that both fascinate and puzzle. The book (with a short introduction by R.A. Grifffiths rather than a revision by him) proceeds first by laying out the story, and then returning to give separate investigation of various aspects of Edward's rule, such as governance, his relations with the community and his finances. This latter subject is particularly well handled, as is the penultimate chapter on law and order. The story is well told, without excessive pedantry and without any attempt to hide when the record is unclear or the author has had to make large interpretations. One may not really know or understand Edward by the end of the book, but one's feeling is that it is the man himself who escapes capture by the biographer's art, not any weakness of the biographer himself. For those interested in such matters - and this is not light reading - Griffith's biography should prove highly satisfying.
scholarly presentation of the adventurous reignReview Date: 2001-05-17
It is very easy to fell victim to novelized history when relating the events as extraordinary as the events of Edward's reign. Not Charles Ross. He is extremely well researched and versed in the records of the period, and presents the somewhat dry details of the records of the Household and Exchequer, in an interesting way and extremely well cross-referenced. Internal English sources are corroborated by continental and papal records. I would recommend this book to a serious student of history.
Also see Charles Ross's "Richard III" for a mysterious, bloody, and tragically brief concluding reign of Plantagenet dynasty. This one is also highly recommended.
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Another Kevin Starr winnerReview Date: 2008-06-01
Learn something new today!Review Date: 1998-07-17
Californians, Learn Your State's HistoryReview Date: 2003-09-17
As with his other volumes, Mr. Starr doesn't just give us straight-ahead, factual history. In my view, he is especially good at giving incidental stories about some of the players involved in a way that keeps the reader more interested. Immediately after finishing the book I went to the internet to find out more about people like photographer Dorothea Lange and the 1939 Golden Gate International Exposition. That is what I ask of books like these: that they teach me about things I don't know much about and that they cause me to follow up and learn more about some of the topics within the book.
One learns reading this particular volume that the current quirkiness of California (governor recalls, liberalism, social diversity) is not something that just developed in the 1970s. We had recall movements back in the 1930s as well and some ugliness comes through regarding racism and discrimination in this state that sometimes thinks so highly of itself in that area. It is truly shameful how we discriminated against all migrant workers, whether of color or the Oakies that came to us from the Dust Bowl. The stories of abuse of power by the police and other government entities were very interesting.
I would love to have every Californian---especially our politicians---read Mr. Starr's work. Most history is slow to read, and this is no exception, but the amounts of knowledge one will get about California, make it worth the while.
A terrific summary of California's Labor historyReview Date: 1998-12-10

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Monopoly game piece error?Review Date: 2008-06-13
Pretty goodReview Date: 2005-08-18
excellent, well written, original storyReview Date: 2001-09-15
A strange killer is on the moves (pun intended), and a woman detective (Jessie Drake) must identify him before it is too late. Will Jessie save her sister's marriage, and will she find the Curare Killer before he strikes again... Romance can not be avoided, as in most thrillers, but it at least is plausible and believable. Of course, the inevitable happens, the plot does get a little predictable, nevertheless the suspense is there all the way. Definitely deserves five stars.
Great BookReview Date: 2001-05-08
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A Bit of a Downturn in SeriesReview Date: 2008-09-17
Stephen Greenleaf 1983.
I'm going to give this 4 *'s because I like Greenleaf's John Marshall Tanner series so much, and because even an off day for Greenleaf still makes for a good read. But this fourth volume in the series seems to lose some of the steam that has built up over the previous three. Away from Marsh's home area of San Francisco and Northern California, the lovely specificity of place that informs so many great mystery series is missing, and of course the cadre of support characters that has been forming make only a token appearance or two on the phone. Sometimes taking a break from the home stomping grounds can be a nice breather for a series that's getting stale, but that's hardly the case so early in this one.
Fatal Obsession takes place in and around Marsh's Midwestern hometown of Chaldea, population 6189, where after nearly 30 years away he has been called by his sister Gail to decide what to do with a plot of land left to them and their two brothers, Matt and Curt, by Uncle Raymond several years ago. Gail wants to keep it in the family and let her daughter and son in law farm it, while Matt and Curt want to sell out. Matt gets to cast the deciding vote (it takes 3 to sell), and the vultures are circling -- the town wants it for an industrial park to save their economy of failed factories, the environmentalists for a preserve, oil, coal and agribusiness each have their proposal. Marsh, ever the moralist, spends the book trying to figure out what is fair and just. But this being a mystery, something just has to crop up to stir the pot, and it does -- Curt's son Billy, still suffering from his experiences in the Vietnam War, and making a royal nuisance of himself, is found hanged almost as soon as Marsh hits town. Everyone seems eager for it to be a suicide, but Matt isn't so sure and investigates. Plus, his high school sweetheart who brutally dumped him has recently moved back to town.
There's lots going on, and it's definitely not a bad book, but it somehow just does not gel for me, and problems loom larger than they might otherwise. The resolution of Billy's death seems forced, and although there are hints as to its general nature it seems too much the deus ex machina. The big plot question to me, though, is just what is so special about this particular, not very large, plot of land? There are abandoned factories galore, and farmers are being forced to sell out and auction off their property on what seems like a weekly basis. So why is the Tanner plot the one that will save the town, or draw the extractive industry wheeler dealers with their nefarious schemes? (And on a more minor level, why has this come to a head just now, this week? the land has been farmed on a shares basis by its neighbor since Uncle Raymond died.)
Also, the writing just doesn't seem to have the same snap, the cynical quip, that has characterized the earlier volumes. I've been flagging lines, and paragraphs, to copy out as I've been reading the series, but could barely find a handful here, a few short lines. And though there is a lot of description of the small town and its plight, and the aftermath of Vietnam which of course hit small towns particularly hard, it doesn't rise to the height of Greenleaf/Tanner's social observation in the more California-centric books, I don't find myself flagging whole paragraphs that summarize an issue just so.
Stephen Greenleaf is a very literate mystery writerReview Date: 2004-07-01
The plot involves Greenleaf's lawyer-turned-private investigator, Marsh Tanner, returning from San Francisco to his Iowa home town to discuss what to do with the family farm. Two of his brothers want to sell it (but to whom -- coal strip miner, wildcat oil company, neighboring farmer, the town?), whereas his sister wants to keep the land in the family and let her daughter and SIL farm it.
Not long after Marsh arrives in town, however, his bad-boy nephew is found hung -- although it appears to be suicide, Marsh has reason to question this verdict. He starts poking around, and in the course of poking around, learns a lot of things about the people of his home town that had been kept secret.
Greenleaf's characters are vivid and memorable, and I was kept guessing about what happened to nephew Billy until the final chapter -- but it all made sense.
Home againReview Date: 2002-08-09
InterestingReview Date: 2000-09-06

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How to find a father, even if you don't have oneReview Date: 2007-10-02
wonderful memoirReview Date: 2003-05-08
The Wisdom of a Fatherless BoyReview Date: 2003-05-17
Kevin Sweeney knows an unfair amount about this sad subect. His own father passed away when he was three, leaving a loving but now nearly destitute mother to raise six children alone.
The Sweeneys, without a father, husband, provider, faced a grim challenge, but the young boy named Kevin was determined to work his way through the loss.
Each child who loses a parent must inevitably come to terms in his own way, but Sweeney, by some quirky inspiration that only an innocent youth could summon, came up with a novel solution. He would adopt a father; in fact, three. Secretly. Without their knowing it.
His plan was simple: without a father of his own to guide him, he knew something was missing, so to fill in the chasm he would select the best, the wisest men in his small world, watch them, learn from them, but never tell. And bask in their glow when he was brought into their gentle orbits.
His powers of observation as a child serve him well as an adult. Sweeney has rendered wonderfully a world that is so quaintly American, so hopeful, that one wishes to step back into it, if only for a sweet neighborhood picnic, or a summer pick-up baseball game with the kids. A time when an entire suburban block came out to cheer the neighbor girls on their way to the prom. That was all in the outdoor world of youth. Inside was a different story.
They were tough times growing up, and Sweeney brings alive an almost Dickensian tale of the private sacrifices his family endured for years after his father died. Nor does he pull punches when, growing up, he begins to discover some of the flaws of hiw own beloved dad. Refreshingly, Sweeney tells this story without a hint of bitterness. The optimism of a boy who is determined to survive and flourish is alive and well in the grown-up who set out to record his past.
Sweeney has done a remarkable job in showing us how a child navigates, poorly at times, the shifting tides of growing up, the yearnings and fears and disappointments. But also the joys and thrills of the little victories, like learning to hit a curve ball. He is funny, honest and blunt and does not spare even himself from his critical eye, not even when it comes to reliving those inexorably dumb decisions adolescent boys seem driven to make.
Above all, he is a gracious and grateful memoirist, and that spirit rubs off on his readers. He is grateful for these three remarkable men and how they, chosen secretly by a bright, fatherless boy, helped him steer his way. It is a wonderful tribute to them, surrogate fathers who deserve a pat on the back from all of us who read Sweeney's memoir.
A Catholic ChildhoodReview Date: 2003-06-07

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Visual FeastReview Date: 2008-09-18
house that faux built reveiws ca togaReview Date: 2007-09-30
an inspiring life to which i aspireReview Date: 2007-09-07
The magical fantasy of Carlo, Maestro d'ArtesReview Date: 2002-07-29
A self-proclaimed great illusionist, he nontheless informs us of the historical references in his art while capturing our imaginations on an illustrated magical journey back through time. The book is storybook, history, and journal, all rolled into one, and written with Carlo's great sense of humor and gusto for life. From the moment you turn the first page, you are captured by Renaissance man Marchiori's presentation, all colorful, fun, and fantastic. It is a delightful glimpse into his most beautiful imaginings, and they are bountiful. You laugh, smile, ooooo, and ahhhhh, and see life above the mundane, as does Carlo!
It is interesting to note that he allows tours of his home, and has a shop and artist studio in Calistoga, where various pieces of his art are sold. These are extraordinary experiences not to be missed while in Napa Valley.
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Erik desperately wants to get closer to Delilah, but realizes that before that can happen two barriers must be torn down. First, his teenage daughter Nikki must accept the new woman in his life. Second, his beloved must listen to her heart. To that end, Nikki and Delilah go out together, but soon are embroiled in a kidnapping in which they are the abductees. It is up to the hard boiled detective to find a way to save not only her life, but the life of the daughter of her beloved.
Though this reviewer has not had the opportunity to read all six Delilah West mysteries (having read four of them), the series remaisn one of the better female private investigative collections on the market today. In her latest entry, DOWN FOR THE COUNT, Delilah is a beautiful conflicting mix of emotions that makes her seem so poignantly human and thereby, stir readers' interest. The story line is at time humorous and at other times very hard-boiled. The dichotomy not only works well, it adds to the humanization of all the characters. Maxine O'Callaghan continues to provide strong detective fiction that feel so real.
Harriet Klausner