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Good to read if you can't sleep.Review Date: 2007-06-22
Rambling, cluttered and yet interestingReview Date: 2005-09-06
I loved the story of Ellen and her cousin Randall - the commonalities they shared, the introspection and retrospection he inspired in her. The twists and turns of the story kept me turning pages. The author takes this tale and weaves into the story of Randall's father, his lost love Ruby, her brief encounter with Professor X who (and here the story gets very dull) is associated with the war department and the decision not to drop an atomic bomb on Kyoto Japan, and this wraps back to a book Randall loved and left to Ellen upon his death (no secret, he dies in line one). Beyond this, the author incorporates domestic abuse, slavery, abortion, adoption, the Korean War, mental illness, suicide, murder and millions of descriptions of social propriety as Ellen becomes an adult in post WWII Philadelphia. It's a jumble of flashbacks and somehow all of this is pulled together in an interesting story -although quite anti-climactic. This book was recommended to me and yet I hesitate to recommend it to anyone looking for an entertaining read. It is definately thought provoking and even disturbing in a way - I find the author a bit squashing of the human spirit. Her characters lie, cheat, and keep awful secrets locked inside of themselves and do little to help their fellow man. The one character I liked dies in line one.
Where's the payoff?Review Date: 2003-12-03
The narration is overclogged with bizarre and inapt descriptions. Point of view jumps back and forth with no rhyme or reason, and she leaves things unexplained for far too long. For example, I didn't figure out what the character's first name was until book three. She describes scenes which entice the reader to find out more; such as the hidden room in her uncle's house which was a hiding place of runaway slaves, and then she drops them, or explains them with an easily missed sentence or two. I wanted to find out more about something, anything, that involved a plot, but alas, a plot was not forthcoming.
If it weren't for my husbands insistence that this book was interesting, I would have put it down in the first chapter. After a while, and with repeated promises from him that it would get better, the loose ends and the irrational passivity of the main character kept me enrapt. As he warned me, it's like a train wreck. I have to say that the loose ends were wrapped up at the end, and yet it was extremely unsatisfying. A character driven novel should have intriguing characters, and yet The Gardens of Kyoto is filled with bland passive automotons who merely stagger through life allowing things to happen to them. The only time the main character actually takes action of her own accord, is when she is doing something pointlessly destructive. From page one to the end, this book kept me asking, "(...) When's something going to happen?"
Confused?ý.I amReview Date: 2003-12-30
In writing this review, I'm not sure I enjoyed this book as thoroughly as I have others. But I am sure that I don't hate it.
The story centers on the protagonist Ellen. Early on as a child, she meets her cousin Randal. A fair boy with nice hands and red hair. It seems an attraction between these two set and there are a few moments that are a bit awkward because they were cousins. But I won't ruin the story. He goes off to fight the war (the 2nd one) and he dies, but not before giving a few letters and what not. He never said out loud how he feels, but does say that she is his main audience. It is about the middle of the book when we hit this part. She then meets Lt. Henry while at a football game. At this point she is a college student. He is not attracted to her, but rather a friend, Daphne, she brings along. He goes to Korea and asks her friend to continue a correspondence with him. She doesn't say no, but since it is hinted that she is a communist, she gives it to Ellen instead. She reads all his mail and falls in love with him. He returns and still thinks that her friend is writing to him. I won't divulge anymore of the plot, but I will tell you that at this time her minds start confusing and mixing up between Randal and this captain.
I won't deny that it isn't original. But I couldn't find anything to grasp myself into. The characters were okay, but they don't stick with you. The writing was a bit shaky and a bit confusing when you read it. But if you give it time, I suppose the story will sink in. It is the writing that makes it confusing. The transition between Henry and Randall could have been a bit smoother. The story was a bit slow. There is no external antagonist to deal with, but rather the conflict lay on the shoulder of internal conflicts of Ellen. But I feel the one reason why I could not enjoy this book was that I just didn't like the characters. I didn't like Ellen because she was so different from myself. And often I find a book more enjoyable when you relate to the characters. I did not find one character that I related too.
Overall, it is an okay book. It is rather short; around I say 200+ pages. It's a fine book to past the time with.
The tyranny of social conventionsReview Date: 2004-05-18
Apparently, that's what social mores of the 40's and 50's insisted on. So what could you do, if your life wasn't as picture-perfect as it was supposed to be? The characters in Walberg's book face this dilemma. Some of them sacrifice their desires in order to fit in, while others die themsleves as sacrificial lambs on the altar of conformity, and the rest simply spend their lives lying about who they are.
Five characters in this book are soldiers; none fits the "hero" mold that society prescribes for them. Even the one who died on Iwo Jima was not killed in combat, but died accidentally after the fighting was over. Yet this isn't really a book about war - more about a society that worked so hard to keep up appearances, that no one was allowed to be different, or even human.
Consider the plight of the narrator's oldest sister. In one of the most poignant moments in the book, she breaks decorum by crying at the dinner table in front of the whole family, then confesses a desperate and shocking problem. Members of the family silently look to the father, waiting for his response. But Rita's problem is so far outside the bounds of what "nice people" talk about, that all he can do is mumble weak, useless platitudes at her. The pitiful thing is that he adores his daughter -- but social conventions won't let him help her, or even admit that her problem is real. When the problem leads to her death, the whole family continues to lie to eachother as if they never saw it coming. And in the ultimate victory of good etiquette, the narrator politely thanks her sister's killer just hours after Rita's death, knowing full well what he has done.
Those were the good old days? Thank God I missed them.

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applique, quiltingReview Date: 2007-02-17
The Best of Baltimore Beauties: 95 Patterns for Album Blocks and Borders Review Date: 2007-09-26
95 patternsReview Date: 2007-06-03
applique, quiltingReview Date: 2007-02-17
Lacking Color ExamplesReview Date: 2007-05-25

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I have a new fav authorReview Date: 2008-11-19
Ghetto blastingReview Date: 2007-04-17
No Good DeedsReview Date: 2007-05-07
3 chapters to figure out who did what. Will never be a PD James.
Tess, Crow, and LloydReview Date: 2008-10-23
Tess, Crow, and Lloyd, three characters caught up in a deadly web of poverty, murder, extortion, and double cross. Operating from three different backgrounds, with three divergent motives, they must find a way to work together or they will sink separately. Once Tess and Crow get the lay of the land, she assumes responsibility for the investigative duties, while Crow takes on the unfamiliar role of bodyguard to a street kid who doesn't make it easy. Unable to communicate, they're flying by the seat of their pants.
Like Elizabeth George's What Came Before He Shot Her, No Good Deeds takes a fresh, edgy approach to the affiliation of poverty, greed, and crime, by writing from multiple perspectives and delineating the roles of circumstance and psychological state. The reader is left in no doubt as to what happened and why it happened, not simply the who and how.
Ably narrated by Linda Emond, who has been criticized for her rendering of Southern accents, but as a Northerner, that's not an issue for me. Very enjoyable mystery, set in Baltimore.
No Good Deeds by Laura LippmanReview Date: 2007-07-10
The Tess Monaghan series remains a constant bestseller in PI series to date. Tess is a strong character, a young woman with an edge. To counterbalance her cynicism is her mate, laidback and amiable Crowe. Lippman excels at characterization, and with No Good Deeds allows the reader a deeper look into Crowe's persona and background. And, as always, spending time with Tess is a bonus. This must-read moves at a fast pace and has plenty of interesting characters.


Finally an Ending that meshed and I savored every word Review Date: 2008-07-18
There were really two plots going on in this book. The first one was Susan fear for her life as Barry Foreman and his brother Noah tries to unravel her predicament, which they find involves several odd murders and corporate deceit. The second plot was the ruthless Carl Rudd and German international alliance to rule the satellite telecommunication market regardless of the cost or lives.
Mr. Saunders does a remarkable job of weaving these two plot lines together and having them mesh at the end. The result was just so good that I savored every word. I really hope that all book-lovers will get a chance to read this wonderful refreshing mystery.
vanity, vanity -- P.O.D. [print on demand]Review Date: 2008-05-26
Planting plugs for vanity press books in reviews of real books (several people comment on that here) is just S.A.D. And a bit dishonest.
An Intriguing Mystery with a Solid storyReview Date: 2007-09-20
A Legal Mystery with kindness and romance held my interest until the very end.Review Date: 2007-12-04
The author does a great job of setting the reader into the heart of the dilemma that faces the main character, Barry Foreman. From that point, the reader is guided through many twists and turns, that occur slowly and methodically. The story kept me turning page after page to find out just what Barry would do next to save his client Susan Graham. The characters actions flow smoothly that is combined into a tale of intrigue and delusion. The book is a page turner and is entirely plausible and be prepared for a shocking ending.
What did I miss?Review Date: 2007-08-24

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While Innocent Fluoridators Schlepped...Review Date: 2006-10-27
Adrian Havill is the kind of disguise artist readers will want to watch carefully. Most writers do their homework and figure out what they're talking about; and don't try to hide monstrosities silently in progress creating autism epidemics from the survivor brain damage victims the SIDS mortality doesn't kill.
Since Havill is such a sleuth...maybe he'll get to the bottom of it eventually. Turns out people have brain stems they need in order to breath while they're asleep. Wow, shocking new scientific discovery? No. Sensitive to a horrific toxin, likfe fluorine? Yes.
Shadow of DoubtReview Date: 2006-01-15
Garrett Wilson allegedly had several siblings die from SIDS. This was his reasoning for purchasing a life insurance policy on his daughter Brandy Jean and son Garrett Michael shortly after their birth. Any time a baby dies from SIDS, the circumstances are suspicious. While Wilson's behavior surrounding the death of his children may be suspicious, much of the evidence seems circumstantial. Though Garrett Michael's edema may suggest trauma from suffocation, an edema can arise from other forms of trauma aside from suffocation. Being the last person to see his children alive before they died does cause some serious eye brows to be raised. Particularly with the accusation that he drugged one of his wives to make her sleep through the murder.
Is it possible that Garrett Wilson killed his two children to collect life insurance? Based on his shadowy financial reputation, his guilt is quite possible. The evidence has obviously left doubt in the mind of other reviewers based on their reviews. I will give the author credit, he did pick a compelling story for his book.
Mother Decides Years Later That Babies Were MurderedReview Date: 2004-10-08
This book didn't tie up all loose ends or erase all doubt, so to me, it was rather disappointing.
Good book, not greatReview Date: 2005-03-20
The author did his homework and wrote the book in a straight forward fashion that neither gets in the way of the story nor overly dramatizes the tale. The background info on the central charachters is adequate, but there were times I would have liked to have them flushed out some more.
I think the book does justice to prosecutor Doug Gansler, who really carried the ball on the case when it would have been just as easy to decline.
What some women will put up with rather than be aloneReview Date: 2004-07-10
It never ceases to amaze me how some women will turn a blind eye to the obvious rather than be alone. Whatever did these women SEE in a fat sociopath like Garrett Wilson anyway? And what did HE see in his last wife, Vicky, who wasn't even in the same class as Missy Anastasi? He used women and then threw them away like used Kleenex when he tired of them.
I hope Wilson does not escape punishment for his crimes: killing two of his own children for financial gain. How can anyone put a dollar value on a child's life? What he did was greed at its worst. This is an individual who didn't want to work to get what he wanted so when he wasn't living off his wives or girlfriends, he used his children as cash cows.
Horrible person who doesn't belong in society.


Horrible, HorribleReview Date: 2005-05-27
A Great Thriller!Review Date: 2004-06-02
A superior psychological suspense thrillerReview Date: 2004-03-09
John Maxwell has written a superior psychological suspense thriller. The isolated frigid locale plays very much a part in this tale, which, in a sense, is a cat and mouse game. The nightmare scenario is very well played out by the realistic characterizations. The highly entertaining plot is well paced. POINT FURY IS another excellent read for the summer months. Rating
An Excellent First BookReview Date: 2003-06-23
Chris Nielson is a college graduate in his twenties whose life seems to have little direction. He was a member of a hard rock band, but a fight ended that relationship. A rich friend of his father's offers him a job house-sitting his beach house. The house is located in a pretty deserted are of Maryland. There is little to do. Chris figured he was in for a mostly boring winter hanging around doing pretty much nothing. But little did he know what he was really in for. The owner of the house is insane, and Chris will have to deal with an awful lot.
I enjoyed reading this book. It was suspenseful and kept me guessing a lot. I will definitely be reading the next book John Maxwell writes.
Looking forward for more from this authorReview Date: 2003-05-08
I couldn't put the book down, it had me interested right from the first few pages all the way until the last page.
I hope to read more from this author.

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Pretty goodReview Date: 2008-06-19
Antietam was an especially bloody, frustrating battle. The book spends considerable time building up to the battle (fighting doesn't start until just about halfway through the book). All of the various incidents that occurred during the course of the fighting, from the captured Union officer who was duty-bound not to warn his colleagues about a Rebel ambush, and couldn't quite bring himself to refrain from doing so anyway, to the famed Lost Order, Longstreet in his carpet slippers, and so forth, everything is carefully recounted, and the result is very satisfying, though of course by the end of it you'll want to strangle McClellan. One annoyance is the lack of good maps.
I enjoyed this book, and would say that it could almost serve as a substitute for a historical account, if you're not going to school or something.
Over-detailed but gripping account of our bloodiest dayReview Date: 2006-03-25
WOW!Review Date: 2006-01-12
Can't wait for Croker's next!
Entertaining and AccurateReview Date: 2006-03-09
War is hellReview Date: 2008-05-25

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death and destuctoinReview Date: 2002-12-19
Unlikely Friends ~ Dynamic CharactersReview Date: 2007-10-18
Parr deals with the subject with honesty, not hiding the real emotions these women go through. A grandmother myself, I was able to relate to one or the other of these characters all the way through. And I love the characters she develops. They're all such different personalities if they hadn't the commonality of grandchildren, they would never have become friends. That's one of the things that makes this book work so well.
I'm not going to talk about the plot, but simply tell you to get the book. Parr writes wonderful stories that captivate and hold you spellbound until you turn the last page. She has jumped to my five favorite authors list. If you love Deborah Raney, Robin Lee Hatcher, Sally John or Roxanne Henke, you'll love Delia Parr. This reviewer gives Day by Day a high recommendation.
Decent reading, especially for a movie tie-in projectReview Date: 2006-05-05
It's a pretty basic plot: Rustin Parr admitted to the murder of seven children in Burkittsville, Maryland in 1941. He was a hermit, anyway. Sentenced to be hanged, he confessed a shocking truth to a priest named Dominick Cazale on the night before his execution. Cazale doesn't reveal the truth until he is own his own deathbed, 60 years later, as a result of a tragic house fire.
As with the Blair Witch movies, the twists and the ending of this novel tie-in are ambiguous and open to interpretation. Recommended to any horror fan.
I was so boredReview Date: 2005-05-30
Whatever It Was That Rustin Parr Confessed...You Won't Find it HereReview Date: 2008-01-02
Reading from the journal Stern discovers that after Dominick and Mary returned from a vacation in Burkittsville, Maryland (the center of the Blair Witch legends), the woman developed mental disorders, reducing her to become a shut-in and hysterically delusional, with strange markings soon developing on her body. After Dominick found her chasing a cat she had lured inside, he writes how he became increasingly worried about the risk Mary posed as a danger both to herself and to others.
In addition to the Cazales' misfortune upon returning from Burkittsville, Stern also discovers that Dominick, a former Roman Catholic priest, once was the pastor of that town. Specifically, Cazale was there in May 1941. It was during that time that the remains of the bodies of seven missing local children were found in the basement of the home belonging to a recluse named Rustin Parr. Another child who was missing, Kyle Brody, would turn up claiming Parr had taken him too, keeping him alive only to witness the violation and murder of the others. An acquaintance of Parr's and the closest thing he had to a friend, Cazale wrote in his journal that he was the last person to speak with the man, and that he had told him the real and full truth of what had happened out there in those woods.
Ultimately THE SECRET CONFESSIONS Of RUSTIN PARR is an interesting but lackluster addition to the Blair Witch 'mythos.' Stern developed an even paced and intriguing plot, then gets it sidetracked with nostalgia until it simply peters out and fails to deliver anything worthwile. The book itself is short, and half of it comprises Dominick Cazale's journal. Although supposedly panic-stricken over the degeneration of his wife, Cazale, however, prefers rather to reminisce about his mother and two brothers and their old Baltimore neighborhood. When he writes about Burkittsville, he spends too much time on the diffulties he, as a "city boy," had to overcome living out in the country. He also dwells far too long over the mutual infatuation between him and Kyle Brody's mother, Carol. That which we are waiting for: Parr's confession, isn't brought up until the near end, where it is surrounded by melodrama and vague enough to be considered simply an intimation.
What Stern wrote here could become the basis for a very good story about a young priest's early ministry. But it certainly isn't good horror.

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Solid, but not stellar.Review Date: 2008-10-08
Mariah Stewart always does a good job of sucking you in to the story and making you want to stick around until everything is resolved. Being a fan of series books, I love that we get new characters with news stories, but get to visit with old friends. Stewart is excellent at maintaining the ongoing story lines and I really enjoy that aspect of her writing.
I would recommend this book to anyone looking for a new favorite author. Her series are really quite good!
Great Read!Review Date: 2006-08-23
Digging Up Past CrimesReview Date: 2006-03-29
Next stop was how the story unfolded in a flash back narrative that takes away the thrill of reading a crime novel, it was too passive and mystery factor was diminished. Yes, you can solve this crime before you reach the end of the book. Quite obvious.
I will skip her books as this author specialises in flash back narrative murders. Not my type of crime thriller.
DisappointingReview Date: 2006-03-25
Nina lived with an aunt and tried to forget what her father did. Her father died in prison. Then Nina's step-mother dies and Nina receives a box of her father's prison belongings, including a letter her father wrote to her step-mom, maintaining his innocence and promising to never tell what the step-mom did.
The letter leads Nina to ask her true crime writer friend for help and they, along with a cop and FBI agent, dig deeper into the 16 year old murders.
This book was predictable and plodding, with an excruciating attention to Nina's movements which led to skimming. The killer was obvious (to me, anyway). The resolution was a mess, a convoluted, ridiculous mess. And whatever happened with trying to find the murder weapon? Did they ever find it? Do I care? No.
Not one of the better ones in the seriesReview Date: 2006-01-26
I also have a hard time categorizing this book as a mystery thriller like another reviewer mentioned. There was very little of the whodunit aspect. Not enough red herrings to make the reader surprised at the ending. I'm sorry, some may disagree with my opinion, but I just didn't think it was the kind of story you would remember after a couple of weeks.
So, is it worth the money? Not as a single novel. As part of the series, on sale maybe. This whole series would be better to have been checked out from the library if it were available. The second in the Truth series was definitely the best and did hold it's own. Dark Truth is better if followed with Final Truth.

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A Bit surprised by the reviewsReview Date: 2008-03-09
I thought the book was a 3 out of 5 at best, I love God too but I must admit I felt the book was sometimes like reading a sermon. The conversation especially between Mary and her friend Naomi I had to skip most of, too preachy. I like books where the message is intricately woven into the story line and not so blatant. I could have done without the bantering between Moor's "Fathers" as well, it interrupted the story and became aggravating, I began skipping that as well. I also found the story to be predictable.
Likes: I did like how the author introduced the characters and brought them together. I specifically liked how Puddin kept cooking those bags of chicken, it was so funny, the author mentioned her grabbing one bag seasoning it and grabbing another, I didn't really get that she was going crazy until she opened that deep freezer for more chicken!
I'm still a little confused about the ending though?! (Don't want to give too much away)
All in all I think it's worth the read though.
Good readReview Date: 2007-08-19
I checked this book out by another Christian based author. It sounds like it got some Caribbean flavor, so I got to big it up! Being One - No One is like No Other. High School- The next frontier. v. 1 (High School- the Next Frontier)
A Delight!Review Date: 2006-06-17
Not What I ExpectedReview Date: 2006-03-08
goodgirlbookclubonline.com loved Ain't No Mountain!Review Date: 2004-10-12
Reviewed by Sherna for The GOOD GIRL Book Club www.goodgirlbookclubonline.com
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The only reason I got this book was because I was being rushed in the bookstore. I wish I had been given more time to look around since I'm sure I would have picked up something more interesting.