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

Florida
The Thirty-third Hour: A Novel
Published in Hardcover by St. Martin's Press (2002-01-29)
Author: Mitchell Chefitz
List price: $24.95
New price: $1.31
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $24.99

Average review score:

Another treasure!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2002-02-25
The gifted storytelling and teachings of Mitchell Chefitz have once again reached the Heart of Texas. Chefitz's latest novel, "The Thirty-Third Hour" was worth the wait.

This book communicates on many levels. The outer layer is a mystery novel; a crime might have been committed and a discovery is underway. The inner layers are a complex and inspiring tale that explore the mysteries within the human spirit.

This tapestry of stories speaks to the heart.
Read this book and find the ones that speak to yours.

A heady blend of mystery, midrash & spirituality
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2002-02-15
Unlike anything I've read. A rabbi sits sleepless in his study, watching videos and reading journals in a desperate attempt to discover why a colleague -- another rabbi! -- so betrayed his trust that the whole congregation is threatened. As mystery, the apparent betrayal generates only mild heat. but mystery (THIS mystery, in any case) is not the main point here. Rather, "Thirty-third Hour" looks at the deeper mysteries of how people relate to one another, their religious traditions and texts, and the nagging uncertainties of existence. Chefitz's book is a wonderful, insightful and provocative exploration of mysticism and midrash. Not only was I unable to put the book down, but I immediately integrated some of the material into a course I teach. What's more, the very day I finished it, I bought two copies as gifts for friends.

the BEST
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2002-02-05
This book is FABULOUS. I couldn't put it down, a real page
turner. I thought I knew the familiar Old Testament stories, but
The Thirty-third Hour puts them into a brand new light. This is a must read for
anyone who thinks there's only one approach to the Bible. PLUS it is a great mystery, with an amazing ending.

A Fabulous Teaching Disguised as a Novel
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2002-01-19
After reading "The Seventh Telling", I had been anxiously awaiting the promised sequel from Mitchell Chevitz. His "The Thirty-Third Hour", bringing back Moshe Katan from the first book exceeded even my prejudiced expectations. With superb skill, he takes us through a review of the critical Torah texts, examining each for deeper Kabbalistic meaning in a setting of family study, all disguised in an intricate suspenseful novel. After the first Chapter, the plot became so intriguing that it is impossible to stop reading until it is exposed, incidentally in the last Chapter. The entire setting is so familiar and logical that you really feel immersed within the story. There is so much to be learned from this "teaching", disguised as a novel, that it should be mandatory reading in every home, school and religious institution. Kudos to Mitchell Chevitz.

A mystery wrapped in a jewish learning course(or vice versa)
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2002-03-02
A great read - both intriguing and instructive. The mystery keeps the pages turning, and before you know it you've been through a Torah course taught in a very unique way.

But beyond that is a new philosophy on the form and future of jewish life and learning - some ideas that really make you think.

It's rare to get so many "benefits" from one book!

Florida
The Unofficial Guide to Walt Disney World 1997 (Unofficial Guide to Walt Disney World)
Published in Paperback by Macmillan General Reference (1996-11)
Author: Bob Sehlinger
List price: $15.95
New price: $0.75
Used price: $0.01

Average review score:

GREAT!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2000-02-14
It is a great book lots of informatio

Pay close attention to the restaurant reviews!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 1998-09-21
I found this book to be fantastic! I was especially impressed with the restaurant reviews. I have been to Disney twice since I read this book and I would not leave home without it. There are so many restaurants to choose from at Disney. This book will help you get through the maze!

Best guide I've found
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 1997-11-17
I will have to say that this book is by far the best guide to the park available, with (for the most part) dead on evaluations of rides and restaurants. My only problem with the book is that some of the reviews of attractions exaggerate their attributes so much that you wind up disappointed. For instance, Star Tours and Body Wars, two similar rides, get high ratings and warnings about their intensity, yet wound up being more like a Wal Mart parking lot ride with a film projected in front of it. A great investment, if only for its touring plans for all of the theme parks.

Offers 1st rate suggestions for the real Disney experience!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 1997-08-25
I have used the guide for my last three trips and I find it very realistic. It also offered answered questions a Disney traveler may only ask once. For instance the chapter on weddings helped me to plan my own. Using the info in the guide coupled with creative planning and common sense I had a dream Disney wedding for $268.00 US dollars. Reception on property, cake made by Disney and memories that will last forever.This years valuable tip comes from the Universal chapter which we look forward to seeing for the first time in September

a definate buy to plan your trip to Walt Disney World
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 1997-07-08
This guide provides a realistic view of planning and participating in a Disney World vacation (and often humorous insites from readers). The book praises that which is good and shoots down that which is not. This is the 3rd unofficial guide I have used. It can seem kind of "commando" at times. Use what you need and store the rest for info. Restaraunt reviews are great. It is very lacking in lodging specifics. You'll need to read another guide book for that. It is behind the times in a few areas but nothing that you can't live with. I'm waiting anxiously for November to arrive so I can purchase the 98 version. If you have never been to Disney World or have only been once before or you have not LEARNED from your past MISTAKES, this is a must if you want a vacation thats less stressfull than most Disney visitors--get this book. Most people do not realize that a Disney vacation can be stressfull. Read and find out why

Florida
Amaryllis
Published in Hardcover by Candlewick (2003-09-15)
Author: Craig Crist-Evans
List price: $15.99
New price: $1.99
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $100.00

Average review score:

I Was Their in 1968-1969...
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-28
I found the little things like the F-U lizards funny. They really sounded like that. I remember the 1st time I heard one. It was on a cold dark rainy night (can't see your hand in front of you even if you are touching your noise) on guard duty at a fire base 40 miles out in the middle of knowwhere. There were a few junkies in my units. Probably more than I knew. I remember one guy named Walker. Guys would start junkie pools and put in a $1 and pick a date when you thought he'd O.D. by. I never really thought of all the families that had kids killed and what they went through. I had a brother 10 years younger than me. Had I been KIA or MIA it would have effected my brother the same way it did Jimmy. My brother & I are very close and talk to each other every day. The Vietnam war was a real waste of time and lives. It is a sad part of US history. To bad we can't learn from history.

Excellent Book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2004-04-26
I loved Amaryllis!!! I also remember the Vietnam era. I felt I could hear Franks voice in his letters to Jimmy. Craig Crist- Evans captured the helpless feeling of Franks questioned existance while fighting his demons.
Hopefully, a POW story will follow!!!!

Amaryllis
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-12-07
Growing up in the time of the Vietnam war and growing up in Florida, I can totally relate to this book. It was, indeed, a time of great turmoil in this country and also brought to the surface many family's individual struggles. Crist-Evans gives us a touching insight into one family's attempts to wrestle with their own personal demons as well as the demons of their country and times. Got a little misty at the end.

Intriguing Book About the Relationship Between Brothers!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-11-02
This book is a great read for teens and their parents! Both will get hooked on the writing style and the communication between father and son. It's great how the two brothers stay in contact through the troubles and confusions! I would definately recommend this book to you!

Intriguing Book About Family!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-11-02
This book caught my attention when I saw the title. I read the first page and I was hooked! This author has a great writing style. He also attracts people of my age with his writing style. If you want to read other books by Craig Crist-Evans please check out Moon Over Tennessee!

Florida
Container Gardens for Florida
Published in Hardcover by Color Garden Publishing (2005-11-07)
Author: Pamela Crawford
List price: $39.95
New price: $26.37
Used price: $28.03

Average review score:

A must have for anyone living in Florida!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-29
Our climate is so very difficult to successfully grow flowers, especially in containers. No more hit and miss attempts, my containers are the most beautiful I have ever grown...now all my fingers have become green thumbs! I highly recomment this book to anyone who wishes to grow beautiful container gardens. It has become my planning and planting bible!

Container Gardens
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-14
One of my gardens always fills up with water anytime it rains, so the soil and plants get washed away. This book shares creative and decorative ideas for having container gardens so the all of the Florida rain does not wash away your garden.

worth every penny
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-08
If only this book was available 20 years ago when I moved to Florida, the time and money I would have saved would have paid for it multiple times. Finally a book that is specific to our hot sun, pool decks, and frequent showers. After reading this book I re-did my pool enclosure container garden using many plants that I already had and it has never looked better. For example, I never thought of mixing bromeliads with my potted flowers even though I've got many varieties crawling all over the property, as do most of my neighbors. This book is full of practical information and great ideas for a truly stunning garden, thank you Pamela Crawford!

Learn How To Create Beautiful Hanging Baskets and Container Gardens
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-16
This book is a must for any gardener in Central or South Florida. The author identifies in detail which plants will perform well and how to artisticly arrange them in pots and hanging baskets. She even has a unique way of displaying hanging baskets on posts. The book is filled with planting information and it has an incredible number of color pictures. This is my favorite gardening book.

Succeed with Container Plantings
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-10
I love puttering with my plants on the lanai, so I was pleased to discover this book after reading a South Florida Sun-Sentinel review. It pointed out that the author has a degree in landscape architecture and tested 10,000 plants in more than 300 containers. That sounds a little overwhelming, but she owns a nursery so can work on that scale.
The book points out that the most common mistakes are overwatering and underplanting (not putting enough plants in the pot). She recommends fiberglass pots which don't wick away the moisture like terra cotta and are more lightweight. Plants she particularly recommends include bromeliads, succulents, dragon wing begonias, palms and crotons.

Florida
Florida's Fabulous Reptiles and Amphibians
Published in Paperback by World Publications (CA) (1991-06)
Authors: Peter Carmichael and Winston Williams
List price: $15.95
New price: $5.94
Used price: $3.66
Collectible price: $15.95

Average review score:

Must have for FL relos
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-04-03
This book was given to me when I relocated to Florida, and I have thanked my benefactor many times over. Living in Florida means living with and respecting the wild critters, who are part of the beauty of this wonderful state. The colorful photos make it easy to identify the animals who slither through my new world and give me valuable information about which ones I should admire from afar.

Outstanding Book
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-16
I would like to say that I am extremely happy with this book. The pictures are huge and are printed on extremely high quality glossy paper. I would recommend this book to everyone that lives in Florida or is considering moving here.

the perfect resource for your children
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-12-16
we LIVE in central florida and my nature loving kids are constantly bringing home wildlife. the vivid accurate photos in this book allow them to ID their living treasures with confidence. (then they get additional info from the internet). the book is also full of useful info, and conservation topics.

Surprisingly informative, and "fabulous" photos
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-12-12
My kids and I went on a kick of reading reptile books at a difficulty level similar to this one. After a week of going through various titles, I was surprised to learn more about alligators from the short section in this book than I had learned from all the previous stuff we had read together! Ditto for cottonmouths, and other reptiles.

The photographs are superb, and there are enough pictures of each species to give a true feel for what it looks like instead of a single profile view of each.

Just wonderful!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2002-08-21
If it's slithering, clawing or hopping around your Florida yard you'll find it in this book. The photographs are very well detailed for easy identification. I also recommend Florida's Fabulous Insects for other creepy crawlies.

Florida
The Hanged Man
Published in Hardcover by Kensington (1998-06-01)
Author: Trish MacGregor
List price: $23.00
New price: $9.89
Used price: $0.32
Collectible price: $23.00

Average review score:

It'll Hang You On
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2001-07-30
What would happen if the Government could help people learn to use their Psychic powers for spying and murder. Fifteen years ago, they did just that.

When Andrew Steele, a prominent psychiatrist who had been working for the government is found dead, and his wife Rae missing, Detective Sheppard goes to work. His job could depend on solving this case. When he meets Mira Morales, a psychic, many questions evolve. For instance, what does the death of Steele have to do with the death of her husband? Read and find out.

This was a very good book. A little slow starting out but reaches a crescendo and comes crashing down in a wonderful conclusion. Ms. MacGregor did a wonderful job with the characters in this book. You will find yourself easily liking Rae and Sheppard and feeling just a little bit sorry for Hal.

My only negative comment would be that Ms. MacGregor could have put a little more action in this book. The few action scenes were good and well described. However, though not packed with action it is "Intense" for lack of a better word. I truly enjoyed this book.

This was my first MacGregor book. I think it was a good choice and certainly won't be my last. If you like Mystery or Detective novels, this is a book for you.

Worthy Suspense Fare
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-01-23
SUMMARY: The novel that introduces psychic bookstore owner Mira Morales, her feisty grandmother Nadine, and precociously impish daughter Annie, The Hanged Man is the story of Fort Lauderdale floating detective Wayne Shepherd, searching for the killer of famed criminologist Andrew Steele and the disappearance of his wife Rae. His search leads him to a tip phoned in by a reluctant Mira, whom he draws into this web of intrigue. Also on the trail of the perpetrator is FBI big-wig Lenora Douglas, who chaired a covert operation called Delphi with the late Steele. Solving his murder is imperative to her admonition by her superior to erase all traces of Delphi.

WHY YOU'LL LIKE IT: If you enjoy elements of the supernatural in your novels, or are an aficionado of psychic detective fiction, you'll immensely enjoy this story. Mira is written as a strong, brave heroine with human foibles, and her family life is as integral to the story as her unique abilities. Shep is a rarity in the detective fiction genre - a masculine, stalwart guy who is not so entrenched in his beliefs about the system or his own ability that he is willing to disregard pertinent information, regardless if it comes from a sense other than the usual five.

WHY YOU WON'T: MacGregor attempts to invoke some sympathy for the killer from the reader, but it just doesn't wash. Everyone has a sob story, and his isn't so terrible that it excuses his actions. However, he is cleverer than most villains, and his preternatural ability is terrifying.

BOTTOM LINE: Suspenseful, action-packed, and romantic, this is a wonderful offering from a woman who always delivers compulsively readable fiction. Highly recommended.

NO NOOSE IS GOOD NOOSE
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2003-12-10
MacGregor plunges into a psychic world of terror in this well-conceived and written thriller. All the usual ingredients are here: covert Government experiment using psychis to advance their own means in the guise of helping the government; a dashing cop, Wayne Sheppard; a psychic heroine, Mira Morales; a devilish handsome villain, Hal Bennet; a beguiling, ambitious and deadly female FBI agent, Lenora Fletcher; a kidnapped beauty who finds herself falling for her captor, and assorted other psychics and heroes/villains.
MacGregor pulls out some surprises, and keeps the action brisk and exciting. MacGregor, an obvious horror novel/movie fan, utilizes this love in scenes reminiscent of Farris' "The Fury" and King's "Carrie."
A very enjoyable read.

All about Psychics!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2002-11-26
My wife got me in a library one day. I hated reading books but wen she was searching for her historical romances, i stumbled upon a book, kept deep inside and dark. i grabbed it out of curiousity. well the title really attracted me ALOT- The Hanged Man. I've always loved thrillers, murders etc. so i read the front pages and couldnt stop reading even wen my wife went away! i didnt really know if i wanted to borrow the book cos i was not a bookworm or some sort. but i did the right thing by borrowing. its very very nice! i love it! psychics and murders. everything is nice. now im starting to like psychics plot! anyone recommend me a book pls?

A good psychic thriller with a conspiracy twist...
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2001-08-30
T.J. MacGregor has gotten my attention with this novel. I am fan of mysteries and thrillers with a psychic character in them, MacGregor definitely delivers a tale tight with psychic abilities. "Project Delphi" spawned seven psychics taken from prisons, trained by the FBI, and used as psychic assassins and spies. Now, years after the project was disbanded when three of its members escaped, the seemingly random murder of a criminal psychologist - and the kidnapping of his wife - is anything but random after all.
Enter Mira Morales. A psychic who tuned in on the murder before it happened, and a woman for whom the police have no respect, she just might be the only thing capable of unravelling the conspiracy, uncovering the criminals, and saving the kidnapped woman's life... if she can live that long with three trained psychics after her, and only one detective on her side.
Definitely a thriller, this book had me gripped. There's only a few parts to the book that had me annoyed, but they were fairly minor (there's a whopping big coincidence to the book's plot that made me twitch). Moreover, the psychic abilities take centre stage without causing harm to the plot nor the characterizations. This was a good read, and fans of Kay Hooper, Margaret Lawrence, and Joseph Glass should like it.
'Nathan

Florida
Key of Sea
Published in Mass Market Paperback by Medallion Press (2005-08-01)
Author: Mary Stella
List price: $6.99
New price: $171.65
Used price: $0.42

Average review score:

Captures the Middle Keys to Perfection
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-01-04
As a "local" I generally cringe when reading books set here in the Keys because they do not reflect the "end of the road", anything goes crazy residents who live here, work here and deal with an endless summer vacation. Mary Stella nails it. From the opening scene where Dora bonds with a stuffed trophy fish and takes it home in the divorce settlement, to the island fever bungalow renovation after a bender at the local bar, she gets the insanity and reality of living in paradise to a "T". Her hero is the perfect example of all the hidden gems we have hiding here under the guise of island bums and his patient, loving, acceptance of Dora's quirks as he brings her back to the land that civilization missed is what romance is really all about. This is not a quickie, oh-baby-you-are-so-hot-I-have-to-have-you romance. This is a slow burn under a tropical sun. If you are looking for a plastic Club Med then read someone else. If you are looking for the real paradise of Margaritaville, buy both of Stella's books today.

A Heartwarming Love Story That Will Touch The Romantic Soul, Within Us All!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-11-17
KEY OF SEA is the story of one woman's Floridian journey of life that will come full circle in search of the truly wonderful and vibrant woman she had left behind. Dora Lee will find more than she would or could have hoped for. From the disappointments and betrayal of her ex-husband to the boy back home. This beautifully written story encompasses all the warm feelings that speak to our heart and transports the mind. Bravo, Ms. Stella, you have a hit with KEY OF SEA and this should be an award-winning year for you! KEY OF SEA is a faultless five hearts and a must read!

Dora Lee's husband, J. Walter Morrison III, has just handed her divorce papers after being his trophy wife for fourteen years. It is back to plain old Dora Lee Hanson who is a discarded, has-been socialite without any purpose now. Treasure Coast mansion will no longer be her home; she must be out within a week. At thirty-nine years of age, Dora Lee feels old and useless. With her tail tucked between her legs, she will go back home to her conch roots to a place she'd never thought she would be living again, Hanson's Marina and Mall with her Grandpa Willie. In truth, the Hanson's Marina and Mall is just a glorified row of broken down storefronts. Could her life get any worse?

As always, Grandpa Willie will have his arms and heart open for his "Baby Girl." Dora Lee had gone to live with her grandparents when her mother and father were killed. It is just her Grandpa Willie now and she will need him more than ever! When Dora Lee gets there, it is to the nightly ritual of watching the sun setting on the horizon. All the storeowners gather on the front porch every night, it is a tradition. None of them look happy to see her, including Bobby her best friend Jo Jo's brother. What happened to the gangly kid whose heart she broke? He is no longer a boy, but a big green-eyed hunk that she finds attractive. Things are not looking good for Dora Lee.

KEY OF SEA is by Mary Stella. This book follows in the footsteps of ALL KEYED UP and should be called, "The Key Of Success," because this book is brilliant! Ms. Stella has written a splendidly poignant story that touched this reader. Dora Lee's fascinating pilgrimage back to her old haunts and friends will grab you from the moment you open this book. You will become possessed with the comfort of Dora Lee's conch roots as this story unfolds. From her Grandpa Willie, who can at times have Key Disease (a slow moving pace). To Dora Lee's best friend Jo Jo, whose hyper and optimistic personality will have you laughing with glee. The storyline and characters are clear-cut and precise with a clarity that rings like a crystal flute, just magnificent!

This reviewer highly recommends KEY OF SEA and it is a keeper for her. If you only get to read one contemporary romance this year, please, make it KEY OF SEA. Get your copy when it hits the shelves August 2005!

Reviewed by © Janalee Ruschhaupt, 2005.

Mary Stella has done it again...only better!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-10-09
I love the Florida Keys, and Key of Sea brings it to life so realistically, you can smell the salt air. Dora Lee is a heroine most of us can relate too--a little bit damaged by life and working on her self esteem. And Bobby is just the medicine we need, er, I mean that Dora Lee needs for her condition. Not only is this a delightful romance, but Mary Stella uses fun Keys references in creative ways, sneaking them into metaphors and similies that will make the reader chuckle.
Read this book! And if you haven't already read All Keyed Up, get both.

Another Delightful Read
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-12-05
This is Mary Stella's second book and is more enjoyable than her first endeavour if that is possible.

Dora Lee Hanson leaves the Florida Keys for the bright lights and hopefully a modelling career. Instead she marries a wealthy magnate, J. Walter Morrison III, but after fourteen years of marriage he divorces her for a younger "Trophy" wife. Feeling crushed and rejected, Dora goes home to her grandfather who will welcome her with open arms. Bobby Daulton was crushed when Dora Lee left the Keys the first time. When he sees Dora again after all these years, he realizes his feelings for her have not changed. Bobby decides that this time his "trophy" is not getting away from him and he has every intention of reeling her in before she gets away. The patience of Bobby and the skittishness of Dora makes this a fun, light-hearted, heart warming and touching read. The setting could not have been better for these characters and the storyline works so well for them. Mary Stella has written another winner and leaves this reader eager for more books from her set in the Keys.

Absolutely Fabulous!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-07-16
When trophy wife Dora Lee Hanson gets traded in for a shinier model, she returns to her home in the keys with nothing more than a not-so-lucrative divorce settlement, her ex-husband's stuffed tarpon and a wicked case of Whipped Dog Syndrom. But don't feel too bad for Dora Lee. Her journey toward self-discovery and true love is only beginning. In this heart-warming, laugh out loud tale of new beginnings in the face of setbacks, Mary Stella provides her readers with a highly entertaining read. Her portrayal of the Florida Keys is delightfully accurate and her characters are people you love to root for. If you want a book that makes you laugh, makes you think, and makes you smile, I highly recommend Key of Sea.

Florida
Kick Ass: Selected Columns of Carl Hiaasen
Published in Paperback by Berkley Trade (2001-04-01)
Author: Carl Hiaasen
List price: $13.95
New price: $4.00
Used price: $1.89

Average review score:

I Wonder What Happened to that Jeb Bush guy?
Helpful Votes: 18 out of 19 total.
Review Date: 2002-07-24
There was a brief stage in my college career when I hoped to get into newspapers. Unfortunately, I'm a very slow writer. I would sweat bullets over remarkably simple stories, and my editorial prowess was equally dubious. It was at that time I discovered Carl Hiaasen and his remarkably subversive novel, TOURIST SEASON. His author's bio indicated that his newspaper setting was drawn from authentic experience -- he was a columnist for the Miami Herald.

Unfortunately, the web was just in its infancy, and access to Hiaasen's newspaper writing was apparently one of the few exclusive benefits of living in South Florida. KICK ASS turns out to be just the sort of collection that I had been craving for many years.

KICK ASS does not disappoint. It begins with a nifty introduction that provides a smattering of biographical information on Hiaasen, as well as a context for the subjects and tone of his columns. Hiaasen clearly resides in a longstanding tradition of muckraking American journalism, and I mean that in the best possible way.

This is no mere sampling of his work -- there are more than 200 columns here, organized by topic, and just about every one of them meets the mandate stated in the title of the collection. Hiaasen has a passion for the environment, consumer protection, crime control, and good government. His portrait of a Florida reeling after the flood of growth and development of the last three decades is even starker than the one in his novels. Speaking of the novels, it is also fun to see where he "lifts" some of his ideas for the things that happen in his books. The overamorous dolphin of NATIVE TONGUE appears in KICK ASS as well.

If there is anything to regret about this book, it is that the topical organization often generates confusion for the reader when certain figures re-occur. Some of them almost develop a roguish charm. After all, us non-Floridians don't have to live with the direct consequences of local corruption. A little wrap-up to let us know how some of the notorious figures and controversies ended up would have been nice. I always hated that device at the end of his novels, but it would be perfect for a collection like this.

Another Must-Read from Hiiasen
Helpful Votes: 23 out of 26 total.
Review Date: 2000-06-26
As a lifelong resident of Florida (albeit a ninetten-year-old one), I have seen Florida at its best and worst. Hiiasen's columns represented in this book illustrate the "politics" and people of a great but confused state. If you live in Florida, have visited, or even have heard of it, this book will both amuse and depress you, as is the nature of the state. Everyone will identify with the outrage Hiiasen evokes over the disregard of the envirnment, the sham of politics, and the overall life in Miami, and indeed, all of Florida. This book will remind readers of what Marjorie Kinnan-Rawlings and Marjorie Douglass once experienced in Florida, and tells both the good and the bad of what has happened after a hundred years of exploitation If you want a non-stop laugh and a big dose of reality, read this collection - it's one of the best books in print right now.

it really kicks a__
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-07-30
This book is; to borrow another Hiaasen title a real Hoot. He is without a doubt not only informative,and thought provoking but he does it while leaving his readers in stiches. I think he shows a genuine affection for the idiots he writes about

If you like his novels, you will love his columns
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-04-13
I've never set foot in Florida, but I can't get enough Carl Hiaasen. I've read every single novel he's written and I have to say his columns are just as worthy a read.

From the opening column of the book (Carl Hiaasen's Florida Stress Test) to some of the more serious writings (the group of prostitutes he talks to, the crumbling county health building) Hiaasen writes it all with a razor-sharp flair and zeal that can't be matched. You know this guys just loves going to work every day.

Who else would refer to the newly elected mayor of Miami as a "pernicious little ferret"?

Keep them coming, Carl. I'm waiting on Volume 3.

Most columns are winners
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2006-07-06
Sidenote: I also wrote this review for "Paradise Screwed" b/c it's the same book, just different selected columns.

If you've ever read a Carl Hiassen book (or Tim Dorsey for that matter) and you wonder where he became so cynical, or where he gets his outrageous ideas from, read this book. Taking only the best of his newspaper columns, this book gives little glimpses into the absolute mess that was Miami/South Florida in the 80's/90's. Taking on anything from connected land developers, to cartel-backed politicians, to prostitute employing evangelists.

Each column is 1 to 1.5 pages in length making it the perfect length to read here and there, or big bites at a time. If you're a fan of Carl Hiassen, try this book not for Hiassen's opinion, but just for the shear knowledge of ludicrisiosity he imparts.

Florida
Manatee Blues (Wild at Heart)
Published in Library Binding by Tandem Library (2001-03)
Author: Laurie Halse Anderson
List price: $12.95
New price: $12.95

Average review score:

AWESOME !!!!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2004-02-06
This book was so awesome I felt like I was in Florida ! This story was about a girl named Brenna who really liked manatees. One day Dr. Mac
decided to take Maggie,Zoe,and Brenna to Florida to visit a manatee
rescue center,that needs money really bad.You will have to read the
book to find out what happens next. I really enjoyed this story because
I love animals,especially manatees!

MANATEE BLUES
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2004-07-22
This is the fourth book in the WILD AT HEART series about young vet volunteers. You've read about Maggie, Sunita, and David. This book is about Brenna, and manatees. Manatees are large marine mammals. They look something like floating elephants. They're related to elephants, too, as well as to aardvarks and hyraxes. Did you know that? Brenna did. She loves manatees. She did a school project on them and got an A+. Now she gets to travel by airplane to Florida with Dr. Mac and her two granddaughters, Maggie and Zoe, to work in a rescue mission for manatees. And she is jazzed! She takes along her camera with its zoom lens, and she can't wait to meet Dr. Mac's former pupil, Gretchen, who runs the rescue mission. Of course, her mother's parting words, "Be polite, watch your temper, and think before you open your mouth," get Brenna into trouble --- when she forgets them!

They no sooner arrive at the mission than Gretchen and her assistant Carlos get a phone call about a wounded manatee that needs help. Brenna wants to go along, and she makes Dr. Mac mad by asking Gretchen to let them. But Gretchen says it's okay. When they find the manatee, they discover that it's Violet, an old friend of Gretchen and Carlos. She's been struck by a boat. The propeller ripped into her back, broke her ribs, and punctured a lung. She's been floating, helpless and in pain, for weeks. Gretchen and Carlos don't know whether they can save her or not. When they get her back to the mission, Gretchen lets Dr. Mac and the girls watch the surgery.

While Violet is recuperating from the first surgery, Gretchen takes Dr. Mac and the girls on a floating restaurant cruise to the Gulf of Mexico. Is that neat or what? While Brenna tries to figure out which fork to use (she has three), she notices an abandoned baby manatee thrashing in the water. Gretchen uses Brenna's camera with its telephoto lens to see that the baby is tangled in the rope of a crab pot. The tide is coming in, and the baby will drown unless someone rescues him. Gretchen puts on a life jacket and jumps overboard. Brenna thinks she needs help and jumps in, too --- without a life jacket. Gretchen isn't happy about that, and Dr. Mac is steamed about it.

They rescue the baby and take it to the mission. Carlos says Brenna can name him. She names him Key Lime. That's her pie that was melting while she helped Gretchen rescue him. Key Lime needs an adopted mother, and he wants Violet to volunteer. But Violet is getting worse, so Gretchen and Carlos have to operate on her again. But there is even more terrible news than that. The mission is in debt. It needs hundreds of thousands of dollars just to survive, and Gretchen's bank loan is denied. Even if they can save Violet and Key Lime, they can't save the mission. Or can they? I'll give you some clues: Brenna's camera and a baseball game. Got it? Then you'd better read the book!

--- Reviewed by Tamara Penny

Wild at Heart
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2001-09-10
I absolutely LOVE any Wild at Heart Books, and I can never put them down. I would strongly suggest that you buy this book for you, friend, or a family member. Anyone could find something that they enjoy in these books!!!

WOW!!!!
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2002-04-08
This book is very intriguing, I couldn't put it down! Brenna and two other friends (Zoe and Maggie) went to Florda to study manatees. When they get there they meet a marine biologist who works at a rescue center for manatees and other animals. This place needs ALOT of money to stay open. When Brenna takes a picture of a famous baseball player driving his boat too fast where manatees may be, and then shows it to him after his baseball game... Did she just save the rescue center? I suggest this book to anyone who likes water animals, and alot of adventure.

CRAZY about '' Manatee Blues ''
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2003-01-07
I think this book is AWESOME it's my faivorite in the series !
It's about this girl named Brenna who gose to Florida with some other volunteers from Wild at Heart animal clinic to reaserch Manatees and really makes a diference. I would recamend this book to any persone that likes water animals or just wants a Great book.

Florida
Mirage: Florida and the Vanishing Water of the Eastern U.S.
Published in Paperback by University of Michigan Press/Regional (2008-04-21)
Author: Cynthia Barnett
List price: $18.95
New price: $12.16
Used price: $13.36

Average review score:

AlG
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-21
Outstanding book. It shows us how we let our environment get downgraded and is an important weapon for preventing further damage. Amazon price was good and service great.

Heartfelt Science
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-29
Mirage is a work of science and passion. The writer has focused on that most important, scarce, and necessary resource: fresh water. She explores the political decisions and the business decisions that have affected the water supply in Florida and the rest of the East Coast of the United States. Her research is extensive; her prose is crisp; and her cause is sanity in the management of growth. I recommend this book for any reader who has an interest in science, nature, or business.

Quenched my thirst
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-08
A very thoughtful, well-written book that delves into the science, history and politics of water in Florida and manages to do so in an interesting and readable manner. Cynthia Barnett clearly indentifies the problems and offers reasonable solutions without becoming judgemental or dogmatic. A must read for anyone living in the State of Florida or planning to do so and highly recommended for everyone else!

A 'must' not just for Eastern U.S. libraries, but for any collection on environmental issues and challenges.
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-27
Discussions of America's water problems usually are limited to the West, so it's eye-opening to view a title which is the first to call attention to the disappearance of fresh water from Florida to the Great Lakes. From the high demands of newly-sprawling Florida subdivisions to freshwater aquifers which are disappearing elsewhere, MIRAGE blends investigative journalism with environmental and science history to prove an essential survey of problems and solutions. A 'must' not just for Eastern U.S. libraries, but for any collection on environmental issues and challenges.

Diane C. Donovan
California Bookwatch

Mirage: Groundbreaking study of U.S. water issues
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-04
Perhaps you're like me. You live in a water rich region of the U.S., on top of one of the nation's most productive aquifers and a stone's throw from the Great Lakes -- one of the world's great reservoirs of fresh water.

Water scarcity is not your problem, right? Let all those fools moving to Florida, Texas, California and Nevada worry whether FEMA will have to roll into towns during the next drought and pass out bottled water. You can still turn on your grass sprinkler and catch fish in the local pond without worry.

If that's where you are when it comes to water, Cynthia Barnett has news for you -- someday Las Vegas and Miami will be coming for your water, too. And they'll set their sights on draining your fish pond dry.

If you're already in Florida and can't understand why water bills are going up in a subdivision surrounded by water-soaked scenery, Barnett has some tough love for you, too.

Reading Mirage will open your eyes. Barnett's writing is so (pardon the pun) fluid that even the most unsophisticated novice will come away with the ability to confidently explain why bottled "spring" water may actually be less safe to drink than what comes out of your kitchen tap.

The book is a must read for Floridians. It uses the state -- an extreme example of water policy gone bad -- to instruct readers in the basics tenents of environmental protection and why it matters to everyone. Why should Floridians care if Atlanta suburbanites water their lawns? Because in a drought the rivers that begin in Georgia won't have enough water to feed Florida's bays down stream. And without the perfect freshwater/saltwater balance at the outlet to the Gulf of Mexico, valuable shellfish are completely wiped out. Suddenly there's an economic problem, too.

The most important lesson of Mirage is that water scarcity is a national problem. Consider the water wealthy Great Lakes. Even residents of the upper Midwest can't relax. Barnett shows how southern lawmakers, becoming more powerful by the day thanks to population shifts and redistricting, have been plotting to pipe, truck and barge Lakes region freshwater south. Others have already tried to export it beyond the U.S. You'd think the Lakes have plenty of water to share, but as Florida has proven, even the most water-rich region can see its eco-system wrecked once the water starts getting pumped out.

The most instructive chapter in the book is called "Priceless." Barnett demonstrates that perhaps the best strategy to protect water is to price it right, to make it really worth something to us. But Americans so far refuse to accept the notion of drinking water for anything but a dirt cheap price. Consider the story of Tuscon, Ariz. After a drought, the city council tried to add the cost of finding future water reserves into consumers' bills. Within a year every council member was voted out of office.

But as Barnett shows, Americans can't pretend forever that water is a right and should be nearly free. We have to be taught to conserve. We're doing better in some ways. But Mirage proves we still have a lot of work to do.


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