Washington Books
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Collectible price: $129.95

Sometimes puzzles are not obvious.Review Date: 2006-03-05
Excellent book for anyone interested in puzzlesReview Date: 2005-12-27
It's no puzzle this is a great book!Review Date: 2004-05-29
Information Galore!Review Date: 2001-02-22
Of course not all puzzles are solved by the book...the authors have to leave you something!
If you're handy in the machine shop you'll enjoy the diagrams of wooden blocks and other items that you can make. I've made a few with great results.

ExcellentReview Date: 2001-05-30
Historical significance cannot be stressed enough! Read it!Review Date: 1999-07-28
One of the best ethnic study books I've ever readReview Date: 1999-05-06
GIves perspective on the lives we leadReview Date: 2000-10-02
Collectible price: $15.50

Significant New WorkReview Date: 2002-01-04
Kurata is on the mark.Review Date: 2001-12-27
Reminiscent of Graeme Green's best work Kurata draws the reader into a rich psychological world of men and women caught up in historical forces that sweep them along to inevitable endings. The exotic settings of North Africa, colorfully described in clean declarative prose, amplify the inner turmoil of a hapless Habib caught between his heart's desire and the cruel reality that denies it.
My own postcolonial third world experience was in Somalia at the end of the cold war but the settings and characters differed little from those described in Kurata's novel. I saw many Somalis draw sustenance from their former colonizer's culture even as they moved quickly to their own destruction crushed between the early socialist rhetoric of their postcolonial freedom and the twin barbarisms of dictatorship and cold war politics. Many of today's headlines stem from the cold war and postcolonial issues still unfolding in developing countries. Thus, Habib's dilemma is as relevant today as it was twenty to twenty-five years ago. Kurata, who lived in Tunis, saw to the core and created a world that allows the rest of us to see it too.
The Reluctant Agent: A Spellbinding ReadReview Date: 2001-12-03
A novel of striking insight and power.Review Date: 2002-01-12

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John Marshall in the Seattle Post-IntelligencerReview Date: 1999-01-28
Coburn reminisces: coming of age in America's Deep South.Review Date: 1999-02-11
A dense first novel abou time and memory...Review Date: 1999-02-18
Librarian recommends this first novelReview Date: 1998-12-11

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Wonderful BookReview Date: 2008-01-09
Wonderful bookReview Date: 2007-09-13
Memories from an earlier life of the river.Review Date: 2006-11-02
Anyway, now the Columbia is tamed to a great extent by a series of dams that regulate the flow of water. No longer are there the hundred-foot waves breaking along the bar. This book, though is composed of pre-dam pictures of the river that remain only as memories.
The book is organized in an interesting manner. Just inside the front is a map of the first 200.5 miles of the river. Along the track of the river are a series of numbers. These reflect the page numbers of the pictures that follow. The first number is 5, and the picture on page 5 shows the bar, along with a note that it's 1,243 miles to the source of the river. The pictures range from the mid 1800's to current.
Further into the book are more maps, more pictures. To the old-timer of the area, here will be a collection of memories. To the rest of us, here is simply a spectacular set of photographs of a place that is no more.
BeautifulReview Date: 2006-11-13

Jeffrey Wigand had it easyReview Date: 2003-12-06
You MUST read this book. The more people who know the story, the better. Pharmaceutical cartels aren't as sexy as Big Tobacco, but Stanley Adams' ordeal blows even the dramatised Hollywood account of Big Tobacco's "Insider" completely out of the water.
A real life thriller that leaves fiction a long way behindReview Date: 1998-09-28
Destroys all faith in the European CommunityReview Date: 1998-05-25
Doing what he felt was right for the good of consumers and the EC, he passed cartel and shady dealing information to the European Parliament.
His subsequent arrest, the 'suicide' of his wife, and his ensuing struggle for freedom will bring a genuine tear to the eye of even the hardest reader.
I have tried to contact Stanley Adams and John Prescott (who assisted him in his plight) but to no avail.
All in all a gripping read - at times you will not beleive it is NON-fiction.
A book that must not be missed.Review Date: 1999-06-21

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Excellent..........brings back memories of home............Review Date: 1998-07-02
Excellent cookbook!Review Date: 1998-02-17
Best cookbook I have ever used. Clear, concise, and yummyReview Date: 1997-09-02
The Greatest Cook Book I have ever reviewed.Review Date: 2000-03-03

Used price: $1.43

extremely interestingReview Date: 1996-10-08
A very good synopsis of the 1964 valley campaign.Review Date: 1999-05-30
Season of Fire: The Confederate Strike on WashingtonReview Date: 2000-03-18
great coverage of the Confederate's last big invasionReview Date: 2004-02-21

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Budget Foodie FaveReview Date: 2004-05-15
The cool thing is, you can look in the index for categories of food (say, Barbecue or Breakfast), restaurant names, or even better, neighborhoods. That makes it a fun "let's check out this neighborhood" guide also!
A worthy purchase. I've worn mine out!
just what you needReview Date: 2001-04-28
Save Money on Food that Tastes GreatReview Date: 1999-05-04
When in Seattle, Keep This Guide in Your Car!Review Date: 2001-02-08
Although I grew up in Seattle, we've lived about 45 minutes out of town for over 20 years, and it's hard to keep up with the restaruant scene when we return "home" sporadically. We're the kind of people who prefer to avoid fast food joints and chains, and being school teachers, we're always looking for a good deal. On top of that, we're always open for something off the beaten path. This guide has never failed to tip us off to a satisfying dining experience.
We recently attended a performance in West Seattle, and checked out "Cheap Eats" for some family-friendly restaurants in that area, since we had three kids along with us. We had it narrowed down to three possibilities, but the kids decided on a delightful Italian restaurant. Good food, good price, and great atmosphere for all of us.
Fortunately, many of our favorites from the first edtion survived in the new book. One of them is The Sunlight Cafe in the Roosevelt area, where we can always count on a tasteful vegetarian meal.
This guide has two helpful indexes in the back, one for the type of cuisine--whether it be Japanese, Thai, or Italian--and the other for listings by Seattle neighborhoods. The main body of the book has the restaurant reviews listed alphabetically. The reviews do a helpful job of describing the menu, what's good and what's not, the atmosphere, hours, whether or not credit cards and checks are accepted, and if live music is available.
If you're in Seattle, get this one and keep it in the car!


Excellent book, a must have for zoologistsReview Date: 2006-06-03
excelente review of environmental enrichmentReview Date: 1999-03-21
A nice surpriseReview Date: 2004-04-15
Excellent book!Review Date: 2004-07-19
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This book is an overview of just about everything there is about puzzles.There are all kinds of puzzles such as Crossword,Word Search and many types more commonly called Pencil Puzzles;but that is not what this book is all about. It is somewhat difficult to define Mechanical Puzzles;but if you think of the types of puzzles that you can pick up in your hand,it helps to see the types of puzzles covered in the book.
The authors cover puzzles everyone is familiar with such as Rubik's Cube,Sliding Blocks,Tangrams,Wire,String & Rings,Mazes,Puzzle Locks,Puzzle Boxes,Take-Apart Puzzles,and on and on. I think you get the picture.
The authors cover the history of the puzzles and give hundreds of pictures of them from their collections as well as from collections of other great collectors. The book has many pictures of the creators of puzzles and it is a real treat to put a face to the names which are so well known in the puzzle world.
The book is a pure delight to read and to look at the fascinating array of puzzles;but it doesn't end there. There is all kinds of information on how to go about solving many of the puzzles;and on top of that lots of instructions oh how you can make many of the puzzles. No doubt,the reader could build quite a collection of puzzles,just from the information in the book.
I also find this book to be a real help in finding and identifying puzzles. People don't throw away these puzzles;but they often end up in Flea and Antique Markets,Second Hand Shops,Garage Sales and so forth. This book shows you what to look for and find. Let me give you an example. A while back,I saw one of the Japanese building towers shown on page 65,sitting on a shelf amongst a bunch of bric-a brac,didn't recognize it as a puzzle ,and passed it by. When I saw it in this book,I immediately knew what I had missed. Oh well,live and learn. The point is,if you hope to find puzzles,you got to know what to look for;and this book shows you. Another good example. The Bombay stores carries puzzles at times and recently had 4 very well constructed puzzles.I bought one called "The Comet" which is quite similar to the "Papa-Chuck" puzzle on page 74 and consists of 51 interlocking pieces.
So,if solving,collecting,making or anyting else about puzzles interests you,this book will become a prized possession.It would take many lifetimes for one person to find and enjoy what the authors have assembled in to this excellent book and made it available with extremely high ,color,paper,illustrations ,printing and construction quality;and at the same time a very reasonable cost. While you're at it,why not check out Jerry Slocum's Page on the Web,to see what's going on in the world of puzzles.