Connecticut Books
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BasketballReview Date: 2004-06-15
Love the Huskies, Hate the Book...Review Date: 2000-02-21
If you've cheered even once....Review Date: 2000-02-04
Couldn't put it down!Review Date: 2000-01-23
A Fist-Pumping Journey through UConn HoopsReview Date: 2000-05-30
Calhoun writes like he talks, quick and witty (yes, it's funny!). It is an effective, fast-break style that has readers feeling like they are participating in one of Calhoun's practices. It is never boring, always moving. If you love UConn hoops, you will love this book -- guaranteed.
Calhoun is never chest-thumping. His tone is honest, warm, and humble. He is even a little self-effacing (hey, not even The Coach is above reproach).
Calhoun takes us from his days at Northeastern and prior, through the Dream Season, and into the X's and O's of the Championship Season. You will want read this slowly because you won't want it to end! There are a plethora of tid-bits and stories about the Calhoun era that even the most avid fans will respond with frequent shouts of "Wow!" and pumps of the fist.
Thanks Coach, and thanks, Leigh -- two guys who bleed Husky blue just like the rest of us in Husky Nation!


a new take on the paranormalReview Date: 2008-05-08
Mostly very interesting, but...Review Date: 2008-03-05
The writer could have gotten his point across without this sort of commentary, especially when "liberals" are more inclined to be open-minded about subjects like the paranormal and not treat the believer as is he/she is a crackpot. This was the first book I have read by Mr. Eno, but I will never read another because of these comments. If you want to sell a book or want the reader to read more, don't insult them.
excellent ghost bookReview Date: 2007-07-12
GrippingReview Date: 2007-10-03
I was struck by the way Eno would attempt to explain any paranormal activity in non-paranormal terms. This approach gave quiet credence to everything from his personal written accounts to the photographs in the book.
Furthermore, I enjoyed Eno's scientific approach to explaining the existence of ghosts. I found it very plausible, and supported much more strongly than previous explanations I had heard. Eno laid evidence as he saw it on the table repeatedly throughout the book, but always in what I felt were appropriate moments.
If you enjoy ghost stories, paranormal events, or even speculating on the afterlife this is the book for you.
Fascinating, unique, and plausibleReview Date: 2008-05-04
The theories he poses go a long way in explaining the extreme and persistent déjà vu I have experienced all my life. The chapter on parasites gave me much insight into what that shadowy little wisp I had in my benign little middle-class house was, why it gained strength over the course of almost two years, and then turned not-so-nice after all. A trusted psychic told me at the time that the thing I had was not human, and that I had picked it up through Tarot cards, both of which Mr. Eno verifies with his explanations.
This is paranormal investigation at its finest. Paul Eno has set himself apart as a top-notch investigator of the paranormal. He and his team investigate, with methodical precision, each of these ghosts, poltergeists/parasites, and "tortured souls" with intellect and compassion. After reading this book, I will NEVER touch a Ouija Board again. Much information is here for the taking - highly recommended for anyone seeking an alternative explanation which is not afraid to deviate from the norm.

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The Forbidden SchoolhouseReview Date: 2008-09-16
Amazing true story!Review Date: 2008-09-15
The Forbidden SchoolhouseReview Date: 2008-01-01
A Great ReadReview Date: 2007-07-28
What a story of courage!Review Date: 2008-01-13

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A So So Read 2-1/2 STARSReview Date: 2007-02-28
A book that stays with youReview Date: 2007-04-19
Marie Bostwick does it again!Review Date: 2006-11-03
You will fall in love with this book and want it to last forever!Review Date: 2007-02-09
Just wonderful!Review Date: 2006-10-29
This is one of the best novels I have ever read, and by a "newbie" so to speak. This is only her second novel, but is written as if the words just flowed effortlessly from her fingertips. I just love the way she puts her words together and by the time you finish this book you feel connected to the characters in a way that doesn't easily leave you once you close the cover and put the book on the shelf.
The story line revolves around World War II, but is not about the war itself, although historical facts and a few actual incidents and characters are portrayed. It is about a young German girl, Elise, who is sent by her father to live in the States just prior to war-time. Her mother is dead and her father is an officer in the German military and fears for his daughter's safety. An American minister and his family take her in to live with them on their tobacco farm in Connecticut and consequently raise her and love her as one of their own. The other children in the family find her strange and resent her, and Elise struggles to earn their approval and trust, in a land totally unlike her own. After the war breaks and hatred spreads for the Germans and for the loss of American life, Elise is the target of prejudice and hatred in the town where they live, just for what she is and where she came from. The reader accompanies Elise in her struggle to forgive, to understand, to grow, and yes to love, all the people that influenced her on her journey into womanhood. It is amazingly written and wonderful. Don't miss it. Buy it today, and pick up an extra one for a gift. Christmas is right around the corner. Thanks Marie, for a wonderful story. This is a great discussion book for our book club.
October, 2006

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A book I couldn't put down!Review Date: 1999-02-08
Fast paced story.Review Date: 1999-01-13
A thrilling page turner!Review Date: 1998-12-29
For being a 360 degree turn in genre, I was intrigued with "Good Neighbors." I liked the characters and was totally fooled by the twists and turns in plot. I never guessed the ending! Recommendation: Get the book while it is available or you will be out of luck.
Mr. Bechard has another hit on his hands!
A page turner that to don't want to end.Review Date: 1998-11-29
Bechard Hits another homerunReview Date: 1998-10-21

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A Neat GiftReview Date: 2008-07-28
This past summer, we had relatives from the mid-west who visited and were impressed with New England and especially Connecticut, so we purchased another copy to send to them. It gives you a taste of Connecticut and leaves you looking for more. So hopefully they will come back to visit Connecticut again.
Bit SmallReview Date: 2007-12-21
A Delightful Journey through the Nutmeg StateReview Date: 2007-10-05
The author takes us on a journey through a State that is vibrant in all of its natural offerings. His first stop is "that charming little archipelago off the Branford coast" - The Thimble Islands, one of which Monahan describes with characteristic eloquence: "a lone house sits possessively astride its rock like an insect on a bread crumb." His collection concludes with a look at Connecticut's lighthouses. He asks the reader, "Who isn't drawn to the image of the faithful, unwavering light flashing high above the crashing waves or through a gathering mist?" Who isn't indeed!
Monagan artfully captures with vivid imagery the finer points of the Connecticut locales he has chosen to profile, including such interesting spots as The Sleeping Giant, Hammonasset Beach, Cornwall Bridge (a 137 year old covered bridge that spans the Housatonic River between Sharon and West Cornwall, Gillette Castle, and Castle Craig. He takes us along the Merritt Parkway and the Post Road, to the Waterbury Train Tower, to the Town Greens and the State Capitol, and shows us with luscious language what makes each attraction special in its own unique Connecticut kind of way.
This book is a wonderful resource and great conversation starter. Every Nutmegger should have one on the coffee table!
A multi-angled window on this place of American origin, Connecticut...Review Date: 2007-06-22
Pondering "things most of us see but take for granted, that could take a closer look," Monagan graphs a deft "iconography" of place combining sensibility and research, humor, local color, and common sense. If Connecticut "sit[s] between Rhode Island clam chowder and Manhattan clam chowder without a chowder to call our own," there is much else to savor and praise. From witch hazel to tobacco sheds and steamed cheeseburgers and the Cornwall Bridge, "Connecticut Icons" is a work the great Walt Whitman would love and honor as bric-a-brac of the American sublime.
There is a superb essay on Connecticut as ethos and place by the great American poet, Wallace Stevens, who spent the better part of his life in the insurance business and poetry vocation in Hartford, where he had migrated from Pennsylvania Bucks County. It is the best meditation I had ever read on what makes Connecticut abide as place, value, and style in some thrifty, pragmatic way. "It is a question of coming home to the American self in the sort of place in which it was formed," Stevens writes, affirming his ties to "an origin of hardihood, good faith and good will." I go back to it now and then, for inspiration and an overview of this "place of origin." In these bleak times, we need to be reminded of such values. Steven's essay is the only thing that comes close--though in a far less detailed and dated way-- to the under-stated beauty, joy, and insight of "Connecticut Icons."
CT IconsReview Date: 2007-01-09

Reflection of a TimeReview Date: 2007-08-16
I went to a prep school. There's a lot to remind me of that time -- the oddity of being alone in a place that spends so much emphasis on rigid rituals, at a time in life when you need personal attention.
I suppose it reminds me a lot of "Seasoned Timber," another novel about private schools in New England.
It is not just the subject but really the approach. Yates has a way of spending a lot of time telling you what is happening. Some people prefer a writer who shows you things. The benefit is that as a reader you don't miss out on any of the underlying psychological weight among the characters. The cost is that you're one step removed from experiencing the story.
A Good NovelReview Date: 2003-07-13
His short coming-of-age "A Good School" is something of a departure from the typical Yatesian heartbreak and squalor. In fact, the tone here, despite some shockingly grim and disturbing moments, is mostly upbeat. We follow the adolescent adventures of a boy named William Grove, a man with no real father figure (his parents are divorced) who tries to make a man out of himself after he is shipped to a boarding school designed for "individual" children who don't fit in elsewhere. Left to his own devices, without any real encouragement from the school or at home, and after several difficult missteps that nearly cement him as a permanent outcast, Grove slowly and unknowingly begins to make a name for himself by throwing himself into the only small door he is ever offered - the offices of the school paper.
The cast of the book is rounded out by in intriguing hodge-podge of boarding school characters, equally flailing around in their quest to become men. Even though their stories are unfolding off to the side, Yates somehow manages to tell each of their stories with a richness and intensity that belies their sparseness.
This is ground that has been covered before. One cannot help but think of other prep school novels (like Salinger's "Catcher in the Rye" and Hesse's "Beneath the Wheel") but even in familiar territory, Yates stakes out a claim all his own. This is a short, spare book filled with dozens of stories that build and develop throughout the novel. Old Yates fans will be pleased with this surprising detour into the world of adolescence, the unusual lightness of his tone, and the freshness of his view from this familiar literary perch. For new readers, I would definitely suggest reading the novel "Revolutionary Road," or some of the short stories first. But all in all, a must-read for everyone. I recommend it highly.
The Master at WorkReview Date: 2008-01-07
YATES CONSISTENTLY DELIVERS GREAT BOOKSReview Date: 2004-05-05
He is a master of getting at the core of human emotion. The frustration, anger, jealousy, pity, and loss that his characters experience is so real and raw that the reader almost feels uncomfortable at times just reading the words - almost as if Yates has transformed his audience into morbidly fascinated voyeurs, unable to look away but knowing that they should.
If one is to accomplish nothing else in their literary pursuits, they should take it upon themselves to read every book that Yates ever published. It is amazing what one can take away about themselves after reading his novels.
Unsung YatesReview Date: 2007-02-12
That said, readers should know that Yates' book is much more graphic than either Knowles' or Salinger's. No, it's not over-the-top or anything like that (being written in 1978), but it does have its "boys-will-be-disgusting-boys" moments, with the protagonist, William Grove, being one of the victims early in its pages.
The book is set in northern Connecticut -- a typical prep school milieu -- only it's the war years (1941-44) and this school is for boys that most prestigious private schools won't touch. Grove, of course, is perceived as a loser by the other boys and has to make a name for himself as he best can. Meanwhile, Yates treats us to a wide array of characters, from the teachers to the boys to a certain teacher's daughter, and somehow holds it together. We are treated to the usual issues of young love and lust -- as well as to the equally-usual issues of middle-aged love and lust. We also watch Groves as he finds a calling on the school newspaper while trying to fit in with the other boys.
Yates has a straight-forward style and understands the subtleties of the heart. He shows how desperate these boys are for friendship and recognition in the tumultuous "pecking order" of everyday life, and how awkward some of these pleas for friendship become. It's the little things that add up in this book, such as when we watch Groves and other boys trying to be casual as they ask another boy to room with them next year and when we see how crushed and hurt they are by rejection. More than once, he notes how similar the boys' desire for male friendship and acceptance comes to their longing for a girl and love. He is in that strange and sometimes dark terrain we know as the human heart.
I heartily recommend adding Yates to your reading résumé. This "good" school is tuition-free (for you) and will definitely pay off, hopefully leading you to other works by this fine writer.

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A Family is CompleteReview Date: 2007-05-09
Bloom Where You Are PlantedReview Date: 2002-02-03
Tomie Paola's Best YetReview Date: 2001-05-30
An Autobiography in Touch with the Magic of ChildhoodReview Date: 2004-01-05
Our fourth grade class LOVED it!Review Date: 2001-01-16
Our favorite parts of the book probably were the parts where Tomie caused trouble in school without really meaning too, especially when he totally derails the class production of "Peter Rabbit". Lots of kids can relate to the experience of getting in trouble for just being themselves. Knowing that young Tomie grew up to be a successful author, artist, and dancer helps kids see that they don't have to be perfect or just like everyone else in order to do well in life.
We would recommend this great book to anyone in grades K through 4. The stories in it are ones that children of that age would love to hear and would definitely be able to connect with, although it would probably need to be read aloud to kindergarten and first graders. The reading level is just about perfect for second and third grade. Fourth graders probably won't find the reading hard, but they will be able to use this book as a way to get a look into how Tomie's other stories and artwork came to be.
By the way, this book is the second in a series of chapter books about Tomie's childhood. The first is called 26 Fairmount Avenue, and it is just as good. The third one should be out later this year.

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A great read!Review Date: 2006-01-17
Nothing Lost, Nothing GainedReview Date: 2006-02-21
I got the impression also that Hill was flirting with Worthen continuously, but that his passion for Norma was making him "walk the line" as Johnny Cash used to say. Hill certainly seems unabashed by Worthen's curiosity about his romantic and sex life, even urging her on to ask him some unseemly questions even Bill Clinton might have balked at, though I didn't catch if he wears boxers or briefs.
The revelations about Iran/Contra are minor ones, and debatable. I hate to break it to you, Molly Worthen, but your emperor has no clothes.
The Grand Strategy course he teaches, she notes breathlessly, culminates in a "Crisis Simulation" day in which students are thrown into an imaginary crisis like an outbreak of Ebola or Muslim terrorists occupying the Senate chambers. It's like a Universal Studios tour ride putting you, the tourist, into Jack Bauer's shoes on "24." And out of such theme parks our foreign policy is born.
Thank you MollyReview Date: 2006-03-17
Francie Bremer
Hitting the nailReview Date: 2006-02-24
Yes, you can marvel at the fact that a professor buys coffee at Starbucks. I feel sorry for those who've forgotten that.
A new kind of biography by a promising new starReview Date: 2006-02-28

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best readingReview Date: 2008-06-28
oh one more thing.. i'm a man.. and still i found these books spectacular.. these are not stories of just a little girl.. they are stories of those times.. of war and people.. my favorite, the money under the ice and the coal.. i now have 2 daughters who have read them as well.. and they loved them..
Janey the middle moffatReview Date: 2008-04-17
It was all thereReview Date: 2005-09-27
Anyway, I really liked this book, and I think kid's UNDER nine would enjoy it too.
Middle Moffat Not So MysteriousReview Date: 2005-03-02
In Janey's first adventure she puts on an Organ Recital. Most of the people in Cranbury come; of course there is a twist. Then you can't forget when Janey spends a day with Mr. Buckle, or when she meets Nancy, her best friend. Along the way Wallie Bangs, a mechanical wizard moves in next door. But what did he do with her skates? Or the best adventure and heart warming of all, Christmas Eve, all Rufus wants is a pony! Rufus might not get what he wants, what'll Janey do this time to help her brother. Once Janey fixed Christmas she joins a play, the three little bears. But no, her head is gone! Nancy and Jane then set off for the eclipse in Cranbury. Guess who they meet he's furry too! "I'm no good..." sighed Janey. HA! Yeah right, Janey takes up Basketball and see what she does for the team. It can't be Janey and Nancy not friends! Nancy feels bad about hurting Janey and gives her a ring, ahhh friends again. And Janey can't soon be forgotten on Mr. Buckle's birthday, what a sweet gift she bought him.
Reading The Middle Moffat was like a chocolate cake baked to perfection, every layer of frosting perfectly smoothed on creamy and whipped. YUM! Go ahead and read up. Eleanor Estes adds humor to every page! I love reading this book, the characters are so fun! For instance in parts she used words a four year old would like ignoramus. Estes uses incredible wording only a kid would understand and an adult would laugh at. Like in a part Janey [Estes] thinks you save daylight in a box. Or when she waited up all night for Santa to come. Of course I can't stop laughing when she convinces the all the neighbor hood kids to run into Wallie Bang's basement and steal their stuff back.
I love the plot of this book too! I like how Janey is always trying to be mysterious. Or when Janey won the basketball game and her wish came true. Or when Nancy gave Jane her friendship ring I couldn't help but smile. I think the best part though is when she gave Mr. Buckle his birthday present. Throughout all the chapters of Janey's adventures each one making me smile. I think this book is well dissevering of all the awards it won. Eleanor Estes has the most creative, spunky, humorous, lovable, and fun way of writing.
Overall as you can tell I loved reading this book. There aren't enough hours in the day for me to say how much I like it, but I can try. If you read the book for your self you will understand the way Eleanor Estes writing flows and makes you want more. After each sentence you are begging to read a little more just to widen that smile. All her sentences just flow into one another making it so you can read for hours. I loved the way she wrote about a ten year old. Janey is just too young to understand what people mean. She has her own ideas about the way the world think and I think a lot of us can understand and relate to that. I recommend this to anyone who needs a good laugh and need to lighten up. Or someone who has just come home and has had a horrible day. I can guarantee that if kids or adults read this they will laugh, cry, and smile with Janey.
Very funnyReview Date: 2003-02-11
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I like this book because I love sports and it gives you an idea of good teamwork. I think this book is good because if you work hard it might pay off. I watched the team come together right before my eyes. I felt like I was helping them along to win or I was in the story.
I would recommend this book to people who like sports or who enjoy a good book. I also think that anyone who likes to get lost in a book would love this! The book is exciting and suspenseful. I think people who don't mind getting trapped in the best sports book in the world should read this book!!!!