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

Balls
Haunted Lily: The Nightmare Ball
Published in Paperback by iUniverse, Inc. (2008-03-28)
Author: Sidney Fox
List price: $17.95
New price: $10.54
Used price: $11.22

Average review score:

Great ghostly encounters.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-03
I loved this book. I read this book late into the night, I just couln't put it down. There was very little blood and gore which I liked about the book. There was just enough romace to make it interesting. I thought the characters were well done. You can't help but fall in love with Lily(one of the main characters). The ghost scenes were well described. There were multiple scenes that were scary and imaginative. I can't wait to see what Sindey Fox comes out with next.

Haunted Lily; The Nightmare Ball
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-12
Wonderful book. Fast paced and intriguing. Exciting moments throughout, especially during the paranormal investigations. The characters are compelling and easy to relate to. Well written. I couldn't put it down and can't wait for the next installment. I highly recommend this book.

Haunted Lily -- A Book About Life, Love, Fear and Another Dimension
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-10
Sidney Fox has captured some of our common fears as well as the unexpected in her latest book, Haunted Lily. Her descriptive language paints an amazing story that will draw you in and keep you reading. The book delves into the world of the mysterious in ways that are both thrilling and endearing. I highly recommend this book and anxiously await the release of her next one.

amazing story, elaborate detail
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-05
Finished the book in one night. Great character detail and superb ending. One of the best books I have read in years, I look forward to more of her work. The story-telling seemed effortless and the I have never read a book where you cheered for the heroes so much and despised the villians even more. I anxiously await her next novel.

Excellent Read
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-22
Its been a long time since there was a truly good ghost story out there and Haunted Lilly by Sidney Fox is a definite winner!!! This author truly put her all into her first novel and I anxiously look forward to reading alot more from her. I tell everyone out there to pick up a copy of Haunted Lilly, its a great read!

Balls
Kick the Balls
Published in Kindle Edition by Hudson Street Press (2008-06-12)
Author: Alan Black
List price: $23.95
New price: $9.99

Average review score:

Drool all over self humor
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-03
and a takedown of all that is suburban flatlining. Late night laughs that kept my girl up and she ended up protesting everytime I picked it up.
I passed a copy off to a Scottish bartender, here in LA, so that she would be able to use the comeback to, "Glasgow" "oh.what part of England is that..." "the scottish part"
Great job Senor Black...E.E.

great memoir
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-21
Alan Black is a force of nature. A Scottish force of nature to be exact. This is a hysterical, thought-provoking, funny, tragic memoir about the world's biggest and most popular religion. soccer. Or football as it's known in the civilized world. But it's also a story of a man coming to grips with his past, with his present and his future. It doesn't matter if you are one of the unwashed American masses who doesn't understand or appreciate the beautiful game. If you've ever been a kid, you should read this book. this is Black comedy at its best.

Ridiculously funny
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-31
I don't watch soccer. I don't care about soccer. But this book made me laugh so hard I got eyeballed on the bus as perhaps a bit 'special'.

No one's feelings should be hurt here when he makes fun of you - and yes, he'll make fun of you, and you, and you. He's equal opportunity in mocking athletes, non-athletes, Americans, Scotsmen, parents, coaches, everyone. No need to be offended. Its all in good fun. And its all true.
Really, you have to read this book.

What happened to my review??? Sounds of the Suburbs
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-23
I wrote a review for this book on June 28 and now it's gone. In fact, there were a few reviews up here. Well, thanks to Google cache here's what I said:

When I was a kid in the 1970s, they said in the future soccer would become massively popular in America and we would all use the metric system. Didn't happen. The metric system is pretty much only used to refer to illicit drugs, but almost every American kid in the suburbs plays in a soccer league at least once.

Alan Black's "Kick The Balls" is about his adventures coaching a kids' soccer league, yes. But it is much more. It's about Alan trying to assimilate into the American suburbs. And this is the super funny stuff. No one is safe from Black's barbs: TV preachers, kids, Dockers pants, parents, multiculturalism, the cult of the suburban lawn. Oh and it's not just a snarky hit piece on the easy target of suburban life, Black reserves his sharpest wit to mock himself: a cynical, uncomfortable, Scottish transplant to California. Recommended to anyone in need of a hearty jaundiced laugh at the world and themselves. Extra bonus funny (and insightful) if you are in the position of trying to cope with maintaining your identity and making new friends in a suburban, middle class, vanilla wasteland (i.e., if you're like this reviewer).

The Funniest Book Ever Written
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-10
The view from Alan Black's head, as he surveys Northern California suburbia, is scary the way riding a Hunter S Thompson novel is scary and philosophical in the Vonnegut Breakfast of Champions sense, but since it's all foreign to him it's like reading an alien anthropologist's view of your culture: ironic, enlightening, ridiculous, and a bit absurd.

To get the full rush, you need to hear Alan in your head as you read. Here's your recipe: (1) read the book up until the first time you laugh outloud (make him earn the $24 fercrissakes), (2) after that first laugh, go to http://dublit.com/search?filter0=Alan%20Black (or just www.dublit.com then search on Alan Black audio shorts) (3) listen to one or two readings. You will then hear that mighty screaming brogue through the entire book. Nice.

The comparison on the dust jacket with Nick Hornby follows from the self-absorbed 1st person character. But Alan Black takes it joyously over the top. The humor is bitingly dry, sometimes deliciously obscure, frequently refers to something you'd almost forgotten, and nearly always offensive. Offensive in the way that makes you look around to see if anyone was listening inside your head. In other words, offensive to no actual person, just potentially offensive. The best kind!

The book isn't written with a mess of high-brow literati flair, thank God, it kicks you right in the, well, you know. Given the blue-collar style, it's amazing how this book, which has only one real character, delivers the goods. It's one of those tricks that a purple-prose-artist might shoot for and even pull off. I get the impression that Alan did it so naturally that he's not even aware of it. Organic talent, in other words.

Balls
Loose Balls: Short, Wild Life of the American Basketball Association
Published in Hardcover by Simon & Schuster (1990-10-15)
Author: Terry Pluto
List price: $22.95
Used price: $4.99
Collectible price: $42.95

Average review score:

Loose Balls-ABA history at its finest
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-31
Losse Balls is funny and thoroughly entertaining book about the old
American Basketball Association. It covers all the individuals involved
in the forming of the league, its quirky players and all the stats
during its existence. For those who like basketball, its a great read.

Great Read, Facinating History
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-09
I can't recommend this book highly enough. I love basketball to death but have the misfortune of coming of age in the late 90's, well after the holy trinity of MJ, Bird, and Magic and WELL after the ABA.

This book is an oral history that gives some amazing insights as to how things were before the world of cable and internet and before the NBA was the marketing juggernaught it is today. It is also full of ridiclous stories about players, coaches, fans, and owners. It is facinating to see what aspects of the ABA resonate in todays NBA. Though some of the book is dated (the book was written in 1990) in terms of how things are relayed to the reader, the essense of the book has and will continue to hold up very well.

Best Sports Book Ever.....Probably So
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-07
What can I say about Loose Balls that has not already been said??...Probably nothing...There is a reason why Sports Illustrated ranked this book Number 13 on the Top 100 Sports Books of alltime and why it is still in print 18 years after first coming out....That reason is it's a great book that is the definitive history of the ABA and at the same time has you literally laughing out loud at times...I had more laughs reading this book than I do at most movies....Most people in other reviews have noted the principals like Fly Williams...Marvin "Bad News" Barnes....John Brisker..Pat Boone.. Julius Erving..etc..etc so I won't rehash or spoil the tales but they are memorable because they are true....Pluto's genius in putting this book together was that he let the principals tell their stories and he just put them on paper in an orderly format and let the story tell itself...No need to do anything else...I was pretty young during the ABA Days so I only remembered a little about it,but after reading this book I felt like I was there for all 9 years of the ABA....I can't recommend a book any more than I do this one...Buy this book...you will not be able to put it down once you start and I guarantee you will get a ton of laughs

Funny, Funny Book
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-22
One of the funniest books I have ever read. Great stories told by the players themselves. The pre-packaged NBA in its current form has nothing over the ABA and its love of the game.

Pluto, as always, does a great job in putting it all together. Highly recommended.

In Their Own Words
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-09
This book is a sports gem. The wild ride of the American Basketball Association from inception to its eventual collapse and NBA absorption of the San Antonio Spurs, Indiana Pacers, Denver Nuggets and New Jersey Nets.
The book is divide into 3 parts.Opening Gambits, Middle Game and Endgame.
The first part deals with the origins of the league from the hiring of its first Commisioner, George Mikan and the idea behind the red, white and blue basketball and the struggles of early ABA teams to stock their rosters to a great section on The Indiana Pacers, one of the leagues best organizations. Everything is told in a series of stories told by the people involved. It is a credit to author Terry Pluto's reporting skills and ability to edit that makes this so enjoyable.
Part 2 deals includes a lengthy section about the greatest player to come out of the ABA, Julius Erving. The Doctor must have been a wonder to behold in his early years as he is spoke of in awe by teammates, opponents, and coaches. Also the many stories of the often bizarre characters that inhabited the ABA are priceless in and of themselves.Of which the reader will often find themself laughing out loud. The section on The San Antonio Spurs is enjoyable in that you learn the humble origins of the current NBA dynasty.
Part 3 covers such franchises as the Kentucky Colonels who were considered underachievers until they finally won an ABA championship in 1975. Probably the most entertaining section of the book chronicles the story of the Spirits Of St. Louis. The tales told of this franchise often boggle the mind if one has any isea how professional athletes are expected to act. The antics of Spirits star Marvin "bad news" Barnes are some of the most outrageous I've ever heard of in my life and I've been a sports fan for decades. Great stories of All time great coach Larry Brown and so many others they are too numerous to name.
In the end the massive contracts the ABA gave out became their undoing and eventually forced capitulation to the rival NBA. It is a fun read and you learn so much about so many unheralded ABA players and coaches.

Balls
Mossy Creek
Published in Paperback by BelleBooks (2001-05)
Authors: Deborah Smith, Sandra Chastain, Debra Dixon, Virginia Ellis, Nancy Knight, and Donna Ball
List price: $14.95
New price: $5.47
Used price: $1.98
Collectible price: $18.92

Average review score:

Welcome to Mossy Creek
Helpful Votes: 13 out of 13 total.
Review Date: 2002-10-08
"Welcome to Mossy Creek the town you can count on ain't goin' nowhere, and don't want to" with these words you get the flavor of life in the small southern town of Mossy Creek. The people are fiesty, funny, sad, and loving. Each chapter is a different character's story. You learn the history of the dispute between Mossy Creek and the nearby town of Bigelow. Each chapter becomes a story unto itself while characters overlap occasionally in the tales. From Miss Ida, the guardian/mayor of Moss Creek who will go to jail rather than put up a new welcome sign outside of Mossy Creek (afterall it was written by a Bigelowan!) to Casey, an Olympic hopeful whose dreams are dashed while returning from her elopement, due to a car accident which leaves her paralyzed from the waist down, you will laugh and cry with the inhabitants of this marvelous town. Come on for the ride and enjoy a few moments in Mossy Creek. It is a fast read and powerful in its emotions.

Mossy Creek is a wonderful place to visit!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2001-09-20
I am not usually a fan of short stories, but this book was different. Each story is character sketch and many of the characters make guest appearances in other stories. This is truly fiction, all the characters are big-hearted people who trul y love their town and each other. I loved Mossy Creek and also couldn't decide story I liked the best

Great book ....
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2002-08-18
I thoroughly enjoyed this book - lots of fun, quirky characters. Looking forward to the next in the series.

Laugh Till You Cry!
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2002-06-22
I read this book because I love Deborah Smith's work. I figured at least her stories in the book would be fantastic. I laughed so hard with the first story my husband finally asked me to share the joke. And it just got better after that. I can not wait for the next book to come out! The characters were all fun and lovable. It made me wish my small town was a wee bit smaller, Southern and full of Mossy Creekites!

A Rare Find
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2002-03-25
This tale about the residents of Mossy Creek will warm your heart and touch your soul. It's like sitting down with good friends for a piece of warm apple pie. Delicious!

Balls
The Second Bounce of the Ball
Published in Hardcover by Weidenfeld & Nicolson (2007-11-08)
Author: Ronald Cohen
List price: $39.72
New price: $23.99
Used price: $24.00

Average review score:

A great book for entreprenuers
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-02
The book is a treasure of insights and lessons learned over the course of a 30 year career in the venture capital and private equity industries. The author has built a world class organization from scratch, and in the process backed and helped build, together with his partners, hundreds of companies in more than a dozen countries in three continents. Few people have comparable credentials when it comes to building businesses.

This book is definitely not a "How To" book. Rather, it is a fantastic book for any entrepreneur, in any industry or geography, who is concerned with questions like how do I build sustainable value, how do I balance short term needs with longer term objectives, how do I attract, retain and motivate the best people available, etc. Rather than giving recipe style answers, the book shares the author's experience in addressing these and other challenges, and gives the reader food for thought which undoubtedly will help her or him with the challenges that they are experiencing in their own businesses.

For full disclosure, I have been associated with Apax Partners in the past and know some of the people and the companies in the book.

Good not Great
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-17
The book was interesting and learned some things about Private equity ... what it is, historical perspective, and future directions. The author was at the ground floor of the European private equity boom and describes the lean years through the tech wreck of early 2000's.

The sections on interviewing / people first / helping the less fortunate / ethics were standard boiler plate dribble.

I wish more core operational details for Private Equity would have been provided.

Review for book "The Second Bounce of the Ball"
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-09
There are a lot of books about management out there. Too few are written by practitioners. Every one in a while, there's a great practitioner who actually peers his wisdom and expertise at the height of his game. This book is a perfect example of the kind of book that one would hope all great management practitioners would ultimately write. A must read for anyone who's interested in the personal history of a great entrepreneur or in the practice of entrepreneurship and management.

An Amazing Book
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-08
I have finished to read this book in two days: really an amazing experience.
I think Sir Cohen has an unique intellectual and human approach to Entrepreneurship and Finance.

The Second Bounce of the Ball
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-26
Essential reading for anyone interested in becoming a successful entrepreneur. Ronald Cohen writes in an engaging, highly conversational style about the outstanding achievements of the private equity firm Apax which he co-founded and led. He was one of the leaders in transforming Britain and Europe over the past 20 years, in which he and his partners worked with entrepreneurs to rapidly build and to supercharge major companies, combining rigorous analysis with formidable personal networks and highly imaginative ideas.

He generously shares his insights,techniques and lessons. Most important, yet understated, it becomes clear his spectacular success was founded on the bedrock of integrity. A book to be treasured.

Balls
Slugging It Out in Japan: An American Ball Player in the Japanese Major Leagues
Published in Hardcover by Kodansha America (1920-01)
Author: Warren Cromartie
List price: $17.95
Used price: $15.00

Average review score:

"Yakyuu" is different from "Baseball".
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2000-07-28
I truly enjoyed this book because I am one of the witness of the seasons the author had gone through. Yes, he is the best "gaijin" player in Japanese baseball (Yakyuu) history. Baseball in Japan is not the battle of power, but bottle of spirits. The process is considered more important than the results. The players have to practice many hours before the game, and sometimes pitchers have to start even they have broken arms! This book describes the difference of "Yakyuu" and "Baseball." This also gives us the information about Japanse and Japanese culture. More importantly, this book describes the cultural difference between Japan and the US.

Stranger in a Strange Land... Baseball in Japan
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2002-10-29
Japanese baseball has always fascinated me. This is Warren Cromarte's experience condensed into a book. It reflects his own prejudices, pride, ignorance of Japenese culture, and ultimately his education and grudging acceptance of what he did not understand. The movie "Mr. Baseball" is, in many ways, based on this book.

It is amazing how some people look at Japan and see what is not there. For instance, one reviewer on this book said how most "Japanese players never had much real education, as high schools were more like minor leagues, so the player mostly read mangas (comic strips) on bus rides."

Mangas are much more than comic strips. They are books, written by adults largely for an adult audience. Business people with degrees read mangas.

In fact, the ignorance of Japanese culture reflects in many unfortunate incidences between Japanese citizens and American citizens. Mr. Cromartie's slugging of a pitcher more than illustates this point.

Baseball in Japan is brutal. They burn out their pitchers, for instance, rather than rotate them. In this book you'll see that Warren Cromartie started out his first season first as the hero that was going to save his team, then as the first half of the season wore on he was viewed by the press as a bum who wasn't worth the money they paid for him (Japanese players were, and maybe still are, paid very low salaries for the receipts they bring in for their owners). He then became a hero who batted very well on the second half of the season. Did Mr. Cromartie improve his batting? Perhaps. But more than likely by the second half the season the pitchers in Japan had worn out their arms, and could no longer throw as well.

Get this to learn Japanese culture, Japanese baseball, and one man's confusion and eventual acceptance of both.

Fun, insightful, and candid
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2002-01-12
It's a good book for those with some knowledge or basic interest in Japanese professional baseball, but for those who are only Major Leagues fans this can be very interesting too. Throughout the course of Cromartie's stay, a number of major leaguers and American players came into picture. Bill Gullickson became a teammate for a couple of seasons. Dick Davis (who later got deported for pot possession), Randy Bass, Doug DeCince, Dwight Smith, etc. were also there. There are interesting opinions and episodes about other players: Sanchez (Cal. Angels) was a teammate for 1/2 season but could get along with anyone; Shinozuka, a hitting machine and a friendly teammate; Cro's friendship with Oh; how Japan and especially the teams treated Randy Bass, who had the best single season offensive stats but was walked 4 times in the last game so he could not tie the homerun record; Kuwata, a pitching ace who befriended Gullickson; Egawa, another ace pitcher who often feigned injury to protect himself from overworking; Cro's infamous punching of a pitcher who beaned him; how most Japanese players never had much real education, as high schools were more like minor leagues, so the player mostly read mangas (comic strips) on bus rides. The issue of race and racism is also addressed: how gaijins are perceived -- which is different for Asians (especially Japanese-Korean players) and Americans, and whites and blacks. He also noted how devastated Gullickson felt after being barred from entering a restaurant because of his nationality. The span of 8 years covers a lot of insight and observations and anecdotes.

Cromartie came back to the States and played his last season with the Royals as a pinch hitter/1B and finished the season with a .307 average as a part time player.

Get this book. It's worth it.

Fun, insightful, and candid
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2002-01-12
It's a good book for those with some knowledge or basic interest in Japanese professional baseball, but for those who are only Major Leagues fans this can be very interesting too. Throughout the course of Cromartie's stay, a number of major leaguers and American players came into picture. Bill Gullickson became a teammate for a couple of seasons. Dick Davis (who later got deported for pot possession), Randy Bass, Doug DeCince, Dwight Smith, etc. were also there. There are interesting opinions and episodes about other players: Sanchez (Cal. Angels) was a teammate for 1/2 season but could get along with anyone; Shinozuka, a hitting machine and a friendly teammate; Cro's friendship with Oh; how Japan and especially the teams treated Randy Bass, who had the best single season offensive stats but was walked 4 times in the last game so he could not tie the homerun record; Kuwata, a pitching ace who befriended Gullickson; Egawa, another ace pitcher who often feigned injury to protect himself from overworking; Cro's infamous punching of a pitcher who beaned him; how most Japanese players never had much real education, as high schools were more like minor leagues, so the player mostly read mangas (comic strips) on bus rides. The issue of race and racism is also addressed: how gaijins are perceived -- which is different for Asians (especially Japanese-Korean players) and Americans, and whites and blacks. He also noted how devastated Gullickson felt after being barred from entering a restaurant because of his nationality. The span of 8 years covers a lot of insight and observations and anecdotes.

Cromartie came back to the States and played his last season with the Royals as a pinch hitter/1B and finished the season with a .307 average as a part time player.

Get this book. It's worth it.

Excellent account by a courageous player in a foreign land
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2001-08-30

I grew up watching Warren Cromartie play for the Tokyo Yomiuri Giants during the late `80s. Cromartie was one of very few gaijin players who left a great impact, not only by the way he played the game, but also by his cocky attitude and behavior. For the Japanese media who love to stereotype American players as brashly self-arrogant, lazy, and powerful, Cromartie was such a perfect fit. Of course, they would not report on his side of story, this biography may be of a greater interest for those who viewed him as a gaijin those days. To me, the reader may miss the most interesting points if she just reads this book just as an account of "bizarre" experiences that an American went through in one of the most exotic places in the world.

With the presence of such colorful personalities as the manager Sadaharu Oh (whose career homerun record of 868 surpasses the American counterpart), his teammates, and old-fashioned traditionalists who would be labeled downright racists in many other civilized nations, the story never seems to bore the reader.

Unlike many other player biographies ghost written by mediocre sport writers, this is surprisingly an engaging book. Robert Whiting does a great job of incorporating his own views on cultural disparities between Japan and America into Cromartie's endeavor as a gaijin player. Many opinions expressed in the book overlap Whiting's other works on baseball, such as "You Gotta Have Wa" and "The Chrysanthemum and the Bad," but "Slugging It Out in Japan" is probably the most emotionally involved pieces of all.

Balls
Commando: A Boer Journal of the Anglo-Boer War
Published in Hardcover by Jonathan Ball Publishers (2005)
Authors: Denys Reitz and Thomas Pakenham
List price:
Used price: $29.99

Average review score:

Hard to put down
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-02
First person narrative of the Boer War written just one year after the end of the war. Gives unusual insight into the life of a Boer commando during this conflict with the mighty British army.

Commando: A Boer Journal for the Boer War
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-13
Excellent primary source for research papers on the Boer War! I highly reccommend it!

One of the great war dispatches of all times....
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-04-17
Written in a matter of fact style, the simple experiences of a young man at war are piled one upon the other with no guile and in a straightforward manner. What emerges is one of the greatest stories of war of all time. This stands alongside Dispatches and Black Hawk Down but is perhaps even more remarkable as it was written by a young man at war, not a professional writer or journalist.

Vivid personal recounting of first major war of 20th Century
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2005-10-07
Written by a teenager, albeit, a resourceful, fit, intelligent son of a farmer and distinguished South African, it recounts in considerable detail the honourable soldiering on horseback and mule of young Deneys Reitz. His many encounters with the enemy; the harsh weather, difficult landscape, starvation and disease on a guerilla operation that lasted over two years, is testament in part to luck, but also to his survival skills, marksmanship, courage and tenacity. A great read which should be read with some advantage in conjunction with The Boer War by Thomas Pakenham.

Commando and the Deneys Reitz Trilogy
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2000-11-24
Commando is the first and best known of the Deneys Reitz trilogy. It autobiographically tells the story of his part in the Boer War. He started as the sixteen year old son of a prominent Boer politician and ended with him joining Jan Smutts on his raid on Port Elizabeth. This is a story of guerrilla warfare based on minimal resources, for instance they used to visit the abandoned camp sites of British Columns just to pick up ammunition that the Tommies had dropped. They then used this to attack the very soldiers who had dropped it.

However, at the end of the Boer War Reitz was unable to accept British rule and went into exile and this is where the second volume, Trekking On starts. After a disastrous effort at hauling freight by ox cart in Madagascar which nearly cost him is life, Reitz is persuaded by Smutts to return to South Africa where he regains his health and enters local politics. At the outbreak of W.W.II Reitz joins the South African Army and takes part in the putting down of the Maritz rebellion and the campaigns in East Africa. Once the Germans are defeated in Africa he travels to England and , having decided firmly which side he would prefer to be on, joins the British Army as a private. Following a chance meeting with Smutts in London he experiences a dizzying rise in rank and ends the war, after seeing much action as the Colonel of a famous Scottish regiment.

The final book in the trilogy, No Outspan, covers Reitz's life in South African politics between the wars and concludes with him as Deputy Prime Minister of South Africa sitting on an advisory panel to Winston Churchill. in London. During this time he is visited by an Englishman who returned to him the Mauser rifle he took from him when Reitz became his prisoner during the Boer War. The last time I heard this rifle is still in the possession of Reitz's son and is regularly shot by him.

The Trilogy has been published by Wolfe Publishing as a one volume set in recent years and if you see a copy for sale, grab it!

Balls
Ghosts and Shadows: A Marine in Vietnam, 1968-1969
Published in Paperback by McFarland & Company (1998-07)
Author: Phil Ball
List price: $26.50
Used price: $19.40

Average review score:

Respect for Donald Philip Schuck
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-08
This has become a personal review for
me because I was recently involved in
bringing the MOVING WALL to Southeastern
Indiana and having it on display in
Rising Sun, IN. We paid a special
tribute to Donald Philip Schuck and the
others from a 5 county area here
including Dearborn, Ohio, Switzerland,
Ripley and Franklin Counties. Schuck was
from Franklin Co. and Brookville, IN and
I was honored to be able to go
and visit with his sister, Betty Stivers,
who was gracious enough to give me articles
about him and some pictures of him. I also
visited his grave site at St. Michael's
Cemetery and took a photo of his military
grave marker. We had a special supplement in
the local papers with the information about
the ones from our area who died in
Vietnam. I'd be glad to send one to anyone
who knew Don Schuck because he's an
AMERICAN HERO. Phil Ball did a great job
of bringing the war home to us and telling
us about his friend, Don. Don's sister
Betty is proud of her brother and what
he did for OUR nation. GHOSTS & SHADOWS
shows the respect he and Don Schuck had
for each other and the very difficult
times they had in Vietnam. It's a shame
we had to lose such a fine young MARINE
like Don Schuck. There are 58,260 brave
souls on that WALL and each one deserves
our gratitude for their ultimate sacrifice.
May they rest in eternal peace.
P.G. Gentrup
Rising Sun, IN
25th Inf Div
Cu Chi, Vietnam 1967-68

A Great book-honest, and straight forward
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-18
I noticed this book when I was looking for another book at the library. It is riveting and hard to put it down.

It has some good lessons on how to overcome problems in general.
Reading the book will help you understand Vietnam on different levels.

Probably my favorite vietnam war narrative
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-05-11
This book is probably the best Vietnam War narrative I have read, and I have read quite a few. It really puts you in the middle of the action. It's not too gung-ho; just the experiences of an ordinary guy fighting in the jungle and living day to day.

Spectacular Read! A real account without the fluff
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-08-13
For fans of this genre, this book is a must have. It is written clearly with no dead time in action and intesity of this eye witness account. I rarely rate books but this one deserved my time and review as it acheives what few ever do. Bravo to Phil Ball! Rest in peace leatherneck. Michael Shannon

Ghosts and Shadows by Phil Ball
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2001-08-23
This is one of the best Vietnam books I have read. It is so truthful. Written in a way that made you feel what they (the marines) and all our young men who served in that war must have gone through. Wonderfully written!! ON July 5th, Phil Ball died, he was a wonderfully gifted man. He will be missed for all he was and all he could have been.

Balls
I Love Lucy: The Classic Moments
Published in Hardcover by Courage Books (1999-10-19)
Author: Tom Watson
List price: $15.98
New price: $7.93
Used price: $0.22
Collectible price: $15.98

Average review score:

A Nice Memory Scrapbook of I Love Lucy
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-29
I am watching the I Love Lucy DVD sets right now. I loved to watch the TV show when I was a little kid right up through adulthood. This book is a great help while watching the DVDs. I can look up an episode that I really loved and read more about it. Memories can be stirred up or I can find out more about the show for the first time. My only regret is that the book isn't comprehensive. It deals with the best episodes and not all of them. I would love a book that deals with all the episodes but maybe it would be too big.

Fu, fun, fun
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2004-07-23
This is a really nice look at I Love Lucy. The pictures are great. I just wish they would have been able to include more episodes.

RICKY RICARDO CAN CONGA MY DRUM ANYTIME.
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2001-10-19
" I LOVE LUCY " WAS 1 OF THE BEST TV SHOWS IN THE 1950'S AND IS THE BEST SHOW EVER." I LOVE LUCY" CLASSIC MOMENTS BOOK IS A MUST FOR ANY "I LOVE LUCY" FAN. IT SHOWS YOU THE CLASSIC MOMENTS IN WHAT THE BEST TV SHOW THAT WAS EVER MADE.LUCILLE BALL AND DESI ARNAZ MADE WHAT THE SHOW WAS,ALSO VIVIAN VANCE AND WILLIAM FRAWLEY WILL ALWAYS BE REMEMBERED AS FRED AND ETHEL MERTZ AT 323 E.68TH ST. I FINSHED THIS BOOK AND I TRULY ENJOYED IT.

I Love, I Love Lucy!
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2001-08-26
This is a great book for behind the scenes pictures of the cast and the stage they worked on. I have owned this book for about a year, and come back to look at it all the time. Lucille Ball is my favorite actress, and I just love her to pieces! This book contains photos of their set and everyday life. It also conatains some stories of their lives, so if you are a Lucy fan like me, don't miss this book!

A MUST HAVE...
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2003-03-30
this book is a must have for every LUCY-DESI fan all over the world. it contains beautiful pictures and a lot of information about each episode. it is part of my collection and I see myself coming back to it everytime to look something up.is one of the most complete books I have ever encountered.

Balls
A LITTLE SHORT OF BOATS: The Fights at Ball's Bluff and Edward's Ferry, October 21-22, 1861 (Discovering Civil War America)
Published in Paperback by Ironclad Publishing (2004-10)
Author: James Morgan (III)
List price: $18.95
New price: $12.08
Used price: $11.32

Average review score:

Terrific Book!
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2004-12-06
James Morgan is known far and wide as THE expert on the Battle at Ball's Bluff. There have been other works and articles published on the battle, but Jim's far outranks them all and is now the standard for the fight and battlefield. He also dispels disproven myths about the battle and for the first time presents an extremely well documented telling. The special bonus is that, as with all volumes of Ironclad's "Discovering Civil War America" series, there is an expertly-crafted guided tour in the back of the book.

For anyone interested in a little-known early clash of the Civil War, or even if you think you know what happened there, you must get this book. Read it through, and then take it to the battlefield with you for the tour, especially the little National Cemetery there. If you're lucky, Morgan himself will be available to tour with you. - he's a battlefield guide there.

Fantastic writing, impressive bibliography and sources.

Difficult but rewarding
Helpful Votes: 24 out of 25 total.
Review Date: 2004-12-21
This is the second book in "The Civil War America Series" which "features soft-cover works that focus on less publicized Civil War battles and sites." This is the series strength and also its' weakness. Little known can make a difficult read as you lack reference points and faces for names. The reward is learning something new not covered in multiple books. This is both a rewarding and difficult book. I did have problems keeping the names on the right side of the field but I came away with a much better understanding of this important little battle. This well told story shows James Morgan's knowledge of the battle and the aftermath. He can quickly give us a personal experience or detail and return to the battle with out missing a step. His very detailed narration gives us the full story from both sides of the line while keeping the "Fog of War" for the commanders.

A big plus is the full battlefield tour included at the end of the book. Action is often tied to the current battlefield giving us a reference and a guidebook if we ever get a chance to visit the park. A good selection of photos and maps keep the reader in the picture. This is a battle book. The focus is on General Stone and the men on the field not back at Army HQ. A logical interpretation of HQ's messages helps us understand the assumptions made that day.

Another plus is the price of the book. Ironclad lists this book at $18.95 but packs more and better information, maps and photos into this small package than many books selling for $29.95.

Great Detail on the Small battle That Shocked the Union
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-24
Although I have read and enjoyed Byron Farwell's book on the disastrous Balls Bluff battle that caused such a psychological shock on the Union, Morgan's book provides deeper analysis into what occurred virtually blow by blow that will appeal greatly to the serious Civil War student. The book may be a bit challenging for those less familiar with Civil War history due to depth of the descriptions that breakdown movements virtually by company; however, the several maps included provide a great assistance. The numerous bios and command distinctions does slow the action some times and causes periodic distraction. Morgan describes the battlefield with references to its modern state making it a particularly handy read and companion when visiting the battle site that has suffered some modern encroachment. What I found most interesting about this book is the study of both the union command structure, which was fragmented between commanders of similar rank compounded by the late arrival of the commanding officer Colonel Baker. The force that was initially suppose to be a reconnaissance in force across the Potomac coordinated with a lower movement at Edward's Ferry and a move by McClellan further east but its purpose seemed to lend itself to full committed due to a misperception of grautious success. The author also provides a profile of the odd confederate command with the infamous Major Evans commanding in spite of Colonel Hunton's superior rank. Morgan does a great job capturing the detailed movements of all the forces involved resolving some of the mystery of confederate forces that were largely unseen by the union forces. The command structure of the Union is handicapped by faulty information supplied by an earlier scouting expedition that misinterprets landmarks for a confederate encampment. This confusion contributes to the poor disposition of troops that concentrate on the south and west while the majority of the officers recognize that the east wooded area that also encompasses a ravine, is the most vulnerable area. This recognition of the east vulnerability is discovered late, not long after the commander, Colonel Baker, arrives on the scene. Morgan takes away a lot of the mystery of what happens next by detailing the confederate attacks and late union shifting of units that ultimately leads to a collapse of the union position. With the high bluffs on their back with a relatively deep river behind, the collapse of the union left leads to an abrupt fragmentation of order. Morgan goes further in his book describing the overall campaign that is obviously hindered by the newness of the war's command structure and communications. Neither Stone, overall commander at Balls Bluff and Edwards Ferry, nor McClellan has a real feel for what is occurring until the collapse. Morgan also captures the fighting around Edwards Ferry that coincided with Balls Bluff and McClellan's ineffective movements that contributed to the isolation of Baker's forces. In addition, Morgan tells how General Stone is severely punished, including incarceration, by vengeful politicians and is neglected by General McClellan. Baker was a popular politician and friend of Lincoln's that contributes immensely to the severe reaction to this union defeat. In this book, Morgan also provides a walking tour of the battlefield that identifies significant landmarks even obscured by modern housing units. This is the ultimate book that will give you the in-depth story of this small battle that had far reaching effects on the north while also assisting you in your visit to the battlefield. Farwell's book is also a good read and captures more detail on Stone's fall.

A first rate book
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2005-01-12
Clearly the best treatment of the Battle at Ball's Bluff available. An excellent telling of the little known fight drawn from good research and a thorough bibliography. The included tour guide alone is worth the price of the book.

The definitive Ball's Bluff account
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2005-01-28
There is little to add that already hasn't been said in the other reviews. I just wish it was available in hardback! If the future titles in this series are as good as this then Ironclad is assured of repeated patronage. I only have one very very minor criticism. Though the maps are generally quite good, I wish elevation lines were included as the topography of the Union left flank had a critical effect on the fight and the text covering it was a little confusing at times. None of this detracts much from this wonderful work, which is easily the best battle history of 2004.


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