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Teach Your Kids to Read EarlyReview Date: 2008-05-11
THE book to teach readingReview Date: 2007-04-15
I used them with my son and he was reading and writing (albiet phonetically) by the time he was 3 1/2. Unless a child is dyslexic or has an auditory learning disability, McGuffey is The Way. This is how children learned to read before everyone got 'so smart'. The school systems would be be smarter if they went back to this.
Beautiful wordsReview Date: 2007-02-13
Other reviewers have brought to light that there is an anti-semetic theme in some of the stories for older children. So far, I have not found even a hint of this type of sentiment. Even if there was, and if it was a minor allusion to such sentiment, rather than an overiding theme, I would teach my children that it's wrong.
Back to basicsReview Date: 2007-01-17
Shame orders can't come completeReview Date: 2007-05-16
There is no excuse that I can think of for a set to be plastic wrapped from a source, and for the set to be incomplete.
I'm sure that this will not be posted.

Used price: $5.08

*CRUNCH* Hi, Ima Gaul!Review Date: 2008-06-05
I don't think it's possible to overestimate how interesting and important this comic strip is. Not only is it extremely entertaining, it's interesting and well drawn. Also, if you care to read a little below the surface, many other things: scathing critique of expansionism, romans, and likely catholics. Also the chief of the Gauls is Vitalstatistix, a nod, I think, to Gamers everywhere. Plus... Here's more hidden meaning.. Put Gaul and Rome together, and what have you got? Game. Of course, the romans lose a certain amount of face... heh. Anyway, I'll add more when I think of it.
Asterix rules!Review Date: 2007-04-27
These things are hilarious, has anyone ever read the French version?
The first Asterix comicReview Date: 2006-11-10
Asterix and ObelixReview Date: 2006-11-09
In this graphic novel series there is great storytelling, superb drawing, awful puns, wonderful sound effects (yes, really), and sneakily, insidiously, while you're laughing, you're learning.
Gauls GetafixReview Date: 2007-01-21
"Asterix the Gaul" was the first Asterix comic, published in 1961. Rene Goscinny made the words and Albert Udzero did the pictures. It's a pretty good way to start the series though the sequel "Asterix and the Golden Sickle" (1962) sets up the vibe the other comics enjoy.

A triumph for June B. Jones!Review Date: 2008-01-15
Even at holiday time, Junie is up to her expected tricks, and there's an awful rivalry with Tattletale May. But, alls well that ends well, with tons of laughs on the way to a heartwarming ending.
Brava, Barbara Parks!
Junie B BooksReview Date: 2007-12-11
My 2nd grader read it in less than 24 hoursReview Date: 2007-11-18
Great Holiday Book!Review Date: 2007-08-06
Junie B - elf girlReview Date: 2007-07-14

Used price: $3.99

Choices Can Have Unforeseen ConsequencesReview Date: 2008-05-05
better than the movieReview Date: 2007-05-15
Thoughtful ...Review Date: 2007-03-30
This book is about Madame Wu, who decided to retire from married life at the age of 40. She suggested a concubine for her husband as she believes very strongly that his needs need to be met ~~ just not by her. Her excuse is that she didn't want to bear any more children, but that is just a public excuse, one she offered to everyone who asked. The truth is, she didn't love her husband and wanted to retire from that part of her marriage. Needless to say, it unsettled the entire family ~~ even the concubine was unsettled. It reverberated throughout the entire book till the very end, when everyone seems to have moved onto their own problems.
This is a book on a busy wealthy Chinese family. It is about traditions and ideas, non-traditions, love and finding purpose in life. It is about family relationships between father, son, mother, son, mother-in-law and daughter-in-law, friendships, and even between mistress and servant.
Madame Wu never thought she'd find peace and happiness till one of her sons' instructors came along. He was a Jesuit priest and they struck up a friendship based on conversations (which she remembered after his death). He literally changed her life and thought process. From being a woman who always did what she was told, she was liberated to being a free-thinking woman who strove to find peace in her soul.
It is a book that I would recommend to all readers ~~ and it is definitely a book for a book club to discuss! It is a timeless classic novel ~~ and definitely a great introduction to an author that I have heard about but never have read. I can't wait to read her other books!
3-30-07
Powerful, Rereadable Book For MeReview Date: 2006-08-08
This book, in particular, I think is really spiritual. I really wish that I had a book group to discuss this book with. At the beginning, I didn't really care for or understand the main character, Madame Wu. She decides after her 40th birthday party, that her husband can have a concubine and that she can turn inward. In the beginning, this is really quite a difficult concept for me, but in a way, it's also very liberating. It's a form of birth control for her, and also a way to keep her husband satisfied. In the end, Pearl Buck, as an author, really shows this woman to be very multidimensional, and I feel, quite spiritual and not so superficial as I think she starts out to be.
In the background, there are daughter in laws who are more liberated than Madam Wu, and the chafe at the idea of a concubine. They are too modern for that and would not stand for having a concubine in the house. Some of this is quite historical fand relates gently to the communist revolution. Also it is showing generational differences and lack of understanding between generations. In the end, Madame Wu, I feel , is far more liberated than her daughter in laws, no matter how modern they are.
There is also a DVD of this story, and I think the DVD cover is on the book cover that I read. If it shows a white man in an embrace with a Chinese woman, as if they were about to kiss, I want to warn you that this Hollywood image is not really the book at all. And in fact, that picture does not occur in the book either. Really, that image is an abomination of the book.
I do know, by reading Pearl Buck, why she is a Nobel prize winner in writing. For me, it's this. She helps you to see characters (people) that you might really hate or disagree with in real life as real, very multifacted people. And though I might not always come to agree or fully care about her characteres, through her writing, I will learn to understand and respect them more than I would have if I had not read the book. And more than that, Buck weaves in real history and fact and makes is very interesting.
Please read her books. You won't be disappointed.
Duty Changed Through Love to JoyReview Date: 2006-03-22
As the title suggests, the plot revolves around the day to day happenstances of the oppressed `pavilion of women' that provides a wealthy Chinese gentleman's `happiness' in the form of siring future generations and keeping him pleasured as befits his rank as lord and master. Madame Wu, the one and only wife, on the day of her fortieth birthday decides quite calculatingly to acquire a concubine for this husband whom she has never loved, allowing her to rid herself within the complicated etiquette of the Chinese upper class of the burden of servicing her husband conjugally. As the mother of four sons, in her eyes and in the eyes of society, she fulfilled her duty as a wife. Fully knowing that she will continue to oversee the management of all who live under her domain, she nevertheless anticipates her retirement with relish, planning to read and self-educate herself within the confines of her father-in-law's well-stocked library. As a mother and mother-in-law, she must tactfully and eloquently steer her sons and daughters-in-law towards a rich and satisfying future in a newer less understood world while still buttressing the Chinese family infrastructure to continue what she herself withholds as traditionally correct.
As China plummets towards modern thinking and communism, Madame Wu discovers that she must make concessions. Thinking to arrange the marriage of her broader-minded third son, she hires an unconventional Italian priest, Brother Andre, to teach languages and the known sciences to better endow her Fengmo with the intellectual assets he now needs to captivate a more progressive bride.
Instead, the self-disciplined Madame Wu finds that she is mesmerized by the foreigner's gentle persuasiveness. With him she explores the idea of the soul and its ever pressing quest for freedom and realizes that throughout her life thus far she played the role of a wise albeit voyeuristic manipulator rather than that of thinking and feeling woman. Her gentle yet intense spiritual love for Andre reinforces Madame Wu's innate strength and enables her to make free, wise and joyous decisions that bring a warm happiness to the inhabitants under her domain.
Bottom line: While the storyline moves along nicely, what makes "Pavilion of Women" an absolute pleasure to read is the clarity of Madame Wu's portrait that Buck allows us to form first from the inner workings of Madame Wu's mind and then from the soaring aspirations of her soul as it communes with that of Brother Andre. Buck's language flows from one `pavilion' event to the next; her style is relaxed and easy to read, the development of Madame Wu's identity both believable and beautiful. Highly recommended for its ability to entertain and depict an alien culture.
Diana F. Von Behren
"reneofc"

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Well Written Critique of the Emergent Church MovementReview Date: 2008-07-04
This book was a delight for me to read. It is quick paced, fun reading with deeper chapters by Deyoung (the Reformed pastor) and more experience oriented chapters by Kluck. I felt the balance between critique and love was good throughout the book and both writers admit that not all is bad with the emergents. It is their theology and simply their postmodernism that gets dashed pretty well by both guys. The writers wrestle with Scripture, with emergent authors and speakers such as Tony Jones, Doug Pagitt, and many others. The overall tone is one of loving criticalness with a call for discernment from the disciple of Jesus.
Overall I do highly recommend this book for all who have questions about the emergent church. While the book is not as deep as D.A. Carson's work on the emergent church, both Deyoung and Kluck do a great job of presenting a biblical and personal critique of the emergent movement.
worthwhile readReview Date: 2008-07-03
A good roadmap in a minefield.Review Date: 2008-06-26
What more can I say... I liked it so much that I bought 25 copies and have already mailed 14 out to friends who need to understand why the Emerging movement is such a dangerous thing. And I'm sure the last 11 will be gone soon!
Solid, entertaining and "relevant"Review Date: 2008-06-09
The Literary Lesson of LovelessnessReview Date: 2008-06-29
As I flipped to the first page inside the cover, there's an endorsement at the top of the page by D.A. Carson. Carson's book, published in 2005 entitled, "Becoming Conversant with the Emerging Church" was hardly a fair handed treatment of the topic the title purportedly represents. Furthermore, Carson's claims that Brian McLaren has "largely abandoned the gospel" (pp. 186-187) was evidence to me that Mr. Carson neither knows Brian or has any legitimate grasp of what McLaren is all about in terms of his literary contributions over the past several years and the way McLaren has lived and currently lives his life. Carson captures the essence of why I developed the motivation and went through the effort to read "Why We're Not Emergent - By Two Guys Who Should Be" by Ted Kluck and Kevin DeYoung when he writes: "If emerging church leaders wish to become a long-term prophetic voice that produces enduring fruit and that does not drift off toward progressive sectarianism and even, in the worst instances, outright heresy, they must listen at least as carefully to the criticisms of their movement as they transparently want others to listen to them." (p.234 - Carson, D.A. "Becoming Conversant with the Emerging Church" Zondervan, 2005). Well, D.A., transparently, that's why I read Ted and Kevin's book that has your endorsement as numero uno inside the front cover.
From purely a literary and style standpoint, this book is extremely well written and easy to read. The author's intentions for writing the book are quite clear: "We write this book because the more we learn about the emerging church, the harder it is to swallow (p.23). DeYoung and Kluck even spell out what success might mean to them in writing it when they state: "In fact, if our book makes emergent folks indignant enough to stand up and tell us more definitively what they believe, we will consider this book a success."(pp.23-24). The authors also confess what they suspect may be one of the outcomes of their book: "It reminds me of how sad this all is --- this us/them mentality --- and how writing a book titled Why We're Not Emergent probably won't help at all in the "further alienating friends and acquaintances" department." (p.99). Well, when you take 256 pages to attempt to discredit and seemingly dismember a whole group of folks (none of whom you indicated you had an actual face-to-face conversation with) who were created by the same loving God you profess has created you...well...you get the picture.
The overall effect this book had on me was to ponder the existence of lovelessness within the so-called Christian community. Using an excerpt from this book, DeYoung and Kluck succinctly characterize the essence of this impact when they write:
"Ephesus' lovelessness manifested itself in another kind of sin, not just a lack of life-giving fellowship but a lack of life-giving witness. The followers of Christ were so busy battling and protecting and defending that they had turned inward to self-protection and suspicion. They were navel-gazers, with no vision or purpose outside themselves. They were great at keeping the world out of the church, but they were terrible at taking the church out into the world...It is sad but true. Theologically astute churches and theologically minded pastors sometimes die of dead orthodoxy. Some grow sterile and cold, petrified as the frozen chosen, not compromising with the world, but not engaging it either. We may think right, live right, and do right, but if we do it off in a corner, shining our lights at one another to probe our brothers sins instead of pointing our lights into the world, we will, as a church, grow dim, and eventually our light will be extinguished." (p. 244).
The book by Kluck and DeYoung is filled with the theme described in the paragraph above --- lovelessness. It is clearly a bush league sucker-punch from a methodological standpoint in terms of what might be characterized as a form of legitimate social research. It is essentially a review of the published emergent literature (books and blogs) where excerpts are used to validate the points being made by the authors, without sufficient (in some cases any) impartial, substantive reference to the context of the material excerpted. Furthermore, there are no interviews with the likes of those duly dismembered like Brian McLaren, Tony Jones, Rob Bell, Donald Miller, Dave Tomlinson, Steve Chalke, Spencer Burke, Doug Pagitt, Barry Taylor, Erwin McManus, Dwight Friesen...sorry if I might have missed you. The authors really missed an opportunity to write a vastly more valuable and legitimate literary work had they taken the opportunity to sit down, engage in face-to-face interaction, and discuss their points of inquiry beyond the sole sources they relied upon.
This book is an intentional, unfortunate approach to protecting and defending what Kluck and DeYoung claim to know as truth. The lovelessness inherent throughout the text (save for numerous places where they clearly attempt to exhibit graciousness - they do) by shining the light on their brother's perceived sins caused my light to grow dim. Kluck and DeYoung are convinced that they think right, do right and live right. Yet, they've done it off in a corner, behind the backs of their brothers, sucking the oxygen out of the room that prevented the life giving witness this project had the distinct potential to become to be snuffed out before the ink was dry on the pages.
The vast distinction between these two authors and the people they take 256 pages to attempt to discredit is summarized in the following quote from Kluck and DeYoung: "One of the things that keeps me grounded as a pastor is to ask myself, "Will this help me and my people die well?" (p.252). Well, that's one of the fundamental reasons why I'm not enamored with your book, or the life you script for those who claim the name of Christ, who still live and breathe as I do on this planet. As Neil Cole wrote in his book, Organic Church - Growing Faith Where Life Happens: "Christianity is always just one generation away from extinction. If we fail to reproduce ourselves and pass the torch of life into the hands of the next generation, Christianity will be over within just one generation. Yet, because of the power of multiplication, we are also one generation away from worldwide fulfillment of the great commission. The choice is ours." (p.105).
I would refer you to a splendid source of superb social research to reconsider your stated thesis above about "dieing well." This research is laid out in David Kinnaman's newly released book (October 2007) entitled, unChristian - What a New Generation Really Thinks About Christianity - And Why It Matters. Kinnaman has been George Barna's protégé over the last 12 years and is President of the Barna Group, unequivocally the ongoing source of reliable social research about Christians, Christianity and the Church, particularly in the U.S..
This book is sobering. I wept at certain parts of it. We Christians have made a mess of Christianity in North America and the established Church most certainly has its share of the blame. As Kinnaman says, "We can't change what we are known for unless we change how we live." (p. 231). This "living" includes the "life" of the Church. Kinnaman goes on to say that we must "discern how deep and serious the problems are, so that our missional engagement in the coming years won't be more of the same." (emphasis is mine).
It is my prayer that we shall choose to cease engaging in the lovelessness that we birth and perpetuate in well intentioned books like Why We're Not Emergent - By Two Guys Who Should Be. Of course, we can conjure up all sorts of rationalizations and justifications based upon various perversions of duty and a maligned sense of self-righteousness. However, the world yearns for the life-giving witness that only the presence of such lovelessness prevents. The choice is ours.
Call Brian McLaren and Tony Jones. Buy them lunch. You can't help but love these guys. The love of Christ remains contagious. May we all infect this, His world, with the same. The choice is ours.

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The Dobsonian TelescopeReview Date: 2008-04-20
Excellent, comprehensive, well-written book!Review Date: 2008-04-03
The book is well-written and is a very easy read, even though it goes through some fairly complicated stuff at times. I highly recommend it!
Available from PublisherReview Date: 2004-03-01
from the publisher for $29.95 at
http://www.willbell.com/tm/dobtel.htm
Order it now, you won't be sorry!Review Date: 2006-12-07
One of the authors is responsible for the "Obsession" line of high-end Dobsonian telescopes. This book is almost a step-by-step guide on how you can build your own large Dobsonian, with optics and performance nearly as good as an Obsession. Yes, you probably won't save much money over a purchased 'scope, but the pride of being able to say "I built this myself!" more than makes up for that. Plus, you will know (and understand) every single square inch of your telescope, so modifications and changes won't be as frightening to you as they would if you had to cut into a $3000 commercial telescope.
If you think you're going to use this book and build an 18" 'scope for $500, you're going to be in for quite a shock. The authors in this book both stress the importance of premium optics, and these do not come cheap. Expect to spend roughly $1500, or more, for a good quality 12.5" primary mirror alone. Quality doesn't come cheap, and with the only commercial Pyrex production line in the US shut down for the next several years, expect mirror prices to rise, drastically.
For those who can afford it, a scope like this can last for a lifetime. But if you can't afford such a huge investment, this book also covers construction of an 8", closed-tube Dobsonian (The larger sizes in the book are all truss tube models), which can be assembled for roughly $600.
Right now, several of my friends and I are starting to plan our dream scope, using nothing but this book as a reference guide. We're going to build slowly, completing one major piece at a time. This both insures that the finished unit is as high a quality as we are capable of producing, plus helps to defer construction costs over a longer period of time.
Even if you have no intention of every getting a Dobsonian, you will find many things of value in this book.
Why are you still reading this? Go and order a copy for yourself. Experience firsthand just how well written and useful it really is, and I'll bet you also start dreaming of cutting wood and aligning optics.
The Bible on Building Dobsonians !Review Date: 2006-05-02
The author wisely leaves aside the craft of making your own optics. He reduces it to one chapter. The reason: if you you want to build a serious and large aperture telescope; buy the optics. This, with time and experience, comes as the best option.
Nothing is left aside on what building a Dobsonian may concern. I honestly didn't look for anything else after this book. (The only thing I surfed the internet for was for more images on Dob designs).
This is a rare book, for it accomplishes to fill virtually every doubt you may have on the subject.

Used price: $0.61

Valuable edition, easy to hold, fun to readReview Date: 2006-08-25
A popular play in an edition fabulously rich in helpsReview Date: 2003-06-30
Audiences love this play and they should. There is a lot to like and enjoy. I think upon repeated readings Henry becomes a more equivocal character than he seems at first. And readers of the King Henry IV plays will know him before he became King Henry and know something deeper about his personality.
And of course there is the whole bit about the drive to France being sponsored by the Church to avoid confiscation of property by the Crown. Moreover, there is the slaughtering of the French prisoners, and his treatment of Falstaff (who dies offstage in this play). This isn't revisionist stuff, it is right there in the play, but it is easy to miss the first time you are trying to take in the play.
In any case, this Arden edition is the one to buy and read from. Why? Because it has the most authoritative text, but that is only the beginning. It also shows variants between the early sources. The notes at the bottom of each page of the play are simply fabulous. The editor includes not only helpful notes explaining what might be obscure in the text of the play, he provides sources Shakespeare probably used such as Holinshed and makes for some very interesting study. There are also some helpful notes on how various scenes have been performed over time.
And to make this sound more like an infomercial, you get more! The introduction provides great background material on the play, its sources, and how it has been performed throughout history. After the play, there is a photo reproduction of the first Quarto from 1600 and it is fairly readable. There are also a couple of maps showing the path of the English Army from Harfleur through other towns on its way to Calais and makes clear how they had to pass through Agincourt.
There is also a helpful genealogical table so you can see the confusing claims used by Henry and the French nobility to make their claims. And there is a doubling chart so you can see how theater companies can perform all the roles with fewer actors.
This is a great edition as are all the plays published by the Arden Shakespeare. The amount of work collected in these volumes is stunning and they will enrich your experience of the plays tremendously. I can't recommend them enough.
I've always loved this play with its wonderful battle scenesReview Date: 2005-01-22
Every soldier should carry a copy.Review Date: 2004-11-25
Someone please give this book to BushReview Date: 2004-11-08
Particularly poignant poetry in these times of pompous presidential sabre rattling and wars based on questionable facts.

Used price: $5.50
Collectible price: $12.95

Hell hath no fury~Review Date: 2008-06-08
I'm sure the fourth installment can be read on its own, but I consider the first three in the series (Queen Lucia, Lucia in London : A Novel and Miss Mapp) indispensable in getting the most out of Mapp and Lucia. While all three are delectable entertainments (think social reality TV done to its fullest potential), this one departs its counterparts in a rather bizarre turn of events in the plot. Despite its absurd hilarity, it was logical and it worked, almost too perfectly.
Many thanks go to the originator (In Honor Bound) of this fabulous fondness for Lucia in our family. I am now officially and unashamedly a Luciaphile (would it be too much to admit that I've picked up a thing or two from her? Or would Benson be proud?), and I have no problems getting others on this habit. Just make sure you pair this series with your favorite treat--time with Lucia is worthy of indulgence.
Heaven help my credit card...Review Date: 2003-05-04
Last week I succumbed to a nasty bout of influenza and E.F. Benson. I had grabbed the slender volume of "Mapp & Lucia" from the library shelf and it had rested in my bookcase for almost a week. Not wanting to dull my brain with endless hours of television, I cracked open "Mapp & Lucia".
Ten pages into the book and I was hooked. Lucia, her period of mourning almost over is looking to regain her iron control on her hometown. First action, regain her star role as Queen Elizabeth in the village fete.
As I read Lucia's plots and plans, a strange thought hit me. Lucia is the creature Hyacinth Bucket (the main character of the BBC's Keeping Up Appearances) secretly dreams of being. Having taken over the fete from her dazed and confused friend, Lucia goes onto greater pastures, the hometown of Miss Elizabeth Mapp, reigning social goddesss.
Miss Elizabeth Mapp (known as Mapp) plots with her friends to rent out their respective homes a profit. Lucia and her best friend (a gentleman who brings to mind a cross between KUA's Richard and AYBS Mr Humphries) move and slowly begin to take over the town. Mapp is not pleased and a genteel war of one-upsmanship begins between the two ladies.
Drawings are rejected from the art exhibit, parties given, ownership of produce and fruit desputed with the poor town in the middle. Matters come to a head on Boxing Day (December 26) when Mapp decides to steal a longed for recipe that Lucia refuses to give to her.
Lucia stumbles on her rival in the kitchen and both women are swept out to sea on Lucia's kitchen table (yes, Lucia's kitchen table, this is a not a mis-type). The town mourns the two ladies as lost and the Great War of Mapp-Lucia as over.
Okay, enough said. You'll have to succumb to the collective charms of the ladies Mapp and Lucia yourself and find out all the bits I've left out. Now, I'm off hunt down and read the rest of E.F. Benson's wonderful books.
Cheerful MaliceReview Date: 2003-03-02
Lucia is a newly minted widow in this hilarious outing. Her fires have been banked, and she is anxious to get back in the swing and show her mettle. She rents a house for the summer from the formidable Miss Elizabeth Mapp of Tilling. Miss Mapp is clearly the leader of society in Tilling and revels in her role. Lucia eyes the situation, and the lines are drawn in the most charming but resolute way possible Lucia is the richer of the two and possibly more clever, but Miss Mapp has some powerful advantages of her own. She has pride of place, a town full of quaking allies, and indomnable perseverance. When these two square off, the fun begins and doesn't let up.
This is a delightful read, a mood lifter of the first magnitude. "Mapp & Lucia" is my introduction to Lucia, and I cannot wait to further my acquaintance with this fascinating lady.
-sweetmolly-Amazon Reviewer
Only five stars?!Review Date: 2005-05-08
Gentile warfare!Review Date: 2005-08-16
This aspect of the British Class system was one he knew well and which was breathing it's last in the times in which Mapp and Lucia live, witness the somewaht irritating coldness with which the Ladies treat their Maids, Drivers and Shop staff.
Lucia is the dominant character, lithe, fashionable and razor sharp while Mapp is clumsy, mumsy and opts for bulldog tactics.
The two appear in many novels, Lucia more often and one cannot help wonder if she was based on a Lady whom Benson was ever so slightly in love with, but here they meet for the first time, as Lucia moves to "Tilling" for the summer in Mapps rented out home "Mallards". The array of colurful charcters they surround themselves with and draw into their delighfully bitchy and cunning war agaisnt each other, are of equal delight, of particualr note are Quaint Irene and Georgie. Perhaps seen as little more than bohemian in their day but doubtless these characters would now be seen as obviously Lesbain and Gay; with the former being in love with Lucia. A daring inclusion in Benson's time but subtle and beautifully inclusive one.
Fans of these deliciously naughty pair should see the 1986 TV series which is available on DVD. Geraldine McKewan (of current Miss Marple fame)is petite, pretty, acid and simply perfect as Lucia while Prunella Scales (Cybil of Fawlty Towers) brings Miss Mapp to dusty, dowdy and bullish life! Excellent stuff!
The series was filmed in Rye in Sussex, home town of Benson, it used many locations close to his home (Lamb House), such as the lovley houses of Watchbell Street (My favourite being No 11 which was used as Godiva's house) and "Twistevens" shop on Mermaid Street, actually a Tea Room in reality.
WELL WORTH A VISIT! Literature fans may also wish to know that Lamb House was once home to American novelist, Henry James before Benson's time. One can also visit Benson's Grave in the town. Benson was Lord Mayor of Rye for a while and the river "Tilling"-ton flows through the town.

Used price: $10.13

Wealth of Knowledge in this bookReview Date: 2008-04-15
5 Thumbs Up :)Review Date: 2008-03-11
Holistic Aromatherapy for AnimalsReview Date: 2007-05-21
Another Great Book for PetsReview Date: 2007-03-13
Great Resource for Aromatherapy "Recipies" for PetsReview Date: 2007-03-23

Used price: $4.23
Collectible price: $18.00

Seeks it's own level.Review Date: 2008-06-11
New Agey book on water, not scientificReview Date: 2008-04-15
The Holy Order of WaterReview Date: 2007-04-23
You'll Be RestoredReview Date: 2006-09-22
As a layperson on the path of being a true leader in the H2O movement, I am very glad to have been offered this book to open my eyes about the elixir of life.
This book is astounding in its clarity and authenticity. Its fun to read and brings home my actual deepest feelings about water.
It brings you a masterful tapestry from the authors life story, the science, the philosophy and even the spirituality of water.
Read it. I promise it will trasform your life and it will transform your relationship with water.
You will never relate to a cup of water in quite the same way again.
Truly,
Leslie Gabriel aka WaterMan
Host Of "And So It Flows"
WBCR 97.7 FM Great Barrington, MA
The most important book you will read this yearReview Date: 2006-01-19
Water is a mystical, magical substance, and oh how we take it for granted; filling it with carmel coated sugar substances for profit; tossing our waste products into it as if it had no value of its own, wasting it on "the perfect lawn" which servies absolutely no purpose or function, or even washing our cars, which cry the death knoll of Earth daily.
Care enough about Water to read this book. Pass it on to your friends. Give it as a gift for Arbor Day, Earth Day, Valentine's day. It's the most important book you will read this year.
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The point is that this is a wonderful way for a parent to teach their son or daughter to read very early. You don't need to wait for an incompetent school system to teach reading; your bright child can already be reading and understanding what is read when he or she starts 'formal' education. As long as you make it fun, and show proper 'amazement' and pride when he or she sounds out a new word, your child will almost certainly want more lessons than you have time to give!
Finally, I can't say this will happen to your child, but when our daughter graduated from high school, Mensa (the group for people with IQs over 140) contacted her to join. She probably had a genetic marker for genius intelligence, but I am sure that part of the reason for her high IQ is due to the basics and discipline she learned by reading the McGuffey Readers before she started school.