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

Missouri
Can We Wear Our Pearls and Still Be Feminists?: Memoirs of a Campus Struggle
Published in Paperback by University of Missouri Press (2000-06)
Author: Joan D. Mandle
List price: $29.95
New price: $29.95
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Average review score:

Odd little book
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2002-06-28
This is worth a read if you're interested in the whole Wimmin's Studies cult phenomenon. But there's much to puzzle about here too. Prof Mandle took the helm of the WS program at Colgate determined to drag it out of its sectarian isolation, impose scholarly standards, and build bridges to the secular branches of the humanities and even the sciences. At every turn the True Believers fought her and accused of her of straying from the path of ideological purity. In the end, there was a coup and she got dumped.
It makes for an interesting enough tale, but I was left scratching my head as to Mandle's motivations. Did she really expect to effect a lasting clean-up of that stable?

A courageous and essential effort
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2000-11-03
Joan Mandle has done an excellent job at synthesizing for the reader what types of conflicts and miscommunications lie fundamental to the core of struggling women's studies programs. Her account of a case study (memoirs of a campus struggle) is important reading for anyone interested in truly examining and furthering the state of women's studies programs in today's liberal arts curriculum.

inclusive feminism
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2000-07-03
Mandle has written a memoir of her years running the Women's Studies Program at Colgate University. During that time, she struggled to make it a non-dogmatic, inclusive, academically rigorous program. She had many setbacks but also successes. It is depressing to read about the narrow-minded ideologues - usually people who thought of themselves as feminists - who resisted her admirable goals. Still, the larger message is one of hope. Feminism really can be an open, inclusive force for education and social change. Mandle avoids jargon and her writing is vivid and accessible. This book is a must for anyone interested in an alternative vision of feminism.

Courage and conviction on campus
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2000-06-29
Joan Mandle has written a wonderful, bittersweet memoir about her years as the director of a women's studies program at a liberal arts college. Her passion for feminism is palpable, and her willingness to be openly critical of the intellectual, philosophical and emotional blunders she encounters along the way is as refreshing as it is courageous.

The narrative line of this slim volume moves along at a rapid clip. She tells scores of stories -- about herself, her students, her interns at the center, and her colleagues both on campus and across the country. The tales are both fascinating and instructive. What sets this memoir apart, though, is her unshakeable commitment to social change and her equally rock-solid belief that feminism is strengthened, not weakened, by a rigorous and often critical self-appraisal of both the academic discipline and the social movement.

Facinating account of campus politics
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 2000-08-04
In this cogent, thought-provoking and ultimately hopeful memoir, sociologist Joan D. Mandle chronicles the six years in the 1990s when she directed the women's studies program at Colgate University, an elite liberal arts college in upstate New York. Her main challenge was how to transform a program narrowly focused on identity politics, talk therapy and male bashing--the agenda favored by the program's former director--into an intellectually rigorous, ideologically open, campus-wide forum on women and gender issues. Mandle's efforts were only partly successful, but you'll be fascinated (and disturbed) by the obstacles she faced. Chief among them was self-censorship in the classroom and at faculty gatherings. People avoided frank discussion of certain issues for fear of being labeled a sexist or a traitor to the women's movement. Mandle also analyzes why certain groups rejected, or felt excluded from, the program in the past--male faculty and students, sorority sisters (hence the reference to "wearing pearls"), women athletes, African-American women, pro-life advocates and others. Notably, Mandle counts herself as a feminist. But her vision of women's studies as an ideologically neutral field, anchored in evidence not political dogma, is shared by all too few in the academia. If you've ever wondered why most Americans believe in equal rights for women but reject "feminism", this book is a good place to start.

Missouri
Discover! America's Great River Road : Galena, Illinois to St. Louis, Missouri (Discover! America's Great River Road)
Published in Paperback by Heritage Press (WI) (1998-09)
Author: Pat Middleton
List price: $15.95
New price: $12.99
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Average review score:

I'd like more!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 1999-07-07
I recently purchased DISCOVER! Volume 3 and I want more! Please send Volumes 2 and 3!

I'd like more!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 1999-07-07
I recently purchased DISCOVER! Volume 3 and I want more! Please send Volumes 2 and 3!

Discover! America's Great River Road
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2004-02-29
While planning for yet another summer of rides on the motorcycle,
my wife and I had this book sent as part of our research.
We were very disappointed, it has 5 stars. So what is the problem?
For one thing it is not well written nor does it seem up to date.
We travel a lot, all over the USA and the world.
It is like asking about a good cafe, first you need to know the people who felt it was great. Do they know good food?

We know well done books and this is not one. I move it to the waste fill.

New guide highlights heritage, natural history of Miss River
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 1997-04-16
Rolling on the River.......... In a few weeks, it'll be road-trip weather, and we have some of the nation's prettiest highways at our fingertips--US Hwy 61 and several other state and county highways form the parkway known as AMERICA's Great River Road. Making that drive even easier is a new guide: "DISCOVER! AMERICA'S GREAT RIVER ROAD, Volume 1." This 240-page guide highlights the heritage, natural history and recreational activities available along the Mississippi River from St. Paul, Mn., to Dubuque, Iowa. It includes maps, historical and geological points of interest, bike trails, bird watching spots and short features on small towns, parks, and villages. ----STAR TRIBUNE, Minneapolis, Mn. April 1997

The only thing better than this book is a personal tour.
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 1999-01-05
Having traveled and lived in the areas described in Vol.3, The Lower Mississippi, from St. Louis, Missouri to Memphis, Tennessee, and descended from a family of river rats, I can say that I've "Been there, done that, got the T-shirt."

Reading Pat's book is like traveling along with her as she explores the Great River Road along the mighty Mississippi River. I was especially impressed with the with the book's scope and readability. Pat has included personal insights from area inhabitants, collected geographical, historical and societal information and spread it all liberally throughout the travelogue. This is one hard book to put down, and if you ever decide to visit the area you'll have plenty of reference material to use. You will feel like you know the place already, and have gotten your own t-shirt.

Jim Pankey USN (Ret.)

Missouri
Guarding the Secrets: Palestinian Terrorism and a Father's Murder of His Too-American Daughter
Published in Hardcover by Scribner (1995-04-03)
Author: Ellen Harris
List price: $23.00
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Average review score:

Horrific story
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-04-26
This was such a horrible story of Palestinian parents who murdered there daughter. They called it all in the name of Honor for she was becoming to American. What it's called is murder. The story was not written very well though. The author was all over the place and did not keep the story in one place.

The show forensic files has an episode on this. It gets to the point with out traveling all over the place as the book did.If your curious about the story wait for it to come on forensic files or look it up on line. There is tons of information on line about this tragic story of the lovely , kind innocent girl who did not deserve to die.

In light of 9/11
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2003-01-24
In the wake of the tradegy of 9/11 this book is eye-opening. It goes into detail about how this family/group operated here right under our noses.

Gurarding the Secrets
Helpful Votes: 31 out of 34 total.
Review Date: 2001-07-25
In November 1989 in St. Louis, the FBI inadvertently tape recorded the entire episode of a teenage girl's being killed by her Palestinian father and Brazilian mother (the Feds were looking for evidence of terrorism, which they also found). In a ghastly eight-minute sequence, Zein Isa stabbed his daughter Palestina thirteen times with a butcher's knife as his wife held the girl down and responded to Palestina's pleas for help with a brutal "Shut up!" The killing ends with Zein screaming "Die! Die quickly! Die quickly! . . . Quiet, little one! Die, my daughter, die!" By this time, she is dead.

Harris, a St. Louis television reporter, has done admirable spade work going through the court transcripts and interviewing everyone connected to the case in an attempt to piece together the interlocking stories of family murder and active support of Abu Nidal's terrorist organization. In addition, she successfully conjures up the small and exceedingly unpleasant world of Zein Isa and his family of rabid anti-Americans living right in the American heartland. The murder culminates their lives of frustration, greed, and vulgarity. Unfortunately, Harris spent more effort digging up information than she did writing the book; so the more-than-casual reader must read and reread its pages to piece together the sequence of events and the scope of the Isa family's involvement with Abu Nidal. Doing so repays the effort, however, for Harris has compiled a treasure trove of materials on two usually elusive subjects.

Middle East Quarterly, September 1995

Terrorism's broad inroads
Helpful Votes: 37 out of 39 total.
Review Date: 2001-09-23
This book starkly frames the force of hatred which overtook New York City and the world with the Sept. 11, 2001 terror attacks on the World Trade Center and Pentagon. It relates specifically to Zein Isa's November 1989 murder of his daughter, Palestina. The West Bank immigrant and his Brazilian wife co-conspired in the brutal St. Louis murder of their teenage daughter, whose friendships they believed had endangered their terrorist plans.

In their search for terrorists, the Federal Bureau of Investigation inadvertently taped the actual killing. Zein Isa and his wife were sentenced to death.

The book reveals much about the village life in the West Bank, where most families, according to Maria Zein, belong to radical military groups whose ultimate goal is to destroy Israel. Many West Bank residents are actually "refugees from other countries." According Maria Zein's account, her husband knew "men from Syria, Libya, Kuwait, Saudi." Maria Zein told the author that her husband had traveled from the West Bank village of Beitin, to Jordan, Syria, Libya and Bolivia. He lived undetected for years in the US, and also claimed to have lived in Europe.

The book reveals twisted morals, which condone murder for the sake of family honor. It unmasks intense hatred that evolved into conspiracies to slaughter Jews, blow up the Israeli embassy in Washington and to murder Tina because she posed a threat to these plans.

It also exposes the frighteningly broad inroads that the Abu Nidal terrorists have made into American cities and life. Alyssa A. Lappen

Horrifying!
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2002-07-31
This true-crime story is written in the sensationalistic fashion typical of the genre. It grabs your attention right from the beginning and doesn't let go.
The author describes the irony of Tina Isa's life: to any otherAmerican family she would have been cherished as a charming, friendly, hard-working teen...
The author also describes the network of Palestinian terrorist groups living in the U.S. and the role they might have played... This story is gripping and very informative because the author did a lot of research and provides so much background information about the Palestinian culture, the lives of generations of the Isa family, the Abu Nidal terrorist organization and more.
...

Missouri
Hide & Seek
Published in Hardcover by Thorndike Press (2003-12)
Author: Catherine Palmer
List price: $27.95
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Average review score:

Hide and Seek
Helpful Votes: 12 out of 14 total.
Review Date: 2001-04-05
I really enjoyed the sequel to Finders Keepers. Darcy's past was different from most characters that you read about. It was neat that she was able to over come her past and try to go on. Most main characters you read about if they ever were in jail, it was because they were wrongly accused. Rarely, do you find a christian romance where the woman was put in jail for a murder she really did commit. I also liked that Buck was able to realize what she wanted and why, and tried to keep his father from harassing Darcy. I would advise to read Finder's Keepers before reading this one. It will help to understand some of the minor characters better.

I loved this one also
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2003-06-26
After I had read Finders Keepers and finished it I could not wait to get started on this one. I laughed and cried throughout the book. It is a excellient book I would recommend it to anyone.

its okay
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2003-02-01
Are you a bookworm going on vacation or to the beach? Then take this easy read with you. It's not very well written, its formulaic,predictable, and a little cheesy. I thought that the book "It had to be you by Linda Windsor" was better written and a more compatible companion if you want a beach read.

Unusual
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2001-11-07
This is a very different romance book, from what I've read in the past. The female lead character Darcy actually was in jail for 6 years and of course became a christian there, after they let her out of jail she moves to a small town to start over her life. Very unusual, I've never read about a lead female character in a romance book, being in jail and learning how to move on. I really liked reading it because its very different, and the romance part of it is good too.

Not really a "sequel"
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2001-11-05
I picked up this book because it was billed as the sequel to "Finders Keepers" but it isn't a sequel in my definition. The main characters in "Finders Keepers" are relegated to minor characters in this book and the focus is on Luke Easton and Darcy.

What struck me in this book was the situation Ruby McCann. Without giving it away, once you finish the book, and you reflect on the series as a whole, some of Ruby's actions in "Finders Keepers" will make some sense.

The bitterness that Will feels toward Darcy for the murder of his son, no matter how justified, illustrates how hate and vengeance can twist a person's personality and soul. Buck shows Darcy that even the worse things in a person can be redeemed. Through Luke, Darcy realizes that there are men in the world who are decent and loving; and Darcy shows Luke that it's ok to crawl out from under the burden of grief.

This was a good book, and I would recommend it to anyone, although you should read "Finders Keepers" first, I don't think it's a requirement--none of the true surprises in "Finders Keepers" are given away in "Hide & Seek."

Missouri
Long Train Passing
Published in Hardcover by Thomas Nelson Inc (1996-01)
Author: Steven W. Wise
List price: $16.99
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Average review score:

If you want christian/religious fiction...
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2002-01-12
...this is the book for you. On the other hand, if you want to read about a time "when teachers could change the world, when a stranger's help was graciously accepted and freely given, and a time when the promise of a bright future could capture the imagination and determination of any child." you may have to tolerate a little preachy-ness.

I gave this book only one star because of what I consider the devious way the book was presented. I expected a slice of Americana but got an excercise in feel-good faith reassurances instead. The way the story is presented isn't what the book is really about.

Heartwarming
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 1999-04-30
It is not often that I feel sad when a book ends. But I did when I finished reading "Long Train Passing". I felt like I really knew these people and they were genuine. The way that Steven Wise developed these charactors was wonderful. I wish there were more people in the world like Annabelle.Especially in a world where things like Columbine High happen. I reccomend this book to anyone with a heart, because it will definetly be touched!

Heartwarming tale of caring people in a Midwestern town.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 1998-12-06
Today, over thirty five years after it's debut on network television, The Andy Griffith Show remains extremely popular. I believe the major reason for it's continued popularity is the hidden desire for most of us to be able to return to a simpler time where problems were usually minor and always resolved in 30 minutes. Yet, some of us did grow up in our own versions of Mayberry USA, and while many of the things depicted on the program were fairly true to life, we also know that many of our problems were quite complex and rarely resolved quickly. Such is the town portrayed in the book "Long Train Passing" by Steven W. Wise. While the setting is 20 years before mythical Mayberry, it seems extremely familiar. For those of us who grew up in small Midwestern towns, "Long Train" hits close to home, and takes us quickly back to less complicated days. The characters depicted seem all too real, mainly because the author has taken them fairly faithfully from the real inhabitants of his hometown in rural Missouri. While the story is extremely entertaining, the real joy in reading this book is to see the characters come alive in print and to feel we would know them if we met them on the street. Here is a chance to go back to a time when many of the complexities of our modern society were not present, but the drama of life and the triumph of the human spirit coupled with love overcoming hate are as current as today. Spend a few hours and let the author spin his tale. You will be greatly rewarded for your investment.

A wonderful morally stimulating, well written novel.
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 1998-12-05
Being an avid reader I often find it a challange to find a book that can hold my interest and touch my heart. This novel does both. Long Train Passing does a fantastic job of incorperating drama, suspense, and morality. It is the heart wrenching story of a kind hearted school teacher, who makes a great impact on everyone she comes in contact with. Everyone has, or should have, a memory of a special teacher who has made an impact on them. The person that inspired you, or changed you, in a way that made you a better person. For the people in this story, that person is Annabelle. She breaks down the emotional walls of a child that was deemed "unsaveable." She also makes the town that she is living in a better place for everyone. The amazing part, is that she does this in the midst of her own personal troubles and disapointments. She makes you realize that life is not worth living if you are the center of your own world. I have never read a novel that is so inspiring, and yet so full of action and suspense. It kept me on the edge of my seat, but also moved me to tears more than once. I could say that teachers will love this book, or women, or kind hearted people. But I'm not going to, that would be closed minded. There is not ONE certain type of person that I would recomend this novel to. I recomend it to ANY human with a heart. There is something in it for everyone!

A story of compassion that triumphs over bitterness.
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 1998-06-16
What a find this book is! Steven W. Wise writes a story that in lesser hands may be sappy or over-sentimental. Instead, he tells a story of healing, compassion and understanding. The protaganist is a teacher named Annabelle Allen who is stricken with a physical deformity but blessed with courage and compassion. When faced with a very difficult student named Jewell Cole, she meets him with understanding and breaks through his pained exterior. She helps Jewell, who dreams of some day being a soldier, with the many battles he must face including an abusive father, receiving an education his father tries to deny him and learning to forgive and live. Also, WWII and the Korean Wars are backdrops in this novel of battles and struggles that must be met head-on. Each character faces conflicts with eventual integrity, lead by the righteous Annabelle. For readers who enjoy stories of triumphs in the moral struggle of life, this is a must-read. I look forward to reading more books by this author.

Missouri
Murder Sets Seed
Published in Hardcover by Thorndike Press (2001-06)
Author: Janis Harrison
List price: $27.95
Used price: $0.24

Average review score:

A great read
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2000-10-05
I have been absolutely thrilled with the new mysteries, especially the series that have started up in the last year or two, and Janis Harrison's Gardening Mystery series is just one example of theses great new series.

A Murder Sets Seed is the second of Janis Harrison's Gardening Mysteries. Widowed Bretta Solomon, owner of a flower shop, is our amateur sleuth. She is a fabulous, full-bodied character who holds up the story with her personal strength, humor, and wisdom. The entire of cast and the story line of A Murder Sets Seed are impressive and complete, so readers can expect to react, thank goodness. The mystery, with its developments and revelations, pulled together expertly.

Cameo Beauchamp-Sinclair, a rich socialite, has a couple of problems: she is being blackmailed and needs a surrogate daughter. After she meets Bretta Solomon, she sells the Beauchamp Mansion to her and turns to Bretta for help with the problems. During one of Bretta's formal dinners Cameo denounces her unknown blackmailer in front of the other guests, which causes a snowball effect into murder and mayhem.

Flowery Family Folly
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2004-04-26
In this second book of a series, Bretta Soloman has moved from the home she shared with late husband Carl (see Roots of Murder) and undertaken the renovation of a neglected mansion. Set during the busy Christmas season, Bretta is a busy and ambitious florist, hoping to cash in on the season of spending. However, the tale takes more of a Halloween turn when the former owner of the mansion is strangled with the cord of some Christmas lights. Fast paced, the timing seems off in this book, and too many different components come into play. The widowed Bretta has fallen off her diet, her long lost father has made contact, and the former owner of her new home has made some interesting demands, and Bretta has issues with the sheriff. A few red herrings are to be expected in a cozy mystery, but this one meandered past the point of plausibility on many counts. A baffling "flower" arrangement, with too many design elements?

What a good Christmas read!!!!!!!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2001-11-16
I really enjoyed this book, and look forward to many more in this series!!!!!! Terrific book for the holidays, or anytime!

Murder Sets Seed
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2000-09-27
Bretta Solomon has decided to begin putting her life back together after her husband's untimely death by buying the historic Beauchamp mansion and restoring it. Bretta and her flower shop staff have been working hard at decorating the house in time for the shop's annual Christmas open house. Unfortunately, a week before the event, the manipulative Cameo Beauchamp, erstwhile owner of the Beauchamp Mansion, persuades Bretta to hold a select dinner for a few friends (read River City's most upstanding citizens) so that they can have a sneak peek at the restorations.

Of course Cameo has an agenda of her own that she fails to appraise Bretta of! Just before dinner, Cameo drops a bombshell: someone at this ill-fated dinner party has attempted to blackmail her and she's not going to stand for it. And then dramatically, the lights go out and when they come back on, Cameo is found strangled. Bretta is all for staying out of this investigation but when the town's leading gossip columnist accuses her of the crime, Bretta goes all out to find out who did actually kill Cameo Beauchamp.

I enjoyed this mystery alot more than the first one ("Roots Of Murder"). Bretta Solomon is a charming and sympathetic woman, and I thought the other characters were developed well as well. But I really didn't understand the sheriff's attitude or hostility towards Brettta, especially as Bretta's husband had been a rather close friend. His antagonism seemed all out of proportion. Also, I had to read the last three chapters twice in order to make sense of who had committed the murder and why. And while I did understand it the second time around, I think the novel would have been stronger if there had been a few more clues strewn about in the preceding chapters.

A likeablemystery
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2000-07-20
Over eighteen months ago, Bretta Solomon's beloved spouse, a deputy sheriff, died. Bretta still mourns her loss, but their love is so powerful that even death cannot keep them from conversing with one another. Bretta runs a River City floral shop, but that is inadequate to keep her mind off of her husband's death. So when Cameo Beauchamp-Sinclair offers to sell her family mansion to Bretta, the florist leaps at the opportunity.

Bretta performs a miracle restoring the mansion to much of its former glory. To celebrate her accomplishment, Bretta hosts a dinner to include Cameo and many of the elderly woman's friends and relatives. During the meal, Cameo announces that she has discovered the identity of the person trying to blackmail her. However, the lights go off and when illumination returns, Cameo is dead. Having successfully solved a murder before, Bretta begins investigating this homicide without yet realizing how close she comes to joining her husband in the afterlife.

The heroine of MURDER SETS SEED is a likable, understandable, and empathetic individual. However, the remainder of the cast seems two-dimensional, symbolizing a stereotype rather than a person. Though not enhancing the tale, that flaw fails to hurt the story line because the plot totally belongs to the brave Bretta. Janis Harrison writes an enjoyable amateur sleuth tale that sets the roots for a warm sad character starring in a gardening mystery series.

Harriet Klausner

Missouri
News Reporting and Writing
Published in Paperback by Bedford Books (2001-09)
Authors: George Kennedy, Daryl R. Moen, and Don Ranly
List price: $71.75
Used price: $2.94

Average review score:

News and Reporting, 7th ed.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-09-03
this book came in a timely and ordely fashion, it is in great condition almost brand new and it is a great book. i will definetely keep the book for use in future college classes and hopefully will do exceptionally well in this Journalism class. Thanks

A ripoff at any price! Avoid at all costs!
Helpful Votes: 15 out of 28 total.
Review Date: 2002-06-27
As a Missouri grad, I took classes with some of these dunderheads and was forced to buy their book. Ranly's great contribution to journalism is extolling the use of the word "that." Moen basically retired to Missouri at age 25. His goal was to brighten up newspapers after the "negativity" of the Watergate-era. Kennedy is a living ghost.

Just read the "humor" section. It's unintentionally funny.

This book is not fit to line bird cages. It one the reason so many newspapers are dull and lack substance.

A better book is Steve Weinberg's "The Reporter's Handbook." I'm told there is a recent edition. Weinberg is also a Missouri professor. Unlike the Kennedy, Moen, Ranly triumvarate, Weinberg actually is a great writer and journalist. He knows what he's talking about. Moen, et al are nothing more than witless windbags. (Read about alliteration in the cahpter on "creative" writing.)

Finally, I get my revenge on the dullards who make the Missouri School of Journalism the sham that it is.

With little effort, I have snatched the pebble from the so-called Master's hand.

Perfect for the Classroom!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2004-06-16
I used "News Reporting and Writing" when I studied journalism in college. Upon returning to the college classroom to teach journalism, I introduced my students to the latest edition of this wonderful text. The book provides an excellent introduction to the various elements of good journalism and is perfect for a beginning or advanced course on reporting and writing. I recommend it highly!

Can't Beat It
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2002-06-03
While I can't actually comment on the current edition, I'd like to say that this is the same book I used 18 years ago in college and it was excellent. I still have my copy and refer to it occasionally when I'm covering an area that I don't handle often. The authors are from the University of Missouri School of Journalism, one of the top journalism schools in the country because most of the faculty have real-world, hands-on experience. This book today is used in hundreds of journalism classes around the country.

Great journalism tool
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2000-06-23
News Reporting and Writing is an excellent tool for aspiring journalists. It is very easy to read and right on the money, as far as content. It covers everything from writing a catchy lead for your stories to a step-by-step process for interviewing. The book also has sidebars that emphasize the important elements in each chapter. I would recommend this book to not only anyone interested in journalism, but to anyone interested in learning how to write better.

Missouri
No-Load Stocks: How to Buy Your First Share & Every Share Directly from the Company--With No Broker's Fee
Published in Paperback by Mcgraw-Hill (1996-12-01)
Author: Charles B. Carlson
List price: $16.95
New price: $1.22
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $19.95

Average review score:

how to buy your first share
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2004-02-11
Just wondering why the reviews all three were identical to the other book I reviewed two minutes before.

Back To The Basics
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2002-12-10
"No-Load Stocks" was a very informative book. What it teaches you could be very worthwhile when you go to invest in the market. It uses great real-world examples to relate the stock market and investments to the "novice".

I didn't realize many things before reading this book. It cleared up some very murky waters for me, so to speak. First off, it tells you just how much the brokers take away when you have to go through them to invest. I didn't realize that you have the ability of making so much more money with no-load stocks. Some of the only drawbacks it points out are no-load stocks have maximum amounts you can invest, and the administration fees they charge for them tend to be high on average.

Overall, I would highly recommend this book to first time investors. Perhaps even well-schooled investors looking to "freshen up".

An excellent book
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 1997-10-22
Like "Buying Stocks Without A Broker" This book is a must read for new and experienced investors. After reading it, I have contacted three companies and am waiting their prospectus and application.

A must read for anyone wanting to invest in stocks!
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 1999-01-29
After reading this book and following through with the information it gives, ANYONE can invest in the stock market. Not just second rate stocks either, FIRST rate companys. Research and patients are all that it takes.

Anyone can own stocks after reading this book.
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 1997-02-27
This book takes the mystery out of buying stocks. Even though I have dealt in mutual funds for years, stocks were only for brokers. No longer! Anyone can buy stocks and with any budget. Thank You Charles Carlson for bringing stock buying to the average guy!

Missouri
Ranch Life and the Hunting Trail (Classics of the Old West)
Published in Hardcover by Time Life Education (1981-11)
Author: Theodore Roosevelt
List price: $17.27
New price: $126.32
Used price: $5.03

Average review score:

Great book, lousy edition
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-18
Having misplaced my earlier printing of this book (by the University of Nebraska Press) I ordered the Kessinger Publishing, LLC release of this title, only to be terribly disappointed. The Remington drawings are so poorly reproduced that some appear as blacked-out, scarcely discernable blobs, rather than the wonderful sketches they originally were. This printing appears to be a very poorly-reproduced copy of earlier ones, with much quality lost. Find a copy of the extremely attractive Nebraska (Bison) edition instead.

Vintage Teddy
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2005-01-31
From someone who has lived this life on the great plains from cowboy to hunter, this book is in every detail right on. It is written in Teddy's classic modest style (who else could float the Missouri during spring break up chasing criminals with guns and describe it with as much excitement as buttering toast).

It also is a repeat of some of his earlier works as this seems to be a bit of transitional book of when he was about leaving the Elkhorn for the east.
The Wilderness Hunter is more poetic and Hunting Trips of a Ranchman is a better read, but the history in this book of how Montana and the Dakotas were made safe by lynch justice makes this one interesting too.

The sketches by Remington are wonderfully historic to study and add a great deal to this book.
This book though is like all of Teddy's in settling down with a friend and always looking for his next book to find a campfire with him again.
Thank God Mr. Roosevelt wrote so many wonderful books.

TR's Writing At Its Finest!
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2004-01-10
"Ranch Life And The Hunting Trail" is Theodore Roosevelt's narrative of his life and experiences during his time in the Dakota Territory of the 1880s. Published in 1888, it displays Roosevelt's writing at this finest. His picture words make the scenes come alive in all their splendor. This is a TR I never knew existed. For anyone with a love of western adventure, this book is it!

Besides providing the sheer enjoyment of reading, this book actually teaches the reader much about the life and economy of the era. I had always heard about the open range and the roundup, but this book makes the concepts clear. Cattle and horses were left to feed on the open range. The herds were divided during the roundup, with the calves given the brands of their mothers, as the way to assert property rights in the cattle. The devastation of a severe winter cannot be imagined until you read an eyewitness account, and few are written as well as this. The challenges of the hunt and the unique characters of the West can be experienced vicariously through the pages of this book.

Frederic Remington's illustrations add visual images to the written word.

This book is an excellent choice for anyone with longing for the lure of the Old West or a window into the world of Theodore Roosevelt.

TR's Writing At Its Finest!
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2004-01-10
"Ranch Life And The Hunting Trail" is Theodore Roosevelt's narrative of his life and experiences during his time in the Dakota Territory of the 1880s. Published in 1888, it displays Roosevelt's writing at this finest. His picture words make the scenes come alive in all their splendor. This is a TR I never knew existed. For anyone with a love of western adventure, this book is it!

Besides providing the sheer enjoyment of reading, this book actually teaches the reader much about the life and economy of the era. I had always heard about the open range and the roundup, but this book makes the concepts clear. Cattle and horses were left to feed on the open range. The herds were divided during the roundup, with the calves given the brands of their mothers, as the way to assert property rights in the cattle. The devastation of a severe winter cannot be imagined until you read an eyewitness account, and few are written as well as this. The challenges of the hunt and the unique characters of the West can be experienced vicariously through the pages of this book.

Frederic Remington's illustrations add visual images to the written word.

This book is an excellent choice for anyone with longing for the lure of the Old West or a window into the world of Theodore Roosevelt.

Stellar account of roughing it 1900
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 13 total.
Review Date: 1999-04-18
I have an original copy of this classic. Not a photo-copy. NOT much else of Americana as spectacular.

Missouri
The Adventures of Tom Sawyer (Great Illustrated Classics)
Published in Library Binding by Abdo Publishing Company (2002-01)
Authors: Mark Twain, Deidre S. Laiken, and Pablo Marcos Studio
List price: $21.35
New price: $4.65
Used price: $4.65
Collectible price: $21.35

Average review score:

Third Grade Boys
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-21
I have a boy in my class who would never finish a book. He just wasn't interested in any of the typical novels that third graders read. One day he picked up Tom Sawyer and he read it every day until he had finished the book. Now he's reading it a second time. Something about this story really appealed to him in a way that no other book could. The text level is typical for third grade. The print size is large. There are lots of black and white pictures. It tells the story of Tom Sawyer in a way that a third grader will understand.

its ok
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2002-12-04
the book was ok because it is so hard and it has some long parts in it! so i would not let kids under 8 read this unless they are real good! and other then that it was GREAT!!! then i would give it 50 thumbs up!!

The Adventures of Tom Sawyer - Great Illustrated Classic
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2004-10-22
My 9-year old son picked up the book and could not put it down! This is not typical for my very active son... it usually takes three weeks to finish a book - not the three days it took for this edition of Tom Sawyer. It was exciting to see him read a classic and enjoy it so much. Now he is asking for Huckleberry Finn...

an adaptation
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2003-11-21
Just to alert the prospective buyer- this volume is an adaptation by Deidre S. Laiken - not the unabridged version


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