Tennessee Books
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Champion once more.Review Date: 2008-04-26
A must leader for all basketball fansReview Date: 2008-01-06
the best book everReview Date: 2007-06-11
Fabulous!Review Date: 2007-05-14
A Three-Peat SeasonReview Date: 2007-04-12

Historical significanceReview Date: 2008-08-08
Constitution the early founding of our country (United States). Every politician should read it, because history does repeat itself!
Vincent
A Very Human PerspectiveReview Date: 2008-03-19
In addition, Ferling's writing is practically as good as McCullough's, so read this book.
John Adams: A LifeReview Date: 2007-03-10
A complete look at his lifeReview Date: 2006-09-25
As a detailed and thorough look at the life of a man, this biography is superb.
John Adams: A LifeReview Date: 2003-07-27
My only quibble with this book is that the editing, at least in the edition that I have, is rather poor. There are numerous errors in grammatical structure and word choice, the kind of errors that I have become accustomed to in mass market paperbacks but refuse to accept in a scholarly historical work. Things like "he requested that the Congress name his successor be named in his place" and "...the British ... was ready" and "the New England sates" (rather than "States") and "the House of Representative" (even back then, there was more than one representative in the House) and "the dreary weather proved not be a herald of the months ahead" and many others. I understand that mistakes happen, and don't demand perfection. But there are just too many of this kind of error in this book for me to say that it is well-written; probably two dozen, if I had to guess.
Overall, this is a worthwhile biography of a fascinating president. Hopefully, future editions will clean up the writing a bit more.

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Remarkable CharactersReview Date: 2007-11-22
This book contains so many lessons on so many levels without a preachy tone. The main characters are in different stages of their spiritual journey. We see Grace trying to fix her problems without God, which leads to disappointment and self-destruction. Trina, Grace's drama-filled best friend, accepts Christ in the beginning of the story. Mike, a charming and successful businessman, is committed to his relationship with God. He desires to win Grace to Christ and make her the woman in his life.
This book will inspire, encourage, and empower all readers. I enjoyed it so much that I purchased several copies to give to relatives. Ryan Phillips, who was only 22 years old when she wrote Saving Grace, has such an incredible writing style. It is hard to believe that this is her first novel. She made me fall in love with the characters from the first chapter. They are real and fallible--the saved and unsaved.
I was glad to know that the story of Grace, Trina, and Mike does not end with this novel. After reading Saving Grace, readers can follow these remarkable characters in Fall From Grace, which was published last year.
Tameka Delaney Edwards, Books Editor
WOW! (Women of the Word) Magazine - Inspire, Encourage, Empower
www.wowmagazine.org
Great Read!Review Date: 2007-09-17
WonderfulReview Date: 2007-07-03
A GOOD PICK !Review Date: 2007-05-17
I would start reading at 10p only to look up see that midnight has come
and gone. Great Job! I am off to get the sequel as soon as I'm done with this one!
JESUS KNOWS ALL AND SEE ALLReview Date: 2007-02-03

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Adoption is supposed to be an act of goodness, but there are those who would corrupt it.Review Date: 2008-08-09
A worthy read --- Hard to believeReview Date: 2008-07-25
1. Changes in attitudes about adoption, as well as adoption laws, in the past 100 years.
2. Corruption in adoption, embodied in "The Baby Thief," Georgia Tann. This includes the long-term impact on her victims.
3. Georgia Tann's long-term impact on society as a whole, including her lasting impact on today's adoption laws.
4. A call to revise adoption laws.
It's an engaging read, but loses a star for several instances of repetitive information.
Definitely recommended.
She Should Have Gotten the ChairReview Date: 2008-07-19
Raymond does a good job of getting at as much information as she can, and this book is well researched. However, I would have liked to know a bit more about the celebrity cases involved. Christina Crawford is perhaps the most famous Georgia Tann adoptee; why wasn't she discussed? Was she stolen from her birth parents? Pamela Powell is also mentioned; Dick Powell threatened to fight if her birth parents tried to reclaim her. Whatever happened to that case?
Overall, this is a good read and not just for people with a specific interest in adoption.
Wake Up Elected Officials, Wake Up Supreme CourtReview Date: 2008-01-20
Amazing bookReview Date: 2007-10-01

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Writing and a story line even better than I expectedReview Date: 2008-09-13
I made it through law school without knowing the depth and breadth of this story. How glad I am that these authors wrote a chilling, legal thriller from the awful facts of the lynching of Ed Johnson, a black man who even the U.S. Supreme Court thought was innocent. Those horrible days of lynching are thankfully behind this great nation.
Fantastic book for law or history geeks!Review Date: 2007-03-08
Must ReadReview Date: 2005-06-14
Excellent bookReview Date: 2003-11-10
Scary moments of our pastReview Date: 2003-03-10


Excellent Suspense NovelReview Date: 2008-04-12
This novel is definitely an intricate, well thought out work of suspense. The characters in this novel are very well drawn and Dennehy's relationship and interaction with them gives the novel a very personal touch.
Two thumbs up for this one.
Now this is how you write a book!Review Date: 2007-09-13
I recommend readers go through the bargain hardcover book section of their local bookstores and experiment with new authors on the cheap. That's how I found Reed Arvin and now I plan on reading all of his books.
A great read!Review Date: 2006-07-27
The case of one Wilson Owens has come back to haunt the DA's office as new evidence has come to light that the State of Tennessee may have executed the wrong man two years ago.
Dennehy was the prosecutor in the case known at the Sunshine Grocery murders and has the singular notoriety of having convicted two men in separate trials and of separate crimes of killing the same woman. This in itself puts a tornadic twist into this book that would make it a brilliant story, but Arvin goes one-step further by hurling the racially charged murder of a local white-trash girl by a Sudanese immigrant into the mix.
Kwame Jamal Hale has come forward and delivered what may prove to be very damning evidence that he, not Owens, was the murderer at the Sunshine Grocery. His claim? He knows where the heretofore-undiscovered murder weapon can be found. Dennehy, his boss David Rayburn and soon-to-be retired fellow prosecutor Carl Becker, can only wait and watch as the circus rolls into downtown Nashville and the DA's office prepares to tender their resignations en toto, if it is proved that Wilson Owens was innocent and unlawfully executed.
Meanwhile the bond hearing of the suspected Sudanese murderer Moses Bol comes to court. The DA is dealt another blow when bail is set at $1.5 million and is paid by one Fiona Towns, a Presbyterian preacher of a dying central Nashville church that has less the dozen members.
These two stories together are not enough for Arvin. He tosses in the failing personal life of Dennehy, a cast of characters that make every page a thrill to turn and just enough action for you to gnaw your fingernails down to the cuticles. Dennehy has a wit and dark sense of humor that would be depressing if it were not written so well. Add his ex-wife, her wealthy doctor second husband, and a daughter that truly loves her daddy, and you have the full package in a legal thriller that you will be proud to recommend to every fellow fiction reader you know.
Armchair Interviews says: If you love legal thrillers, check this one out!
Greatly EntertainingReview Date: 2006-07-19
As near to perfection as possibleReview Date: 2006-04-27
This is the New South. Absent are evangelicals, the dominant Democrat party, close-knit generational families and a whites only landscape. Instead, Thomas Dehenny, the district attorney, is a driven, dedicated hard-drinking, divorced father who never attends church. One detects that the author (through Thomas) decries those who devote their lives to defending murderers and rapists. He asks, What about the victims? Who speaks for them?
In this case, there is a strong possiblity that the wrong man was executed. The crime involved two defendents - the shooter & the medic who actually killed the woman through negligance (he was on meth). At the same time, the city is rocked by the brutal murder of a Nationite woman by an African refugee. The struggle between low-class whites (The Nation) & the growing numbers of refugees and immigrants is real & depicted with accuracy. Into the fray steps Fiona Tonws, local Presbyterian minister/activist. Despite their positions, a romance breaks out between the two. The real villian is revealed midway through the book & he is as horrible and clever as they come. The ending was sheer perfection as was the entire story. I cannot say enough about this book! Buy it.

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Great HERstory for Young and Old AlikeReview Date: 2008-05-09
InspiringReview Date: 2007-10-06
A Must ReadReview Date: 2007-07-23
A precious storyReview Date: 2007-06-08
A STORY TO REMIND US THAT DREAMS CAN COME TRUEReview Date: 2007-09-04
Martha Ann's story is not only an inspiration to all, it is also a true story. A story reminding us that with determination, hard work, and confidence even the most seemingly impossible dreams can come true.
Born about 1817 in eastern Tennessee, Martha Ann Ricks was a slave. Her father was a traveling preacher who learned about the American Colonization Society, an organization that assisted blacks in beginning again in a new place - Liberia.
When Martha Ann was 12, her family had finally saved enough money to buy their freedom and they moved to Liberia. Once there Martha Ann was able to go to school where she joyfully learned how to read. At home her mother taught her to sew. However, these happy times came to an end all too soon when African Fever took the lives of her mother, father, and sisters.
As an adult and a married woman, Martha Ann went to the market with her husband where she saw British naval ships patrolling the coast to stop slave catchers from kidnaping blacks. So impressed was Martha Ann by the ships and Queen Victoria for sending them that she determined to personally thank the Queen for protecting her people.
An impossible hope? Yes, but Martha Ann fulfilled her dream.
Highly recommended for young readers.
- Gail Cooke


An Absolute Joy to Read!!Review Date: 2008-06-25
At the beginning, the author leaves New Delhi for US, where he is awarded a fellowship to study at University of California, but he gets caught into culture shock, as well as an internal dilemma, seeking a deeper meaning of life. While he is most vulnerable, he manages to fall in love with one his student but is unable to express his feelings.
Then he seems to have gone through the roller coaster ride of the technology industry emerging as a winner, a successful technologist leading a group of innovators.
We end in beautiful San Diego, with a moving story about how the author and his family face the Inferno, the great wildfires of 2007.
I don't believe anyone has experienced living unless they have ventured around like the author has. It is in his narratives, his reaction to the challenges he faces and his observations of people and culture of various places that he truly shines.
It is my top read of the year!
Light reading yet thought proving, wonderful conversational style!Review Date: 2008-06-24
This book combines elements from good humor, a memoir, a scenic travelogue, a touching love story, science fiction and philosophy.
The author, pretends to be an Artificial Imagination computer program simulating human creativity, describes the life/career journey of a modern nomad through the Hi Tech world of California and Washington (Settle). The book is clever, witty and obviously written by someone very intelligent but still manages to be very down to earth and funny! it's light reading, the author has a conversational style, you feel as if you are reading a letter from a close friend!!
AMAZING COMBINATION!!!, Review Date: 2008-06-24
as a character. Kalpanik seems simultaneously incredibly thoughtful and serious and yet someone who has a carefree attitude towards life, someone who handle life as it happens!
It's a light reading, and yet thoughtful; funny yet serious; conversational yet literary!
A funny memoir by a fine writer!Review Date: 2008-06-24
This book takes many life concepts expressed in different forms and combine them in a mishmash. He structures the 12 different personal essays, each highlighting a particular transitional period in his life or a specific experience in to a beautiful collage of experiences in this book very successfully. What a funny memoir!
Kalpanik S. is a fine writer with a lot to say about a lot of things and a unique way of making you laugh! I highly recommend her book.
Refreshing, unexpected, humorous and meaningfulReview Date: 2008-06-22
He adds so much meaning, passion and humor, he is so open with the readers that I felt like I was reading a private letter that someone would write only to their best friends.
The writing is refreshingly unexpected, humorous and meaningful. Great read!!


Tall tales of a female Paul BunyanReview Date: 2007-12-20
While life was hard on the frontier, it was made harder by a giant bear that everyone called "Thundering Tarnation." His skin was so think that bullets could not penetrate it and Tarnation would raid the cellars where the settlers stored their food for the winter. Finally, the people were so frustrated that they posted rewards for anyone who could vanquish Tarnation.
When all the men failed, Swamp Angel encountered Tarnation and they started battling. They fought and fought and fought, knocking down mighty trees and even drinking a large lake dry. Finally, Swamp Angel was able to kill Tarnation and his flesh fed thousands of people for the entire winter. His pelt was so big that Swamp Angel spread it over Montana and it became the shortgrass prairie.
The tall tales in this story will delight children and the use of a female version of Paul Bunyan sweetens the treat. I strongly recommend this book for elementary school reading groups.
Great NON-Princess Story!Review Date: 2006-11-10
Swamp AngelReview Date: 2006-05-22
A Book For AllReview Date: 2006-04-21
I really liked Tarnation!Review Date: 2004-08-23
This story starts out by telling about the birth of a young girl who is amazingly big for her age. No one knows that she will become a great woodswoman since she cannot climb a tree at birth without help:). As she grows older she saves her town numerous times with her strength earning her the name "Swamp Angel".
When a mean bear comes to town many hunters try to capture it before it causes anymore damage.(One is Swamp Angel) Eventually she does capture the bear, named Tarnation, and kills him. Call me a sucker for a happy,happy ending, but I was hoping Tarnation would give up his evil ways and use his strength for good. And then they could have all lived...well you know what I mean.

loved itReview Date: 2005-11-14
awesome bookReview Date: 2005-08-12
Where I'd Like To BeReview Date: 2006-03-21
A review of Where I'd Like To BeReview Date: 2006-02-04
Maddie may seem a normal kid to you, she goes to school, has great friends, is in after-school activities, but then you go to her home. She has shared a room with people who come and go as often, it seems, as the seasons. Maddie lives at the East Tennessee Children's Home. She wants a home so badly she has a "book of houses" and a "book of people." Throughout the book she and her friends find that they are all a family, a strange one, but a family none the less.
Where I'd Like To Be, is a book that all people should read for a heart warming tale. I think what I liked best is that you can almost feel each character's emotions as they change. I think anyone who likes a story that makes you glad for what you've got, should read this book.
Really Interesting BookReview Date: 2005-03-20
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