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Really enjoyed this bookReview Date: 2008-06-26
Nora's still smokin' goodReview Date: 2008-06-23
Great Audio boodReview Date: 2008-05-04
An Excellent ReadReview Date: 2008-01-07
Fully rounded characters were what first grabbed my attention. It is through the central character's interaction with those around her that we learn of the events that have brought her to the present day and why she is so fiercely independent.
Ms. Roberts attention to details is one of the many things I love about her writing. Not too wordy, not too sparse, just enough to give you a perfect picture of the who or where she is describing. In Blue Smoke she is absolutely eloquent in her descriptions of fire, especially how it is perceived by some as a living thing. Her heroine, Reena, and the nemesis, Joey, are actually cut from a bit of the same cloth but the fine line between madness and sanity is what sets them apart. Both are drawn to fire because of its power but one is drawn to its capacity to harm while the other is searching for a way to quench the powerful beast.
The Hale family is down to earth as they rally to protect their own. The Pastorelli family is as dysfunctional as they come. Thrown into the mix is a wonderful leading man named Bo Goodnight (with a name like that you know he rides the white horse).
Suspense piled up as this reader tried to figure out where the arsonist would set his next, premeditated fire. I literally held my breath when Reena and Joey finally confronted each other.
I truly enjoyed this book. The final couple of chapters are definitely not for the squeamish but I didn't think they were too gruesome. I've seen plenty worse on the TV set.
I give Blue Smoke five stars for keeping me up way past my bedtime on way too many nights.
Blue SmokeReview Date: 2008-03-08
Renna feels content with her life when she becomes a member of the police department, and buys her first home. She is surprised when she meets neighbor Bo Goodnight to find out he has been trying to find her since college. He saw her at a party across the room and has been trying to find her since. As they grow closer and fall in love, Renna is horrified when Bo's life is threatened again with fire. As they investigate further, it is revealed that two of her other boyfriends were touched by fire, and it is all perpetrated by the same person.
I loved this story. It is definitely one of my favorite NR tales. The characters were phenomenal. Reena and Bo are a good match, but all the supporting characters were an important part - from her loud obnoxious loving family to the creepy villain.

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Just a Little RumpusReview Date: 2008-07-16
The novel opens with a shooting in an affluent high school's restroom. Two girls are wounded, one dead. The motive behind the shooting is unclear as all three girls are intelligent, popular, and best friends. Lippman takes us inside the girls' friendship and the hierarchy of the school and town, starting in the third grade and interspersing years until she reveals what happened and why. She incorporates viewpoints of teachers, fellow students, the police detectives, parents, and others in order to move her narrative along. In someone else's hands, this enormous cast of characters might have turned out unwieldy, but Lippman pulls it off with panache. As in What The Dead Know, her dialog is first rate and authentic and her sense of place and description are quite remarkable. I finished this book in a single day simply because I couldn't stop reading it until I got to the end. This is a first rate novel with well-developed characters and an intriguing plot. A must read.
psychological suspenseReview Date: 2008-06-20
The story starts with three teenage girls, Perri, Josie, and Kat, locked in a school bathroom with a gun--Kat's dead; Perri has been shot in the face and is not expected to live; Josie's been shot in the foot. It appears that Perri killed Kat, then Perri and Josie struggled over the gun and Josie was shot, then Perri turned the gun on herself.
But the evidence doesn't add up: why are there bloody footprints leading away from the locked door? Where are Josie's shoes? Where are all three girls' cell phones?
The book bounces all over place and time, between different POVs, delving deep into each one, showing the development of the girls' friendship until a year earlier when there's an abrupt break between Perri and Kat. And despite the nonlinear progression of the story, it works, for the most part, because the psychological suspense is high and the characters are realistic and familiar (at least to anyone who is, has, or has been a teenage girl).
My only problems were first, that there were a few too many characters, too many POVs. I didn't see a lot of point to teacher Alexa Cunningham's POV, for example--her scenes were very in-depth, but she seemed to be only peripherally involved, if at all, in the events leading up to the shooting.
And then there was the ending. I don't want to spoil it, but it felt flat and anticlimactic. And maybe that was the point--that life doesn't always have a dramatic point. I can accept that--it just doesn't make me love the book.
Overall, I loved the feel of the book: that somewhat dream-hazed, suspenseful, close-up portraits of how 3 teenage girls ended up dead or wounded. If it had been a movie, it would be an artsy one, with lots of out-of-focus close-ups. It's different from my usual reading, which is always a good thing, and I was really immersed in it up until nearly the very end.
No Materpiece but Will Pass the Time if You Need Something to Fill itReview Date: 2007-04-11
In Power of Three Kat is dead, Perri is missing half her face and probably won't live and Jessie has a bullet in her foot more than likely putting an end to an athletic uni scholarship. There three girls were best friends so what happened is the journey the reader will be taken on to find out. Jessie says Perri shot Kat then in a struggle for the gun shot her in the foot before turning the weapon on herself. Police know this story is very unlikely, and there's other things to explain which Jessie doesn't seem to be able to, such as why are all the stall doors along with the main door locked? Why is their blood where Jessie said she never went? If this wasn't planned why is Jessie not wearing shoes and surely three teenage girls would have mobile phones but where are they? Lippman takes the reader on a journey through all the school years of the three constantly flashing between the past and current time with the investigation. She finally tells us what happened in the final pages but she could probably have gotten there a lot quicker.
Awesome ReadReview Date: 2007-03-30
Laura Lippman booksReview Date: 2007-10-15

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excellent as alwaysReview Date: 2007-07-21
Crash and BurnReview Date: 2006-12-01
Oh and why oh why does Fern switch from Bode to Bawdey? I don't know why but this was one thing that really bothered me the most!
Really Really BAD!Review Date: 2006-01-22
Mixed feelings on this bookReview Date: 2005-06-01
Southern muddleReview Date: 2006-02-09
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Great Read, unexpected endingReview Date: 2008-06-05
Take this to the beach!
Baltimore as you've never seen it before!Review Date: 2008-01-14
Her life and her city both seem to be experiencing dubious growth. Her Uncle Spike is beaten when he tries to stop a robbery. After he slips into a coma, Tess finds out that her uncle has left her the task of caring for a greyhound dog. While in the local politics, a local big shot promises the city a basketball team, this is under minded when he is discredited by the untimely released news article. Events don't get better when he is found dead, an apparent suicide.
There's more to her uncle's attack than is first apparent. Someone is stalking Tess, looking for something. What and why are just parts of the story.
Laura Lippman has managed to insert humor, adventure, and tension in this novel. All loose ends are neatly tied up, and with a sigh, the cover can be closed.
Review by Wanda C. Keesey (author Lost In The Mist release May 2008)
Skulduggery at a Baltimore NewspaperReview Date: 2007-12-29
Tess, a former journalist turned private investigator, keeps the narrative edgy with her quirky personality and often-cutting assessments of other characters. The novel uses Baltimore's unique mid-Atlantic atmosphere and notable landmarks to their fullest, making the Charm City as important to the feel of the story as any of the characters or plot turns.
The mystery takes a while to rev up, as Lippman juggles the main story line (the mystery surrounding the unauthorized publication in the Beacon-Light newspaper of a scathing article about a businessman who has plans to bring professional basketball to Baltimore) with a subplot involving a brutal attack on Tess's Uncle Spike and its seeming connection to a greyhound dog that comes under Tess's care. While not traditional ingredients for a mystery novel, Lippman cranks up the stakes masterfully when Tess's investigation of these two capers begins to reveal a dark side behind the Beacon-Light newspaper and the greyhound racing establishment.
The ending of the novel features plenty of grisly action, along with a few somewhat-improbable twists and character motives that struck me as slightly out-of-place in a mystery that's otherwise so grounded and authentic. Overall, though, this is a strong, engaging novel that works well either as a stand-alone mystery or an entree into the series.
-Kevin Joseph (as reviewed for TCM Reviews)
Warning! Not a New Book!Review Date: 2007-12-21
Overall, I have enjoyed the Lippman books that I have read although only a couple of them were page turners. I wish I had paid more attention to the details of this book before buying it and then hopefully would have realized it was first released in 1997.
So these comments are just a warning to other readers who might make the same mistake I did.
More Clunky Than CharmingReview Date: 2008-02-19
Set soon after the events of Baltimore Blues, this book finds Tess still living above her aunt's bookstore, still sharing a bed with her younger musician boyfriend Crow, and halfheartedly working as an investigator for a lawyer. A meeting with a friend from her days working as a newspaper reporter is the catalyst for her latest adventure. It involves the effort to bring pro basketball to Baltimore, and the shady background of the prime mover and shaker in this effort. Somehow, a muckraking piece on his life winds up in the paper, despite having been killed editorially, and Tess is brought in to try and figure out who did it and how.
This becomes a bit more important when the subject of the article turns up dead of an apparent suicide. As Tess pokes around the newspaper and its computer system, she also investigates one of the reporters, the suicide, and more and more. Meanwhile, there's also a subplot involving Tess's uncle, who is beaten into a coma, for reasons no one can work out. He also left a greyhound in her care, whom she names Esskay (after the local hot dog brand) and becomes an important character in his own right.
Unfortunately, Tess continues to fail to engage me as a heroine. She flails around for the truth, bumbling along full of self-pity and bitterness, lucky to be alive at the end. It doesn't help matters that the book switches away to third-person narration for some scenes. Oddly, despite Lippman's career as a newspaper journalist, some of the plotting concerning the newspaper and its operations seems very artificial and false. Finally, traditional mystery readers will find it annoying that there really aren't the clues in place for the reader to deduce "whodunnit." I'm not getting what it is that others seem to love about this series, and I'm not sure I'm willing to spend time on a third book to find out.

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Review by Nan Kilar and Bob MillerReview Date: 2006-09-15
One day while photographing the birds, he sees a small plane land across the water on the new neighbor's (James Roach) property. He witnesses a murder and vows to himself not to get involved. Then he learns the neighbor is the wealthy, shady assistant secretary of state. Fritz has been reckless most of his life and, against the advice of his lawyer friend, starts nosing into the life and misdeeds of Roach--to see that justice is done. He's soon in way over his head.
The story has a few twists and turns to keep your interest. And there's much more to the story than I've mentioned. This was my first experience with this author and there will be more.
I'd Like to Give it More I Really WouldReview Date: 2003-10-25
First though let me say I am a big fan of Freedman's works, however I couldn't in good conscience give this offering more than 3 stars.
As thriller's go it is interesting, and has many elements I look for in thrillers namely excellent characterization, after all if reader doesn't feel he/she can genuinely care or sympathize for characters why read the book? Freedman again presents an anti-hero worthy of readers' emotion, and it is not there I failed to totally fall for this story.
It is just not exceptional. The tie-in with Ollie the Crane was nice play on title, but the overall plot didn't make me go wow I've gotta stay up all night reading. I know Freedman is an extrememely talented writer and although this could be he most mature work I can't claim its his best. Having said that I am reviewing it not necessarily to give it the ol' 2 thumbs up but to at least praise it as being worthy for a quick read.
Enjoyable read Review Date: 2005-03-26
I appreciated the author's brevity of language, and ability to make the characters accessible and real. The storyline kept me interested all the way through.
When I finished the book, I went looking for more by the same author. I was happy to add this one to my list of favorite authors.
International Intrigue comes home to roost in Maryland swampReview Date: 2004-09-11
The basic plot elements are all great. Ordinary guy falls on hard times, too much alcohol, too much self-pity, too much self-absorbtion. Then a series of events, rooted in gun running in decades past, mixed with political intrigue, conspire to intrude into hero's neat little self-contained world.
The plot twists and turns; no one is quite who we thing he (and, most significantly, she) is. The story unfolds with Freedman's great writing, and the pages keep turning.
Two problems. First, the scenes between Maureen and Franz feel extremely forced, and even to the point of being long winded. Second, the story simply peters out at the end. We don't know if the bad guy gets away with it. We don't know if true love will out. We don't even know what happens to the birds.
I suspect that Freedman got bored with thrillers, and tried to do something more "literary". The title is an excellent double (triple, more?) entendre--it is by viewing his birds that Franz gets sucked in; but it is also by trying to live life from a bird's point of view--above it all, with no cares about the world--that Franz gets sucked deeper and deeper into trouble. Finally, the whole problem is caused by the fact that Ollie (our hero's whooping crane) is not where he belongs--several thousand miles from Texas, where he "belongs". This is also Franz' problem, who got lost in Texas, and ended up a few hundred feet away from Ollie in the Maryland swamps.
Good read, but not as good as the other Freedman's I've read.
Suspenseful tale sets good pace, not just for the birds!Review Date: 2003-05-11
Tullis spends much of the first half of the story staying uninvolved - but as he learns more about the potential culprits, or at least the conspirators involved, he cannot resist doing the right thing (solving the crime) while seeking little help from the authorities, with whom he knew he would have little credibility. Meanwhile, another new lady friend takes just a little too much interest in both the birds, one of which is a rare whooping crane, as well as the murder mystery; and we readers get enough info to smell a rat much sooner than does Tullis. Corruption and politics soon enter the fray as an Assistant Secretary of State, James Roach (presumably no pun!) turns out to be the neighbor who owns the air strip. Along the way, another murder or two adds to the intrigue and the dangerous nature of the chase, with the action and affairs of the heart reaching crescendo pace by book's end.
Freedman develops a fine plot without engaging so many characters we lose track. The suspense is realistic, as are the players and their thoughts and feelings. In sum, we not only enjoyed this novel immensely but will seek out his earlier works soon. Enjoy!

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Another wonderful read from Anne TylerReview Date: 2007-12-06
All of the characters in this book are so well developed and comical in their own right. Morgan's wife, whom he eventually leaves for a younger woman, is spiteful but in such a lighthearted manner that the tricks she plays on Morgan come off more as harmless pranks than malice. I would highly recommend this book.
Interesting, but confusingReview Date: 2006-10-04
Essentially, Morgan's Passing follows the story of Morgan Gower, a middle-aged man who becomes infatuated with a young couple after assisting in the emergency birth of their daughter. Gower - a married man with seven daughters - dreams of living Emily and Leon's frugal life, just as he's taken on the "roles" of many other persona in the past. As time passes, he also become obsessed with Emily, who begins to represent everything that he believes his own wife isn't, and everything he would want. Eventually, of course, Gower learns that people are just people, and not always what we think - or want - them to be. It just might be too late when that realization occurs.
A life full of possibilitiesReview Date: 2008-04-25
Morgan's lives--all of them--seem to shift when he meets Emily and Leon Meredith, two puppeteers who perform their shows for children; he poses as a doctor, delivers their baby in the back seat of a car, and mysteriously vanishes after dropping the couple off at the hospital. Just as the grateful pair imagine him as a harmless, if eccentric, guardian angel, Morgan idealizes the young couple and their daughter as the echo of his lost family life, when his daughters were still children he could protect and adore and not strangers who bother him with their marriage plans. ("You don't stop loving people just because they change size," says his exasperated, long-suffering wife.) While Emily and Leon's marriage deteriorates, they're not quite sure what to make of the eerie man who not-very-surreptitiously spies on them and whose attentions become more and more intrusive, until he insinuates himself fully into Emily's and Leon's household.
"Morgan's Passing" is perhaps Tyler's most unruly, wacky, even Dickensian novel; its fabulist plot and characters flirt alternately with the surreal and the extreme. It is also, I think, one of her most underrated works of fiction, an offbeat tale of love among the ruins of tedium, of a life still "rich with possibilities." Yet, as unique as it is among her oeuvre, the novel features a hero with a peculiarly Tylerian trait: while passing through the lives of others and transforming them all irreversibly, Morgan ends up exactly where he began.
Morgan's PassingReview Date: 2006-08-27
And so it was that I found myself looking at a battered copy of MORGAN'S PASSING, with no memory of who gave it to me or what book(s) I gave up in return. Pages brown and falling out, cover falling off, blurbs that make it sound like something I didn't want to read. But, a desperate junkie in need of my reading fix, I gave it a shot.
And, at last, the review. I thoroughly enjoyed this book. The story of how I obtained it is much like the character of Morgan himself. He just kind of appears -- you don't know why -- but you're glad you met the memorable eccentric. This book is witty, original, and well worth reading. Ignore the [...] on the cover about "the love story." The book has one, but it's incidental. Some marketing bozo didn't know how to describe true creativity.
Okay, time to go broke ordering more Anne Tyler books from Amazon. All the way from China. There's even a Putlizer Prize winner in there.
slow but goodReview Date: 2006-04-08

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Sniper aims at own foot!Review Date: 2005-11-12
"MICHAEL CROW is the pen name of a prize-winning, critically acclaimed novelist whose works have been translated and published in nine languages."
Let's leave aside the issue of whether "Michael Crow" can correctly be called THE pen name of someone who also writes under another name. (I notice it's been changed to "pseudonym" on a couple of websites.) A quick web search turns up the fact that the guy self-consciously slumming as "Michael Crow" won a prize I've never heard of and was nominated for the Pulitzer for journalism. Since fan-favorite "John Sandford" actually WON the Pulitzer for journalism under his real name (and has never implied that he's stooping or embarassed by writing the "Prey" series, just that he needed to keep his careers separate until both were established), "Michael Crow" starts looking pretty weak. He sure has an amazing ability to irritate people with an "about the author" blurb, though!
not in Connelly's leagueReview Date: 2004-06-20
his details about guns are play army gear geek detail, not something most ex military special ops types would obsess about.
lastly, he's always using BRAND NAMES, often multiple times on one page. i assume he's doing it for artistic effect of some kind, not for payola, but if i wanted to get bombarded w brand names i'd watch tv.
Something to read if you can't find anything elseReview Date: 2005-07-12
Since it was so formulaic, I found the coyness of the author's pseudonym extremely irritating; understandable but irritating. Mr. Crow is billed as being a prize-winning novelist on the dust cover, and having made that claim I can see why another reviewer has decided that the author is contemptuous of the audience. He is billed as being so capable, yet he delivers a product that is very average. Ergo irritating, but understandable why he doesn't want his own name on it. So this feels like simply another hack writing job someone had to do to make a mortgage payment. I don't sense a true attachment bewteen the author and the characters and the world he has created within these pages.
All that being said though, I did read the whole thing, and read the two sequels, mostly because I was having a week where a little gratuitous violence sounded cathartic and I didn't have anything else to hand. So if you want a standard story of tough guys whupping up on other tough guys and don't have any Robicheaux or Repairman Jack novels available then this might fit the bill.
Bloody action, ripped right off a movie screen.Review Date: 2006-08-25
Read it, said, 'Huh'. Been there, done that. Tossed it.
Okay, fast-forward a year. Something in The Bite must've struck a nerve, 'cause now I'm bored, desperate with a need to read. Stalking the local mega-used book store like a heroin junkie looking for a street-corner dealer, I see a used hardcover copy of Crow's first Ewing thriller, Red Rain, and I think, 'Huh. The other one wasn't so bad... Was it?'
Maybe it wasn't. Red Rain opens with Ewing and his first assignment with the Baltimore Narcotics squad, and his soon-to-be partner, Ice Box (Seriously. Imagine a white, falsetto-voiced version of The Fridge...), as they help bust a pathetic ring of suburban white-boy dope dealers. Ewing's boss, Lt. Dugal, labels Ewing a wild gun ('natch, since Ewing throws down with a non-reg, Israeli made, .50AE Desert Eagle equipped with an Aimpoint attachment), and promptly hooks Ewing up with Ice Box as his senior partner, sort of reverse Lethal Weapon style. The fun begins when more and more drug busts come down, all suburban kids, the drugs getting heavier and heavier, and suddenly all the trails lead back to one of Luther's old merc buddies: a Russian mafioso, ex-Spetsnaz psycho called Vassily who's quickly taking over the Baltimore drug trade. The bodycount builds fast after 'The Big Bust' goes south; Vassily goes after Luthor and his homies. In the end, after Vassily almost drops Luthor's city detective buddy Dog, well - not to give anything away here, but Luthor goes Rambo on Vassily and his cronies, even going so far as to smear on the war-paint during the finale.
Okay, yeah, yeah, it's derivative of just about any other thriller out there. But there's something endearing about Luthor and his crew, and until the cheese factor ramps up a notch with the lipstick war-paint at the end, Crow barrels gleefully along, tossing in enough sex and spilling enough blood to satisfy any adolescent teenage boys' hormonally charged action fetish. Just read - don't think, 'cause Red Rain really is as big and bombastic and... well.. dumb as a Shane Black flick. Get past the silliness and into the adrenaline, and you might suddenly find yourself having a blast.
Wow. Some of our "resentments" are starting to show.Review Date: 2005-12-19
I like Luther Ewing, don't care that he's half black-half vietnamese, has the usual arrogance for authority that . . . let's see, Joe Pike, Spenser, Robicheaux, Hawk, Lucas Davenport, Frank Corso and Sunny Randall have, likes to have sex (wow; what an anomaly), and knows his guns. The anti siezure drugs have me a little perplexed but, what's your point?
I think the guy behind Michael Crow wanted to test his limits. People get irritated that he does that and I suspect it was a little too heavy handed that crap about 'he's really an international author blah blah.' Sounds like one of those 'game show annoncers.'
But that's a publishing decision. The guy goes to his publisher and says "I want to do this, will you back me?" and Pub says "yeah but we want to make some dinero on it so we're going to do it this way." That's what went down. Viking didn't want to spend muy bucks on some author's whim. You guys are nuts.
So I give it 5 stars. Exciting dialogue. Good plot, and yes, the guy knows his street slang (I think only Pelecanos does it better) and his guns. Interesting character. I've read them all. I got no beef, dog. Larry Scantlebury

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The Best of Baltimore Beauties: 95 Patterns for Album Blocks and Borders Review Date: 2007-09-26
95 patternsReview Date: 2007-06-03
applique, quiltingReview Date: 2007-02-18
Lacking Color ExamplesReview Date: 2007-05-25
Wow!Review Date: 2006-08-29

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Alice is growing up...Review Date: 2008-07-04
The old gang's still meeting at Mark Stedmeister's pool, yet the feeling is different. Everyone's got summer jobs in different places, and new friends are being made. Among the old familiar faces, new activities are being pursued, such as smoking cigarettes and marijuana. Sometimes - like when she's uncomfortable in a car being driven too fast - Alice is put to the test. Will she speak up for what she believes is right, or keep quiet to avoid be thought a baby?
On the homefront, Alice's dad and Sylvia are adjusting to married life, and older brother Lester's dating Tracy, a fantastic girl who happens to be black. Since it's not a problem for the McKinleys, Alice - and Lester - are devastated when it turns out to be an issue for others - including Tracy herself.
In the meantime, Alice fans will be comforted in seeing more of the usual standbys of her stories, including embarrassing moments, memorable Aunt Sally interactions, and good times with longtime friends Elizabeth and Pamela.
"Alice in the Know" is a quick, fun read, guaranteed to please both longtime readers of the series and newbies.
awesomeReview Date: 2007-10-29
Not My Favorite!Review Date: 2007-06-16
Another Alice HitReview Date: 2006-08-05
Alice is definitely growing up. I found the ending of this novel to be poigniant, and I read this one twice in the two weeks I had it from the library. There were still plenty of silly, embarassing moments (just like real life) but with some hard issues mixed in.
This is definitely my favorite Alice that's been out in a while.
Not as good as the others, but still great!!Review Date: 2006-07-22
This book was not my favorite in the series, but I am surprised at the horrible reviews it has gotten. By no means is it a 'bad' book. It is simply (in my opinion) not my favorite.
Alice is still the same girl, except maybe a little more mature, and Alice fans will be very much satisfied with this book.
Here is the plot:
Alice is in the middle of the summer before here Junior year of High School, and her life is defenitely taking a different turn. Her dad is encouraging her to take a break from her job at his store, the Melody Inn, and explore different jobs. Her brother's love life just might be getting a lot more serious, and the usual gang of friends that hang out at Mark's pool are changing, some for the better, some for the worse.
Alice is obviously getting more mature, and giving more thought to her future. And, as the more recent Alice books usually do, Topics such as sex come up during the story. I think this is good, because often Teens or tweens are uncomfortable with these subjects, and it is good that books they enjoy reading educate them about these topics in a way that is fun.
Although not the best in the series, this book is still a must read for Alice fans! ENJOY!

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A Waste of TimeReview Date: 2008-01-21
Informative Reading for Colonial History BuffsReview Date: 2007-08-14
Happy to see this classic back in printReview Date: 2003-12-24
Had potential...but failed to live up to it.Review Date: 2005-12-03
I was interested in the religious struggles undertaken by many of the early American colonials and Robson does a fairly good job of highlighting their plight and it's also interesting to meet many of the indentured servants who helped build early America.
But, after a journey on a crowded ship to America, the story seems to fall apart. I honestly stopped caring about what would happen to any of them. Yes, the poor, indentured Anicah is somewhat amusing in the beginning as she tries to keep herself and her lover, Martin, out of trouble (sort of) but everything moves so slowly that reading this work was literally like watching paint dry.
I like my historical novels to be akin to the History Channel--giving me good information, in an interesting way, but not enough to bog me down or bore me--but bore me is exactly what this book did.
History becomes aliveReview Date: 2002-07-07
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