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New York Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

New York
The Sisters Mallone: Una Storia di Famiglia
Published in Hardcover by Simon & Schuster (2002-05-28)
Author: Louisa Ermelino
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Average review score:

A Great Book!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-03-16
I truly enjoyed this book. Even though I'm not Italian, I could appreciate the sense of sisterhood between the sisters. Read this book, you'll enjoy it!

A superb bokk and great read: way beyond genre fiction
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2002-11-22
The Sisters Mallone is simply one of the finest novels to appear in the last few years.

It is the story of three sisters and their grandmother as they deploy all their cleverness, determination, loyalty and love to find their way in the harsh and complicated world of New York of the 30's-50's. Their lives are woven into a tapestry of old Italian and Irish neighborhoods, glamorous nightclubs, gangland politics, the Catholic Church, easy money and hard labor.

The characters, their milieu and their stories are all rendered with great economy, wit and insight. Ermelio's prose sparkles and the books moves without any misstep. It is, as they say, impossible to put down.

The Sisters Mallone is wonderful in every way and certainly transcends any genre niche.

This takes care of Christmas presents this year.

Delicious
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2002-06-10
What a wonderful and engrossing story. I could not put it down. The characters were so interesting and so well drawn. I really wish I knew them. Highly recommended.

Wish I had sisters like that
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2002-07-25
This is a book about the ties of sisterhood. Mary, Helen and Gracie are completely different yet are bound together as sisters. They are tough and clever. When Gracie's husband is found to be a real loser, Mary and Helen put their heads together to teach him a lesson. I love these characters. The book is well written....I felt like I could have been one of the Mallone sisters.

Delicious
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2002-06-12
What a wonderful book. The characters are so finely drawn and so interesting I wish I knew them. I literally couldn't put it down. Highly recommended.

New York
Skyscraper: The Making of a Building
Published in Hardcover by Viking Adult (1990-04-26)
Author: Karl Sabbagh
List price: $22.95
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Average review score:

Maybe the Best Engineering and Construction Book of its Kind!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-12-24
I have worked in science and engineering for many years and worked on many projects. I keep this book on my bookshelf and read it every few years. It is just wonderful and well written story. I think that I have now read it three times.

It is about the construction of a building in Manhattan at 49st and 8th avenue called Worldwide Plaza. It takes the reader right from the concept through all aspects from zoning, financing, foundation work, steel erection, concrete, marble, mechanical, water leaks, leasing, everything in a nice narrative form, but not dry ...written like a novel and very entertaining.

But what is great is the way all the small problems arise and are solved between all the contractors and trades and suppliers or subcontractors including trips to visit marble suppliers in Italy, laboratories in Florida, etc. This could be problems with brick colors, or steel, or delivery schedules, or street traffic, or water leaks or even alterations to the common areas as the building is finished. It is a nice review of "Just in time" manufacturing on a large scale.

Not for everybody put near perfect for engineers! Realistic, educational, entertaining... a keeper for the bookshelf.

This one is a winner!!!
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2003-12-22
I watched the series with fascination and now the book. This is a great way to learn the workings of a fantastic creation and take a peek of the frustrations towards success. I've been looking for the video to purchase, but understand there are none and no plan to create one. WELL GUESS WHAT! I was looking at some old video tapes of mine when I came upon some with no labels. I popped them into the VCR and guess what....that's right...I HAVE IT!!! I guess I recorded it when PBS had it on. For more information you can contact me at tellablvr@yahoo.com

Up, Up and Away
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2002-04-13
I thought this was an all around cool book. This book deals with the whole process of how a building is built, from the sight location, finances, government agencies and construction. You get just the right amount of detail, not so much that you are forcing your way through the book, but enough to really understand it. I like the flow of the book, the author keeps the pace going and you can feel the tension main of the actors are experiencing. The author has done a good job with this book, detailed and interesting. If you ever wanted to know how they build those big building then this is an introductory course.

Same as TV Series?
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2000-12-06
This book is a fascinating look at the entire process of building a skyscraper. Finance, logistics, negotiation, construction, architecture... it's all here. I have one question. I believe this book was once a PBS series... does anyone know if that is available on video? If anyone has any info on that please email me at adeleanddavid@mediaone.com

The give and take in transforming design to finished product
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2000-05-03
I believe the author has done an excellent job of articulating the concessions and compromises made by all the parties in the development of a skycraper. To illustrate the delineation of some of the roles, responsibilities and concomitant frustrations, I quote from the book:

"In an earlier world the architect got on with the drawings. In todays world it's left much more to vendors to produce documents which the architect checks" (page 242)

"We can never work in the final medium of our art, as painters or sculptors usually do, so it's frightening to see the final thing come together being crafted by other hands than your own" (page 299)

"The architects were pretty confident that it wasn't a design fault. The masons were pretty sure that they had built the wall to specifications...The window manufacturer was fairly happy with the windows he had fabricated and shipped...for the mockup. The testing company, which had supervised building the mockup, seemed confident that all the instructions had been followed...As they all talked among themselves, rumors spread." (page 202)

The interface between the consultants, trades, vendors, managers and developer makes for interesting reading with some lessons to be learned.

New York
Socrates in New York
Published in Paperback by Athena Pub (1998-12-10)
Author: John Kotselas
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Average review score:

IVE HEARD OF HERCULES IN NEW YORK WITH ARNOLD SWARZENEGGAR!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2004-03-18
IVE HEARD OF HERCULES IN NEW YORK WITH ARNOLD SWARZENEGGAR!
THAT WAS A GOOD FILM. WHEN DOES SOCRATES IN NEW YORK COME OUT?
SOCRATES IN NEW YORK? WHATS THIS?

READ THIS BOOK AT MY LOCAL COFFEESHOP. IT WAS GOOD.
THANK YOU FOR YOUR TIME.

HARRY,

Socratese in New York
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-05-20
I just have to say this is a must read for everyone in the world. It is a such a logical way of looking at God that if you are looking for something real and powerful to make you believe this is it. If you are a doubter then this is the book for you! It is for everyone!

The only book who that has made me rethink my beliefs!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-15
The Basic plot of this story is Socrates the ancient philosopher and Philo the famous Jew come to the future and spend an afternoon in a museum. Three men discover who they are and have a conversation with them. These three men are Ron a simple man with not many belifs, Professor an intellectual man who never thinks he is wrong, and Dr. Lattison a doctor who is an athiest going through a ruff time in his life and is willing to listen to anything. These five men converse back and fourth their views on Justice, Freedom, Illusion, Love, Divine Love and Divine Justice. Socrates quickly dumbfounds Ron and is slowly getting the professor to listen but he is stubborn so he will not listen. In the end Ron becomes a man with many questions and he finally has a cause in life, it is finding the truth. Professor quits his job and goes back to school to study greek philosophy, and Dr. Lattison is converted to the Jewish faith by Philo and he eventually becomes a Rabbi years later. This book is influential to me because what Mr. Kotselas says through Socrates changed my belifs back when I believed in Anarchy. Beofre I thought this would be a boring read but I have the privallege of knowing Mr. Kotselas personally because he is my friends dad, and he convinced me to read it and i spent one and two days without sleeping reading the book five times to fully grasp it. This book taught me about myself and that I was to stubborn before and not open. Since I have reaD This book I have started going to church I became an alterserver and last year I became the lead alterserver at my parish.

Just wonderful!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2000-10-25
This book is so fun to read that you don't realize that your brain is being twisted into proper shape. It's like going to a mental chiropractor.

Other books of interest may include: "Between Heaven and Hell" by Peter Kreeft. All of Kreeft's books are engaging in style and hearty in substance. To see the interaction between Christianity and classical culture, see "Christianity and Classical Culture" by Jaraslov Pelikan. Mortimer Adler's books are also helpful in discussing how to think about God, Life, Truth, etc. A short little book "Does God Exist?" by Moody is written in the trialogue style and is great at rejecting the silly, yet popular, arguments against God and gives the reader much to think about. In a more Christian line, the works of C.S. Lewis are great, and the classic by Bishop Kallistos Ware, "The Orthodox Way" is a great place to start if your interested in historic Christianity. "The Mystical Theology of the Eastern Church" by Vladimir Lossky will certainly reshape the old brain, too! Please check some of these out. Enjoy!

Totally Enlightening and Non-threatening
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2000-01-06
Socrates in New York was a breath of fresh air. It enables a reader of any religious or non-religious background to grasp the message contained. Modern man is no closer to the truth than the ancient philosophers, even with all the advanced technology; science still cannot prove or disprove the answers to the mysteries of the universe.

The reader will find the truth as it is written and provides some strong arguements in favor of faith, hope, and love... A clever piece of work indeed!

A must read for anyone in search of God or "Higher Power".

New York
The Sopranos: Selected Scripts from Three Seasons
Published in Paperback by Grand Central Publishing (2002-09)
Authors: David Chase, Soprano Productions Inc., and Home Box Office
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Average review score:

Life as Art, art as Life?
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2004-01-30
Being female, it's difficult for me to appreciate the full context of why the Soprano's series is so appealing to men; but it surely is. To the extent that the series reflects the lives they lead, and hence, is the art by which they are most likely to identify with the dynamics, it must be successful due to its popularity. To the extent that it doesn't, it offers the opportunity to prevent lives from having to. Either way, it's a win-win situation since the positive and negative effects can be visualized and measured on the screen rather than through the high risk performance that people must try to live through to survive. Perhaps that is the series' peculiar appeal: safety and entertainment through scrutiny of what people could construe as dangerous territory involving dangerous people. To the extent that it measures a code of justice not often available to people on the outside, it serves to make the world a safer place because of its portrayals.

It Delivers What It Promises...
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-03-19
It's a book that contains five scripts of the best show on TV. It's more than just a TV show, it's a cultural event. It captures the modern day mafia in a brilliant, clever, dramatic, and often times funny way. If You are an inspiring writer, wishing to find a good book for form, or seeking a great work to emulate, then this is the book for You...

Very Interesting
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2003-04-26
I bought this for my son because he is a huge Sopranos fan. However, I snatched it away from him and had a great time reviewing the scripts.
When you watch the show, the dialogue is often lost or ignored because the viewer tends to be caught up in the action. By having a script handy, you get a chance to analyze the writing style. While the plots have a great deal to do with the show's ultimate popularity, the crisp and effective dialogue which remains true to each character's development is equally important.
If you are interested in learning how to write for tv or movies, the scripts are great to analyze.

About time!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2002-12-02
I've been waiting for the screen plays to be released ever since seeing the first season of THE SOPRANOS. The only draw back is the print doesn't seem dark enough. I hope it won't fade quickly. That said, it's still a great book and would make a wonderful gift to any hardcore fan of the show. Keep your fingers crossed that other scripts will soon follow.

A quintent of final shooting scripts from three seasons
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2003-03-13
The big irony is that when you read "The Sopranos: Selected Scripts from Three Seasons" expecting to have increased respect for the writers, what you come away with is even greater respect for the actors. I like to look over scripts of favorite television shows, not just to see what was changed, deleted or added to what eventually aired, but to enjoy the stage directions, where the writers work in all sorts of fun and telling details. However, compared to most other television scripts David Chase and company do not provide a lot of extra tips (neither did Shakespeare, come to think of it). Consequently, the chief attraction here for fans of the shows ends up being the dialogue that never made it to the screen along with the introduction by Chase.

Of course the introduction is insightful, albeit relatively short, as Chase talks about the creative and casting process. I particularly liked the part when he explains the multiple strands that comprise each episode (a rule clearly violated by the "College" script, which only has two) and the process by which "Soprano" scripts are written. The results are the "final" (i.e., shooting) scripts, and why the title page of each episode lists the various revisions (blue for 1st, pink for 2nd, yellow for 3rd, etc.). Unfortunately, unlike some other script collections, there are not any notations on the pages to indicate what color they are; I admit, I am curious as to what pages make it from the first draft all the way through production.

For selecting only five scripts from the first three seasons of "The Sopranos," this collection does a nice job. You have to have the "Pilot" episode and "College" is clearly the most memorable show from the first season. "The Happy Wanderer" is another pivotal episode in the show's history and "The Knight in White Satin Armor" contains one of the biggest surprises. "Pine Barrens" represents a prime example of the comic extremes of which the show is capable. So I have no complaints given the collective results. The final comment would be that it is interesting to read hour-long television scripts without teasers and four acts; just another reason to applaud HBO's efforts in this area. So, where is the script collection for "Six Feet Under"?

New York
Stonewall: The Riots That Sparked the Gay Revolution
Published in Hardcover by St. Martin's Press (2004-06-01)
Author: David Carter
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Average review score:

Of Queens and Heroism
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-06-01
The Stonewall Riots of June 28-July 3, 1969, following a police raid on an illegal, mafia-owned gay bar in New York's Greenwich Village, mark the decisive turning point in gay American history. The unprecedented uprising has taken on mythic dimension over the succeeding 35 years. Author and eyewitness Edmund White has compared Stonewall to the storming of the Bastille in 1789. Community lore has focused on colorful aspects of the melee, like the wresting of a parking meter from a sidewalk for use as a battering ram against police, the contemporaneous passing of Judy Garland, and the Rockette-style street theater participants used as a campy rebuke to the authorities. Yet given a lack of narrative detail about the events of the riots, Stonewall has become a metaphor for gay liberation while remaining vaguely understood.

Previous accounts of Stonewall, in the gay and mainstream press, and in Martin Duberman's 1992 book Stonewall, have suffered from the paucity of the historical record of the riots themselves. There is no film of the riots, and only one "frontline" picture survives from the critical night of June 28, 1969. Moreover the Sheridan Square area of New York where the riot was centered affords few vantage points from which crowd activity could be seen in overview. The insignificant press items from the time are bias-ridden and controverted in key particulars. Reconstruction would be impossible since the police lost the initiative soon after the raid, and there was no gay guerilla leader orchestrating the assault from "our " side according to some strategic plan. Given the dearth of historical data, the feature film Stonewall purported merely to be one queen's story, and is fictionalized at that.

Eyewitness accounts--though each is spotty considered in isolation--remain the primary information source about the Stonewall Riots themselves, while context of time and place help fill in interstitial detail. David Carter's masterful study, Stonewall: The Riots That Sparked the Gay Revolution, researched painstakingly over a ten-year period, has finally exhausted the store of information to be had about those climatic nights in 1969. Interviewing over 40 eyewitnesses and carefully analyzing the times and the milieu of Greenwich Village, where he lives, Carter has produced the first work that can be considered a comprehensive factual rendering of the Stonewall phenomenon. With so many witness accounts to work with he is able to sketch a breathtaking overview in his synthesis. Even with the scholarly pedigree the book is lively, readable, and at times downright fascinating.

The Stonewall Inn filled a unique niche in the gay scene of the time. Carter's witness accounts stress the centrality of dance to gay experience and interaction at the club. He theorizes that unfettered same-sex dancing to the music then-popular--a rarity at the time--created a unique social environment distinguishing the Stonewall and giving it its principal draw. Some observers saw a nascent gay tribal impulse incubating amidst the lights, sound, motion, and sensation--that group instinct subsequently animating the invisible hand that coalesced and coordinated the feverish gay assault on abusive law enforcement.

Carter has written what is sure to become the definitive history of the seminal event in the gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender struggle for civil rights and liberation. Both scholarly and highly readable, the book deserves attention from all who have benefited from the historical events Carter so faithfully recounts.

Riveting.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-09-13
I thought this book was excellent. It read like fiction, and was a real page turner. The book was unbelievably well researched, and I enjoyed very much reading about this critical turning point in history. My only query to the author is this: (as Marty Robinson's niece), why didn't you contact any of his family members? You did all of this amazing research... yet missed pieces of the puzzle by failing to contact those who new him in a way that others didn't. I wonder if you did the same with other central heroes in the book... Otherwise, I think this book should be required reading in every high school history class. Bravo.

A Pivotal Event
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2005-01-28
The Stonewall riots, beginning on June 27, 1969, in and around the Stonewall Inn in lower Manhattan, are pivotal at least in memory because they galvanized the gay liberation movement, which in the last generation has profoundly altered social attitudes toward gays and lesbians. The story is therefore well worth telling in itself, and particularly so since the original event has gradually become the subject of legend; further, the number of eyewitnesses who still survive is now beginning to dwindle.

Carter's narrative is very wide sweeping, particularly as to the background of the riots: the extensive persecution of gays in the 1950s and 1960s both nation-wide and in New York; the emergence of seedy Mafia-owned bars, such as the Stonewall, as a place of refuge; the incipient pre-Stonewall gay rights coalitions in New York and in San Francisco and Los Angeles; and so on. But Carter is also extremely sensitive to the individual stories of gays who migrated to large cities seeking at least a measure of freedom.

Carter's narrative, particularly of the riots, is not at all triumphalistic, nor is it weighted unfairly against the police and city authorities (who, even on the most neutral account, do not come off well). Often the narrative disintegrates into short bursts of conflicting story-telling from various viewpoints, but this just feeds the excitement. It is a very powerful saga, and Carter tells it well.

This book was helpful to me even though I lived through the riots; like many others, I'd bought into much of the false mythology about what happened that night. But it will be especially attractive to anyone who came of age after 1969, and who wants to know something about what the pre-Stonewall era is like. Just one small sample, from page 117: in 1968 a gay activist named Leo Laurence "had a picture of himself and his lover, Gale Whittington, with the latter shirtless and Laurence embracing him, published in the Barb [of Berkeley, CA]. Gale, who worked as an accounting clerk at the States Steamphip Line, was immediately fired from his job." That is very much how things once were.

A compelling history of the birth of the gay rights movement
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2004-07-10
This book reads like a novel; it is compelling and moving and cries out to be turned into a PBS/ David Burns special. An excellent history and a fascinating insight into how much has changed in 40 years.

Not just about Stonewall
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2004-10-13
While the title of the book is, of course, STONEWALL, and a large portion of the book is devoted to an almost minute-by-minute account of the fabled riots, Carter also takes considerable care in detailing all of the many contributing factors that led to the revolt against the police (debunking the ludicrous "because Judy Garland died" myth in the process) as well as the activism of several newly-founded gay groups that resulted from the action. The book is meticulously researched and footnoted and should stand as the definitive account of the subject for a good length of time to come. It took Carter ten years to write the book; it was ten years well spent.

New York
Streets: A Memoir of the Lower East Side (The Helen Rose Scheuer Jewish Women's Series)
Published in Hardcover by The Feminist Press at CUNY (1996-09-01)
Author: Bella Spewack
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Average review score:

I love that book!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2001-07-22
this is my favorite book. if anyone has similar taste to me then i highly recommend them to read it. i was getting so into reading it that i never wanted it to end. to last forever. so i tried to do so by reading a limit of pages each day. i live in NYC and by reading the book i had grown a stronger love for the city and thats another reason i loved the book. the down fall of the book? well, it was and made me sad. it was kinda a depressing book. you now. like a heart-acher.

it was indeed a pleasure to read and in the future, if you do read it, i hope you injoy.

thats my review! i hope i helped!

Fascinating, historical review
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 1999-08-06
This book was written by a very eloquent author in 1922. At 23years of age, she carefully details her struggles of growing up inpoverty on the lower east side of Manhattan. This is one of a few books that deals with the difficulties faced by immigrants of to New York around the turn of the century. Her battles are those of a poor, Jewish girl growing up without a father in tenement housing. I thouroughly recommend this book to Jews, feminists and historians.

I love that book!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2001-07-22
this is my favorite book. if anyone has similar taste to me then i highly recommend them to read it.

i'm going to describe it as a story of a girl growing into a women on the streets of the lower east side of manhattan. she tells of different jobs and the boarders that her and her mother board to help pay the rent. its very hard for me to describe becuase of 2 reasons 1) you can't describe it you have to read it 2)i read it a year ago.

i was getting so into reading it that i never wanted it to end. to last forever. so i tried to do so by reading a limit of pages each day. i live in NYC and by reading the book i had grown a stronger love for the city and thats another reason i loved the book. i also loved the stories she has of her childhood. the down fall of the book? well, it was and made me sad. it was kinda a depressing book. you now. like a heart-acher.

it was indeed a pleasure to read and in the future, if you do read it, i hope you enjoy.

thats my review! i hope i helped!

Recommended to students of Jewish history & women's studies.
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2000-04-04
Streets: Memoir Of The Lower East Side was written in 1922 and published for the first time in 1955. This remarkable memoir of a young Jewish girl's coming of age in the tenement slums of New York's Lower East Side is gritty, candid, vivid, engaging, sensitive, and streetsmart. Bella Spewack overcame obstacles of gender, background, and religious discriminations to succeed as a celebrated journalist, playwright, and screenwriter. Streets is highly recommended, articulate reading and will prove of special interest to students of American Jewish history, Women's Studies, and biographies reflecting the triumph of the human spirit over social and cultural barriers.

The early life of an unusual woman, with comedy and sadness
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 1999-09-09
This is a coming of age story depicting the harrowing early life of an extraordinary talent. Told with an amazing eye for detail and a highly developed sense of humor, this is one of the most moving autobiographies I have read. Bella Spewack writes of her thirst for knowledge and determination. In later life Bella invented the Girl Scout cookie, became a noted journalist and wrote successful plays and movies. Streets tells of the difficult circumstances of her childhood.

New York
That Special Place: New World Irish Stories
Published in Hardcover by Hanging Loose Press (2004-05-30)
Author: Terence Winch
List price: $24.00
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Average review score:

Good craic
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-05
On the road with Terence Winch in That Special Place. He takes the reader by the heart along a journey of moments remembered. Making quick stops at the corners of Galway and the Bronx, Washington, D.C. and Baltimore, he reflects on his Irish American experience, unique to his place in time with friends, family, and the MUSIC that occupy it. He occasionally glances, not too long, down alley lanes haunted by grief and fear.

Good craic for anyone weathered and tendered by life.

A wonderful book... by a talented author
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-01-11
In "That Special Place," Terence Winch manages to evoke the sights and sounds, and even the scents and tastes, of the many otherworldly settings in which traditional Irish music is played and heard. Terence can draw a portrait in prose like no one else, and his descriptions of the many colorful characters who populate his world are deserving of many rereads. For me, this transcendent book was equal parts Ciaran Carson's "Last Night's Fun" and Jimmy Breslin's "Table Money" (the former being a meditation on spontaneously-created Irish music, the latter being a roman à clef about an Irish family in New York, and both being great works, next to which this present volume can take its honored place). Terence can be sentimental in one passage, and humorous in the next, and at all events he manages to effortlessly transport you into his colorful world with every turn of phrase. Those of you who already know Terence Winch's work hopefully will have already snapped up this great volume of stories and poems. Those of you who are not familiar with his work should immediately rush to add this book to your collection. I finished "That Special Place" in just one sitting, and I plan to return to it again and again, just as I would revisit a favorite restaurant to savor its prize dishes.

travel to another world....
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2004-08-25
Every story from this book transports me right to the middle of the action...I feel like I can smell the smoke of the bars and hear the music being played. I was amazed that 2 or 3 pages of a story evoked such a wide spectrum of emotions...laughter, longing, love. These stories connected me to people and places from another time...and I didn't want to come back. Finding good short stories is such a treasure and Terrence Winch seems to have no difficulty supplying us with beautiful writing, intriguing events and fantastic characters. I love this book and have already started re-reading my favorite stories!

Book triggers emotions, ideas, memories, & connections
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2004-06-10
Terence Winch's THAT SPECIAL PLACE evokes the whole range of emotions - I even laughed out loud from time to time. Reading it is like sitting comfortably and talking with family, friends, and neighbors. The book prompts an amazing flow of memories and ideas. Winch's passion for blood pudding took me back to my first and only encounter with the traditional Irish breakfast fare. His account of Willie Joe Carty's statement that "the famine wasn't so long ago" is a remarkable reminder of the connections between generations, and should encourage all of us to treasure the scarce resources of living history that all of our families represent. Everyone will greatly enjoy this book - especially those of Irish descent.

Enjoying life
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2004-06-24
Terence Winch's new book, "That Special Place: New World Irish Stories", is a pure delight and can be read repeatedly for all the richness one finds there. A first generation Irish-American raised in the Bronx during the 50's, Winch is known for his distinguished career both as a musician and a writer. This latest book is a combination of reflections and vignettes about his life as the child of immigrant parents in a strong ethnic community and his adventures while working as a musician both in the U.S. and Ireland. If you have never heard of the "Irish Riviera" and think it must be somewhere off the western coast of Ireland, guess again. It was an area of Queens, otherwise know as Rockaway Beach, where the Winch family rented a cottage, his mother worked as a waitress, and the kids enjoyed both the beach and a host of lively characters who populated this colorful locale just outside of New York City. Winch relates how he and his brother spent their days on the beach just hanging out or collecting bottles for deposit. But it was the nights when the two boys met their mother after work and she treated them to ice cream or pizza that hold especially fond memories for him. As Winch weaves back and forth through time, he spins a tale that is populated with memorable characters, the zany and the mundane of a musician's existence and a deep respect for family and friends. In one piece entitled "The Pleasure Principle" Winch ambles through the story of one his favorite musical haunts and muses on how the sign behind the bar reading "Enjoy Life" could just have easily flashed "Get Really Drunk" on some nights while exhorting one to "Drink, Fight, Smoke" on others. But it is his meshing of the message on that sign coupled with his heartfelt story of a visit with his elderly Auntie Moll in Galway that places the sign's message within a deeper context. When Auntie Moll asks Winch and his wife if they are indeed enjoying life and they nod that they are, you can almost feel Moll's hand squeeze yours as she says, quite simply and lovingly, "Good, enjoy life." There is much life to savor and enjoy in this memorable book full of understated humor and a deep appreciation for family and friends.

New York
Thin ice: A season in hell with the New York Rangers
Published in Unknown Binding by Morrow (1982)
Author: Larry Sloman
List price: $12.50
Used price: $4.19

Average review score:

Thin Ice is a must read !
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2002-12-17
It's absolutely asinine that this book was not among "The Top 100 Sports Books Of All Time" compiled by the staff of Sports Illustrated Magazine. It is a must read, you do not need to be a hockey or sports fan to enjoy this read, it is the "Ball Four" of hockey books. Don't miss it, if you can find it !

"Ratso" and the Manhatten Rangers !
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2001-03-13
Although I'm not a NY Ranger's fan by any stretch of the imagination, this book is a long forgotten classic and a must read for every hockey fan. "Ratso", (Larry Sloman) did a great job in profiling the NY Ranger players on and off the ice and he is able to insinuate, instances of sexcapades and drug use among the players and still protect their privacy, he takes us behind the scenes of the Manhatten party life with celebrities, models and hockey players. I was able to find this book in an old inner city library sometime in the late 70's, early 80's. The chance of you finding it now are slim and nil, but if you do get a hold of it, I'm sure you'll be glad you did.

The ULTIMATE hockey book!!!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-07
I've owned this book for over 20 years, and I still pick it up from time to time to read it . .it is honestly that interesting and compelling. In no way would I consider myself as being a New York Ranger fan whatsoever. That being said, when I had finished reading this book, I found myself at times actually rooting for the Rangers in the playoffs based on the writing skill of "Ratso" Sloman. It is that good. If you can only read one hockey book in your lifetime, read this one.

Hmm ... Interesting
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 1999-04-03
As JHRay has already mentioned ... it's funny how rbettendorf could review this book and find such information as: personal bios of Mark Messier, Brian Leetch, and Mike Richter as well as the rangers winning the Stanley Cup in 1994.

This book was published in 1981. Mess was in Edmonton and Richter and Leetch were still in high school my friend.

Prior review of a different book
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 1999-01-25
On the off chance that anyone else is searching for this book, the other review posted is not a review of Sloman's book. As you can see, this book was published in 1982, years before the cup win in '94...

Sloman's book is about the late 70's and early 80's. He is friends with several Rangers, and writes about his experiences with them.

For a SERIOUS hockey fan, a great book. For a casual fan, probably a pass.

BTW, Sloman has been on Howard Sterns show many times.

New York
The Traveler's Guide to the Hudson River Valley: From Saratoga Springs to New York City (Traveler's Guide to the Hudson River Valley)
Published in Paperback by Random House (1999-05-11)
Author: Tim Mulligan
List price: $15.95
New price: $4.99
Used price: $2.75

Average review score:

Mid-Hudson Valley is special area
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-23
I met Tim Mulligan many years ago when living in the Hudson Valley and he signed one of his books for me. I've been to many places in the states/abroad in my travels, but the Mid-Hudson Valley is one of the most beautiful and life-affirming places I know of - and yes, I've been to Big Sur and Olympia Park.
I wrote a little blurb on my blog at: [...]
about a few places I inhabited while living there. Don't miss the Mohonk Mountain House (hike around the trails above the lodge), the old Catskill Mountain House site and overlook (gasp!), or Olana in Greenport area. That special light in the Catskill Mountains viewed from the other side of the Hudson River is awe-inspiring. Keep in mind that some of the food places Mr.Mulligan has referenced have closed, such as the Cafe Pongo in Tivoli. Oh! long gone are the magical Tivoli days rocking away on the old 1940's front porch glide rocker with a whole grain baguette filled with roasted vegetable, pesto and goat cheese with dogs and cats at your feet free to enter and exit the cafe with the owner supplied pet food and drink dishes scattered about with the smell of those wild flowers wafting on the warm breezes.

TRAVELERS' GUIDE TO HUDSON RIVER VALLEY
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-03
On the mark and very interesting. I want to make some trips to the Hudson Valley.

A Perfect Companion to the Region
Helpful Votes: 13 out of 14 total.
Review Date: 1999-11-24
I have used this book on many of my forages into the Hudson River region and I have always found its inspired commentary, accurate information and insightful observations make it the perfect book for exploring this region. I highly recommend this book for all who visit and seek more information about the Hudson River Valley.

This is the trip I would take if I were tripping today.
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-21
I read this lovely book for genealogical purposes. The migratory path of our family was from Westchester County in the 1600s to Schoharie County in the 1800s. There are a few towns mentioned here where our people had lived.
The book begins in Albany going toward New York City. I read it backwards one chapter at a time to really make the trip in the same direction that our family went!
Who knows if I will really take this trip? I collected travel brochures on France for a dozen years and then I really went three times. When I take this trip I am bringing this guide.

Red Hook Inn, Red Hook NY Guest Comments
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2005-07-28
We purchased this book for our INN guests who are interested in learning more about the interesting history of the Hudson Valley of NY. We have owned it for about 3 weeks and at least 5 guests have taken it overnight to read and each guest has returned it to us with very positive comments on the accuracy of the contents. We highly recommend this book for anyone who is going to visit the Hudson Valley of NY! Pat and Bill, Innkeepers

New York
The True Story of Stellina
Published in Hardcover by Knopf Books for Young Readers (2006-03-14)
Author: Matteo Pericoli
List price: $14.95
New price: $8.24
Used price: $6.14

Average review score:

The True Story of Stellina
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-09
This is a wonderful story about a couple who find an abandoned baby bird in a busy intersection and take it home to raise it. It is very touching because of their love that grew for little baby Stellina. She became a member of their family. My grandchildren love this kind and tender story and want me to read it to them again and again. The artwork is also delightful. I recommend this book for children and adults alike. My grandchildren are 2 to 9 and they all love it.

The True Story of Stellina
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-10
This is a beautifully told story that is very refreshing and sensitive, bringing tears to adult eyes and causing smiles and cooing in the young listeners. The ilustrations are delightful. Nothing but praise for this children's book.

charming illustrations, wonderful story
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-06
This illustrations in this book are refreshing-- they are charming without being kitsch. They pique the imagination without surpressing it as some of the more photorealistic illustrations in childrens books tend to do.

Beware-- this book does deal with death, but it does so in a very gentle way. My children loved this book. I enjoyed it as well. The repetitive style also makes it suitable for younger children (older babies/toddlers) despite its length.

Little Star
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2006-05-18
I was in the American Museum of Natural History last month, or rather, in their gift shop (honestly, is there any better place to shop for kiddie stuff?) when I noticed Pericoli's impressive rendering of the city skyline, Manhattan Unfurled, on prominent display.

I knew that on my shelf sat a more humble volume of his, about a single bird and not an entire cityscape. Stellina was a finch chick rescued by his wife, Holly, when she heard its tiny peeps at her feet above the roar of traffic.

While a press release and the book itself make much of the love that sprung between rescuer and foundling, I was struck more by Pericoli's obvious awe of his wife. He dotes on the way she fed the bird by trickling juice down her pinky, or played piano to inspire it to sing, or schlepped it in a plastic box whereever she went until it was old enough to be left alone in her tiny apartment.

He also refers to her as "Holly, my wife" on every single reference, in case you miss it. An end note explains she was only his future wife when Stellina peeped into their lives, and further confuses matters by saying a security guard first rescued the bird. There is no guard in Pericoli's narrative.

There is, however, what appears to be a lovely, stylized rendering of Holly, with an elongated nose and slender frame, dabbled with just enough watercolor to suggest her clothes or Stellina's plumage. Pericoli's use of pigment is like his spare prose, giving us only what's essential:

"It was evening when Holly, my wife,
decided to take Stellina home with her.

"They sat together for a while,
looking at each other,
and both must have wondered:
'And now? What's going to happen now?'"

Stellina finally died after eight years as Holly's well-tended pet, probably a better lifespan than she could've expected in the wild (I'm guessing). This tribute to the bird -- but really to its keeper -- is much like a splotch of warm color in the big, gray city.

Charming
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-04-13
One of the honors of being a school librarian is the opportunity to be there for some of the small but very important moments of your students lives.

Reading The True Story of Stellina reminded me of an early morning visit from a student who came in before school and asked "Do we have any books on birds?" Well, what do you want to find out about birds? Is this for a report? Is there any special type of bird you are looking for?

She was clutching a shoebox and slowly lifted the lid and began to explain how she had found-this-baby-bird-on-the-sidewalk-on-the-way-to-school-and-she-had-run-run-all-the-way-back-home-to-find-a-shoebox-and-now-she-had-it-in-the-box and-see-the-sticks-and-leaves-she-had-added? She needed to find out how to take care of the bird so she had come to her library to get help.

We ended up enlisting the help of our school nurse who is a professional 4-H mom, and has raised just about every kind of animal imaginable. I cannot remember now what happened to the bird but my young friend would have been enchanted by this gentle story.

Matteo Pericoli's wife hears a "cheep" and finds a baby bird on the noisy streets of Manhattan. She takes the little bird home and manages to feed it and care for it. Stellina lives and thrives and repays the couple with companionship and love for eight years. The drawings are light and delicate like the bird whose story they are telling. I am looking forward to sharing it with kids. They will be charmed.


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