New York Books
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Good craicReview Date: 2007-09-05
A wonderful book... by a talented authorReview Date: 2005-01-11
travel to another world....Review Date: 2004-08-25
Book triggers emotions, ideas, memories, & connectionsReview Date: 2004-06-10
Enjoying lifeReview Date: 2004-06-24

Thin Ice is a must read !Review Date: 2002-12-17
"Ratso" and the Manhatten Rangers !Review Date: 2001-03-13
The ULTIMATE hockey book!!!Review Date: 2006-03-07
Hmm ... InterestingReview Date: 1999-04-03
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 bookReview Date: 1999-01-25
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.


Mid-Hudson Valley is special areaReview Date: 2008-03-23
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 VALLEYReview Date: 2007-08-03
A Perfect Companion to the RegionReview Date: 1999-11-24
This is the trip I would take if I were tripping today.Review Date: 2006-11-21
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 CommentsReview Date: 2005-07-28

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The True Story of StellinaReview Date: 2007-01-09
The True Story of StellinaReview Date: 2006-11-10
charming illustrations, wonderful storyReview Date: 2007-04-06
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 StarReview Date: 2006-05-18
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.
CharmingReview Date: 2006-04-12
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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Gripping read, enduring time capsuleReview Date: 1998-02-19
Fascinating/frustrating psychiatric world portrayedReview Date: 1998-01-13
A chilling description of psychiatric counseling gone awry.Review Date: 1997-11-17
Stunning story of therapy folly and family redemption.Review Date: 1997-10-21
A deft, intelligent, readable novelReview Date: 1997-10-14

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Mighty Insights from Little Potshards GrowReview Date: 2005-03-29
Cantwell and Wall prove the answer is "an almost infinite amount." From a painstaking analysis of shards of pottery found in various privies, for example, we learn how the world changes for women when New York became too big to walk (they no longer lived above the shop, so to speak). In landfill in lower Manhattan, the charred ghost of a ship that sunk in the harbor in the 17th-century tells us something about trade back then. Most touchingly, the discovery and excavation of the old African Burial Grounds tells us something about the lives of the enslaved (did you know that over 20% of the residents of colonial Manhattan were enslaved? I didn't; I learned it from this book).
The book is extremely well-designed, liberally illustrated with photos of digs, but also old maps and engravings. If you have lived or walked New York, it will inspire you to look at the city in a new way - the ground you tred on still bears the marks of centuries past.
By the way, the authors have also brought out a book of walking tours based on their discoveries - next time I'm in town I'm tucking it under my arm and having a good look around at the vestiges of the 17th-19th centuries presented here.
New York's underground historyReview Date: 2002-03-01
In a time-line fashion (11,000 years before present to today) the authors reconstruct a picture of what life might have been like during these times. Lest one think the unearthings are limited to Manhattan, they are not. All five boroughs are represented. There were moments during the reading of this book that I wanted the authors to spend more time recounting the actual excavations to which they refer, but in the end their historical perspective is the link that saves the day. Without it, their offerings would be no more than a field trip.
My future trips around the city will be made with a new awareness as I ask myself, "I wonder what lies beneath....". It is a question we all can ask.
A Marvelous BookReview Date: 2002-07-19
Good Book for Urban Arch/Anth loversReview Date: 2006-02-26
Unearthing a masterworkReview Date: 2003-09-11

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Excellent story with well developed charactersReview Date: 2003-09-08
The characters are well developed. It was hard to put this book down.
Terrific crime story -- and not a bad parable, besidesReview Date: 2003-09-02
Heffernan also gets right the self-importance of people attached to the powerful. His rendering of the Cardinal's aide-de-camp, the numeraries in Opus Christi, and their nemesis (a humorously drawn Jesuit priest and professor at Fordham) demonstrate the bad, the ugly, and the sterling good that play out in Church politics.
Ultimately, it is hard to say all that is praiseworthy about this novel without repeatedly reassuring potential readers that it does not bog down, that it never becomes polemic in its well-wrought moral points. Still, Heffernan cleverly threads throughout the plot the silliness and even wickedness of categorizing people by their bedroom activities. He reminds parents that not even the daughter of a police inspector is immune from making a stupid mistake with a stranger. The goodness of cleverness and intelligence prevailing at last over plodding intransigence and the self-interest that leads to evil is an over-arching theme, as well.
Sweeping aside the ample food for thought, this is a fast-paced, zig-zagging novel that riveted my attention from the first page through the last.
The Firm in Clerical CollarsReview Date: 2002-09-10
Heffernan's novel falls short only by failing to fully exploit the oppotunities the cultish criminal enterprise offers. As he draws near the end of his tale, the focus becomes concentrated on one member of Opus Dei, rather than the order itself.
While this enables him to wrap up his novel, the reader wants more. In a sense Grisham had the same problem and reached for the same quick solution in The Firm with the "mail fraud" prosecution. But this book is, if anything, more artfully presented than Grisham's classic, and such a facile solution is a bigger loss to the reader.
Couldn't put it down!Review Date: 2002-05-17
Excellent Police Procedural!Review Date: 2002-03-15

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Just Try to Put It DownReview Date: 2002-02-26
Fred and Jan Yager obviously have delivered the foundation for a franchise series of mystery novels. Hope to see Kimberly Stone and Alan Blake in action again soon.
Couldn't sleep until I finished it.Review Date: 1998-06-15
A riveting mystery with a human touch.Review Date: 1998-05-28
Untimely Death is an excellent read.Review Date: 1998-07-31
Character development is good -- the people are real, and I can't wait for another book featuring Kimberly Stone. The Yagers' familiarity with New York gives us Left Coasters a view you won't find in a travelogue, and the descriptions are fascinating.
The well-designed plot moves at a perfect pace, and the suspension builds steadily, until the end, when you might discover you've been holding your breath a long time.
When I see the name Yager on a title, I'm not going to look any further. I'm going to get it, find a nice chunk of time and settle down for another good read.
This book was a fun read and a good puzzlerReview Date: 1998-03-13

Love This Book!Review Date: 2007-11-26
Linking Literacy and the ArtsReview Date: 2008-02-09
Great for all agesReview Date: 2007-11-25
vincents colorsReview Date: 2006-11-05
a book to treasureReview Date: 2006-03-10

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The coolest coloring book in the whole wide world!!!Review Date: 2005-09-01
Pierre has done it again!Review Date: 2005-07-26
Welcome to New York City is great for childrenReview Date: 2002-01-03
This is a really cool coloring book!Review Date: 2001-12-31
Great Idea for a New York guide!Review Date: 2002-01-03
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Good craic for anyone weathered and tendered by life.