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The Hundredth Man
Published in Hardcover by Dutton Adult (2004-06-03)
List price: $23.95
New price: $0.45
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $23.95
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $23.95
Average review score: 

I don't know thrillers, but I know what I like.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-10
Review Date: 2008-06-10
This book was totally awesome from start to finish. I keep meaning to read the rest of the books in the series and I am excited that they exist.
The best!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-30
Review Date: 2008-01-30
This seriously is the best psychological thriller I have ever read! Don't plan on getting to bed early if you get into this one in the evening, though! Can't say enough about it. GREAT plotting and character development, a roller coaster page turner (!), very unique twist to the crimes, and Carson Ryder/Harry Nautilus are probably the best duo in a thriller I've come across so far. I hadn't heard of Jack Kerley before someone recommended this book to me, and now I have "The Death Collectors", and "Garden of Vipers", too. Can't wait to see what he has in store with those! Very, very highly recommended. If I could give it more than 5 stars, I would!
a weak book that I could take or leave
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-07
Review Date: 2008-02-07
When I review books, I usually try to point out some of the negatives that keep me from giving the story five stars. I say this because I found so much here to have been done in-expertly, I could go on for a while listing aspects that bothered me while reading the story. Yet I understand that this is Jack Kerleys first attempt at writing and that he is rightly proud of his efforts and I want to just say that first of all I managed to finish the book, so its not as bad as a lot of what you can find on the best-seller lists. Secondly, the mood and sense of place were fairly well done. I had a distinct idea of the environs and local. Perhaps I stumbled across the Hundredth Man at an inopportune time due to the fact that I just finished a few of the best mystery/thrillers I have ever come across, including "no country for old men", and a couple of the Lew Archer classics, and this one just does not compare.
Ok, what really got to me the most, was that this did not feel authentic to me. I felt like Kerley is as much of a fan of this genre as myself, but that he has yet to fully find his own voice. Some of what he tries to pull in here, the alcoholism in particular, felt like it was stripped from one of my favorite series', the Matt Scudder books of Lawrence Block. However, Block just takes a character through several books of agony and here we are almost treated to a sunday walk in the park in comparison.
Secondly, and by far the most annoying, is that the brother of the protagonist is obviously %100 Hannibal Lecter. Kerley did not need this character here and sadly I see this series, if he continues this line of books, as being heavily reliant upon the brother. Harris, the author of Silence of the Lambs has written a few of the all time worst books since his block buster and this is due to his being over-whelmed by what started out as a marginal character. I can see Kerley being pulled into this brother/Lecter with the same desire, but I hope that he sees that beyond my advice that he start a fresh new series, that the brother is absolutely not his character and that he should write him out of future endeavors. Its just plain lazy and offensive to the reader to pan this off on us.
Thirdly, I really felt like Kerley could have delved deeper into studies of both his day to day lives of his characters and their development. I felt like Kerley was rushing through the good stuff, the minutia of the crime beat and trying to pawn off B movie genre gunk in great swaths. I would have traded all the over the top action for a slower, deeper, and simpler look at the characters he wanted to get onto the page.
I could go on and on like I said before, but I will stop here. I would suggest that you pass this book by. I think that in future years, Kerley could grow into something akin to a master of his craft. You can see the potential there. Only this is not a book that will make you think that thought.
Ok, what really got to me the most, was that this did not feel authentic to me. I felt like Kerley is as much of a fan of this genre as myself, but that he has yet to fully find his own voice. Some of what he tries to pull in here, the alcoholism in particular, felt like it was stripped from one of my favorite series', the Matt Scudder books of Lawrence Block. However, Block just takes a character through several books of agony and here we are almost treated to a sunday walk in the park in comparison.
Secondly, and by far the most annoying, is that the brother of the protagonist is obviously %100 Hannibal Lecter. Kerley did not need this character here and sadly I see this series, if he continues this line of books, as being heavily reliant upon the brother. Harris, the author of Silence of the Lambs has written a few of the all time worst books since his block buster and this is due to his being over-whelmed by what started out as a marginal character. I can see Kerley being pulled into this brother/Lecter with the same desire, but I hope that he sees that beyond my advice that he start a fresh new series, that the brother is absolutely not his character and that he should write him out of future endeavors. Its just plain lazy and offensive to the reader to pan this off on us.
Thirdly, I really felt like Kerley could have delved deeper into studies of both his day to day lives of his characters and their development. I felt like Kerley was rushing through the good stuff, the minutia of the crime beat and trying to pawn off B movie genre gunk in great swaths. I would have traded all the over the top action for a slower, deeper, and simpler look at the characters he wanted to get onto the page.
I could go on and on like I said before, but I will stop here. I would suggest that you pass this book by. I think that in future years, Kerley could grow into something akin to a master of his craft. You can see the potential there. Only this is not a book that will make you think that thought.
PHENOMENAL !!!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-29
Review Date: 2007-03-29
Let me start by saying that Jack Kerley is a terrific writer. From the chilling first chapter to the nail biting end, The Hundredth Man pulls you in and doesn't let you out. I was trapped in this book for 2 days. I could not put it down. The characters are fascinating, and sympathetically human. Nautilus and Ryder are very well developed and provide an entertaining sense of camaraderie, while Ryder's brother Jeremy is terrifyingly fun to read. Ryder's old wounds and personal conflicts are exploited through out the book and provide the insight that makes him a very likable hero. Kerley unfolds the plot masterfully as nothing goes unexplained or wasted. Every chapter and sub-plot has a purpose. The author gets you hooked on just enough information to draw you in until the answers explode on the pages in dramatic fashion. There is enough humor to make you laugh aloud, just enough horror to keep you on edge and plenty of surprises to keep you guessing. My only complaint is that the writing, while fresh, vivid and stylish, is burdened by numerous typos. It's the only reason I did not give this book 5 stars. There are simply way too many. Looking past the poor editing this is a phenomenal book that sets into motion what should be a terrific series. I can't wait to read the next two installments already out.
A bad Start!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-04
Review Date: 2007-04-04
Jack Kerley made a very dissapointing 'debut' with this novel. 'Hundredth Man, The' is just another serial killer suspense, without any point of originality and - even worse - with a plot so ludicrous, so unbelievable, that you'll feel a jerk to lose your time with a so bottomless book.
To say the truth, Mr. Kerley made a direct rip-off of Thomas Harris celebrated characther, Hannibal Lecter, in the figure of the insane brother of the detective who is investigating the case. But all the similarity stops just here. Lecter has something to do and to say in Harris's books but the weird and crazy created by Kerley is just a crazy crying all the time!.
Don't lose your time and your money.
To say the truth, Mr. Kerley made a direct rip-off of Thomas Harris celebrated characther, Hannibal Lecter, in the figure of the insane brother of the detective who is investigating the case. But all the similarity stops just here. Lecter has something to do and to say in Harris's books but the weird and crazy created by Kerley is just a crazy crying all the time!.
Don't lose your time and your money.

Big Fish : A Novel of Mythic Proportions
Published in Hardcover by Algonquin Books (1998-10-01)
List price: $17.95
New price: $8.95
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $17.95
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $17.95
Average review score: 

A Novel of Understanding
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-11
Review Date: 2008-06-11
This simple tale warms the heart. Just as William must learn to accept his father's tall tales, so too must we as readers. After all, don't we all just want to be "big fish in a big pond" in our own ways?
Joyful & Insightful
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-16
Review Date: 2008-04-16
Big Fish was an absolutely joyful read. I finished it in about 4 hours over the course of 2 days. The poetic examination of the father/son relationship brought me to tears. Wallace captures the intangible struggle between understanding, & accepting who our parents are, in turn, who we ultimately are. A must read!
BIG mess; BIG waste of time
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-20
Review Date: 2008-02-20
This book was a heinouse waste of time and paper. The pages have little more than juvenile sketches, notes of what could have been a decent story. There was so little here that was even close to imaginative. The structure of the book didn't reveal any kind of clever conceit or grain of wisdom as should myth / fable. The form could have worked if there had been any substance but I just don't find anything redeeming in the authors work.
After the first few pages, I thought, well, maybe the author is going for a very minimalist idea. Maybe William Carlos William and fellow modernists highly influenced the authors choice and eventually we'll see how each word, image is loaded with meaning...nope...
I was surprised when Tim Burton attached himself to a filmed version. And for all the wonder that Burton has created on film...I thought, well, even the best falter now and then. He did not. I thought Burton did what the author should have. He fleshed out so much of what was skeletal in the book. Of course, Albert Finny and Billy Cruddup are always marvelous and bring a great deal to their work as well. Hail Burton for pouring soul into the drek that this book is and rendering something beautiful out of it.
After the first few pages, I thought, well, maybe the author is going for a very minimalist idea. Maybe William Carlos William and fellow modernists highly influenced the authors choice and eventually we'll see how each word, image is loaded with meaning...nope...
I was surprised when Tim Burton attached himself to a filmed version. And for all the wonder that Burton has created on film...I thought, well, even the best falter now and then. He did not. I thought Burton did what the author should have. He fleshed out so much of what was skeletal in the book. Of course, Albert Finny and Billy Cruddup are always marvelous and bring a great deal to their work as well. Hail Burton for pouring soul into the drek that this book is and rendering something beautiful out of it.
A Book to Keep
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-23
Review Date: 2007-11-23
Big fish is pocket-sized book with a total of 180 pages. It is not a novel; it is more like a Memory to a distant but loving man and the transforming power of story telling and humor. Big fish is the life of Edward Bloom, told as a continuous myth and legend. William Bloom's father is dying. The problem is, William fells like he doesn't really know who really his father is. And that is because Edward Bloom's entire life has been a series of tall, legend and myths for that he knows. He was born on the day Alabama's worst drought in 40 years broken. He could converse with animals. He subdued a wild dog. He bought a small town among many stories toed about hem.
One thing that is obvious in the book is that Edward always communicates through his funny and entreating stories. One of my favorite is this; William who straggles to find out who really he's father is, as his father is dying riches to him looking for a heat to heart conversation. Edward reminisce as they start talking, his eyes look seemingly in to memory, a word of wisdom perhaps and he said "I Don't know if I told you this,...there was this panhandler who stopped me every morning when I come out of this coffee shop near the office. Every day I gave him a quarter. Every day. I Mean, it become so routine the panhandler dint even bother asking any more - I just slipped him a quarter. Then I got sick and was out for couple of weeks and I went back there and you know what he says to me?"
"What Dad?"
"'You owe me three-fifty'''
As I said before Edward is a teller of jokes, which makes this book very entreating beside the fascinating stories he tale. I know as read this book I laughed so hard that people who heard me thought I needed some kind of professional help.
Edward tells his stories because he believes that they will make him immortal and I think we should read them to entertain ourselves. The stories in the book are descriptive enough to draw them in our head and are more like a fairy tale. Which I think would make teenagers and kids candidate audiences/ readers for the book.
One thing that is obvious in the book is that Edward always communicates through his funny and entreating stories. One of my favorite is this; William who straggles to find out who really he's father is, as his father is dying riches to him looking for a heat to heart conversation. Edward reminisce as they start talking, his eyes look seemingly in to memory, a word of wisdom perhaps and he said "I Don't know if I told you this,...there was this panhandler who stopped me every morning when I come out of this coffee shop near the office. Every day I gave him a quarter. Every day. I Mean, it become so routine the panhandler dint even bother asking any more - I just slipped him a quarter. Then I got sick and was out for couple of weeks and I went back there and you know what he says to me?"
"What Dad?"
"'You owe me three-fifty'''
As I said before Edward is a teller of jokes, which makes this book very entreating beside the fascinating stories he tale. I know as read this book I laughed so hard that people who heard me thought I needed some kind of professional help.
Edward tells his stories because he believes that they will make him immortal and I think we should read them to entertain ourselves. The stories in the book are descriptive enough to draw them in our head and are more like a fairy tale. Which I think would make teenagers and kids candidate audiences/ readers for the book.
Excellent
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-28
Review Date: 2008-09-28
It's a terrific book, and possibly even great. It's not pretentious, it's not larded with `depth' that reeks. It simply tells, through a couple dozen vignettes, the tale of a legendary man named Edward Bloom (not to be confused with pseudo-critic Harold Bloom nor James Joyce's Leopold Bloom). I reviewed the film a while back, and found it to be wanting. That's the way a Tim Burton film can affect you. How that ceaselessly puerile director got a hold of this terrific little book and nearly ran it into the ground is beyond me. The actual book is, as the apothegm goes, much better than the film. Yes, there are many of the famed scenes from the film, but also alot more. The bond between Edward Bloom and his son William, narrator of film and book, is much more strongly developed, and the end far more poignant than the dumbed-down Disneyfied movie. In fact, the only really good purpose the film served was likely in increasing readership for the book. This is why picked up a good copy at a used bookstore, and am thankful for the million dollar commercial the film turned out to be....Oddly enough, the book's episodic nature reminded me most of Girl, Interrupted, another very good book made into a mediocre movie. Of course, Big Fish is more expansive and light-hearted. It also is not in chronological order, as the tales wenf through time. In this way it greatly parallels the masterpiece of Kurt Vonnegut, Slaughterhouse-Five. Yet, where Vonnegut's book took a real world `big event' and crammed it inward, to reveal the psychosis of its lead character, Big Fish takes the smallest nubs of a human relationship, and unfolds it writ large. It is also not a regional book, dependent upon place the way William Faulkner's books are, and it is far more lucid, taken as a whole, or some as tales that stand on their own, than the works of Isaac Bashevis Singer or Zora Neale Hurston. Wallace's colloquialism works well, and his sense of character is spot-on, both in those more realistic characters, and even in the fabular ones. I'd like to go more into depth on the book, but its being so short (I read it in little over an hour- but I am a fast reader) makes me loath to spoil some of its charm. Suffice to say, I recommend this book being read by everyone, regardless of age. I just hope Wallace's two later works Ray in Reverse and The Watermelon King are as good when I eventually find them on sale. Also, check out the author's website http://www.danielwallace.org/.
When the literary history of the millennial era is written, years from now, there is likely to be a writer by the name of Wallace who is declaimed one of the greats of his day, and it won't be the flatulent, talentless hack known as David Foster. He'll likely share my first name.
When the literary history of the millennial era is written, years from now, there is likely to be a writer by the name of Wallace who is declaimed one of the greats of his day, and it won't be the flatulent, talentless hack known as David Foster. He'll likely share my first name.

Gonna Lay Down My Burdens
Published in Hardcover by Kensington (2002-09-01)
List price: $24.00
New price: $4.77
Used price: $0.50
Used price: $0.50
Average review score: 

Excellent Story--Dragged Out Though
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-31
Review Date: 2008-08-31
This was a really good story and humerous in parts. I enjoyed it, and I do recommend this book to other adults to read. The last part of the book was excellent. However, it was dragged way too far out. The same story could have easily been told by taking out about 1/4 of the book. There are 70 chapters in this book! YES--70!
Well written
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-22
Review Date: 2008-06-22
We've heard it before. Never intervene in a lovers quarrel. Someone could turn up dead. And that is just what happened! Carmen Taylor of Belle Helene, Alabama has secrets that could raise the dead. Carmen's childhood friends Desiree and Chester are having an aweful argument when she tries to do what is inevitably in her nature to preserve and protect. Too bad Chester has been sworn to do the exact same thing as an officer of the law and at the hand of Carmen, now he's dead and Carmen's on the run!
This novel retraces the past between friends Desiree, Chester and Burl whose actions have always had Carmen enslaved to her relationships with them all for one reason or another. The author revisits their childhood and shed light on the situation that has left Carmen ready to lay her burdens down!
Brilliantly entertaining and awesomely written. Suspenseful and dramatic. Good read!
This novel retraces the past between friends Desiree, Chester and Burl whose actions have always had Carmen enslaved to her relationships with them all for one reason or another. The author revisits their childhood and shed light on the situation that has left Carmen ready to lay her burdens down!
Brilliantly entertaining and awesomely written. Suspenseful and dramatic. Good read!
A good read
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-11
Review Date: 2007-08-11
Mary Monroe has done it again in my opinion! This book keeps you reading and wanting more!
one hot book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-13
Review Date: 2007-04-13
i thought this book was off the chain i read this in a day
Sent The Book Back
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-31
Review Date: 2007-05-31
I received a paperback book, my fault. I returned the book.
Breakheart Hill
Published in Hardcover by Bantam (1995-06-01)
List price: $21.95
New price: $4.96
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $21.95
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $21.95
Average review score: 

A THRILLING RIDE, BUCKLE UP!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-03
Review Date: 2008-08-03
BREAKHEART HILL
I have now read and ENJOYED two of Thomas H. Cook's books. The first one was RED LEAVES, and now this one. They are both full of thrills and surprises! What great movies his books would make! I swear while I was reading I could hear thrilling, mysterious, nerve-wracking music playing in the background! Awesome read!!!!
The place is Choctaw, Alabama, in l962. Kelli Troy is the new girl in town and most of the local boys have never met anyone quite like Kelli. She is beautiful, kind, smart, out-spoken. Most of the boys have fallen for her, but in particular -- someone who is truly in love with Kelli is Ben Wade, who narrates the story.
Kelli is found beaten to a pulp on Breakheart Hill. This one incident is the backbone of the book. The author takes you in the past, in the present, back and forth, forth and back, making you reread and question and be shocked at what is happening to all the people in Choctaw. The format of writing is not confusing, but I found myself going back and rereading passages just to make sure I had things correct! I also found myself getting more and more involved in this book, practically and truly sitting on the edge of my seat more than once.
All phases of the book are superb and thrilling. There is never a dull moment, the characters are great and believeable. I kept changing and changing and changing my mind as to who attacked Kelli constantly. And guess what? I was WRONG. And SURPRISED and SHOCKED!!!!!!
This author takes the reader down so many paths and you don't want to get off those paths. But then you leave that path because the author is teasing the reader and dangling yet another carrot out there to entice you along and make you a nervous wreck reading this book! This book really makes you THINK and do nothing but enjoy, enjoy, enjoy.
The ENDING is a total SHOCK and I never in a million years saw this one coming! WOW!!! WHAT! WHY! and HUH! all crossed my mind instantly!
Thomas H. Cook has many books out there and many fans. Count me in on both! I HIGHLY recommend this book!
Thank you!
Pam
I have now read and ENJOYED two of Thomas H. Cook's books. The first one was RED LEAVES, and now this one. They are both full of thrills and surprises! What great movies his books would make! I swear while I was reading I could hear thrilling, mysterious, nerve-wracking music playing in the background! Awesome read!!!!
The place is Choctaw, Alabama, in l962. Kelli Troy is the new girl in town and most of the local boys have never met anyone quite like Kelli. She is beautiful, kind, smart, out-spoken. Most of the boys have fallen for her, but in particular -- someone who is truly in love with Kelli is Ben Wade, who narrates the story.
Kelli is found beaten to a pulp on Breakheart Hill. This one incident is the backbone of the book. The author takes you in the past, in the present, back and forth, forth and back, making you reread and question and be shocked at what is happening to all the people in Choctaw. The format of writing is not confusing, but I found myself going back and rereading passages just to make sure I had things correct! I also found myself getting more and more involved in this book, practically and truly sitting on the edge of my seat more than once.
All phases of the book are superb and thrilling. There is never a dull moment, the characters are great and believeable. I kept changing and changing and changing my mind as to who attacked Kelli constantly. And guess what? I was WRONG. And SURPRISED and SHOCKED!!!!!!
This author takes the reader down so many paths and you don't want to get off those paths. But then you leave that path because the author is teasing the reader and dangling yet another carrot out there to entice you along and make you a nervous wreck reading this book! This book really makes you THINK and do nothing but enjoy, enjoy, enjoy.
The ENDING is a total SHOCK and I never in a million years saw this one coming! WOW!!! WHAT! WHY! and HUH! all crossed my mind instantly!
Thomas H. Cook has many books out there and many fans. Count me in on both! I HIGHLY recommend this book!
Thank you!
Pam
A classic
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-09
Review Date: 2007-03-09
This marvelous book should be taught as literature. Beautifully written and plotted with believable characters' trauma and responses developed over half a lifetime.
Dark, elegaic thriller.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-06-03
Review Date: 2006-06-03
Town doctor Ben Wade narrates the sad history of Kelly Troy, a bright, intelligent girl who moves into a small Southern community, both shocking it with her outspoken views on segregation and charming it with her natural vivacity before she is tragically attacked on top of Breakheart Hill. Ben falls deeply in love with her, and author Thomas H. Cook is very good at depicting the black mood he falls into when his love is not returned. The narrative moves back and forth in time, skillfully manipulating our expectations. I thought I knew what had happened, became increasingly sure of it as the novel progressed, then had to revise my beliefs when I came to the final devastating pages. This is a excellent suspense novel.
Haunting and powerful story...
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-09-14
Review Date: 2005-09-14
I'm not much into the Suspense/Mystery genre, but this book literally had me on the edge of my seat. I've read several other Thomas H. Cook books and none of them are able to stack up to this one.
This is the haunting story of Kelli Troy told in a series of flashbacks by the town doctor, Ben Wade. It is about the people that were changed forever, after a violent incident involving Kelli that occurred on Breakheart Hill. The climax will leave you reeling! It was completely unexpected and I was left in shock for several days after finishing the book. I even had to go back and re-read some of the passages and chapters to understand just exactly what happened.
This is a powerful story about betrayal, violence, and ultimately, about the power of love.
This is the haunting story of Kelli Troy told in a series of flashbacks by the town doctor, Ben Wade. It is about the people that were changed forever, after a violent incident involving Kelli that occurred on Breakheart Hill. The climax will leave you reeling! It was completely unexpected and I was left in shock for several days after finishing the book. I even had to go back and re-read some of the passages and chapters to understand just exactly what happened.
This is a powerful story about betrayal, violence, and ultimately, about the power of love.
incredibly bad book--so much potential
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2004-06-13
Review Date: 2004-06-13
I was enthraled by this book. This was the first of this author that I had read. I could hardly put it down, the writing was incredible.
And then the ending came and it was as if all the air went out of the balloon. Lame, weak, stupid, words fail me.
This guy writes well but someone needs to supply him with a plot that works. What a sad waste of time to read this book.

Murder on a Bad Hair Day (Beeler Large Print Mystery Series)
Published in Hardcover by Thomas T. Beeler Publisher (2000-02)
List price: $27.95
New price: $115.00
Used price: $35.27
Used price: $35.27
Average review score: 

No-brainer, Light Read
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-21
Review Date: 2008-01-21
Okay, if you want southern literature at its finest, most elite level, immediately go browse Faulkner. BUT, if you simply want a good read, in a southern setting, with all the vernacular and colloquialisms that make you feel like you're sipping iced tea on your grandmother's front porch, and you want to read the whole caboodle in one weekend or beach trip, then buy, buy, buy. Buy one book in the series for each vacation you plan to take this year.
Lucy Adams, author of If Mama Don't Laugh, It Ain't Funny
Lucy Adams, author of If Mama Don't Laugh, It Ain't Funny
FUN Read!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-12
Review Date: 2008-07-12
This series of books were a wonderful delight to read, we her fans miss her dearly and hope she is writing the rest in heaven. Highly recommend, your day will be brighter for each book you read!
Souther Sister Marvel!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-21
Review Date: 2007-03-21
This series is a MUST READ! These books are so funny and frantic you can't put them down. Get them all, read and reread till you laugh your socks off!
Easy reading!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-04-14
Review Date: 2005-04-14
I bought this book a year ago and just recently picked it up again to read--again! Oh, sure, I knew 'whodunit', but the story and the characters were just fun to revisit. I love the way Anne George portrays the two sisters. Her characters seem like neighbors and her writing is most entertaining. I won't donate this one to library just yet....
I Just Love This Series!
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2006-10-16
Review Date: 2006-10-16
Patricia Ann (Mouse) and Mary Alice (Sister) are sisters living in Birmingham, Alabama and though they love each other they have very little in common. That disparity in their personalities though is what makes these books so much fun, because their little spats and the tricks that they play on each other tend to drive the plot and are usually hilarious. Understanding the relationship between the two is therefore critical to enjoying this series so I would heartily suggest that you read these books in order since the first book provides a lot of the history necessary for the reader to reach that understanding.
In this entry Sister convinces Mouse to attend an art showing featuring a group of "primitive" artists from the area. Much taken by the beauty of the art they find at the showing the sisters are very surprised the next day when they learn of the death of the young owner of the gallery of an apparent heart attack. Apparent is the key word here and once again the sisters are drawn into the mystery, not by curiosity but by the involvement of one of Mouse's former students who turns to her former teacher for help. Being a retired teacher can apparently be a dangerous thing.
Most of the recurring characters are introduced in the first book but they are filled out a little more in this entry and unlike the characters in some "cozy" mysteries these people are very believable. You may in fact find that you know some of these people, or someone very much like them, they just have different names and don't live in Birmingham. One new character in this book is Sister's overweight and very spoiled cat named Bubba. Bubba has his own heating pad on the kitchen counter where he comfortably lounges away the days. He just sits there and waits to be adored and Mary Alice provides that in plentiful doses. That is, when she isn't busy being a sex slave for Santa at the mall. No, I'm not going to explain that statement, you will just have to read the book.
The most pleasant thing about this book and this series is that you will find yourself laughing out loud but at the same time this author doesn't sink to the slapstick level that many other authors in this genre do. The characters are not only believable but you will learn to care about them and worry when they get hurt. You are also impressed by how caring these people are and it is that caring nature that leads these snooping sisters to the solution of the crimes involved in this book. Murder it seems is not the only game afoot in the iron city.
In this entry Sister convinces Mouse to attend an art showing featuring a group of "primitive" artists from the area. Much taken by the beauty of the art they find at the showing the sisters are very surprised the next day when they learn of the death of the young owner of the gallery of an apparent heart attack. Apparent is the key word here and once again the sisters are drawn into the mystery, not by curiosity but by the involvement of one of Mouse's former students who turns to her former teacher for help. Being a retired teacher can apparently be a dangerous thing.
Most of the recurring characters are introduced in the first book but they are filled out a little more in this entry and unlike the characters in some "cozy" mysteries these people are very believable. You may in fact find that you know some of these people, or someone very much like them, they just have different names and don't live in Birmingham. One new character in this book is Sister's overweight and very spoiled cat named Bubba. Bubba has his own heating pad on the kitchen counter where he comfortably lounges away the days. He just sits there and waits to be adored and Mary Alice provides that in plentiful doses. That is, when she isn't busy being a sex slave for Santa at the mall. No, I'm not going to explain that statement, you will just have to read the book.
The most pleasant thing about this book and this series is that you will find yourself laughing out loud but at the same time this author doesn't sink to the slapstick level that many other authors in this genre do. The characters are not only believable but you will learn to care about them and worry when they get hurt. You are also impressed by how caring these people are and it is that caring nature that leads these snooping sisters to the solution of the crimes involved in this book. Murder it seems is not the only game afoot in the iron city.

A False Sense of Well Being
Published in Hardcover by Ballantine Books (2001-10-02)
List price: $23.95
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Average review score: 

Boring
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-14
Review Date: 2007-06-14
After 60 pages, i got the idea already: she's bored with her husband and most of her life. maybe something more interesting happens later, but i stopped there.
Lovely Southern Fiction
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-06-01
Review Date: 2005-06-01
This lovely novel is laughing out loud funny, yet touching. It is beautifully plotted, as the narrator/protagonist gradually clues us in and our view of her reality changes. People who don't believe God has a sense of humor would be happier to give this one a pass.
Not Enough For Me
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-01-04
Review Date: 2005-01-04
I like this genre of book- middle-age woman suddenly finding herself lost in life & begins exploration. I just couldn't help but have a difficult time in finding a lot of originality within the pages.
I wanted it funnier & there are parts I think could've been, but simply fizzled. I found it particularly amusing when our heroine went back home for a visit & had to share the same roof with her sister's many exotic, talking birds.
Not much stood out in this book. It was okay, but I was expecting at least a bit more boundary-pushing going on. Not just a home visit spent looking back on first loves then finally figuring out that your present home w/ hubby is not so bad.
I wanted it funnier & there are parts I think could've been, but simply fizzled. I found it particularly amusing when our heroine went back home for a visit & had to share the same roof with her sister's many exotic, talking birds.
Not much stood out in this book. It was okay, but I was expecting at least a bit more boundary-pushing going on. Not just a home visit spent looking back on first loves then finally figuring out that your present home w/ hubby is not so bad.
Thoroughly Disappointed
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2003-12-03
Review Date: 2003-12-03
I had a very difficult time getting into this book. The characters were shallow, the plot undeveloped, and overall a complete waste of time. I would expect "searching for self" books to be a little more deep and rich than this poor read.
A False Sense of A Good Book...
Helpful Votes: 29 out of 30 total.
Review Date: 2005-10-27
Review Date: 2005-10-27
I probably should of listened to the reviews I read on this book before I started it. Most people here didn't care much for it, but I thought it sounded like great southern reading...well I was wrong. This was one of the dullest books I've read in a long time.
The only reason I'm giving this 2 stars is beacause of Wanda McNabb, the one character in the book that I liked. The rest of the cast was so one dimensional and drab that I barley made it through. Jessie turned out to be just a predictable bored housewife.
Overall, this is definitely not a book I'd recommend. It's just a winey account of an upper middle-class wife who's tired of the normal hum-drum of her life. There's absolutely better reading out there.
The only reason I'm giving this 2 stars is beacause of Wanda McNabb, the one character in the book that I liked. The rest of the cast was so one dimensional and drab that I barley made it through. Jessie turned out to be just a predictable bored housewife.
Overall, this is definitely not a book I'd recommend. It's just a winey account of an upper middle-class wife who's tired of the normal hum-drum of her life. There's absolutely better reading out there.

The Journal of Biddy Owens: The Negro Leagues, Birmingham, Alabama, 1948 (My Name is America)
Published in Hardcover by Scholastic Inc. (2001-04-01)
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Average review score: 

The Best way vto learn about negro league baseball
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-15
Review Date: 2007-05-15
I really like the book The Journal of Biddy Owens. It was about a boy from Birmingham Alabama at the age of 17 he was playing on a Negro league team called the Black Barons. They played on away team fields or their home field Rickwood. The Black Barons had to travel all around the United States to play against 11 different Negro league teams and some Rookie teams. There where some many talented ball players on the team and there was one who was the leader who is the second baseman named Piper. They where a very outgoing team like going to restaurants and meeting new people. The team mad it all the way to the championship. I liked the author because he used very descriptive words and the best was that he uses dates and not chapters. I would recommend this book because it was very well written and descriptive.
This book was actually okay!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-16
Review Date: 2007-04-16
This book is about a 17 year old boy named Biddy Owens. He is an African American and is the equipment manager for the Birmingham Black Barons. The year was 1948 and he lived in Alabama. The Black Barons were a team that at the time played in the Negro Leagues. Biddy had always been fascinated with baseball and had always wanted to play as a regular player. He always felt left out just running errands and keeping score. The head coach named Piper knew that so every now and then in practice Piper would let Biddy jump into right field. Piper said though that if he wanted to be on the team though, he would have to put on a few pounds because of him only weighing 135. Biddy started getting better and better and got his weight up until they finally let him join as what they called a regular. That year the Birmingham Black Barons made it to the Negro League World Series. In that series the Black Barons lost every single game. Biddy realized that he wasn't very good, but he didn't care because he had such a love for baseball. In the end the Barons season ended and Biddy got invited to come back and play again next year. I recommend this book to anyone who likes following a diary/journal and to people who especially like baseball.
Homerun Hitting Book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-04-16
Review Date: 2005-04-16
Read a homerun hitting book about baseball. It is the Negro Leagues and it is the journal of Biddy Owens. It is about a 17 year old boy that is the team equipment manager of the Birmingham Black Barons. He sometimes gets to play right field and hit the ball too. He goes from city to city with the team to baseball games.
The conflict is that the Blacks have to play baseball in their own league and in some cities they go to they can't go into certain bathrooms, they can't go into certain stores, and they can't even drink out of certain water fountains. Later in the book the white people realize that black people can do things just as well as white people can, so the white leagues draft some black people into their league to play in the major leagues with the white people.
I would recommend people that enjoy baseball read this book because you could read a lot about the history of baseball and how different it was in 1948 compared to how it is now. You could learn about how the leagues were separated and how they come together to form one league.
The conflict is that the Blacks have to play baseball in their own league and in some cities they go to they can't go into certain bathrooms, they can't go into certain stores, and they can't even drink out of certain water fountains. Later in the book the white people realize that black people can do things just as well as white people can, so the white leagues draft some black people into their league to play in the major leagues with the white people.
I would recommend people that enjoy baseball read this book because you could read a lot about the history of baseball and how different it was in 1948 compared to how it is now. You could learn about how the leagues were separated and how they come together to form one league.
This book makes you want to play a game of baseball with fri
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-02-23
Review Date: 2005-02-23
This book makes you want to play a game of baseball with friends!
*************************************
I chose to read Biddy Owens by Walter Dean Myers because I thought it would be fun and interesting to read. The cover of this book looked like the best biography out there. After reading this book, I felt like playing a good game of baseball because this story described the game like no other! This story was in a way what I expected it to be, but in a way wasn't what I had bargained for. It was what I thought it would be like because it was jam packed with action about all the games Biddy Owens played. It was not what I thought it would be like however, because it also had details about their home life. I definitely don't feel the same about this book because I thought it was going to just be about baseball but it wasn't. It was also about how black people were discriminated in 1948 in Birmingham, Alabama.
The main character of this biography's name is Biddy Owens. He is at age 17 years old, 5 foot 10 inches tall but only weighs 135 pounds when this story takes place. He is an equipment manager, a scorekeeper, an errand boy, and sometimes right fielder. This book takes place in 1948 Birmingham, Alabama. This story is about Biddy Owens and when he played for the Black Barons. It is also about his home life. This is a biography written in first person by Walter Dean Myers.
I liked this book because it had two parts to it, it described baseball back then but it also described black discrimination and home life back then, and I like that because it came from Biddy Owens that had experienced both of those.
I liked this book a lot! And I would definitely recommend it to a friend. I think this book would be appropriate for anybody at the age of 10 or up.
I would give this book a four-star rating.
*************************************
I chose to read Biddy Owens by Walter Dean Myers because I thought it would be fun and interesting to read. The cover of this book looked like the best biography out there. After reading this book, I felt like playing a good game of baseball because this story described the game like no other! This story was in a way what I expected it to be, but in a way wasn't what I had bargained for. It was what I thought it would be like because it was jam packed with action about all the games Biddy Owens played. It was not what I thought it would be like however, because it also had details about their home life. I definitely don't feel the same about this book because I thought it was going to just be about baseball but it wasn't. It was also about how black people were discriminated in 1948 in Birmingham, Alabama.
The main character of this biography's name is Biddy Owens. He is at age 17 years old, 5 foot 10 inches tall but only weighs 135 pounds when this story takes place. He is an equipment manager, a scorekeeper, an errand boy, and sometimes right fielder. This book takes place in 1948 Birmingham, Alabama. This story is about Biddy Owens and when he played for the Black Barons. It is also about his home life. This is a biography written in first person by Walter Dean Myers.
I liked this book because it had two parts to it, it described baseball back then but it also described black discrimination and home life back then, and I like that because it came from Biddy Owens that had experienced both of those.
I liked this book a lot! And I would definitely recommend it to a friend. I think this book would be appropriate for anybody at the age of 10 or up.
I would give this book a four-star rating.
A Real Patriot
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2004-12-09
Review Date: 2004-12-09
Scott Pendelton Collins is a true american patriot. In this book he faces many hardships that would make many men runaway with their tails between their legs. He fights through one of the most well known battles of World War Two, D-Day and his company aids in the capture of the French city of St.Lo, and many key cities along the way. He has to walk endless miles and be ready for unexpected attacks, as well as have to be ready to fight with a 30 minute notice. He is hesitant on making friends because he knows that they or he could die at any time. He witnessed many of his new friends die on the beach on D-Day. He also reads about one of his friends deaths in a casuality report. He says the war has changd him in many ways, some good and some bad, and he doesn't think he will ever be able to forget the constant boom of the arterilly fire for both sides, allies and germans.
Scott fights for his family back home and his friends, but he also fights to defend many people in Europe he has never met. He steps in and fight risking his life for people he has never met and for people who can't fight for themselfs. He has the power to fight and he fights, this makes him a true patriot, fighting not only for his faily and friends, but for people he hasn't met and for his nation that he loves. Even through all his fighting he has to give up the right to tell his parents anything about where he is and what he's doing which he sacrifices knowing that what he is fighting for is well worth the sacrifice. He is willing to make the biggest sacrifice anyone can make for his country which is something only a true american patriot would do.
Scott fights for his family back home and his friends, but he also fights to defend many people in Europe he has never met. He steps in and fight risking his life for people he has never met and for people who can't fight for themselfs. He has the power to fight and he fights, this makes him a true patriot, fighting not only for his faily and friends, but for people he hasn't met and for his nation that he loves. Even through all his fighting he has to give up the right to tell his parents anything about where he is and what he's doing which he sacrifices knowing that what he is fighting for is well worth the sacrifice. He is willing to make the biggest sacrifice anyone can make for his country which is something only a true american patriot would do.

Let Us Now Praise Famous Men
Published in Paperback by Penguin (2006-04-06)
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Average review score: 

Topic great, writers not so great.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2006-05-27
Review Date: 2006-05-27
The eloquence of composition surely necessitated infinite use of superlatives and verbs, resulting in a requisite painstaking remostrance to the reader, thus fettering the effusion and disembogulation of the document. In other words, wouldn't it have been better to just leave all of the fluff out of the book and just write as if the reader is someone other than the Queen of England? If you can weed through all of excessive use poems and verbs, it's a halfway decent book
I thought I hated it at points, but I've never been able to get it out of my head.
Helpful Votes: 19 out of 20 total.
Review Date: 2005-09-22
Review Date: 2005-09-22
This book is an amazing work of art. At times it's baffling, and at times almost impertinent--like when the author decides to describe every object in an entire home, and yet in all these things and in all the conflicting emotions it evokes, it creates a mood and a feeling and a setting that will seep into your skin and fog your brain for months.
The writing is beautiful, the story it tells--of poor, sharecropping, depression-era families--is heartbreaking, and the experience of reading about it all is like a baptism by fire. This book just might re-wire your brain.
I think this is a much better read than Agee's "A Death in the Family," and that one won the Pulitzer Prize. Read this, for sure.
I read it on a bus trip across Guatemala, and the way Agee's descriptions of the old southern poverty fit the poor little towns full of Guatemalan coffee pickers was uncanny.
Let Us Now Praise Famous Men, and let us start with James Agee.
UPDATE: It's years later, and this book has never stopped haunting me. I think of it almost daily. If I were to review it today, I would definitely give it Five Stars.
The writing is beautiful, the story it tells--of poor, sharecropping, depression-era families--is heartbreaking, and the experience of reading about it all is like a baptism by fire. This book just might re-wire your brain.
I think this is a much better read than Agee's "A Death in the Family," and that one won the Pulitzer Prize. Read this, for sure.
I read it on a bus trip across Guatemala, and the way Agee's descriptions of the old southern poverty fit the poor little towns full of Guatemalan coffee pickers was uncanny.
Let Us Now Praise Famous Men, and let us start with James Agee.
UPDATE: It's years later, and this book has never stopped haunting me. I think of it almost daily. If I were to review it today, I would definitely give it Five Stars.
If nothing else, certainly brilliant and thought-provoking
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-09-15
Review Date: 2006-09-15
Let us Now Praise Famous Men, in all its poetry and prose, reminds me of an epic, like the Hindu Mahabharata or Homer's Iliad and Odyssey. The lyrical narrative reveals just as much, if not more about Agee, than his subjects. His writing style excludes his subjects as readers.
His prose, which tends to be lofty and cerebral, is also beautiful and brilliant. But, I often wondered, who he was
writing for? The New Yorker audience? The distance in his observations often left me feeling cold. I imagine these hardworking sharecroppers exhibiting some joy, some evidence of warmth, of hope. But I had difficulty finding it in Agee's voice.
The length of Agee's sentences and paragraphs were long, each containing an entire scene, and I labored through them, hoping sleep would not steal me from a passage I might not finish. It was as though Agee too, was afraid sleep would come and steal him from his mission, and so kept hacking away at each sentence, adding commas and colons and semi-colons, lingering his thoughts across the page.
Whatever level of consciousness Agee existed, I could not hang with him for any more than a couple of sentences, as I would fall off the page and have to find my way back into the scene. Where was I? You get the picture...
Agee also uses parenthesis and colons, often not giving his parenthesis a mate: (This struck me as rather unusual and often, cold and detached--more like a voyeur. Did he fabricate his own method of communication using punctuation or was this being done elsewhere at the time? I felt left out of his thoughts when he did this, like when two people are communicating via sign language and you can't make out a word they're saying. Was he doing this in a way to urge us to "think," to stretch beyond the ordinary conventions and try something on that is foreign and unfamiliar, like his subjects and their hardship?
His prose, which tends to be lofty and cerebral, is also beautiful and brilliant. But, I often wondered, who he was
writing for? The New Yorker audience? The distance in his observations often left me feeling cold. I imagine these hardworking sharecroppers exhibiting some joy, some evidence of warmth, of hope. But I had difficulty finding it in Agee's voice.
The length of Agee's sentences and paragraphs were long, each containing an entire scene, and I labored through them, hoping sleep would not steal me from a passage I might not finish. It was as though Agee too, was afraid sleep would come and steal him from his mission, and so kept hacking away at each sentence, adding commas and colons and semi-colons, lingering his thoughts across the page.
Whatever level of consciousness Agee existed, I could not hang with him for any more than a couple of sentences, as I would fall off the page and have to find my way back into the scene. Where was I? You get the picture...
Agee also uses parenthesis and colons, often not giving his parenthesis a mate: (This struck me as rather unusual and often, cold and detached--more like a voyeur. Did he fabricate his own method of communication using punctuation or was this being done elsewhere at the time? I felt left out of his thoughts when he did this, like when two people are communicating via sign language and you can't make out a word they're saying. Was he doing this in a way to urge us to "think," to stretch beyond the ordinary conventions and try something on that is foreign and unfamiliar, like his subjects and their hardship?
A Classic
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2005-08-05
Review Date: 2005-08-05
Excellent editon of this wonderful, classic work. A series of visual and verbal snapshots of the South as a third world country, the South of the 1930's.
A timeless classic...
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-22
Review Date: 2007-03-22
James Agee's painstaking and honest masterpiece is an exercise in empathy. It is a beautiful, tortured writing that speaks to both the deplorable conditions of the Depression-era souther sharecropper and the humanity of trying to present them in a favorable light.
Agee's writing style is at times erratic-- which helps to give the book its character. It is often self-doubting, as Agee calls himself a spy and frequently second guesses his role in accurately reporting the families' lives. Beautifully done and a groundbreaking classic in ethnographic fieldwork-- a must read!
Agee's writing style is at times erratic-- which helps to give the book its character. It is often self-doubting, as Agee calls himself a spy and frequently second guesses his role in accurately reporting the families' lives. Beautifully done and a groundbreaking classic in ethnographic fieldwork-- a must read!

Rural Studio: Samuel Mockbee and an Architecture of Decency
Published in Paperback by Princeton Architectural Press (2002-01-01)
List price: $30.00
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Average review score: 

Pretty Alright
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-27
Review Date: 2008-06-27
The book has great photos and text, the work itself is questionable. I reminds me of being a sophomore in design school. Much of the work is by the students and it's a bit overdone and not always as practical as one would hope.
Samuel Mockbee is a God...
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-25
Review Date: 2007-04-25
After reading this book, I for one would loved to have worked at Rural Studio under him. But the stories and the student work is what completes the book. If every community had a "Rural Studio" of their own no community would have homeless. The pictures are also fantastic, I can't wait to buy the next book.
Not To Be Missed
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2005-07-25
Review Date: 2005-07-25
The evidence of Mockbee's brilliance and compassion. Proof positive that Mockbee deserved all the awards and acclaim. Great pictures of both the architecture and the house recipients. I love this book and share it often.
Architect's Cause Related Marketing?
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2006-07-26
Review Date: 2006-07-26
It has been nearly two years since the AutoCAD disappeared from my desktop. When I dropped by a new bookstore near my home, I looked for the architectural section. It is because I felt that I got too far away from architecture, my original work area.
But most architectural books were still in their old-fashion: planning manuals, master architects' theories, works of recent architects and architectural histories. In addition, some others are focused on the architects' political(?) intention. Consequently, I could hardly find a meaning of such publications, meaning that could be understood even by the general public.
This book gave me a meaning in two aspects; an architect should do his social responsibility and an architect should participate actively in communication with the general public like Sang Lim Lee, an architect who translated the book to Korean.
The style of writing is rough as is shown in blogs. But, in other words, it can be understood easily by the general public. We can see Mockbee's work both with a view of respect and a view of jealousy. Nevertheless, I would like to focus on his achievements in communication with regional community and in giving his students significant opportunities. His vision has not degenerated into profit-seeking one and has been sustained by his successors until now.
After reading this book, I got to think that an architect should not be exempt from cause related marketing.
But most architectural books were still in their old-fashion: planning manuals, master architects' theories, works of recent architects and architectural histories. In addition, some others are focused on the architects' political(?) intention. Consequently, I could hardly find a meaning of such publications, meaning that could be understood even by the general public.
This book gave me a meaning in two aspects; an architect should do his social responsibility and an architect should participate actively in communication with the general public like Sang Lim Lee, an architect who translated the book to Korean.
The style of writing is rough as is shown in blogs. But, in other words, it can be understood easily by the general public. We can see Mockbee's work both with a view of respect and a view of jealousy. Nevertheless, I would like to focus on his achievements in communication with regional community and in giving his students significant opportunities. His vision has not degenerated into profit-seeking one and has been sustained by his successors until now.
After reading this book, I got to think that an architect should not be exempt from cause related marketing.
inspiring
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2005-10-03
Review Date: 2005-10-03
Maybe the most important architectural idea since the series of pattern language treatises by Christopher Alexander. I think this is a must read for anyone involved with real estate development. Surely a model for New Orleans. I'm planning to take a trip and pay homage. Mr. Mockbee was a genius.

So Help Me God: The Ten Commandments, Judicial Tyranny, & the Battle for Religious Freedom (Unabridged)
Published in Audio Download by audible.com ()
List price: $27.99
New price: $14.69
Average review score: 

NOW THE REST OF THE STORY.....
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-04
Review Date: 2008-09-04
Former Chief Justice Roy Moore is one of the nations leading scholars on Constitutional Law (period)! The bottomline line here is that Judge Moore was denied the constitutional right to acknowledge God. The same court that recognized God by openning with prayer the day of his trial, fired him from his position as Chief Justice of the Alabama Supreme Court for doing the same (ACKNOWLEDING GOD)!!!! How do I know? Because was there at the trial. Then, Attorney General Bill Pryor asked the Judge point blank and I quote "IF YOU RESUME YOUR DUTIES AS CHIEF JUSTICE, WILL YOU CONTINUE TO ACKNOWLEDGE GOD NO MATTER WHAT ANY PUBLIC OFFICIAL TELLS YOU"? I often wonder who Bill Pryor was acknowledging when he placed his hand on the Bible as he was sworn into office? Simply put, Judge Moore recognizing that fact that this country was founded on Godly principles and that our founding fathers knew this. The reason he was ordeered by the court to remove the monument was due to the fact that a couple of lawyers from the Southern Provery Law Center said they were offended by the monument when thet saw it in the Rotunda of the Judicial Building and that it was placed near the restroom where they had to pass it to get there! Again, how do I know this? I was at that trial as well. Chief Justice Moore knows alittle bit about the law, an knew that the court didn't have the right to order him to remove the monument, so the fight began. Despite the thousands of people throughout Alabama and the country that supported him, he lost this battle because of the conspiracy on the hill to get rid of him. In closing, read this book with an open mind and put yourself in his shoes, then ask yourself, What would I have done? What makes this book a great book, is the fact that everything in it is based on (actual true events) that happened.
The State is the Church for Secular Humanist Liberals
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 14 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-07
Review Date: 2006-11-07
In Alabama Judge Moore was not allowed to acknowledge the Judeo-Christian God and His ten commandments as being the foundation for our laws, something that is easily demonstrable and clearly our heritage. Judge Moore simply exposed the hypocrisy of a judicial system that acknowledges the Judeo-Christian God by opening in prayer and swearing oaths on a Bible, but prohibits acknowledging God in our historical foundation for law as he did. Judge Moore further demonstrated their logically fallacious reasoning in that they would not allow him to display the commandments, citing the establishment clause, but they refused to define the key word "religion" in this clause. So in effect, they decided that he violated a clause that they were unwilling to define. In doing so Judge Thompson actually stated that he found what Judge Moore did "religiously offensive." How ironic considering Thompson would not even define the word.
Simply put, every law and liberty upon which this country was founded is based on the Judeo-Christian ethic. The secular humanist liberal progressives do not want the American public to recognize that. They point to a few secular oriented statements, but fail to point out that the great preponderance of the evidence points toward biblical foundations for our laws and liberties. Facts like, 1/3 of the quotes in the books and papers written by founding fathers are Bible verses, that 52 of the 55 were regular in church attendance, and that the prolific use of references to God in official documents points to the fact that their view of the establishment clause was far different than the secularist of today that wishes to ban all such reference. Even the Declaration of Independence that established our liberty to be an independent nation states that our rights come from the Creator and because of that they are unalienable (absolute, not awarded by human power, not transferable to another power, and incapable of repudiation). This knowledge interferes with the humanist agenda to change laws and liberties as we humans progress to a so-called higher form of liberal society by casting off the shackles of these Creator endowed rights. But of course this is anarchy, for there are no humanistic standards for right and wrong that can be agreed upon by millions of discordant people each serving their own self-interest. Outside of the words of a revelatory God such as we find in the Bible nothing can be said to be inherently right or wrong. Furthermore, concepts like separation of church and state, freedom of speech, rule of law, juvenile restrictions, bearing false witness, sanctity of life, and marriage, are in and of themselves biblical concepts. They flow from and through that particular belief system.
The secular humanistic viewpoint is also hypocritical since it is itself a religious belief system. As it has been aptly said, there can be no separation of church and state for the secular humanist, for the state is their church. The establishment clause prohibits government interference with the free exercise of religion. By banning all acknowledgement of God by government officials, even when it is based on clear historical reference, the government is interfering. Even a world famous atheist that recently converted to theism because of the powerful argument to design from the plethora of discoveries in genetics and molecular cell biology says the liberal activist judges in the U.S. have interpreted the constitution the wrong way. Antony Flew said "the Supreme Court has utterly misinterpreted the clause in the Constitution about not establishing a religion: misunderstanding it as imposing a ban on all official reference to religion." Although a theist, he is only barely so. This guy hopes there is not an afterlife and does not like any organized religions (including Christianity), which makes him an especially credible witness to what is going on in this country.
The facts are clear, there is a faction that is currently trying to establish secular humanism as our national religion, and they are using state agency to do so. Will the American populace tolerate the complete secularization of society through government supported, communistic social policy dependency and its associated philosophical indoctrination into the state sponsored religion of secular humanism? Liberals don't want you to know that behind all the smoke and mirrors of political rhetoric and banter, this is the true battle raging in 21st century America.
Are our laws and liberties going to be subject to the whims of secular humanist progressives, or shall they remain in the domain of the constitution and its amendments as set forth with the original intent of the framers? We stand at a crossroads as we begin the 21st century. Is America going to become the brave new world of the liberal with all the moral norms of the jungle, or are we going to be a constitutional republic founded upon biblical principles, the same principles that made this nation great for its first 200 years. This is the generation that must choose. Read Roy's book, it is an eye opener, but don't expect those of the secular humanist persuasion to give it a good review.
Simply put, every law and liberty upon which this country was founded is based on the Judeo-Christian ethic. The secular humanist liberal progressives do not want the American public to recognize that. They point to a few secular oriented statements, but fail to point out that the great preponderance of the evidence points toward biblical foundations for our laws and liberties. Facts like, 1/3 of the quotes in the books and papers written by founding fathers are Bible verses, that 52 of the 55 were regular in church attendance, and that the prolific use of references to God in official documents points to the fact that their view of the establishment clause was far different than the secularist of today that wishes to ban all such reference. Even the Declaration of Independence that established our liberty to be an independent nation states that our rights come from the Creator and because of that they are unalienable (absolute, not awarded by human power, not transferable to another power, and incapable of repudiation). This knowledge interferes with the humanist agenda to change laws and liberties as we humans progress to a so-called higher form of liberal society by casting off the shackles of these Creator endowed rights. But of course this is anarchy, for there are no humanistic standards for right and wrong that can be agreed upon by millions of discordant people each serving their own self-interest. Outside of the words of a revelatory God such as we find in the Bible nothing can be said to be inherently right or wrong. Furthermore, concepts like separation of church and state, freedom of speech, rule of law, juvenile restrictions, bearing false witness, sanctity of life, and marriage, are in and of themselves biblical concepts. They flow from and through that particular belief system.
The secular humanistic viewpoint is also hypocritical since it is itself a religious belief system. As it has been aptly said, there can be no separation of church and state for the secular humanist, for the state is their church. The establishment clause prohibits government interference with the free exercise of religion. By banning all acknowledgement of God by government officials, even when it is based on clear historical reference, the government is interfering. Even a world famous atheist that recently converted to theism because of the powerful argument to design from the plethora of discoveries in genetics and molecular cell biology says the liberal activist judges in the U.S. have interpreted the constitution the wrong way. Antony Flew said "the Supreme Court has utterly misinterpreted the clause in the Constitution about not establishing a religion: misunderstanding it as imposing a ban on all official reference to religion." Although a theist, he is only barely so. This guy hopes there is not an afterlife and does not like any organized religions (including Christianity), which makes him an especially credible witness to what is going on in this country.
The facts are clear, there is a faction that is currently trying to establish secular humanism as our national religion, and they are using state agency to do so. Will the American populace tolerate the complete secularization of society through government supported, communistic social policy dependency and its associated philosophical indoctrination into the state sponsored religion of secular humanism? Liberals don't want you to know that behind all the smoke and mirrors of political rhetoric and banter, this is the true battle raging in 21st century America.
Are our laws and liberties going to be subject to the whims of secular humanist progressives, or shall they remain in the domain of the constitution and its amendments as set forth with the original intent of the framers? We stand at a crossroads as we begin the 21st century. Is America going to become the brave new world of the liberal with all the moral norms of the jungle, or are we going to be a constitutional republic founded upon biblical principles, the same principles that made this nation great for its first 200 years. This is the generation that must choose. Read Roy's book, it is an eye opener, but don't expect those of the secular humanist persuasion to give it a good review.
Judge Moore for Supreme Court
Helpful Votes: 21 out of 31 total.
Review Date: 2005-11-08
Review Date: 2005-11-08
Wow, finally the whole story. It is hard to believe that men with as much courage, backbone, and strong morality still exist in America. This, folks, is the story of a modern American HERO. Nowadays, true heroes are ignored, blacklisted, put in jail, harassed, made fun of, and purposely misunderstood. Moore is no exception, as this story points out. In the meantime, I will be helping this man become the next governor of Alabama.
crystal clear...
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-02
Review Date: 2007-01-02
Thank you, Judge Moore for your uncompromising stand in regard to following the Constitution, and the rule of law. It's so easy these days to compromise, and take the easy path. It's refreshing to see a man with backbone and courage, who counts the cost, and still does the right thing! You present your case explaining the foundations of the Constitution and rule of law with crystal clarity. You're truly an inspiration. In the ages to come, we will find Judge Moore hanging out with Jefferson, Washington, Adams...and the rest of our great nation's founders.
Perhaps past the point of no return, but a timely book.
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-03
Review Date: 2007-04-03
To those who believe in Jesus and familar with the history of our America will understand this book.
To those who do not believe in Jesus and care little about our nation's history will hate this book, just as Jesus was hated.
America has become pluralistic. A nation of many gods and idolotry. We worship anything and everything but the one and only God of Abraham, the Alpha and Omega, the great I am and Lord of the universe. We refuse to worship God Almighty because of pride and fear of rules. The liberal mindset of America today has violated the 2nd commandment -- thou shall not have make a graven image (idolotry). We have made a god to suit ourself, created our own rules and removed the once understood 10 commandments. Then we wonder why our country has so many problems with crime and immorality. We have forgot from where we came.
[...] Where will you go when you die? Are you Good enough to go to heaven?
To those who do not believe in Jesus and care little about our nation's history will hate this book, just as Jesus was hated.
America has become pluralistic. A nation of many gods and idolotry. We worship anything and everything but the one and only God of Abraham, the Alpha and Omega, the great I am and Lord of the universe. We refuse to worship God Almighty because of pride and fear of rules. The liberal mindset of America today has violated the 2nd commandment -- thou shall not have make a graven image (idolotry). We have made a god to suit ourself, created our own rules and removed the once understood 10 commandments. Then we wonder why our country has so many problems with crime and immorality. We have forgot from where we came.
[...] Where will you go when you die? Are you Good enough to go to heaven?
Books-Under-Review-->Recreation-->Outdoors-->Speleology-->Show Caves-->North America-->United States-->Alabama-->66
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