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FANTASTIC-PLUS!!!Review Date: 2007-04-22
Intelligent, well-plotted, suspensefulReview Date: 2003-12-20
Author Caroline Slate weaves multiple threads in and out, moving us from present to past effortlessly and skillfully. She keeps us interested in the characters . And, most important, she makes us care about characters whose flaws are both serious and obvious.
Grace admits she can be gullible -- and she manages to attract some of the best liars on the planet. Grace's father George, a George Burns wannabe, has earned Grace's love and trust while providing an erratic but eventful home life. Each character embodies a level of complexity rarely found in heroes, let alone minor charactersi
After reading the book through, I went back to re-trace some missing parts. All the strands were tied neatly, except for a mention of Grace's "stalking" her grandfatrher: it wasn't clear when she acually did find and follow him.
I hope Slate writes more fiction like this one - and gets more publicity and fame, too! A wonderful, thought-provoking all around "good read."
A compelling work-A must readReview Date: 2003-08-06
In the first weeks of freedom, Grace realizes her parole officer is a battered wife who hates her, makes friends with a con man like her dead husband, and reconnects with her first love Michael, whose father is indirectly responsible for the mess her life is in. Michael's dad, serving a life sentence, is also the only man who can help her find the father she wants to see one last time.
Caroline Slate lives up to the promise she's shown in her debut novel THE HOUSE ON SPRUCEWOOD LANE with her second novel, a powerful work about a woman who is driven to murder, but somehow hooks the reader's sympathy even before all the facts are revealed. The protagonist's relationship with her friends, her lover, and her father ring so true that the audience will shed tears for a woman who was deliberately pushed to her limit by an expert manipulator and brilliant con man. A FRACTURED TRUTH is a compelling powerful story.
Harriet Klausner
"A Light in the Blackout of 2003"Review Date: 2003-08-31
Suspenseful and sinister thriller!Review Date: 2003-09-23
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Joy in every dayReview Date: 2005-10-23
From Fly Creek With LoveReview Date: 2005-10-27
In their current book, From Fly Creek, with Jim Atwell's words, and Anne Geddes-Atwell's illustrations, nothing dies at all. With his written observations and her magnificent illustrations, they do the positive things, and so much more. They poignantly paint such vivid and meaningful pictures. As readers, we must now use a different set of glasses, and view things through humans' AND animals' eyes. What an opportunity! To see and experience life through another perspective. Hey, not bad!
Anne Geddes-Atwell's illustrations are superb! They strike the graphic and visual chords that we all need to hear and feel. They enhance the pictures and text exactly when they need to appear. Jim's and Anne's creative talents add to more than the arithmetic total of their individual contributions. As readers, we are able to experience and enjoy their combined talents and offerings. Better still, we'll remember them individually on the levels we need to.
Several years ago, circumstances brought Jim to Fly Creek. He needed what that New York local community had to offer. Fly Creek needed the writing and visual talents that he and Anne ultimately brought to local readers. The rest, as some might say, is recorded history.
Excuse me, but have you ever fed hungry animals on a cold morning? If not, don't bother me with you're your small problems. The Atwell's have dealt with these, as well as bigger ones. Please read Chapter 2 of From Fly Creek. Then tell me about your insignificant concerns. Pardon me, while I don't care.
I have more encouraging words about future chapters. However, for now, I'll blow them off. Just buy the book. Believe me, you'll be better off for having done so.
Buy this book, NOW! Otherwise, you're missing a part of life you'll need.
Like a friend talking to youReview Date: 2005-10-15
From FlycreekReview Date: 2005-10-13
From Fly Creek: Starting Again In Leatherstocking CountryReview Date: 2005-10-12

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It is for the reader who likes ghosts and their behaviorReview Date: 1999-03-24
It is for the reader who likes ghosts and their behaviorReview Date: 1999-03-24
A wonderful chilling collection of Ghost Stories.Review Date: 1999-03-23
It is for the reader who likes ghosts and their behaviorReview Date: 1999-03-24
It is for the reader who likes ghosts and their behaviorReview Date: 1999-03-24

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on the shoulder of giantsReview Date: 2008-06-23
lot of the content which motivated me to buy the book as a collectors
item. I also order the book for my grandson and a friend's son.
Doug Murray
KAREEMReview Date: 2008-05-29
A lovely and important piece of writingReview Date: 2007-07-11
A wonderful discovery.
This book is a great view into the history of NYC & HarlemReview Date: 2007-04-16
Memoir and HistoryReview Date: 2007-04-12

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Great Book!!Review Date: 2002-03-02
ALL THAT & A CAN GOOD STUFF!Review Date: 2002-01-23
where is new york?Review Date: 2003-02-04
FABULOUS FUNNY FEROCIOUSReview Date: 2002-01-30
QUALITY READ!Review Date: 2002-01-24

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Hell...Review Date: 2006-07-20
My heart goes out to Mr. Eder and His FamilyReview Date: 2005-04-04
As a teacher, myself, I know that it is hard to put your heartfelt personal life out there for students (let alone others in the general public) to see...this crime was so horrific, that I can't imagine how this man managed to inspire students the way that he did everyday. He has been through Hell and it is inspiring to see how he and his family have carried on with such dignity and courage.
Thoughtful & NecessaryReview Date: 2004-07-30
Recommended to anyone who loves a good book; excellent for libraries.
My classmateReview Date: 2004-06-30
My heart goes out to Mr. Eder, and I thank him for sharing his terrible ordeal with us.
Couragiously Written and Extremelly InsightfulReview Date: 2004-02-15

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Beautifully ConceivedReview Date: 2003-05-27
The design is elegant. The text is interesting and important.
A great book.
New insights, repeated delightsReview Date: 2003-07-24
Packed with memories and familiar imagesReview Date: 2003-04-14
Seeing the old with eyes anew...Review Date: 2003-04-09
Delightful and strangely reassuringReview Date: 2003-03-25

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A Great Teammate: A Great Book!!!Review Date: 2007-09-21
Great gift for Mantle fanReview Date: 2007-05-15
Heroic, Inspirational, Tragic Figure ...Review Date: 2007-04-25
the numerous descriptions of Mickey by his beloved teamates gives the reader clear insight into what kind of person Mickey was ...
the quintessential teammate who gave everything he had on and off the field to win and help his teammates ... e.g., playing in tremendous amounts of pain (so as not to disappoint, in case the father of a poor family took his boy once a year to see him play); at restaurants, picking up "the check" most of the time; insisting that old teammates come to autograph sessions (or he wouldn't attend) so they could make money too; and the lovable prankster (the "TP" prank)...
truly a one of a kind, the last of the 4 great Yankees (Ruth, Gehrig, DiMaggio, Mantle), one of those who really was head and shoulders above the rest, and he was the last player to connect us to the baseball of a by-gone era ...
and to prove it all, he's got his own 4,500 lb. monument in Center Field! I could go on and on ... but ... the book is well worth the money ... buy it!
THE MICKReview Date: 2007-08-17
Mickey Mantle was, for us, the consummate baseball player. He hit the ball hard and ran the bases fast. His arm was strong and his glove golden.
But that's only part of why he was our hero. Randall Swearingen's book, A Great Teammate, covers the rest. Mickey was one of the greatest team players the game has ever known. He found a way to win. One day he'd hit a home run. The next he'd bunt and steal--or literally outrun a fly ball. It added up. Between 1951 and 1964, Mickey's Yankees made twelve trips to the World Series. Twelve!
When his teammates batted, Mickey cheered. When they slumped, he took them to dinner. When Roger wilted in the Babe's mighty shadow, Mickey took him under his wing and into his home--even as The Mick took his own shot at THE RECORD.
Mickey played hurt nearly every game of his major league career because, as a rookie, he deferred to a teammate named Joe DiMaggio. Mickey never complained or made excuses. He just came to the park early, took his treatments, hid the pain, and played hard. As good as he was, he could have been even better with two legs rather than one.
When asked why he didn't take himself out of the lineup to rest the legs, Mickey replied that some child might come to the ball park to watch him play, and he didn't want to let that child down. Mickey didn't know it, but I was that child. My family drove from North Carolina to New York City in 1961. It was the only chance I ever had, as a kid, to watch a major league game. Mickey didn't disappoint: he hit a line drive into the right field bleachers for a home run. From then on, Mickey was my hero. And, like so many southerners in those days, I became, of all things, a Yankee.
Then came the 70s, 80s, and 90s. Sportswriters forgot who Mickey Mantle was and why he had been our hero. They publicized his alcoholism. His business failures. His divorce. If only he had fallen in his prime, they implied, like Gehrig with ALS or Ruth with cancer. But somehow he dodged the Hodgkin's curse. And even though alcoholism is every bit as much a disease as ALS, or cancer, or Hodgkin's, America stopped loving Mickey the way he had loved us. We forgot. And, I must admit, as I almost forgot.
Then I read A Great Teammate, and the memories came pouring back. Mickey winning games for his team. Mickey bringing out the best in his teammates. Mickey loving and respecting the game. Playing hard. Playing hurt. Always humble. Ever helpful. Never making excuses. And, in bottom of the 9th, whipping his toughest foe, alcoholism, and helping others do the same.
No doubt, Old Timers told these stories time and again at ball games, fantasy camps, reunions, and funerals. But, no one ever bothered to write them down for us, the fans. Until now. Mickey, Randall: thank you.
Mantle family feels dad would love this book. Review Date: 2007-05-02

Used price: $1.50

An entertaining look at a bygone eraReview Date: 2001-06-03
Fascinating look at a lost time and placeReview Date: 2000-04-03
High on this book!!!Review Date: 2002-01-15
I loved every page of this bookReview Date: 2000-07-26
As exciting as a night in Max's BackroomReview Date: 2000-04-17

Used price: $2.93
Collectible price: $26.95

Ironworker History and LifeReview Date: 2008-03-31
One of the bestReview Date: 2005-06-24
A thrilling history and profession, beautifully evoked!Review Date: 2004-05-05
A Special FraternityReview Date: 2004-10-18
It's also clear that this is one of the last few places where men only need apply. In almost every other phase of American working life, qualified women are accepted as working peers. It's really ironic that one of the thickest "glass ceilings" is where they haven't even built the ceiling yet...
But Rasenberger's job is not to change this world, but just write about it. And write he does - you share in the working days of these men, of what happens when they fall (as they do), their families, their heritage, and, in an especially moving chapter, their heroic work right after the collapse of the World Trade Center.
Gender equality is the right thing. I get impatient when I encounter a workplace where women are so clearly unwelcome. What these men do, though, is very special and very much worth our attention and praise. As we might ask them to confront their stereptypes about women, we're challenged to confront our own stereotypes about the "lazy, ignorant construction worker." Rasenberger teaches us that nothing could be more unfair.
These are intelligent, skilled, disciplined and, above all, brave men who can do what we need done. The book will open your eyes.
Outstanding Account of Brave BrotherhoodReview Date: 2004-06-23
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I just discovered that I can't write a second comment, but that I can add to this one. I finished the book and it was SUPERB all the way through. I was disappointed when it ended. I loved the story, twists, and characters. It was truly a page-turner. I can't wait until Mrs. Slate's next novel.
Kate