Travel Books
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The Most Successful Test Program NASA Has FlownReview Date: 2007-03-28
An exciting readReview Date: 2007-04-16
How NASA Learned To Fly In SpaceReview Date: 2007-01-17
The photos are in sharp black and white and complement the text nicely. A lot of them first appeared in the original Nasa Fact Sheets which I still have.
I would recommend this to anyone interested in spaceflight as it comprehensively covers a programme which is all too often overshadowed by the glamour of project Apollo.
Great personalities, a great vehicle, pioneering workReview Date: 2006-06-16
The Gemini spacecraft was a dream, too, and we learned a hell of a lot while using it. This book captures those pioneering days well.
Bringing Gemini back to lifeReview Date: 2006-06-16

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It IS ComplicatedReview Date: 2008-06-26
It's Complicated:The American TeenagerReview Date: 2008-04-13
It Pulled Me In From Photo OneReview Date: 2008-01-11
must buy for high schools/teachersReview Date: 2007-12-31
Teenagers and their parents will find it compellingReview Date: 2007-12-28
Collectible price: $12.95

Ivan's reviewReview Date: 2006-05-19
John Midas in the DreamtimeReview Date: 2006-05-17
John Midas in the DreamtimeReview Date: 2006-05-17
By Mark A. Durham
Great creative kids' bookReview Date: 2006-02-01
John Midas in the DreamtimeReview Date: 2005-05-06
In this book John and his family are going to Australia,for their winter vacation.John is looking for a real adventure,which he's not getting.When John enters a forbidden cave, he gets lost in time.He goes into Dreamtime! John is bumping into weird situations like crying kangaroos.John meets the Aborigines and soon realizes these people don't really know much.John is going to have to teach them how to make fire and things like that.When John comes to a hard situation with the Rainbow Serpent what will happen? Will John be a hero and save the day? To find out read John Midas in the Dreamtime.It is an excellent book. John Midas in the Dreamtime is very adventurous.Maybe it will start making you daydream about the Dreamtime.If you like adventurous books you'll LOVE John Midas in the Dreamtime!
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What a great book!!!Review Date: 2007-05-12
Read this and then visit the places!Review Date: 2007-04-25
The best travel book I have ever read. I picked it up becasue I had been in a couple of the places covered in the book. Millman truly captures the sense of place, people, life and environment and is funnier than you can ever imagine travel writing being. He gets involved with the locals and this leads to our discovery of some very interesting local customs. He provides the best description of being sea sick that I have ever read - I could almost feel it!
I have loaned this book to so many people that it is dog-eared. It is the book we always talk about year after year and have great laughs.
Really Good Travel Story; Weak EditingReview Date: 2008-07-05
Vagabond of the High NorthReview Date: 2007-02-21
An excellent adventure story. Highly recommended.
Extracts: A Field Guide for Iconoclasts
Fascinating.....Review Date: 2005-07-20

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Good item for LHOTP collectorsReview Date: 2008-06-18
Tour GuidebookReview Date: 2007-01-09
Things even a Minnesotan didn't know!Review Date: 2005-09-16
It's eye-opening to read about these various locationsReview Date: 2007-06-05
Each chapter discusses the location of each "little house," including places that Laura lived in but didn't write about. Almanzo Wilder's homes are also included. We see photographs and read descriptions of what each place looks like now, how and when each spot was honored as a Laura Ingalls Wilder historical site, along with suggestions for interesting places to visit and stay.
The first chapter, which deals with "the little house in the big woods" of Pepin, Wisconsin, tells the tale of how Charles and Caroline Ingalls (Laura's parents) were among the earliest settlers of western Wisconsin. One interesting note: the house in the big woods was actually the Ingalls's home twice. The family sold the land once, moving to Kansas. However, the buyer quit making payments and the Ingalls returned. As with many of Laura's little houses, the original cabin is gone but visitors can tour a replica.
The next chapter discusses the setting of LITTLE HOUSE ON THE PRAIRIE, near Independence, Kansas. Here we learn more about the land issues between the Native Americans and the settlers, which eventually prompted the Ingalls to leave their prairie home.
The following chapters cover Plum Creek, near Walnut Grove, Minnesota; the Masters Hotel in Burr Oak, Iowa (covered in OLD TOWN IN THE GREEN GROVES, written by Cynthia Rylant); and De Smet, South Dakota (otherwise known as "The Little Town on the Prairie" and also covered in the books BY THE SHORES OF SILVER LAKE, THESE HAPPY GOLDEN YEARS and THE FIRST FOUR YEARS).
Laura and Almanzo eventually moved to the Ozarks in Mansfield, Missouri, where they established Rocky Ridge Farm. Here, visitors can tour their white farmhouse, kept just as the Wilders had it in the 1940s and 1950s, along with the Rock House that daughter Rose had built for Laura and Almanzo in 1928.
Almanzo's houses come next: his boyhood farm home in Malone, New York, still stands and can be toured. Almanzo's parents moved to Spring Valley, Minnesota; although their Minnesota farmhouse is long gone, rabid Wilder fans may want to visit the town museums and the graveyard where Almanzo's brother Royal is buried.
Speaking of fans, THE LITTLE HOUSE GUIDEBOOK is fascinating for Laura's many admirers. It's eye-opening to read about these various locations. The photographs by Leslie A. Kelly are a fine addition, giving readers a view of each area and a peek into how people lived back in Laura's time.
--- Reviewed by Terry Miller Shannon
Invaluable Resource for Little House FansReview Date: 2002-12-05

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The Lost MenReview Date: 2008-10-24
A. P. Bushey
East Longmeadow, MA
Gripping saga of leadership, adventure and cold discomfort. Review Date: 2007-10-19
Can You Be A Hero If Your Efforts Are Ultimately Pointless?Review Date: 2007-06-03
Less well known is the story of the Ross Sea Party -- the group charged with laying in supplies that Shackleton would need as he crossed the pole and returned northward. This book tells the saga of the poorly funded "other half" of the planned expedition.
Focusing more on the shore party, rather than on the shipboard party on the Aurora, the book details the mistakes that were made in the first summer attempt to stock the depots, where Macintosh drove the sled dogs to death and made very little progress, to the stranding of the shore party at the end of the first summer when they were not picked up by the ship.
Presuming the ship lost, and wondering if a rescue would even be attempted during WWI, the 10 men were determined to do the job they were sent to do and proceeded through all odds to strive to lay the depots that Shackleton would never need.
Kelly Tyler-Lewis examines the physical and mental struggles of the shore party including their deep divisions over leadership styles. Culled from the diaries of the expedition, she has weaved a gripping tale of man's struggle against incredible odds.
Inspiring tale of adventure and discoveryReview Date: 2007-08-24
I saw the PBS special on the Shackleton Journey, but many times, like this, the book is much better.
The book was highly researched and vividly written describing the many astonishing moments of the expedition.
It was a ten-man journey the relies heavily on personal journals about some happy moments and some very terrible times. It goes into detail about the decreasing health of the journeymen and stuggles with scurvey, frostbite, snow blindness and the horrible mental and emotional anguish that many sucumb to on this dangerous 1330-mile mission to Antarctica.
Thought-provoking chronicle of adventure and adversityReview Date: 2007-01-10

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This is a great new concept in time travel!Review Date: 1999-05-17
A TIME TRAVEL TALE THAT TANTALIZES...Review Date: 2001-09-30
Two people from New Jersey, each on the run from a broken romance, go to Scotland. Maggie Hobbs is there on vacation. Alex MacKendiman is accompanying his aunt to a gathering of his clan near Dunnedin, Scotland. Maggie and Alex meet at the clan gathering. They also meet a mysterious stranger, Mairi, who pushes them through a portal in time. Before they know it, they are in a medieval Scotland of six hundred years ago.
As luck would have it, Alex is the doppelganger of a long ago ancester of the same name. It appears that his ancestral namesake has been visiting in England for some time. When Alex and Maggie arrive in medieval Scotland, he is mistaken for his returning ancester, who also happens to be the laird's son. Maggie is taken to be his leman, as Alex has been betrothed to Anice, daughter of the head of the MacNab clan.
From here on in, their adventures fly fast and furious, as Alex and Maggie struggle to fit it and get the lay of the land in order to survive, until they can figure out a way to return to the present. There are many pitfalls to avoid and many customs to adopt in order to make their trek through time a safe one. In the process, they fall in love.
What happens to Alex and Maggie is entertaining and interesting, as they traverse a veritable minefield of differences between past and present. It is only through their growing love, however, that they will find the link necessary to effect a return to their time. Will they make it? Read this book and find out. You will not be disappointed.
Debut Deluxe!Review Date: 1999-08-03
Pleasant readingReview Date: 2007-01-22
Anyway, our hero Alex is a double for the laird's son and heir Alesander who has been away for five years in London with the Scott king David (who was being held as a hostage by the English). So he is mistaken for the young heir, and Maggie is taken as his leman (mistress). Lots of ups and downs follow our H&H as they try to understand what's happened, and try to find their way home without being killed for pretending to be what they're not.
All in all very entertaining, but you do have to suspend some disbelief. I am sorry, but no man of the our times (most especially an ACCOUNTANT!!) could go back to the 14th century and pick up a sword and even have a clue to what he was doing, let alone convince his peers that he was adept at it. Also, the author wrote the story so that Alex picked up a Scottish brogue and Gaelic when they went back in time, but no one noticed Maggie's lack of English accent, let alone that she was from New Jersey. For those and a few other discrepancies I give it 4 stars instead of 5.
Note: if you are looking for something for a younger reader, this would not be a good choice. It's a bit of a bodice ripper, with more sexual content and descriptions than is appropriate for a young teen.
A totally different aspect of time-travel, a very good readReview Date: 2000-05-07

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Wilderness for ALLReview Date: 2008-08-12
The service has been amazing. Thank you SO much!!!Review Date: 2008-07-30
More Readings From One Man's Wilderness: The Journals of Richard L. Proenneke, 1974-1980Review Date: 2008-01-09
Superb Book !!! I agree this book is one of the best books on Richard L. Proenneke life - A+
Richard Proenneke's Journals Review Date: 2008-09-02
Sit back...imagine...dream...relaxReview Date: 2008-07-29

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Loved it, want more Review Date: 2007-12-08
Mr Ding's is good readingReview Date: 2007-03-20
The author sets sail on an ocean of cultural difference and wins over the hearts of the crew - a rough and salty bunch who sit spellbound by her in English class.
Because of the obvious vast expanse of ocean to cross, you know that the author is going to have to face a few things she has probably never had to before, and deal with them. There is, after all, no escape on a small boat in the middle of the ocean.
Kendall reveals the color of the crew over the course of the journey as if she were polishing up tarnished brass. It was great fun to read about the men as they blossom at the hand of their teacher...though the revelations were not one-sided.
Not surprisingly, I felt the poignancy at the sight of land, which meant having to say goodbye.
Kendall writes with an unpretentious clarity, humor and heart. I definitely recommend it.
From Ji Lian's best friendReview Date: 2007-03-20
An expat ESL teacher loves this book but, doesn't care for chicken feet either!Review Date: 2007-05-03
Risk Taker's Journey VindicatedReview Date: 2007-01-14
Her story really takes off once the ship leaves shore. Then it leaves behind any experience I and probably most readers have had. Shipboard life with a completely male crew who mostly speak very fractured English seems so weird and challenging that you half expect the book to be a story of failure -- perhaps noble failure but depressing nonetheless. So it's very satisfying that she actually makes a difference to the sailors' English and lives. She is inventive in her methods and determined to give her employers their money's worth and thereby wins the crew's respect and affection.
Kendall can write -- just see her description of the terrible storm at sea. It had me rigid with tension. Shades of Conrad in Typhoon. She has a distinctive and likable tone of voice. The book tells an optimistic story in an unpretentious way and gives you faith in the power of empathic teachers (and English!).

Used price: $8.99

Intelligent, fun, the best book for NY buffsReview Date: 2004-12-23
Celebrate New York TriviaReview Date: 2004-12-01
You won't be able to put it down. Test your own knowledge. Written in an easy reading style, yet thorough and detailed enough to challenge and entertain at the same time.
Enjoy!!!
Not just a trivia book but a wonderful guide to NYC!Review Date: 2004-11-25
It's Certainly 'Sweeter the Second Time Around'Review Date: 2004-11-24
NEW YORK LOVES JOHNReview Date: 2002-05-13
Related Subjects: Publications Image Galleries Travel Agents Attractions Lodging Preparation Tour Operators Travelogues Specialty Travel Transportation Guides and Directories Consolidators
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