Benn Books
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Jan Brett Night Before ChristmasReview Date: 2008-04-06
Beautiful, large bookReview Date: 2008-03-29
ClassicReview Date: 2008-01-12
It's Become a TraditionReview Date: 2007-12-28
This Book is Beautiful...!Review Date: 2007-12-10

Used price: $165.36

Excellent Reference for Floodplain Modeling Using HEC-RASReview Date: 2006-02-24
good investmentReview Date: 2004-05-07
Floodplain Modeling for the beginners to expertsReview Date: 2004-03-08
Beginners will find excellent "lead you by the hand" explanations. Experts will find excellent tips on querky modeling situations such as culverts that have changes in size or flow internally.
This book really makes the whole process of flood modeling more understandable to everyone.
Haestad Methods' Flodplain Modeling Using HEC-RASReview Date: 2004-03-10
Must HaveReview Date: 2004-03-09

OUTSTANDING collection of poems!Review Date: 2008-11-07
Holds its own, after all these yearsReview Date: 2008-08-20
And I want to go back - and I will.
Poetry I like.Review Date: 2008-04-02
We love it!Review Date: 2008-02-05
We love it!Review Date: 2008-02-05
Used price: $19.19

Robert Service: a handsome, easy to read editionReview Date: 2008-10-06
The Best of Robert ServiceReview Date: 2008-07-08
A great book of Photos and PoetryReview Date: 2008-01-07
Great Poems from the heart of the land...Review Date: 2008-01-06
A Poet for the PeopleReview Date: 2007-12-12


One of the best Moomin books (for adults!)Review Date: 2007-06-06
They all have wickedly funny moments, they're all fanciful, they're all subtle in some way. But some of them are really aimed at kids and, despite their considerable charms, can wear thin at times.
Moominpappa at Sea is a really great one for the adult reader. Yes, it has all the fancy and fun of a children's book, but....good lord! it is wonderfully complex. very funny, psychologically perceptive, at times very creepy. Where, say, Moominvalley Midwinter is a series of loosely connected episodes, everything in Moominpappa at Sea fits together very cleverly, from the first sentence to the last.
the plot hinges on Moominpappa's vain, poignant quest to have his family feel like they still need him. Moomintroll on the other hand is making some kind of adolescent transition, getting away from the family, bonding in the dark on the beach with a strange creature.
ExquisiteReview Date: 2006-08-11
One of My Favourite Childhood BooksReview Date: 2002-12-23
Given that the books were originally written in Finnish the translator has done a fantastic job to make the stories incredibly readable and finely nuanced in English. It's possible that the books appealed to us kids so much because they come out of a European culture quite distinctly different from most of the English and American stories we were used to.
The chapters are the right length to read aloud one at a time to kids. (Good for bedtime stories in the summer holidays, I seem to recall!)
I was fortunate enough a couple of years ago to take a ferry across the Gulf of Finland from Stockholm in Sweden to Turku in Finland, and the little rocky islands in the Gulf are almost exactly as I imagined them from the book...
Magical MoominsReview Date: 2002-05-21
Moominpappa decides they all need an adventure, and he is most desirous of "taking care" of everyone so Moominmamma can rest and all can be safe and protected. They set sail on an evening in late August to a small island in the Gulf of Finland planning to live in a wonderful lighthouse. The island is strange, bleak and barren. The lighthouse appears abandoned and is locked. The Moomin family consisting of Mamma, Papa, little son Troll, and Little My all go about practical tasks of settling in, first a search to locate a key. The living quarters in the lighthouse are at the very top only to be reached by a rickety spiral staircase. Much to Pappa's dismay, the light is out, and he cannot make it work. The fall storms begin (Pappa never explains why he didn't begin his adventure in the spring) and the life on the island becomes terrifying as well as bleak.
Though the Moomins get angry at one another, they are unfailingly polite and cooperative with the exception of Little My who is a cheerful, cynical pragmatist. Mamma & Pappa are very permissive parents, but always interested in what Troll and Little My are thinking and doing. The author very gently shows how perhaps there is a downside to sleeping and eating when you want, sleeping where your fancy takes you, and going on any adventure that occurs to you. There is delightful comedy where the Moomins throw a birthday party for The Fisherman, and he discovers all his "presents" belonged to him in the first place.
Come, enter the world of the Moomins! You might want to stay!
Tove Jansson's guide to the familyReview Date: 2003-07-13
Every psychology student has something to analyse in every character, and anyone who ever had a moment of doubt about the meaning of their life has something to ponder. What father with a teenage family would not relate to Moominpappa's melancholy, feeling that his life is without purpose now his family appear to be independent, his urge to be needed, to be able to protect them? What homesick traveller could not understand Moominmamma's longing for her garden, (and its magical transformation which you will have to read for yourselves). The description of her homesickness brings tears to the eyes. And what put-upon mother could not identify with her delight in being able to disappear from her family just long enough to stop them taking her for granted? The glimpses of the fond, but no longer passionate relationship between Moominmamma and Moominpappa, and Moominmamma's endless patience for Pappa's foibles, their need for their own roles, and his inability to understand her own needs says more about the maried state than plenty of far more learned texts. We will all be able to identify the same dynamics in our own families and relationships.
Meanwhile Moomintroll's adolescent emotional awakening must bring nostalgic memories of first love to we adult readers, but must surely mystify the average 8 year old. Younger children do not usually have a developed enough sense of other people's individuality to understand the complexities of what is driving the Moomin family to their peculiar dispersal.
The allegory of the frozen Groke could represent so much - I feel a thesis coming on - but I think represents how people get into a vicious cycle;cut off emotionally because no one interacts with them, and becoming ever more reclusive and antisocialin a vicious cycle. She makes us think about how we subconciously excuse ourselves for avoiding the lonely, scared, mentally ill, etc among us, for fear we may be "tainted" them.
Although I'm sure children will enjoy it at one level I recommend it highly to everyone, particularly if you are in a life crisis. I have lent it to nearly all my close friends and no one has yet not enjoyed it thoroughly.
Anyone who enjoyed this book should also enjoy Moominvalley in November with a similar selection of odd characters who we will all recognize among our own aquaintance.

Used price: $8.68

One of the Best books everReview Date: 2008-06-09
The Best Self- Help Book I Have ReadReview Date: 2008-05-27
I have been going through an extremely stressful time, and it was very needed. It is a deep book, but it is written in a nice, relaxing and caring way. I love the way the author injects personal experiences into the book because it makes the author and the book seem more real. Most books like this preach to the reader and tend to make the person feel inadequate.
I intend to reread this over time as I need it.Stories From The Couch: And Other Telling Tales
Mark BennReview Date: 2008-05-13
This book is greatReview Date: 2008-04-22
This book will teach everyone something while they enjoying reading it!Review Date: 2008-04-20

the Books about the MoominsReview Date: 2007-04-20
for the invisible children everywhereReview Date: 2007-04-02
The warmest book series ever.Review Date: 2007-11-20
I fell in love with them. Totally and permanently.
If not for anything else, get this book for the story of the Hemulen who loved silence. I actually had tears in my eyes when reading it.
Beautiful, warm, mature and full of hope, like all the other Moomin books.
A real surpriseReview Date: 2002-12-13
I generally dislike the short story genre, but not when it's done like this. Every short story is simply that, a short story; not a contrived literary exercise with the obligatory "twist in the tail". Jansson's stories are charming little gems, full of wonderful moments and images, thought-provoking and touching. Her characters are often the lonely, the lost, and the troubled, and she makes you feel for them and understand them, without ever becoming ridiculous or sentimental. The tales about Snufkin and his tune and the Fillyjonk who believed in disasters are shining examples of this. But Jansson can write humour and happiness just as well, as the tales of the invisible child and the fir tree show.
I really can't speak highly enough of this book. Jansson's wonderful insight into people, her spare, deft prose, and her brilliant imagination make a great combination. Buy it for your children or for yourself.
Tales worth tellingReview Date: 2005-12-22

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MichaelReview Date: 2008-08-18
Mike, 37
Philadelphia
Loved It!Review Date: 2007-06-27
Love ya!
Steph
ABSOLUTELY MARVELOUS!!Review Date: 2006-06-19
Thought provoking and humorous!!!Review Date: 2006-03-18
Enlightening for Parents of Gay OffspringsReview Date: 2006-03-18


Brilliantly innovative!! A book that enhances my lifestyle!Review Date: 1999-04-27
Freed from the repression of PC cookeryReview Date: 2000-06-03
Finally, people who know how to eat.Review Date: 2000-08-30
Fantastic!Review Date: 1999-08-03
A Cover-to-Cover Read!Review Date: 2000-12-09

Strong on architectureReview Date: 2008-11-02
This city guide is a treasure.Review Date: 2007-11-26
Thus, I heartily recommend the book to all longer-term visitors and to those New York residents who yearn for a greater appreciation of home. Indeed, the richness of detail and comprehensive geographical coverage may actually render BLUE GUIDE less than ideal for the short-term visitor. (For those in need of a restaurant or hotel guide, there are more than enough lesser guides to fill the bill.)
One caveat. As an avid user of the 1991 2nd edition, I looked forward to the long overdue 2002 edition. With all due respect to the two new co-authors and their well-intentioned efforts, I believe that the newer, more user-friendly visual format actually decreases the book's effectiveness, as does the additional text, which lacks the consistently high critical standards of Wright's solo work. I recommend seeking out the 1991 edition (Amazon seems to offer several copies at reasonable prices). Whatever inconvenience is caused by the several outdated entries is outweighed by the ample rewards of the text.
Not a review but an informative noteReview Date: 2006-01-27
Co-authors of "The Other Islands of New York City" and individually authors of "Big Apple Safari for Families" (Seitz) and "Where Have All Our Giants Gone" (Miller), we streamlined many of the routes and shifted the emphasis of the book to add more on the boroughs outside of Manhattan and to add places that reflect previous oversights in terms of nature and of popular culture (places like CBGBs, for example).
TimelessReview Date: 2006-10-07
Having said that, even the oldest first and second editions (the latter, from 1991) are still incredibly useful, even timeless. For even they have listings of the most important sights in each of the city's five boroughs, a bevy of maps, lists of hotels and restaurants, sightseeing services, theaters, amusements, gardens, museums and so on.
But unlike the average, perfunctory city guide, this one (at least the 1991 edition) has more than 760 pages, including all the maps. And those pages also encompass a broad spectrum of architectural descriptions and historical events.
Not only buildings and the like are described here. So are whole parks, streets and districts, along with detailed pointers on all the exterior and interior trivia one could ever want to know while on a walking tour.
I can't attest to the value of any of the other 40-plus Blue Guide titles. But if you forget every other guide book while in New York, it will be okay, so long as you bring along at least some version of this one.
--Alyssa A. Lappen
Simply Indispensable!Review Date: 2005-03-13
In an extremely accessible format, "The Blue Guide" presents information on all NYC districts and important sights, including: practical information, lodgings, restaurants and eateries for every budget, transportation, museums and galleries, sports, performing arts, shopping, monuments, historic detail and districts, detailed walking tours and background information. As noted, there is a veritable plethora of clear and easy-to-follow maps, along with a large pull-out MTA map of the subway system, and bus, railroad and ferry connections.
From the posh shops on Madison and Fifth Avenues to the funky Lower East Side, from the streets of Greenwich Village and Soho to the brownstones of Brooklyn Heights and Park Slope, this is the one and only guide you will need to navigate through this fabulous city, and to find fascinating out-of-the-way places most tourests never discover. There are myriad cultures here: Little Odessa in Brighton Beach, Brooklyn, Little Italy, Chinatown, a thriving Greek community in Astoria, Queens, Atlantic Ave. in Brooklyn where Arabic is heard on the street and wares from all over the Middle East are sold. Almost every country in the world is represented here and you can visit them all easily with the Blue Guide in hand. I hope you enjoy the city I love!
JANA
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