Carroll Books
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Read this...Read this...Read it NOW!!Review Date: 2004-11-22
Gotta Love ItReview Date: 2004-11-22

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Filled with informationReview Date: 2008-07-02
Should be required reading for criminal justice professionalsReview Date: 2007-03-12

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From Mrs. Cowells ClassReview Date: 2004-11-05
From: Kayla/ Mrs. Cowell's student
Lauren/Mrs. Cowell's ClassReview Date: 2005-02-02
Collectible price: $49.95

Growing Up MechanicalReview Date: 2008-04-04
Sladek's satirical masterpieceReview Date: 2000-04-07
Marie Dressler (as Carlotta Vance): (Looks her over) My dear, you've got nothing to worry about.
Just one of the dry and appropriate quotations the renownedly erudite Sladek uses to pepper the chapter headings in this brilliant book about a very human machine in a dehumanised world full of mechanical people. Roderick is a learning machine - the product of a highly experimental artificial intelligence project at the University of Minnetonka. But the project's funding is under threat and their leading genius is on the verge of mental breakdown. Roderick escapes and is adopted, bought or just kidnapped by one after another crazy person - beginning with a disfunctional couple who neglect him. He starts to learn all about the world from TV, and begins the long process of trying to work the whole thing out using his (as you would expect) powerfully logical brain. He is forced to work in a fairground by the scary Mr Kratt, comes across a sinister corporate conspiracy, and is eventually adopted by the warm-hearted, but extremely eccentric Ma and Pa Wood who teach him human values and try to get his body sorted out for him. If the story sounds a bit like the "Wizard of Oz" or "The Brave Little Toaster" believe me it isn't - well I suppose it is a bit, but it's also full of dark humour, weird characters and hilarious situations. There's beautifully observed school scenes, and an unforgettable theological discussion with a very worried priest. There's the story of Abraham and Isaac as a flow chart, and lots of strange little codes and puzzles to work out. There's obsessive artists, craven academics, moronic TV shows and general satirising of all the crass things we've come to accept as inescapable parts of modern life in the twenty years since the book was written. Together with its sequal "Roderick at Random", "Roderick" - one of David Pringle's "Science Fiction: One Hundred Best Novels" - is a fitting memorial to a great modern satirist who died in March this year.

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Provides a focus on the history and geographic developmentReview Date: 2001-04-29
Very ComprehensiveReview Date: 2002-07-01
The atlas is also very useful for those who are interested in the emigration of the various ethnic groups to America as religious affiliation is closely tied to ethnicity and country/area of origin (especially in the colonial period to the 1800s).
It can be observed from these maps that different ethnic groups arrived during different periods and that their settlement were concentrated in specific regions.
For the period before independence (ie. 1776), there are maps showing the emigration of the Puritans/Congregationalists from the counties of Eastern England to New England, the Anglicans to Virginia and other Southern states along the Atlantic coast, Northern English and Welsh Quakers to Pennsylvania, Scotch-Irish Presbyterians to the Middles colonies and thereafter, onwards to the backcountry. There were also the Dutch Reformed (and some French Huguenot) in New York who settled there when that state belonged to Holland, and the Lutherans, Reformed and Mennonites who emigrated from Germany to the Middle colonies. Meanwhile, Louisiana was mainly Catholic due to French and some Spanish settlers.
A phenomenon which I found interesting was the transformation of denominational affiliation in the Southern states from Anglicanism and Presbyterianism to Baptist (and Methodist)and later, the emergence of Unitarians and Universalist among the Yankees in New England. All these showed regional trends.
This religious affiliation can be traced as migrants moved Westwards from the original colonies. Hence, the Yankees brought with them Congregationalism to the Midwest whilst Texas, Arkansas etc. had large Baptist and Methodist groups due to settlers from other Southern states.
In the 1800s, one can see how America was transformed from an almost exclusively Protestant Anglo-Saxon/Western European civilisation with the immigration of Catholics from Ireland, Germany and continental Europe. Orthodox imigrants form Eastern Europe in the late 1800s to early 1900s added even greater to the diversity.
And of course, in the late 20th century, America became a microcosm of the world with immigrants from Asia, Africa etc. [with large numbers of Buddhists (of various sects), Hindus, Bahais, Sikhs and Muslims (who enjoyed a phenomenal growth in part due to the large-scale conversions among African-Americans)].
This atlas also has maps showing the religious transformation in the African-American community i.e. from having their own Methodist and Baptist denominations to the formation of Black Hebrew organisations and the Nation of Islam and quasi-Muslim sects (such as Moorish Science).
The last few maps showed that despite the change in ethnic composition over the years, the various regions are still unique in their concentration of various denominations.
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A classic piece of erotic fiction!Review Date: 2001-10-26
An absolute pleasure to read .. erotica for the conosoire ..Review Date: 2002-03-04
Most, if not all of the authors books deal with games of life and love that the decadent wealthly played incessantly in Paris during the 1920's. The theme of many of the stories seem to invariably involve beutifull and wealthy society women, which, I must say, pretty well have the morals of alley cats, and are usually on the hunt for men and erotic diversions. For the hunt to be enjoyable, the hunted should usually not be aware of the game and feel that he is the master of his own destiny, what a laugh .... most of the men really don't know what had hit them though they would be lax in admitting to themselves that they were used and abused at will .....
In Scandale D'Amour, we find two very similar books titled 'Mystere D'Amour' which is 320 pages and 'Folies D'Amour' which is 248 pages in length.
Both books are a compendium of short stories each with its own plot, characters and delicious stories of erotic seduction and submission. The author has an innate knack for allowing the reader to quickly identify with one or another of the characters in each story making one feel as though you are a vicarious participant. BTW Anna Marie Villafranche's prose and descriptions of the love scenes can span 10 to 20 pages as she is a master in drawing out those delicious sinfull moments. It's not the hump and bump of many of our contemporary authors ....
I had some trouble finding this book and I can assure you it's not leaving my little library of erotic masterpieces any time soon .....

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Fascinating Book of MagickReview Date: 2004-11-22
As I have been working with this book through time, I have found
that it is also an excellant source book for original magickal
knowledge that is hard to find anywhere else.
The Whole Nine Yards, and Then Some!Review Date: 2001-11-05
Also Runyon has some fascinating appendices on the "Eleven Sphere Tree" in the Ciphers (nobody else has this that I know of). Then, as a special addition: we have R.A. Gilbert's great article on Wynn Westcott's Cipher Notes. What a feast for Golden Dawn buffs! If you are going to get a book on the G.D. Ciphers, this is the only one you'll ever need.
Collectible price: $29.99

Even better than the WinterborneReview Date: 2004-10-19
A battle of the sexes. Lady Jenny is forced to face her secret most fears and learn that love conquers all and will sustain you through the most difficult of times. Set during the reign of King Herny III's most difficult political troubles, Lady Jenny must learn that sometimes politics are best left to the men.
Set in the Age of Chivalry, when England was at war with France and subservient to the Court of Rome, when freelance knights offered their arms to the highest bidder, Shades of Winter is an unforgettable triumph of passion, witchcraft, and supreme valor, a story in which to lose yourself completely.
This is one book that you can read several times and not be bored. Ms. Coppula brings to life the feel of England and France is the mid 13 century. Truly a must have of a complete library of a historical romance reader.
A must-read if you liked WinterbourneReview Date: 2003-05-30

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A Small Taste of RedwineReview Date: 2006-12-16
This book is like every thing else about C.E. Redwine. Honest, full bore and full of heart/soul. He would play with everything in him for every song of every dance. Turns out thats how he lives his life- pedal to the metal, as it were. He was, and is, a great example to all aspiring musicians on how to be a "local" musician, and make music either professionally or as a weekend warrior type.
I loved the stories about his adventures growing up. Highly recommend this one. Way to go, C.E.
An Epic Story of a Father, Soldier, and a man of good taste.Review Date: 2006-08-12

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A Must-Read for anyone interested in the Spanish Civil WarReview Date: 2006-10-16
Rubin writes about some of the brutal campaigns from Brunete to Teruel and GraƱen. He also places the Spanish Civil War in an international context, noting Germany and Italy's aid to Franco's troops and the US position of maintaining an embargo against the Spanish Second Republic. To anyone knowledgeable about the Spanish Civil War, this isn't anything new. However, coming from an actual participant, who was fully aware of his own government's indirect complicity in causing the demise of the Spanish Second Republic, it is worth reading.
I was touched by a poem written by Rubin following the death of a comrade at arms, who he was unable to save in the medic tent. It captures fear, hesitation and pain that too often accompanies any soldier who goes off to war. I quote it here: "From far away, from Everett on the Puget Sound with the peace of its water the serenty of its green hlls you came from so far to a dusty plain, to mountains without peace. You expected to fly to strike the enemy boldly from the sky, guns roaring your strong hands guiding your plane, triggering your guns. Instead you had to fight on foot, did you ever expect to die? To have a bullet in your head? To suffer your guts torn apart? And was it worth it? Was the pain too much? Was there even pain for you? Was the cost of death too high?
This is an excellent memoir from someone who participated in an event that far too many Americans are unaware of. I recommend this to anyone interested in learning more about the Spanish Civil War. Other recommended books along this vein: Peter Carroll's "The Odyssey of the Abraham Lincoln Brigade," and "American Commander in Spain," by Marion Merriman and Warren Lerude.
A remarkable military memoirReview Date: 2004-12-21
Equally fascinating is the portion of the book detailing his actual time with the Spanish army, during which he served in a machine gun squad and as a medical laboratory technician. Rubin explores the unique challenges in putting together a multinational, multiethnic, and multilingual fighting force. He details the illness, discomfort, and deprivations that the troops endured in order to uphold their ideals.
In addition to covering such down-to-earth issues as mail call and footgear, Rubin also offers some potent reflections on wartime morality and medical ethics. Particularly interesting are his thoughts on the impact of his Jewish identity on his decision to enlist. His writing style is largely straightforward, but graced with occasional passages of great beauty and power.
Rubin's narrative really educated me about the unique place of Spanish Civil War veterans in the United States. This book is a valuable and enjoyable addition to the canon of American military memoirs.
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