Long Books


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Long Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

Long
The Long Return
Published in Mass Market Paperback by Boport Developments Ltd. (1997-12-15)
Author: Bob Porter
List price: $19.95
Used price: $6.70
Collectible price: $19.95

Average review score:

The Long Return
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2000-03-04
The story of a boy named Thad who was captured by indians and became an indian chief's son.

Escape from Gestapo--how pilot survived
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2000-06-09
Author lives in Canda..survived plane crash, lived--- underground----WW-II & eluded capture by Nazis

Long
Long Road Home
Published in Kindle Edition by Samhain Publishing, Ltd. (2007-11-13)
Author: Sharon Long
List price: $5.50
New price: $4.40

Average review score:

Long Road Home
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-17
Jules Trehan has been on the run for three years in which she has been unable to stay in one place for very long. Having made a mistake in her youth and joined an operation that the government is after was a very bad decision on Jules' part, and now she is unable to break away from the tentacles that hold her to the organization she is trying so hard to get away from. Injured in an explosion cause by the men after her, she winds up in a Colorado hospital and comes face-to-face with the only man she has ever loved - Manuel Ramirez. Knowing without a doubt that his life will be forfeit if he's seen with her, she does her best to get rid of him. Little does she know that Manuel has more than just his good looks to back him - he has the power of the CIA.

Manuel Ramirez has been searching for Jules for three long years. As soon as he would get a lead, it would go cold and he would have to start over again. When he finally corners her in the hospital after the explosion that killed two innocent people, Manuel decides enough is enough. Jules is going to come clean about her life and she IS going to let him help her, because above all things, Manuel loves her and wants to be the man that she can turn to. Easier said done when he finds out exactly how desperate and dark her secrets are.

Long Road Home is unlike any Sharon Long book I have ever read. Full of turmoil and suspense, I almost gave up on Jules being able to have a life away from the bad choices she made years ago. Her love for Manuel was apparent to me, as was his love for her. I found myself totally immersed in the story and unable to put it down. Once again, Sharon Long gives me another reason to keep reading her stories. Long Road Home was simply magnificent.

Talia
reviewed for Joyfully Reviewed

5 Klovers - Courtesy of CK2S Kwips & Kritiques
Helpful Votes: 15 out of 16 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-02
Jules Trehan is on the run from those who have blackmailed her into doing things she despises herself for. But she did what she had to do in order to protect her loved ones. Now her childhood friend and the man she loves more than anyone else has found her and is determined to protect her, at any cost. His life, however, is not a price Jules is willing to pay.

Manny has used every resource at his disposal to search for Jules since she disappeared three years ago. Now that he's found her, he is determined to never let her go again. But Jules' secrets threaten everything they might have together, including their very lives.

Sharon Long's newest release, Long Road Home, sees a change of genre for her. Fans of this author's work are used to seeing historicals with a slight paranormal twist to them, but will be delighted with her new contemporary suspense romance! Ms. Long flexes her writing muscles and pens a tale certain to find a place in readers' list of favorite stories, as it did my own.

This is really Jules' story, and my heart broke for her as I saw the life she was forced to lead for the last three years, felt her loneliness and fear, and saw her hopes and dreams dashed time and again. But in spite of everything she has been through, and the things she was forced to do, her motivations remain pure throughout the story.

Manny is the kind of man any woman would be more than happy to be with. He remains steadfastly loyal to the woman he loves, whom he has called friend for a lifetime, in spite of what he discovers she has been doing for the last three years. In fact, even while she was separated from him, her love for Manny has been an anchor during the long dark years she has suffered.

The plot of Long Road Home is fraught with more twists and bumps than the Titan roller coaster at Six Flags over Texas! Sharon Long deftly lays clues throughout the story that give readers a fair shot at deducing who the villains are without giving it away too soon.

No matter what pen name this author uses, no matter what genre she tackles, she always delivers a wonderfully written story guaranteed to captivate the reader until the very last page. I highly recommend Long Road Home!



Long
The Long Road Home
Published in Paperback by Goose Lane Editions (1994-06)
Author: Eric Trethewey
List price: $10.95
Used price: $44.70
Collectible price: $45.00

Average review score:

Grief made gorgeous -- an incredible work.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2004-04-06
Wow -- what a book. Ever since I first heard him read I've admired it. These poems are traditional in the best sense: They welcome the reader in, give specific image and voice to struggles and pains that are universal, and the language is incredibly sonorous. The title poem alone is worth the price of admission. An overwhelmingly sad book, there are nonetheless moments of humor that glimmer through -- check out "The Wave" for a pretty hilarious skewering of academic venom.

Exceptionally Good Poetry
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-08-01
Eric Trethewey's poems are colorful and rich. His word-choice shows readers that he is well-read and it makes for very interesting poems. He conveys a very good "sense of setting" and makes the reader feel comfortable with the voice of the poem. People who like to read good poetry will love the poems of Eric Trethewey's book.

Long
Long Road to Boston
Published in Paperback by Cedarwinds Pub Co (1987-08)
Author: Bruce W. Tuckman
List price: $9.95

Average review score:

A Truly Amazing Book
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2000-07-19
Upon first reading this work of art by Bruce Tuckman, i was vacationing at a friend's lake house. The book was recomended to me to read so i began reading. The book did not leave my hands after that until I was done with it. It contains the same descriptiveness as the book, Once A Runner, by John L. Parker. This book ranks up at the top with the rest of them.

An inspiration to any runner trying to qualify for Boston!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 1999-10-03
I read (and reread) this book before my first Boston Marathon. The action was so real I couldn't tell if this was fact...or fiction! Did Brad Townes win??? or did Bill Rogers win?? As I ran the route from Hopkinton to Boston, the scenes were vividly replayed in my mind. It was like I had been here before! This book is MUST reading for anyone attempting to qualify for Boston..."Long Road to Boston" convinced me that if Brad Townes could overcome his demons and handicaps, then surely I could train hard enough to join the runners at Boston...and I DID!! This book accompanied me to Boston!

Long
Long Run Home
Published in School & Library Binding by Topeka Bindery (2002-05)
Author: Milton F., III Heller
List price: $25.05
New price: $19.04

Average review score:

Hilarious!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-02-24
Wow, this author has a sense of humour that is quite dry and witty. Reminds me of childhood realities!

Evocative, touching and often hilarious
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2002-07-31
Jack Walker is a kid with a healthy wariness about most things. Blessed with unusual powers of observation, Walker proceeds cautiously, and sometimes clumsily, through childhood, worrying about what might happen next. Often, his fears are justfied. As a kid, he's sent to a hell hole of a summer camp. As a teen, he's violated by a quick-draw enema artist of a school nurse. Jack survives it all, and comes through his often hilarious adventures a little wiser, and less innocent. It all makes for a wonderful read, a coming-of-age tale that unfolds as naturally and unhurriedly as a Saturday afternoon baseball game. Heller, a copy editor at the Washington Post, writes with the sensibility of a novelist and the precision of a veteran journalist. He has a gift for dead-on descriptions and small insights that evoke memories of what growing up was really like.

Long
The Long Shadow
Published in Paperback by PublishAmerica (2005-12-27)
Author: Loretta Proctor
List price: $24.95
New price: $24.95
Used price: $28.15

Average review score:

What a wonderful, heartwarming read!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-06
The Long Shadow kept me company as I rode for 3 1/2 days on the Alaska ferry from Juneau, AK to Bellingham, WA. I loved it! It is rich with descriptions that helped me picture the places and experiences of the characters while the plot kept me interested at every turn. But it was the last couple pages from the end that brought me to tears, literally. Amazed and delighted, I highly recommend this book.

A Rare Treasure!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-07-27
Some books are meant to be savored, and Loretta Proctor's The Long Shadow is definitely one of them! As rich in imagery as it is, history, this author's amazing command of the English language, combined with a beautifully poetic writing style make this novel a pleasure to read. I will definitely be looking for more titles by Ms. Proctor!

Long
The Long Shadow : Culture and Politics in the Middle East
Published in Hardcover by Transaction Publishers (1999-01-01)
Author: Daniel Pipes
List price: $39.95
New price: $30.00
Used price: $9.04

Average review score:

Wisdom
Helpful Votes: 35 out of 39 total.
Review Date: 2001-10-28
Although this excellent book came out in 1989, it remains highly relevant, for it takes an historian's view to place current events in their larger context, to successfully interpret the long shadow of the past--antique cultures steeped in political volatility--and show its effect on the present.

A case in point: In April 1981 a semi-official Egyptian weekly pronounced Ibn Taymiya, the renowned Syrian theologian who lived from 1268 to 1328, the most harmful influence on Egypt's youth. A few months later, Ibn Taymiya became the basis for the actions of 3 of Anwar Sadat's 4 assassins, who had read him extensively.

Pipes divided the book into 5 sections, each including 4 or 5 articles. He groups them somewhat loosely and the articles run the gamut.

Islam and Public Life first discusses fundamentalist views of America and Russia, also touching on how the secular, traditional and reform branches of Islam relate to public life. It next examines religious similarities between Judaism and Islam--both of which stress correct action, compared with Christianity's focus on faith. Pipes shows the far-reaching extent of Muslim anti-Semitism, which stemmed from a patronizing view of other religions that became virulently anti-Jewish in the 20th century--and found welcome among Western Protestants, human rights activists, reporters, academic committees and even liberals seeking a "respectable forum in which to vent their own views about Jews." Pipes also covers the Muslims of Central Asia--which border Taliban Afghanistan's fundamentalist hotbed.

A section on the Persian Gulf attributes the origins of the Iraq-Iran war not to religious differences, but to economic and geographic factors--including the Shatt al-'Arab River and its vast water resources. Pipes also discusses the dangers that oil wealth poses to Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, the United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Libya. The oil windfall made these desert sheikdoms dependent on a continued oil boom, unless new sources of income could be found. So far, none have emerged. Pipes praised Kuwait in 1986 when its government refused to buckle under US pressure to release imprisoned terrorists, and later toured the oil state as the guest of Minister of Information, Sheik Nasir. He found the Bedouin descendants' grand hospitality and intellect reflective of the Arabian Nights. Next, he considered the Saudi Arabian kingdom formed by Wahhabi leader Abd al-Aziz, dissecting various histories, including Peter Mansfield's The New Arabians, funded by the Bechtel Corporation.

Pipes' prescient take on the Arab-Israeli conflict also still holds value. The conflict is fueled, he believes, not by Israel but by the conflicting claims of Palestinian separatists, Arab nationalists and the Jordanian and Syrian governments, among others, over Palestine and its boundaries. The latters' perpetual incapacity to unify stems from irreconcilable goals. An Arab government's sponsorship of the PLO grows, he wrote, proportionate to its distance from Israel. Pipes considered no Arab nation eager to end the conflict. By implication, he believed that nothing Israel could do unilaterally would improve the conflict's complexion. Were the PLO, fundamentalists or Syria to inherit the Arab claim, he predicted that the conflict would last longer--which is precisely what happened with Arafat's violent rejection of Oslo in 2000. Pan-Arabism spawned the PLO, prompting Saudi Arabia to give Arafat's organization $250 million a year by the late 1970s, and other oil states, smaller sums. But this funding dictated that PLO behavior would reflect weighted-Arab demands for Israel's destruction, more than Palestinian needs. Meanwhile, the PLO dictatorship brutalizes its own people, as evidenced during its reign of terror in Southern Lebanon from 1975 through 1982.

Another real gem is the section on terrorism. Pipes provides background for suicide terrorism, which is not rooted so much in Islam as in state-sponsorship. The first major instance of suicide terror was the 1981 destruction of the Iraqi embassy in Beirut, which killed 27 and wounded over 100. The phenomenon picked up political steam with the 1982 murder of Lebanon's Bashir Jumayyil and went international with the 1983 bombing of the US embassy in Beirut, which killed 63. Later the same year, a truck bomb killed 241 US servicemen, also in Lebanon. State sponsorship, he shows, was behind most suicidal actions. Many suicides were recruited via blackmail or under other duress. The way to combat it, he wrote, is to punish states that sponsor this violence.

And finally, for the finale, we learn pointedly what is wrong with media coverage of the Middle East. "Put simply, American journalists are interested in only two topics in the Middle East: Israel and the United States. Whatever takes place that is related to these countries is amplified...;whatever does not is ignored." From 1972 to 1980, for example, ABC, CBS and NBC devoted an average of 98.4 minutes annually to Israel, only 54.7 minutes to Egypt, 42.4 minutes to the PLO, 25.7 minutes to Syria, 18.4 minutes to Lebanon, 12.7 minutes to Saudi Arabia, 8.5 to Jordan and 7.2 to Iraq. But the US and the Middle East won an average of 153 minutes of coverage annually. "Israel is imagined to be more powerful than it really is because it is watched so closely," Pipes writes. Similarly, attention given to Palestinian refugees far is out of proportion to their suffering, which in any case is caused by their own leaders' refusal to accept peace. During the same era far greater numbers of Vietnamese, Cambodian, Afghan, Somali and other refugees , whose ranks now include some 2 million Sudanese, suffered far worse tribulations, which shamefully got far less press attention. Being overexposed, Pipes rightly concludes, means that Israel is "held to impossible moral standards." Israel is measured "not in relation to [its enemies] or other states, but in relation to abstract ideals."

Pipes offers 10 times the wisdom of many other volumes, despite the book's age. Alyssa A. Lappen

Makes some valuable points that are still valid today
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2004-12-02
This book came out fifteen years ago, but it is still worth reading now. One benefit is that we can be sure it hasn't been influenced by more recent events!

Pipes points out that he writes as an historian, placing events in their larger historical context. And that there are two main factors that make this perspective worthwhile. First, there is the feeling that things today are going poorly, which leads to a fascination with the past. Second is the unsettled politics which make recent events hard to explain unless one can put them in a larger context.

There's an essay about the risks of supporting fundamentalist Muslims against communism, something we all should have taken more seriously. There's an article comparing Jewish and Muslim life, and pointing out that in both religions, people are becoming less observant of traditions, and that as a result, there has been more emphasis on faith in both religions, making them both a little more like Christianity in that respect. There's another fine essay about the roots of Muslim antisemitism and Western receptivity to it. And some interesting material about the Muslims of Central Asia (my ancestors!) as part of the then Soviet Empire. We also get to read about the origins of the Iraq-Iran war.

We discover how oil-rich Saudi Arabia and Kuwait treat foreign workers (mostly Muslim Arabs themselves). And there is a (pre-invasion) analysis of Kuwait in particular: it has become very rich from its oil. What will it do with all that wealth? Anything useful?

We all know that many Arabs want to get rid of Israel. Pipes asks what they want to replace it by. A bigger Syria? A bigger Jordan? A Pan-Arab nation? A local Arab tyrant? A fundamentalist state? A nation of local residents? And he asks why Arafat was always so unsuccessful militarily. Most folks who keep losing battles either start winning or get replaced. Why was Arafat so successful at getting support even though he never accomplished anything of value to anyone in the region? Pipes explains that Arafat's support came from Arab states, not from local Arabs.

There's an article on suicide terrorism, "the new scourge," which also ought to have been taken more seriously fifteen years ago.

An excellent essay deals with the way President Carter mishandled the Iran hostage situation. Objectively, Carter did a terrible job here, allowing American foreign policy to be determined "on the interests of a handful of individuals." Pipes predicted that this could set a precedent for more American helplessness when confronted by terrorists.

Three of the more interesting articles deal with the United States and the Middle East. The author points out that the debate between American pro-Israeli and anti-Israeli camps crosses party lines. One can be liberal or conservative and support either side. The pro-Israeli side sees the Arab conflict with Israel as a symptom of Arab instability. It recommends Arab reform and says that were Israel to vanish, all the Arab problems would remain. The anti-Israeli side sees the Arab conflict with Israel as a cause of Arab instability. It blames Israel for all the problems between the Arabs and the West and recommends doing something about Israel. It says that were Israel to vanish, we'd all live in peace together, our problems gone. Pipes explains that the fact that people on both sides are taking similar positions gives the United States a unique opportunity to help resolve the conflict. And he then gets into the question of the extent to which American Presidents determine our Middle East policy (it's to a significant extent). And how our record in that region isn't too good: we've come up with a big bunch of plans for resolving the Arab-Israeli conflict and none have gotten off the ground (by the way, in the ensuing fifteen years, we've come up with many more plans and we're no closer).

Perhaps the most interesting essay is near the end of the book, on the media and the Middle East. As Pipes shows, the media do not merely report the news here, they create a fair amount of it. And he quite properly says that the preoccupation on Israel and on Arafat certainly gave us all a very narrow and misleading view of the region. It made Israel appear far more important than it is in real life. And I think it made Arafat appear to be something like the most important person who ever lived. While one can make a hero out of anyone (consider Horst Wessel), it isn't always useful to do so.

Yes, this book is still worth reading, in spite of all the wild happenings and misadventures that have gone on in the region in the past fifteen years.

Long
Long Shadows (Studies in German Literature Linguistics and Culture)
Published in Hardcover by Camden House (1995-02-09)
Author: Marie Luise Kaschnitz
List price: $47.95
New price: $39.63
Used price: $12.00

Average review score:

WONDERFUL
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2001-06-15
I had to read this book for my German studies class (Women and Family in the 19th Century). This was the book that moved me the most, enraged me the most and made me think the most. This book not only covers many of the historical events of the 19th century (such as the Prussian War, Hep-Hep riots, and Ernst Haeckel), but it also covers feminism--or rather the repression of feminism that the main character, Agathe, experiences.

Although this book was written in the 19th century, this novel feels quite modern (and is a good translation) in the thought and concepts of feminism and gender equality.

Be warned: this book, as a reflection of a woman's life in the 19th century, is not happy, but is extremely satisfying because it feels so real and is extremely thought provoking.

Do not be turned off by the cost of this book. It is worth the expense and is a good quality printing.

Unique, interesting, and definitely worth reading!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 1999-10-17
We read Ms. Tatlock's manuscript for a class two years ago before it was published and it was excellent! This is a translation of a nineteenth-century German novel about a girl coming of age in a very repressive bourgeois culture. It was too controversial to be printed in English at the time, and went out of print in Germany when Hitler came into power. This book has a lot of history and a lot to teach, as well as being an interesting (although somewhat disturbing for those of us interested in gender equality) story. Highly recommended!

Long
Long Shadows in Victory (Dead Letter Mysteries)
Published in Paperback by St Martins Mass Market Paper (1997-06)
Author: Gregory Bean
List price: $5.99
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $10.00

Average review score:

Great surprise
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2000-10-30
I had never heard of this author and just happened to pick up this book. I am so glad I did. It is one of the best books I've read in a long time and I plan on reading all the other books by this author. I think it's a " man's" book, but it had me laughing several times. I can imagine what anyone would say when attacked by a barn owl!! Thanks Mr. Bean!!

High plains adventure mys.
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 1999-08-16
Gregory Bean does an awesome job of capturing the flavor of life on the high plains and foothills of contemporary Wyoming.He is especially adept in his decription of both Wyoming wildlife and landscape. His characters are authentic modern Westerners and his portrayal of Wyoming pathos stings the imagination . Bean tells a "tight" story, adding no unecessary detail or event and leaving out nothing which might highten the sense of adventure his books give to the reader. I must say that I had trouble putting down all four of his novels once I began reading them.

Long
Long Shot: Steve Nash's Journey to the Nba
Published in Paperback by Polestar Pr (1996-09)
Author: Jeff Rud
List price: $16.95
New price: $550.92
Used price: $69.42

Average review score:

Steve Nash, not only plays excellent, but is also FINE!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2000-03-29
Steve Nash, Dallas Maverick #13, at his earliest stage growing up into a great basketball player. This biography is great for all those Steve Nash fans as well as an athlete seeking inspiration from a determined and hardworking pro.

Summarizes how dedication and hard work can pay off.
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 1997-09-28
With a personal and business point of view, Jeff Rud encapsulates how hard work and determination can help you succeed. The hard work of Steve Nash helped to fulfill his lifetime dream, setting an example to our youth that in all of us no matter the dream, there is a" Steve Nash."


Books-Under-Review-->Reference-->Biography-->L-->Long-->65
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