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

Owens
Star Trek Roleplaying Game: Player's Guide
Published in Hardcover by Decipher Inc. (2002-07)
Authors: Mathew Colville, Kenneth Hite, Steven S. Long, Don Mappin, Christian Moore, and Owen Seyler
List price: $29.95
New price: $13.55
Used price: $13.58

Average review score:

Very leery- but pleasantly surprised grognard!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-09-10
I was very leery for a while to buy this product after the LUG debacle but was was very glad I did afterwards. Decipher put together a great psuedo-d20 d6 sytem RPG that is easy to play with tons of Star Trek backround in it that will please gamers and fans alike I think. In fact only a non-trekkie would be crippled when reading the many in rule Star Trek references from all the series except Enterprise. As other reviewers have stated, this book focuses on character creation and has little in the way of Narrator tools and it is best used with the Narrators guide. Fan books, maps, galaxy guides, technical manuals, creature guides etc. from Star Trek all are very useful one might say essential to this game as well. In short the pictures, backround, rules, and system are all excellent with this Star Trek license game and I give it my highest marks.

Great buy for this collector
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2004-01-21
First, let me say that I bought this for the Trek content and for inspiration as a writer and may never play the game. I have played some previous RPGs (none Trek) so I can still evaluate it as one - I hope. Anyway, this appears to be a complete player's guide. Unlike some games, everything you need is here, and sourcebooks are extras not essentials. There are ten starting species to play: Humans, Bajorans, Betazoids, Cardassians, Klingons, Ferengi, Trill, Vulcans, Talaxians and Ocampans. Each matches what we have seen in the show in their attribute modifiers and special abilities, although Vulcans have so many that some were cut. The action is done by rolling dice once, adding your character's skill score, bonuses and penalties and then comparing the result to the number needed for success. Everything your characters can do is expressed in a skill, and the range of skill coverage is very good. Characters also have edges and flaws, character traits that help define their personalities and affect their skills. Finally, each character also has Courage points. These represent heroic action and you use them to add to your rolls, either to prevent failure or boost the level of your success. (I would love this feature as a player.) There are seven basic professions: Diplomat, Merchant, Mystic, Rogue, Scientist, Soldier and Starship Officer. There are elite starship officer professions for every one we have seen in the shows. There are other elite professions that can be entered by anyone meeting their prerequisites. This system manages transfers like Spock from Science Officer to Commander to Ambassador and then probably either Envoy or Spy, all as a Starship Officer. All in all, the system really captures the feel of Star Trek characters.

The guide has a number of flaws. Least annoying first, there are a number of canon errors, which is surprising considering how much trivia the Decipher staff know about Star Trek. It was enough to bother me a little, so some fellow Trek reviewers may be driven crazy by it. As has been mentioned in most reviews (such as on rpg.net) the chapter and section order is really bad. The sections on character mechanics and level advancement should have been consolidated and in front. Character Development should probably have been in front of Professions, since you would use them in that order, and the non-starship elite professions should have followed the basic professions. The worst flaws are outright errors in presenting the mechanics of the game. There are edges listed in training that were renamed or eliminated by the time the Traits chapter was written. There are errors in the examples supposed to clarify how the game works. The level advancement rules are sometimes unclear. The Starship Duty ability is, according to the FAQ on the web, importantly more limited than it reads in the Guide. This needed a much more thorough editing before printing.

These problems are irritating, but they are fortunately simple to resolve. The character generation system and the skill test system are solid and very simple to implement. The guide also explicitly states that the players can create their own skills and edges, and even rules for doing so, and that the Narrator can change the type of skill test as he sees fit, if necessary. Should I ever choose to play, I would be very happy to use this system. As a collector, the insight into the skills and abilities of the character types, especially the elite professions, was worth the price. Also, nearly a third of the guide is given to chapters on equipment, starships, the galaxy and the Federation. Those sections were really interesting and informative. As a player I would give this a four for the errors, but as a collector I give it five stars.

Very high quality...
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 14 total.
Review Date: 2003-01-17
This book is one of two core books, the other being the Narrarator's Guide. This book is full-color, with pictures from the original Star Trek all the way through Voyager and Enterprise. It has just about every gadget you've ever seen, and some you haven't, available to characters. Classes include Trader, Rogue, Starship Officer, Warrior, etc. If you're a Star Trek fan and enjoy roleplaying, do yourself a favor and get this book!

The best roleplay game I ever had
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2004-11-05
This is the best. I'am a narrator and I own all of those decipher manuals. This is the best rpg I ever played. Not just the best of trek rpg ,but the best of all I have played, and I have played almost all.
Perfect rules, Perfect manuals (that explain deep the ST universe and clear all on the rules for roleplaying and starship battles, spece astrogation or space hazards), perfect universe : what u are looking more? I have only a thing to say: buy it, and play.

Make it So!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2005-07-08
This is the first book of the Star Trek RPG series. In this volume, it gives you the basics of character creation and gameplay from the player's point of view. It's a pretty simple and flexible gameplay system. However, there are a few complaints about this book. First of all, I feel that it wasn't organized very well. There isn't a checklist for character creation (I had to get that from another GM), so at first it's a little confusing. You have to jump around to different chapters to get all the information you need on character creation. Even just adding a checklist would have helped a lot. A second complaint is that a lot of skills, especially racial skills and abilities, are not listed on the character sheet, so again, you'll have to use resourses created by other GMs or make your own.

Even though this book has weak points, they can be overcome with resources available on the internet. Just be warned, this book only presents the game from the standpoint of the player. While the book claims that the game is playable with only this book, it's very difficult because there are no adventure seeds, or even many races or creatures to play with. If you're planning on running a game, you'll definitely need to pick up the Narrator's Book as well.

Owens
Tahoe Ice Grave (An Owen McKenna Mystery Thriller)
Published in Paperback by Thriller Press (2002-08-01)
Author: Todd Borg
List price: $16.95
New price: $6.10
Used price: $2.97
Collectible price: $16.95

Average review score:

Another great read by Todd Borg!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-04-13
I don't know how Todd Borg learned so much about so many different places and activities, but Ice Grave is not only rich in plot and characters, but in ambiance!

Owen is quite the Renaissance man. I never cease to be amazed at what Owen can explain. At one point, he explains, "scuba no decompression limits" to a local copper.

The whole scene just came to life for me. All of a sudden, I wasn't just "watching" a scene with a diver chick and a couple of middle aged men standing on a beach in Tahoe, but I was standing there with them - listening to the conversation, feeling the chill air, smelling the lake. Todd Borg has a talent for drawing a reader into a story.

An of course there's Spot. As the bookmark says, "Spot Rocks!" For most of the book, he's a bit more of a minor character than in Blowup, but he's still hanging about, drooling, lazing around, and making new friends.

I'm happy with my purchase, and recommend this book to anyone that wants a quick enjoyable read.

GREAT BOOK!!!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2004-03-12
Borg writes with a style that makes writing books seem easy. His characters are simple and interesting. The plot is unique, and the ending couldn't be better. My steaks burned on the grill because I was reading this book--no regrets.

Don't Miss this page turner!!!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2002-09-30
Todd Borg knows how to win fans...
Taho Ice Grave is a well executed story that
provides fast moving, compelling suspense.
Owen and Spot pack the realism that all mystery
readers enjoy.
Add Todd Borg's name to your list of favorite
authors!!!

"Tahoe Ice Grave"
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2002-09-05
Murder in the deep icy waters of Lake Tahoe; the search for a priceless manuscript and the ruthless killer who would do anything to get his hands on it; a frantic chase up frigid mountain cliffs to a hidden ice cave-Owen McKenna and his faithful Great Dane "Spot" are at it again.
"Tahoe Ice Grave," Todd Borg's third thriler in the Owen McKenna myatery series, is every bit as fast paced and spell binding as his first two, "Tahoe Deathfall" and "Tahoe Blowup." Borg's attention to detail and unique talent for character portrayal go a long way to make "Ice Grave's" people and places larger than life. A fast paced read that will keep you turning the pages 'till the wee hours of the morning.

A big thumbs up
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2002-11-05
Todd Borg is a Tahoe resident and small businessman. He also teaches part time at Lake Tahoe Community College. TAHOE ICE GRAVE is his third Owen McKenna and Spot mystery. Mr. Borg's first two novels in the series, TAHOE DEATHFALL and TAHOE BLOWUP, won several awards, including "Top 5 winner of Bay Area Independent Publishers Association" and "Librarian's Choice, Best Fiction 2001" by the Cincinnati Public Library.

Thos Kahale's body is found naked near Rubicon Point in Lake Tahoe, his clothes neatly folded onshore and a bullet through his head. Thos's mother, Janeen Kahale hires Owen McKenna to look into the death. Thos was an upstanding young man with a successful business and a discreet nature, and there is no apparent reason for his death. Owen has to dig deep to find the reasons, and in the meantime the Kahale family seems to be dying at an alarming rate. All Owen has to go on is a suicide note left by Thos and his family history:

"'Janeen, Thos's note says he was responsible for the deaths of three people. Jasper's father and brother have died in the last few weeks. Could they be two of he people Thos referred to?' 'Of course not. Jasper's father died of lung cancer. His brother in a car accident. Obviously, Thos could not have had anything to do with either death.'"

One of the real strengths of the Owen McKenna series is the characterization. Mr. Borg has a knack for telling a "tall tale" with larger-than-life characters. Owen himself is 6'6", and his dog spot is a Great Dane who is perfectly tuned to Owen's commands. McKenna's girlfriend Street completes the triad; an entomologist (science of insects) who deals with the grisly forensic side of murder. Together the threesome make for a winning combination of grit, intelligence, strength, and tenderness that is captivating to the reader. But Mr. Borg's plots are also super-twisters that take the reader back and forth, into and out of the mountain scenery at a dizzying rate. TAHOE ICE GRAVE is as compelling as any of Todd Borg's tales to date. With each book his writing advances to a new level, much to the delight of his growing audience. A big thumbs up.

Owens
Tahoe Silence (An Owen McKenna Mystery Thriller)
Published in Perfect Paperback by Thriller Press (2007-08-01)
Author: Todd Borg
List price: $16.95
New price: $10.00
Used price: $6.95

Average review score:

A wonderful novel that has lots to offer
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-11-15
This is my first Todd Borg book and I am definately going to read the rest. He does a great job of combining an interesting story, well-developed, believable characters, and deep, delightful descriptions of people, places, activities and emotions. His wonderful understanding and descriptions of the autistic girl and her world helped me to find the compassion I have been envisioning but not able to find for those so closed off to me. Thank you!

Tahoe Silence
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-27
This whole series has been wonderful to read!! They are great mysteries, and I love that they are based in real places. If you've been to the Tahoe area, you can see/remember exactly what Todd Borg is describing. He is a great writer, and I can't wait for the next in the series!!

Tahoe Silence
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-08
Having read every one of the Owen Mckenna series, I looked forward to the publication of Tahoe Silence with great anticipation. I honestly think it is Todd Borg's best by far. He has taken the series to a new level of character development while keeping his wonderful plot line and Tahoe area descriptions that were extant in the previous novels. What really blew me away, however, was his depth of understanding of people with autism. He goes beyond just having knowledge and using it to fill gaps. He has a depth of understanding that is remarkable, and he makes the character come alive with this understanding. If you want to really get a feel for autism while reading a truly delightful mystery with action and a surprise ending, get this book!

Todd Borg ROCKS! Everyone who reads should read Todd Borg's books!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-24
As luck would have it, I happened to stumble upon a Todd Borg Owen McKenna mystery a few years ago. Once I cracked open the cover, I couldn't put the darn thing down until I read until the end! The following day, I was out purchasing the rest of the books in the series!
I now wait,salivating,for each new release date. I feel as if I've won the reading lottery!
Mr. Borg's writings are so amazingly realistic and beliveable. I find myself THERE helping Owen and Spot figure out who the bad guys are and what to do with them.
Mr Borg is so good, that after being immersed in one of his stories,I really believe-even much later- that there is a PI in Tahoe named Owen McKenna. I almost expect to run into Owen and Spot-the-Great-Dane as I run errands around town!
I admit to laughing out loud when Spot comes to life so vividly on each page with his doggy sighs and drools and other antics.
If you like Sue Grafton's Kinsey Millhone series, you will fall in love with Todd Borg's Owen McKenna with his trusty sidekick Spot the gorgeous Great Dane! (not to mention his hottie,enigmatic sweetie,Street and his rugged,cop-friend, Diamond Martinez)
The author's descriptions of the picturesque scenery of Tahoe is so clear it's almost like watching a movie.
I have hooked my family and friends on this author as well--ya gotta share a great thing!
My crime-mystery-loving Pop declares Mr Borg writes better than Tony Hillerman.
If you like mysteries,if you like action,if you like crime/cop stories, if you looove animals, if you love a good laugh, if you like books by Sue Grafton (Kinsey Millhone series -as mentioned above)OR Patricia Cornwell (Kay Scarpetta mysteries)OR Jonathan Kellerman(Alex Delaware mysteries)OR James Patterson(Alex Cross series)OR Kathy Reichs (Temperence Breneman series)...you just HAVE to take a chance on Todd Borg!!
He is the absolutely the BEST! You will NOT regret picking up a book by this author, I swear you will be hooked after the first few pages and be back for more Don't just read one, get 'em ALL!
Tahoe Silence is absolutely fantastic! I didn't let my 13 yr old son out of my sight for two weeks after I read this one,(much to his eternal scorn and dismay).
Each book from Mr Borg gets better and better. Descriptions of people and places are so crisp and concise and the characters are ones that endure and get better with each new book.
I appreciate that I can't figure out the plot until it's revealed. It is soo real, it is sooo thrilling!(plus,Owen McKenna is sooo HOT! lol!)
It is so UNLIKE all the cookie-cutter predictable crap that is published today, passing as books. All of the author's books are entertaining without being sappy or blah. You WILL be on the edge of your seat. I am impatiently waiting for the next book due out this summer.. woo-hoo!
So just do it! Buy this book, Tahoe Silence. In fact, buy ALL of the Owen McKenna Mysteries by Todd Borg. They are DEFINITELY worth the money you will spend. (heck,they are worth MUCH more than you will spend!)
You will enjoy an unforgettable adventure,I promise you will enjoy yourself and be back for more. I often reread all the books in the series and they never get stale or blah. Each is just as exciting at the 10th read as they are at the first!
This is some seriously satisfying entertainment of the highest caliber. I hope you find Mr Borg's books as refreshing and shivery-delicious as I have since I found 'em!
Happy reading!!

Another great read!!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-05
Todd Borg is the author of four previous mysteries with Owen McKenna (and his Great Dane, Spot). TAHOE DEATHFALL; TAHOE BLOWUP; TAHOE ICE GRAVE; and TAHOE KILLSHOT have garnered several awards and universal praise from the major review organizations in the United States, as well as the Library Journal. Todd Borg and his wife moved from Minnesota to Lake Tahoe after several vacations, where Todd writes his Owen McKenna/Spot mysteries and his wife is an artist. They think Lake Tahoe is sheer heaven.

When a mute, autistic 17-year old artist named Silence Ramirez is kidnaped with her popular brother, Charlie, who has always been her link to the outside world, the entire community of Lake Tahoe is on alert. Her mother, Marlette, enlists the help of Owen and Spot to find Silence, who begins sending artwork to communicate where she is being held. Even Owen's girlfriend, entomologist Street Casey, is called upon to examine Charlie's corpse for telltale signs of the murder. After interviewing almost everyone who ever came into contact with Silence, the top suspects are a motorcycle gang, who call upon Owen to proclaim their innocence. But the Aztec sign left on Charlie's forehead push them to the top of the list of suspects:

"Gomez reached out and handed me a card. It had a phone number printed on it. Nothing more. 'That is my private cell number. When you need help, reinforcements, men for a stake-out or even, possibly, some intimidation services, give me a call. There are no strings attached. My men wish to serve. I wish to serve.'

'And you want me to put in a good word about you to the authorities.'"

To the fan, Owen McKenna and his dog, Spot, and girlfriend, Street, are like good friends. They are high achievers who have their wounds. They do what they do for all the right reasons, and when they flail, the reader flails along with them. Borg's ability to draw the reader in to his stories is amazing. His plots are so seamless that the reader can't put the book down once engaged. His writing is clear and concise, and his characters are poignant and skillfully conceived. TAHOE SILENCE is particularly engaging with his study of autistic children. His experts give the reader a sliver of a view into what it must be like to be autistic, and it is heartbreaking. McKenna's depiction of "bad" bikers is also awesome. Another great read!!

Shelley Glodowski
Senior Reviewer

Owens
To the Limit of Endurance: A Battalion of Marines in the Great War (C.A. Brannen Series)
Published in Hardcover by Texas A&M University Press (2007-09-30)
Author: Peter F. Owen
List price: $32.50
New price: $20.28
Used price: $16.49

Average review score:

The Finest Critical Analysis of a Corps Unit Ever Done. Period.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-19
I sitting down to write this review, I am moved by many forces. First of all is the shear outstanding qualities of this book. But in stating that, I keep in mind the fact that the author is a Marine Corps officer (well, WAS - but once a Marine, Always a Marine) and that anything less could not be expected of his work. That fact aside, I am confident in making the statement that this is perhaps the finest analysis of a Marine Corps unit I have ever read, and certainly one of the finest on a mid-level military unit in general. Lt.Col. Owen has written objectively and honestly about the 2nd Battalion/6th Marines, with true candor and skill. He is unapologetic concerning the problems faced by the Corps and the 2/6 in particular (something rarely encountered when Marines write about other Marines), and presents the FACTS clearly and concisely. This is clearly an asset, especially in this case when one must consider the fact that Owen was Executive Officer of the 2/6 during Operation Desert Storm. His sketches of the characters involved present the reader with a clear picture of the individual - only that which is necessary to gain a clear understanding of the men and their motives is included, while superfluous clutter is cast aside. This can sometimes appear very workman-like in print, but is definitely not here due to Owens' clear and direct writing style. Simply put, the book reads well.

Taking a step by step approach to the story, while not getting bogged down in far too much detail, also holds the reader's interest. This book could easily have been twice as long, as the sources Owen had to hand at the time were considerable. In delving into unpublished memoirs, the truth behind many of the myths and legends behind some of the Corps most famous moments is brought into clearer focus, without the flag waving and chesty pride usually associated with such endeavors. What the 2/6 went through at Belleau Wood was simply appalling, and Owen makes no bones about it. Nor the advance at Soissons, where a serious leadership blunder led to carnage. By the end, however, we see the learning curve that the AEF had to go through during its 19 months of serious existence beginning to take hold. There has been a spate of critical analysis of what the AEF high command did wrong in France written lately. Here, Owen does not hesitate to point out the flaws in AEF (and, by extension, the Corps') tactical doctrine as well, but is also quick to lay praise where it belongs and give due credit. This is a commendable initiative in a climate where the AEF is being hammered by many who seemingly refuse to accept that the AEF command structure did a remarkable job when one considers the time span and climate in which they had to work. Owen thus risks irritating 'serious' historians, but his effort is justified in the clear picture he paints of the 2/6's actions in France. The transition from tight knit, closely trained unit to tightly trained but more effusive 'organization' is particularly telling. It is also illustrative of exactly why so very few original members of a true combat unit actually see the end of any war...

I have read this book three times now, in order to keep a clear picture of all that i have read in my mind as I write this. Further, i read it three times because it is just a damn good book and has called to me!. Poignant moments prevail throughout the book, that stand out in relief against the swirling backdrop of war; scenes of men, thrown into a maelstrom, who learn the true meaning of death under fire. Among these that I will carry with me for many years to come are the first and the last; the first, in the shelling of the unit at Belleau Wood in their first action, where the men of the 2/6 are slapped in the face by the full reality of their situation; and the last, as the all but exhausted, spent and dirty officers of the battalion command staff stand in the cold, rainy darkness on a hillock overlooking the River Meuse on what will be the last night of the war, with orders to advance across the dirty river - all the while knowing that the end of the war is but a few hours away, and that German Maxim guns await across the cold, black water...

I have talked at length with Lt.Col. Owen about his work and the war in general. Those talks, however, have in no way influenced this review - it stands on its own and is based in the merits of his work. The idea for the book was given to him while standing in the darkness at the rail of a cruiser in the Persian Gulf coming out of Desert Storm. He himself had 'seen the tiger smile' only days before. And as XO of the modern 2/6, he therefore found himself doubly qualified to become the custodian of this portion of his unit's history. As a writer myself, I am aware of the sometime NEED of writers to write about specific events, and the apparent inevitability that leads them to certain projects. Peter Owen answered the 'call' that came to him and has done justice in no small way to the 2/6. Because of his excellent work, the sacrifice of those men from so long ago will never be forgotten, and we are provided with a glimpse of the lineage that made Peter Owen, and all his brothers in arms, the Marines that they were to become...

Well done Marine.

Robert J. Laplander
Author of:
Finding the Lost Battalion: Beyond the Rumors, Myths and Legends of America's Famous WW1 Epic.

CWO4 Allan Cordera USMC Retired
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-25
An exceptional job by Lieutenant Colonel Pete Owen on his research and writing by masterfully piecing together first hand accounts of the Marines of all ranks that fought at Belleau Wood and Soissons. A well organized, simple read - but one that provides any military leader many lessons learned that can be applied to today's global war on terror and the battlefields of Iraq. Any reader who enjoys historical or military writing will enjoy and learn something from this book. LtCol Pete Owen provides interesting facts and military traditions of that era that are probably not known by many current military personnel. This book makes the perfect gift for any newly promoted NCO or recent academy school graduate and has become a definite addition to my PME library. Highly recommended and congratulations to LtCol Pete Owen on a job well done. Semper Fi Mac.

This is a great read...
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-16
To the Limit of Endurance: A Battalion of Marines in the Great War by Peter F. Owen was a fascinating look at the tactical level of World War I. The only other book on World War I that I have previously read that focused on the challenges of tactical leadership was Erwin Rommel's Infantry Attacks. (Most books seem to either talk about generals or the actual foot soldiers.) But Field Marshal Rommel's memoir of his exploits in World War I was not a critical analysis of the German Army's doctrines or its ability to execute those doctrines.

LtCol Owen recounts the tale of the 2nd Battalion, 6th Marine Regiment, a unit he would later serve in, from its formation in 1917 through the end of the war. He insists upon using the original unique numerical designations for the rifle companies of the battalion rather than the alphabetical letter designations imposed by the U.S. Army and later permanently adopted by the Marine Corps.

Owen gives the reader thumbnail biographies of many of the key personalities that made 2/6 Marines the unit that it was. He discusses the equipment and organization of the battalion. He also discusses the training and doctrine imposed upon the battalion--and how that training and doctrine measured up to the stress of actual combat. It should be no surprise that the doctrine had to be modified in light of the lessons learned on the field of battle. Owen contends that the battalion probably represented about the best that the U.S. Army or Marines could field at the time that they were committed. And they were found wanting.

It almost goes without saying that the casualties suffered by the battalion were simply appalling. The tidbit about units holding back 20% of their troops before an attack so that it would be easier to rebuild the units was very informative (if grim). In addition to the "normal" hazards of the Western Front battlefield (fortified machine gun nests, gas attacks, etc.), the men of 2/6 Marines were also to suffer from the inexperience of their leaders and their staffs--from the platoon commanders all the way up to the corps command level. What struck me was, as in World War II, the American war machine quickly absorbed lessons and applied them. When you look at the time period of March to November of 1918, the American Expeditionary Force (AEF) learned its craft in a relatively short amount of time. I speak in particular here of the arts of logistics and coordinating tank and artillery support.

What was also striking was how Army and Marine officers were interchanged. This dismayed the Marines of course, but the exigencies of the situation resulted in an intermixing of officer assignments that probably is rare even in our present ground forces--and certainly almost unheard of in the Second World War and Korea.

And the most compelling thing about this book to me was the author's candor. All too often (in my view), the Marines tend to whitewash unsavory parts of their history. And as Harry Truman observed, their propaganda arm is as good at Joe Stalin's. But Owen is not hesitant to expose examples of poor judgment and sometimes outright incompetence on the part of 2/6's leaders. This is after all, a critical assessment of the performance of the battalion in the Great War. And he does not trumpet the battle at Belleau Wood as an unvarnished success.

This book is an imminently readable and informative book about one battalion's part in the Great War. And it hopefully also gives the reader a look into the problems faced by probably every American rifle battalion that fought in that conflict. Any serious student of American involvement in World War One should look to add this work to his or her library.

Excellent book that translates to today!
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-07
LtCol Peter Owen's book is a must for your PME collection as well as for anyone who likes to read about units of the Great War. Owen's book focuses on the 2/6 Marines which was part of the AEF's 2nd Division during WWI. Owen brilliantly tells the story about how the unit was a mixture of career Marines and men who joined up after the US declared war in 1917. Along with describing the personalities of the 2/6, Owen focuses on the operational effectiveness of the unit from its inception and how loses in combat negatively effected the performance of the unit. Owen also shows how the lack of training and poor doctrine was coupled with poor leadership decisions that led to very costly battles for the battalion. The book is easy to read and the chapters are well structured so the reader clearly understands the story Owen is relating to them. I plan to give this book to my friend who is going to USMC Command and Staff college!

For USMC-WW1, a must-read
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-31
COL Owen(USMC)'s latest effort is a must read for all those interested in the United States in World War I particularly the US Marine Corps readers.

Expanding on his excellent work annotating a previous Marine Corps WW1 effort published by Texas A&M University Press, COL Owen's smooth writing style combined with exhaustive primary and secondary documentation research, makes for an "easy" read detailing the 2nd Battalion's grim and bloody campaigns during WW1 as part of one of the Marine Brigades attached to the U.S. Army's 2nd U.S. Infantry Division 'Indianheads" .."2nd to None!" The officers, non-commissioned officers, and enlisted men of the 2nd Battalion fought in most of the major battles of the last year of the war and its casualty rosters reflect the butcher's toll. Many of the veterans of these battles played major roles in future Marine Corps efforts in Nicauragua(sp?), Haiti, World War 2 storming the beaches of the South Pacific and the Korean War.

The book contains the all-important maps for military history, an extensive bibliography/associated footnotes, and index as well as photographs.

A highly recommended effort worth adding to one's WW1 library and USMC histories.

Owens
Wolfsong
Published in Paperback by West End Pr (1991-12)
Author: Louis Owens
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An intense first novel by an Indian who loves the Cascades.
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 1996-01-29
Anyone who fears the possibility of mining interests encroachinginto the wilderness will understand the real threat thatfaces the Native American "hero" of Wolfsong. With an Abbey-like view to Monkeywrenching when the time is right, Tom Joseph learns to set his priorities and do some great backpacking up the Suiattle River in the process. This is Owen's first novel, begun in 1975 when he was a Wilderness Ranger in the Washington Cascades. There still is a valid copper claim on Miner's Ridge, north of Glacier Peak. This is a scary story; it could really happen.

superb
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 1999-05-20
This book combats the usual conservative white male destruction of the enviornment, and offers instead a compelling look at the incredibly brave and noble traditions of Native Americans and their conservation efforts. Copper mines are not usually something I could care about, but this book challenges the assumption of the domineering white patriarchal culture, and I for one am grateful.

Wolfsong
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2003-05-26
This is not a politically correct book.

It challenges ideas of Native "authenticity" and gives short shrift to out-of-town environmentalists (rather shorter shrift than I entirely agreed with, in fact). When Tom decides to act against a copper mine, he does so not out of simplistic ideological purity but because of a complex of reasons, largely having to do with his own identity. (And he was uncritically working as a logger before that.)

Nevertheless, this is a profoundly environmentalist novel, with intensely beautiful descriptions of wilderness. It's an environmentalist novel because of the unbreakable connection it creates between humans and their environment and because of its challenge to the ideals of short-term profit. (At the same time, the problems of poverty are never glossed over.)

Owens wrote beautifully and incorporated stunning passages of magic realism. Tom is a believable character--confused, irresponsible (college drop-out), lonely, fierce, and ultimately heroic in the same way animals are in those old Western novels where wolves and mustangs leap off cliffs rather than be captured.

Loggers, miners and environmentalists in a literary novel.
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 1997-01-29
It is the "forks" in the river and the road for the citizens of Forks, a small town which perviously had logging money running through its veins, but now it is considering an infusion of mining dollars as the mills close down. Native American Tom Joseph returns home to attend his uncle's funeral and to unconsciously assume the mantle of trickster and to learn what drove his uncle to acts of ecoterrorism and monkeywrenching. Readers will get a true feel for the temperate rain forests of Western Washington while reading this novel, and may be tempted to don a slicker or their climbing boots by the time it is finished. Owens lets the reader decide many of the outcomes in this novel, though the meaning is always clear, the humor is rampant and the small town was probably a role model for Northern Exposure, right down to troubled sexy waitress and a fly bouncing around in the pie case.

For wilderness supporters, this book is a horror story. The book is based on the very real possibility that a copper mine could be opened with the attendant roads and carnage, on Miner's Ridge, north of Glacier Peak in the Glacier Peak Wilderness Area. Congress left a loophole big enough to drive a front-end loader through when the Wilderness Act was passed. The road isn't there yet, but Owens' vision is remarkably clear. Take heed, and enjoy

Howl over what could still happen in the Cascade Mountains!
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 1997-01-16
Wolfsong is a cautionary tale of what could potentially happen in the North Cascades. Congress conveniently neglected to ban mining in wilderness areas where old claims were established. This is Owens' cry of alarm: don't even consider mining in places like this. Wolfsong is told through the eyes of a local Native American, Tom Josephs, who inherits the mantle of protector of this sacred place from his uncle. Funny, insightful, true to the environment and the community, this book deserves a place on the shelf next to Desert Solitaire and the Monkey Wrench Gang

Owens
Wonderful Fool
Published in Paperback by Peter Owen Ltd (1995-10-10)
Author: Shusaku Endo
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Average review score:

curiosity
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 2001-03-11
Didn't Mr Endo pass away in 1996?

This was a great story by one of Japan's finest writers
Helpful Votes: 21 out of 21 total.
Review Date: 1999-10-27
Being a large fan of Shusaku Endo, when I saw this book with an interesting title, I decided to read it. I was very happily surprised. Not only is this excellently written story a very moving tale, but it is often very funny. Endo has used his talent to tell the story of an often foolish man named Gaston Bonaparte, a man with a passion for Japan. He travels to Japan and stays with a small Japanese family. While his old pen pal, the only son of the family, is very supportive of him, the only daughter does not like him at all. Things get even worse when he is abducted by an angry gangster, and eventually forced to make the greatest sacrifice of all. If you like dramatic, moving, and funny stories, make sure you read this one.

Loved it
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2002-08-20
I first read Wonderful Fool in a high school English class, it was out of print so my teacher photocopied 60 copies of the entire book, and it was wel worth it. I loved both the story and the way it was told, with vivid colors and moods. Highly recommended

Great book
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-17
I just finished Wonderful Fool by Shusaku Endo, the fifth novel I have read by him. Like the others, this one was outstanding. He wrote very skillfully and deeply perceptively about human nature. Endo always chooses topics, it seems, which are uncomfortable, which draw up against the reader's "flesh" or that part of them that is worldly and selfish at the expense of others' wellbeing. (As a Japanese too he chooses topics which are particularly unflattering for the Japanese people like the crucifixtions of Portugese missionaries in Silence, the experimentation on POWs in The Sea and Poison, and the pornography industry and sex trade in Scandal. In Wonderful Fool his readers see some of the gangs, spend time with the prostitutes, and go around the slums of Tokyo with a hitman, but all as seen from a holy heart of love, it seems clear to me. Endo is not content to remain on the surface of things- his art is nobler than that and his love more burning than that. He brings his reader with him to touch the nerves that run so deep they cross beyond his cultural moment to the universal heart of mankind.

His characters always act from weakness and sorrow and struggle and failure. Gaston, the socially inept, the ugly, the slow-minded, reaching out to Japan with the most powerful thing in the world, love, but covered in a ball of rags.

Like Scandal this novel contained characters deeply effected by warcrimes that those close to them had participated in. The hitman Endo (Endo likes to make the criminal characters reflect identity with him in some way in some of his novels, naming the hitman Endo or making the main character of Scandal a Christian writer, like Endo, of a Life of Christ.) turns to a life of hatred and coldblooded murder when faced with his brother's having carried out orders to burn the occupants of a village and the brother's subsequent framing by his commanding officers. Gaston persistantly, doggedly, beyond all civil tepid-ity, urges Endo from a position of weakness not to go through with his plot of revenge on the officers. Gaston, despite his outer weakness and failure, is a real man, as the character Takamori discerns, because he takes a stand for the right thing despite his weaknesses that he could have so easily taken as excuses not to do what he should. It is integrity to the gospel that Endo has witnessed, bears witness to, keeps within himself. The "fool" is wonderful for this integrity, this sacred obedience, this longsuffering love, which endures blows and persecutions by the ones he is trieing to help, and which has takes the courage to recognize that he can and must help, that he must, despite all his weakness and absurdity in the eyes of the world, come to Japan for love. Hallelujah!

Endo ends by tieing Gaston's mysterious end into the early Japanese story, "The Tale of the Bamboo Cutter."

Only a real fool would pass this one up
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2005-03-28
Endo's novel is a marvelously winning and affecting story about the wanderings of a saintly Frenchman (and descendant of Napoleon) through the mean streets of post-war Tokyo.

You have maybe met someone like Gaston Bonaparte? The sort of man who apologizes when you step on his foot; who'd rather be cheated than think someone dishonest. Who is, naturally, held in a sort of weary pity by his family and in complete scorn by almost anyone else.

Endo addresses in this novel what it is that world values and what it does to a man who who is apart from those values. While the rest of the world cannily pursues it's own ends (survival, or better, and reproduction) Gaston is --quite unintentionally--pursuing that proffession which is revered in name but entirely held in contempt in actual practice. Gaston is maybe not a man who is good for much, certainly not in the world's eyes -but sainthood has ever been the most egalitarian of vocations.

There is a powerful case made for man's free will implicitly in this, but also in the novel's character, Endo, who is the opposite and the reflection of Gaston. He too though, is pursuing his end regardless of even himself -to the extent of refusing to take antibiotics for a tuberculosis infected lung.

Perhaps the novel's most poignant theme is it's message that even at our most debased and broken, God has not forgotten or given up on us. Endo's illustration of this is original and startling; Gaston chooses to follow after Endo at a cost and in a way that could only be called insane by anyone the world would call sane.

Endo's writing is simple and elegant and executed in an exciting, almost cinematic manner. It keeps the reader turning the pages through the book's all too short duration. If I had to say something critical about this book, I might mention that the writing is not as smooth as some of Endo's later works -it lacks subtlety at moments and there are plot possibilites which are raised and not pursued. That is just nothing though, to the whole of how wonderful this book really is.



Owens
Abraham Lincoln: The Man & His Faith
Published in Paperback by Tyndale House Publishers (1981-08-31)
Author: G. Frederick Owen
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Average review score:

Outstanding review of Lincoln's faith and convictions!
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 13 total.
Review Date: 2000-02-18
This book is an excellent source for information not generally discussed about Lincoln's faith and his morals. Very well researched with a detailed bibliography. A must read!

A Man of Faith
Helpful Votes: 17 out of 18 total.
Review Date: 2004-01-26

To study Abraham Lincoln is to study character. I would be hard-pressed to think of a person who lived since the time of Christ that so fully embodied the qualities and character of a Christian. He was a man who lived with humble faith and firm convictions and seemed always to direct himself by what was right.

Perhaps no other character in history other than Jesus has been written about as much as Abraham Lincoln. There are literally hundreds of books that trace his life, from its humble beginnings in the backwoods of Kentucky to its conclusion at the hands of an assassin. This book does not attempt to provide an exhaustive biography of his life. Rather, it traces the growth of Lincoln as a Christian. It traces the roots of his faith in the teachings of his mother and shows how his faith was tested and sharpened through his life. It shows how the wisdom which made him famous was godly wisdom, learned through a lifetime of humility and submission to God.

Perhaps the most striking thing about Lincoln's life is that while he lived a life of moral purity that would be the envy of man Christians, for the greater part of his life he was not a believer. It was only near the end, riding across the battlefield at Gettysburg to deliver his famous address, that he could say he fully dedicated himself to God. Though he was a good man and a moral man, he did not actually become a Christian until that time. Through his life prior to that time it was his mother's faith and her teaching that had carried him through life's trials and temptations.

The author's extensive research has led him to pivotal moments in Lincoln's faith. The most important influence was his mother, who raised Lincoln with awe for and respect of the Bible. His mother, who died when Lincoln was just a young boy, made him promise that he would live as she had taught him and to keep the Lord's commandments. This promise shaped his life as many times in life he overcame temptation by thinking of his mother's words. Other pivotal moments in his life were the death of his fiancée and the later death of his son. Both of these events shook him to the core of his being, but God sent people into his life to comfort him and minister to him during these times. In the end, we see, these events left him stronger and helped lead him to making a commitment to God.

When we trace Lincoln's life we can see how God was preparing him for the task He had appointed to him - the task of saving the nation. We see how the development of his character, his faith and his relationships all led to him becoming a great statesman. We see how these elements brought him through this time and how he stood firm in them until the time of his death. It was these elements that made him one of the most beloved men in the nation's history.

Abraham Lincoln serves as an inspiration to me. I dream of being a man of Lincoln's character and dream of being able to write and express myself as Lincoln did. I dream of having his simple, humble wisdom.

This book is well-written, well-researched and well-documented. I give it my highest recommendation.

Gripping read
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2004-04-15
If you want to get a true sense of Lincoln, then this book is for you. It is a well written and an incredibly detailed narrative chronological account of Lincoln's life, filled with lots of examples of stories that Lincoln expounded, and minute details of major events in his life. A book I will read again and again.

Inspiring Integrity
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2003-12-04
This book reveals the humble faith of a man whose simple convictions guided him through the fiery trials of the U.S. Civil War. Owen documents Lincoln's passion for truth and integrity that inspired his countrymen then and now. Growing personally even as his stature and influence as a statesman spread across the seas, Lincoln's faith is evident from his mother's early influence through the end of his life as quotes throughout the text reveal.

Owens
America the Beautiful: A Song to Celebrate the Wonders of America (Patriotic Songs)
Published in Library Binding by Picture Window Books (2003-01)
Authors: Katharine Lee Bates, Marsha Qualey, and Ann Owen
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Average review score:

America is the Beautiful
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2004-11-06
A visual record of a cross-country trip that was inspired by the poem America the Beautiful with vibrant, expressive watercolors set in pastels and earthy tones.

There are fourteen panoramas in this thirty-two page book that covers east to west and north to south. One line of the first verse is placed on one side among the two-pages. The waterfalls appear misty with the dark clouds looming behind. This image was captured in rainbow colors tapering off as the water hits the bottom. The rolling hills are dotted in pinks, purples and greens as the spacious skies flow across the page.

Then we have the calm ness of the bulls or buffalo grazing before turning to find the purple mountains majesties. The fruited plains consist of teal green and blues showing a few people working in the fields. This is a beautiful picture that gives the image of working in the fields as rewarding and serene. The second page with America! as the text is spectacular with tall bare trees as if you were standing down at the bottom looking up at them. It appears to be a moment captured of a father and son looking at the forest.

This is a beautiful one-of-a-kind book that deserves to be sitting on the coffee table to highlight the splendor in these images set to this patriotic song. Inside are man-made wonders, natural ones, ancient dwellings, glaciers, desert, sea and rain forests. The colors evoke a range of emotions as you flip through the pages of America the Beautiful. Now that I have these portraits nestled in my memory the song will take on such new meaning.

Readers young and old can delight in the beauty that can be found along the roads traveling inside the United States. This would make a great gift for anyone planning summer excursions within the country. America the Beautiful would be appreciated by older relatives to remind them of the locations they have visited as well as offer the younger ones a sense of the beauty that is found at these places while learning the words of the poem and singing the song.

Review by Livingston Parent Journal
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2004-06-21
Samuel Ward (1847-1903) was the organist at Grace Episcopal Church in Newark in 1882. One day a melody popped into his head as he was riding the boat back from Coney Island. He called it "Materna" and it was first published in 1888.

Katharine Lee Bates (1859-1929) was an English professor at Wellesley College in Massachusetts. In 1893 she made a trip by train to Colorado. From the to of Pikes Peak she saw the Rocky Mountains in one direction and the Great Plains in the other, and she felt inspired to write about the beauty of America. Her poem was published in the Fourth of July issue of The Congregationalist in 1895. Her poem was popularly sung to Ward's tune, and they were first published together in 1910.(...)

Later in the 1900s Neil Waldman was staying at a kibbutz in Israel. His friend Moti Shuvai insisted that they take a road trip together through America. They traveled from New York through the Northern Rockies, down along the Pacific Coast, back through the Southwest and the South to New York, 13,000 miles. Waldman combines his sixteen paintings, "a visual record of that first cross-country trip", with the words to "America the Beautiful", written by Katharine Lee Bates, to make a children's book that celebrates the scenic glory of America. "...it should inspire readers with a desire to see these wonders for themselves."(School Library Journal)

In the foreword he says this, "...I have traveled to four continents and more than a score of countries, but nothing I have seen can match the magnificent splendor that lies within our own borders."

Parents will have a chance to tell about when they have visited these places, or make plans with their children to do so, because an appendix describes all of the places featured in the paintings. They include Niagara Falls, The Great Smoky Mountains, The Grand Canyon and the California Redwoods. Families also could talk about the beautiful places in Michigan or even Livingston County that Bates and Waldman unfortunately never had a chance to see. Or other places you have visited that are not included like Florida, Alaska, or Hawaii.

This book also helps to make art and poetry accessible to children of all ages, and each child can relate to it in his own way. The folks at Publishers Weekly relate to it like this: "...he renders each vista in thick, impressionistic strokes from a predominantly violet palette, choosing his colors as if from a paradigmatic sunset." (If that helps you at all.)

Also included are all four stanzas and sheet music.

It has wondeful illustrations.
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 1998-12-11
The book has good illustrations and it has the song five times. The illustrations go very nicely with the words to the song.

Great for kids!
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2002-03-05
I wanted to just "read" the book to the kids. But gosh, I started singing it. And did they love it. I sang and flipped pages as fast as I could. Over and over. I teach preschool and this was America week. This was pretty much the only book about America their "level." It has beautiful "impressionistic" painitings of all sorts of beautiful and significant places in America that you can talk about. And if you are proud and interested, the kids will be too. We sit on a map rug so the kids are getting familiar with all our landmarks. But this book helps learn the song and gets them familiar with our nation. The last page has a picture of the Statue of Liberty in the harbor, "from sea to shining sea." I felt so good to read this to the kids. Please get this to make not only children feel good about where they come from, but also you as well!

Owens
Around the House : Reflections on Life Under a Roof
Published in Hardcover by Villard (1998-08-11)
Author: David Owen
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Excellent Read
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-21
Want to learn a lot about homes and home repairs but hate boring manuals? This book is the one for you. The book is a simple exploration of the authors world. During his journey he comes across great chestnuts of information. For those of us that hat boring pictures and want real world experiences this book is a must.

Dave Barry meets Bob Vila
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2000-02-28
For fans of David Owen's earlier book, The Walls Around Us, the style of this book will be familiar. Although it's less informative than the earlier book, Owen's musings about home ownership and home repair are very entertaining.

He is the most consistent humorist today
Helpful Votes: 14 out of 14 total.
Review Date: 1999-01-26
Owen can bury his funniest lines in his grand understated way. I haven't read a book of his that didn't make me laugh out loud, and this is no exception. If you haven't read him yet, this is a fine start.

this is a wonderful, interesting, humourous, literate book -
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 1998-11-29
This is a wonderful book - I bought it through amazon.com of course! - and I HIGHLY RECOMMEND it to anyone who enjoys the essay-form and is interested in the vissitudes of modern life. Humourous in an understated way and literate without being pretentious. BUY THIS BOOK and be prepared for a treat. A good Christmas present as well.

Owens
The Book Of Wheat Weaving And Straw Craft: From Simple Plaits To Exquisite Designs
Published in Paperback by Sterling (1998-12-31)
Author: Morgyn Owens-Celli
List price: $18.95
New price: $30.10
Used price: $22.63

Average review score:

A Good Resource for Wheat Weavers
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2001-11-13
Along with a fascinating history of wheat weaving in ancient times, this book offers clear instructions and excellent photographs for a variety of projects. It also gives an estimate for the skill and time required for each project. If you are a Wheat Weaver or an aspiring weaver, this book is well worth adding to your library.

Excellent
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2000-02-19
This is the perfect gift for anyone interested in craft work. It has excellent pictures and the step by step instructions are easy for beginners to follow. As well as projects for the advanced weaver.

Wonderful, easy to follow instructions!
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 1999-01-02
Simply wonderful book! Great pictures as well as easy to follow line drawings and instructions make it easy to produce beautiful works of art. The author has included a wealth of information between the covers of this book. It is a wonderful addition to any book collection - whether you weave or not!

Beautiful photos! Complete, easy to follow directions.
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 1998-02-12
This is the best book on straw weaving I've found so far. It includes photos and drawings of every technique. I have had no trouble following any of the instructions. Each project contains a short piece of folklore that pertains to the piece. The pictures are so beautiful, it also makes a good coffee table book.


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