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Related Subjects: Peter Pitt Parker Park Powell Phillips Plantagenet Perry
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KavikReview Date: 2007-08-28
The Greatest Book I've Ever Read...Review Date: 2007-06-06
This book takes place in Alaska. Kävik gets taken away from is loving family. My favorite part of this book was when Kävik finds his way back to his way back up north through impossible Glaciers and rugged trine and had to travel 2000 miles to find his loving family in Copper City. In the book the Theme I personal think its never give up hope cause Kävik never gave up hope on finding his family even with a dislocated hip didn't stop Kävik . I liked all the hard ships Kävik had to go through like fighting another wolf to win his mate (who dies in the book) and traveling 2000 miles I would change nothing.
Justin says - Go KavikReview Date: 2007-03-14
I am doing a report on Kavik The Wolf dog. Written by Walt Morey . It takes place in Alaska and Washington State ; the main characters are Kavik, Andy, and George Hunter
Bye Kavik
Kavik the Wolf dog is about a dog that just won a big sled dog race a rich man named George Hunter (who lives in Seattle) he wanted him because he won. A man named Smiley John came to pick up Kavik and put him on the plane. Kavik got put in a big cage. The plane ended up crashing. The men died. But Kavik was still alive, until Andy found him.
Do you like this book?
I like this book because it is full of action like shooting and dog fights. This book is very good. It is sad sometimes. There are parts were you feel like you are right with Kavik like when Kavik was very sick in the first part of the story. This book has a lot of heart jumping parts in it, like when Andy was going to shoot Kavik and Kavik was still alive. Also when Kavik got a girlfriend I think that Walt Morey did a very good job in the middle of the story I liked the middle of the story.
Recommend or not
I like this book because I like dogs and stories that keep your eyes glued to the pages. I would recommend this book to all my friends and give it a five star
Wolf DogReview Date: 2004-12-20
Book ReviewReview Date: 2005-10-21

Thank you, Remy...Review Date: 2008-09-17
Sleep well old snake, we're eternally entertained.
Joseph
Old favorite....Review Date: 2008-01-01
it today. The pictures and wonderful little rhymes and
verse are as amazing today as they were over 30 yrs. ago.
You cannot go wrong in giving a child a Remy Charlip book.
Enjoy!!!
A Favorite of MineReview Date: 2004-05-13
The best Aunt!Review Date: 2004-04-17
What a thrill to find this book again!Review Date: 2004-07-04
This book is a nostalgic treasure that has definitely stood the test of time, I've no doubt it continues to enthrall young people today. And I'm very pleased for Remy Charlip, in finding in these reviews that SO MANY of us remember this book from 20-30 years ago, went out of our way to track it down, and continue to share this book with future generations!

Used price: $0.24
Collectible price: $15.95

Everyone Should Read This Diary!Review Date: 2008-03-22
Page after page reaffirms God's great mercy. Reading the words that Jesus actually spoke to St. Faustina is so moving. You will want to meditate upon them. I find it is a great book to take with me to Eucharistic Adoration.
So, if you only have a couple of Catholic books in your home, this should be one of them.
This is Not the Diary of St. Faustina - this is Part of the DiaryReview Date: 2008-04-07
The diary itself is the story, as a diary would be, of St. Faustina's life and her interactions with Jesus and His messages throughout her life.
The sayings alone, without knowing the content of what was happening at the time of each saying, can easily make it seem like something totally different then when you combine the whole picture of what had and was happening when Jesus spoke each quote to Faustina.
(it is the same as only getting one side of the conversation, very disjointed and out of contest).
That said, if one knows the whole story and has read Faustina's diary, then this is a nice book just to be able to have the actual sayings of Jesus to St. Faustina in one compact and easily to review book.
The complete Diary:
Diary of Saint Maria Faustina Kowalska - in Burgundy Leather: Divine Mercy in My Soul
Diary of Saint Maria Faustina Kowalska (Mass market version): Divine Mercy in My Soul
Diary of St. Maria Faustina Kowalska (Polish Version)
Very well written, easy and fast paced story of St. Faustina's life:
Faustina: Apostle of Divine Mercy
Another book that sorts out parts of the Diary:
Revelations of Divine Mercy: Daily Readings from the Diary of Blessed Faustina Kowalska
The Diary of Saint FaustinaReview Date: 2007-05-18
Buy the book and study it.Review Date: 2007-08-15
I am one of those souls. At times I felt as if Christ was speaking to me through her. This book helped me so much to understand more fully how vast is the love of God. So vast that none of us will ever be able to understand it. Much larger than the worst sins that any of us can ever commit.
This book made me more aware of my own sin on another level than what I was previously aware of. This book has taught me new forms of prayer that have helped draw me closer to Christ.
This book has taught me more about how to love God. It has greatly enriched my interior life. My relationship with God has now moved up to a higher level.
It has also helped me to understand more about the living presence of God in the Eucharist.
I am not Catholic, I am an Episcopalian, (but I am rather Catholic at heart). And although I have always believed in the living presence of Christ in the bread and wine, it has now moved to a higher level of understanding and reverence. I anxiously look forward to every oportunity I have to join with the living Christ in the Eucharistic feast.
The book is a bit long and does repeat a bit, but it is beautiful and well worth the time to read.
My copy is underlined, and marked with sticky notes and folded over pages of places that I have returned to again and again to meditate on.
I have nothing but praise for this book and recommend it to everyone of any religion.
Daily thoughts for the soulReview Date: 2007-05-25

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CUTE!!!Review Date: 2008-01-01
Mama I wanna read Mr Carp!Review Date: 2007-07-20
Favorit kid's book ever.Review Date: 2007-07-01
Every new child in our family gets a copy of this book and it has become a favorite for all of them.
A Fish Out of WaterReview Date: 2007-02-19
My little grandson is two years old and he has 3 goldfish. I thought the book would be appropriate for him -- and he loves it.
So Cool!Review Date: 2007-05-16


Great Title For A Well-Told Story Of A Shockingly Gritty LifeReview Date: 2008-04-17
As for Futureproof itself, Frank Daniels has written a gritty but eloquently-told page-turner about an intelligent but perilously flawed young man growing up in 1990's Atlanta, and his descent into an out of control life fueled by hard-core drug use, promiscuity, and sensory inputs of the most destructive kind, including stints of self-mutilation.
As Daniels' main character, called Luke, though basically a stand-in for the author, tumbles from a respectable suburban public school (the chapter where he is involved in a play is deceptively hilarious) into a world in which the primary pursuit is the next high, readers are alternately dragged, coaxed and invited along through the back alleys of crack dealers and into parties where drugs are mixed, shared and swapped, and the threat of overdose, visited more than once in Futureproof, lies ever-present. As we read of Luke's tales of thefts undertaken to fund his habits, of odd jobs, including a stint as an extra on a broadcast miniseries, the sense of tragedy doubles and re-doubles as this obviously intelligent and perceptive youth sinks ever lower into a life so increasingly dreary that were it not based on stark reality, it might almost seem melodramatic. When in a remarkably depressing turn of events Luke finally reaches what seems life's absolute nadir---his drug-addicted infant son is taken into state custody---his circumstances seem to find a way even then for things to slide still painfully farther.
If this was all Futureproof was about, then there might be little to recommend it except as a cure for happiness, but I'm glad to say Luke's story (and Daniels') does come with a redemptively happy ending. And yet...if I have any criticism of this novel it's in the ending itself. I obviously don't want to say too much and be the reigning spoiler queen of Amazon.com but Futureproof's sudden ending felt incomplete. I stared at the last page and thought, "OK, so what happened next?" I don't know if a sequel to Futureproof is planned, and if so, then disregard the comment I'm about to make, but I would have liked to have read one final chapter that emphasized what I think was too lightly mentioned at the end, and after having traveled to post-modern Hell and back with Luke, it would have been nice to read about him after his personal reformation and transformation into what he brought himself up to become. After I finished Futureproof, I kept thinking, "Luke deserved a moment of redemptive glory, Frank, how come you didn't give it to him...?"
But, it's N. Frank Daniels' novel, not mine, and he did a fine job of telling a hard-core story that in many other hands would have been an unreadable, alienating mess. I was glad to hear Futureproof was picked up by a major publisher, and I do hope the years ahead bring much well-deserved success to this bravely candid writer!
Refreshing!Review Date: 2007-08-15
There was no forgetting Futureproof. I was immediately drawn to the narrator's conversational (and often caustic) voice, and after that, the characters themselves - each of them real and complex - added to the book's allure.
It's also getting inside people and taking vicarious pleasure in the things we really aren't supposed to take pleasure in that really attracts me to reading any particular book. (If you can't be improper in fiction, where can you be?) Daniels provides one such guilty-pleasure scene on page 66:
"I kick him hard in the ribs, hear the wind rush out of him. Then I take my boot to his face a few times for good measure. He doesn't move anymore after that.
"Should I relish these moments? Probably not. But I do. I can't stop kicking him."
Futureproof is deliciously hardcore and a wonderful read.
AmazingReview Date: 2007-06-21
One of the most inspiring, beautiful novels written
Sympathy for the DevilReview Date: 2007-06-15
The writing style emulates the behavior and thoughts of Luke's narration. Sometimes seemingly disjointed vignettes ultimately tie together to give a mosaic view of his increasingly troubled life. Visceral descriptions of hard-core drug use are shown as growing ever more commonplace and what starts out as mostly innocent adolescent substance abuse at the occasional party turns into full-blown addiction. To anyone who grew up in the 90s, it is hard to not connect the beginnings of Luke's story. And it becomes all too easy to see how he could make his choices.
While the steps on the path may be disturbing, it is hard to pull away. As the story progresses you can almost feel the numbness to the prior behavior creep over you as the newer debaucheries put the old ones to shame. A compelling read from a new artist with something to say. Give it a read.
Over at the Frankenstein Place ...Review Date: 2008-01-26
Frank Daniel's tale of teenage insecurity and discomfort is set in the wasteland of 1990's Atlanta, Georgia - where white-flight and bright-flight were probably the two most overused phrases regarding this point in Atlanta's struggling history. Daniel's drop kicks your senses from the suburb of his single parent home that is cluttered with siblings and homo-habilis era man-friends of his mother's - directly into a lifestyle and life that no one would sanely wish for, but many of us have survived through. Sometimes raw and real and other times light, overall "Futureproof" is a solid piece of literature.
Frank's literary doppelganger, Luke, comes across as the Black Swan of his generation but seemingly finds himself embroiled in the arms of more women than Highsmith's `Dickie Greenleaf' ever dreamt of on his best day. It is this element though, that brings the reader some often-needed light-heartedness as the tale slips into the dark perimeters of drug-use, mindless shift work, couch-lock and lost vagabond youths working on their much-coveted X-Box tans.
The book is quite absorbing overall, full of teen-angst and coming-of-age matter. I came up with a list of great coming-of-age (bildungsroman) books by decade and believe his might just be that for the 00's.
1940's: Richard Wright's "Black Boy"
1950's: Jack Kerouac's "The Subterraneans"
1960's: S.E. Hinton's "The Outsiders"
1970's: Robert Cormier's masterpiece "The Chocolate War"
1980's: Bret Easton Ellis's (Los Angeles Nightmare) "Less Than Zero"
1990's: Haruki Murakami's "Norwegian Wood" & Irvine Welsh's "Trainspotting"
And now, if handled properly by time, "Futureproof" might just take a place in the revered list.
Daniel's does keep you closely engaged not just for the big events that fuel the story but the minor happenings that boggle the mind and typically foreshadow some change within the narrative. A writing style that is unforgiving as Bukowski's "The Genius of the Crowd" and at times as detailed as James Clavell's "Shogun". Frank Daniels: Poet Warrior on the nod delivers the goods, and not just in small ziplocks either.
Collectible price: $115.00

Childhood FavoriteReview Date: 2008-09-05
I'm fascinated to discover that other little girls love it, too.Review Date: 2008-07-14
Perhaps it was feeling that I was in the wrong family by some evil accident. I've been in therapy for many years, and needed every minute of it, so that feeling was accurate.
Perhaps it was the feeling, which also proved accurate, that my life would improve as soon as I got my own friends who cared about me which happened in early high school.
I held fiercely to the spirit of this book for many years.
When I found it, I took it to my therapist to prove to her that, even when I was little I felt strongly about these issues.
I also loved school and considered it my saving grace.
I read voraciously as soon as I learned how. And this is the only book from early on that I can clearly remember.
Anyone who wants to start a lovers of Little Witch club, get in touch with me.
I still read LOTS of fantasy books.
Back to my childhoodReview Date: 2007-12-03
I can't wait for my granddaughter to be old enough ot understand this story. It will be a "must read" at Halloween.
Rainy Day EcstacyReview Date: 2007-07-20
Childhood TreasureReview Date: 2007-05-01


Great!Review Date: 2008-10-11
Life as it was Meant to be LivedReview Date: 2007-12-28
We're Getting SHAPE'D Up in Canton OhioReview Date: 2007-10-01
Simple: Erik does an incredible job of making this stuff easy to use.
Helpful: The Spiritual profile that every participant leaves w/ helps the reader to succinctly understand what their next step for service is.
Authentic: if you're able to go through the small group curriculum ( video ) you'll seek Erik's authenticity. It's the real deal.
Passion: As you read the book you'll sense a desire to want to do something bigger than your normal everyday routine. You'll discover or rediscover your passion to impact lives or causes on a daily basis.
Experience: You must experience SHAPE either in book form or through the small group curriculum. Both are incredible resources!!
Helps to recognize spiritual strengths....Review Date: 2007-09-16
Finally a book that informs me that I can be me....Review Date: 2007-09-16

Used price: $2.72

stupendously brilliantReview Date: 2008-01-12
If you have been reading this series, you must have this. If you have no idea who P.C. Hodgell is, I would recommend you start with Godstalk and work your way to this 4th book in the series to familiarize yourself with Jame's universe.
Great Book, Bad ProofingReview Date: 2007-12-26
The story gets better - write more, Pat!Review Date: 2007-12-18
Wow. Amazing. I am thrilled, yes thrilled, to finally get hints and bits and pieces of the elaborate backstory that has lurked behind Jame's adventures. I feel that in this book we are finally given enough detail to have an inkling of understanding of the complex psychological issues that face so many of her characters.
Jame and Tori are wrestling with the same issues as ever, but here we finally start seeing the big picture, start really feeling their struggle and knowing it, rather than being told it exists. There seemed to be a bit more of a window into the internal life of the characters in this book, more detail about their childhood and especially more info about their father. Tori's deepseated response to the Shanir comes to make more sense.
A brilliant and fascinating book. God I hope there's another after it.
Great series!Review Date: 2007-11-26
Author commentReview Date: 2007-11-12

Good and SweetReview Date: 2007-12-16
Dawn's Early LightReview Date: 2007-10-11
Wonderful historical romance Review Date: 2007-04-12
Thanks to the Internet, I now know more about the author. Elswyth Thane (1900-1981, American) was a romance writer in her time. She wrote several books, but the Williamsburg series are her most popular.
I'd say while these novels have a healthy dose of history -- historical characters like Jefferson and Washington interact with our fictional characters in "Dawn's" -- they are first and foremost romance novels. Therefore, female readers might enjoy them more, which seems to be the case from the comments posted here!
Dawn's Early LightReview Date: 2006-08-19
Let Me Give You A Little AdviceReview Date: 2005-04-02

Still the best!Review Date: 2007-09-30
Great Book!Review Date: 2007-09-30
A genuine classic. Buy it for all boys between 7 and 15!Review Date: 2005-06-29
The early sixtys were the heydey of Avalon-Hill's tabletop sized board games with little cardboard counters representing everything from a single sargeant to an army corp. These games grew out of the minatures rules which would later contribute, along with the popularity of the `Lord of the Rings' novel to the creation of `Dungeons and Dragons' roleplaying games. Both Avalon-Hill styled and Dungeon and Dragons styled boardgames have been partially superceded by computerized versions of these simulations and, while I still fondly fondle my chit representing the 82nd airborne division as it participates in the Normandy invasion, I get much more satisfaction out of a good computerized version of the same campaign.
And yet, Wells' simplified minatures rules with no more than a few dozen pieces per side and firing success being determined by real live aiming, physics of ballistics, and the effect of wind deliver the same kind of charm evoked by that old Robert Lewis Stevenson poem of the young boy with his toy soldiers navigating the hills formed by his blankets lying over his outstretched legs.
I am not intimately familiar with minatures rules, but what I do know tells me that they are quite complicated with lots of tables based on the role of dice. Wells' rules are much simpler. And, he is not deeply involved in realistic landscapes which are so interesting to minatures hobbyists. Not a word is said here about cleaning and painting raw lead or tin soldiers. All our troops here are fully clothed straight out of the box. All the landscapes are created by nothing more complicated than the kind of plain wooden building blocks I so coveted when I was a kid. These are embellished with the outsides of houses painted or drawn on the plain side of wallpaper which is then folded and glued around the blocks. There is not interest with any ability to hide inside any of these houses, as this would simply slow things down and make the rules more complicated. The only other concern is that if rivers are part of the landscape that there are enough fording and bridged points to not funnel things too much into a single choke point.
The rules only deal with three kinds of troops, infantry, cavalry, and artillery. As this book was written in 1913, and Europe had largely been at peace for almost a hundred years since the defeat of Napoleon at Waterloo, it is not surprising that the strategies evolving from these three types of troops are strongly similar to Napoleonic battles. As this was the period of muskets, long range infantry fire was remarkably ineffective compared to the destruction caused by Napoleonic era artillery. To a person versed in 20th century wars, it is strange to see the lineup of forces at, for example, the Battle of Waterloo, where the guns were in front of the main lines of infantry rather than far to the rear. This was before the age of indirect artillery fire, which just began in the American Civil War and it's great mortars.
So, the only way our small forces can inflict damage at a distance is by little cannons which fire real live wooden projectiles and, a soldier is killed only if you actually succeed in knocking the little fellow down with the wooden pellet.
A similar combat simulation which existed in parallel with Wells' and other minatures' rules is the kind of wargame simulations invented by the German General Staff with the very German name of `Kriegspiel' or War Play. An expert in English Kriegspiel practice compares this professional exercize with Wells' game and finds the latter far more fun, as the Sandhurst (English Army Military Acadamy) version is weighed down with rulings from referees and the kind of tables of outcomes so familiar to modern manual wargame rules.
Remembering that this book was written in 1912-1913, it is chilling to read Wells' final assessment of the lack of proficiency of professional military men at this little game. The most chillingly Strangelovean statement is that `You have only to play at Little Wars three or four times to realize what a blundering thing Great War must be'. This was written in 1913!!!
One may be discouraged from reading this book by the prospect of reading 120 pages of game rules. This is not what this book is about. All the details of the rules are compressed into the last six pages. Everything which goes before is the stuff which is written to bring out the little boy in us all. And, the author knows nothing of politically correct gender washing, as he is firmly committed to the idea that this is an activity for little boys, and maybe girls who think like little boys.
A minor classic worthy of it's famous author.
Pick it upReview Date: 2006-04-13
A piece of wargaming historyReview Date: 2006-12-22
Related Subjects: Peter Pitt Parker Park Powell Phillips Plantagenet Perry
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