Richard Books
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One of the bestReview Date: 2008-01-12
Great purchase!Review Date: 2008-01-07
True Oregon flavor - a must Pinot Noir fansReview Date: 2003-03-11
What's really interesting to me is that almost every recipe in the book goes very well with a nice Oregon Pinot Noir.
Well-received giftReview Date: 2001-11-25
Flavorful, earthy foodReview Date: 2001-01-30


MagneticReview Date: 2008-10-05
PARRY DID GOOD!!!Review Date: 2001-12-06
New Wyatt Earp StoryReview Date: 2000-01-30
It certianlly got me to wondering what might have happened if Wyatt had a son. I look foward to his next book and I am sure the readers of Winter Wolf will also. This is a book well worth the time.
A great read!Review Date: 1999-11-14
The Serial Novel lives - and opens a great vista on Alaska.Review Date: 1999-10-27

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A Book for Unappreciated Nursing AssistantsReview Date: 1999-07-24
Book to Share with Family Members of Nursing Home ResidentsReview Date: 1999-07-24
A much needed antidote for bashing Nursing HomesReview Date: 1999-07-24
Uplifting meditations for sharing in a nursing homeReview Date: 1998-06-15
Stories that would be lost without this excellent book.Review Date: 1999-07-24

Used price: $74.99

A Must Have for the Boxer LoverReview Date: 2008-04-27
World of the BoxerReview Date: 2008-02-25
A "must have" for Boxer enthusiastsReview Date: 2006-03-23
Absolutely fantastic Boxer Book-Rick Tomita's expertise +200Review Date: 1998-12-22
Simply the bestReview Date: 2001-10-29

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Reads like a novelReview Date: 2008-02-20
Lots of TextReview Date: 2003-06-12
Wow!Review Date: 2002-09-05
Best of the BunchReview Date: 2003-01-23
100% SatisfactionReview Date: 2002-10-30
I'm sure the 14 percent have this book already and that they're reading it aloud to their kids every night before bed, wiping tears from the kids' faces, letting them know how deep and wide the Yankees history is.
If you're the other 86 percent, you ought to be reading it too. First, because there's something devilishly satisfying in reading about the early days, when the team was nearly shut out of Manhattan, playing on a sloppy, cobbled together frield with a sawamp in right. Second, because as you turn the pages you come to realize that from DiMaggio to Mantle, from Bucky Dent to Reggie to Paul O'Neill and El Duque, these guys and the things they've done (sometimes to you, sometimes in spite of you) are part of your history, part of how you remember and imagine your life. An third, because it's insanely thorough, full of details you've forgotten or never knew, and very good looking.
Stout started this series with Red Sox Century in 2000. Dodger Century is in the works. These are rich, dazzling books, standard-setters, fully-realized, complicated portraits of the ways a team and a game weave in and out of politics, history and popular culture.
O'Neill's sister contributes an essay that sums up the series appeal much better than I can: 'In our family we tell stories. We don't really Talk. We let baseball articulate the hopes and fears that we'd never consider telling each other.'"
In this case, I found the review was completely accurate. Of the spate of books out now that claim to tell the history of this team, this book, in almost 500 pages of words and photographs, is the only one up to its subject. If you don't believe me, or ESPN, I suggest you read the excerpt about the birth of the team - even hard core Yankee fans will learn something new.

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The Art and Feel of Yellowstone CountryReview Date: 2003-11-03
My God! It's awesome!Review Date: 2003-03-12
Slice of Wyoming's PastReview Date: 2003-02-17
Yellowstone CountryReview Date: 2002-08-21
Back in TimeReview Date: 2002-09-12

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A great practical and inspirational guide for the FutureReview Date: 2001-05-15
A great practical and inspirational guide for the FutureReview Date: 2001-05-15
A practical and inspirational guide to the FutureReview Date: 2001-05-15
The future is not what it used to beReview Date: 2001-02-27
Do yo want to succeed tomorrow?Review Date: 2001-02-27

A Writer's WriterReview Date: 2000-12-28
"Eleven Kinds of Loneliness" is a delicious work.Review Date: 2000-09-07
A Masterful CollectionReview Date: 2006-08-29
Only the LonelyReview Date: 1999-06-17
Richard Yates writes about ordinary men, women and children -- "loners" leading solitary existences. A few stories, such as "Doctor Jack-O'-Lantern" and "Jody Rolled the Bones", are filled with bittersweet humor; others, such as "Fun With a Stranger" are downright sad. But don't think Yates is some depressed, manic-depressive writer, because he's not. Rather, his words, his characters strike you in a way you never thought possible, making you want to read them over and over again.
Yeats has got it downReview Date: 1998-04-09


Very Helpful.Review Date: 2007-09-30
Fantástica colección de ejemplos...Review Date: 2006-01-31
A mi modo de ver, le faltaría un poco más de organización a la hora de agrupar las cartas, es complicado en este caso (y curiosamente no lo es en el de Resumés) el diferenciar el trabajo al que va destinada la carta, salvo si uno lee la carta.
Por lo demás, los ejemplos son muy buenos y prácticos.
Carlos Ortega
2006-01-31
Outstanding Book!Review Date: 2000-01-27
Outstanding Book - A great help!Review Date: 2000-01-27
Author does a great job of describing how to write a variety of different cover letters. I particularly liked his step-by-step, by-the- numbers approach. Makes cover letter writing a breeze! Highly recommended!
Outstanding Book - A great help!Review Date: 2000-01-27
Author does a great job of describing how to write a variety of different cover letters. I particularly liked his step-by-step, by-the- numbers approach. Makes cover letter writing a breeze! Highly recommended!

His Best Yet!!!Review Date: 2008-08-19
As Napolean tries to increase his world domination, Drinkwater finds himself involved in the blockade of the French/Spanish fleet, eventually taken prisoner and on one of the enemy ships during the epic battle of Trafalger.
I'm not going to spend a lot of time extolling this authors virtues, except to say they are legend and apparant. This is his best yet.
Richard Woodman's SeriesReview Date: 2008-01-27
5 rakings top and bottom for climactic Tragalgar actionReview Date: 2000-01-18
1805 starts in 1804 with Napoleon threatening to invade England. Drinkwater, now a captain, must patrol the English Channel to ensure that the French cannot bring a huge army across and subdue the stubborn English. With the powerful Royal Navy besting the French at every tack, was an invasion of England ever a real threat? Woodman makes a strong case that the answer is yes. Woodman, through letters from Drinkwater's wife, conveys the tension that was felt by English people at the time. Whether the threat was real or not, the reader is convinced that it was.
The reader also gets a sense of the loneliness felt by sailors with months or years of separation from their families. Drinkwater becomes a father figure to Midshipman Gillespy. Woodman presents the irony of Drinkwater being a father to a boy who is not his own while his own son is fatherless at home. The loss of fathers for indefinite periods of time or permanently is one of war's great tragedies and Woodman portrays it with some understatement.
Modern readers also know that 1805 culminated in the Battle of Trafalgar, which was Britain's greatest naval victory and perhaps the most decisive naval battle in history. Drinkwater has a unique perspective on the battle. Woodman's description of the battle through Drinkwater's eyes is a vision of hell, a vision that rings very true. Even though the reader sees the battle from the English perspective and the battle is a victory, Woodman emphasizes the tragedy.
1805 is a little uneven but Woodman more than makes up for this by his description of the events leading up to the Battle of Trafalgar and the description of the battle itself from Drinkwater's vantage point. 1805 is a powerful novel that has probably not received the recognition that it should. Without Trafalgar this is just another naval novel but with Trafalgar it's a masterstroke. It's every man's duty to read this one!
6th in this exciting series.Review Date: 2002-11-05
The threat of now-Emperor Napoleon's invasion requires Nat's constant vigilance over the French ports, destroying any likely transports and incidentally aiding the spy network in their subversive attempts to overthrow the 'little corporal'. During this routine blockading, the intransigent midshipman Lord Walmsley pushes his status too far and ends up over a cannon wearing a check shirt, then a transfer out of Nat's hair - but who turns up in the future, like a bad penny.
Despite the blockade, the Frogs break out and, in
company with the Dons, apparently head to the W.Indies, leaving Nat to wait for Nelson appearing from the Med. Nat gets a
transfer to a 74, but in a turn of events he is captured by the Spaniards and flung into prison with his officers. The loathsome
Santhonax appears again to quiz Nat and do more dirty deeds as the book closes.
Trafalgar forms the high point of
the story, with Nat only able to view the carnage from the orlop of the French 'Bucentaure' 80, where he was transferred
as prisoner with little Gillespy.
We see more of the character of Mr.Q, Mr. Frey & Lt.Rogers in this book as well as more
of the strategy of the defence of Britain, as Nat becomes more accepted by those in command. A small reference in a letter
from his wife, tells us that Nat has fostered poor little Billy Cue Maxted, the Mid whose legs were blown off in the action
with 'Requin' off Greenland (in the previous volume 'Corvette'). This touching generosity, the tenderness he shows to little
Mr. Gillespy and his encouragement of Mr.Frey reveals a different side to the cool, collected tactician we normally see.
Mr.Woodman's
writing gets better and better with each story - more fluid and confident, yet providing another level of suspense under the
surface; meanings are implicit rather than voiced; inferences made by subtle suggestion rather than bald statement, which
makes this a real pleasure to read.
As good as the best in the genre. *****
A well researched historical novelReview Date: 2000-12-07
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Local foods and people. A must for anyone who enjoys food and life!