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

Scott
The BabyCenter Essential Guide to Pregnancy and Birth: Expert Advice and Real-World Wisdom from the Top Pregnancy and Parenting Resource
Published in Paperback by Amazon Remainders Account (2005-06-22)
Authors: Linda J. Murray, Editors of BabyCenter, Jim Scott, and Leah Hennen
List price: $14.95
New price: $4.04
Used price: $4.03

Average review score:

So Far So good
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-25
I really like the fact that they have information week by week about what you and the baby are going through. In addtion they have comments from mother's for each week. A lot of the time these comments are contradictory which helps to illustrate the point that every pregnancy is different and what you are going through is normal for some. I'm in my first trimester and i've read the first 14 weeks thouroughly and looked through the rest of the book as well. I like how the sections are split up and the sections at the end such as the "is it safe?" section are great. There are benefits to other books as well - one is that some of the information, such as information on specific symptoms, is talked about throughout the chapter and so it may not be as easy to search for answers to specific questions in these areas. However, I've really enjoyed this book and I think it's a great reference to have.

Great for Fact Lovers
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-15
I flipped through a bunch of books (and someone gave me What to Expect When You're Expecting). But The Baby Center's Guide had the most meat of those I looked at. I'm the type of person that wants the facts written in intelligent terms. The rest seemed "dumbed down" in comparison.

Simply the best guide to pregnancy
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-06
This is hands down the best pregnancy guide I've read. "What to Expect" is alarmist. "The Girlfriend's Guide" will quickly make you neurotic about your weight. The 2004 edition of "The Unofficial Guide to Having a Baby" is organizationally muddled. This book, however, is wonderful and everything you could ask for in a pregnancy reference guide.

The week-by-week pregnancy descriptions in "Essential Guide" are informative enough to satisfy your curiousity about what's going on with your body and your baby's development, but not so detailed that you feel creeped-out or overwhelmed. The tone of the book is never preachy or anxiety-inducing. The medical info is largely up-to-date and tailored to common American health care system practices. And there are helpful sections on "making the most of your changing look." Bravo! A superb resource I consult often and would recommend to any pregnant woman.

Best Preggo Book Out There!!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-04
This book was well-thout out, put together clearly, and features input from mothers at each stage (week) of pregnancy, which really helped me understand that everything I was going through was normal (and scientifically explicable). I'm a childcare provider and 1st time mom (now 16 months old), and I recommend and buy this book for all of my pregnant friends (even dads-to-be should read it).
Trust me, you won't be disappointed! I had 7 other pregnancy books given to me by friends/garage sales, and they all were terrible, common sense type books. Even the "What to Expect" series is so incredibly overrated...I have no idea why! Buy this book and you won't regret it. Oh, and you're welcome to check out my wish list on Amazon that I share with my expectant friends and family. I researched forever before deciding on each item and have nothing but terrific things to say about each one!

Good to have
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-09
Great week by week guide of what is going on. Good tips and things too look out for.

Scott
Charlie Parker Played Be Bop
Published in Paperback by Scott Foresman & Co (1999-03)
Author: Christopher Raschka
List price: $50.45

Average review score:

A Wonderful Resource
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-25
This book introduces jazz to a young audience. It explores the sounds, rhythms, and emotions of the genre through colorful pictures and rhythmic words similar to the beat of "scat" singing.
Lots of the words are there just for the sound of them. By focusing on the sound words, students could develop spelling strategies that help them move from phonemes, the sounds they make, to graphemes, the written representations of those sounds.

Charlie Parker Played Be Bop
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-31
This book is excellent. The illustrations and musical text allow for early readers to really enjoy and learn from this book. Perfect for preschool and kdg age. I used this book as the basis of a jazz unit, it worked wonderfully.

Incredible SCAT for musicians of all ages!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-30
"Charlie Parker Played Be Bop" was my son's favorite book when he was two and nine years later we still have fun reading it. I now purchase a copy for new parents to read to thier babies. As a speech language pathologist, I want to share to magic of words and the music they can make! This book is an absolute MUST read for all children.

My baby loves Charlie Parker
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-18
I wasn't sure how my little one would respond to this book even though I love it. If I ask, "Do you want to read about Charlie Parker?," she lights up and starts literally starts to bop. The baby digs it. Just more evidence that the jazz is a universal language. I like the introduction to poetry, rhythm and randomness ("Never leave your cat alone"). I bought two other copies and gave them to my friends for their babies.

How can overshoes have feet?
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-10
I am an elementary school music teacher with students ranging from pre-K to 5th grade. I read this book to all of my pre-K and kindergarten through second grade classes and sometimes the mood strikes me to read it to older students. There is something in here for most every age. Everyone loves it.

So why does Raschka draw chicken feet in such odd places, e.g., on overshoes, alphabet letters, pancake flippers?

Well, rumor has it that one day Charlie Parker was driving back to his boarding house and, as luck would have it, he hit and killed a chicken that had run out into the street from someone's front yard. Such chickens are called "yardbirds". The alleged events include Parker doing the unthinkable, namely, backing up his car, picking up the dead chicken (aka "roadkill"), taking it to his landlady (hey, it was fresh!), her cooking it, and him eating it. When friends heard this story, Parker was known forever after as "Yardbird", which was eventually shortened to just "Bird".

If you didn't catch the part about the chicken feet on your own, don't feel badly. Insiders like Rachka and myself know it and now you do too. Rachka has done a terrific job in providing a lot of feeling about some very notable personalities. Plus he does it with humor, some of which is very subtle.

My students probably have as much fun going through Parker's history as with the book itself. But all of that is just the preliminaries: I then have to read it several more times with the students reading and acting out the story. We have a rockin' good time.

Scott
Don't You Just Hate That?: 738 Annoying Things
Published in Paperback by Workman Publishing Company (2004-04-01)
Author: Scott Cohen
List price: $7.95
New price: $0.27
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $10.00

Scott
GUERMANTES WAY: PT. 1
Published in Hardcover by CHATTO AND WINDUS (1957)
Author: C.K.SCOTT MONCRIEFF (TRANSLATOR) MARCEL PROUST
List price:
Used price: $10.00
Collectible price: $75.00

Average review score:

Philosophy as narrative
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-12
Volume two of Le Proust's great work is a sensual delight. Part One (of Vol.2), by and large, is more about Swann's family and, of course, the agonizing and philosophizing in regard to "getting over" Miss Gilberte. There is much less about the narrator's family which ran the course throughout SWANN'S WAY. Stylistically, BUDDING GROVE is an absolute wonder. We are once again treated to the narrator's philosophies on life's ups and downs (how's that for a summation?). Once he gets to the fictitious seaside town of Balbec, the book surges--taking on the proverbial "life of its own". The reader is in the hotel room with him...and on the beach...and on the boardwalk, etc. It was a joy to see how Proust/Moncrieff would occasionally work in "street talk" with the mainstay of aureate and lyrical prose: a woman in Balbec is described as having "yellow hair and six inches of paint on her face and a carriage which reeked of harlot a mile away..." Delicious. Priceless.

Perception and cognition
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-09-12
I cannot imagine trying to read Proust's Everest of a novel until I've had enough life experience to be able to identify with his insights. How on earth was a man who died young and was confined to a bed for so many years able to learn so much about life and common human experience, emotion and perception? I don't know how, but I thank God that he was.

For modern readers, Proust is definitely an acquired taste that rewards patience. I never thought reading the works of one author would make those of others seem so much easier to read. But such is the case with Proust. Nevertheless, one shouldn't regard his writing as therapy or medicine; it may read like self help at times, with its frequent use of the first-person plural, but it is a story first of all. His writing is just more detailed and insightful than that of all but a handful of modern novelists.

Within a Budding Grove is a primer on patience and perception, one that will probably make you a better reader, perhaps a better writer, and certainly a more interesting human being. Struggle on patiently. You will get used to the labyrinthine sentences, paragraphs that run on for pages, and gargantuan chapters (if they can be called that) that don't really begin or end anywhere tidy. Eventually, you will likely come to enjoy it.

My only criticism: at times one does get annoyed by the slow pacing. For instance, I knew that this is the volume that introduces the reader to Albertine. But it did take about 600 pages for the narrator to meet her! That said, there are plenty of tasty morsels along the way. Read it, not so much for the simple story or the minutely detailed descriptions, but for the numerous insights and the astounding wisdom.

In Search of Lost Time Volume II Within a Budding Grove (Modern Library Classics)
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-04
Montcrief's translation, is the quintisential Proust. The, beautiful, florid prose is reminiscent of a time and a place that no longer exists, and captures the French aristocracy in the advent of WWI -- full of old-world trappings, yet abounding with subtle reminders of the globalization that was to follow. Proust's style and vision are directed admirably towards his artistic goal of appreciating art through sublimation, and express his idea that a true understanding of art comes first through appreciation, and then expression through a medium. This volume is full of Proust's own philosiphies on art, life and the people who abound in both. His observations, pointed and amusing, keep this volume relevant. Considering the wave of expatriate and existentialist writers who propogated Paris after the Great War, this book is truly the last in a line of works that view life in a grand, sweeping and elegant manner. Within a Budding Grove brought Proust fame and acclaim in his own time, and in ours can be seen as a masterpiece reflecting a time past, yet glimsping assiduously into the future. For those "in search of lost time" this is truly a great read.

beautiful
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2005-12-21
How can anyone summarize even a single volume of Proust's massive six volume novel? Within a Budding Grove (sometimes translated as In the Shadow of Young Girls in Flower) is the second installment of In Search of Last Time. We find the narrator perhaps marginally older on vacation with his grandmother living in a luxurious hotel in Balbec off the coast. This volume, paired with the first (Swann's Way), is really the introduction to the work entire if you can believe it. In it, the narrator perhaps matures slightly; he cultivates his keen awareness of art, meets new people, and ultimately falls out of love with Gilberte and falls in love with Albertine. His relationship with his grandmother is certainly expanded, and the reader comes to learn that the narrator is not merely motivated by a trivial pursuit of pleasure and bourgeois charm. He is in fact, a truly full human being, complete with fear, love, desire, and ambition. He meets one of my favorite characters in the whole book, the impressionist painter Elstir, a character clearly based Monet, Manet, Pissaro, and others. He introduces the narrator to Albertine through his paintings, and teaches him about the joys of life and art. There are some passages in this section of the book (the latter half) which I just can't resist from quoting,

"I could never have believed that I should now be dreaming of a sea which was no more than a whitish vapour that had lost both consistency and colour. But of such a sea Elstir, like the people who sat musing on board those vessels drowsy with the heat, had felt so intensely the enchantment that he had succeeded in transcribing, in fixing for all time upon his canvas, the imperceptible ebb of the tide, the throb of one happy moment; and at the sight of this magic portrait, one could think of nothing else than to range the wide world, seeking to recapture the vanished day in its instantaneous, slumbering beauty" (pg. 657).

also (how French is this?),

"For a convalescent who rests all day long in the flower-garden or an orchard, a scent of flowers or fruit does not more completely pervade the thousand trifles that compose his idle hours than did for me that colour, that fragrance in search of which my eyes kept straying towards the girls, and the sweetness of which finally became incorporated in me. So it is that grapes sweeten in the sun. And by their slow continuity these simple little games had gradually wrought in me also, as in those who do nothing else all day but lie outstretched by the sea, breathing the salt air and sunning themselves, a relaxation, a blissful smile, a vague dazzlement that had spread from brain to eyes" (pg. 669).

I certainly cannot add any insights into the greatness and profundity of this work which has not already been said by Edmund Wilson or Vladimir Nabokov. Within a Budding Grove is a deeply felt, beautiful and fleeting segment of one of the finest novels of the last century, I urge you to read it.

PROUST: NEED ONE SAY MORE?
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2005-08-28
.
This is a great copy of Vol. 2 of A la recherche du temps perdu [In Search of Lost Time].
Each volume in the septrology may be read individually as an independent novel.
This is, of course, the very best translation available in English; probably the very best that will ever be available in English: certainly the next best thing to reading the original French.

NOTE: Proust is not quick reading, and one who tries to read him too quickly will just as quickly lose the tread of the narrative.
This text has its own time scale, and the reader must adjust his/herself to the text--not the other way around.
In this stream of consciousness narrative, the narrator (/author) digresses as he speaks (/thinks): he digresses, digresses, digresses; and then, he returns, returns, returns to the point where he began. One has to follow his line of thought: this is the art and beauty of the text.

Proust's achievement is one of the greatest edifices of Western art, perhaps comparable only to Wagner's Ring cycle.
.

Scott
Hot Times During the Cold War: An American Comes of Age in West Germany
Published in Paperback by iUniverse, Inc. (2007-08-16)
Author: Scott W Hawley
List price: $11.95
New price: $7.38
Used price: $7.38

Average review score:

CAPTURED PERFECTLY!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-18
received and read -Scott Hawley's - "HOT TIMES DURING THE COLD WAR"

I am not sure where to begin and I know for certain I cannot adequately or fairly write what I felt while reading Scott's book.

July 1989 one month after graduation from FrankfurtAmericanHigh Schoolmy family and I prepared to leave Rhein-Main Air Base (our second tour) after three, magical almost unexplainable, awesome years. The going away parties, the last days with all my friends, and the nights in Sachs that led up to our leaving was nothing compared to the day we actually had to say good-bye.

My dad was commander of the 435th Aerial Port Squadron - the Terminal at Rhein-Main - while we said our good-byes in the special room at the terminal I knew my life would NEVER be the same - as we stepped off onto the tarmac my dad's entire squadron lined up saluting my dad and our family as we prepared for the flight back to my dad's last duty station at Randolph AFB in San Antonio - while all of us attempted to hold back the tears and clear the lump from our throats we knew what we had experienced would never be repeated or easily explained -

Scott made me feel like I was back at Rhein-Main & back at FAHS. I laughed, I got that familiar lump in my throat and I was transported back 19 years, ago to Rhein-Main, Frankfurt, my dear friends and that VERY special time in life.

We were all family (all of us) and I like to think we all still are - Our circle will never be broken.

Thank you, Scott, you captured what I have been trying to "explain" all these years.

UBER ALLES!

Amy Shields
Class of 1989 FAHS!



The good old times!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-11
The author did an awesome job putting great memories in poetry! Thank you for bringing back the memories of the good old days. I will definitely be sharing this book with the other Frankfurters!
Frankfurt Uber Alles
Woohoo Sue FAHS 88

I REALLY DID LIKE THIS ONE!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-03
HAWLEY DEFINITELY LIVED THE COLD WAR FROM AN AMERICAN YOUTH'S PERSPECTIVE LIVING IN GERMANY. VERY WELL DONE.

RAD!!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-08
85-88 was some damn good times!! man, this book rocked!!! Thanks Scott for sharing the stoke.. I'll treasure it. FAHS 86

-acacio

Wonderful, touching and creative!!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-08
I read this book and thought it was incredibly creative and a very touching and sweet story about the author. I loved it and highly recommend it!

Scott
Journey to Cubeville
Published in Paperback by Andrews McMeel Publishing (1998-08)
Author: Scott Adams
List price: $77.70
Used price: $97.02

Average review score:

The Corporate World is Just One Big Cube
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-22
Just thumbing thru the book already has me laughing out loud. The business plan in disarray... the Family Friendly policy... and my personal favorite - the office thermostat! I wish I had Alice's chutzpah." I wouldn't be freezing to death all day!!!

A must-have
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2004-09-13
Journey to Cubeville is a 224-page collection of Scott Adams' hilarious Dilbert cartoons. Dated between 11/1/96 and 1/4/98, these cartoons include all of the normal Dilbert crew: Dilbert, Alice, Wally, Asok, Dogbert, Catbert (a personal favorite), and so forth. The cartoons themselves appear as they did in your favorite newspaper, with the big Sunday ones printed in bright color! Plus, as a bonus, this book includes pop-out finger-puppets, which includes Dilbert, Wally, Alice, Dogbert, Ratbert, the Pointy-Haired-One, and a cubicle. (Dilbert wouldn't be Dilbert without a cubicle!)

This book is great, a must-have addition to the library of any Scott Adams fan. And, the finger-puppets make it that much better. This is perhaps the best Dilbert book of them all - buy it!

Cliché in a Box (or Cube)
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-27
Dilbert is the perfect hero for the modern office, which consists mostly of cubicles, or cubes as we frequently refer to them.

What happens in a cubicle? Oh, you know. The boss comes around and indicates that he is the great power behind everything, though he actually knows nothing about the product. If anything goes wrong, downsizing of those best suited to fix the problem follows.

What of marketing? Well, they are selling a product we have yet to build, for a price we are unable to achieve, with features that marketing neglected to tell engineering about. When all else fails, hire a consultant!

But Dilbert also has to face things like synergies. What are synergies? Ah, well, Dilbert can tell you that when you hear a cliché word like synergies, down-sizing is sure to follow in Cubeville, along with additional doses of cluelessness.

Any Dilbert book is perfect for a modern office worker, especially if they are in engineering, as Dilbert is. This collection of cartoons published from 9/1/96 to 1/18/98 are sure to give you more than a few chuckles as you recognize behaviors from an office you once worked in, or, if you are unfortunate, an office your are currently working in. At least you get gain some perspective and humor from your misery!

Enjoy!

The best Dilbert collection ever!!!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2004-08-07
JOURNEY TO CUBEVILLE is the absolute best collection of Dilbert comic strips!!! The whole hilarious gang (`specially Wally,Alice and Dilbert et. al) just saturates every single page with their best laughs.So whether you`re wandering through a bookstore,or on the net,DO NOT miss out on JOURNEY TO CUBEVILLE.It`s worth the money!

Absolutely hilarious!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-12-21
It's amazing how Scott Adams is able to produce hundreds of hilarious Dilbert strips that revolve around just a few themes -bosses are stupid, engineers are geeks, and the whole purpose of management, marketing, and the like are to squash productivity. This book is proof that Adams is a genius because not a single strip fails to produce at least a chuckle. Get this book and laugh your a** off.

Scott
Knowledge of Angels (Isis Series)
Published in Audio Cassette by Isis Audio Books (1996-07)
Authors: Jill Paton Walsh and Jill Paton Walsh
List price: $69.95
Used price: $136.46

Average review score:

Painfully acute
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-10-21
Two plot-lines interweave: a feral girl-child is found on a mountain, wholly without speech or any other attribute of human culture; and at the opposite scale a highly educated and intelligent man is washed up on the shore. Mountain and shore are both on Grandinsula, a Spanish island at the height of the Catholic Inquisition ruled by its benevolent prince Severo.

With this initial juxtaposition, Walsh sets in train her theme: a careful exploration of belief and unintended consequences. This is a dialectical novel, a novel of ideas guised in naturalistic form. For the washed-up man, Palinor, originates from an impossible land: one in which reason prevails. He finds himself now in a country where religion dominates and therefore the stage is set for a fundamental clash between reason and unreason.

Walsh's poetic genius is to sketch the Catholic protagonists delicately, wtih immense compassion. Yet at the same time she subtly indicates their terrible ignorance, their entire lack of connection to the real world that surrounds them each moment of their lives. They have high office and great power, yet they are astonished when a gypsy woman feeds her baby by the breast - the reality of squirting milk that formerly was assumed by these least-worldly of men to be merely a painter's metaphor. Later, in conversation with Palinor, Severo realises that years earlier he caused to be executed a man who was not evil but rather insane. During every encounter with Palinor the atheist, Severo the Prince of the Church is uncomfortably aware that the atheist is a more attractive and honest person than any other man he has encountered (and indeed more intelligent and honest than Severo himself)- yet his beliefs are in stark opposition to Severo's religious convictions. The core conflict of the book is the conflict in Severo's breast, as he struggles to make sense of the dichotomy he confronts.

Walsh's brilliance is that she largely writes the book from the perspective of the believers, and thus can show step-by-step how they proceed from discourse through torture to final execution. She enables us to move inside the thoughts and feelings of the priests as they struggle with Palinor, and she allows us to feel some sypathy for them even as they collaborate in an atrocity: the torture and murder of an innocent man.

Fine details accrue throughout the story, each lending its infinitesimal mass to the overall construct until the result overwhelms us. At times this is chilling: Walsh's account of the Inquisition is based on real-life records and reminds us that humans have a unique capacity for abstracting violence; the mundane records of the Catholic Inquisition are nauseatingly similar to those of the Gestapo and the KGB.

The novel's necessary flaw is Palinor: for the theme to exist he must be a kind of mythical man, a super-man of sorts, able to reason clearly and maintain a never-wavering attachment to truth above personal considerations. No such man has ever existed, and thus ironically we feel less sypathy for Palinor than we do for the religious men who exterminate him. This is the price the novel must pay for its core theme, and it is worth paying because above all else this is a novel of ideas. All the naturalism of the book serves to insinuate the ideas, to carry them forward.

Ultimately the book is also highly naturalistic because Severo protects his faltering ungrounded faith by sacrificing the good man Palinor to torture and the flames, just as religious people have always done when time and circumstance permits. The self-protection reflex of the human mind is extremely powerful and Walsh is true to life: she sets events in motion and they roll forward with inexorable momentum.

At the very end of the book we see nemisis approaching: the ships of Palinor's home country approaching Grandinsula to discover what has happened to their countryman. When I wrote to Walsh shortly after the original publication of this novel I suggested the approach of the ships was akin to Mr Kurtz's cry in Heart of Darkness: "Exterminate the brutes!" But Walsh kindly replied to correct me, explaining her painful sympathy for Severo as a good man impelled by the logic of his beliefs to perform an evil act. And it is this terrible heart that the novel shows so clearly. While in no way a polemic, Knowledge of Angels shows with crystal clarity and precision how the blanket of religion wraps around what would otherwise be adequate minds and clouds them to the point where they are incapable of recognizing reality from fiction and good from evil. If Richard Dawkins' book The God Delusion and Daniel Harbour's book An Intelligent Person's Guide To Atheism approach these issues from a purely intellectual perspective, Knowledge of Angels carries the reader into the most intimate reaches of the problems of religion and enables us to feel terrible sympathy for those who labor under the delusions of faith.

Tour de Force
Helpful Votes: 14 out of 15 total.
Review Date: 2003-12-01
This book cries out for a different rating system - perhaps a 1-10 scale. Even then one would have to reward an "11" for this magnificent tome. I could not find a single flaw in the entire reading - character development and portrayal was realistic yet unforgettable, the setting mesmerizing (one is instantly transported back to the time of the Inquisition and the faith-filled, simple lives of the city dwellers) and the plot was perfect.

I have read criticism that the tale was not realistic or made suppositions and assumptions that are not exactly correct in the historical sense. But what one should remember is that this tale is an allegory, not a documentary. The fictional city is in Spain and the Inquisition is at its high point when a stranger appears. He is intelligent, interesting, and friendly but an unbeliever. He tells of a land in which belief is arbitrary and where one can change their religion - or choose to have no religion at all. This is too much for Church officials for in their eyes murder, torture and lying can be forgiven but also blessed. A trial of sorts is proposed.

Now we have the second story and the joy is how the two are seemlessly weaved into one arc. A child found among the wolves is being raised by nuns. She is not to be given any religious instruction and if she comes to a belief in a Supreme Being the visitor will be found guilty, otherwise he will be judged to be innocent.

The battle is not between atheist and believer. It is a civil war between two schools of thought within Catholicism - the plain folk and their local leaders and a grand inquisitor who employs "unusual" methods for "protecting the faith". The wolf-girl finally is made to make a statement that can be interpreted as belief and Palindo, the visitor, is tortured to confession. When he refuses to follow this up with another confession (which would then validate the previous "confession") he is sentenced to be burned alive at the stake. A lowly follower trades all her material goods for a balm that will bring instant death upon being heated.

The aftermath is a short but appealing denouement. The bishop's assistant announces he cannot believe in a God that seeks obedience through torture. The wolf-girl returns to her solitary mountain home but not before catching a glimpse of a vast naval armada from the foreign land streaming toward the city that burned its citizen. The rewards of sin...

Knowledge of Man
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2005-01-24
While I can't top Avid's review (see below) for insight and eloquence, I can say that this book will appeal to you even if you're not normally the type interested in vast philosophical questions. Part of Jill Patton Walsh's triumph is that she makes the discussion of ideas so accessible. One truly feels drawn into the world of this tiny Spanish island and the people who live there. And one does not have to be a literary genius to realize that the structuring of this novel is nothing less than symphonic in its brilliance.

I won't reveal the powerful, throbbing revelation that lies at the core of the novel. Know, though, that this book will almost certainly spark your imagination and challenge your assumptions about faith, life and, indeed, the universe.

A beautiful story
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2002-07-10
This story is an especially pertinent discussion of religious intolerance, and how to live a beautiful, joyful, inquisitive life in the face of it. A revealing look at the genuine sources of wonder life grants us.

my all time best read
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2002-06-14
Every single chapter ends with an astonishing line that makes you want to stop and think, to contemplate yet at the same time has introduced a quiet shocking revelation that there is nothing to do but read on, and read and read. The book is clever, is wise but not judgemental. It touches the heart, the soul but is neither sloppy nor politically philosophical. A book to fall in love with, i recommend it to all.

Scott
Loving God
Published in Paperback by Marshall, Morgan and Scott (1984)
Author: Charles W Colson
List price:
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $19.95

Average review score:

Christianity Makes Sense
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-01
This is an excellent book. It really shows you how being a Christian makes sense.

Mr. Colson gives an excellent argument on his experience with the Watergate scandal. He illustrates how if Jesus Christ were just a scandal, then Christianity would have caved-in with the apostles and the first believers long ago.

Neat book.

Superb!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-09
It is a must for christian reader. Very moving and crystal clear message of what constitute Christian message.

Wonderful.
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-06-28
Inspirational writer, Chuck Colson, delivers a heartfelt and moving book about loving God. He refers to R.C. Sprouls "Holiness of God" dvd series, which is a class I'm taking at my church right now. I couldn't put the book down & read it in two days.

Loving God
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-28
This is a wonderful book whether you are Christian or not. It really depicts what Loving God really is. This book has helped me make my decision for Christ. There are many stories inside that really depicts the foundations for loving God. Chuck Colson has incorporated many wonderful testimonies that truly depicts how wonderful this God is.

Stories on loving God
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2006-07-23
I appreciate Colson's heart and where he has been in his life. This book is chock-full of stories of his life and ways we can learn to love God. There were a few chapters that seemed to bog down, but overall it's a good read and worth the time.

Scott
Saturday Night at the Dinosaur Stomp
Published in Hardcover by Walker Books Ltd (1997-10-06)
Author: Carol Diggory Shields
List price:
Used price: $53.66

Average review score:

Very cute!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-16
I bought this for my 7-year-old for his birthday, and it's very cute. He is reading it on his own (with a few prompts for some of the dinosaur names, but he's a dino buff so he knows most of them already). It's funny, creative, and quite entertaining. It will be a big hit with your dinosaur fan!

One of the best kids' books I've found
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-08
I am having to buy this book a second time because we have lost our precious first copy and my 2 1/2 year old BEGS for it CONSTANTLY. He simply cannot get enough of this book. It's his absolute favorite. He loves the rollicking rhythm and rhyme. It really has a rock-n-roll reading beat to it, and my son loves repeat some of the musical words such as "Booma lacka, Booma lacka Whack! Whack! Whack!" He loves the illustrations of the dinosaurs, since he's big into dinosaurs at the moment. But even if your child is not into dinosaurs, he/she will love hearing this book or reading this book aloud. And I have to admit, because the book flows off the tongue with such entertaining, dancy rhythms, both my husband and I LOVE to read this book to our son. It's so important when you're a parent, to buy books you yourself can stand to read over and over and over to your child, and not get bored. "Saturday Night at the Dinosaur Stomp" is one book I enjoy reading to my son EVERY TIME.

One of my son's favorites.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-23
This is one of my son's favorite books. He's a huge dinosaur lover and I remember reading him this book all the time...still brings it out now and then. If you have a dinosaur lover, you'll love this book.

Great fun to read
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-21
A good picture book to read to a 9-month old who doesn't want to sit still is hard to find, but this book is fantastic. The book just reads so fluently like you can't keep up with turning the pages!! Both the words and the pictures are so lively, bright and fun ... it totally absorbs you into the dinosaur stomp:-)

Had to have our own
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-01
We first found this book at the library and found ourselves checking it out time and time again. My daughter is two and a half, though she first fell in love with this book right around the time she turned two. After months of checking it out, I decided it was time to buy our own copy.

It's full of clever rhymes and ideas about dinosaurs and lots of dinosaur identification in a fun way. The pictures are great and the words are even better. Boys and girls alike would enjoy this. My daughter knows all the words to it now, but I still enjoy reading it to her frequently.

Scott
Zits vol. 1/ Spanish Edition
Published in Paperback by Public Square Books (2004-09-25)
Author: Jerry Scott
List price: $19.95
New price: $123.68
Used price: $28.54

Average review score:

So True!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-08
As the mother of a teenage son, this is so true to life. If I were a bit paranoid, I might think Jerry and Jim had bugged my home! And on the subject of authors, who the heck is PRUE Scott?

While I laugh at Jeremy and his teenage angst (it's hilarious and I don't feel guilty like I do if similar situations with my son make me snicker) I'm sure my son recognizes me in Connie, the kill joy mom!

Parenting a teen is tough. Zits finds the humor and anything that puts belly laughs in parenting, RULES!

Zits-Sketchbook #1
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-28
I found this book to be exceptionally funny and have read several times over. I recommend this to any looking for a good laugh to cheer up a dreary afternoon.

One Of My New Favorites
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-09-05
As I read Zits, I am always stopping amid my chuckles to think that if this is how it is and boys have it this rough, then maybe we of the other half should consider we got through our teen years relatively unscathed.

The Cincinnati Enquirer's living treasure, Jim Borgman, has teamed up with writer Jerry Scott to create a funny, intelligent daily comic strip that rivals For Better Or For Worse in sheer insightful understanding of its subject matter. The four-panel stories of Jeremy, a perpetually fifteen-year-old high school freshman, and his daily misadventures on the rugged uphill climb of adolescence, tell an honest, sometimes rule-bending tale of growing up in modern America. Experiencing life through the eyes (ears, nose, emotions and wandering mind) of Jeremy as he deals with love, school, parents, friends, we are treated to some pretty good laughs. Zits has been around for most of the last decade but I only discovered it this summer, and I'm in the process of buying collections to see what I've been missing. "Sketchbook" was the first one I got and it's a jewel!

So very funny!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2002-08-03
"Zits: Sketchbook 1" is simply wonderful! "Zits" is one of the best comic strips, full of teenager facts, personality traits, and humor! If you missed the first year of "Zits" or just want to refresh your memory, you must get this book! I recommend!

Take it from a mother of a teenager -
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2004-04-07
- this is a WONDERFUL, witty, funny, very true to life and very sweet representation of a teenager's day-to-day struggles. I have a teenage son who, while in high school, lived 'Zits'! I had saved many of my newspaper's strips to bring home and show him because of the similarity to what we were talking about at breakfast. I finally bought this book (I opened the first page and laughed out loud in the store!) and read it in one sitting cover to cover! I love it! It makes fun of all the teenage tragedies, parents, girlfiends, music, tests, all of it, and it does it with such wonderful sense of humor! I highly recommend it!


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