Stewart Books


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

Stewart
Wildfire at midnight (Crest book)
Published in Paperback by Fawcett Publications (1962)
Author: Mary Stewart
List price:
Used price: $1.50
Collectible price: $10.00

Average review score:

Wildfire at Midnight
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-30
If you appreciate an 'old fashioned' tale free of graphic intimacy and violence, if you appreciate vivid description, romance and intrigue this is for you. I read all but one of Mary Stewart's books in my early twenty's through late thirties. Now, nearing seventy, I am rereading them and cherishing the stories I read in my young years. I have divested myself of hundreds of books. Mary Stewart's remain a constant. "Wildfire at Midnight" tells of a young divorcee, unusual in Ms. Stewart's books, traveling to the Isle of Skye to recover from and get over her ex. BUT...he is in the same hotel on the remote Isle. Like many of Ms. Stewart's work murder has been done, intrigue and danger abound and one is constantly wondering WHO DID IT? a good read.

Suspense At Its Best
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-21
I loved this book! It is a great example of Mary Stewart's ability to create suspense and atmosphere in writing. I only wish that she would write another book sometime. I don't even know if she is still around.

Great Atmosphere and Characters!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-12
This was the first Mary Stewart I read and I was hooked. It is still a favorite along with Madam Will You Talk and The Ivy Tree. The author is masterly in setting up the suspence and romance along with compelling action.
In Wildfire at Midnight, the setting is the Isle of Skye and the tension becomes quite frightening as the heroine feels drawn to a possible murderer. Someone is committing ritual murders on the mountainside and the murderer is likely one of the guests at the remote lodge.

One of the greatest first chapters in popular fiction
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2005-03-25
This is a very good book, but the first chapter is a beautifully polished gem. The description of the heroine's look-alike but very different ancestor is unforgetable: "the Vixen Venus ...a Beauty in the days when beauties had a capital B, and were moreover apt to regard beauty and capital as one and the same thing."

Some books are like relatives. You love them despite their lack of perfection. Perhaps they are better than other books in the ways that count - with characters who truly live in their pages and your imagination. Or perhaps they become alive because they transcend the confines of genre fiction and have the complexity of real life.

I love this book, and the author's Nine Coaches Waiting, but both books raise issues about love and trust that I don't think they resolve realistically. However, it is probably my persistent re-reading of the books that caused me to see flaws the casual reader would not.

Creepy Hebridean Murder Mystery
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-04-05
When I was a child in the 1970s we were on a holiday on the west coast of Scotland and by chance, taking refuge in the car from the torrential summer downpour in the barren square of Portree, my father turned on the radio. What came on was a creepy, disturbing drama set on Skye. A young woman, the only visitor to this country hotel not on the suspect list for a grizzly murder is sitting in the dead of night by the unconscious body of another would-be victim of the murderer. "How appropriate!" my mother laughed, and we listened on. The landscape of the story was the same landscape that was around me, though I couldn't see it for the rain, and there were strange characters, a crazed climber, beltane fires and murder. I thought it was great and it really, really stayed with me. It was years later that I read Wildfire at Midnight and realised that this was the self-same story I'd heard as a child. It's cracking, unashamedly romantic, but really rather well written. A good read for a sick day tucked up on the sofa, or a quiet night in. Mary Stewart's great - if only new pulp fiction could manage the same alluring balance of literary poise and good swash-buckling plots. No one else does it as well.

Stewart
Eros
Published in Hardcover by Stewart, Tabori, & Chang (1996-10)
Author:
List price: $60.00
New price: $29.99
Used price: $5.55
Collectible price: $60.00

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perfect for couples
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-15
Wow, what a treat! I purchased this book for my wife (oh, okay, for the two of us) for Valentine's Day. It was perfect!!!

Very sensuous and enjoyable. Some full frontal nudity, but absolutely nothing offensive. All beautiful and erotic.

This is a high-quality, coffee-table type book celebrating heterosexual love and sex. I wish we could find similar movies--people just making wholesome, beautiful love. (We're not all that interested in the XXX variety of pornography that also passes as instructional books/videos for plumbers learning how to "lay pipe," know what I mean?)

Eros is pure class for adults. Buy it and enjoy it with someone special.

Sculent Nudes for your Love
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-01-29
I wrote this review in 1998. I will rewrite it here and say, that i have given this book as a gift many times and all the recpients have loved it. In 1998 I wrote the following and when I looked at it today.......I felt the same but even more so.Here it is............."This shimmering collection of nudes,male and female,can be debated to be a perfect gift for your love. Inscribed with your own words and pointing to a page of succulent text and a most erotic body you will surely send the arrow home like Cupid.A woman's breast cast upon with a vine's shadow is not far from the lower torso of what's surely a male dancer, toe pointing on a small wooden ball.A jug of wine , a loaf of bread and this.Review this beautiful book of nudes together by a roaring fire"

Bold and loving
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-09
What a gorgeous collection! For me, the attraction is in the images. There's generally one B&W photo per two-page spread, beautifully printed at a large size. A lot of the pictures show a single figure, male or female. My favorites, though, show couples embracing. Although wonderfully sensual, all these photos meet the highest standards of good taste. Still, people shy about seeing the whole body might think twice.

Most two-page spreads also include extract from the literature of love. That includes everything from the classical periods of Egypt and China up to Walt Whitman, e e cummings, and Erica Jong. Like the photos, all of the chosen texts avoid vulgarity. Also like the photos, some of the passages evoked more for me than others did.

I can easily imagine a couple enjoying this together, on some night warmed by a fire, a blanket, and each other.

-- wiredweird

Tasteful Erotica
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2000-05-31
The black and white Photos are truly art, and the poetry is well suited to the photos. This is an adult book that stays where I can share it with my friends who enjoy beautiful art and poetry. This erotica is tastefully done and I am sorry that this book is no longer available it makes a great gift for special friends.

Absolutely Gorgeous Nude Photography
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2000-12-11
These are the most wonderful nude photographs imaginable. They are not as shocking as the Mapplethorpe photographs but they are as artistic and as sensuous as his are. Unfortunately, you have to buy your copy used. That's the way I had to buy mine. I have bought many other nude photography books new but, except for Mapplethorpe's work, none of them are as good as this book. I spent a small fortune on photographer David Hamilton's book new, for example, and I look in Hamilton's book one tenth of the time I look inside this book. This book contains both nude men and women plus couples. You can't go wrong buying this book. Get it while you can as my experience with great out of print books is that the price skyrockets before long.

Stewart
My brother Michael (A Fawcett Crest Book)
Published in Unknown Binding by Fawcett (1961)
Author: Mary Stewart
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Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $10.00

Average review score:

My Brother Michael
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-30
If you appreciate an 'old fashioned' tale free of graphic intimacy and violence, if you appreciate vivid description, romance and intrigue this is for you. I read all but one of Mary Stewart's books in my early twenty's through late thirties. Now, nearing seventy, I am rereading them and cherishing the stories I read in my young years. I have divested myself of hundreds of books. Mary Stewart's remain a constant. "My Brother Michael" tells the tale of a young woman travelling in Greece and, as in other Mary Stewart books, stumbles by happenstance upon murder done and more to come. In this book there is the briefest hint of romance while the heroine is emeshed in a web of fear and violence. Each chapter is headed by a brief quote from ancient poets and philosophers such as Sophocles to Milton giving the reader the tiniest preview of things to come. A good read

Great Read!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-15
Mary Stewart is a great writer. I loved the setting of Delphi, Greece. The whole driving scene is funny. The bit of war history of Greece is good background information. Highlights the British view of Greece and it's people, which is not always flattering. But, still a great read.

The old stuff pours like wine.....
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-22
Definitely buy this novel, or any by Mary Stewart, if you have grown bored of the modern authors.

Stewart knew how to tell a tale of romance and intrigue and here you are plunged into the crisp, dark waters of suspense. The rocky hills and ancient marvels of Greece are the backdrop for this fast-paced story of a young woman who sets out to see Delphi. She discovers far more than she bargained for in the form of the very likeable and mysterious Simon, whose brother Michael was murdered during the hostilities of WWII more than a decade before.

She joins him in his search for justice and together they solve the murder and find great wonders. If I compared this story to a painting, it would be one of the colorful baroque canvases about 12 feet tall.

Barbara Michaels fan finds new author
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2003-07-01
As a fan of Barbara Michaels/Elizabeth Peters work, this book at first moved slower than I am used to. However, the book delivered on many of the elements that makes me most interested in picking up a mystery novel - historical/archeological/mythological themes, exotic settings well described, a strong female heroine, adventure, and maybe just a touch of romance (not too much). What I found most interesting/facinating was Mary Stewart's ability to paint with words a richly detailed/atmospheric landscape (in this case the rugged mountains of Greece and historically significant center of Delphi) was enough to leave a lasting impression, like snapshots in your mind of time spent in a place that just by being there spiritually uplifted you in some way. Armchair travelers with an interest in experiencing through osmosis impressions left on people upon visiting historical/mythological places will like this book.

Other recommended authors: Sharyn McCrumb, Nevada Barr, Jessica Speart, Beverly Connor, Lyn Hamilton, Susanna Kearsley, and Kathleen Skye Moody.

Revisiting Mary Stewart...
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 17 total.
Review Date: 2003-03-03
I remember before I discovered Ruth Rendell, Elizabeth George, Minette Walters, and P.D. James, my favorite writer was Mary Stewart. I may never read her "Merlin" series again, but I still think of it fondly as a great step along the way to good reading. So when I came across a few of her books recently that I may or may not have read 20 years ago, I snatched a couple of them up, anxious to see if they held up over time. I probably should have resisted. "My Brother Michael" is an interesting story, and Mary Stewart's writing is good, but she just isn't in the same league as the Big Four. This was an OK read, and the setting was beautifully described, but the story sort of lurched along for me. I may go ahead and read another of the Stewart books I picked up at the same time as this in hopes of redemption, but then again, I may not. The good news: this is a very fast read. : )

Stewart
Grey Seas Under
Published in Paperback by McClelland & Stewart (1980-01-01)
Author: Farley Mowat
List price: $16.95
Used price: $6.25
Collectible price: $24.95

Average review score:

Foundation Franklin
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2000-11-20
I have read this book twice and I loved it. Mowat wrote as if the tug was a living thing. It was wonderful. I actually cried at the end when Franklin came into the harbor with barely any power left and covered entirely with ice, thus ending her life. The people who captained Franklin intriqued me as well. In the book they were the only ones that really cared for her.

Farley Mowat is a superb writer!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2000-09-24
Farley Mowat can make the stars sing with the sheer beauty of his writing. His writing is a little old-fashioned by today's standards, (all the better) but his craftsmanship is unsurpassed. You ARE there. You feel everything his characters felt, you see what they saw. The book ends happily and I know it, but I cry through the last chapter every time I read it because his writing takes me there. One hedge: the book does start slow, but if you keep plugging away, you will be richly rewarded.

Riveting slice of marine history
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2000-09-25
This book is an unexpectedly riveting episode-by-episode story of the Foundation Franklin, a marine salvage tug that sailed out of the ports of Nova Scotia and Newfoundland in the 1930s and '40s. This working ship, built in Scotland in 1916 to craftsman's standards, eventually found itself unused in a Hamburg shipyard in depression-strapped 1930 where it was identified as a possible vessel for the Canadian maritime salvage fleet. From that day to its final heart-stopping drama, the trials of this unprepossessing high seas coal-fired tugboat are recounted in all their adrenalin-filled reality in Mowat's gripping and evocative prose. Managed by callous profit-seekers, officered by experience-hardened seamen and crewed by men desperate for employment, Foundation Franklin's story is, as well, a slice of social and commercial history. The mood is workaday danger, fortitude, struggle and courage, marred by a single passing dismissive remark about "union mechanics".

First-Rate True Saga of the Sea
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2000-09-24
I first discovered "Grey Seas Under" about 15 years ago, appropriately enough as Able Seaman on an Ocean Salvage Tug. I was immediately enthralled. Out of the many books on the sea I have read, this one remains very dear to me (not that you have to be a mariner to enjoy it). Grey Seas Under is the true story of the ocean salvage tug, FOUNDATION FRANKLIN and the brave men who battled the North Atlantic to save hundreds of ships and thousands of lives. Farley Mowat, a master srory-teller, passionately desribes the exploits of FOUNDATION FRANKLIN with geat admiration and humor. Grey Seas Under is a true masterpiece saga of the sea. I've read this book probably 6 times in the last 10 years and I'm sure to re-read it for many years to come. I cannot recommend this book enough. I also highly recommend "The Serpents Coil" also by Farley Mowat, another first-rate tale of the sea.

Perfect Storm, eat your heart out!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2001-12-19
The ocean-going salvage tug, `Foundation Franklin' was more than a match for the worst the North Atlantic could throw at her, including Force 10 hurricanes and Nazi U-Boats. Perfect Storm, eat your heart out! Here is the real book about the great-hearted men and their staunch little ships that survived blow after blow from the Atlantic and bobbed up for more.

If the author, Farley Mowat is sometimes guilty of over-the-top prose---well, he lived and worked on the Franklin, and he loved her sturdy lines, her jaunty roll, and every rivet that held her together while she rescued ships that were Goliaths to her chubby, little Baby Huey. No work could have been more dangerous; none required a higher degree of seamanship and courage than dropping a line on a berserk, lunging, steel-hulled freighter, and then towing her through the maw of a mid-December gale, or the shoals and `sunkers' of the Newfoundland coast---something the Franklin did so many times that her crew lost memory of all but their most freakish or man-killing expeditions.

"Grey Seas Under" will give you an interesting perspective on the true maritime heroes of World War II. Farley Mowat doesn't pull any punches when he describes the tension that existed between the expert seamen on the ocean-going salvage and rescue tugs, and their relatively `amateur' counterparts on Canadian and American naval warships. Some of the funniest scenes in the book involve convoys of merchant ships under the `protection' of corvettes and destroyers. Once a U-Boat had been sighted and the merchants steamed for cover, it was up to the Franklin to rescue the ones that ran into each other or shoaled themselves. Usually, the tug had to perform her duties without any cover from the warships.

"The days the salvors (tugboat seamen) spent tethered to fat and crippled merchantmen, crawling along on a straight course at a speed of two or three knots like mechanical targets in a shooting gallery, were the kind of days that would drain the courage from the most heroic man alive...The Germans knew, that for every rescue vessel sunk there would be a score of crippled merchantmen who would never make safe port."

This is a great book about men against the sea, even though the language gets very nautical at times. Read it and you will learn all about Lloyd's Open Form, and the tricks that wrecked merchant masters play to cheat tugs out of their salvage fees. You'll learn to tell the difference between `Monkey Island' and the poop deck---and the difference between `brass monkeys' and true seamen. You'll thrill to the dangers of sunkers, beam seas, and Arctic white-outs. You'll bite through your pipe-stem, just like the Franklin's captain did during those tows when his sturdy little tug steamed back into port with barely enough coal in her bunkers to "cook a pot of beans."

Someone ought to make a movie out of "Grey Seas Under." It's got everything---romance (between man and ship, at least); life-and-death adventures; heroism; humor; and the treacherous ice, wind, and sea of what the author respectfully refers to as `the Great Western Ocean.'

Stewart
John Lennon: The New York Years
Published in Hardcover by "Stewart, Tabori and Chang" (2005-10-01)
Author:
List price: $29.95
New price: $4.35
Used price: $3.66
Collectible price: $40.00

Average review score:

A New Perspective
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-28
I was amazed at how many photos were included in this book that I had never seen before. I was equally amazed to discover that Gruen had taken some of the most well known photographs of John Lennon during this time period; and it's interesting to know the story behind them. The book is entertaining to look at, but it's also an interesting read with Gruen providing a "fly-on-the-wall" perspective of what it was like to hang out with John & friends during the New York years. Gruen provides a detailed account of what was going on in John's life when a certain photo was taken and, unfortunately, what it was like walking into the Dakota a few hours after John was shot to pick up a package at the front desk that John left for him.

Great book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-16
I like very much this book, because has a lot of pictures with John in his intimate life, but i think Bob Gruen as a photographer is not the best. The pictures he had taken of John Lennon, are more a "fan photos". Of course there are "iconic pictures", like the New York series. But still a nice book to have to all the Lennon fans.

Great book, great photos !!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-02-01
Fortunately for us, Bob Gruen was there. I must admit that the book show mostly really great photos, and some others are not (I mean the focus, light, etc), but you can saw John as he was, a normal guy, doing daily stuffs, playing with his guitar, in the studio, off course with Yoko, with baby Sean, public events, etc, a great review of those last years in NY.
I didn't know that so many of the famous pictures of John where taken by Gruen. The quality of the book is great, I think that every Lennon's fan will love this book, and I hope that Bob Gruen show more of his John Lennon's photo collection in a near future, he share a lot with him in those New York days and probably he got more to show!

A nice touch
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-02-19
If you enjoy black and white photos with interesting and informative commentary and John Lennon happens to be one of your musical heros, consider adding this book to your library. It just has a nice touch.

Pictures of John Lennon
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-01-30
Bob Gruen invites readers and photo aficionados into his chronological photo portfolio into former Beatle John Lennon's life with the book John Lennon: The New York Years. Gruen provides a combination of never before seen and seen candid and photo shoot images of Lennon during his years in New York. Gruen closely associated with John and Yoko as a neighbor and as their personal photographer, and the images show the intimacy and the trust they had in him in capturing their moments in just about every situation, in the studio, a walk in the park, or simply hamming it up for the camera; every picture tells a story behind it.

The difference with this book of photographs and others is that Gruen offers much insight of the time and place in which he took each photograph. Gruen specifically shares with the public his personal account of knowing John as a friend or as he refers, "just a New York guy." He does not concentrate on over wrought information, but rather recounts the first time he met and became friends with John and Yoko and the events that made an impression on him, such as the story behind the most iconoclastic poses: the New York City t-shirt and Statue of Liberty pose.

Bob Gruen covers much ground in a little less than ten years, 1971-1980. However, in that time, he covers the most interesting and controversial period in John's post Beatle life. John Lennon: The New York Years is recommended for all Lennon as well those interested in documentary photography, and is yet another welcome addition to anyone's collection of rock and roll oriented books.

Stewart
Letters of a Woman Homesteader
Published in Unknown Binding by ()
Author: Elinore Pruitt Stewart
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Used price: $2.88

Average review score:

Insight into homesteading in the turn of the century Wyoming
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-24
Wonderfull stories actually written by Elinore Pruitt Stewart. The woman was a tireless worker with a special kindness to her fellow man. You can picture in your mind just what she lived. Her descriptions are as good as they can be. Her kindness will melt your heart. She makes me wish I had lived in the area at the same time. It's such a world of difference from todays progression. I'm not so sure we have progressed to a better life. Even though it was a hard life and a short one I think it may have been a slice of heaven back in old Wyoming. She will tug at your heart at times and make you smile at others.
A great easy enjoyable read. I highly recommend it.
Steve from Boulder Creek, Ca.

Joyous and Inspiring and a Great Gift
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-08
The audio version of this book is so well read -- it is well worth the cost. You cannot help feeling cheerful and energized about your own life, as you hear it. I gave the paperback version to a couple of discouraged women friends who prefer to read rather than listen to books. Both women loved it, and were inspired to face their own hardships more buoyantly. The very gifted author has blessed us with a wonderful history and narrative!

Pioneer grit
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-01
Genuine substance and sincerity describe Stewart's letters from the early twentieth century while homesteading in this remote corner of Wyoming. Whereas most women would not even consider putting down roots in such an isolated area, Mrs. Stewart was determined to make a life for herself in this territory. And she did just that. It took a special kind of person to live in this far-removed landscape.

Her writing, subject matter and approach to life were most admirable. Hard working and always enthusiastic for adventure, she writes of various encounters with surrounding neighbors and experiences into the countryside. If she had any dull moments on the ranch they must have been few and far between.

Very optimistic about life, Mrs. Stewart affirms, "...all my own efforts have always been just to make the best of everything and to take things as they come."
To further quote, "It has always been a theory of mine that when we become sorry for ourselves we make our misfortunes harder to bear, because we lose courage and can't think without bias."

A wonderful read furthering an appreciation for life in the homesteading era.

I can't put it down!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-02
Dear fellow Book-lovers:
I found this little gem at the local library today and I can't put it down. It is so good--easy to read (perfect for a busy Mom of 5 like me), inspiring, wholesome, funny, and informative. I am fascinated with this woman: her love for people, her giving heart, and her passion for fun and for life. I'm only on page 81 (out of 282) but I can already sit here and tell you to buy this book and enjoy it! I'm buying myself a copy and also one for my best friend. Christmas is coming!

So good, I thought it was a contemporary novel!
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-29
I listened to the audio version of this book and after the first part, I went online to check to see if this was actually taken from real letters or just a modern novel. It was so interesting and so well-written that I couldn't believe it wasn't the creation of a novelist. But no, they are the authentic letters of an incredible woman. Ironically, she apologizes in her letters, for writing too much. If only she could have known that a century later, people around the world would be wishing she wrote even more.

If you choose the audio book, try to get the Sound Room Publishers version, narracted by Kate Fleming. It is far superior than Blackstone Audio's version read by Rebecca Burns (who does a good job, but whose voice is too much like a young girl's to express the wisdom and experience that Fleming projects).

Stewart
Madam Will You Talk
Published in Mass Market Paperback by Fawcett (1987-08-12)
Author: Mary Stewart
List price: $2.95
Used price: $2.90

Average review score:

Madam Will You Talk
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-30
If you appreciate an 'old fashioned' tale free of graphic intimacy and violence, if you appreciate vivid description, romance and intrigue this is for you. I read all but one of Mary Stewart's books in my early twenty's through late thirties. Now, nearing seventy, I am rereading them and cherishing the stories I read in my young years. I have divested myself of hundreds of books. Mary Stewart's remain a constant. Though I prefer some over others "Madam Will You Talk" is one of my favorites. It tells of a young widow vacationing in Southern France who accidentially stumbles on murder, betrayal and intrique. Of course there is a romantic touch, but who is the object of the heroine's affection? Good read...

A Quality Read
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-28
Yes, yes, yes to all the earlier reviewers! That's why I put Madam, Will You Talk? on my listmania list of favorite romances - along with my alltime Stewart favorite: Nine Coaches Waiting. They both hold all the essential ingredients for a good read - not the least being excellent writing. It's all too true that most contemporary love stories, suspense thrown in or not, are written at an elementary school literary level. I've submitted 3 manuscripts to Avalon, all of which were returned with comments that my writing was excellent and my characters engaging but I spent too much time on plotlines and peripheral characters outside of the central love story - which is exactly what I prefer in a story! Thank goodness Stewart never followed Avalon's "Rules for Writing"! Unlike some other reviewers, I lost interest in Stewart with her Merlin series. It's her early first-person narratives that enthralled. Her sense of place, plot, and people cannot be beat in this genre! Sad to say, my local library does not carry a single one of her early romantic suspense novels, so I'm on a quest to build my own Stewart library. I don't reread many authors - but Stewart just gets better with time. Madam, Will You Talk? holds a line I've never forgotten over 30 years: "Who's Johnny?" Not what I expected the hero to ask in that scene but what an impact! Read the book and see if you agree. Lily's Sister

Absolutely wonderful!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-09
First Sentence: The whole affair began so quietly.

WWII war widow Charity Shelbourne whose holiday in France becomes life changing. It starts with a large dog and a young, clearly troubled, boy in Avignon and progresses with a suspicious step-mother, an Englishman who reads poetry and a way-too-handsome Frenchman via a thrilling car chase to a man who had been accused, but acquitted, of murder and is desperate to connect with his son in spite of others desperate attempts to prevent it.

I love Mary Stewart's pre-Merlin books. The story starts off placidly but you are told things are going to quickly change as all the players are in place. Stewart's writing is incredibly visual. Her sense of place is vivid to the point that you feel the heat and smell the flowers. Her use of analogy is wonderful. With only a few words, you know who these characters are. Her protagonist is strong, smart and very capable. Her friend, Louise, plays a minor role but is memorable in her own right. I don't always like the way children are portrayed but, again, Stewart has drawn a lovely character in the boy, David. Stewart creates and builds the suspense, but adds just a subtle, mostly off-scene, dash of romance to make a wholly satisfying read. Even the chapter headings add to the story. My only personal nit-pick is the use of portents, which is just a personal irritant for me, but so minor when compared with the rest of the story. This book was an absolute pleasure to read.

Wonderful story
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-20
I first read this nearly 30 years ago (yikes), and it left such an indelible impression that when I recently started visiting this genre again, I had to have another taste of this story. There are a couple points where it's obvious this is an early work, but they are few and do not detract from the vivid descriptions and characterizations. By the end of the novel, I have been to Avignon and Marseilles, and I'm quite fond of Charity and her friends. Even Louise, a minor character, is well drawn and you feel you know her.

Time to revisit all of Mary Stewart's books, I think. I remember the Merlin series fondly as well. If you like this genre, you may also like the works of Victoria Holt, Susan Howatch, and Phyllis Whitney. And if you liked the Merlin series, I highly recommend The Mists of Avalon by Marion Zimmer Bradley.

Superb!
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2005-07-05
Mary Stewart writes great romantic suspense. This novel has the beautiful settings, fast-paced mystery and charming protagonist of all her suspense novels, plus an edge-of-your-seat climatic car chase that will leave you wanting to rush out and get her other books.

Stewart
Tools of the Shaman
Published in Paperback by Meriones Publishing (2007-11-03)
Author: Kathleen Stewart Schramm
List price:

Average review score:

A great and practical guide to truly successful living
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-11
This book has both great teachings and real (not to mention practical!) examples from Kathleen's own life. I tried some of the tools listed and had success. This book is really for anyone, new ager or not, as it offers ways to empower yourself using the gifts you already have. Well worth the purchase price.

Higher Knowledge
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-04
Kathleen,
Mahalo> (Thank-You) for this "Higher Knowledge" in sharing "Spiritual" growth and personal "Empowerment". Thus giving us expansion of "Awareness" and connection to the "Universal Spirit" we find ourselves getting in touch with the "Consciousness". Reading these pages have awaken something inside us.
"No Ka Oi" <(your the Best!) when it comes to "Ancient Wisdom" with a "modern application". You are improving the "QUALITY OF LIFE" in which makes us remember "I AM THE LIGHT" we are truely blessed to have walked paths with you.
We give you a "Thumbs UP" with "7" STARS ******* On this Book
Sending Positive energys your way so that you can keep publishing
more books like this one!
ilima & Edwin smiling on a job well done!

Amazing intuition!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-14
I purchased this book for my mom for XMAS but I ended up reading it before she did. Kathleen's adventures in life are absolutely amazing and truly exciting!! Once I picked up the book; I found it very difficult to put it down. It was very easy to read and informative. This book gives you a ton a different tools to use to better your life; and, all around becoming a better "healthier" person. I learned so much from this book. I've used Kathleen's tools and so far, they have worked. Its incredible! For anyone who is "debating" on purchasing this book; stop! Because you won't be sorry!! It is one of the most interesting books I have purchased and can't wait for Kathleen to write another edition!!!!

Very Good Tools!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-02
This was a good read and I found it very helpful for a bad situation I wanted to straighten out. There was a bad situation at work with a supervisor who was just bad news. I used the tools as directed. Within a week this person was fired! I received some long overdue recognition from the boss, an apology and even a hug! What could be better than that! Don't forget to smudge the area after the issue is over and the person is gone. Thanks Kathleen! I can now smile on the way to work!!
Novella

Excellent, insightful book!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-25
This book is a "must have" for all spiritual seekers. The information is ancient wisdom which is metaphysically based. The author teaches excellent techniques useful for paranormal investigators. The experiential stories are fascinating

Stewart
When We Were Very Young
Published in Unbound by McClelland & Stewart (1988-04-01)
Author: A.A. Milne
List price:
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $10.49

Average review score:

Now That I'm "Very" Old
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-07
This is the book, in this format, my mother read to me 50-plus years ago, and it is still as good. I recently purchased four copies. One each for two adult friends who are very ill. Both responded with uplifted spirits. One each for two young women who will be welcoming new "Young" ones soon.
Please note "Disbobedience" was set to music in the '60s by, I believe, the Chad Mitchell Trio, and James James Morrison Morrison Weatherby George Dupree is still warning his mother "not to go down to the end of town unless you go down with me ..."
"Vespers", at the very end, not only brings back memories of your own and your children's innocent childhoods, but also contains a very important message, "Oh, I quite forgot/God bless me."
And God bless you and those with whom you share this book.

Poems for Now and Everafter
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-04
One day, I found one of these poems running around in my head 40 years after I first began reading them to my boys when they were very young. As my older son took possession of that copy some time back, I had to order a new one for my 67-year old self just to get the lines absolutely right. It was worth it. My only regret is that I have no grandchildren to drum them into. Charming, literate and comforting.

When We Were Very Young by A. A. Milne
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-09-01
This is one very good book and can be enjoyed by people from 2 to 92. I've read it to senior citizens as well as my grandchildren. The subjects are universal. The rhyme and rhythm are delightful.

When I Was Very Young
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-06-08
My copy of this book is 51 years old and has my grandmother's autograph. Talk about a lasting gift! I love books as gifts, and this is my all-time favorite.

Milne's Beauty in Simplicity
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-28
I had to read this for a little while before I got to a poem I really liked. The first 10 or so poems just seemed incomplete to me. "Independence" caught my eye first. In very few words it pretty much tells us adults that our kids are going to do what they want, despite all the things we say. It's followed by the wonderful poem "Nursery Chairs" where a child pretends the chairs in his house are different things. Then after "Nursery Chairs" is another strong poem, "Market Square" where we learn that there are things all around us in nature that we don't need to get from the market.

"Disobedience" is another interesting poem. It's kind of a role-reversal story about a kid whose mother disobeys his orders to stay away from the end of town, and she gets lost as the result of her disobedience.

"Spring Morning" emphasizes the beauty of nature to us, saying, "It's awful fun to be born at all." Next is "The Island" which has a wonderful closing message that screams, "God made it all - FOR US!" to me.

And there are so many other joyous poems in this quick read too. There's "Jonathan Jo," "Rice Pudding," "The Wrong House," "The Dormouse and the Doctor" (which has some terrific rhythm), a very touching "Little Bo-Peep and Little Boy Blue," "The Invaders," "If I Were King," etc., etc.

But perhaps my favorite poem in the collection is "Halfway Down" which is about nothing more than sitting on stairs. Man, if someone can take such a simple act and make it so astoundingly wondrous, then that person truly must be one of the greatest writers ever.

Stewart
Apocalypse How: Turn the End-Times into the Best of Times!
Published in Paperback by Running Press (2008-05-12)
Author: Rob Kutner
List price: $12.95
New price: $5.15
Used price: $3.21

Average review score:

Oh man, too funny!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-15
Great tips for the end of times! I can't wait for them to get here so I can try out my bunker and free-range everything! Too funny, so get it!

The Days After
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-28
Rob Kutner, writer for the Daily Show, sets forth to humor us with this text on how to make the best of times for the end of times. You learn how to deal with the apocalypse and aftermath but don't let it drag you down, here's how you can make the best of things. He covers topics from dressing, home defense, new foods to try (mmm rock soup), dating & repopulating, recreational activities, and more. Overall, there are some fairly funny parts but I didn't find it laugh-out-loud funny, but rather some good strong smirks. Some jokes got a bit repetitive and even as a humor book it lacked some fleshing out in areas that would have improved the text. Worth reading and the illustrations are equally amusing. There are bits that you'll miss the first time through so it is certainly re-readable.

Dark humor for dark times
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-11
Do you fear the end of the world? Rob Kutner's new book makes it seem like it will be as fun as a trip to Disneyland!

Apocalpyse How presents many ways that the world as we know it might end: nuclear holocaust, robot revolt (a la Flight Of The Conchords' song "The Humans Are Dead"), alien invasion, global warming. And it gives some really funny advice about how we can not just survive, but thrive in the new world order.

There are perhaps one too many references to cannibalism for my taste, but Kutner's clever writing and sharp wit makes up for it. My favorite part was the "Fun & Games" chapter near the end of the book.

The book does not give enough credit to illustrator Joshua McDonnell. His drawings, photographs and collages are superb, and are as strong of a presence as the writing itself.

The end comes too soon.
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-26
You'll regret the coming of the end of "Apocalypse How" almost as much as you'll regret the coming of the end of the actual world (next week). Fortunately, the book is packed with so much verbal and visual humor, you'll need to read it at least twice to wring all the laughs from it... much as you'll want to wring all the potable, nutritious juices from whatever minimally-irradiated flora, fauna, and Frankenfoods you can find when the end-times arrive. You'll want to read the acknowledgments three times.

Apt Advice for Armageddon
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-26
This is the way the world ends, not with a bang...but a howl of laughter! Who knew that the Fifth Horseman of the Apocalypse is a brilliant satirist by the name of Rob Kutner? With a gift of prophecy that Cassandra would envy and the swiftness of a Sidewinder missile, Kutner has beaten the likes of those esteemed self-help gurus Heloise, Bob Vila, Dr. Phil, Martha Stewart, Dear Abby, et al. in fulfilling an unrecognized need: an ironic handbook for coping with nearly all aspects of the Last Days. "Apocalypse How" is highly entertaining and may even be useful. I liked it so much I bought copies for my family and closest friends.


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