Travis Books
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Absolute ThrillerReview Date: 2008-10-24
What a great read!Review Date: 2008-10-08
IntenseReview Date: 2008-10-04
Frightening and inspirationalReview Date: 2008-09-15
I don't want to give away any major plot points, but I must congratulate the author on his development of this villain. I have personally believed for some time that mental illness is one form of modern-day demon possession. Bravo, Travis, for bringing this concept to life in this novel!
Travis Thrasher can WRITE!Review Date: 2008-10-10


Green looks good on youReview Date: 2008-02-21
The pinnacle of Manhood is NOT a Sears' Wardrobe, a Super Cuts hairdo and a crazed envy of stylish guys who date super hot women. You can make fun of the Brad Pitts of the world all you want but last I checked they were dating the Jennifer Anistons and the Angelina Jolies. Scoreboard.
Guess what: I'm one of those guys dresses well, wears a bracelet, and gets his eyebrows waxed. I also like football, action movies and my drop dead gorgeous GF.
Being a Metrosexual doesn't mean giving up your manhood believe me. It simply means that your main priority is not trying to impress your ex-frat boy friends. Now if you'll excuse me I have a beautiful, amazing GF who requires my attention.
If your a man, you must readReview Date: 2008-06-02
There are ONLY two types of menReview Date: 2008-03-24
Plain and simple, it's just darn funny. I laughed out loud so many times and had to read many rules to my wife and oldest son. It is adult based so the majority of the book is unsuitable for children but then, it's pretty sexist too yet all in good humor. Read it for what it is and laugh.
Would recommend but you should read Dixieland Delight firstReview Date: 2008-02-29
HillariousReview Date: 2008-02-23

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Another dog-eat-dog mysteryReview Date: 2000-12-04
In this latest installment of the Melanie Travis mysteries, Laurien Berenson unleashes another engrossing story; this time the victim is the co-publisher of a new dog show gossip rag (the kind everybody in the community reads but won't admit to doing so). Melanie's involvement in solving the crime is requested by an unusual source, too -- her fiance Sam, whose opposition to this hobby has been more than vocal in past novels. That his ex-wife's death drives a wedge between the couple is an understatement, but Melanie can only hope the killer does not separate them permanently.
Depending on how attached you are to these characters, you may or may not like the ending of this one, however. I won't give it away, but I will say I was bummed at the outcome (not the mystery, but the personal subplot, you'll know when you get there). Since it will be a while until the next installment in this series, we'll have to wait and see if Melanie will be changing her last name.
Very EnjoyableReview Date: 2000-11-21
It's a dog eat dog kinda worldReview Date: 2000-12-28
Sam's ex-wife, Shelia, a pug owner, has invited Melanie and Sam to dinner to announce her partnership in a new dog magazine called Woof! It's going to expose the dirt on the dog breeders and shows. Sam, being a breeder show-person himself has a problem with the magazine, and seeing Shelia back with their old friend Brian, who is owner of the new magazine and a Saint Bernard. While Sam is dealing with Shelia and Brian being back together, Melanie is dealing with Sam's feelings for his ex-wife, driving the soccer car pool for her son, and taking care of her pregnant standard poodle. It's a busy life for these characters and a busy mystery. The following Saturday is a show, and Sam's poodle puppy is showing. While at the show, they receive terrible news of a murder. Sam takes the murder pretty hard and flies off to Illinois to deal with the victim's family. While he is away, Melanie plays intrepid girl sleuth and rounds up a list of suspects for his return. Just when she thinks she figured it out, another murder takes place and leaves her scratching her head.
I have two pure breed dogs, but I know nothing about shows or breeding. And to prove it, I never registered our dogs, the Lhasa carries a poodle cut, and the miniature schnauzer has floppy ears. They were hand-me-downs from families who didn't want them. So, in reading this mystery, I've learned a lot from the drove of dog show information blended into the mystery. It was interesting without being distracting. The mystery itself was pretty good, and although I did have it solved right away, I still enjoyed reading the storyline and enjoyed watching the lead protagonist's personal life take on some changes. Speaking of the of the protagonist, the lead characters of Melanie, Sam, Aunt Peg, and Davy are likable; their relationships are realistic without being silly or over sweet. The sub-characters aren't left out of the action either. Each has an essential part in the mystery, whether it's to add more suspicion or to become a suspect. I sincerely think Laurien Berenson's fans will enjoy the undemanding epic called Unleashed in the Melanie series.
If you enjoy barking up this type of mystery tree, then you may also enjoy some similar canine mysteries by Susan Conant, Melissa Cleary, Carol Lea Benjamin, and Leslie O'Kane.
Berenson's best work yet!!Review Date: 2000-09-18
The Best One YetReview Date: 2001-01-10

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another satisfying mysteryReview Date: 2008-10-05
Good but not the best of the seriesReview Date: 2008-09-30
Another great mystery by BerensonReview Date: 2007-12-24
This series continues to satisfyReview Date: 2007-12-29
it's a place where Melanie's first husband co-exists nicely with her second, and her formerly aimless brother finds true love with the gorgeous handler, Bertie and even establishes a thriving business for himself. And then there's Aunt Peg...with her critical eye yet unconditional love. I'm looking forward to the next installment as the Travis/Driver family grows!
Fantastic, as usual!Review Date: 2008-02-04

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Biography /or/ Regimental History?Review Date: 2007-08-07
My Brave Boys is readable, and seems quite solidly based, but reading the other reviews left me a bit befuddled - I didn't come away thinking it was as great a book as others seem to find. Your mileage may vary...
Long overdue recognition for Fighting 5th N.H. Vols.Review Date: 2001-05-09
A Story Well-ToldReview Date: 2001-07-22
Civil War Battlefield History at its BestReview Date: 2002-06-02
The Colonel Cross of the title was Edward E. Cross, a newspaperman from New Hampshire who had worked on newspapers in Ohio and Arizona before the war started. He was an American party member (the "Know-Nothings") and something of a bigot, but very strong-minded on the subject of the preservation of the Union. When the Civil War began, he immediately returned to New Hampshire, and through political connections was given command of the state's Fifth regiment. He immediately recruited as many experienced soldiers as he could, turned them into drillmasters, and began to transform his crowd of farmers and townsmen into soldiers.
The training paid off. In its first fight, the regiment acted as if it were composed of veterans, and the authors make it clear that it didn't lose this composure until long after Cross' death at Gettysburg, when it was weakened by draftees (from other states even!) who didn't want to fight, and weren't properly trained. The heart of the book follows the regiment through its baptism of fire in the Seven Days, the Second Bull Run campaign, Antietam, Fredericksburg, Chancellorsville, and Gettysburg, where as I said, Cross was killed. The narrative keeps you apprised of the course of the battle well enough that you understand the context of the regiment's actions and the opinions of the participants, without bogging down, and the battles themselves are recreated here as well as it's ever been done. The authors have, through contacts they have in the state, found several people who have collections of letters from participants to relatives back home. These give the narrative an immediacy and authenticity that might otherwise have been lacking.
Lastly, the maps are gorgeous. This is the sort of thing that's difficult to do in a book like this, and often you're presented with a blurry recreation of something from the era, overburdened with detail and almost illegible. The authors made a happy choice in allowing Charlotte Thibault, who's apparently the newsroom illustrator at the paper they both work at, to draw the maps. She's done a marvelous job: they convey the situation in the battles, and the Fifth's position and actions in the fighting, while being clear and easy to understand.
Pride and Travis have produced one of the best books on the Civil War in a good while. It'll be interesting to see if they have anything else up their sleeves.
"Not Merely a War Story, But a Human Story"Review Date: 2001-05-31

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Become aware of who you are and how to use this to your advantageReview Date: 2008-10-29
It examines the study of 500,000 people from 94 counties (large sample size), their 123,000 personality combinations and the resulted 14 distinct human personalities.
The advice that appealed to me the most was to become aware of what my personality traits are and focus on using them to my advantage. This idea contrasts sharply with the traditional self-help books where one is encouraged to change to resemble someone he/she will never become.
The book investigates the reasons behind human personality, how and when it solidifies and why we can't change who we are beyond a certain point in our lives. Very intriguing.
I highly recommend it.
What makes YOU tick? This one is better than StrengthsFinder!Review Date: 2008-02-22
With some of my, eh hem, tougher to understand colleagues, I now have a way to understand where they are coming from and why they do some of the bizarre things that they do. The book gives us a common language that we now use to understand and describe each other. We also took the strengthsfinder test and I didn't get the same depth of information from that test, so I don't understand the review here that says that book is better. Plus that strengthsfinder book is too short and The Personality Code provides a wealth of information. Highly recommended!
Fun readReview Date: 2007-06-11
A twist on MBTIReview Date: 2007-05-12
Good BookReview Date: 2007-04-27
I really enjoyed the author's writing in this book. Dr. Bradberry has
influenced me to learn more about myself and to explore the perspectives of
others. I enjoyed the stories, understood the research, and the test that
comes with the book is top-notch. I have benefited so much from this
information I hope everyone who comes in contact with this information have
the same revelations as I did.

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Great find!Review Date: 2007-07-25
New Characters Replace the Old StandbysReview Date: 2006-10-23
This book--like so many of Kensington Press's--suffers from lazy editing. On page 122, for example, one minor character, a habitue of the posh nursing home that figures in the mystery, mourns the loss of her large ("big as a grape") ruby ring. But by page 283, readers wonder if Melanie's hanging around with old people throughout the book has affected HER memory, because she refers to the character's missing "ruby brooch." I know, I know, this is nitpicking and not germane to the mystery. But the truth is, when I read this kind of ephemera (and I do all the time), the most fun of all is not the light-weight mysteries, but the search for these kind of hidden gems. Unfortunately, Kensington makes this game almost too easy for the reader. I wish this press would better serve its writers and spend a little more time, effort and cash on proper editing. But then I'd be out a game!
Too many characters, too little timeReview Date: 2006-09-11
Enjoyable story--but a bit light on mysteryReview Date: 2005-10-07
On her first visit to the senior housing campus, one of the guests dies--and the police discover it is murder. Recognizing Melanie's history of solving mysteries, her fellow obedience school members urge her to discover the killer. With a bit of pressure, and some help, from her aunt, Melanie sets off to do just that.
Author Laurien Berenson maintains a light tone, provides lots of information about dog training and showing, if not so much about the mysteries she's solving, and recognizes the importance of personal life in her sleuth. Indeed, half the fun is watching Melanie solve mysteries between running around with her dogs, trying to keep her son entertained, exploring the sexy side of her new marriage, and dealing with an overcrowded life.
RAINING CATS AND DOGS is an enjoyable story. I would have liked to see a bit more sleuthing and mystery mixed in with the 'life of Melanie Travis,' but that didn't keep RAINING from being an enjoyable story. Dog-lovers, in particular, will appreciate Berenson's attention to the interaction between dogs and their human-companions.
Another great read!Review Date: 2005-09-26

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You need this book on your reference shelf.Review Date: 2001-06-14
FTP, Compressing Files, Telnet OperationReview Date: 2000-07-29
very good overviewReview Date: 1999-09-01
Good protocols overviewReview Date: 2000-03-22
IndispensableReview Date: 2000-01-20

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A great bookReview Date: 2007-04-05
Another page-turner...again a Best In Show winner!Review Date: 1999-06-05
Hooray!Review Date: 1999-09-11
Dog lovers will love BerensonReview Date: 2000-06-12
Getting better with every bookReview Date: 2000-12-04
Frank's latest big venture in a string of failed jobs and prospects is a coffee bar in a nearby Connecticut township. Locals are protesting the business, and one would that was the worst of Frank's worries. Then his financial backer turns up dead on the construction site, and Melanie -- whose hands are full with dog shows, a new job, and a marriage proposal (finally!) from Sam -- must come to the rescue.
Berenson is always a delight to read, with fun characters and lessons in dog grooming. Watchdog is no exception; watch out for this one and for Melanie's future exploits.

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Effective software tuitionReview Date: 2007-07-26
The cover categorises the user level as beginner-intermediate, and that assessment seems realistic.
I have so far worked through 4 chapters/200 pages. Each chapter has taken about 3-4 hours to read the information, and do the exercises. The later chapters are longer. The layout is generally clear, logical and comprehensible.
The only exception is chapter one, which required several readings and revisits before I started to make sense of the file types and file organisation.
The attached CD installed and worked without a hitch.
The exercises so far are fairly easy, and interesting, and nicely demonstrate the intended points.
The user interface of Inventor 10 bears little resemblance to AutoCAD, and AutoCAD users will require an open mindset to learn how to use it. For a start, there is no command line. It is almost entirely mouse controlled, with some input from keyboard shortcuts and function keys.
The book itself has a quality feel, and despite its 750 pages, is easy to handle. The index is comprehensive. I expect that it will be a very useful reference manual.
I have used quite a few software instruction manuals over the years, and I would say that this is the most impressive one yet. Recommended.
A great ReferenceReview Date: 2007-05-07
Inventor for beginners - still in the beginning of the bookReview Date: 2006-02-27
So far I can really recommend the book.
Excellent coverage of the "Essentials", and some of the "Plus"Review Date: 2006-01-06
Detailed and accurate guide to Inventor 10Review Date: 2006-07-16
1. Getting Started - Talks about the "Getting Started" screen, reasons for which a project file is used, how to create a project file for a single user, different file types used in Inventor, and application options.
2 Sketching, Constraining, and Dimensioning - Teaches how to change the sketch and part options as needed, sketch the outline of a part, create geometric constraints, dimension a sketch, create dimensions using the automatic dimensioning tool, change a dimension's value in a sketch, and import AutoCAD DWG data.
3. Creating and Editing Sketched Features - Explains what a feature is, how to use the Inventor Browser to edit parts, how to extrude or revolve a sketch into a part, editing features of a part, editing the sketch of a feature, making an active sketch on a plane, and creating sketched features using the cut, join, or intersect operation.
4. Creating Placed Features - Shows how to create fillers, chamfers, holes, work axes, work points, work planes, and internal and external threads.
5. Creating and Editing Drawing Views - This chapter helps you understand the drawing options and styles. You also learn to create and edit drawing borders and title blocks. The creation of base and projected drawing views from a part is discussed as well as the creation of auxiliary, section, detail, broken, break-out, draft, and perspective views. You'll learn how to edit the properties and locations of drawing views and how to retrieve model dimensions to use in drawing views.
6. Creating and Documenting Assemblies - This chapter discusses the various assembly options, and the creation of bottom-up assemblies, top-down assemblies, subassemblies, and adaptive parts. It discusses how to constrain components together using assembly constraints, and how to edit those assembly constraints. Finally, you learn how to pattern components in an assembly.
7. Advanced Sketching and Constraining Techniques - This chapter shows how to use construction geometry to help constrain sketches. It also shows how to create an ellipse, 2D spline, and a pattern of sketch geometry. You'll learn how to share a sketch, utilize the symmetry constraint and mirror tool, slice the graphics window, sketch on another parts face, change the display of dimensions, create relationships between dimensions, create parameters, and finally create a part that is driven by an Excel spreadsheet.
8. Advanced Part Modeling Techniques - This chapter teaches you how to extrude an open profile, create ribs, webs, and rib networks, emboss text and profiles, create sweep, coil, and loft features, split parts or faces of parts, copy features within a part, and reorder those part features.
9. Sheet Metal Design - This final chapter is a "capstone" which builds on knowledge of the previous eight. You learn how to use the Inventor sheet metal environment, modify settings for the sheet metal design, create sheet metal parts, modify sheet metal parts to match design requirements, create sheet metal flat patterns, and create drawing views of a sheet metal part.
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The Miller family is staying at a "lodge" of 40,000 sf in the secluded mountains of North Carolina in the dead of winter. Trapped in a mansion during a major snowstorm with an evil presence lurking all around. Jim and Stephanie are both fighting a spiritual battle that appears to be beating them down until the innocent faith of their son brings them back to God and rebuilds their own faithful beliefs. Travis Thrasher has done an excellent job weaving this scary story with several twists. Not to be read by the those who easily frightened or else you will be sleeping with your lights on tonight.