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

White
White Soul
Published in Paperback by Harvest House Publishers (2008-02-01)
Author: Brandt Dodson
List price: $13.99
New price: $5.69
Used price: $5.00

Average review score:

Great Suspense with a Twist
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-06
Brandt Dodson takes a break from his usual characters and gives us a whole new cast. He knows the ins and outs of working all sorts of cases and White Soul is one that will keep you guessing until the very end. As Agent Ortega goes undercover to learn who is taking over the drug trafficking in Miami, he learns that nothing is sacred and there truly is no honor among thieves and those who break the law. The closer he gets to the leader, the closer he comes to being discovered and losing his life. The final showdown takes an unexpected twist and proves once again that all is not as it seems. This is a true tale of suspense, intrigue, mystery, and takes the reader on a wild ride into the underworld of crime that will leave the reader breathless.

Intrigue and Danger in Miami
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-29
White Soul
By: Brandt Dodson

Brandt Dodson has done it again. With his realistic characters, intriguing mystery, and keen understanding of police work, he has created another thriller.

FBI agent Ron Ortega, is new to the world of undercover. He joins forces with agents in Miami, FL and infiltrates one of the city's most prestigious and vicious gangs. No amount of training prepares him for the turmoil to come. Once welcomed into the gang, he finds there are expectations of him that will challenge his badge and his faith. When an attempt upon his life fails, Ron realizes the dangers before him. Temptation reigns supreme in this world of drugs, money, power and intrigue. Rom must face his greatest challenge within himself as he battles the desire to live the life he always proclaimed or take the way to wealth offered him.

Brandt Dodson wove story that will both intrigue and challenge the reader. Open the book for entertainment. When you close it, you will not be disappointed, but you will also find your own faith and beliefs a bit touched. I highly recommend White Soul.

Another Great Story by Brandt Dodson
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-29
I've been a Brandt Dodson fan since I discovered the Colton Parker Series. Now with White Soul, he has another winner. Ron Ortego is an undercover cop working in Miami. His wife wants him home. She's expecting their first baby and believes his place is with her. He's ambitious, though, and he sees this case as a career builder for him. Ron infiltrates deeper into the drug scene and is accepted by Ricardo Estevez, head of one of the most feared gangs in the area. Suddenly, he has good reason to believe he might not live long enough to make it back home.
Brandt Dodson just keeps getting better and better, and White Soul is his best one yet. This one has it all. Recommended.

Riveting!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-11
This is my first Brandt Dodson book, but I guarantee it won't be the last. I was spell-bound from the first page to the last. White Soul is a fast-paced ride that will keep you on the edge of your seat all the way. At times, you think you've got the next action figured out, then Dodson does the unexpected and leaves you gasping in surprise - even shock.

Undercover agent Ron Ortega, our protagonist, has managed to infiltrate one of Miami's most vicious gangs and puts his life on the line. But he faces some irresistible temptations that threaten to destroy his faith. He has a decision to make: do the right thing, or do the desired thing, but as things progress, the difference between the two becomes blurred. As Ron says, "We're all faced with choices at critical times in our lives . . . and then we have to make decisions. There are times when it doesn't come down to a clear black-and-white choice, but more of a shade of gray."

Ron's wife, Libby, is in Chicago, expecting their first baby; Ron is in Miami following his own ambitions and the life he's always wanted . . . if he even survives.

I highly recommend this book to anyone who loves suspense thrillers. One caveat: It contains rather graphic violence and probably not for the faint-hearted.

Cop-Lit with Soul.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-28

This adrenaline soaked read kept me turning pages to the bittersweet end.

Fans of cop-lit should find much to like as they plunge into Ron Ortega's dual life as the undercover DEA agent becomes Ron Acuna, wannabe, and infiltrates the organization of a proud, suave and filthy rich drug Lord. What Ortega discovers will test everything he ever believed in.

Told in omniscient POV with plenty of juicy detail, the novel explores the underbelly of steamy, seamy Florida. However, in a step beyond secular cop-lit, the reader is able to experience the spiritual toll as the lure of money, glitz and power beckon Ron.

I would've liked to see a deeper relationship between Ron and Libby, his wife who is pregnant and alone, but I love character pieces. Those who consume plot-driven novels won't likely share my sentiments.

Warning to the sensitive -- Dodson peppers this work with grit. Squeamish souls may squirm.

White
Black Rednecks and White Liberals
Published in Paperback by Encounter Books (2006-06-25)
Author: Thomas Sowell
List price: $17.95
New price: $5.81
Used price: $4.45

Average review score:

Provactive title but a must read for all
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-10-10
Great book. A very necessary addition to the discussion. I agree with the positive comments aleady on this board. I bought and read this book a few years back so the details escape me now. It's time to reread it. That will have to wait until a coworker finishes reading it. I'll expand my comments then.

The three things that stand out are:

1) His refreshing discussion of the world-wide history of slavery that takes a holistic view rather than a bash-the-US approach.

2) His interesting and unique (I think) comparison of the white redneck culture to the black inner city culture...thus the term black rednecks. I discussed this idea with some of my black collegues and they were at first a little uncertain what to think, then they whole heartedly agreed. They are hard working men who despise cultures that reward laziness, lack of education, and intolerance. Most of them grew up in inner city USA, have friends/family there, and find it difficult to relate to those people whom they now view as being stuck in nowhere land.

3) His discussion of the origins of the redneck culture, including language.

Wake up call for all races
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-11
Sowell presents many ideas that could reduce racial tension and help all of us strive for the American dream. Craig Matteson's review gives an excellent summary so I refer you to that for details. The title is a great choice. I highly recommend this book for blacks, whites, and other races as well.

No Cultural Gray Areas In Provocative "Black Rednecks and White Liberals"
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-10
In his bestselling autobiography, "My Grandfather's Son," Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas called hearing and speaking with leading conservative author Thomas Sowell "a landmark event." Justice Thomas later cited Sowell among a few who, "unhampered by party allegiances...could speak their minds with honesty and clarity. They were my kind of black men."

In "Black Rednecks and White Liberals," Sowell's sober, reasoned approach wrestles major pieces of Western cultural history from emotional revision and reinterpretation.

Anyone following conservative politics and philosophy since Ronald Reagan's election will recognize Sowell's underlying themes. He long opposed preserving "ghetto" or "gangsta rap" culture, which criticized studious, high-achieving blacks for "acting white." His first essay traces perceived black "cultural heritage" to a "redneck" culture rooted in Britain's working class, transplanted with the 18th century Southern settlers, extracted through education and migration after the Civil War, then given, in Sowell's words, "new lease on life" by liberals and academics after 1960.

Sowell also long opposed affirmative action, racial quotas, and busing. In "Black Education" he uses the histories of Washington, DC's Paul Laurence Dunbar High School and Howard University to divide traditional teaching (based on discipline, study, and hard work) from modern social experiment, multiculturalism, and what Sowell quotes one leader's calling a "superiority-inferiority complex" between mostly white teachers and their black students. Sowell sees the tragedy stemming from students needing the best available education regardless of race.

Sowell's essays siphon morality from causation, drawing lessons (as opposed to agendas or even reparation) from US history. In "The Real History of Slavery," and again in "History vs. Visions," he laments black history told only through acknowledged mistreatment of blacks by whites, challenging Alex Haley's powerful "Roots" mythology. He widens slavery and human exploitation's shame and history to South America, the Middle East ( frightening examples of Arab mistreatment of slaves) and among Africans. He cites Western Civilization and philosophy as catalysts to see and end slavery's evil; Western culture had been vilified for preserving the "peculiar institution" and not denouncing it strongly enough in Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation.

Two essays, "Are Jews Generic?" and "Germans and History," isolate Nazi Germany's unspeakable Holocaust from Jewish and German interlocked histories. Sowell recalls their cultural contributions: Germans as punctual craftsmen relishing and using learning and technology, Jewish merchants and bankers creating wealth through long hours, hard work and convenient goods and services in new, untested areas. Both were discriminated against (as would other nationalities seen as economic "middlemen"), sometimes violently, by indigenous peoples Sowell saw as lacking their respective initiatives and work ethic. Sowell noted Adolf Hitler exploited this trend in his need to seize dictatorial power from Germany's need for restored pride, and used it to win an election with devastating results none could expect in 1933.

Ultimately, this book's provocative title (I received more comment from its cover it than any book I carried publicly) and essays tell Western cultural history without evoking guilt, shame, or burden. "Black Rednecks and White Liberals" is history re-told as statistically as Sowell (also a leading economist) could tell it; a wake-up call from nightmares of past mistreatment. It licenses anyone reading it to transcend their past or its perceptions. Highly recommended for those interested in American history and culture.

What I knew wasn't so
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-29
With his usual impeccable research and clear writing, in the title presentation, Black Rednecks and White Liberals Thomas Sowell has shown that much of the self-defeating behavior of Black Americans came from neither the antebellum South, nor from ancestral Africa. Rather, they came from the behavior of English expatriates who relocated to the old South. From the Reverend Wright style of rant, to the word choice itself, we see reflected in American Blacks the lifestyles of the people who had lived in the Northern half of England, and who were considered unwelcome and uncouth even among their own countrymen.
There are other long essays, including works on Black education, slavery, and discrimination against Jews, but it is the first that generates "aha's" on almost every page

Good Read
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-18
I was automatically attracted to this book by the title and was interested to see what was written. I'm not a big fan of Sowell but this was a very compelling read. Finally a book that explains "ghetto" culture and not just fingerpoints at it. Also, I love this book because it equates whites and blacks that live similar cultures. Too many conservative writings that focus on societal failures always point to the black community when the same ills exist in predominatly white locales.

I think this is a book that both whites and blacks should read.

White
Double Luck: Memoirs of a Chinese Orphan
Published in Hardcover by Holiday House (2001-03)
Authors: Chi Fa Lu, Becky White, and Lu Chi Fa
List price: $18.95
New price: $2.00
Used price: $1.75
Collectible price: $18.95

Average review score:

9th and 10th grade reading
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-18
I assigned this book to all of my 9th and 10th grade English students. I have never before seen students so eager and motivated to read a novel. All of my students are energized about reading and are excited to read their next novel. I would recommend this novel to anyone- student or adult.

What a story...
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-05-22
I could not put this book down.
It is written so well that you are literally transported to China.
A survival story not to be missed.

A story to help you rise above
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-09-29
Chi Fa is orphaned as a very young boy. Throughout his childhood, he goes from family to family many different times. He is abused and often goes hungry. He is not unkind, though, and is respectful of others. His problems do not affect how he treats others or lives his life. In the end, his dream comes true and he makes a good life for himself. This is a story of determination. It inspired me and made me realize that one can rise above tragic circumstances; dreams can come true. I recommend this book to anyone who needs some inspiration.

A magnificient memoir that must be read by all
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-12-13
Growing up in Communist China was not easy, especially for Lu Chi Fa. "Double Luck" is a memoir throughout his days as an orphan in Communist China, moving around all his life. Chi Fa's parents died when he was very small, and he never had a real home when he was in China. Chi Fa's sister was the one of the two adults in his family who cared for him and his safety, but she could not have him stay at her house, and tried to give him to other family members. He would leave his temporary house after his temporary guardians were bored with him and was tossed around the family until he was sold to communists. His life was hard and grueling with guardians who beat him, harsh living conditions, near death moments, begging on the streets, and many more tearful stories. This is a remarkable story; every one should hear the tale of Lu Chi Fa.

Thinking that he would never have a real home to live in forever, he first learns of "America," the place where you "Eat three meals a day" and "are too full to complain." After hearing of this wondrous land, he envisions such a place and tries to find ways to get him closer to it. When he was living with his brother, he worked at a station for US soldiers to rest and retire. This gave him an understanding for the language and a happy feeling that he would soon live in this "amazing country." After back breaking and heart stopping moments, he finally sees his dream come true many years later. On each page the author would give, in great detail, a small portion of the story that put you right into the book. Each chapter was either one year or one day of his life, all teaching him methods on how to survive. And with each chapter came a sad ending as well. The way the author kept each story alive is remarkable, like he was there at each time and whispering what was happening while you were hiding in the shadows. This book is like no other.

I loved reading this memoir, it is above many other books I have read. "Double Luck" is a story that can not only entertain, but teach. This book must be the best story that anyone can read no matter how old you are. After you read each chapter, I cannot begin to tell you how thankful you feel. Thankful for the house you live in, the bed you sleep on, the food you eat, and the family who cares for you. I truly loved this book with each passing page and couldn't wait for what would happen next. I admired the way that the book described his stories in a way that put you right in the book. I also feel that it is necessary to tell about the plot itself. This book could never have a look alike, it is to unique and personal to copy. This is a book that gets you hooked in and is hard to put down. After all, growing up in Communist China could never be easy.

Double Luck for the Readers
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-05-02
Double Luck was an outstanding book that describes the troubles and dangers on the childhood of Lu Chi Fa as he tries to be free and escape from Communist China. Double Luck clearly describes the terrible childhood he had as he was a slave to Communists, beaten constantly from guardian to guardian,and face almost certain death. The true beauty of this book is that after all this happened and how little kindness he was shown he still looked back on his life and thanked every person he had met because it had taught him bravery and determination. Double Luck is truly a must read!

White
The Heart of a Soldier: A True Love Story of Love, War, and Sacrifice
Published in Hardcover by (2005-12-29)
Authors: Dana White and Kate Blaise
List price: $25.00
New price: $4.32
Used price: $2.42

Average review score:

Exactly what its subtitle says
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-10
Kate Decker and Mike Blaise were high school sweethearts in a small town in middle America. They both chose Army careers - Mike as an infantryman who later became a warrant officer and helicopter pilot; Kate as a commissioned officer via ROTC. Their commitment to both their marriage and their careers challenged them often, but never as much as when both were deployed to Iraq. Theirs became a combat marriage at that point, because Kate's "support" role required carrying her weapon 24/7 and placed her as close to Mike's Kiowa helicopter base as one mile. So she was there, near enough to have been laughing with her husband in his quarters a few hours beforehand, when a flying accident killed him. It happened so close to their scheduled departure for home, at deployment's end, that Kate's belongings were already packed up and ready to accompany her unit.

Politics has nothing to do with this book, although Kate Blaise makes no secret of her beliefs and her feelings where the war is concerned. This is just what its subtitle says, a story of love, war, and sacrifice. I found it a remarkable testament to how much times have changed (Kate is a generation younger than I am, you see), in that a woman can live the life she has chosen and consider it her duty as well as her right. But it's equally a testament to the unchanging nature of those things that matter most in life: love, faith, family, and - yes, again - duty.

Well worth reading. Glad I did!

Mundane story until last 3rd
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-17
Until the end it could have been story of thousand of soldiers,
and cloying in its sweetness of Missouri people and a theme of "people dont cause their own accidents" trying to avoid responsiblity.

Should take last part of book and make it its own storyb but not a novel, a short story!

Im sure G Bush would love to be absolved of responsbility like this book does in spades.

Beautifully Written
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-07-27
I was an Army Brat growing up so when I saw this book at the PX (AAFES) while visiting my parents I knew I HAD to read it. After reading Kate's story, I feel an incredible amount of appreciation for everything that our service men and women sacrifice and endure. The amount of loyalty Kate and Mike have for this country is what being a soldier is truly about.

Amazing True Heartfelt Story
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-05-07
Reading this story I felt new compassion for those who serve in the military. Most of us know someone either in the war or associated with the military. Only a few know what it is really like. One of those people happens to be Kate. Heart of a Solider is a one of a kind story that will make you think about the sacrifice others give to bring us freedom and others wanting freedom. I recommend this book to anyone who wants to learn more about life in the military, beliefs, or just wants to read an incredible story. From small town Macon to the Big Apple this book is for anyone. Once you pick up the book you will understand.

Absolutely amazing!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-02-26
Kate Blaise is an amazing woman and author. I met Kate a few years ago thru my college roommate. Never did I realize everything that she had been through. Reading her accounts of life and how she carried through her trials and tribulations was very uplifting. I met Kate's husband one time, but through her writings, I feel like I knew him all along. The love story between her and Mike and her passion for the Army was told from the perspective like no other. Thank you Kate for sharing your story!

White
Here Is New York
Published in Paperback by Warner Books (1988-11)
Author: E. B. White
List price: $5.95
Used price: $11.94

Average review score:

The indestructible spirit of the world's greatest city
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-11-05
E.B. White, the author of the classic THE ELEMENTS OF STYLE, shows off that style brilliantly in this highly literate, amusing, and passionate memoir of New York City in 1948. Although the surface details of New York have changed in sixty years, the spirit remains the same, and that's what White is really writing about. White is also disturbingly prophetic when he writes, "The subtlest change in New York is something people don't speak much about but that is in everyone's mind. The city, for the first time in its long history, is destructible. A single flight of planes no bigger than a wedge of geese can quickly end this island fantasy, burn the towers, crumble the bridges, turn the underground passages into lethal chambers, cremate the millions." I doubt that a book such as this could be written today. Some editor would "dumb it down" and politically correct it. But how refreshing it is to read such wonderful prose. This is really a 56-page essay between hard covers, rather than a "book." As such, it's very a very easy and exhilarating reading experience and would make a wonderful gift for anyone who loves New York or would like to visit it someday. Five stars, absolutely.

Not as advertised
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-08
The reviews I read said that White gives the reader a feel for life in New York. Nonsense - the book is vague to the point where it could have been titled, Here is London, or Here is Shanghai. If you want to get a feel for New York, or at least the Bronx where I grew up, read "World Fair" by Doctorow.

Here Is New York by E. B. White
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-23
Anything by E. B. White is fine - he must have been quite young when he wrote this but I enjoyed reading it and getting a sense of what New York was like at that time - some of it is still true but much has changed.

Style, Truth, Prescience
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2005-12-11
Early to a party, I was looking at a friend's bookcase and pulled this slim volume from a shelf. After reading the first sentence, I knew I had to have it.

Originally published in 1949, E.B. White, who no longer lived in New York City, captured the soul and spirit of the place. Nothing has changed. At the time, the United Nations building was under construction, and the bombing of London was fresh in his mind. He ends the book with a vision that perfectly balances hope with danger, in words prescient of September 11 - I re-read those paragraphs on every anniversary, it has become my ritual.

But what originally drew me to the book is not only the truth and insight of White, but his style, his felicity of expression. The author of "The Elements of Style" certainly knew the rules, and knew when to break them, as well. The second paragraph ends with a run-on sentence 198 words long, a thrilling joy ride which itself demonstrates how impossible it is to capture, in prose, the enormity and importance of this city.

I agree with Russell Baker, this is "the finest portrait ever painted of the city."

A Love Letter to New York City
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2006-04-24
HERE IS NEW YORK is a truly spectacular 1948 essay that originally appeared in Holiday magazine. Written by E.B. White and named one of the ten best books ever written about New York, this is a quick read that will leave you years later savoring White's timeless observations.

Writing in a hotel room during a sweltering heat wave, White takes the reader through the essence of New York City and its eight million inhabitants who he notes roughly fall into three groups: the natives, the commuters and the transplants.

Warning that "no one should come to New York unless he is willing to be lucky," White lovingly explains how the city is more a collection of thousands of small neighborhoods that implausibly operate independently of each other, completely oblivious to what is occurring only a few blocks away.

Though it was written almost 60 years ago, HERE IS NEW YORK is just as accurate today as the moment it was written. Yes, the city has changed but the basic structure of life in New York remains the same.

Overall HERE IS NEW YORK is a very positive book that will leave everyone feeling welcome and needed in America's biggest city. But eerily the book presciently warns that "a single flight of planes no bigger than a wedge of geese can quickly end this island fantasy, burn the towers, crumble the bridges, turn the underground passages into lethal passages, cremate the millions."

Though it was tough to read that passage right after 9/11 as I did, I still whole heartedly recommend HERE IS NEW YORK to anyone who lives in New York, commutes to and from there, or has just moved there and is now, as White observed, generating "enough heat and light to dwarf the Consolidated Edison Company."

- Regina McMenamin

White
Nothing but the Truth (And a Few White Lies)
Published in Library Binding by (2008-05-22)
Author: Justina Chen Headley
List price: $16.99
New price: $16.99

Average review score:

Nothing but the Truth (and a Few White Lies)
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-13
I really liked this book. Patty is a hapa (half white, half Taiwanese) and she's always wishing that she could fit in... She feels like her brother is better than her because he is the Good Child in her strict mother's eyes.

I like how this book deals with family issues, fitting in... such sensitive issues for some people but they were dealt with in a good way.

Hapa girls are hot!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-23
I wasn't sure what to expect from this book but wanted to read it because there was so many good reviews for it.

It was a nice change of pace from the typical teen lit books I read and that was a big plus. I loved that the main character, Patty Ho, was half Taiwanese and half white. What also brought the story more depth than your average fluffy teen book was that she hated who she was and wanted to be caucasion to fit in with everyone else. She couldn't understand why her Taiwanese mother acted the wasy she did. What she comes to realize through a summer of growth and maturing is that the truth of the matter is, she's perfect the way she is.

I'm looking forward to more from Justina Chen Headley.

Classic coming-of-age story, with a twist
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-09
I had the chance to talk to Justina Chen Headley briefly before she gave a reading from Nothing But the Truth (and a Few White Lies). She was very cool, grounded and an absolute pleasure to talk to. So, it should be no surprise that her narrator, Patty Ho, is equally enjoyable in every way in Headley's first novel written for young adults.

Half-Taiwanese and half-white, Patty feels like she doesn't belong anywhere. This fact is confirmed when, instead of going to the last school dance of the year, Patty's mother drags her to a fortune teller who discerns Patty's future from her belly button. Things get worse from there when Patty realizes that sometimes dream guys are anything but and finds herself enrolled in Stanford math camp for the summer.

This novel is a classic coming-of-age story. As the plot progresses, Patty learns that sometimes you have to find people like you in order to appreciate the value of being really unique. Now, that might sound a bit pat and cliche--but I can assure you this book is anything but.

Headley writes with a style unlike any authors I've read recently. The narration is snappy and spunky--as is fitting for a teenage girl as vibrant as Patty. I also like that Headley doesn't take the easy way a lot of the time. The story doesn't follow any typical girl-meets-boy formula. In fact, Headley has quite a few twists thrown in along the way.

It's also really interesting to read about Patty and her mother. The subject doesn't often come up in teen literature, where often the characters are immigrants if they are not white. Headley's dialog between Patty and her mother seems realistic (not being Taiwanese at all I can't really say). Her incorporation of slang and certain speech mannerisms bring to mind Amy Tan's writing in The Hundred Secret Senses (another book about a half-asian, half-white character, incidentally). Honestly though, everything in the book is interesting. Even math camp, which some readers will view as warily as Patty does in the beginning, turns out to be a cool environment to read about (with minimal time spent on math in the narrative).

In a lot of reviews you'll see me complaining that the characters come off as flat. Happily, I can say that is not the case here. Patty and her myriad friends (and enemies too) jump off the page. Furthermore, Headley artfully negotiates Patty's changing sense of self throughout the novel.

It's weird to be saying this about a novel that isn't a thriller, but it was really a page turner. I couldn't put it down. Headley has a lot to say here about identity and family and self-confidence. All of which she manages like a pro.

The term "new classic" is bandied about a lot for modern books and movies. I'm going to go out on a limb and say that Nothing But the Truth is going to get that label if it doesn't have it already.

A Joy to Read
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-05
Nothing but the Truth is about fifteen-year-old Patty Ho, daughter of a controlling Taiwanese mother and a long-absent American father. Patty struggles to find her place in a world where she's not fully Asian, but not fully white, confronting both egregious and subtle prejudices from both sides. She also struggles with something I could personally relate to, being good at math, but also wanting to write. Her struggles come to a head when her mother sends her to Stanford for the summer for math camp (a month-long program for gifted high school students). While there she encounters humiliation and heartbreak, but also gains self-confidence, friends, and insight into her own family history.

Nothing but the Truth is a joy to read. Patty practically leaps forth from the page, fully three-dimensional. I refuse to believe that she isn't real. Every paragraph reveals something about her, or her family, or what it's like to be hapa (the Hawaiian word for someone who is half-white and half-Asian). Her mother, with her strengths and weaknesses, temper tantrums and quirks, feels real, too. Life at Stanford during summer session is also fully realized - the book is chock full of insider information about the university.

I particularly enjoyed the writing style in this book. Humorous, yet lyrical, and dripping with (frequently Asian-tinged) metaphors, and the angst of a teenage girl. For example:

"Mama breathes in sharply. She must be smelling my exasperation polluting the air. (page 13)"

""O-kayyy." Anne drags out the last syllable as if it's a hoe, raking through the intractable soil of my rudeness. (page 76)"

"I'm here because I don't want to be up in the Pacific Northwest where it's always overcast with disappointment and showering anger. (page 108)"

"Under the Dish that scans planets and distant galaxies, I know that the world -- the universe -- is bigger than high school and Mark Scranton and Steve Kosanko and their edamame-bean brains. That it's bigger than Mama and math camp. That maybe I am Zebra-woman, trapped behind black-and-white bars of my own making. (page 110)"

Despite the tremendous depth and authenticity that Justina Chen Headley brings to her hapa and Asian characters, this is a book that will resonate with teenage girls from all sorts of backgrounds. Because what it's really about (as is clear from Patty's essay at the end of the book) is the struggle to balance the conflicts in yourself, whatever they are, and find your place in the world. This makes it a perfect first book for the readergirlz discussion group, focused on celebrating gutsy girls in life and literature. An example of Patty's place as a gutsy girl is this passage, in which she muses about facing down her fears.

Is attitude truly the only thing separating embarrassment from triumph? That a little sass could turn you from a social zero to a social hero? (page 174)

I highly recommend this book for anyone who revels in reading about strong girls.

A slightly longer version of this book review was originally published on my blog, Jen Robinson's Book Page, on March 4, 2007.

One Girl's Summer of Change
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-10
A great strength of Nothing But the Truth is the interaction of its female characters. Patty, our protagonist, is at the heart of the story, but we see how the other girls and women in her life help her grow and change. When we discover why Patty's mother is the way she is, for us as much as for Patty, life takes on new levels. When Jasmine pushes Patty outside her comfort zone, we wonder what exciting opportunities may lie outside our own. And what is most reassuring is that after this transformative summer, Patty hasn't had to give up any of her former self; she's only added new dimensions.

In Nothing But the Truth (and a few white lies), we see how a girl can grow and change and find out who she is, without losing a sense of who she was. We can be in the present, look to the future, and remember the past. And I think Patty's most important discovery, and mine too in reading this book, is that the events that shape us do just that - they shape who we are and what we become. But they don't determine it. That's up to us.

White
Great White Shark
Published in Paperback by Stanford University Press (1995-10-01)
Authors: Richard Ellis and John McCosker
List price: $37.95
New price: $23.99
Used price: $8.95

Average review score:

Great book!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-09
This book was awesome! It was purchased as a gift for my 13-year-old son who loved it. It was full of interesting pictures, facts, and stories about the great white shark. He considers it one of the best books in his "shark library".

"Jaws" fallacies debunked!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-02-15
This is an excellent work about the most feared creature in the ocean. I've always had an interest in marine biology, and sharks in particular, and this book embodies both biological and cultural information about one of my favorite animals. McCosker and Ellis give the great white a fair shake, and while they acknowledge "Jaws" as an excellent film, they also debunk the fallacies of it (i.e. great whites are not 30 feet long, and only very rarely do they attack humans). I appreciated the considerable section of the book that discusses "Jaws"; I feel as though it was necessary to include this information in a book about great whites since that film is the only source of information about sharks that some individuals have been exposed to. Great book, great read...and well worth the price!

A wonderful book
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-03-24
A wonderful, excellent, magnificent look at the natural history of the Great White. Written from a scientific perspective but easily accessible to everyone, this book covers biology, feeding, fishing, filming, attacks, and the exploitation of great whites. Nearly every page has superb photos and/or illustrations, and the authors do an excellent job of making the sharks an animal to be respected but neither irrationally feared nor glorified. The text covers all aspects of the shark's natural history, but never gets so in-depth as to be boring. Highly recommended.

Good shark book!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-03-10
I'm not sure why, but I'm a bit of a shark freak. I got this book for Christmas, and I read it all the way through without putting it down. Granted, a lot of this information wasn't new, but it was presented very nicely. The pictures are fantastic, and I enjoyed the extras about other sharks.

I think children as well as adults would enjoy this book. I wound up getting other people (who don't much care for the subject) interested in the pictures and short articles in this book.

Subjects treated include biology, geography, behavior, history, and interaction with man.

Good book about GWS
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-07-26
The book is great with its info. I could not believe the horror of the picture of the beautiful woman Shirley Anne Durdin and when they describe her being eaten alive...what it must have felt like. The people who watched the shark swim away from their boat said they could see tattered wads of her once-beautiful flesh dangling from its teeth and her arm sticking out. Worse than any scene in "Jaws."

White
Men of Salt: Crossing the Sahara on the Caravan of White Gold
Published in Hardcover by The Lyons Press (2006-01-01)
Author: Michael Benanav
List price: $23.95
New price: $2.10
Used price: $2.14

Average review score:

A mesmerizing blend of adventure, history and culture
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-11-08
This book lets you vicariously experience an almost 6 week camel caravan across the western Sahara. Michael Benanev's writing is clear and descriptive and you will feel that you are with him during his adventure. He blends some historical, cultural and environmental facts with the sensations of the camel caravans, the desert and the salt mines of western Sahara.

Michael read that the camel salt caravans might cease since trucks had begun transporting the salt. Fearing that he would miss a unique caravan expereince, he travels to Mali and hires a guide to take him into the desert to meet up with a salt caravan. Ironically, when they arrive at the salt mines, the miners tell him they expect the camel caravans to continue and tell him how the truck transportation has improved their lives.

Michael's goal was to go beyond being a tourist and to become an active member of a caravan. In the beginning he's pretty inept at some tasks but he becomes familiar with caravan life and eventually is entrusted with the camels while the natives stop to visit or to pray.

This was a hard book to put down and gives a vibrant portrayal of life in an impoverished land.



Please don't preach
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-19
This review is less about the book than about my reaction to the book. If you want a conventional review, please read one of the long, 5-star alternatives.

I liked this book, most of the time. Benanav has what it takes (the youthful illusion of immortality?) to undertake adventures most of us would love to try, if only we had the guts, wherewithall, health, and time. He has the ability to describe his adventures in an engaging, entertaining fashion. When he writes about WHAT happened he is excellent. Unfortunately, when he feels compelled to write about why it happened, what he felt at the time, or the geopolitical meaning of it all - well, read fast. Benanav will develop into a fine writer of travel adventures if he doesn't get himself killed, and if he learns not to preach. He should spend some time reading books by Rory Stewart.

Absorbingly Good Reading
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-18
I thouroughly enjoyed reading this book. The author writes well and is engaging in his description of the Sahara and the people he encounters. He also writes to educate the reader about the history of the salt trade and gives a thoughtful analysis of his feelings about his journey. This is a wonderful story about the kind of travel experience few of us will ever have. It also inspired me to explore the history of the countries involved in the salt trade and to research the natural history of the Sahara.

Made me want to go there!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-10
I read "Men of Salt" just a few weeks after returning from Timbuktu. And I thought I had it rough! It's just a brilliant narrative, written in such vivid detail that you really feel that you're there in the heat and dust of the Sahara. Now I'm reading one of the other books that Michael Benanev referenced ("Forbidden Sands" by Richard Trench, another, earlier account of crossing with a salt caravan). I highly recommend "Men of Salt" to real and armchair adventurers everywhere!

Fun Read
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-29
This is quite a fun read that exposed me to a world that I never knew about. It's well written and just the right length. It made me think quite a bit about camels, salt, the desert, and how you wipe your bottom with sand while out on a caravan.

White
Mistress Masham's Repose
Published in Hardcover by Jonathan Cape (1947)
Author: T H White
List price:
Used price: $9.00

Average review score:

The Children's Masterpiece that Never Was
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-25
I first learned of Mistress Masham's Repose during a game of charades. (Can you imagine trying to act out this title, especially since it's a book so few people have heard of?) I had already read and loved The Once and Future King, and set out to find a copy. I have read this book three times over the past 20 years. Each time it strikes me anew as such a wonderfully funny, sweet and substantial novel. It could be that the title itself is what kept it from becoming a classic alongside Wind in the Willows and A Wrinkle in Time. Read this book! Buy this book for all the book-loving children in your life!

Fantastic and inspiring
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-04-15
Although one of White's lesser-known works, to my mind it's easily one of his best (Anne Fine regards it as her favourite children's book). The concept of Lilliputians living in an English landscape garden is superb, and White develops his theme in wonderfully enticing ways - and always with his typical 'feel' for character and setting. There's so much to enjoy in this tale - still a classic after 60 years.

My favorite children's book
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-21
As an American child of about 10, I acquired a battered copy of this book along with a bunch of children's books from a family friend whose children had outgrown them. As other reviewers suggest, I was mystified by much of the book (the poet Pope?) but I still found it a great adventure story and loved the illustrations. It didn't hurt that I resembled Maria myself (a bookish tomboy with glasses--thank God for LASIK). I have re-read the book with pleasure on a number of occasions and now understand the references, but I wouldn't hesitate to give this book to an intelligent American child today. Perhaps it would prompt him or her to learn more about British history and literature. I'm glad to see it has been reprinted.

One of my favorites - thanks for putting it back in print!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-09
As kids, both my brother and I considered this one of our favorite books - and we did a LOT of reading. I can't tell you how many times I read it. Our copy was lost at some point, so I am thrilled that it is back in print so I can now read it to my own children. My kids are 3 and 6, so still a bit young for this book, but I'll probably buy a copy now for my own pleasure, and another for my brother.
I have always loved books that lead you to another book, and I just had to read "Gulliver's Travels" after reading this one. As a kid, much of it went over my head, but I still enjoyed it. Now that I think about it, I should re-read that one too...

Little England
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-07
After finishing university T. H. White worked as a teacher in the Stowe School which occupies a gigantic former Baroque stately home: here he conceived of the idea of Malplaquet, modeled after the greatest of all British country homes, Blenheim Palace, where the Dukes of Marlborough have lived and where Winston Churchill was born and raised. Malplaquet, an imaginary dilapidated repository of all its nation's history (we find out the Princes in the Tower were executed in its medieval dungeon, which also contains the ax which beheaded Charles I), would make a wonderful setting for any book, but rather than use it for a Gothic (the obvious choice), here White had the inspiration to make it the setting for a children's fantasy. White's mansion is not only the home of the little girl Maria who has inherited the estate (and not much else) and her warders--some cruel, some kind--but also a group of Lilliputians brought over from their island home during the time of Swift, whom Maria encounters one day. Maria's encounter with the Lilliputians becomes for her a means for learning about the nature of tyranny--both that exercised over herself by her guardian the Vicar Mr. Hater and her governess Miss Brown, but also that she herself can hardly keep herself from exercising over the Lilliputian community hidden on her estate.

This is a children's book that, to be honest, will best be appreciated by adults. White imagined his readers not only familiar with GULLIVER'S TRAVELS but also with some of the history of seventeenth and eighteenth-century England: American children particularly today would be confused as to who Mistresses Masham and Morley were, or what Malplaquet is named after, or even who Gulliver was. And their patience might well be tried by White's love of Wodehousean "types": the bluff Lord Lieutenant with an obsession with horses and hounds, and Maria's mentor the absent-minded and esoteric antiquarian the Professor . But adults (and even older children) should love this book, and its well-structured narrative is a real pleasure.

White
RED, WHITE AND DRUNK ALL OVER: A WINE-SOAKED JOURNEY FROM GRAPE TO GLASS
Published in Hardcover by BLOOMSBURY PUBLISHING PLC (2007)
Author: NATALIE MACLEAN
List price:
Used price: $20.56

Average review score:

"Adventures in Wine Tasting" Review of "Red, White and Drunk All Over."
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-10-07
The experience one derives from wine is not like any other beverage; it is an adventure of exploring the land and the people from which it comes. It is an expression of the Providential weather, climate and soil as well as the blood sweat and tears of those who pour out their lives into the craft of wine making.

There are many books on wine that provide historical facts about production, viticulture regions, step by step instructions on how to make wine and a lot of "how to" tips on enjoying it. But they tell you little about the soul of the writer and nothing of the adventure of traveling the wine country, meeting the people or what it is like to have first hand experience in the wine making process.

The difference between Natalie MacLean's book "Red, White and Drunk All Over" and so many others is that while many authors can provide a lot of professional wine making technical information for Natalie, "...my real wine education has largely been through the people I've met and the places I've been." Like most wine enthusiasts I have met, Natalie has a story to tell of her discovery of the grandness of wine that sounds almost like a religious conversion experience. It is a moment when the light comes on and the mystery of wine grabs hold of you "that evaporates with the cold touch of analysis." You develop an insatiable appetite to learn more about wine and why it is the perfect catalyst for enjoying food and fellowship with friends. Natalie shares her personal story with her readers and as you travel with her you will find greater inspiration for exploring vineyards and the desire to expand and mature in your appreciation for the culture of wine.

I have also read countless books, journals and magazines about wine but the telling of her personal traveling experiences is where Natalie MacClean sets herself apart as a writer. As a wine-writer and fellow explorer I feel a great kinship with Natalie for I too have a "conversion story" and until recently my own education about wine has come from my interaction with wine growers. In her book Red, White and Drunk All Over she shares her experiences as she takes you along with her on her wine travels to Old World and New World wine regions. She will also invite you into the inner sanctum of fine wine shops as well as into the battlefields of wine critics.

Sound intimidating?

Well, have no fear for along the way you will learn with Natalie all that you need to know about wine. You will gain a knowledge of various wine varietals, soils as well as the enigmatic and allusive concept of "terroir." Along with Natalie you will experience the process of nurturing the nectar of the grapes from vine to wine while gaining an appreciation of the heritage of Old World wineries as well as come to love the visionary souls of those who are pushing the envelope in New World territories. Yet this is no dry textbook for it reads as a Meritage of adventure story, romance novel and an introductory class on enology and viticulture.

If you are looking for a fun, leisurely and yet insightful way to learn about wine then I highly recommend that you pick up a copy of "Red, White and Drunk All Over." Then pour yourself a glass, snuggle up to a cozy fire and read along with Natalie. Or, better yet, buy several copies and get together with your family and friends, open a bottle get ready for a fun time of adventuring the world of wine exploration.


For more wine country and travel related articles, see my "Adventures in Wine Tasting" web site at: http://erikwait.blogspot.com/

Informative & Funny
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-10
Reading the book while I'm in the right environment (France - lovely wheather - Lac Léman - tasting and buying wine - et cetera) gives me lots of pleasure. It's not only informative but also 'funny' (excusez le mot) and - while I'm half way the book - puts me in a situation where I have to choose: read the rest of the book or drive to the next planned stop in Marin (Savoie) for wine to taste again... Just decided to follow my nose... and read on in the book when I return.
Conclusion when I finished the book: can't wait to read the next one!

Wine Book Review
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-23
I have only skimmed through this book but from what I have seen I believe that it will prove informational. Also, from this book I have subscribed to a newsletter from the author and find this very informative also. I would highly recommend this to a beginner or an old hat in appreciating wine.

A laugh-out -loud, down- to- earth educational read
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-10
Reading this book was like listening to a girlfriend talk about a subject near and dear to both of our hearts. While reading this book, I felt like I was experiencing her journeys and education with her- and with quite a bit of a sense of humor. All to often, it seems wine educators take themselves (and wine) too seriously. This book will teach you more about wine production, selection, and food pairing without being snobby and pretentious. It was fun, easy to read, and informative. I hope Natalie will be writing more books!

Excellent read for the REAL wine lover
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-08
This is the first book that I've read that actually makes it fun to
learn about wine. It's relaxed and realistic for the wine novice.
Natalie teaches about wine to those who want to enjoy it, not just look
impressive ordering or drinking it.
I retained more real world knowledge about wine reading this than I have reading the wine magazines and tomes.


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