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

Lincoln
Romanovs: Autocrats of All the Russians
Published in Hardcover by Doubleday (1981-09)
Author: W. Bruce Lincoln
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The Romanovs: Autocrats of All Russia
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-14
This is an excellent history book. Even though I was had to read the book in many sittings, I never lost the train of thought of the author.

My only criticism is that I really wanted to learn more about Peter the Great and how he built St. Petersburg. I felt the book was lacking in this very important aspect of the history of Russia

Great Book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-17
Book was very easy reading and well organized. One of the best history books I have read.

russia
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-28
if you want to no about the early to last romanov's and russia history this book is for you.this writer leave nothing out.

A Very Readable Account of Imperial Russia's Rulers
Helpful Votes: 19 out of 19 total.
Review Date: 2003-12-05
W. Bruce Lincoln's history of the 300 years of Romanov rule in Russia (1613-1917) is easily his most readable account of Russian history. While Professor Lincoln's research is meticulous as ever, in this volume he has to cover far more ground than in his other more focused histories and thus he avoids some of the digressions that he normally might allow himself. The result is a superb one-volume history of the Tsars and Tsarinas who determined Russia's development from a minor principality into the largest empire on earth.

The Romanovs consists of four parts: Muscovite beginnings (1613-1689), the Rise of an Empire (1689-1796), Empire Triumphant (1796-1894) and the Last Emperor (1894-1917). The first three parts each consist of several chapters, with the first covering biographical details of the Tsars and Tsarinas in that period, followed by chapters on political and cultural changes in that period. There are only two significant problems with what is otherwise a superb presentation: a non-chronological methodology and a lack of a single supporting map of Romanov domains (there are two maps of St Petersburg's layout). In the first case, Lincoln tends to keep coming back to Tsars in subsequent chapters on culture, politics, etc which is very confusing. Indeed, he seems in a rush to plow through the biographies of the Tsars, then revisit their cultural accomplishments, then come back again and discuss their political accomplishments, and then maybe discuss a few scandals or wars. As for the lack of maps, it makes it extremely difficult for the reader to evaluate the territorial expansions of the various Romanov rulers or Russia's growth over three centuries.

Despite these two flaws, the Romanovs is a delightful read for anyone with a scholarly interest in Russian imperial history. Perhaps the three most significant rulers that Lincoln assesses are Peter the Great, Catherine the Great and Nicholas II. Most histories tend to elevate Peter to hero status, but Lincoln's evaluation is more mixed. While Peter gets great credit for pushing Russia to modernize, the costs he incurred may have been too great. In particular, Lincoln questions Peter's obsession with building his capital on totally unsuitable terrain; the fact that the Russians were able to eventually succeed in constructing Peter's dream capital often disguises the fact that the human and financial losses were exorbitantly wasteful. The reader will be left to ponder the question that if Peter had built his capital elsewhere, Russia's development might have been much less painful. As for Catherine, Lincoln prefers to minimize the scandal and corruption associated with her court and view this as the golden age of Russian cultural development. Finally, Nicholas II appears as even more of a fatalistic dolt bent on self-destruction than he did in Lincoln's previous books. In sum, The Romanovs provides a solid and very readable account of Russia's development under the Tsars and Tsarinas.

Read It!
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2002-07-22
A genuinely great book. Lincoln certainly could write, and make
all those old Russians seem really interesting. As Lincoln's
former students (including me) know, his lectures were tediously
boring, so that makes the books all the more remarkable.

Lincoln
Abraham Lincoln and the Second American Revolution
Published in Hardcover by Oxford University Press, USA (1991-02-05)
Author: James M. McPherson
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Outstanding!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-26
Absolutely outstanding book on the complicated second American revolution that occured as a result of the American Civil War and the startling reversals that took place not ten years later. McPherson's essays are masterful.

First rate.

How Lincoln changed the United States...
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 2004-06-07
This thin book which contains series of essays on how Abraham Lincoln revolutionized our nation during one of the most important periods of our nation proves to be well written and amazingly easy to understand. James McPherson writes clearly how the American Civil War was truly a revolutionary moment in our nation's history and how Lincoln took steps to ensure these changes. How we lived, our political/racial/social norms that are part of our society today took form during the Civil War. Even the way we waged war, have it roots in the Civil War, all have Lincoln's fingerprints all over it.

The book proves to be easy to follow and read. But in its simple prose, lies amazing insights and perception of Lincoln's influence during the war and his abilities to effect changes in our nation. I would say that this book is a "must read" for anyone interested in American history.

From union to nation
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-28
This well-argued collection of James McPherson's occasional pieces focuses primarily on what the author sees as the fundamental changes that the Civil War brought to America's polity, economics, culture, and self-identity. The first, second, third, and seventh of the essays deal especially with this theme. The middle fourth, fifth, and sixth essays are less directly related to it, but nonetheless offer fascinating explorations of Lincoln the total war president, Lincoln the wordsmith, and Lincoln the "hedgehog."

Many of the people who lived through the Civil War thought of it as a revolution. Many historians since have agreed, although for varying reasons. McPherson's main project in this book is to figure out whether and how the Civil War can be considered the "second American Revolution."
He believes that the war was in fact revolutionary on several counts.

First, the war shifted the economic and political power balance in the United States. The war's devastation of southern property and demographics, especially after it evolved from a limited to a total conflict, shifted economic superiority to northern industry and agriculture. Moreover, the southern states' virtual antebellum monopoly of the White House, as well as their immense congressional power, was broken for the next half century. This is what McPherson (and others) refer to as the "external" revolution.

But there was an "internal" revolution too in the realm of legal rights and national self-identity. Four million slaves were freed and granted civil and political rights, and the southern aristocracy, along with the entire way of life and set of values it maintained, disappeared (or at least went underground). Moreover, argues McPherson, the war brought about a shift from early Republic concentration on liberty as "freedom from" (negative liberty), which distrusted strong central government, to liberty as "freedom to" (positive liberty), which emphasized the responsibility of the federal government to guarantee civil rights. This shift helped create a new sense of national identity that focused on the nation rather than the region: hence McPherson's claim that the Civil War moved the country from a "union" to a "nation."

The influence of the political philosopher Isaiah Berlin is present throughout much of McPherson's thinking about liberty, and McPherson also draws on one of Berlin's most famous essays in designating Lincoln (Chapter VI) as a hedgehog in his single-minded devotion to preserving the union. McPherson might be drawing on the work of philosophers of language in his fascinating discussion (Chapter V) of Lincoln's influential talent for creating and manipulating "live" as opposed to "dead" metaphors in expressing his opinions and seeking support for his policies. In both these cases, McPherson nicely weaves some philosophical analysis into his historical interpretations.

Where I find McPherson less helpful is his rather uncritical discussion of Lincoln's suspension of habeas corpus (Chapter III). He rehearses the well-worn argument that the suspension was simply necessary from a pragmatic perspective--end of discussion. As Lincoln said in another context, "often a limb must be sacrificed to save a life." But this interpretation begs for a discussion of the moral and political short- and longterm trauma that the amputation inflicted on the body politic. How far can one go in suspending liberties in order to preserve liberty?

Nonetheless, the essays collected in Abraham Lincoln and the Second American Revolution are exactly what readers have come to expect from McPherson: illuminating, gracefully written, well-researched. They aren't the final word, and I suspect McPherson doesn't expect them to be. But they wonderfully enrich the on-going conversation.

McPherson Excels with A. Lincoln Again
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-06-30
James McPherson (Battle Cry of Freedom) is the preeminent Civil War author and scholar of our time. The Princeton University professor provides fresh insight into A. Lincoln in these seven essays.

McPherson demonstrates conclusively that the Civil War was indeed the Second American Revolution - it abolished slavery and smashed the political, economic, and social status quo. Before the War, southerners dominated American politics - after the war it was decades before a son of the south could be elected President. The absence of the south from the national legislature during the war allowed the passage of the great progressive and modernizing legislation; the Homestead Act, enabled a continental railroad, and land-grant colleges. After the war, blacks made great (if far from complete) progress in education, politics, and economics.

Unfortunately, the reactionary forces led a counter-revolution that attempted to turn back the massive changes in society with much success. That counter-revolution eventually yielded to a Second Reconstruction in the mid-20th century.

McPherson repeatedly returns to Lincoln's political evolution as the War changed from a limited war for limited ends to a total war for revolutionary ends. In the end Lincoln insisted on unconditional surrender.

I particularly enjoyed the essays entitled 'How Lincoln Won the War with Metaphors', which contrasts the communication abilities of Lincoln and Jefferson Davis, and 'The Hedgehog and the Foxes', in which McPherson favors us with a description of Lincoln as the single-minded hedgehog outlasting the multifarious foxes such as Horace Greeley and William Seward.

My only small quibble is that similar points are made using the same quotes in multiple essays (perhaps unavoidable in a collection of previously published essays), but the quotes are so evocative of Lincoln's thinking that the repetition is not only forgiven, but enjoyed.

Highly recommended for anyone interested in US history, Lincoln, or the Civil War era.

CATACLYSMIC MIND
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2005-11-24
ABRAHAM LINCOLN AND THE SECOND AMERICAN REVOLUTION by James M. McPherson is a thin juicy volume. You feel energized as you read and absorb its deep insights. Each of six essays shows that it was Lincoln's reality anchored character and powerful intellect that transformed the United States to the country it is today. One essay shows how Lincoln's use of metaphor, culled from Aesop's Fables, the works of Shakespeare, and the Bible made him a consummate communicator. His metaphors resonated to the deepest layers of mind of the average American in way that instilled motivation and purpose to a war that seemed impossible to manage or win. Compared to Jefferson Davis who was so highly educated and abstract but was unable to connect with ordinary folk. But it is McPherson who too is able to convey to us this president's great powers with his own metaphors i.e. "barnyard philosophy," and his essay, "The hedgehog and the fox," which compares and contrasts Lincoln's abilities with the "smartest contemporaries." ABRAHAM LINCOLN AND THE SECOND AMERICAN REVOLUTION is a great distillate of the voluminous Civil War Literature. You must have it for your library.

Lincoln
Lincoln's Legacy (Blast to the Past)
Published in Paperback by Aladdin (2005-01-06)
Authors: Stacia Deutsch and Rhody Cohon
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Blast to the Past Lincoln's Legacy
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-09
This is an awesome book and series! (there are 7 total and the 8th is out in July, keep reading!) After going through the Magic Tree House stories and the Time Warp Trio series, this book series was a SPECTACULAR time twist on American's who helped shaped our nation. Each book asks, "What if this person quit? Gave up? Didn't do what the history books said they did?" I was looking for a series to get my kids interested in U.S. History and this series kept catching my attention. I couldn't find them in the local libraries and it is ashame! These books need to be on the shelves for all the kids to read. Tell your school library, tell your local library that you want to read them. I can't say enough good things about the book! And by the way, my opinion of this series was formed long before our school was fortunate to have the author visit and talk to the kids. It was a unique experience that has all the kids excited and wanting to read the books. My twin boys could NOT put the books down and went through them as quick as I could buy them off of Amazon! ENJOY THEM YOURSELF! READ THEM TO YOUR KIDS! GET YOUR KIDS INTERESTED IN U.S. HISTORY AND THIS SERIES! YOU WON'T BE DISAPPOINTED!

A Penny For My Thoughts?
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-30
This book was excellent. I learned a lot about the President. I also liked it because the author was very good at describing what life was like whem President Lincoln was alive.

I recommend this book to people around the ages of 7-10 years old. I have read every book in the series and find they are an excellent and fun way to learn about history. The Blast to the Past books really bring the characters to life. At times I thought I was there. I can't wait for the next book to be written so I can read it at once!
Michelle J
Age 9
San Diego, CA

More than a Blast
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-01-10
This wonderful series of "Blast to the Past" books enables children to explore history and to develop an appreciation for the importance of personal courage. Elementary school students can easily relate to the main characters (3rd grade children) as they transition from our familiar world to a time of historical importance, with the help of a time traveling machine. Not only do the authors transport the readers back in time, but they take it one step further by entertaining "what if" scenarios. Readers get to imagine what the world would be like without the important contributions of people from the past. And they get to imagine the personal challenges each person faced before accomplishing greatness.

In "Lincoln's Legacy," the children in the story meet up with Abraham Lincoln as he waits for a victory on the battlefield before issuing the Emancipation Proclamation. The book helps us imagine how tense and uncertain those times were for the people who lived then, especially for someone empowered with so much responsibility for his nation. The children in this story have to find a way to convince Lincoln to not give up. My 8-year-old daughter loved this book and she enjoyed the chance to repeat the phrase "Emancipation Proclamation" until she could say it flawlessly.

As a mother, I like how each story emphasizes the point that great things can be accomplished when we each of us can persevere past our doubts and draw upon our courage to follow our convictions and dreams. The Blast to the Past books are fun to read and exciting lessons in history. More than that, the authors have provided a powerful message about optimism and determination, encouraging future greatness in our children.

The Best Book Ever!!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-09-19
I'm ten years old and in my opinion, I think that this book is so much fun to read. It is very educational and exciting. Once I started reading I couldn't stop! It only takes one hour to read it. I love how they put real facts. While your reading it your learning many things. The author has described it with excellent detail. I am sure you will like love this book. Happy Reading!!

A fun time travel adventure for young readers.
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2005-09-09
This is the first book in the Blast to the Past series, about the adventures of a group of kids who travel through time and meet famous historical figures, while learning how little it takes to change history.

Abigail and her classmates always enjoy Mondays at school, where their teacher asks them "what if" questions about historical events. This particular Monday, their teacher, Mr. Caruthers, arrives late at class, looking disturbed. After lessons, he confronts Abigail and a few of the other students with some shocking and disturbing news - he just came back from a trip to the past, where he learned Abraham Lincoln was ready to give up on freeing the slaves after a series of battles that the Union Army lost. Mr. C was unable to persuade President Lincoln to change his mind, but he hopes the kids may have more luck. So he sends them back in time, where they meet President Lincoln and must try to persuade him that he will be successful and it's still worth fighting for freedom.

I think this book would be a good choice for reluctant young readers -- the characters will appeal to kids, and the book is a fast-paced read that teaches history in a fun way. Kids who already love to read and enjoyed books such as the Magic Tree House series are sure to enjoy it as well.

Lincoln
The universe and Dr. Einstein (A Mentor book)
Published in Unknown Binding by New American Library (1952)
Author: Lincoln Kinnear Barnett
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The Universe and Dr. Einstein
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-17
Who would believe that a book on the Theory of Relativity could be written for the masses? Well it was, and this is it. The concepts that the book conveys are mind boggling, yet quite understandable at the same time. You'll never view space, time and the world around you the same again. It's a quick read, but as you'll learn, time is relative.

Equivalence of gravitation and inertia
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2004-12-03
Suppose all matter in the universe is expanding at a uniform rate and that "gravity" doesn't exist. Also imagine standing atop the Leaning Tower of Pisa and releasing two cannon balls. One weighs one ounce and the other ten pounds. Because the earth is rushing up to meet the balls, both seem to fall to the ground at the same rate. A cannon ball fired into the air seems to follow a curved trajectory back to the earth as the ground rushes up to meet it. A comet passing close to the earth seems to be "attracted" to the earth as we are pushed upwards towards it. Einstein says "gravity" is the effect on the path of a moving object caused by distortions in the geometric structure of the space-time continuum caused by mass. But space is "nothing," so how can "nothing" be distorted? Could the earth and all matter be expanding uniformly and unnoticed by us? Could this expansion be the real cause of what we call "gravity" and not the distortion of "nothing"?

This problem, somewhat simplified here, has been bothering me since I first read this book some forty years ago; if anybody can help enlighten me on this, I'd be glad to hear from you!

Non-scientists tell it Better
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2004-02-29
Mr. Barnett, a journalist, crossed over into the arena of science, a subject that he had not studied in college. And to the world's amazement, he captured on paper a clear and easy to read explanation of the genius and elegance of Dr. Einstein's theories concerning the very small (quanta) and the very large (space and time).

"Simply" Perfect
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2002-07-06
I feel that this book is a must for any home library. If you are experienced in physics, this book is extremely interesting because it delves deaply into the philosophy that brought Dr. Einstein to his great accomplishments. For those that have little knowledge of relativity, the universe, and quantum matters it offers a great introduction with a minimum of complex math. A simple way to understand how Dr. Einstein changed the entire universe. I have studied Albert for years. This is the first time I have read anything that gave me such an insight to his personality and thought processes. HONESTLY, the best book I have ever read.

A Page Turner! Excellent Intro to a Difficult Concept
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2001-07-11
This is absolutely the best book on any scientific topic intended for the general reader that I have ever read. It is one of very few books about science I have ever read that I could seriously call a "page turner". Einstein's theories are presented in such a manner that anyone reading the book can understand the concepts without trying. I have read other books that discussed Einstein's theories, but none of them presented the ideas with such lucidity and simplicity, while at the same time not losing the depth and profundity of the concepts.

Lincoln
Soul Journey from Lincoln to Lindbergh: Revealing the Mysteries of Karma and Rebirth
Published in Paperback by Crystar Press (2006-01-01)
Author: Richard Salva
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A Classic in it's own time!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-09
Richard Salva is one of the most compelling and knowledgeable guests, it has been my pleasure to ever have on my radio shows. His book "Soul Journey: From Lincoln to Lindbergh" is the best written book, I have seen on the topic of reincarnation, karma and understanding the nature and progression of Spiritual growth. His book is a must read for anyone who has ever wondered about reincarnation.

To listen to Richard, on Vaishali's, "You are What You Love" go to:
www.contacttalkradio.com/hosts/vaishali.htm and scrolled down the page to archived shows and click on 6-29-07. Look for Richard to appear again live on this show
2-15-08.

Richard will also be appearing on, Vaishali's, "You Are What You Love" on
www.worldtalkradio.com on Saturday September 15, 2007.

A unique and compelling reassessment of their lives, accomplishments, and coincidences
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-10
It is the premise of Soul Journey From Lincoln To Lindbergh by Richard Salva (an author, minister, and for more than thirty years a dedicated student of yoga who studied under Paramhansa Yogananda) that Abraham Lincoln was, in a former life, a Himalayan yogi of advanced spiritual attainment, and that after his assassination at the hands of John Wilkes Booth, was reincarnated as Charles Lindbergh. Soul Journey From Lincoln To Lindbergh presents hundreds of similarities in the personalities, character, and life circumstances between Lincoln and Lindbergh, presenting an articulate, documented, persuasively iconoclastic argument that offers a unique and compelling reassessment of their lives, accomplishments, and coincidences. Soul Journey From Lincoln To Lindbergh will be of very special interest to Metaphysical Studies collections in general, and students of reincarnation in particular.

A Page Turner
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2006-06-16
Abe Lincoln reincarnated as Charles Lindbergh! The premise is fascinating, so is the book. I read it in one week end. A real page turner

Remarkable Comparison
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2006-07-02
A highly researched comparison between the lives of Lincoln and Lindbergh. I was surprised by many of the facts of their private lives that seemed to have escaped the history books. If you believe in reincarnation or not, this book will give you insight into two amazing lives or should I say; one remarkable soul.

Brilliant, creative work of metaphysical U.S. history
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2006-12-06
A simple premise: the 19th century soul of Abraham Lincoln reincarnated on earth as 20th century Charles Lindbergh. While the thesis of this book could be considered a marginal, "unscientific" one within the realm of pure academia, I hope that at least a few serious scholars give this book a look. This is a brilliant work not just of metaphysics, but of U.S. history. Salva presents the true heart and soul of these two giants in a highly readable anecdoctal style that cuts through all confusion and gets right to the heart of the men. The view of Lincoln given here is probably unique and also probably more accurate than portrayed to date. Portions of the Civil War section are devastating: Lincoln was wracked with guilt over the war, yet compelled by duty to defend the Union. A very powerful, well-researched, and perceptive view of the President at war.

For those like myself who knew almost nothing about Charles Lindbergh other than the stock cliches of "famous pilot" and of "Nazi-lover," (the prevailing view within "The Nation" magazine) this is a brilliant well-balanced introduction to the man. I wish I had read this book before I had read other negative accounts regarding Lindbergh, because what emerges from these pages is a clear picture of a great American. A man, I should say, who clearly is not an anti-Semite or a Nazi-lover, despite the frequency of those charges. Salva also does an excellent job at explaining the mysterious, almost frightening, worldwide fame that came to Lindbergh very suddenly after that first transatlantic flight.

This is a creative and soulful, but serious work of history. The author has succeeded in his quest to "prove" the intuitive statement of the great yogi Paramhansa Yogananda that inspired this book. The book could be improved with a bibliography that included more information on sources, such as year of publication and publisher. Other than that, there is not really any other way that this work could be better. I recommend it highly to those interested in reincarnation and history alike.

Lincoln
A Welcome Grave (Lincoln Perry)
Published in Hardcover by St. Martin's Minotaur (2007-06-26)
Author: Michael Koryta
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It's tough to remember that the main character, and the author, are so young.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-29
Sometimes it's easy to forget that Lincoln Perry isn't a middle-aged guy who's been in the P.I. business for a long time. He demonstrates a maturity beyond his years - most of the time. It's when he doesn't do that, when he acts his chronological age, that his life gets very messy. In A WELCOME GRAVE, Perry agrees to do a favor for an old flame, the woman he was once engaged to marry. Now anyone with a grain of sense would know that this will probably not turn out well. Perry doesn't see past that all-too-human desire to put his rival in a bad light.

Alex Jefferson has been murdered, after being tortured. His wife Karen is the old flame. She asks Perry to track down Alex's son, from whom he has been estranged for quite some time. Matthew is an heir, and Alex was a very rich man. When Perry finds Matthew, not a difficult task, Matthew kills himself in front of Perry. The police, who were already interested in Perry because of the rivalry over Karen, are even more interested now.

As Perry keeps poking around, he seems to get into more and more trouble. Someone is either going out of his way to make Perry look like a truly bad guy, or his luck is incredibly bad. All of this causes some strain between Perry and Amy, a friend in the process of becoming more than that. His business partner Joe is slowly recuperating from taking a bullet in the shoulder, a bullet that saved Perry's life. So Perry's support system is a little shaky right now.

This is the third book in Koryta's Lincoln Perry series. He's good, and getting better. One can excuse some of Perry's more foolish choices; he is, after all, pretty young. He seems to grow a little more with each book. The settings are wonderful, the plotting tight. Readers of classic P.I. series, with just a bit more than a hint of noir, will relish Koryta's newest.

Another just excellent book from Koryta
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-25
This book is the third in Kortya's fine series about Lincoln Perry, a Cleveland private investigator.

Once again he weaves together strong local Cleveland color as well from southern Indiana to tell a Ross MacDonald-esque story of family greed, desires, and repressed secrets.

As his writing progresses, his plots have become even more multi-layered than in his fine debut work and its follow up. The villains are darker and the violence is greater. Complicating this book is that Perry is the most likely suspect in both locales for a couple of murders, and the local law enforcement officials have no interest in his side of the story. That tension between cop and PI has been done many times before, but not recently to such good effect.

It's a wonderful thing to contemplate work this good from someone in his twenties and just how scary good he might become. Can't wait for his next work!

Crime Fiction at its Best
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-20
I've often heard Michael Koryta mention people who have influenced him or the genre. A Welcome Grave is proof that he himself is influencing this genre now, and definitely for the better!

Koryta has a gift when it comes to the English language. I have not walked away from any of his books without feeling like the characters somehow made their way inside me...inside my head, inside my soul. A Welcome Grave continues the character development of Lincoln Perry and Joe Pritchard, but it also starts to lend weight to some other characters: Amy, Thor. And the dynamics of these characters in relation to Lincoln and Joe add a lot of dimensions to the plot.

Life is never black and white in Koryta's world; I love the shades of gray that develop throughout the course of the book. They help in the suspense and definitely keep the plot from becoming predictable.

Koryta should definitely be a staple of any mystery-lover's booklist!

This Author is Scary Good!!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-04
OK people. Let's get past the fact that the author of three outstanding novels is only twenty-three years old. Let's look at his writing and when you do that, his genius is timeless.

The thing about this novel that enthralled me is how the protagonist of the book, Lincoln Perry, kept getting drawn deeper and deeper into the murder investigations in two locations notwithstanding the fact that he was innocent of either murder or the ones that followed.

There is a murderous manipulator at work in this story and how he goes about controlling events and getting the police to chase all the wrong suspects is both frustrating to the reader and infuriating to Lincoln Perry.

Do not pass up on anything this talented young man has written. They are keepers.

A Welcome Thriller!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-20
I couldn't put this book down about a private eye (Lincoln Perry) who is framed for a few murders and must clear his name as the police are tightening the noose. Perry has only his partner Joe and his new girlfriend Amy behind him and everyone else against him. Add to that, the mysterious Thor is thrown into the mix and when all can't get any bleaker, Lincoln must team with Thor to maybe turn the tables on the "real" bad guys. A great thriller!

Lincoln
Lemons Are Not Red
Published in Hardcover by ZZCFRANCES LINCOLN C (2006-05-01)
Author: Laura Vaccaro Seeger
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Beautiful book!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-08
We keep buying this for children, but all the adults who see this are mesmerized! A winner!

love it
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-21
This is a great book that my 21 month old daughter loves. She has been learning her colors and this book helped.

Great book!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-26
This is such a cute book! My 3-year-old daughter loves to have it read to her, and "read" it back to me as well. She always gets a kick out of the "wrong" colors for familiar objects. I plan on buying this book as a birthday gift for another young child very soon.

Terrific!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-18
My grandchildren, ages 6 and 3, and I enjoyed this very simple but most pleasurable book. The kids giggled and I smiled. Beautiful colors; cleverly arranged cut-outs. The idea that lemons are NOT red and other items are NOT colors that they're not, has great appeal to these young minds.

A new (lemon) twist for flap books
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-03
A terrific book for thinking about color, enjoying beautiful art, and just having fun. Clever take on the tired color concept book. Your kids will be laughing and thinking and immersed in high quality art. What could be better?

Lincoln
Network Programming with Perl
Published in Paperback by Addison-Wesley Professional (2001-01-06)
Author: Lincoln D. Stein
List price: $54.99
New price: $35.00
Used price: $23.00

Average review score:

One of my favorite Perl books.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2003-06-15
This is one of my favorite Perl books. It really serves what it says it will. It covers a great amount of Perl coding, but like the title says, goes into a lot of networking code, functions and so on. For Perl network programming, you really should have and use this book.

The nirvana
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2002-08-16
Just to say this is a big introduction (from starts to experts) to the network stuff through the magnific language that is perl.
Do you want to be a hacker? do you know enought of perl? Do you feel the only you need to be a hacker is some specific book that prepares to it? this is the one, BUY IT, at the end you will think this is one of the best books you have already read, i promise you.

(if you already know the net, it explains how to do the stuff in perl in an exciting way!)

Excellent
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2003-08-10
This book is excellent. This is one of very few books that the author really takes time, has a good plan to write a book and have good understanding of the subject.

I read many computer books that are just repetitive so it can make the books thick enough to look like a 'good book' (May be this is what US raaders like). I try my best to avoid those books. Those books do not say much in hundreds of pages.

But this book is not that kind of book. Every pages are worth to read. It is quite easy to follow. (I do know a bit of TCP/IP from reading other books before I read this book.) E.g. Stevens TCP/IP books. Unfortunately he died and he won't be able to update those great books.

Some authors are not professional, they just copy here and there. Then they put everything together. Those are terrible books to read. Those terrible books explain some simple concept again and again and take up hundreds of pages that can be done in half of volume. It is not just wasting the readers time (time is money) but also wasting the resource (trees)! Even most college textbooks are that way. Sometimes it is even worst since they know you won't haave much choices!

I seldom to give 5 stars. This book does deserve 5 stars.

You will enjoy this one if you like networking.

Perl Guru Has Another Home Run
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2002-01-12
Everything you wanted to know about Perl and socket applications. Lincoln is very good about explaining all concepts and providing lots of examples.

Lincoln is the author of the CGI.pm module. In addition, he wrote a book about CGI.pm that is the bible - a "must have" for anyone doing Perl CGI work.

Lincoln is a great guy. He wrote a Perl module for Napster. I could not get it running on my Win32 system (my linux box was at work). Within an hour of sending him an email, he sent me a new module for Win32 that worked great. Lincoln did not even know who I was.

Everything you need to know on Network Programming
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2002-01-30
This book has been in my wish list for pretty long time, and before I actually buy it decided to check it out of my school's library. Enjoyment started at the first chapters of the book that I read in the library's caffeteria. The book definitely covers all the aspects of the Network Progamming, not only with Perl, but in general as well.

In the first chapters of the book, Lincoln Stein makes good use of such OO modules as IO::File and IO::Socket to demostrate that difference between local file operations and remote network programming isn't that much different at all ( at least in Perl ).

Chapter 2 shows you several applications that are built on pipes. The best thing about the chapter was the signals part, where L. Stein shows examples, catching all sorts of signals that your progam receives and reacts accordingly. One example was reacting to pressing of CTRL+C sequence of keys to terminate the progam.

I would call Chapter 3 the heart of the book, since it goes over Berkeley Sockets, the base for Network progamming in most systems, no matter what progamming language you tend to prefer. It also explains thoroughly Sockets Addressings, Network naming conventions, protocols, services and a lot more. This chapter, together with the Chapter 4 alone are worth the whole price of the book, I believe. The chapter in the end goes over some common netwook analysis tools, such as "nslookup", "ping", so on and so forth.

Chapter 4 tells you all you need about TCP Protocol. Shows several examples as well. Goes over Adjusting Socket options, and their uses.

Chapter 5 is not anything newer supposing you've been following all the pervious chapters. Untill this chapter, L. Stein demonstrates the coding using much low level Socket API. here Lincoln starts using IO::Socket's Object Oriented Interface for its handy functionalities that enable writing Networking applications more relieving.

Chapters 6, 7, 8 and 9 takes you through writing several commong network clients such as SMTP/mailing clients, Telnet, FTP clients. Also provides their complete source codes in case you just feel likek copying them. Chapter 9 gets into the most fun part: LWP and HTML/XML Parsing. Spends good 50 pages on those. Very exciting indeed!

The rest of the book (another half) is dedicated for writing Server applications, which I haven't read. I am sure the rest is as exciting as it's been up to this point. But no matter what, I am greatefull to the book for such an exciting and informative coverage of the topics. It's worth every penny that you spend on it. Buy it!

Lincoln
Soccer Goalkeeping
Published in Paperback by McGraw-Hill (1996-02-01)
Author: Lincoln Phillips
List price: $12.95
New price: $13.00
Used price: $0.12

Average review score:

Sweet
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2003-12-11
This is a great book! im a keeper myself and it works for me. The pictures and disriptions are great too. ***** 5stars
GREAT VALUE!!
:)

Worth twice the price
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2001-01-22
I have over 100 soccer books including goalkeeping books by Wilson, Shilton, Luxbacher, Waiters,Machink and the videos of Machnik, Hoek and Dicicco. Lincoln Philips's book was worth the money and more for several reasons. He has the wisdom of years of playing experience at the the national team level as well as college coaching and USSF Staff coaching duties. He has an excellent discussion on the art of stopping penalty kicks and develops a list of visual cues goalkeepers can use to predict where kicks will go. He examines techniques for prevailing in 1v1 breakaways I had not previously encountered. Finally he has an excellent section on defending restarts which is particularly valuable to the goalie in light of the high percentage of goals which result from poor defensive communication and organization at these times.

The best keeper book available.
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2004-02-24
I have reviewed many goalkeeping books and own four. This book is by far the best. It is well organized and explains the details of soccer's most difficult position in an approachable manner. It is obvious that Lincoln knows his stuff. If you read it in his book you can be sure of it, which is not the case in some other books I've read. Can't go wrong with this one.

An excellent book and superior value
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2000-10-04
I knew nothing of goalkeeping before purchasing this book. This book is easy to read and understand, well organized, and full of easy-to-follow visuals. I purchased it to understand our goalkeeper's job and loaned it to him to read. He played keeper for years, and even he learned from it and INSTANTLY improved. An injury prevents him from playing this season. With this book as my only coach and practicing what was in it, we (myself and my defense) earned a shutout in just my second game as keeper. Lincoln Phillips provides coaching in every aspect of goalkeeping and tells you exactly what you need to know. I recommend this book for beginning keepers, experienced keepers, coaches, and anyone else interested in the position and its importance. BUY THIS!

The Number One Goal Keeping Manual For Any Serious Keeper
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 1999-12-02
Lincoln Phillips is one of the outstanding teachers of the game today. He brings a warm and open presence to the subject, revealing the secrets to playing the position with a common sense approach that is guaranteed to bring success. This is a must-have addition to any coaches or players library.

Lincoln
5 Steps to a 5 on the AP: Psychology (5 Steps to a 5 on the Advanced Placement Examinations Series)
Published in Paperback by McGraw-Hill (2004-01-27)
Author: Laura Lincoln Maitland
List price: $16.95
New price: $7.98
Used price: $3.68

Average review score:

Worth Every Penny
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-26
I bought this book early in the year to prepare for my AP Psychology course. It was a TREMENDOUSLY HELPFUL supplement with my Psychology textbook (Myers).

One of the reasons why I enjoyed this book was it has a "student planner" to carefully allocate your time in order to maximize your score on the AP test. If I had to estimate the time per week I used to read this book to fill in the holes I missed in the textbook, it would be at least 1 1/2 hours a week.

I followed exactly what the book recommended me to study, and when I finally took the AP Exam: I couldn't believe how easy it was.

Buy the book. It's your ticket to a 5.

Highly recommended
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-10
With the easy-to-read text and study plans for the A student and the procrastinator, it is the best AP study guide I've seen for Psych. It is also more detailed than the Barron's and goes into depth about everything covered.

The AP Psychology BEST book out there
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-06
I used only this book to help prepare for the AP test, and I didn't take the class. If you are good at studying and memorizing, and at least somewhat interested in the subject, you can definetly pass the test with this book. I liked that there was a quiz after each chapter, it helped me focus on what I needed to review again from the precious chapter. Also, the text is not small so it's easy to read, and it's written in way that doesn't put you to sleep.

AP Psychology ONLINE
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-16
I was taking the AP Psychology on-line course. Half of the stuff in the on-line class was not on the test. And the class is only one semester so I was only half-way through the course when I decided to screw it and just read this book. I highly recommend it. It was the only thing I used. And I only studied this for about a week. I got a 4, but I only read about 2/3 of it. If you were to read the whole thing, I would say you would probably get a 5. I only spent a week, only read 2/3, but I spent many hours on it and focused. I tried the Barron's one too, but it didn't work for me. It had a lot of good information, but it was dull. This book had everything I needed, I only wish I would have read the whole thing.

Helped me get a Five
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-08
Because my school is in the Boondocks, I did an independent study of AP Psychology. This book was what I used as my textbook. Most AP books have a content review section that resembles a bullet list. This book, however, provides very well written and complete chapters covering every aspect of the test. I took the two practice tests in the book before I took the exam and got a 5 on both. The practice tests were practically identical to the real thing. I highly recommend this for both the type of person that studies well in advance or the type that reads the entire review book in the weekend before the test and prays that he still got a 5 (I'm neither confirming or denying that I did this).


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