Nevada Books
Related Subjects: University of Nevada
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Used price: $7.55

A runaway - who starts to learn about herselfReview Date: 2008-01-19
Too Long...Review Date: 2007-12-05
A Very Pleasant Surprise - I Like This BookReview Date: 2008-04-19
Sure, our heroine falls into a community of acceptance and caring too rapidly and overcomes her childhood a little more easily than is likely in real life. However, the community actually has a reality lacking in most such novels.
The characters she encounters on her flight are fully realized. As she (and we) know them better, they are flawed people who have made wrong choices but learned to get the most out of the lives they're left with.
The book doesn't demonize the villains, especially the domestic ones. And our understanding of some characters' behavior doesn't result in their miraculous repentance. We get our happy ever after, but without tying everything up into a perfect knot.
Other things I liked about this book:
The wonderful sense of place. I never heard of Boulder City, but it came alive to me.
The heroine isn't a miraculous virgin - one of those girls who date tough guys but somehow managed to have ended every evening with a peck on the cheek or a handshake - or any kind of a virgin, actually.
There's more gender equity regarding sexual behavior. Neither the hero or the heroine are diminished by his lack of and her possession of extensive sexual experience. Those books that continue some kind of 19th century view of sexual relationships have helped guarantee no survey of actual sexual behavior has a chance of accuracy. (Apparently spirit succubi or perhaps aliens from other planets really have sex with men in their sleep, since any survey of sexual partners or even marriage, finds irreconcilable differences between tallies from men and from women.)
Other of the author's books are counted as women's fiction or chick lit, but I don't believe romance novels are forbidden to have believable characters, with a realistic response to their childhoods, and heroines with 21st century sex lives.
Give this book a try. I think you will be pleasantly surprised, also.
I like Robyn CarrReview Date: 2005-08-10
Run Away From This BookReview Date: 2005-07-19
I barely got through the first chapter and by that time, I already hated her, could care less what happened to her. We are supposed to believe that she makes a complete transformation overnight and becomes this nice, caring person. Okay, fine. I kept reading. I didn't buy it because I never could warm up to her, but I kept reading. But when she told the hero about her past, a nice cop who even mows the lawns of his elderly neighbors, that "I can understand you being a little put out, but I didn't do anything wrong," I quit reading.
I believe people deserve a second chance and can turn their lives around, but first impressions are important and I could not get past my first impression of Jennifer Chaise.

Used price: $2.50

A new ship in a big ocean.Review Date: 2000-02-16
Extremely DisappointingReview Date: 2000-01-16
The Wendover WhaleReview Date: 1999-12-07
The Wendover WhaeReview Date: 2000-01-28
Meaningful, enjoyableReview Date: 2000-01-25

Used price: $0.25
Collectible price: $12.95

wonderful,useful book for us grandparentsReview Date: 1999-07-29
A Great Starting PointReview Date: 2003-04-12
An excellent, user-friendly guideReview Date: 1999-08-07
I think the best course of action would be for potential book buyers to disregard the negative comments from Mr/Ms Anonymous. Rather, use and enjoy the book for the quality publication it is.
sloppy research mars this bookReview Date: 1999-06-03
Broad but not helpfulReview Date: 2001-06-24

Used price: $2.28

a great readReview Date: 2007-06-26
Don't buy this bookReview Date: 2006-06-10
Enjoyable beginning to a seriesReview Date: 2005-06-07
This book was much better than I expected. The author blends the elements of the paranormal, mystery, and romance with great skill. The characters and plot twists are very well done. I have already preordered the next book in the series.
Cover Rating R - Book itself PGReview Date: 2005-01-18
wonderful paranormal taleReview Date: 2003-12-26
In the garage after a performance, Alana bends down to pick up a gold Irish claddagh charm that someone dropped. That motion saves her life as someone tries to kill her. Using an illusion she manages to escape, but not without suffering a concussion. Police Detective Leo Grady informs Alana that a serial killer has murdered five people associated with the paranormal with her being the token survivor. He places her in protective custody, but watches Alana perform weird actions that shake his logic system to the core, but not as much as his love for the magician does to his heart.
Fans of police procedural romantic fantasies will receive plenty of pleasure from the delightfully charming THE PROTECTOR. The story line is loaded with action as the cop and the performer work together to stop a killer while falling in love. Alana is a great protagonist and her Helper Carrick Murphy is a solid secondary player who needs his own story told. Leo may be reeling with what he sees and hears, but when it comes to his beloved he refuses to accept anything except her safety. Jenifer A. Ruth effortlessly combines the three genres into a wonderful paranormal tale.
Harriet Klausner

Used price: $54.22

absolutely the best perspective on wild horsesReview Date: 2008-07-10
Honest HorsesReview Date: 2006-08-16
The challenges surrounding the beauty of the WestReview Date: 2007-10-15
Oral historian and photographer Paula Morin has assembled 62 narratives from the individuals who are most familiar with the Great Basin area, home to the greatest number of our country's wild horses. This geographical region covers parts of Utah, Idaho, Oregon and California, with its largest portion sitting within Nevada's borders. In each of those states, the wild horse issue is a complex one, complete with firm stands being taken by environmentalists, animal lovers, scientists, ranchers, wranglers, politicians and government workers. We hear many of their voices and their viewpoints in this compendium.
Because the bond between humans and horses is a close and historic one, and because equines are such sizable animals, it's difficult to think of the wild horse as a non-native species to the western region. But as alien invaders often do, wild horses reproduce in such numbers that they wreak havoc on any ecosystem. Aside from the occasional mountain lion or coyote band attack, the horse has no natural predator. The Great Basin simultaneously offers an especially harsh and fragile habitat, with periodic dry seasons and soil that needs time to recover from any kind of disturbance. Anyone can predict the kinds of problems that will arise when too many large mammals are confined to such a delicate area.
Horse history, captivating stories and personal experiences abound as the interviewees speak. A variety of opinions are aired here. But the majority of the individuals agree on at least three points: (a) letting nature take its course isn't a practical or humane solution when hundreds of animals die slow and gruesome deaths; (b) folks outside the Great Basin region don't understand all the complexities of the issue and shouldn't be the primary decision-makers involved; and (c) yes, it's still nice to have the wild horses out on the land, running free.
One Amazon reviewer stated: "To me, wild country, while possibly requiring management and certainly requiring protection, need serve no human purpose. It is sufficient to itself." While I agree that we should preserve as many large portions of land as we can, that's not exactly the point of this book. The region in question has already been impacted by man, both directly and indirectly, by the accidental or deliberate introduction of wild horses. Once the habitat has been tampered with to such a drastic state, all options should be considered to restore its health. Limiting the number of wild horses on the land -- however that can be accomplished -- appears to be a logical remedy.
"Honest Horses" is valuable reading for all of us here in the United States, especially since other books about wild horses, especially those for children, never mention the questions and problems they present. For those of us who live "away," it's easy for us to pass judgment or to think of a possible solution. After reading this book it should be obvious that all the stakeholders must sit down and work out the problem to the best of their abilities. Unfortunately, every environmental challenge turns into a political one.
One-sided propagandaReview Date: 2006-11-30
Honest HorsesReview Date: 2007-06-01
If the commentators are correct that there are no natural limits on mustangs' population growth (why not reintroduce wolves? Too unpopular with ranchers?), then their arguments seem convincing. I am willing to believe that too many scrub horses are running wild in Nevada and their numbers need to be drastically reduced. However, the total lack in this book of any dissenting argument means my conviction will remain on hold. Every statement here tells the exact same story, and that in itself is something I find questionable.
I've also had enough of people referring to open range and wilderness as "the resource", as if it couldn't possibly manage itself without human interference and in fact had no purpose other than to serve human beings in whatever way; a viewpoint that seems unspeakably arrogant. To me, wild country, while possibly requiring management and certainly requiring protection, need serve no human purpose. It is sufficient to itself.


Another Quick CSI-Based ReadReview Date: 2007-05-14
Another good CSI mysteryReview Date: 2006-02-08
A great ReadReview Date: 2006-02-07
Original CharactersReview Date: 2005-12-19
Not as strong as you'd hopeReview Date: 2005-11-21
The plot is very by the numbers and I'm sure by the end of the book most people will have figured out who did it. Check it out if you're a CSI fan, but if this is your first CSI novel, you may want to go back and read Binding Ties instead.

Best Blackjack Tutorial in PrintReview Date: 2007-05-30
Revere's style is a bit aggressive, but it
apparently reflects the mental resolve necessary
to succeed at playing/counting blackjack.
He knows what he's talking about, and can show
you why and how to learn to play the game flawlessly.
Although most BJ books introduce you to basic strategy
and some sort of counting method, Revere shows you
what it takes to win.
Required reading for all students of the game.
best of the bestReview Date: 2000-02-14
The Charts Are Not in Color!Review Date: 1999-07-22
"This book contains 70 charts, 36 of which are in color."
Well, none of the charts in the book are in color. A big disappointment giving the high price of the book.
the best card counter's guide ever writtenReview Date: 2000-05-10
The strategy charts are of poor qulity.Review Date: 1999-07-08
Don't get me wrong! The magic of Lawrence Revere is there still; I don't believe that will ever change. Nor there is anything wrong with the hard of the book is its strategy charts. And that's what got me boiling over. I can't believe it that Replica Books did such a bad job in reproducing them. Their wretched look is an instant turn off, and again that's perhaps the most important part of the book, the meat if I may!
It appears that color charts meant to be reproduced in color were reproduced in black and white. Normally, black and white designs reproduced in black and white come out in good quality. Not so, color designs reproduced in black and white, alas, this book in question.
The quality of the charts is so bad that I decided to return the book for a full refund. Amazon will even refund the postage so that it would be like if I never ordered the book, as one of her courteous representatives has assured me.
For my own consolation, though, I will order the soft cover version to replace my copy that after so many years of giving me the joy in the art of playing blackjack is beginning to fall apart. I know that version has better quality charts in full color

Used price: $6.80

Good IF you understand what you're hoping for in a readReview Date: 2008-05-31
Whether every aspect of his work is true or bears some embellishment hardly matters to me when buying one of his books. I'm just looking forward to reading about the type of life I'll never live but can certainly enjoy vicariously.
Busting Vegas is a good companion to his earlier work Taking Down the House. Mezrich is almost apologetic when he explains why he chose to revisit old ground. The ideal situation would have been if BOTH of these tales were under one cover.
The writing is fine. It could have been more tightly written certainly but the idea is to follow the events as well as put out a product with some length to it.
This is the kind of book you can take to the beach, or on a plane trip as one reviewer noted, and help enhance the time you while away. I deliberated over whether to star this as a 3 or a 4 (Amazon and Netflix need to allow for half a star voting soon); and finally settled on 4 stars as I have qualified this review.
I'm not sure if Mezrich patrols these reviews ever but just in case, I have a request. Could you dig a little deeper into MIT sometime soon? It seems to me this is the second book where a cabal of MIT mad scientists have come together using a cleverly hatched plan to bring ruin to the gambling underworld! Oh okay, maybe it's not as sinister as I wish it to be, but still... SOMETHING is going on at MIT.
Poorly written, bland and predictableReview Date: 2008-03-30
fun ahoyReview Date: 2008-01-03
In "Breaking Vegas" (BV) he continues with his well-honed formula, but as transparent as Mezrich's style and agenda may be, he writes a great book. BV follows the arc of the career of Russian émigré and MIT student Semyon Dukach as he and his team mates deploy three probability enhancing strategies over "basic strategy" (Blackjack's -2% probability equivalent optimal strategy). Along the way they meet thugs, casino "hosts," Police, prostitutes, and druggies, making the whole thing as atmospheric as any memory of Vegas you may have.
There are many irritating elements in the work: Mezrich's breast-fetishism for one (not a single female appears in the book without her breasts being described!). But the single most irritating is how much of a "math genius" Semyon is. It is an old literary trope...keep referring to your character as a genius, even if they do ordinary things...surround the character with folks who laud his/her genius...and eventually the reader believes you even if you haven't shown him to be genius. The techniques described in this work are no more genius beyond Statistics 102, and the skills employed are fully confessed to have been honed by sheer repetition, so where's the beef? A competent close-up magician of average intelligence could do this...genius it does not take.
But make no mistake, the book is a fun read. Those parts that are true are interesting and those parts that are embellished, compressed, or narrative devices are all forgivable.
A helluva good story!Review Date: 2007-05-31

Used price: $0.36

This book is the cream of Finney's crop.Review Date: 2000-06-25
I grew up and still live in the Big Valley where this story takes place and Finney cleverly captures the spirit of the valley's unique mix of cultures. He does this by lovingly weaving his characters through each other's lives and times. We see several different immigrant families struggle through school and adolescence, grow up, fall in love, have their lives turned upside down by World War II, and . . . I can't wait for the follow up novel. I want to know what else happens to Julian (you'll love this guy even if you're not Italian) and Hortense and Reiko and the rest. I hated for this book to end.
No real insight is shown into the ethnic cultures depicted.Review Date: 1998-06-14
Forget what Kirkus Reviews says... this book is great.Review Date: 1999-05-26
Good flavor of the San Joaquin Valley and ethnic groups.Review Date: 1999-02-07
Also worthwhile reading by this author: Words of My Roaring, civilians in wartime San Bruno.

Used price: $6.14

More for South Tahoe than North TahoeReview Date: 2002-05-29
Ok but not greatReview Date: 2002-08-17
Finally, a book that focuses on short hikesReview Date: 2000-06-22
Good for beginners with childrenReview Date: 2003-07-25
These omissions will unsettle veteran hikers with endurance. But for many more casual folk, this guide will fit their needs to a "T." If you're interested in short, scenic and not very strenuous outings, then Stone has provided you a piece of Nirvana. His descriptions of the trailheads and directions on how to reach the hikes are adequate and accurate. He also dispenses advice on bug repellent, sunscreen, band-aids and proper footwear. If you decide to embark on some of these short treks, and your fitness level is good, I urge you to tackle more ambitious peaks at Tahoe, the hiking here is beautiful and among the best in the state. Happy hiking!
Related Subjects: University of Nevada
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The supporting characters were fairly predictable. Why, oh why, is there always a troubled teen with a younger sibling who has a drunken parent? Hedda, the teen waitress. As usual, there was no father figure in that family. That sub-plot really didn't add too much to the story except provide a venue for Jennifer's back story to come out.
I liked the last part of the story - don't worry - won't write a spoiler. By then, Jennifer learns what she really wants and thinks before she acts. A lesson she finally learned.