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

Authors
Jump Start Your Book Sales: A Money-Making Guide for Authors, Independent Publishers and Small Presses
Published in Paperback by Writer's Digest Books (1999-04)
Authors: Marilyn Ross and Tom Ross
List price: $19.95
New price: $8.25
Used price: $1.99

Average review score:

An Invaluable Source
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-11-14
This book has been around a few years now, but it is still one of my favorite book marketing books. It covers all aspects of book marketing thoroughly, and it does it in a charming way. The authors are well-known for their books on self-publishing, and with this book they have given us their wisdom on marketing. The book is filled with useful tips, and there is no doubt that you will be "charged up" and ready to market your book when you finish reading this one. Almost all aspects of marketing are covered, but it was written before the internet came into extensive use, so the coverage on online marketing is limited. This, however, does not detract from the book. It contains many highlighted (shaded) areas of useful suggestions, and it has a large number of diagrams. The "resource" section of the book would be particularly useful to anyone marketing their book. One thing that makes this book stand out is that it covers several topics that are not covered in other book of its type. Strongly recommended.

Information I can use right now!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-30
Great ideas abound in this book for start up publishers. Takes the guess work out of the equation. Cuts right to the chase.

Great information for authors
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-11
I think that this book can be very helpful to any writer that wants to sell his/her book. I am using several of the ideas that I recieved in the book to sell my book 31 Steps to Your Millions in Antiques and collectibles. it has increased my sales. Daryle

If you write, you need this book
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-17
I've never read a more informative book. It not only points out what you should do to promote, it actually gives you the tools to do it. Both phone numbers and websites that will really help you. It is the first self help book that doesn't tell you what it is going to tell you, IT JUST TELLS YOU. How novel. It will take me weeks to implement all the information, but each step is clearly presented. If you write to sell you need this book as flowers need rain.

It's Never Too Early to Start Marketing
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-16
Do you know when you should start marketing your book? Marilyn Ross does, and in "Jump Start Your Book Sales" she reveals the answer. (Hint: It's before you start writing it!)

Before, during, and after -- in fact. Regardless of where you are in the writing and publishing process, book marketing should be at the forefront of your thinking. Is your book even marketable? What is the market? What length of book are those people used to buying? Why would they buy yours instead of (or in addition to) all the other similar books on the market? What will differentiate yours? These are the kind of questions you should be asking yourself even before you put pen to paper, or fingers to keys, as the case may be.

These strategic concepts are the bread and butter of the pages comprising "Jump Start." Don't be surprised if you find meat in the middle that you can really sink your teeth into. This isn't another rehash of duplicative information available for free from countless websites. This is the real deal, written by the co-founder of the Small Publishers Association of North America. Highly recommended reading before you start writing, before you start publishing, and after you think you've marketed it all. - Brent Sampson, author of Self-Publishing Simplified


Authors
Ficciones
Published in Paperback by Alianza (Buenos Aires, AR) (2006-10)
Author: Jorge Luis Borges
List price: $18.60
New price: $17.27
Used price: $16.99

Average review score:

The labyrinth that consists of a single straight line
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-03
Jorge Luis Borges was one of those rare writers who can take even a bizarre, utterly unbelievable idea, and spin it into an exquisite little gem of prose.

And this classic writer was at the peak of his powers when he collected together "Ficciones," whose plain name belies the subtle power and exquisite beauty of Jorges' short stories. Even among Borges' many short stories, few of them can rival this little labyrinth of strange ancient cities, fictional histories, and the eerie depths of the human mind.

"I owe the discovery of Uqbar to the conjunction of a mirror and an encyclopedia." An odd old saying from the Middle-East leads the narrator to seek out the long-lost heretical histories of a fictional world known as Tlon. Its beliefs, language, and metaphysical eccentricities increasingly fascinate the narrator, until it's almost a surprise to realize that Borges invented all of this.

The stories that follow are no less engrossing -- the recounting of a strange, haunting novel, a man who attempts to LIVE as Don Quixote, a man who tries to dream a new being into existence, a lottery that determines the way the people of Babylon are to live, an examination of a brilliant and underrated author, an exploration of the eternal Library of the universe, and a labyrinthine spy story.

The second round of short stories is a bit less enthralling, merely because it focuses more on "typical" Borges short stories. But they are still pretty enthralling pieces of work -- the remembrance of the brilliantly eccentric Ireneo Funes, the story of a scar, a series of murders linked to "the secret Name," a condemned man's begs God for a year to perfect his art, a forgotten heretic, a conversation leading to revenge, the Cult of the Phoenix, and a man entranced by the "Arabian Nights."

Mirrors and labyrinths fill Borges' work -- real and imagined, in word, metaphor and reality. You see them in an endless library, a guitar melody, a contradiction in religious faith, a complex plot, and in the mind of a man who loses himself to an obsession. The mirrors show you the sides of people that they would never see themselves, and the labyrinth twists the mind into new places where it would never normally go.

"Ficciones" explores places where normal fiction would never go -- such as a Babylonian lottery for different places in society, corrupted by greed -- even as it imbues its eulogies, metaphysical ponderings and explanations with the tinge of reality. The cults, deaths, and art that Borges describes seem so plausible, and are given such depth and detail, that it comes as a mild shock when you realize, "Hey, he made all of this up."

Part of that is due to his unique style, full of elegant wordcraft and gently luminous imagery ("a round yellow moon defined two leaf-clogged fountains in the dreary garden"). Even a stabbing is made brutally beautiful, and often dialogue is unnecessary -- the most beautiful and striking stories in here are the ones where Borges (aka the narrator) eagerly explores some invented facet of the world.

And woven through these stories are many of the things that fascinated Borges through his career -- a tragic hero, ancient heresies, an elusive God, and people whose lives he could somehow explore through his own imagination.

If you could criticize anything at all, it's that few of the characters -- aside from the Borges "narrator" -- are much more than walking symbols of a murky little message. But hey, you could simply see this entire book as an exploration of Borges' own imagination by himself. He happily recounts countries that are nonexistant, books that were never written, geniuses who never were.

"Ficciones" is about the dullest name you can possibly give to a work of genius -- an intricate little web that is all mirrors and mazes. Absolutely stunning.

So much more
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-04
My knowledge of Borges is small; before purchasing Ficciones I had only read two or three of his short stories. Enough, however, to know that it would be well worth the short time it takes to read each of these stories.

Borges had an unusual and amazing way of compressing the most stimulating, fascinating material into a small number of pages. You may read one of his stories in ten-fifteen minutes and contemplate it for a week (or more) and remember it for life. And still, you may well want to reread it many times; it has happened more than once that upon finishing a Borges short I immediately wanted to go back and start from the beginning.

The strange thoughts on infinity and the nature of existence are presented in a way that stimulates thought in a humble yet intruiging way. Ideas that may be well recognized and used in other fiction (in some cases overused) have some other element, some different approach, so that even if the premise is not "new" the experience certainly is. How this can be done, and in so few words no less, is beyond me.

This was certainly one of my very best buys and I know that this book will be well worn by my reading alone, not to mention that of the many people I will lend it to with my best recommendations. These short stories will bring beauty and excitement of the mind to many an otherwise boring, mundane day.

An ingenious labyrinthine narrative....
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-20
Borges never fails to please, to challenge, to entertain, and more importantly make one's brain shift into high gear!
If you are looking for an easy read, don't expect to find it in Ficciones.

However, if you are looking for a little cerebral cortex arousal; grab this book and find a cozy spot...you won't be disappointed!

Reading with his head instead of his heart, Borges looks to fill his mind with all the minutia and information he can possibly hold and release it back in his works with finely crafted and fascinatingly playful philosophical stories.

The sparse, objective writing of Ficciones is a far cry from his earlier lyrical style, of which he says: "In those days, I sought dusk, the outskirts, and unhappiness; now, mornings, the center, and serenity."

Thankfully in the newer center, we are treated to 17 extraordinary stories that are teasingly succinct, yet brimming with imaginative and aesthetic prose!

The scarcity of words requires that the reader pay attention to them all or miss much of the wisdom and subtleness that define the delicate and ingenious style that is this fine master of fiction...Jorge Luis Borges!

Borges is the original Neo (The Matrix)
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-26
Transport the Wachowski brothers to the 1930's and ask them to express their philosophy by way of short stories. You might get something in the same ballpark as Ficciones. The diversity and genius of Borges' work is so unique that if you were to know all the languages in the world and had no word limit, it would still be hard to do a review that does justice. Ironically, this is exactly the kind of challenge that Borges would stand up to. I will attempt to review this work by enlisting adjectives that come to mind.

Surreal, mystic, recursive, sophistic, heretical, philosophical, religious, profound, imaginative, ingenious, circular, open-ended, unorthodox, personal, hallucinational, original, universal, self-referential, concise, contextual, complex, ironic.

Here are a few examples of the complexity of Borges' mind at work.

Borges attributes certain imaginary books and volumes of books to some of the authors that he is most influenced by. In reality, these books are projections of Borges' fertile mind and no more. In the process of critiquing imaginary works of art (let's call this meta-art), he creates an instance of the meta-art in the mind of the reader. It's like me talking to you about the eating habits of a third person you haven't met, and actually does not exist! Borges never fails to leave you with a lasting impression of a meta-art that resonates with your senses. On second thoughts, this is obvious because the meta-art is as much a figment of your imagination as it is Borges'. Every meta-art is a reflection of your own creative mind, while Borges is simply holding a mirror. And talking about mirrors, here's a quote from Borges as attributed by him to the meta-art in his first short story "Tlön, Uqbar, Orbis Tertius": "The earth we inhabit is an error, an incompetent parody. Mirrors and paternity are abominable because they multiply and affirm it." And with this we come full circle just like you would in most of Borges' stories.

Borges is fascinated with the idea of god and provides several unorthodox notions of god that might be as appealing to scientists as they would to priests. This is done more so by illustration than by elucidation. In fact, subtle self-references and recursions are an integral part of the entire work. The stories embody the concept that Borges sets out to illustrate, and always come full circle at the end such that appreciating the story is equivalent to appreciating the concept. Whether it is the wizard of "The Circular Ruins", the librarian of "The Library of Babel", the spy of "The Garden of Forking Paths", the teenage boy of "Funes the Memorious", or the playwright of "The Secret Miracle"; the self-referential nature of the work is haunting. Each story leaves you wondering how Borges could convey so much with so little words [This also speaks volumes about the quality of English translation]. Then again, the very topic of brevity and excessiveness is discussed in one of the reviews of a fictional book. It is like Borges does not let anything go. Yet again, the very topic of an all-encompassing book is discussed in the context of a fictional book that aspires to BE god.

There was not a single story of the seventeen that was not profound. There is no chance that you would not re-read this book after reading it once.

Borges A Man from Peru
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 14 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-17
Borges, a half deaf Mephisto indian from Peru, wrote in the later half of the 20th century when half of his inheritance had been squandered in Bordellos charging full price. His forte into "asylum" literature came about as a result of being incarcerated by accident in a Bolivian prison camp which inspired the film, "Papillon". His days were spent by writing and re-reading a book he carried inside his pocket for 22 years which was titled, "Moth Collecting for Youngsters". Most of these stories deal with tidal waves and rocks but some, deal with the memories of his youth like "Hopping on Empty Books".

Authors
Paddle-To-The-Sea
Published in Audio Cassette by Audio Bookshelf (2004-01)
Author: Holling C. Holling
List price: $14.95
New price: $14.95
Used price: $6.48

Average review score:

Remarkable achievement, though a slow read for young ones
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-10-24
I think the temptation here is to give "Paddle to the Sea" five stars. After all, the book is a dazzling display of art and narrative, an educational and interesting tale. But five stars is the voice of the adult reviewer, and this book is mostly read by and to young children.

I was excited to stumble across this book in the library: I remembered it from my childhood. But I was surprised to find how little of the book I remembered. Mostly I remembered the general idea--perhaps my parents were not too keen on reading the entire book.

From the perspective of my daughter (nearly 6), the book was well worth reading, though not terribly compelling. She was curious to learn about Paddle's journey, and interested in the geography (we live right on the route). She liked many of the illustrations, though not nearly so much as I. The book is quite lengthy: it took us several bedtimes to finish it. I was drawn back to the book each night, eager for more of the art and story. I liked the altruism of the people who find Paddle, and the solidarity they show with a maker they will never meet. There is a beautiful selflessness in the land and in the people of the land. But I found that it was I who wanted to read the book each night, more so than my daughter. For young ones, the art is less impressive and the story is a bit slow. And since children's books ought to be ranked with children in mind, we'll have to give this book fewer stars than it otherwise deserves.

Paddle to the Sea
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-17
I purchased this as a gift for my daughter. She is delighted. The art work is beautiful. She was so happy I purchased the rest of the set and they are just as beautiful.

Excellent reading material, especially for boys
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-27
This is a great book to read. I would highly recommend this book and others by the author for fun reading and at the same time great learning opportunities.

A Childhood Memory
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-17

I read this book 60 years ago as a young boy of 10. It made a tremendous impression on me with regards to the geography of the Great Lakes of the US and Canada. I was thrilled to find that it is still being printed and the pictures are the same as I remember--excellent. A wonderful story.

One of my all time favorites - a true classic
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-12
As others here have said, this is a true keeper. A babysitter read it to me when I was 10, and I never forgot it. I bought and read it to my kids when they were around that age, and they wouldn't let me put them to sleep without reading at least one chapter. It's educational, beautifully illustrated, and a touching story. I may have to fight with my kids over who gets to read it first to their kids! A treasure.

Authors
Hood Rich
Published in Paperback by Crystell Publications (2005-02)
Author: Crystal Perkins-Stell
List price: $13.95
New price: $13.95
Used price: $5.00

Average review score:

Great Story
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-22
I truly enjoyed HOOD RICH. I could not put it down. It was a page turner.

Hood Rich Wannabe
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-21
The story was written well although it was told as if the main character was being interviewed. (Couldn't get into that part of the story). The rest of the story was well written - it makes you relate to the characters. You feel very sad in parts, you can picture this being someone in your family, and you cry in others. It gets very emotional towards the end (if anyone knows anyone incarcerated) - you can imagine that this is what it must feel like. I think all younger males should read this story - it almost reads as a testament to the street life our young men may have to face or if they idealize the thug life - this story really tells them the ups and the downs of that life without lecturing....

Hood Rich...It was JUST O.K.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-26
I was expecting it to be better than what it really was. This story is mostly about the struggles a young man face while being wrongly convicted of a crime he did not do. So most of the storyline deals with the main character being behind bars. There were a lot of twist in the storylines which held my attention and made the book an OK read. There is a part II to this book and I will be starting it next. Hopefully it will be better than part I.

P.O.M.E
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-16
Crystal takes you on a journey through the transformation of P's life...from a boy to a man. P makes some bad choices and he pays for them. Will he learn from his mistakes?

I connected with P and actually felt his pain.

After reading Hood Rich, make sure you read Big Tymers...it's even better.

Reflecting......
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-09
Wow the book had me speechless, it did start a little slow but when it starting going I could not put it down. This told a tale of a young man nicknamed Prince cause that was his last name and he had some kingpins in the family that he looked up to. He was young and ready to live the fast life too soon and with that being said he ended up going to jail for fifteen years at the tender age of seventeen and there he learn just what being loyal was, how to survive, having faith, endureing hurt and pain, dealing with the lost of loves one and most of all how to hold on. This book reflected a lot about family. This was a good story you never know whats gone go down next. And Prince is real likeable I enjoyed his personality. Barvo Crystal......

Authors
When Crickets Cry
Published in Kindle Edition by Thomas Nelson (2006-04-04)
Author: Charles Martin
List price: $7.99
New price: $6.39

Average review score:

Very Inspiring
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-11
Charles Martin is a wonderful writer. His characters are developed well and I came to love them. This is a great book!

NEW FAN I AM
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-11
I love laying on beach reading christian fiction. This book made me get a sun burn! Be careful, you forget your surroundings and the next thing you know you have forgotten to reapply sunscreen. It's that good, you truly have trouble putting it down. I won't discuss the contents, if I start, I might ruin it for you. NO JOKE, A MUST READ!!!

Heartfelt, heartbreaking, and heartwarming!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-05
This book will grab your heart and won't let go until long after you've read the last page, leaving fingerprints as a reminder of what matters most in life. You will breathe and bleed and cry for Reese and Emma ... Reese and Annie ... Reese and Charlie ... Reese and Cindy -- each pair sharing heart-healing actions with each other.

The book's messages arrive with felt force, like the resilient beat of a healthy heart, over and over and over ... reminding us that the heart offers redemption and renewal through an unknowable life-force that transforms as it purifies. Like the heart, this book has a pulse and a heartbeat that you will feel.

Read it and be moved, from smiles to sobs. Read it and be thankful for divine coincidence (also known as answered prayers ... that lead a heart surgeon to a lemonade stand and a girl who needs a new heart, that tease him out of grief and withdrawal to use his heartfelt, God-given gifts once again). Read it and shout, Hallelujah!

Redemption
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-03
Fabulous book. Very little do we see in life another opportunity for redemption. When Crickets Cry is a true page turner. If you love Charles Martins' other books then you will more than love this one. I read this and wanted to tell everyone else to read it. One of those rare gifts in literature that you want to hang on to forever. It was that great! I highly recommend this one.

When Crickets Cry
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-28
Where do I begin, our bookclub at Church read this book and it was the first time I read anything by Charles Martin. The book had me from the first page. I was mesmerized by the detail and research Charles put into the book. Saturday our bookclub went to Clayton, GA where the story took place, we ACTUALLY met and got our book signed as well as purchased his latest book. What a class act! He was so personable, honest and has a great memory for names.

We met at Persimmons discussed the book, took pictures and walked where the story began (Savannah and Main). Even took pictures of the cricket box outside of Reeves. We later had lunch on the Lake. It was a wonderful day for us all.

The book hit home in many areas, friendship, forgiveness, love and restoration. I'm personally using this author for Christmas gifts this year and looking forward to reading all his other books. You won't be sorry with this purchase, it's been a long time since I found fiction to be so inspirational! Thank you Charles, the pleasure of meeting you was ours.

MJ

Authors
City of Thieves: A Novel
Published in Hardcover by Viking Adult (2008-05-15)
Author: David Benioff
List price: $24.95
New price: $12.38
Used price: $11.50
Collectible price: $28.95

Average review score:

A dystopian journey through WWII Leningrad
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-11-10
A good page-turner. This one will appeal to those who love WW II military stories and anyone who loves an odyssey through a dystopian landscape. Lev, a Jewish boy too young for the Soviet army, is arrested for looting the body of German bomber pilot that lands near his apartment. But instead of the usual punishment of a bullet in the head, he is sent on an impossible quest with Koyla, an army deserter Don Juan who fancies himself a conman. Their goal: locate a dozen eggs for a wedding cake to be made for a Russian colonel's daughter in a city under siege and without food. This story will grab ahold of you and keep you reading page after page.

Great story
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-11-09
City of Thieves has a story that pulls you in and keeps you reading. It tells a wonderful and horrible story of what the Russian people went through during their occupation of WWII. Benioff uses just the right amount of humor and characters that you really care about. Buy it!

Great
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-11-06
I would like to spare you the same disappointment I had with this nearly flawless book. DO NOT READ THE PROLOGUE. I have no idea how the author, the editor, and publisher agreed to add those mere three pages that nearly ruin the rest of the book. But I'm glad I got over it and continued. This is an amazing book. I've read a lot of WWII era books, and this one is funnier and more entertaining than others. In my opinion, it is nearly a perfect book except for the ridiculous prologue.

Heart-warming, Stomach-turning
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-11-05
As a history and chess buff, as well as one who's traveled in Russia, I wish I had picked up this novel much sooner. "City of Thieves" pulls us into WWII Leningrad with a frequently used technique--an author capturing on paper the accounts of his elderly relatives. But this time the technique is more than a fictional tool, it is a knife that cuts to the heart of Leningrad--in Hitler's words, "city of thieves"--and cuts back to the present with a nicely understated final sentence.

The story follows young Lev, a boy trying to survive the siege of his snow-covered city. His decision to plunder a German paratrooper's fallen corpse lands him in prison, where he prepares for his demise while realizing he'll never be a great Russian, a silent hero who braves the elements. He is young, weak, and scared. To his surprise, though, he finds himself on an unlikely quest the next morning, when he and another prisoner--a deserter from the Russian army--are told to go find a dozen eggs. Their captor's daughter is engaged to be married, and she needs eggs for her wedding cake. Eggs, in this war-torn region, are a luxury beyond words, and the search for them will lead Lev and his new friend Kolya from gruesome scenes to humorous moments to taut scenarios at the hands of the Nazis.

Lev is a wonderfully realized character, a boy who wants to be brave and worldy wise, but feels saddled with a sharp wit and large nose that don't always bode well in the Russian reality. Kolya is equally engaging, vulgar and crude, yet full of humor and wisdom, as well as a grand desire to be a noted novelist. Along their journey, they will become friends despite their differences, and they'll meet new acquaintances and enemies before it's all over.

Benioff creates a palpable landscape to match this setting among the dregs of history, and he gives us a very human story in the midst of atrocity. This is a mix of the heartwarming and stomach-turning, and in the end is a great addition to the tales to come from the Second World War because it's a tale about men and their desire to belong, whether in large or small ways.

Good as entertainment, less so as a serious novel
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-11-04
This is a good yarn that is well told. Benioff is not a great stylist, but his writing is more than serviceable. What Benioff does best is tell a shaggy dog kind of story, a buddy story in an exotic location. As serious literary fiction, this book comes up short - both stylistically and in terms of character development it's rather stock - but I don't think that's Benioff's aim. Benioff isn't trying to be Ian McEwan. Rather he seems to be aiming for something higher than your standard bestseller in terms of literary quality but lower than lasting fiction. It's "tweener" fiction. Not many people are doing this. As a matter of fact, I can't think of anyone else who is doing this right now. You'd have to go back to another era. Benioff reminds me of the late Irwin Shaw in a lot of ways. He's smart and not afraid to be more than a little sentimental. The closest contemporary to Benioff is probably Richard Price, but Price is far more manic.

Ultimately, this is a good airplane flight read. It's educated entertainment, far better than you get with bestsellers. You can read it cover to cover easily flying from LA to NYC. You'll forget about it in a year or two and won't ever need to reread it, but it is fun and enjoyable.

As an aside, my father lived through the siege of Leningrad and told a lot of stories about those dark years. In terms of mood and setting, this book seems to ring true.

Authors
Treasured Misfortunes
Published in Mass Market Paperback by Mary, Inc (1999-09-28)
Author:
List price: $15.00
New price: $54.98
Used price: $15.00
Collectible price: $15.00

Average review score:

This is a Phenomenal book!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-11-04
Thankyou Sammer Ghouleh for writing a book that gave me hope, wisdom, and a sense of peace. I highly recommend this book to anyone with a sick child. It has given me strength when I needed it the most. Sammer is talented and really let me feel her emotions through her poetry.

This is a phenomenal book. I enjoyed reading it and it has given me a stronger spirit in coping with my own child's illness. Any parent with an afflicted child needs to pick this book up. It has made me a better mother because i nutured my soul. Sincerely, Jacqueline Elmosa

Touched My Heart
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-17
Treasured Misfortunes, is a book that I read many years ago. This book of poety has touched my heart. The illustrations relate to the poetry so well, that I often think of them as much as the words they depict. I have become a different person because of the extent the poetry has affected me in my life. I recommed this book to everyone who needs an awakening to their consienceness.

LOVE
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2004-02-25
As I read the book,my every emotion of love became awakened with it's reality.Amazon did great job in allowing the readers to express their thoughts and feelings.I love the book and told as many people about it as I could.I would love to meet the great lady who wrote the book.I am waiting to read more of her books.Good luck.

OUTSTANDING
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-08-27
As I was reading the powerful poetry of Treasured Misfortunes
I became to value the real meaning of sincere love between a mother and her child.I was very educated. The book was full of many emotional issues,that are very deep and sacred to the poet soul. I enjoyed the book very much,as well as appreciated Amazon .com for it's great way in allowing me to express my thoughts. I am actually waiting to read more of her books, She is just an outstanding lady of great talent and wise expressions that are very healing.

Real Experience
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-07-11
Many people read many books but not always do people remember what they read and react to it with tears and sincere emotions.
Until this day some of the poems I read still effect my heart when I remember them.The poems in the Living Through Faith chapter is just beyond my ability to express.It is a great book,I really would like to read other type of poetry which she writes about.I wish fo every perso who desire poetic reality to purchase Treasured Misfortunes.

Authors
King of the Wind - Newbery Promo '99: The Story of the Godolphin (Aladdin Fiction)
Published in Paperback by Aladdin (1999-06-01)
Author: Marguerite Henry
List price: $2.99
New price: $2.99
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Average review score:

great true horse story
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-15
This was one of my favorite books as a child, and i just gave it as a gift to another child. It is an excellent book - a true story about a famous horse who had to overcome tremendous struggles and his faithful groom who managed to accompany him and assist him no matter the personal cost, as well as a look at prejudice and genuine kindness.

A classic!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-16
I first read this book when I was in elementary school. That was many, many years ago. The thought of this book somehow crossed my mind a few days ago. So I procured one and read it through in a couple of hours. The re-read reminded me of how great of a book this is.

This book speaks of hope, trust, perseverance, and especially of undying love. Yes, it's a children's book but adults will benefit greatly from reading it as well. It's one of those books which will forever remain a classic in the hearts and minds of those who have read it.

Amazing
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-12-08
This is one of my favorite horse stories of all time. It is about a young boy who makes a bond with an increadible horse. A must read for any horse lover!!!!

Marguerite Henry's best ever!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-17
This is my favorite horse story ever! This book stands above all others for me and I will always remember it. My mom read this to me when I was 9 years old and still to this day, I have never read it's equal. Henry's writing is so beautiful, the story so touching and the characters so real. A plot unfolds about a young stable boy in Morocco and his golden-bay stallion who would one day be known as the Godolphin Arabian, who's bloodline still runs in race horses of today. It's quite possible a lot of this book is based on fact. A simply amazing story in all respects! I must warn sensitive readers however, there are some very intense parts of this book, some sad parts which are sure to make most people cry and a few parts where there is fairly harsh abuse and neglect of animals. Maybe not the best choice to read to very young kids, especially if they are the type to get scared easily. Overall, I would say the book has an excellent balance of tragedy and triumph. The ending is a beautiful one, both happy and a little sad but satisfying and well worth reading the story.

Review: King of the Wind
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-30
King of the Wind is a great book by Marguerite Henry. It is about a mute boy named Agba and his horse Sham. Agba goes with Sham on many adventures together. Agba goes with Sham from the royal stables in Morocco to Gog Magog. Sham also sires many winning foals and when he is gone, Agba goes back to Morocco.
I enjoyed this book very much. I liked it because it is about horses. I also liked it because it was full of adventure. It was sad and exciting and there were many parts where Sham and Agba were seperated. Agba was very brave for a young, mute boy and Sham kept him company with his firy spirit that only Agba could control.
My favorite part was when the cook tried to drive Sham. He wanted to show that he did not need Agba to drive Sham. He left Agba at the royal kitchens then set out. Sham bidded his time till the cart was groaning with goods and a young pig. Then "BAM!" He went wild and ran like the wind, sending the goods, the pig, and the cook into the air. The cook runs after first the pig, then Sham, then the pig, until he is so confused that he catched nither. In the end the apple woman cathes Sham and the cook is so fustrated that he sells Sham to a cruel man. I like this part best because it is so funny and shows Shams firy nature.

Authors
Secrets of the Zona Rosa: How Writing (and Sisterhood) Can Change Women's Lives
Published in Paperback by Holt Paperbacks (2006-05-02)
Author: Rosemary Daniell
List price: $15.00
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Average review score:

Secrets of the Zona Rosa
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-20
This book is just one more proof of Rosemary's undying devotion to energize writers, stir belief in themselves and evoke the best that lies within their hearts and psyches. She never gives up--always looks for ways to teach and motivate. Thank you many times over.

A MUST FOR YOUR BOOK SHELF
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-08
No more excuses. Whether you are a published author, have never written a word, or just want to get some thoughts on a page, Secrets of the Zona Rosa will change your life if you let it.

The lessons in these pages are are powerful, provocative, and positively practical because they are universal. This book is not just for writers. It is for everyone.

Willing students will learn how to free their trapped, inner demons - as well as angels - through the healing, therapeutic power of words in Rosemary's "Exorcises". These wonderful writing tools will allow you to celebrate yourself by helping you reveal facets of your soul you might not otherwise knew existed.

Rosemary Daniell is not afraid of writing and telling her truths. Neither should you be! A marvelous follow-up to The Woman Who Spilled Words All Over Herself, Secrets of the Zona Rosa will make you laugh. Sometimes, it will make you cringe - with a smile. Most of all, it will make you write. Read it, apply it, and gain the power to tell your story!

A FLASHLIGHT IN THE DARKNESS
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-20
My hand reached for this book as if it were a divining rod to grab onto something to help me find the way out of the darkness I was in...
Reading other women's stories of finding their true ALPHA voice gave me courage, confidence and broke the isolation of going it alone...
Rosemary recounts stories or events that are sometimes disturbing, painfully truthful, colorful and full of the true paths that many women have been on. Sometimes, the passages I read would haunt me through the day, but motivated me to read on to gain wisdom and life lessons.
You will not be disappointed in this book...it is worth it's weight in gold...!

Rosemary Daniell and the southern feminine of writing.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-05
Rosemary Daniell is a fascinating woman with wild and unbroken energy in terms of her life and her writing. This energy along with a sharp focus for writing is establishing an example for women around the world to follow. Essentially, she is (and has been for years) writing her way through what, in part, seems to be the unconscious shadow of a civilization who for hundreds of years has not freely admitted the feminine into it most prized corners of culture and art, particularly in the south.
In her books, as in her teachings at numerous talks and workshops across the country and in Europe, Rosemary Daniell lifts the ordinary of life to the sacred and then she brings the sacred back to the ordinary as she connects writers and ideas from all areas of life.
All in all, her latest book, "Secrets of The Zona Rosa How Writing (and Sisterhood) Can Change Women's Lives" presents not only a way to show up for your writing but for your life as well. Rosemary uses numerous quotes from other writers, such as Georgia O'keefee, Natalie Goldberg, and Menander to support the points of stories and ideas that make up the book.
"Secrets" is huge in terms of information for beginning as well as "old" writers. And there is laughter throughout the book, belly laughter rolling off pages of this book even in the midst of a painful story being told by Rosemary about writers and writing.
Carefully laid into the pages of heart-wrenching truths and the gut-splitting laughter are also guidelines and "exorcises" as well as the most sinful but delicious recipe for Strawberry Cream Cake--the Official Zona Rosa Dessert.
This book is so rich with ideas and stories that it will take years for its contents to settle within our culture but when it does, and as it does, it will take hold and become part of the anchoring force of great writers and great women who create (and a few great men who are willing to wear pink and the ZR tattoed across their hearts).
Every women should have this book as a guide for living; every woman writer should stop what she is doing right now and go out and get this book if she doesn't already have the book. Ryder J Finnegan,Ph.D./Writer/ Fayetteville, Arkansas.

An Exhilarating Experience
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-09
When you pick up a copy of Secrets of the Zona Rosa, better pick up two or three extra notebooks and a box of pens or pencils because you are about to start writing.

It's hard to imagine not getting itchy writing fingers while reading the intriguing titles in the table of contents: "We are all doors until someone slams us," "If I was really wild," and "If I thought like a guy."

Rosemary Daniell is an intriguing and powerful woman. She writes her own truths and invites other women to do the same. No, she doesn't invite; she insists. And insistence is hard to resist.

I first met Rosemary Daniell in the pages of her 1997 book, The Woman Who Spilled Words All Over Herself: Writing and Living the Zona Rosa Way. It headed this fallen-away writer back on the writing road. For several years, I was a member of Rosemary's Atlanta Zona Rosa group. It is with real joy I welcome this book, as will other readers of this author's works. Those who have not had the fun and challenge of working their way through Rosemary's exercises--and exorcises--will soon share our enthusiasm.

Rosemary took the name Zona Rosa for the writing groups and workshops that she leads from the bohemian quarter of Mexico City, but she gives it the additional meaning of the "feminine zone," where women (and not a few men) explore using writing not only as a challenging, creative activity but also "as a tool for healing."

Secrets explains how her mother's suicide inspired her to explore her own life and truths through writing, and how the knowledge of her mother's frustrations and sadness over a lost ambition to write led her to devote her time and talents to helping other women not only fulfill their dreams of writing, but also to hone their skills in practical ways. Rosemary, already a published poet, was leading a writing workshop for women prisoners when she learned of her mother's overdose.

"I felt once more how little she--like the women in the prison--had been able to tell of her own truths. How little permission she had been given--whether by herself or others--to express them.

Although I didn't know it yet, Zona Rosa was born in that moment; an unrealized passion that would lead me to spend much of the rest of my life seeking to help women like Mother and women in prisons of all kinds to achieve their dreams."

Rosemary does not and did not flinch at telling her own truths. She spent the next three years of her life writing a memoir, Fatal Flowers: On Sin, Sex, and Suicide in the Deep South, inspired by her mother's death. Not long afterwards, Rosemary began leading a small group of writing women. Zona Rosa was born.

This book tells Rosemary's story and more. She looks back over the nearly twenty-five years of Zona Rona writers and shares (with their permission) the moving tales of how their writing has changed their lives. There are sad stories and stories of triumph, all of them fascinating.

This is not, though, a book of stories. We find guidance and guidelines that all writers, novice or expert, use with relish.

While the book deals with serious subjects, it is filled with Rosemary's wit and humor. "Pilates on Paper" first appears in Chapter 1, and the reader becomes the writer before she turns the page. (Remember my warning about new notebooks and pens!) "Book Therapy" appears regularly with reading suggestions and guidance. Writing exercises (or exorcises as Zona Rosans call them) appear throughout. Toward the end of the book, Rosemary addresses "The Emotional Tai Chi of Getting Your Work Out There"--excellent advice on finishing and submitting our work when it is ready (and we are ready for it) to be shared with the world.

Attending a Zona Rosa group or workshop is an exhilarating experience, but so is reading and writing from this book. I recommend it wholeheartedly.

by Patricia Nordyke Pando
for Story Circle Book Reviews
reviewing books by, for, and about women

Authors
Persuasion: The Art of Getting What You Want
Published in Audio CD by Your Coach Digital (2008-03-04)
Author: Dave Lakhani
List price: $29.98
New price: $15.39
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Average review score:

Excellent Book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-11-18
If you are looking to become more of an influential person, then this book is perfect for you. This is by far one of the best books I have read on persuasion (and I have read quite a few). If I were you I would buy this book right now. Also another quality book on persuasion is "The Art Of Woo." Get this one as well and then review both often, take notes, and underline the good stuff. This will ultimately allow you to achieve your goal of becoming more persuasive, which we all know is vital if you desire success in life.

Persuasion, the art of getting what you want.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-11-18
Thus far it is a fairly good book. I am into the third chapter now, and I can say there are quite a few thoughts in the book which turn a light on. good read id say. i look foward to finishing it up.

Karla Yee
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-18
I love this book and recommend it. It is an easy read, but more importantly the book touches on the basics of persuasion and gives the reader a better understanding of how, where, and what to focus on in order to be persuasive. Truly enjoyable book!

Get this book TODAY!!!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-22
Dave Lakhani has done it again! Get this book today and it will immediately change your life-- your life does need changing, doesn't it?
It is loaded with practical, you-can-use-it-right-now tips for all situations where you want the other party to come to the correct conclusion which happens to be yours.
Also, see Dave's book Power of an Hour. A great book as well.
No, I'm not related to him.
Happy persuading!
Robert Mimm, Wesley Chapel, FL

Excellent learning tool!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-02
I am actually reviewing the audiobook from audible.com, but I enjoyed this book so much that I am going to be ordering the physical book for quick reference purposes. Dave Lakhani really has a wealth of information and understanding of how to help people improve their ability to persuade others effectively. This is currently the first book I recommend to others looking for a way to improve their persuasion and selling skills and I expect it to remain my first recommendation for a long time.


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