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

California
Child of Silence
Published in Hardcover by Mysterious Pr (1993-01)
Author: Abigail Padgett
List price: $17.95
New price: $3.05
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $17.99

Average review score:

Review of Child of Silence
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-27
This book is the first of Abigail Padgett's "Bo Bradley" series. It is very well written, and gives some important insight into a very important issue, as well as being an extremely good story.

Interesting and Cool!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2000-01-10
I really liked this book because it was interesting and you would never want to put the book down. It's mysterious and rare. It's about an investigator named Barbera Bradley and she tries to save a 4 year old boy from two dangerous guys that try to murder the little boy named Weppo. She got a mysterious call to run away with the child. This is my favorite book I'v read so far.

Compassionate Ride on a Rollercoaster
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-25
Mix a child-protection officer with her Irish grandmother's Gift of "knowing," an elderly Indian receiving beneficient messages from The Spirit, and the officer's bi-polar illness, and you have a marvelous ride on a merry-go-round. Add a French pediatrician, a cold-eyed Texan running for office, and the "severely retarded" child who unites all. Allow plenty of time, because you won't want to stop for bedtime. A rare treat.

Child of Silence
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-01-06
I absolutely loved this book. I couldn't put it down. Being Bipolar myself, I could completely identify with the main character, Bo's, inner challenges. The author has done a very, very good job of capturing and describing what goes on inside the mind of a high-functioning person struggling to stay sane, and she's done it in a way that brings a lot of humor. Bo is so likable, so determined, so admirable. The central storyline is very engrossing, and the whole southwestern setting and mystique are icing on the cake. I highly recommend this book and can't wait to read the next one.

Interesting and Cool!
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2000-01-10
I really liked this book because it was interesting and you would never want to put the book down. It's mysterious and rare. It's about an investigator named barbera bradley and she tries to save a 4 year old boy from to dangerous guys that try to murder the little boy named Weppo. She got a mysterious call to run away with the child. This is my favorite book I'v read so far.

California
Child of the World: Montessori for Ages 3-12+ (Michael Olaf's Essential Montessori Series)
Published in Paperback by The Michael Olaf Montessori Company, Arcata, California (2006-05-01)
Author: Susan Stephenson
List price: $5.00
New price: $6.00

Average review score:

The Best Resource for all who love the young child
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-09-18
Child of the World is a complete resource for parents, grandparents, teachers and anyone who is a friend to a child between the ages of three on up to twelve years old. It offers very practical advice to support the Montessori lessons of practical life activities, sensorial experiences, language, math and geometry, art and music, social studies and the physical and life sciences, from age 3 through age 12 and beyond. It has been referred to as "a Montessori course in one volume."

Susan Stephenson has been teaching in the Montessori field since 1970, has read all of Dr. Montessori's books and pulled out the quotes that are most helpful to parents and teachers. Child of the World is filled with clear guidance using the priciples of Dr. Maria Montessori. She addresses the joys and challenges of supporting children's process of becoming a fully human being with common sense and deep insight into the nature of the human being. You can feel her enjoyment and appreciation for the unique needs and gifts of the developing sensibilities of the child. Here she offers a perspective that encourages us to observe, reflect, and connect with the child, while offering activities which foster independence, life skills, communication, time for personal reflection. All those who desire to preserve the dignity and joy of the young child will admire how Susan conveys great respect for the inner life and spiritual nature of children. She has gathered together gems of wisdom, practical help, and activities, books, and games that expand the world of the child. She has travelled the globe collecting precise, beautiful and often handmade items that invite the child to interact and discover. Child of the World is also a source of delightful and inspiring books and materials.

Child of the World (three to twelve years) and its companion, The Joyful Child (birth to three) offer kind guidance along a sure path for developing the skills and attributes that will assist the child in preparing for life. These are the resources I have depended on to find wonderful additions for my Montessori environment during my 32 years of teaching. It is also the place I rely on for gifts for my grandchildren and resources to have ready when they come for a visit. Child of the World is a great resource for the many years from three to twelve and supports us in the attitudes and applications of good child support. Both of these publications are welcomed into Montessori training centers, schools, and homes worldwide as a clear and concise guide to basic Montessori principles.


A wide array of resources and excellent links such as lectures, children's projects, etc., at the always-current websites of the publisher of Joyful Child and Child of the World:[...]

Cathryn Kasper, AMI/USA consultant

Montessori for parents and teachers.
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2000-05-27
I must say, this is the bargain of the year for making Montessori philosophy understandable to parents. An excellent overview, practical and clear. Also, the materials offered in the catalogue section are much less expensive than those usually found in Montessori schools and so are valuable to parents for their children at home.

Homeschoolers Delight!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-02-14
This product is an excellent educational resource. The notes on child development ages and stages are very useful; I have used it extensively during the past ten years in homeschooling my own child (and the children of others).It is now the mainstay of my step-daughter's homeschooling curriculum for her three children.
Child of the world is an excellent tool in ensuring your child has a well-rounded education. My current copy lives on the coffee table. Children love to peruse it before birthdays and christmas!

A Montesssori Course in one book
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2005-01-23
This book can be ordered directly from the publisher at www.michaelolaf.net and a lot of the text has been placed free at this site. It presents a clear picture of Montessori ideas for both the preschool and elementary school, and can be used for projects at home as well. The "book" is also a catalogue of books, toys, and materials that engage the child in a healthy and fun way while educating.

Excellent Book on Montessori Method with a Catalogue of Prod
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2002-02-27
This is a great book with all the basics for a home school. It helps you set up, explains how to go about teaching, offers tons of resources and then there is a catalogue to buy great aids, toys and materials needed. The perfect all-in-one and very [reasonable] for the great stuff it has. I know I bought the expensive guides and now only refer back to this one!!

California
City of Strangers: A Jack Liffey Mystery (Otto Penzler Books)
Published in Hardcover by Carroll & Graf (2003-03-24)
Author: John Shannon
List price: $24.00
New price: $10.65
Used price: $7.27

Average review score:

Powerful, emotionally moving. This is a good one
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-11-18
Since losing his job as an aerospace engineer, Jack Liffey has become something of a specialist in finding missing children. So, when an old school acquaintance asks him to find his missing daughter, Liffey is happy to help out--even if the acquaintance insists on reports and psychological analysis (he's a psychologist). The missing daughter was associated with four Persian-american high school boys, also missing. It doesn't seem like an especially difficult case, although the arrival of an FBI agent gives Liffey a hint that things are going to get difficult.

Liffey's investigation takes him from Los Angeles to Mexican border towns, involves Arabic terrorists, terrorizing Mexican drug dealers, and layers of government corruption, lies, and secrets. As always, Liffey finds a portion of what he is looking for--and a lot more. Persian-American student Fariborz Bayat plays a major role in helping Liffey and, through Liffey, gains a deeper understanding of his humanity, his relationship with Islam, and his moral senses.

Author John Shannon has created a powerful and complex character in Jack Liffey. His love for his daughter, philosophical approach to the world, anguish over his erratic sexual performance, and tough moral code make him both admirable and approachable. As a reader, I'm not sure I would like Liffey, but I am sure I would want to have him on my side.

Shannon knows that moral questions can be tough, that an assurance of righteousness is often the mask of evil, and that goodness exists outside of the arbitrary whim of a God--but he conveys his message through story rather than through artifice. CITY OF STRANGERS is a powerful and emotionally moving story. I highly recommend it.

Another great Jack Liffey book from John Shannon
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-10-09
I loved this book! John Shannon combines great plot, great characters, and a social conscience in a thriller noir style mystery. The plot is fairly complex and covers a lot of ground - racism, class bias, the divisions among arabs and persians, terrorism, dirty bombs, drug smuggling, divorced parenting, car trouble, and raising a teenage girl. Some diaglogue borders on didactic, but still engrossing. The setting is LA grungy, very realistic. If you like your thrillers with some gravity to them, you'll like this book. I can't wait to read the next one.

Back in form
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-12-24
I recently reviewed John Shannon's book "Streets on Fire" rather negatively. I want to go on record as saying that I just dislike the *book*, not the character or the author. This next entry in the series, Jack Liffey's sixth adventure, is called City of Strangers, and though I was at times a bit annoyed with the author's attitude towards Muslim extremists, I found the plot very believable, and the ending satisfying.

This time around, Jack's been hired by a college roommate who's now a shrink. The shrink has a daughter who's 17 and who's vanished without a trace. The only real clue is that she had an Iranian boyfriend, who dumped her after converting to a more radical version of Islam. When Liffey interviews the boy's parents, it's immediately apparent that things aren't what they seem, and the story takes off.

Shannon's made Liffey into an interesting character. He's sort of the prototype of the old-fashioned private eye. If he gets into a fight with the bad guys, he *might* win if there's only one guy to fight. Two, and he'll probably lose. If they shoot at him, he ducks, runs, hides, whatever, and gets hurt more often than not, winding up in the hospital. And of course the women enjoy him a great deal, and he winds up in bed with 1 or 2 per book.

I enjoyed this entry into the series a lot more than the last one. The author didn't try quite as hard to make LA look silly, and the plot was more satisfying. Recommended.

Life as usual in Apocalypse Central
Helpful Votes: 18 out of 18 total.
Review Date: 2003-04-17
What is notable about John Shannon's Jack Liffey series is the author's depth of feeling and respect for young people. What is also of signal importance is the author's talent for creating thoroughly believable characters--even the villains. Take, for example, the fat man so immense that he requires two chairs to accommodate his width. In anyone else's hands, this creature would be a blob of amorphous evil--intent purely on doing his motiveless bad deeds. But with Shannon at the helm, we're presented with a history that makes the character so real that his behavior is genuinely shocking because we don't want to think that someone thoughtful and articulate can, given his intimate first-hand acquaintanceship with pain, proceed to inflict that same pain (literally) on someone else. Yet he does. And it feels very real; the reader shares Liffey's injuries--both physical and psychic. The same skill is at work in defining the young people in City of Strangers, especially the exquisitely drawn Fariborz who is a living, breathing portrait of internal conflict--a good soul on a crusade to awaken people to the wrongness all around them.

As always, when Liffey ultimately makes contact with the young people he's been hired to find, there are deeply thoughtful exchanges. Never condescending, never patronizing, always self-deprecating, yet always sensitive to their struggles--whether real or imagined--Liffey enters into their lives offering his battered heart and body as support for their sorrows. No one I've read has such a profound grasp on the issues that are central to the lives of youngsters approaching the treacherous border of adulthood. Liffey is a good man whose empathy is a poultice for the injured young, drawing out their pain and taking it into himself--like the archetypal sin eater.

Then, gleefully, there are the apocalyptic views that are sprinkled throughout every Liffey adventure. This time out, sadly, there are no little rat-like dogs to be hated. But there is a billboard advertising Drive-Through Hi-Colonics. Relief Without Waiting. (Hilarious!) And there are a couple of bemasked individuals on the street, holding up a banner that says, "Open Up Area 51, Display the Alien Remains."

Finally, happily, Jack has connected with the redoubtable Miss Rebecca Plumkill. And there are bits of a shredded foam pillow littering the bedroom. Now how, we have to wonder with amusement, did that happen? And aren't we glad that some warm light has managed to filter through the gloom of Jack's sorrows!
My highest recommendation.

Ya Gotta Love Jack Liffey!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2003-04-26
Here's another great book from John Shannon! It's full of contempory issues such as dirty bombs and Arab Islamic terrorists. As well as covering Los Angeles scenes, which Shannon does better than anyone else I've read, he takes us across the border for a danger-filled visit to Mexico, complete with a vicious drug lord. Jack Liffey gets pretty beaten up this time, but he encounters a couple of interesting new women to ease the pain. He survives it all with courage and integrity intact and with a little help from his daughter Maeve, who seems to be more involved in keeping him alive as the books go on. It was such an engaging story that I could hardly put it down! I'm eager for the next book so I can find out which little corners of L.A., ethnic groups, and social issues, the multi-dimensional Jack Liffey will deal with as he and "Sancho Panza" Maeve drift around my city.

California
Competing Visions of Islam in the United States: A Study of Los Angeles (Contributions to the Study of Religion)
Published in Hardcover by Greenwood Press (1997-07-30)
Author: Kambiz GhaneaBassiri
List price: $119.95
New price: $19.98
Used price: $10.61

Average review score:

hey kambiz! it's me!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2000-01-21
I remember the day that Kambiz received his book in the mail, "hot from the press," so to speak. We were studying in Middlebury, Vermont, and I had the honor to be a classmate of Kambiz. I flipped through the book, and though i didn't read it, it was obvious from the accuracy of his data on MSA-UCLA that he had done a considerable amount of fieldwork.

adambenwang@hotmail.com

The best book that I have ever read.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 1999-05-20
I am a moslem and I think there are more things that any researcher about Islam must tell the people and I think this book is very useful for all the people in all contries. I like to thanks Kambiz Gh. for this book. I wish to have more books from him about Islam.

Truly a profound study!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 1998-10-03
By reading this book one can get a clear, well researched, and 'real life' picture about Islam/muslims in the United States. Where there are so many unfortunate misleading information about Islam and Muslims in our community, Mr. GhaneaBassiri puts forth a true and dignified perspective about the religion and muslims' experience. This is a well written and thorough book.

A wonderful change to the mediocre books on Islam in the U.S
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 1998-07-28
This book is excellent for at least two reasons. Unlike other books on Islam in America, it considers all Muslims: immigrants, converts, black Muslims, and NOI. Second, Ghaneabassiri shows a human side to his subject, one which is lacking in other books. It is a shame the book is not in paperback.

Competing Visions of Islam in the United States
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2001-07-30
GhaneaBassiri, an Iranian 174 doctoral student at Harvard, read widely, sent out a questionnaire, and talked to American Muslims. The result is perhaps the most sophisticated study to date of Muslim attitudes in the United States. He reaches two main conclusions.

First, immigrant and convert Muslims alike share a deeply ambivalent attitude toward American culture. They find immorality rampant in the country ("culturally retarded" is one interviewee's colorful term) 44 but see it as an exciting place of opportunity-not just for economic gain, but as a place "to live Islam." 44 This ambivalence, GhaneaBassiri finds, has direct political implications: "a significant number of Muslims, particularly immigrant Muslims, do not have close ties or loyalty to the United States." 47 Indeed, his questionnaire shows that 12 out of 15 immigrants and even 5 out of 15 converts feel more allegiance to a foreign country than to the United States. 45 Second, GhaneaBassiri finds that Muslims in the United States "are undecided about what Islam is and requires." 50 Taking advantage of America's unique religious freedom, they insist on exploring their Islamic identity and are bouyantly self-confident about their potential to lead the Muslim world. 57 This attitude, when coupled with the enormous ethnic and sectarian diversity of American Islam, translates into a disunity that has prevented American Muslims from influencing American politics. 101

Middle East Quarterly, Islam in the United States December 1998

California
A Complicated War: The Harrowing of Mozambique (Perspectives on South Africa)
Published in Paperback by University of California Press (1993-02-26)
Author: William Finnegan
List price: $26.95
New price: $15.00
Used price: $6.85

Average review score:

Mozambique revisited, fifty years later
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-21
Having spent my teenage years in Mozambique during the 1950s, I've always felt a strong affinity for Mozambique and its people. I read Finnegan's book with a heavy heart, finally piecing together the puzzle of what has become of the, "Terra de boa gente", the land of the good people. Finnegan's book is amazingly sensitive and intelligent. This is a book built on a foundation of deep insight, patience and great scholarship. Through Finnegan's incisive reporting, I was transported back to this "harrowed" land down to the smell of the wood fires. Not having been in Mozambique since 1968, Finnegan re-kindled my interest and wish to re-visit this challenged land and to see it again for myself.

History is related to place
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-11
This is a great introductory book to understanding the war in Mozambique from independence until 1992. This would be the first book that I would recommend anyone wanting to know about the history behind current events not only in Mozambique, but in Southern Africa in general. Finnegan divided the war into sections based on the provinces of Mozambique, and then told the unique story relative to each region and how the war was influenced by Mozambicans and its neighbors. If anyone is interested in further reading on Mozambique and/or Southern Africa, the bibliography in the back of this book is exceptional. Most highly recommended!

Excellent Book
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2000-11-13
I bought this book before a trip to Mozambique in the summer of 2000. I found it very hard to find books about the country. I found this to be the most complete book as far as giving me a big picture of what the people had been through in recent years. The book has many anecdotes to show the typical western reader just how different life is in Mozambique. I found that the sense of poverty as well as generosity and warmth that the author communicated was verified by my own experience. It is the stories of the everyday person in the book that are so wonderful. Stories of the joy of children upon recieving a gift of a pen or the desire of young man for a pair of shoes.

The Mozambicans are amazing people. I apprciated them even more because I had read this this book. I was filled with wonder at the total complete wonderful humanity I encountered given the populations truly horrible experience of war.

Excellent Book
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2000-11-13
I bought this book before a trip to Mozambique in the summer of 2000. It was very hard to find books about the country. I ended up coming to Amazon and jsut doing a search. This was one of the books I bought sight unseen. It turned out to be the best. It was the most complete book as far as giving me a big picture of what the people had been through in recent years. The book has many anecdotes to show the typical western reader just how different life is in Mozambique. I found that the sense of poverty as well as generosity and warmth that the author communicated was verified by my own experience. It is the stories of the everyday person in the book that are so wonderful. Stories of the joy of children upon recieving a gift of a pen or the desire of young man for a pair of shoes.

The Mozambicans are amazing people. I apprciated them even more because I had read this this book. I was filled with wonder at the total complete wonderful humanity I encountered given the populations truly horrible experience of war.

Valuable and painful insights into Mozambique's past.
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2001-10-31
This is a lively and well written book which deals with the period of civil war in Mozambique. It was completed and published just before the conclusion of a successful peace process and so provides a particularly clear and powerful view of recent history.It is based on the author's travels within country during the war period and includes extensive interviews. The people he talked and worked with emerge as very vivid and lively characters. The support of the rebels by Rhodesia and South Africa, and the reasons for that support, are well described. A must read for anyone going to work in Mz, strongly recommended for the serious traveler as well.

California
Crossing the Border: Encounters between Homeless People and Outreach Workers
Published in Paperback by University of California Press (1999-09-02)
Author: Michael Rowe
List price: $21.95
New price: $19.83
Used price: $2.60
Collectible price: $21.97

Average review score:

MSDQ Book News
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2001-01-05
"Rowe provides a rich picture not only of a particular group of homeless people, but also of the complicated interactions between the marginalized and those who try to help them." -MDSQ Book News

Note re: previous reviews and comments.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2001-01-05
The preceding reviews and comments were presented to the author with permission from: 1. Deirdre Oakley, Psychiatric Services and 2. Cynthia Karlton, Journal of Addiction and Mental Health.

Crossing the Border
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2000-12-08
Crossing the Border makes a noteworthy contribution to the field [of qualitative studies of outreach work.] It should be considered an essential read for everyone- from administrators to those on the front line- working with the most marginalized among the homeless.

MSDQ Book News
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2001-01-05
"Rowe provides a rich picture not only of a particular group of homeless people, but also of the complicated interactions between the marginalized and those who try to help them." -MDSQ Book News

Very well done...
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2002-12-27
Having been an outreach worker for roughly six years, I found this book to be surprisingly well written. Too often, books tackling this subject present mere caracatures of the people it talks about, vieweing the subjects more as data or political process than real human beings.

This book presents many different points of views and differing types of outreach workers and the people they seek to help. The homeless are not condescended to nor are the outreach workers glamorized. It is quite factual and quite objective.

I saw myself in some of the types and picked up excellent little reminders about the whole homeless issue and those whose lives it affects. If you are looking for a bit more of the 'human' connection of those who are on the front lines (as opposed to the theorists, the politicians, the directors and others removed from the field), this is a great book toward that end.

California
Dark Side of Fortune: Triumph and Scandal in the Life of Oil Tycoon Edward L. Doheny
Published in Paperback by University of California Press (2001-02-05)
Author: Margaret Leslie Davis
List price: $21.95
New price: $14.19
Used price: $10.87
Collectible price: $39.99

Average review score:

Dark Side of Fortune
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-08
Well written biography. Moves along with a smooth pace. Has the feel of an exciting novel rather than a history. Will be of interest to southern Californians and particularly Angelenos. Those who have seen the movie, "There Will Be Blood" will find this story worthwhile.

Oil Scandal
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-01
The book was very interesting and historical. The writer was excellent and easy to read and understand.

Another terrific biography from Margaret Leslie Davis
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2000-03-13
Margaret Leslie Davis has done it again with another fine biography. Ms. Davis shows us the inner man of Edward L. Doheny, one of the richest and greatest Californians in history, virtually the John D. Rockefeller, Sr. of the West. Doheny was flat broke at the ripe age of 40 and yet within a few years he became one of the richest men in the country through his wild-cat oil discoveries in Los Angeles and Mexico. The break-up of Rockefeller's Standard Oil by the U.S. Supreme Court left Doheny an opening which he exploited adroitly. Most impressive is Ms. Davis's keen legal understanding and her scrupulous attention to noting her sources. In fact, the "notes" at the end of the book are arranged so that the top of the page refers the reader to the page number of the text thereby making it very easy to flip back and check the source. A small detail, perhaps, but much appreciated. Ms. Davis is a true scholar; her legal training shows itself especially when discussing the Tea Pot Dome scandal that ultimately tarnished Doheny's reputation. In short, Ms. Davis is becoming our finest historian on the West and particularly California.

"Beyond Greed"
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 15 total.
Review Date: 2003-10-07
Good read, except for the fact that the author deliberately omitted the fact that Ned Doheny & Hugh Plunkett were gay. Ned Doheny probably was bisexual and he spent a lot of time with his buddy Hugh Plunkett. Certainly the Doheny family asked the author to downplay this issue in exchange for their co-operation with the book. Hugh was more than a "private secretary". I assume the author is straight; so she would not understand Ned's sexuality; Ned was spoiled rotten, an only child, and was given everything money could buy. It is a wonder Hollywood never made a film of this story; perhaps the Doheny family have something to do with this? In 1929, it was assumed that Ned and Hugh were lovers. Ms Davis has tried to change history? For a price? The public is not that stupid. Especially now with the scandals coming out of that seminary in Camarillo for pediphile priests that Estelle Doheny donated so many millions to. It is a wonder the Doheny family did not provide more photos as there are more at the USC library than Ms Davis was able to come up with in this book. The Beverly Hills Historical Society has a better collection of photos of Greystone; fully furnished in its heyday than you see in this book. Behind every great fortune there is a great crime. I expected to read something I had not heard before; but she is afraid to go there. Did Lucy Battson die with her secret? It was scandalous to be gay in those days, but not now. Maybe a gay author could have done the story justice. Her details about the oil fields are great; it is the social history that is lacking. We all know that the greatest export from Ireland is its people.......

Teapot Dome - Early Oil Industry
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2002-08-07
This book is a fascinating look at the life and times of one Edward Doheny the onetime founder of Mexican Oil Company prior to the nationalization of reserves by the revolutionary PRI party in the early days of their power. The narrative follows the career of Mr. Doheny from his modest prospector days in the Wild West to the heights of his infamy during the Teapot Dome scandal.

This is perhaps a timely book as well given the questions being raised at the time of this writing about corporate malfeasance and corruption in the U.S. (Enron). Teapot Dome was one of the biggest political scandals in the first half of the 20th century and involved the leasing of government/public lands in preserve areas for energy development. More than one person went to prison and wrongdoing was proven against multiple individuals in the matter.

The book makes the case that Doheny was more or less guilty of poor judgment and being in the wrong place at the wrong time more or less. It is true of course that Doheny was found innocent on the charges and it is also true that despite this Teapot Dome is the matter for which he is best known (despite for instance being a contemporary and rival of John D. Rockefeller in the oil business). If in fact he was innocent of the charges then he paid a heavy price in terms of his health and the somewhat mysterious death of his son, which was either suicide or murder depending on who you ask and how you look at it.

For those with an interest in the biographies of the early titans of U.S. industry this is a worthy read in that it does detail Mr. Doheny's rise to power as well as his fall from grace. He came from a modest background and did not make his fortune until after the age of 40 in a time before life expectations averaged 70+. He suffered through personal loses and setbacks and managed at the time of his death, despite the misfortunes, to bequeath a sizeable fortune to his heirs. This book may also be of particular interest in the study of Los Angelos in particular and California in general in that the Doheny's were prominent citizens who built some noteworthy structures in the city including religious and educational facilities.

The author acknowledges that she had the cooperation and blessings of the descendants of Mr. Doheny and that a good body of original documentation was available for review and research. This provides an intimate look at the lives of the people in question but it also may cause the thesis to lean towards their views. The book does tend to exonerate Doheny in Teapot Dome and it does make a good argument that his involvement was not profitable and that the Navy Dept in fact sought him out because of rising fears of the Japanese Navy in the years leading up to WWII. It was a condition of Mr. Doheny's development of the area under lease to him that he build an extensive oil storage and supply facility for the Navy in the Hawaiian Isles out of his own pocket. This he did and subsequently was not reimbursed when the lease was negated despite having spent many millions in pre-WWII monies. It is also I believe true to state that it was Henry Sinclair who was the actual lease holder on the Teapot Dome acreage and that Doheny was leased an entirely separate parcel of public land. Sinclair along with Interior Secretary Albert Fall went to prison in the affair but Doheny was also tarred and feathered by the affair.
Whether the delivery of $100,000 in cash by Doheny's son to Sec. Fall was in fact a personal loan much as one might expect between old prospecting buddies (which they were) is really a matter of conjecture. At any rate there was clearly the appearance of impropriety in the matter and both Doheny's son and the man accompanying him that night were involved in a murder/suicide after indictment but before trial. With the principle witness gone and little other corobative evidence Mr. Doheny's celebrity legal representation did get him acquitted although he was convicted in the court of public opinion.

Personally I am inclined to believe a man of his stature might loan a friend the sum in question but I also would not be surprised if a quid pro quo were expected in return. You see there was any number of companies competing in secret for the government contracts and it is interesting that both men who won had either the appearance of impropriety or were outright convicted of bribery. Part of the reason Doheny was spared prison was in fact due to the death of his son and his earnest and teary eyed appearance on the witness stand where he looked the part of a grieving grandfatherly figure who had lost something money could not replace.
It is an intriguing story and well written book, not terribly long or archaic for the casual reader. While it is a history book it is in fact also the story of an interesting chapter in American business and personality history.

California
Desserts: Mediterranean Flavors, California Style
Published in Hardcover by Scribner (2000-09-06)
Author: Cindy Mushet
List price: $30.00
New price: $19.74
Used price: $5.86
Collectible price: $30.00

Average review score:

Great recipes
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2003-10-18
This book is extraordinary for the innovative takes on old favorites (e.g., greek pastries). I was drawn to this book because of its particular konafa (aka kataifi) recipe which I had been searching for many years, and it was delicious. I also attempted her baklava (not to my taste only b/c I didn't like the orange flower water). I am giving it 4 stars however, because the author does stretch the concept of "mediterranean" a bit. This doesn't detract from the tastiness of the recipes she offers, however.

Hands Down My Favorite Cookbook
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2002-08-28
I've gone through several dessert cookbooks and this is by far the best one. I consistently get "wow"s from the recipes. You will not find these recipes in any other cookbook. I hesitated on some of the recipes because they sounded too "weird", but when I ended up making them, they produced wonderful flavors. I've even seen some of the recipes show up in upscale New York City restaurants. A woman at work told me "That's the best baklava I've ever had and I'm from Greece!" All the instructions are easy to follow and the desserts don't take forever to prepare like a lot of other cookbooks. Cindy Mushet - please do another cookbook!

EZ to follow great often slightly exotic recipes!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2003-12-18
I first purchased this book because of the great title. At the time I bought this book, I was a student studying baking and pastry for the first time at a college in Sonoma County. I wanted a tasty impactful recipe to present at my backshop management class and decided to try Mushet's "Marbleized Chocolate Velvet Tart" pg 104. It came out perfectly! I have since tried the pistaccio ice-cream recipe that has become my favorite ice-cream. Other recipes that I tested came out equally well. Her recipes are easy to understand and do not have much extra information. I obviously like the book and her style. By the way this is the first book review that I have felt compelled to write.

Very food instruction and variety
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-04-29
Cindy Mushet has a great book...easy to read, with clear instructions and good hints in the sidebars.

If you want to make beautiful and tasty desserts with a Mediterranean flair, buy this. It delivers what it offers, pure and simple. If you want "exact" Mediterranean recipes, look elsewhere, both for another book and also for the hard to get items such as proper blood oranges, specific types of flour, vanilla beans instead of vanilla extract, etc to go with such "authentic" precision. I don't need such for my cooking.

I'm happy with 5 different baklava as follow:

...Antibes with almonds, hazlenuts, cinnamon and cloves...Pistachio and apricot with orange cardamon syrup.....quince and walnut.....sour cherry and almond.....hazelnut and chocolate. Not bad, eh, and you can create your own variations.

Try Konafa with tangerine lime syrup, tiropetes with chocolate and apricot filling, various biscotti variations as well.

For cakes, try strawberry mascarpone layer cake, fregolatta with almonds and jam...grilled coconut cake with double-lime ice cream, almond brown butter cakes with raspberries, pomegranate dacquoise (a beautiful and tasty variation on the classic French dessert)...the variety is more than enough, and the instructions are doable for advanced beginner to intermediate cooks.

As this is published in 2000, there's not an abundance of pictures. That's not a problem, as Cindy gives serving and even storage suggestions to make you look like a pro!

This is better quality than "storebought", and you can taste the difference. Start with the cover..the Roasted pears with spiced sabayon...and learn about sabayon preparation, and how to buy a proper pear corer, too!

Fantastic flavor combinations with excellent instructions
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2001-05-19
Cindy Mushet has accomplished a difficult task - that of creating a dessert cookbook chock-full of truly original flavor combinations, warm prose and explicit instructions. Several recipes grabbed me off the bat: a pistachio cake with a nougat cream enhanced with the flavors of honey, Amaretto and orange; one of several baklavas with pistachios and apricot with an orange cardamom syrup and a filo pastry with figs, almond paste and lemon. For chocolate fanatics there's a marbleized chocolate velvet tart and a chocolate souffle roll with rum and mascarpone. This book will complement any already in your library and I will certainly refer to it often. Buy it; you will love it!

California
Dining by Design: Stylish Recipes - Savory Settings
Published in Hardcover by Junior League of Pasadena (1998-10)
Author: Junior League of Pasadena Inc.
List price: $24.95
New price: $9.50
Used price: $0.73
Collectible price: $24.95

Average review score:

Best Cookbook I've Read- and That's Saying Something
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-06-10
I come from a long line of fantastic cooks. I read and reread cookbooks all the time. This is my favorite cookbook. I have tried many recipes from here and even though I am usually a try-something-new-cook some of these have become staples. Also the recipes lend well to improvisation. Really I can't say enough about this cookbook, my family covets it.

More Than A Cookbook
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2000-01-25
I couldn't wait to dive into the Junior League of Pasadena's Dining by Design cookbook. In addition to delicious and easy sounding recipes, it is full of all kinds of interesting nuggets of information. Things that you've always wanted to know but could never put your finger on in other cookbooks. It is also a lovely looking book, almost too pretty to be a cookbook. Try it, I think you'll really, really like it!

More Than A Cookbook
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2000-01-25
I couldn't wait to dive into the Junior League of Pasadena's Dining by Design cookbook. In addition to delicious and easy sounding recipes, it is full of all kinds of interesting nuggets of information. Things that you've always wanted to know but could never put your finger on in other cookbooks. It is also a lovely looking book, almost too pretty to be a cookbook. Try it, I think you'll really, really like it!

Every recipe i have made has been fabulous and easy.
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 1999-06-15
i recommend this book to absolutely everyone. i have yet to have a bad experience with any one of the recipes found in this beautiful book. Not only does the book contain tasty recipes but it contains valuable tips for cooking, decorating, entertaining and the like. this is a must buy for family and friends as well as for yourself. i sure hope the junior league of Pasadena, inc. will publish another:)

Junior League of Pasadena does it again!
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 1999-08-21
As expected, I was not disappointed by the Junior League of Pasadena's newest edition in their series of cookbooks. I didn't think anything could top their last, "California Sizzles", but "Dining by Design" is even better! I have dozens of cookbooks that remain dusty on the shelves, but both my Junior League of Pasadena cookbooks are very well worn from all of the recipes I use. Way to go! I recommend these delicious, easy to understand, easy to prepare recipes to everyone!

California
The Dinosauria
Published in Hardcover by University of California Press (2004-12-06)
Author:
List price: $100.00
New price: $19.95
Used price: $19.35

Average review score:

Congratulations - Excellent
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-08
Thanks for your product - it's too much good!
It's satisfy my better expectatives...


Have a good day...

All It Is Cracked Up To Be And More!
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 13 total.
Review Date: 2001-04-15
What more can I say for this book than has already been said? The first book of it's kind (that I know of), The Dinosauria is the perfect introduction into SERIOUS paleontology. If you want to know more about dinosaurs than you learn from Jurassic Park, this is the place to start. Be warned though, a basic knowledge of the science of paleontology is needed as the book does go deeper into the realm of true science than in other popular books. The Dinosauria layed the foundation for works that would follow, and again this is the perfect introduction for someone who wants to get more serious about the real science of the Dinosauria.

A professional reference book
Helpful Votes: 29 out of 33 total.
Review Date: 1998-08-10
This work was a bit tedious, as any book of this magnitude can be, especially to someone without a PHD, like me. If, however you are aspiring for that PHD, or are a very serious amateur paleontologist, this book is great. It is the most in-depth book I have ever found on the subject. Most books are significantly watered down, as their intended audience is often teenage or younger. This book supplies enormous quantities of information in a fairly usable format. I just wished that there had been more illustrations, perhaps some pictures of different excavation sites and more actual fossil examples, instead of mere drawings. Perhaps this was done for cost effectiveness, as this book is very expensive for someone on a budget. The bone anatomy is very well shown though, and can be studied with the help of this book. I would recommend it for anyone who is serious about paleontology, but please, if you are not, check out another book, as this one may be a dissapointment with a! big price tag.

The Dinosauria
Helpful Votes: 37 out of 37 total.
Review Date: 2004-10-13
"The Dinosauria" edited by David B. Weihampel, Peter Dodson, and Halszka Osmolska is for the serious dinophile and for those with some science and paleontology backgrounds. This book should NOT be tackled by the casual reader as it can be very serious when reading this volume on comparitive anatomy of dinosaur bones.

I found "The Dinosauria" to be very well-written and very informative and it gives the reader a clue to the nature of dinosaurs through their bone structure. The first section covers a broad area of interest, mainly the evolutionary relationships of dinosaurs within the wider context of archosaurian descent. The behaviorial attributes are next and what did they possess. Also, how does one analyze them from the paleontological and modern biological perspectives? In this first section, the question is posed, as to how the dinosaurs became extinct as a group.

In the second section each group of animals receives a detailed treatment, beginning with its anatomy. This is a comprehesive review of the taxonomy and systematic relationships at the level of genus and species. Here the dicussion focuses on the aspects of the fossil record, preservation, paleogeography, paleoecology, and life habits of that particular group.

I found "The Dinosauria" to be a solid five star book that is as close to being current as can be expected. Written by experts in their respected fields this book is well-edited and progresses in a very logical manor. "The Dinosauria" is a benchmark reference book. For those interested in vertebrate paleontology, students, serious amateurs, and those in need of serious authoritive information this is the book for you. "The Dinosauria" is NOT a childrens book nor is it intended to be.

"The Dinosauria" belongs on the bookshelves of all serious dinophiles and of those wanting a near complete reference book. The bibiography, alone, contains more than 2,500 enteries and is well appointed with references making your search for authoritive information an easier task.

Best book on dinosaurs ever - till the next edition...
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2006-01-09
This is a technical book on dinosaurs, covering their systematics, anatomy, diversity, ecology, distribution, physiology, and many other topics, written by leading experts in the field of dinosaur research. It has been completely updated and largely rewritten from the first edition, and the editors did a great job in keeping a common structure especially to the first chapters despite the high number of authors involved.
In the first part of this book, each group of dinosaurs is introduced, with a detailed description of the anatomy, systematics, and ecology of the animals included. The second section starts with an extremely helpful overview of dinosaur localities known from around the globe and then illuminates topics such as dinosaur biogeography, physiology, and extinction. The book is complemented with an extensive list of technical references of dinosaurs, which will be invaluable for any student of these amazing creatures.
Though not necessarily aimed at the general reader, it is certainly a must have for anybody interested in natural history, dinosaurs, or palaeontology in general. This is, arguably, the best, but certainly the most informative book on dinosaurs yet published!


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