Missouri Books
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good mysteryReview Date: 2008-08-06
Maybe You Shouldn't Shake Your Family TreeReview Date: 2007-05-24
A very well plotted cozy mysteryReview Date: 2005-08-18
I was genuinely surprised by the solution to this crime, although it all made sense. This is my second book by this author and I intend to read more.
She Did It Again!Review Date: 2001-09-02
A GREAT READReview Date: 2004-09-03
I highly recommend this one and the rest of the series. Well done!

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Absolutely could not put this one downReview Date: 1997-10-12
Shirley Kennett - FirecrackerReview Date: 2000-09-03
Makes you think about the computer ageReview Date: 1999-05-11
In FIRE CRACKER, PJ Gray (plus son, Thomas, and wonder cat, Megabite) and Leo Schultz appear again to take on Will "Cracker" Carpenter--a computer geek who is bent on revenge on Mom Elly--his evil stepmother (in his mind).
Since PJ is also very knowledgeable with computers, it may seem surprising that Cracker knows even more--and is NOT bashful in letting her know.
I really like the characters PJ, Thomas, Leo, & yes, the wonder cat, Megabite. They are REAL people--almost unheard of in today's fiction. Yeah, they get put in very unreal situations--it wouldn't be fiction & a thriller if it wasn't. I e-mailed Shirley and told her how much I enjoyed her stories; she told me that she has 7 cats; I can see that since Megabite has many qualities that my own share!
The story itself has several interesting points of interest--among them, Cracker's ability to thwart PJ; when PJ steps into the virtual world & confronts Cracker's Grim Reaper (had me squirming!); and hints that maybe Cracker ISN'T the machine he wants to be.
Mostly, though, I really love the characters in Shirley's world. PJ, Thomas, Leo, & Megabite; Dave (who gets queasy at the thought of blood & guts); Anita--the steady, up & coming detective wannabe; PJ's bosses; Millie's diner & Millie (makes me wish we had a Millie's here in Danville). The whole package.
Great characters and a cutting-edge plotReview Date: 1999-03-06
NOT BAD AFTER ALL....Review Date: 1998-07-06

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A highly scholarly and insightful textReview Date: 2003-02-11
Ivory TowerReview Date: 2003-04-05
Outstanding Resource for HP Scholars!Review Date: 2003-03-15
Could have been much, much better.Review Date: 2003-05-08
I wanted to like this book, but I can't reccommend it.
What is Rawlings up to??Review Date: 2003-02-19
University of Chicago graduate who majored in ancient languages and English (Cum Laude) John Granger. He offers an air tight case that Rowlings is writting from within the same world view as C.S. Lewis and Tolkein with the same purpose and that her books are popular for the same reasons. Absolute must reading for serious Potterites.

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Missouri never sounded so good!Review Date: 2006-07-01
There's No Place Like HomeReview Date: 2006-06-13
Will is impossibly hunky, nice and--thanks to a fortune made from internet consulting--rich. He loves the small town where he lived briefly in his youth. In addition to restoring an old mansion for his home, he also hopes to restore the economy of the town and give it a future. Will is nothing short of perfect. He may have been James Dean in his youth, but now he's a model citizen, w/out being a drip about it. His commitment to the well-being of Daisy Creek and its citizens is totally admirable, and Ms. Devoti does a terrific job of presenting a realistic development scheme.
Patsy is an engaging character. She's more than a little bit "hick," but she's kind-hearted, loyal, a good friend, and smart. Initially, she's not smart enough to know what she really wants in life, but she comes around. She and Will have some steamy sexual chemistry, but they're also two nice people who feel respect and friendship for one another. They're very believable as a couple and readers will root for them to get together.
There are also some interesting secondary characters, including Patsy's relatives and her best friend, Ruthann. Her aptly named pug, Pugnacious, is a real scene-stealer, too. (The coon hunting scene is a hoot!)
There are some unpleasant characters, of course. Those tend to be presented a little on the broad side, such as the trampy Jessica; Will's snooty father and sister; the rigid, sanctimonious Mrs. Jensen (the mother of Ruthann's love interest); and Patsy's coworkers in St. Louis, among others.
This is a sweet and fun book. What a great job for a first-time author. It's not the deepest or most memorable of reads, but it has some unique characters and it's a nice way to spend a few hours.
humorous regional romance Review Date: 2005-04-27
Will Barnes made millions from the Internet boom, but having all the money in the world and a beautiful fiancée has not made him happy. In fact he has not enjoyed life except for establishing his Net business which turned into a laborious task before he finally sold it and as a child growing up in Daisy Creek in the Ozarks. He ends his engagement, leaves Chicago, and comes home to recapture the magic of life that he somehow has lost. Will feels renewed with his homecoming as he begins plans for a new internet business and renovating his fixer upper Victorian mansion. He especially enjoys the women led by the Clark females, but the one he wants most Patsy Lee insists she is heading to St. Louis. Will thinks that won't happen if he, assisted by her aunt and granny, has any say. He hopes love will keep her with him in breathing life in this dying town.
This humorous regional romance contains a serious social issue involving dying small towns. The story line takes the future of Daisy Creek quite seriously, but uses zany eccentrics to make the romance into an amusing counterpoint to the grim aspects of can small towns survive in today's megalopolis world without condemning big cities. Patsy Lee and Will make a fine couple, but it is the wild bunch led by the lead female's unconventional relatives that spice up this well written contemporary tale.
Harriet Klausner
Good debut!Review Date: 2005-05-06
Will Barnes sold his internet consulting business for plenty of cash. If he never works again he will never be able to spend it all. Will finally decides that he is going to do whatever it takes to make himself happy. So he breaks his engagement to money-loving Cindy and moves back to Daisy Creek. Will plans to begin a new internet business, but this time it will be fun instead of a chore. Yet as he is settling down in his "fix-er upper" old Victorian mansion, which the green-bean brigade of neighbors are determined to help him remodel, the woman he wants most is about to flee to a St. Louie job.
**** This is Lori Devoti's debut novel. It slows down about mid way in, but not for too long. The secondary characters are spunky, Patsy's granny and aunt are scheming riots, and the author even added a couple of sub-plots to keep things moving forward. Well worth your time and money to pick up! ****
Reviewed by Detra Fitch of Huntress Reviews.
SOLID FUN IN A BOOK!Review Date: 2005-06-02
I have to admit first of all, that I read every word of LOVE IS ALL AROUND. Every one. That's how much fun this book is.
I won't go into the plot. Other reviewers are much better at that than I could possibly be, and I hate synopsis writing anyway. In brief: Patsy Clark thinks she knows what she wants. Just about everyone else in town (and readerdom) know better. That much is crystal clear. Good thing she comes to her senses before I had to step in and kick some butt! That's what happens when you read Lori Devoti's book, LOVE IS ALL AROUND. You get involved. You care. You really like this Patsy, faults and all, and you want the ending to arrive, but you don't want it to come too fast and ruin everything! You want it to be oh so right.
Here's my next confession. I read this book in one (split) sitting. I only put it down because I had to go pick up one of my children at a party, and I was late for that! I was pretty un-neighborly, too, when I arrived, but I was getting back home for a reason. I was hooked on LOVE IS ALL AROUND.
I have to admit next that I am so, so, so, so, NOT into contemporary romances. I'm a historical romance fan. Always was. Always will be - although I will read other genres if the story's right and grabs me. In fact, when I first saw this book, nothing about it intrigued a historical romance fan like me. Nothing. Boy! Am I ever glad I overcame any prejudice and bought it! Debut author, Lori Devoti has a way of linking words together that's indescribable. It's akin to treating yourself to a large helping of decadent chocolate when you're supposed to be on a diet. There were two parts that had me laughing out loud, even, and then I actually stopped reading to look around and make sure I wasn't caught at it. (and I was alone!) That's how delicously funny this book is. Like I said, I am not into contemporary romance. It always seemed to be a bunch of scenes, somewhat related - or not - that got to a very predictable ending. I want larger-than-life heroes, take-your-breath-away heroines, and scenes of destruction and mayhem. Admittedly, not your usual contemporary setting, and not remotely like LOVE IS ALL AROUND. This one is in such an everyday setting, I thought for sure it would bore the pants off me. Was I ever wrong!
*****In closing; as a very opinionated, selective, nit-picky reader that doesn't much care for contemporary romance, surprise! LOVE IS ALL AROUND is such a wonderful, encapsulated trip into Patsy and Will's life, and the way Ms. Devoti writes is so hypnotic, that I have no choice but to Highly Recommend her for contemporary romance fans, and yes, even the historical romance fan will find themselves guilty for thoroughly enjoying themselves, too.

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A real page-turner...Review Date: 2008-02-25
A handful of black-and-white photographs illustrate this engaging historical novel.Review Date: 2008-02-04
Based on the true story of the 1915 slaying of Jasper Jacob "Jap" Francis near the Ozark railroad town of Stoutland, Missouri, Murder on Rouse Hill is a dramatic tale of greed, fraud, political clout, and death-dealing of the cruelest kind. Jasper's accused killer was nearly lynched by the townsfolk, yet ultimately lived to the age of ninety-one. Murder on Rouse Hill tells of a young girl who unwittingly visited the murder site in 1928, then returned decades later as a spirited 84-year-old woman in the middle of bizarre events that could almost be described as supernatural. A handful of black-and-white photographs illustrate this engaging historical novel.
Murder and Intrigue in the Missouri OzarksReview Date: 2007-11-13
An engrossing readReview Date: 2007-11-12
The Seabiscuit of StoutlandReview Date: 2007-11-15

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After I read this, I bought the second in this seriesReview Date: 2008-04-16
Set in Kansas City as World War II is beginning in Europe (Germany has just bombed Poland, setting off the war), the lead is a female private investigator. Dorrie Lennox is tough (carries a switchblade and swears like a sailor), but also vulnerable and likeable. She has been asked to trail a woman that she is told is the client's girlfriend, but while she's doing this, late at night, she sees the woman jump off a bridge into the Missouri River (to her death). She is asked to continue her investigation, to find out more about this woman. Something is definitely off, and Dorrie finds herself with a lot of unknown enemies that may be taking interest in her work for different reasons -- in other words, it's more than one person/group who is trying to influence her behavior. Gangsters play a role, as does a fast-talking journalist and a law firm. Her employer, an Englishman whose lungs were severely damaged by poison gas during WWI, is not able to provide the usual guidance because of health problems.
The more I read this book and adjusted to the style, the more I enjoyed it. I must say that although it was well-plotted, some of the things that were supposed to surprise the reader did not surprise me. On the other hand, after all the mysteries I've read, I think I'm not the average reader, so most would probably be surprised.
I can hardly wait to read the second in the series to find out what Dorrie is up to and how her fragile romance is going.
Lennox is Tough, Tender and TerrificReview Date: 2002-09-15
While tailing a beautiful blonde, Lennox witnesses the girl's suicide by jumping from a bridge into the Missouri River. The death of this woman, the girlfriend of a client who doesn't seem all that broken up when he hears of her death, puts Lennox onto a mystery that includes missing money, corrupt lawyers, murdered witnesses, infidelity and double crosses.
Lennox has to mix it up with some mighty shady characters, some of whom definitely do not treat her like a lady, but slowly she digs up the secrets in a desperate attempt to save the life of her mentor and partner, who has been fitted for a frame by some very cleaver, devious crooks.
There is a definite film noir feel about this book, and I really enjoyed it. I'd like to see other books about Dorie Lennox. She is a really cool character.
WOW!Review Date: 2001-05-19
Travel back in time with this exciting bookReview Date: 2001-05-15
The Girl with the SwitchbladeReview Date: 2002-06-17
For P.I. Dorie Lennox, the investigation becomes personal when she is threatened and told to quit the case. As she continues digging for answers, more people enter her investigation, each creating questions that need answers. Answers that always seem to come with pain. Quite often to Lennox's body.
Lise McClendon has captured the flavour of prewar Kansas City and blended it with exciting intrigue that carries us along to its emotion-filled conclusion.
This book becomes a splendid page turner as the mystery deepens. It is really quite a decent read.

The Definitive GuideReview Date: 2008-08-17
Great detail for practical planningReview Date: 2006-11-11
Great resourceReview Date: 2002-04-29
Very valueableReview Date: 2004-12-12
This book is great for planning out your itinerary before your trip. It includes, campgrounds, bed and breakfasts, resturaunts, motels, bike shops, contact information, and more. There is also stories, history, tidbits of information, and suggestions for side trips that will add to the experience. There is also a section that lists that answers to frequently asked questions about the trail and planning a trip.
Businesses along the trail come and go, so it is best to have the most up-to-date version of this guidebook with you. Also, be sure to stop at Bret Dufer's bookstore in Rocheport. There, you can meet that author, and find many interesting books.
Biking Missouri's "Big" Rail-TrailReview Date: 2003-08-30


Great memory book, but lacking on real informationReview Date: 2000-11-17
Oh , the memoriesReview Date: 2000-06-22
The Arena - The Memories Live On!Review Date: 2002-04-15
That building is beautiful -- LETS GO BLUES!Review Date: 2000-05-12
Lots of pictures, short on info.Review Date: 2000-01-01

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Informative & detailedReview Date: 2005-02-23
The only criticism is that the author tends to lean toward an attitude of "acquital due to technicality". He believes that the system was unfair & that the leaders deserve a pass, of sorts, due to the elementary stage of internat'l law & the impromtu procedures. Opinion is fine, but I was expecting an unbiased read.
THE TRIALReview Date: 2001-03-21
ONE OF THE FIRST BOOKS ON THIS SUBJECT, AND STILL ONE OF THE BESTReview Date: 2006-09-02
This book was released in 1966 seeing its fourth printing as late as 1969. I was still in college in those days and obtained my Macmillian & Company hardcover print through The History Book Club.
I had read William Shirer's "The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich" (who hadn't) while yet in the military, and about the time of returning to civilian life, Professor Davidson's book appeared. His book was the only one I can recall of those times, being the forerunner of others to follow. Today I also have Persico's study on my shelf, however, I value Davidson's book equally.
The book is a large volume in excess of 600 pages that will more than acquaint any reader on the Palace of Justice and the ensuing tribunal proceedings. And between pages 304-305, are some of the better photographs of the 22 Nazi criminals appearing before the court.
If one is to read on this trial, Eugene B. Davidson's book of 40 years past should still be considered. No matter the passage of years, his book still matters. And it is good to see it yet extant through this recent publishing event.
Still recommended.
Semper Fi.
A Detailed Account of the 22 Nuremberg DefendantsReview Date: 2003-12-26
Read The Title Carefully...Review Date: 2000-06-29
Instead, this book is literally an "Account of the twenty-two defendants at Nuremberg." Taking each defendant in turn, Davidson gives us a neatly potted account of their history, their involvement in the Nazi regime, their relationships with other high-ranking Nazis and ultimately, decides the extent of their guilt. In short, the reader is provided with 22 "mini-biographies." The conduct of many defendants at the trial is occasionally discussed, but that usually takes second place to the historical data.
This books does contain some fascinating insights on the working relationships between the various Nazi officials. In almost every case, one is struck by the realisation that any given minister was in conflict with almost everyone else. For instance, Speer got along admirably with Hitler (until 1944, at least), but he distrusted almost everyone else in the Nazi hierarchy. Likewise, Kaltenbrunner appeared to regard almost everyone except the Fuehrer as his enemy. It seems that all of these defendants were trying to zealously protect their own sphere of interest and fend off all those who attempted to enroach upon them.
In general then, this book makes for stimulating reading. As for Nuremberg itself, Davidson concludes: "In a world of mixed human affairs where rough justice is done...Nuremberg may be defended as a political event if not as a court." and "In a certain sense, the trial succeeded in doing what judicial proceedings are supposed to do: it convinced even the guilty that the verdict against them was just."

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Kick Butt BookReview Date: 2004-04-03
Complete and unabridgedReview Date: 2004-03-05
The Adventures Of Tom SawyerReview Date: 2003-12-22
I would recommend this book to readers who are in sixth grade or higher. while most of the content in the book is appropriate, some of the slang term they used would not be understandable to younger readers. For example, the word "lick" appears many times in the story. The word has many meanings like to beat up or to call oneself. It shows that in some quotes like " I'll lick you good" or "that's the name they lick me by"
Overall, This was a great book. I would recommend this book to anyone who is interested in adventure or comedy genre of books. i hope this review helped you out and i also hope you enjoy reading it as much as I did.
Cool for Kids!Review Date: 2004-03-05
Some of these adventures are re-enacted fantasy (such as playing pirates) and some are real (such as witnessing a murder). Kids of all ages will therefore like how they head to an island for their piracy. Of course they have so long a fun-time there that they are presumed dead--only to return in time for their own funeral!
The murder is bad news but discovering treasure is good news--beyond their wildest dreams. Twain was quite the dreamer himself so I recommend this book for ages 8 & up. Younger kids can "fast-forward" past Tom's engagement at age 13!
Awesome boooooook!Review Date: 2004-03-03
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