Europe Books
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Excellent tribute to a neglected heroReview Date: 2006-12-09
Thanks for informing us!Review Date: 2006-01-28
Well Known Musicologist Dr. Price Sings Jazz Lieutenant's Praises!!!Review Date: 2005-08-26
Emmett G. Price III, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor of Music and African-American Studies
Northeastern University
351 Ryder Hall
Boston, MA 02115-5000
(617) 373-7700 office
(617) 373-4129 fax
e.price@neu.edu
Well Known Jazz Enthusiast John Gilbert: This is a book of historical significance in both jazz, race relations and heroism.Review Date: 2006-03-02
While in service with the army in the first world war, James Europe was the victim of a gas attack while in battle. He led the band of New York's 15th. National Guard Unit known as The Harlem Hellfighters. The unit was reputed to be the most decorated regiment in WW1.
James Reese Europe was a true pioneer of black jazz and influenced the works of Ellington, Basie and others of import.
At the age of 39 Europe was tragically murdered by a member of his band and his brilliance was left tragically on a Boston hospital bed, hislegacy lives on, however, to this day.
This book is illustrated magnificently by R2C2H2 in the folk art genre.
Eubie Blake described Europe as being among the major influences in both jazz and the advancement of the black musician in society. George Gershwin, as a child would sit outside the Harlem club where Europe was performing and no doubt was hugely influenced by his artistry.
This is a book of historical significance in both jazz, race relations
and heroism.
John Gilbert
Visit California Coast Jazz At:
http://community-2.webtv.net/johnnyjazz/johnnyjazzsjazzpage
Tisha St. Clair of Sister Nineties Literary Magazine Believes Jazz Lieutenant Is An Important Tool In Teaching Our Youth About OReview Date: 2005-08-27
James Reese Europe Jazz Lieutenant
by R2C2H2
BookSurge, LLC, © 2005
ISBN: 1-4196-0245-4 (paper)
R2C2H2's book about the life of James Reese Europe was an informative and delightful read. Not only was he the author, but also the brilliant illustrator. R2C2H2 used his drawings to punctuate the story of Europe's life. Especially haunting was the picture entitled "Welcome to Spartanburg, South Carolina!!!" R2C2H2's words told of the harsh treatment of Europe and his band, but the picture truly shows the ugliness of racism, prejudice and segregation. R2C2H2 captures the loathing and hate in the eyes of the white southerners.
R2C2H2 includes many of the ground-breaking achievements of James Reese Europe, and the composers and musicians that benefited from his hard work. One of Europe's crowning achievements, prior to World War I, was creation The Clef Club, the first black musician's union and booking agency. This agency was responsible for getting black musicians the same or sometimes better pay than their white counter-parts, and ensuring they would be treated as professionals rather than traveling minstrels. During WWI Europe served as the commanding officer of the 15th Regiment Band. The band was well received in France. Europe and his men also became fierce soldiers, despite a lack of training from the United States Army.
They were awarded numerous medals from the French government during the war.
Some of Europe's other achievements included working with Eubie Blake, Vernon and Irene Castle; performing at Carnegie Hall; establishing a music school for aspiring black musicians; and re-establishing the black musical theater art form. I really don't want to tell you much more, because you really need to read all about it yourself.
Through this book, R2C2H2 introduced me to James Reese Europe, a visionary and pioneer. Any primary school aged child could benefit from reading this book. It shows how a person can overcome obstacles to achieve his goals. Any lover of jazz would find this book enlightening and may prompt them to search for some new (old) music for their collection. Any admirer of R2C2H2's work would be please to have a gallery of his drawings at their fingertips.

JaponismeReview Date: 2008-04-25
Exquisite book, most comprehensive I have seen on this subject. Worth ten times over the Amazon price!
New thoughts on Van GoghReview Date: 2006-07-28
About JaponismeReview Date: 1998-07-10
My holy grailReview Date: 2000-05-16
"Japonisme" is the term used to describe the Victorian fascination with all things Japanese. Wichmann's book successfully demonstrates the influence of this fascination on the fine art of the era. Lavishly illustrated with over a thousand images, Wichmann's essays are informed both historically and artistically on the detailed ins and outs of the sharing of the two cultures of East and West. Topics include the Asian influence in composition, pictoral space, design, choice of material, and subject matter in the visual art and architechture of turn of the century fin de siecle Europe and America. Visual examples are given from a wealth of artists including Van Gogh, Manet, Cassatt, Whistler, Degas, Mucha, Klimt, the architechs Frank Lloyd Wright and Richard Neutra, and Japanese artists such as Hiroshige and Hokusai, just to name a few.
Being a visual artist from the west trained in the Western tradition and yet fascinated with Japanese fine art and in particular the tradition of ukiyo-e, discovering this book for me was like finding the holy grail, a book filled to the brim with stunning visual compromises between the traditions of East and West from which to take my own influences. Fantastic.
WONDERFUL RESOURCE GUIDE Review Date: 2006-02-28

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JAN PECZKIS comment aboveReview Date: 2008-01-08
Polish-Jewish Mutual History, The "Kielce Pogrom", Recurring Manifestations of Polonophobia, etc.Review Date: 2007-08-08
There is an extensive expose of the so-called Kielce Pogrom--A Soviet-staged event (pp. 403-422). The Soviets wanted to discredit a free Poland in the eyes of the west, and to terrorize the remaining Jews into fleeing to Palestine. Other anti-Jewish actions in Hungary and Czechoslovakia got little press in the west, probably because anti-Communism had been relatively weak in those countries.
In Kielce, the tale of the blood libel had been spread by agent provocateurs (p. 414). The Jews were shot by Communist police, and club-wielding fake "steel workers" also took their toll. Other Communist police involved in the so-called pogrom had been dressed as goons or priests. There is the fantastic myth of the 15,000 to 75,000 cheering Polish onlookers (p. 406), a myth recently repeated by Gross in his FEAR. The actual number of Polish onlookers, most of whom were probably motivated by curiosity, didn't ever exceed several hundred at its peak.
After the "pogrom", inconvenient eyewitnesses met their deaths. The Kielce files themselves were burned in November 1989, shortly before the Communists left power.
Pogonowski makes clear that the Communist anti-Jewish policies of 1968 were not Polish. They were plainly Soviet-dictated (pp. 30-31).
The atlas itself is chock-full of useful information. The reader soon learns that, despite the frictions and mutual prejudices which sometimes developed between Poles and Jews, Poland was historically one of the most tolerant nations in the world for Jews. If the fact that 80% of the world's Jews, at one time, made their home in Poland does not prove this fact, then what does? This book makes it clear that Poland had been centuries ahead of others in terms of human rights and religious tolerance.
Poland: A Long-Term Haven for JewsReview Date: 2001-03-13
Sets the Record Straight on Polish-Jewish RelationsReview Date: 2001-06-07
An excellent treatment of a misrepresented subjectReview Date: 2000-04-14
"Jews in Poland" is full of very instructional maps and diagrams, it also carries a good selection of illustrations (although their quality is rather so-so). All in all, a book that stands head and shoulders over any other treatment of Jewish-Polish history in the English language.

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Joan of Arc, maid of Orleans, saves FranceReview Date: 1998-09-21
Saints and stars shine on foreverReview Date: 2005-11-13
Great Introduction for Children to Joan of ArcReview Date: 2003-01-20
An Excellent Childrenýs Introduction to St. JoanReview Date: 2000-08-09
Angela Barrett's illustrations are striking and memorable. In particular, I like the painting of the English bombarding Orleans, as it shows what a siege was like in those days. The cover picture (displayed above) shows Joan on her horse surrounded by the hopeful residents of Orleans who wanted to touch the maiden that God sent to liberate them. Without being heavy-handed, the fire engulfing the banner hints at Joan's ultimate fate, and her face reminds us that she was in many ways a child. This was a true incident, and Joan was said to have been masterful in guiding her horse to water to douse the flame. There is also an outstanding two-page illustration of Charles' coronation, in which Joan is shown standing in a position of honor as befits the liberator of the kingdom. The depiction of angels visiting the imprisoned Joan while she was on trial at Rouen captures the spirit of her faith in God and certainty in her quest. Remember that this uneducated peasant girl held her own for two months in a contest of wits with masters from the University of Paris. The illustrations alone make this book worth having.
Any biographer of Joan of Arc must find a way to explain the inexplicable. Josephine Poole's text is good, beginning with the simple statement that this is a true story. Ms. Poole offers Joan's story more-or-less at surface value. As is appropriate for her audience of children, she simply relates that Joan was a country girl working in a field when she heard voices that filled her with overwhelming happiness. The author includes some details of Joan's story that one could quibble with, but overall the text is solid as biography. I was frankly glad that she did not go into details of Joan's terrible death, concluding instead that a saint, like a star, lives forever. Indeed, Joan of Arc will always live in the hearts of all of us who love her.
Perhaps my son's actions speak loudest about the value of this book. We never go on a trip without "Joan of Arc," and I have heard him tell his friends, in his own way, that Joan of Arc tried to warn Classidas to go home, but that she ended up having to shoot and was sorry when he died. This book has helped my son begin to love St. Joan, and that is the strongest recommendation for it that I know how to make.
Joan of Arc as a saint, who like a star, shines on foreverReview Date: 2004-01-21
Young readers will understand how Joan's beliefs could inspire her troops at the siege of Orleans, but they will have trouble understanding why there were those who abandoned her or why the English made sure she would be convicted at her trail. However, ultimately this look at "Joan of Arc" is more interested in providing a look at the story of her life without really trying to explain the motives of anyone beyond Joan. Within that context, the illustrations by Barrett make it clear that although she is dressed up in armor and carrying a colorful banner, Joan was a young girl. Young readers will definitely have a sense for why the story of this particular young girl has been a dramatic and compelling one for centuries.


Through His Glasses, Face to FaceReview Date: 2000-06-20
Photographic masterpiecesReview Date: 1999-08-10
Opening the past and the mind of Joseph BrodskyReview Date: 2002-11-10
remarkable bookReview Date: 1999-08-02
Samuil Lurie, Neva Magazine (St.Petersburg, Russia)
Lemkhin's photography replies to Brodsky's verse.Review Date: 1998-11-25
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A great look into the Holocaust!Review Date: 2000-04-12
Very movingReview Date: 2006-09-03
As Cat R reports, the author's daughter found her mother's manuscript in 1979, after the former had died. The text gives a very personal account of the Nazi invasion of Poland, this one from the perspective of a Warsaw native shipped with her small daughter, in January 1943, aboard a cattle car from the ghetto, bound to a certain death at Treblinka.
Certain except that she fought back. She knew from rumors what happened there. With a hacksaw blade she had concealed, she determined to saw through the bars of one of two small windows in her car, and reached them from the shoulders of two strong young boys willing to help her.
To ensure that the boys threw her daughter out the window after she had jumped, Eva gave a bag of chocolate, sugar and bread to a sympathetic friend too old to join her, and asked her to ensure they got it if they did as she had asked.
The jump was but the beginning of one Jewish mother's perilous and somehow miraculous bid to survive--with her child.
In the end, this sufferings of this mother and child were far less severe than those of my friend Masha. Nevertheless, this is a gripping, and important account, not to be missed.
--Alyssa A. Lappen
persecution and heroismReview Date: 2000-05-30
One of the best memoirs by a holocaust survivorReview Date: 2007-03-15
A Fascinating Account by a Polish Jew Who Escaped From a Death TrainReview Date: 2007-03-20
Originally written in 1946, Cyprys' account is remarkably free of the Judeocentric, German-whitewashing, anti-Christian, and anti-Polish tendencies of today. She devotes almost as much attention to German crimes against Poles as to those against Jews. Furthermore, Cyprys makes it clear that the Germans regarded the Poles as having no more inherent right to live than the Jews. Consider what happened when two Poles were mistakenly herded with Jews into a Treblinka-bound train: "Two gentiles in our wagon tried to explain to the Germans that they did not fit into this society and tried to show their documents. All to no avail. `Even if you are not a Jew, you are a damned Pole', yelled the German, and slapped the older woman's face, barking `Polish swine' and with his rifle butt drove her to the wagon." (p. 95).
Cyprys reported a balanced range of Polish attitudes towards Jews (pp. 118-119, 127, 132), some of which varied within the same family (pp. 142-143). Ironically, she was helped by the obsessively anti-Semitic Mrs. Zosia, who felt sorry for the Jews and who aided them (pp. 220-221).
In his FEAR, Jan Tomasz Gross presents a distorted view of Poles acquiring Jewish properties during the German occupation. In contrast, when mentioning how some Poles pretended to be Volksdeutsche in order to join in the German-sponsored pillage of Jewish properties, she nevertheless added: "The local mob usually guided the Germans to the rich Jewish houses and stores. With the deepest shame I must admit that there were some Jews among the scum." (pp. 25-26).
One inflammatory Polonophobic Holocaust myth is the one about Jews, while being transported to the death camps and with full knowledge of their impending deaths, being forced to endure the sight of indifferent or gleeful Polish onlookers. Against such nonsense, we learn that the death trains had small, barred windows well above eye level, and with nothing to stand on in order to look out of them (p. 96). Viewing (in either direction) was nearly impossible. The author and her daughter were loaded on a Treblinka-bound train. It was only with the greatest difficulty that Cyprys was boosted up and enabled to cut through the bars to jump out and to have her daughter Eva (Ewa) get pushed out.
The oft-quoted Polish remarks about Jews in the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising "getting burned like bugs", although invariably presented as such, wasn't necessarily derogatory. After all, Poles used the same phrase to refer to themselves in the face of their defenselessness against German incendiary bombing during the Warsaw Uprising! (p. 200).
The Germans strongly promoted alcoholism among Poles. This was done in order to degrade them (Lemkin elaborated on this) and to exploit this dependency as leverage in the denunciation of fugitive Jews (p. 174).
Cyprys elaborates on the semi-collaborationist Polish Blue Police (Policja Granatowa): "There were policemen who would accept neither bribes nor ransoms but, for the sake of their ideology, would hand over the Jews. Looking at this group objectively, however, one has to say that among their ranks there were many Volksdeutsch volunteers. The activities of the Polish police aroused such hostility among the majority of the Polish people, that death sentences were passed on several policemen by the Polish underground organizations and executions were carried out by Polish lads...upon the orders of the Organization a detailed list of all policemen was kept in the Underground offices. These contained, apart from proved misconduct, evidence of their standard of living which ascertained whether a dark blue was profiteering from blackmail or extortion. These lists of evidence were kept till the Warsaw Uprising: I do not know whether they survived the insurrection." (p. 138).
However, by no stretch of the imagination was the Polish Blue Police the main force in the roundups of Jews for their deaths: "On about 5 August [1942] all `workshop territories' were hermetically closed and the Germans and Ukrainians started a ruthless expulsion of anyone found outside these areas--always with the efficient help of the Jewish militia. Wherever a German or a Ukrainian did not venture the militia men would gladly fish out as many as possible of those still hidden in cellars and vaults, only to oblige the Germans." (p. 52).
Most Polish blackmailers (szmalcowniki), "the scum of mankind" (p. 119), took only part of the belongings of their Jewish victims and didn't usually actually denounce Jews to the Germans (pp. 119-120). They sometimes excused their conduct by their poverty and even gave the Jews advice on how better to disguise their Jewishness (p. 140).
Underworld Poles weren't the only ones that fugitive Jews feared: "The Jewish Gestapo men who remained alive were very dangerous. Their eyes were penetrating and Jews pointed out by them were lost beyond hope." (p. 165). Cyprys personally observed them shouting Jewish slogans or singing Jewish songs in order to provoke a telltale reaction in fugitive Jews among the pedestrians (pp. 165-166).
Cyprys alludes to Zegota as follows: "It goes without saying that only a fraction of the Jews in hiding knew about the existence of this committee. Those who were in touch with the patriotic `Polish intelligentsia' or people who worked in the Underground were most likely to benefit. Everything was obviously carried out in the greatest secrecy, using all available means of security." (p. 150). Complaints about Zegota aiding only a modest number of Jews are clearly off the mark.
In fact, Cyprys has a very sage understanding of ALL underground activities: "In reality underground activities were extremely stressful and required a great deal of steadiness and concentration. And because it had gone on for so many years, it was exhausting even to the strongest individuals and led to many casualties." (p. 184).
Cyprys provides a level of detail about the Warsaw Uprising usually done by Polish authors. We read, for instance, about the devastating effects of the German nebelwerfer ("roaring cow" or "cupboard"), and the systematic destruction of Warsaw by Germans AFTER the Uprising.

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Very HelpfulReview Date: 2007-07-05
Thank god !Review Date: 2000-05-02
Just Enough Serbo-CroatReview Date: 2006-08-19
Learning for my child,my husband and my vacation to BosniaReview Date: 2000-05-02
the best way to start learning serbianReview Date: 1999-04-17

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Collectible price: $13.95

Great!Review Date: 2005-08-31
Some have complained that Conot's jumping around between the trial and what he believed were contextual actions confuses the reader, making it difficult to understand his reasoning. It is true that his presentation style is hard to understand at times, but this is probably more to do with the complexities of the Nuremberg Trial and the historical and political influences that Conot believed affected the trial. The complexities, therefore, can be hard to follow and confusing. In order to understand what happened at Nuremberg one has to understand what happened in Germany when Hitler came to power; all these events are confusing but without understanding them it would be pointless to even look at the Nuremberg Trial. The reason for this is simple: the reader would see what the defense and prosecution were saying; one side saying that the defendants were innocent, the other claiming to have documents and witnesses which show the defendants culpable for many atrocities. How would the reader know who was telling the truth? The past is being studied, and because of that there should be an explanation of the events leading up to the trial.
Robert Conot did a good job putting the trial into its historical context. While readers who have studied Nazi Germany for quite some time would be annoyed at having to read about things they already knew about, this book is good for people who have not studied Nazi Germany in depth. Robert Conot gives background information on the defendants-there are many interesting tidbits that he provides. Two examples that come to mind are the defendants Goering and Hess. Conot provides some interesting information about how when Goering was little he had to write an essay about a notable German and he chose to write about Epenstein. (Conot 41) Immediately after turning in his essay he was taken in to the principal's office and asked why he wrote about a Jew instead of a notable German. He was punished by having to write "I will not write essays in praise of Jews" on the blackboard one hundred times and by having to wear a sign around his neck saying "My godfather is a Jew." (Conot 41) Hess, a very strange man, thought that the Jews were controlling people with hypnotic powers. (Conot 47) He stabbed himself with a knife one time and then claimed that the Jews used magic to place the knife in his hands in order to tempt him (Conot 47) The kind of background information that Conot provides may seem like trivial facts or gossip to some, but these things are important because the reader gains insight into the lives of the defendants; what made them tick.
The author also does a good job of describing the motivations for the trial. The Nazi party, under the leadership of Hitler started a war that killed millions of people-not only soldiers on the battlefield, but noncombatants as well; but millions of civilians murdered. These civilians died in horrible ways: they were beaten to death, gassed, starved to death, essentially boiled with quick lye, worked to death, and used in horrific experiments. What the Nazis did was so unspeakably evil that it had to be addressed. As Jackson said in his opening statement, "The wrongs which we seek to condemn and punish have been so calculated, so malignant, and so devastating, that civilization cannot tolerate their being ignored, because it cannot survive their repeating." (Conot 105) However, if after the war, all the Nazis were lined up and shot, what lessons would the world learn? As Bernays said, "Not to try these beasts would be to miss the educational and therapeutic opportunity of our generation." (Conot 11) Furthermore, what would people today think of these actions? Would they believe that we were the same as the Nazis for not giving them a trial? The trial was important; the trial would show the world not only that this was not "Victor's Justice" but how evil the Nazis were and that such actions would not be tolerated in the future.
After reading this book one gets the impression that while this trial appears not to have been completely fair, it was far from a sham trial or "victor's justice." The biggest problem had to do with the fact that a Russian judge was presiding over the trial. This is a problem because the Judge's actions were essentially dictated from Moscow. Indeed, for every defendant, the Russian Judge tried to have the death penalty enacted. Furthermore, there was a very embarrassing incident: during a party someone raised his glass and toasted to the speedy trial and execution of the defendants-a toast all judges partook of. (Conot 92). This may be the definitive proof for some that the trial was nothing more than "victor's justice." To assume this though, is to ignore the rest of the facts-this judgment of the trial is too hasty. If the trial was just a sham then why was it that some of the defendants were acquitted? The actual results of the trial do not support the perception that this trial was rigged given the defendants did not all receive the death sentence. Many were hanged, but some were given various prison sentences, and of course, some were acquitted. Schacht, Fritzsche, and Papen were acquitted. Schirach, Neurath, Speer, Raeder, Hess, Funk, and Doenitz avoided the death penalty receiving varying sentences of time in prison.
Furthermore, there is other evidence provided by Robert Conot which shows that the trial was not a sham. First of all, the very fact that the defendants could even give their version of the story is certainly more than one would expect from a sham trial. Second, the defendants actually did have a chance to best the prosecutors in the verbal battle for their lives. Goering was an intelligent man and he outwitted Jackson. "Time and again it was Goering who caught Jackson in error, rather than Jackson who trapped Goering in lies." (Conot 337) Third, the judges didn't always rule against the Nazi defense lawyers. An important development during Goering's defense was that the defense tried to get the right to submit documents into evidence, and although Jackson (prosecutor) tried to prevent this from happening, the judges ruled that the defense should have the same rights as the prosecution in submitting documents. (Conot 346) Another interesting example of the Judges siding with justice instead of the prosecution or the defense was when the defense complained that they were not getting translations of all the documents that the prosecution was introducing as evidence. (Conot 146) When the prosecution was asked why this was the case it was discovered that the prosecution was sending tons of translations to the media, but not to the defense attorneys. (Conot 147) "...the prosecution seemed more interested in trying the case in the press than in furnishing the defense with copies of its evidence." (Conot 147) The judges ruled that copies of the evidence were to be given to the defense before they were given to the press, as the defense obviously needed them more. This is certainly a ruling that one would expect in a fair trial.
Just think, what is usually the purpose of a sham trial? In this case the purpose of having a sham trial would be to punish the Germans for what happened during World War II, right? If the purpose was to punish the Germans, then why weren't all the defendants executed? It makes no sense to claim that this was "victor's justice" when the victors gave a fair trial. The Nuremburg Trial had its problems-it was by no means perfect. However, to say that this trial was "Victor's Justice" is to show an ignorance of the facts. Not only were many people involved in the trial motivated to make it fair, the very fact that not all of the defendants were hanged is proof enough that the trial was fair.
Conot successfully presented his case. He wrote a highly readable account of the Nuremberg Trial that presents the trial, characters and influences in an easily accessible format to the public. More importantly, however, was that history was written true, and proving Conot's thesis that there was Justice at Nuremberg. Robert Conot hoped to interest a large audience in the Nuremberg Trial in the hope that the history surrounding this trial would not be repeated as atrocities of the future. Justice at Nuremberg captures the horrific atrocities committed during the period leading up to and including World War II, the people behind them, the influencing factors that preceded them, and the justice meted out to the perpetrators. Justice that the victims of World War II never received. Justice that lives up to the adage, "two wrongs don't make a right." Justice that says "never again."
Very informativeReview Date: 2007-01-05
A Brillant AccountReview Date: 2000-05-09
A very thorough accountReview Date: 2000-07-22
RecommendedReview Date: 2002-10-30

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Very funny bookReview Date: 2008-02-01
Funny Jewish Humor for Kids and AdultsReview Date: 2008-01-07
Schlemiels and Schmendricks for your enjoyment and gezundtReview Date: 2005-10-03
Classic Simms Taback And A Good Introduction To Yiddish!!Review Date: 2007-09-27
Like Joseph, it's set in a shtetl, but it's not one story. It's a collection of very short stories that teach about Jewish culture and also teaches some basic Yiddish words and phrases. The short glossary (52 words) in the back of the book is quite useful too.
The description on Amazon says it's aimed at ages 4 - 8, but I'd say more like ages 6 - 10. I don't think it will hold a preschooler's interest, but is an absolute must have in your child's library. Not to be a kibitzer, but every Bubbe or Zayda should buy this for their grandkids!
THE PERFECT GIFTReview Date: 2006-03-09


Great Travel Preparation for Kids and FamiliesReview Date: 2008-03-03
This Book Rocks Review Date: 2007-04-26
Italy Discovery JournalReview Date: 2007-03-04
journalReview Date: 2006-04-25
Surprisingly Fun Little BookReview Date: 2006-04-12
Anna Manna!
Related Subjects: Greece Turkey Finland Netherlands
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