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Maine Books sorted by
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Discover nutrition!: Student study guide
Published in Unknown Binding by Maine Dept. of Education, Nutrition Education and Training Program, School Nutrition Programs Division (1991)
List price:
Average review score: 

Michael Collins rules!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-26
Review Date: 2007-09-26
Excellent book, very well written in the usual "Coogan" way, that is, skilfull, fluent and full of nice anecdotes. Gives an insightful portrait of one of Ireland's greatest men and my personal favourite. Eireann go brach!
A good picture of revolutionary Ireland
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-14
Review Date: 2007-05-14
An informative humanizing biography that provides a good picture of revolutionary Ireland. More photogrpahs would have made for 5 stars.
Best book on Collins
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-07-14
Review Date: 2006-07-14
I recommend this book to anyone who wants an intense indepth study of Collins and Ireland of his time. This is easy to read and full of interesting information about the man and those around him. Collins was a genius who shaped the fate of modern Ireland and did so with an acute sense of how far he wcould go to achieve what he wanted.
It really makes me wonder how much better off Ireland would have been if he had not best lost so early in his life.
It really makes me wonder how much better off Ireland would have been if he had not best lost so early in his life.
Michael Collins: The Man who made Irelaand
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2005-08-17
Review Date: 2005-08-17
This is an extarodinary book about an extraordinary man. It is well wriiten, it is exciting and easy to read. It gives a wonderful insight into the life and times of Ireland during this remarkable time
Excellent Book
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2005-04-05
Review Date: 2005-04-05
Although the pages and the sophisticated writing style might intimidate one, if you stick to it and read the book to the end, you will NOT regret it. It was my first book in Irish History and I have learned so much from reading it. This book is amazing beyond words. If you buy it, you won't reget it.

Fiddlers: A Novel of the 87th Precinct (87th Precinct Mysteries)
Published in Hardcover by Harcourt (2005-09-12)
List price: $25.00
New price: $0.50
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $25.00
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $25.00
Average review score: 

Good
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-16
Review Date: 2008-08-16
This kind of novel is a little off the beaten path for me, but I had always wanted to read a McBain mystery, and now having done so, I'm glad I did. Good light reading featuring very human "good guys" and a villain with a credible back story.
A decent end to a landmark series of novels
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-14
Review Date: 2007-02-14
Having read more than half of the fifty-five 87th precinct novels written by the recently deceased Ed McBain, I think they break down into two categories. First, there are those that grip you from the get-go and, more important, can be read as an enjoyable" stand alone" novel even if you are not a fan. The three that come to mind for me are "Ice," "Lullaby" and "Hark." On the other hand, there are the ones that are seemingly a bit more plodding but if you are into the characters and McBain's style, you will stick with the book more as a fan and a way to continue watching your old pals move on with life. For me, Fiddlers fits into the latter category. Not as good as his previous work(the aforementioned "Hark") but decent enough where if you stick with it, the end result will be bittersweet - a good read tinged with the sadness this is the end of a landmark series.
A series of execution style murders, with the victims all being old enough to apply for their AARP membership, gives just about the entire group of recurring 87th precinct detectives their moment in the spotlight. Most of the detectives we have seen in this series all get a murder tossed their way and the fun is in us following them on their investigation. Of course, the climactic moment when everyone has to come together to connect the dots is vintage McBain.
As I mentioned, this book may not be a great starting point for a non-fans since I believe the investigation is more fun to read when you know the detectives already. Yet if you are a fan, this is a must read just so you can say a fond farewell to a writer who truly set a standard others may never be able to duplicate.
A series of execution style murders, with the victims all being old enough to apply for their AARP membership, gives just about the entire group of recurring 87th precinct detectives their moment in the spotlight. Most of the detectives we have seen in this series all get a murder tossed their way and the fun is in us following them on their investigation. Of course, the climactic moment when everyone has to come together to connect the dots is vintage McBain.
As I mentioned, this book may not be a great starting point for a non-fans since I believe the investigation is more fun to read when you know the detectives already. Yet if you are a fan, this is a must read just so you can say a fond farewell to a writer who truly set a standard others may never be able to duplicate.
I hate to see these draw to a close...
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-07-10
Review Date: 2006-07-10
I'm sad to see the 87th Precinct series draw down to a close... This is (I believe) the first 87th Precinct novel released after Ed McBain's death... Fiddlers.
Carella's group draws a case where a blind violin player was found shot twice in the head behind the restaurant where he worked. This quickly becomes more than "just another murder" when a sales rep for a cosmetic company is found dead in her home, same killing wound, and same murder weapon. Five murders in two weeks, all the same modus operandi, all the same gun, means they have a serial killer on their hands. But how do you tie together victims that have little in common except for the fact they're all over 50? All of the detectives of the 87th Precinct are tracking the murders, trying to find the common thread that will point to the killer. Meanwhile, the killer is on a mission to correct errors that only he knows and understands...
As with all other 87th Precinct novels, I enjoyed this one quite a bit. I did find it a bit bittersweet, however. McBain passed away recently, so there's not much hope for too many more episodes. I've heard it rumored that he had one last novel "in the can" to be released upon his death. I'll have to keep an eye open for that, and for any other episodes that happened between this release and now. McBain is a true master of the police procedural, and his passing is a sad event for many of us. Fiddlers is a quick page turner that draws you into the life of the killer, as you try and figure out his motive and story.
Classic McBain, and one to savor...
Carella's group draws a case where a blind violin player was found shot twice in the head behind the restaurant where he worked. This quickly becomes more than "just another murder" when a sales rep for a cosmetic company is found dead in her home, same killing wound, and same murder weapon. Five murders in two weeks, all the same modus operandi, all the same gun, means they have a serial killer on their hands. But how do you tie together victims that have little in common except for the fact they're all over 50? All of the detectives of the 87th Precinct are tracking the murders, trying to find the common thread that will point to the killer. Meanwhile, the killer is on a mission to correct errors that only he knows and understands...
As with all other 87th Precinct novels, I enjoyed this one quite a bit. I did find it a bit bittersweet, however. McBain passed away recently, so there's not much hope for too many more episodes. I've heard it rumored that he had one last novel "in the can" to be released upon his death. I'll have to keep an eye open for that, and for any other episodes that happened between this release and now. McBain is a true master of the police procedural, and his passing is a sad event for many of us. Fiddlers is a quick page turner that draws you into the life of the killer, as you try and figure out his motive and story.
Classic McBain, and one to savor...
Fiddlers
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2006-09-11
Review Date: 2006-09-11
"Fiddlers" is the 55th and last novel of the 87the Precinct by Ed McBain who passed away in 2005 shortly before this novel was published. "Fiddlers" is an excellent novel that reminded me of many of the earlier 87th Precinct novels. Max Sobolov, a blind violinist, is murdered outside the club in which he was playing. Then, Alicia Hendricks, a cosmetics salesperson, is murdered. Then college professor Christine Langston is murdered followed by a priest Father Michael and a 70+ year old woman named Helen Reilly. All five murders were shootings from the same Glock hand gun, and all the victims were over 50 years of age. Almost all the cops of the 87th are involved in the investigation as well as Fat Ollie Weeks from the 88th who has been in many of the 87th Precinct novels. Ed McBain was the master of the police procedural and this novel won't disappoint his long time fans. He will be greatly missed. I will sorely miss the 87th Precinct novels which were written frequently by McBain. American mystery fiction has lost one of its best. "Fiddlers" is very highly recommended.
Five Star Finale
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2006-10-16
Review Date: 2006-10-16
Though it had to be, what a shame to end the series on such a downbeat note, with Steve Carella's little April, once the apple of his eye, turning into a gang girl, and her opposite number, the boy twin, becoming a snitch, a rat, of the worst description, telling on April as soon as it's convenient. Those twins once were the highwater mark of cute kids in the detective novel, now they're just like slimy movie kids. Their mother seems incapable of keeping up with the changes puberty brings. Yes, she can sign "No drugs!" as loudly as she can, and it may work the first time, but eventually the kids will do their own thing, rebelling against the unusual home setup (obsessed cop dad and signing Mom) and wanting to be like other more normal families.
However, Ed McBain's tragic death deprives us of resolution, and I expect something in the man delighted in this, for he had a pretty good opinion of himself and, much like you and I, considered himself one of the great American novelists. Irreplaceable. I for one don't want any V C Andrews scam occurring to the 87th Precinct series. We loved him for his writing pure and simple.
FIDDLERS is pretty good and it's miles better than that wretched book where Ollie Weeks was writing a novel, remember that? Its lame parody of bad writing, presented in standard 87th Precinct facsimile form? Yikes was that awful. This one is much better, and although the actial revenge plot borrows quite a bit from Cornell Woolrich's two 1940s thrillers THE BRIDE WORE BLACK and RENDEZVOUS IN BLACK, the addition of the red-headed prostitute, Reggie, turns the human interest up a notch, so we become interested in the unlikely pairing of serial killer and call girl.
Why "FIDDLERS" though? OK, the first victim played the violin. Maybe there's some larger, overarching metaphor here. Funny thing that FIDDLERS should be Ed McBain's last book, while FIDDLERS THREE was the last play that Agatha Christie wrote. Nothing but a coincidence, but I'm just saying.
However, Ed McBain's tragic death deprives us of resolution, and I expect something in the man delighted in this, for he had a pretty good opinion of himself and, much like you and I, considered himself one of the great American novelists. Irreplaceable. I for one don't want any V C Andrews scam occurring to the 87th Precinct series. We loved him for his writing pure and simple.
FIDDLERS is pretty good and it's miles better than that wretched book where Ollie Weeks was writing a novel, remember that? Its lame parody of bad writing, presented in standard 87th Precinct facsimile form? Yikes was that awful. This one is much better, and although the actial revenge plot borrows quite a bit from Cornell Woolrich's two 1940s thrillers THE BRIDE WORE BLACK and RENDEZVOUS IN BLACK, the addition of the red-headed prostitute, Reggie, turns the human interest up a notch, so we become interested in the unlikely pairing of serial killer and call girl.
Why "FIDDLERS" though? OK, the first victim played the violin. Maybe there's some larger, overarching metaphor here. Funny thing that FIDDLERS should be Ed McBain's last book, while FIDDLERS THREE was the last play that Agatha Christie wrote. Nothing but a coincidence, but I'm just saying.

Lipshtick
Published in Paperback by Harper Paperbacks (2001-01-01)
List price: $13.00
New price: $1.99
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $13.00
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $13.00
Average review score: 

A Very Funny Read
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-05-03
Review Date: 2006-05-03
This book will have you cracking up. Very well written and easy to read. Something that everyone can relate to. Great to share. Highly recommended.
Buy it for all your girlfriends...
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2001-11-03
Review Date: 2001-11-03
Laugh out loud funny! Gotta get this for all your girlfriends...and make em read it to the guys! Can't say enough about it. I loved it!
MORE---PLEASE!!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-07-02
Review Date: 2005-07-02
people say this is girl talk in a book... only if you're lucky to have friends as funny as Macsai--I have given it away time and again...I keep this book stocked at my house just to give to my favorite people. This is THE FUNNIEST book ever--I read it while single and childless... and STILL found her chapters on marriage, pregnancy and childbirth painfully funny. I have not been entertained like this since - Sedaris comes close with Santaland diaries (in Holidays on Ice) but still...it wasn't Gwen.
Funny and true to life.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2002-04-10
Review Date: 2002-04-10
The second chapter "A Snowball's Chance" is worth the [money] for the book itself.
The rest ... well.. it's good but the second chapter was just soooooo descriptive, funny and true to life that I think it's just paling in comparison, KWIM?
No holds barred, chin hair and all girl talk!
Helpful Votes: 14 out of 18 total.
Review Date: 2001-12-19
Review Date: 2001-12-19
What a fun book! The perfect account of what it's like to grow up "Girl". From the heartache of school girl crushes and embarrassing dating disasters to the slap-in-the-face reality of marriage and the REAL truth about pregnancy and motherhood ~ Gwen covers it all. And she doesn't mince words either ~ I couldn't believe some of the things this woman put in print! Every woman will be able to find something in these pages to relate to ~ even if she'd never admit to anyone but her closest girlfriends. Get this book, then get copies for all the women you know!

Murder on the Rocks (Gray Whale Inn Mysteries, No. 1)
Published in Paperback by MIDNIGHT INK (2006-05-01)
List price: $12.95
New price: $5.49
Used price: $3.92
Collectible price: $12.95
Used price: $3.92
Collectible price: $12.95
Average review score: 

The Best Food Mystery Ever!!!!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-21
Review Date: 2007-06-21
I love this book! I could not put it down! I also can't wait to start trying her recipes, they sound delicious! I could almost taste the blueberry coffee cake as I was reading! I am on to "Dean and Berried"!
Delighted
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-09
Review Date: 2007-08-09
Delighted to discover this author, heroine and inn! The mysteries are well developed and the recipes are an extra treat. I hope there will be more than two!
Simply Awful.
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-08
Review Date: 2007-08-08
I can't even finish it, it's so poorly written and so boring. I am so disappointed. I thought I had found a new author to read. Oh, well.
Needs some work
Helpful Votes: 23 out of 26 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-17
Review Date: 2007-05-17
I just finished "Murder on the Rocks" and while I think this series has potential, the writing needs to be edited better.
1. Natalie frequently complains about how she is flat broke and unable to eat at restaurants. She runs out of groceries and ends up with nothing to eat but a peanut butter & jelly sandwich. However, she is constantly baking up huge batches of cookies and brownies to take to friends and neighbors around the island. Whenever she needs something out of the freezer, she is pawing through chuck roasts and bacon to find the fruit she needs. So is she broke and hungry or not?
2. When a guest at her inn is found dead, Natalie sneaks into his room (against direct police orders) and finds significant evidence that she then hides. When the police later suspect her of being the killer, Natalie is unable to show evidence pointing away from her, because she stole it from the crime scene. Is she really this stupid?
3. An intruder breaks in and clobbers Natalie. She doesn't bother to call the police immediately, instead just waits for them to show up the next day.
4. Natalie pretends to be someone she's not in order to obtain private information she has no right to, and opens and reads her guests' mail.
While the plot is presented as "Natalie is a suspect in a murder she didn't commit and tries to find the real killer" she is guilty of numerous counts of obstruction of justice and just plain stupidity. It was hard to swallow.
1. Natalie frequently complains about how she is flat broke and unable to eat at restaurants. She runs out of groceries and ends up with nothing to eat but a peanut butter & jelly sandwich. However, she is constantly baking up huge batches of cookies and brownies to take to friends and neighbors around the island. Whenever she needs something out of the freezer, she is pawing through chuck roasts and bacon to find the fruit she needs. So is she broke and hungry or not?
2. When a guest at her inn is found dead, Natalie sneaks into his room (against direct police orders) and finds significant evidence that she then hides. When the police later suspect her of being the killer, Natalie is unable to show evidence pointing away from her, because she stole it from the crime scene. Is she really this stupid?
3. An intruder breaks in and clobbers Natalie. She doesn't bother to call the police immediately, instead just waits for them to show up the next day.
4. Natalie pretends to be someone she's not in order to obtain private information she has no right to, and opens and reads her guests' mail.
While the plot is presented as "Natalie is a suspect in a murder she didn't commit and tries to find the real killer" she is guilty of numerous counts of obstruction of justice and just plain stupidity. It was hard to swallow.
Great Start to this Series
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-14
Review Date: 2008-02-14
Natalie Barnes has decided to go for broke and trade her life saving for a Bed and Breakfast called the Grey Whale Inn on Cranberry Island in Maine. Soon the slimy Bernard Katz shows up and announces plans to change the whole inland into a mega resort which will include turning the Grey Whale into a parking lot. So no one is surprised when he is found dead, the only surprise is the who and why. Natalie just has to stay alive long enough to get the whole story out. Great start to a new series plus great recipes at the end of the book.
Oh, and someone needs to tell the author that you don't get knitting wool from a goat.
Oh, and someone needs to tell the author that you don't get knitting wool from a goat.

The Cactus Eaters: How I Lost My Mind-and Almost Found Myself-on the Pacific Crest Trail (P.S.)
Published in Paperback by Harper Perennial (2008-06-01)
List price: $14.95
New price: $8.74
Used price: $7.99
Collectible price: $14.95
Used price: $7.99
Collectible price: $14.95
Average review score: 

The Pacific Crest Trail reaches from Mexico to Canada: a grueling stretch with many physical demands
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-16
Review Date: 2008-08-16
The Pacific Crest Trail reaches from Mexico to Canada: a grueling stretch with many physical demands. When the author and his girlfriend decided to hike it, Dan's parents thought they were crazy; especially since the two hadn't even lived together and were contemplating a grueling six-month journey. But the trip tested them on many levels, and THE CACTUS EATERS: HOW I LOST MY MIND AND ALMOST FOUND MYSELF ON THE PACIFIC COAST TRAIL documents these changes.
Diane C. Donovan
California Bookwatch
Diane C. Donovan
California Bookwatch
Too bad the cactus didn't eat him
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-03
Review Date: 2008-09-03
OK, I love books about long distance hiking. I collect all books concerning the Appalachian Trail. I hike whenever I can. I work for a major outdoor retailer. That said I really disliked this book because I found Dan White to be a very dislikable person. Oh sure there are a few chuckles in the book but not enough. His humor is High School and sophmoric at best and the way he treats his girlfriend it's a wonder she did not leave him sooner. I had high hopes for this book based on the publishers blurb but my dislike for White grew so much that I could barely finish the book. His lady friend deserved better.
rmw
rmw
Looking over the shoulder and getting into the head of a Pacific Crest Trail throughhiker...
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-26
Review Date: 2008-07-26
As a university librarian, I've found that walking through the exhibit hall of the American Library Assn annual convention is a bit like strolling through downtown Tijuana. Hawkers of library-related software, library shelving, computer systems, you-name-it -- and hundreds of publisher's representatives -- are doing everything they can to get your attention.
So, last month, during the most recent convention in Anaheim, California, when some publisher's rep shoved a copy of The Cactus Eaters in my hands with a 20-second "elevator speech," about it being "a wonderful new book about a couple's hike of the 2,650-mile Pacific Crest Trail from Mexico to Canada," I'm thinking -- "Well, how interesting could that be?" They're trying to "get a buzz going," on the book, while I'm more interested in getting to the next programming session on Copyright Law or Use of Social Networking Software at the CIA, DIA, Dept of State and Library of Congress, etc.
At the end of the day, however, I rely on my tested methodology regarding which books to keep and which to quickly get rid of (typically by leaving them on end-tables in the hotel lobby). I skim the blurb on the back cover and read a few paragraphs on three or four random pages. My reaction to this one? "Wow, this is really good narrative writing!"
There are a lot of books out there that promise a good story, but -- more often than not -- the writing usually doesn't convey the content well-enough to allow the reader to develop and maintain a mental picture clear enough to carry it through to completion. But, Dan White's account of his part of the "Lois and Clark Expedition" is *very* well-written. I, like a lot of readers, was quickly hooked and found myself absorbed by the details, personal reflections and pace of the story he tells. Soon, I found myself looking forward to time to slowly read it -- at night at the hotel, on the cross-country flight home, and for a few weeks of couple-of-pages-a-night reading at home just before turning out the nightlight.
It's clear that White wrote a first draft based on his trail journal, then wrote multiple other drafts, adding details as they came to memory. Then, later went back and added a *lot* of research content regarding the political, natural and geographic history of various segments of the trail. Finally, judging by the smoothness of the flow of the text, I would guess he went through the manuscript a few dozen times to get the timing, narrative voice and underlying themes just right. This isn't easy to do, as works like this tend to read more like a Botany student's master's thesis; it usually takes years to get a book "just right," like White did.
The book has multiple themes: on the surface, it's the tale of two young, naive journalists who enjoy each other's company, and -- on a bit of a whim -- decide to drop-out of the work-world to take-on the self-imposed challenge of hiking the Pacific Crest Trail. Another theme is that of the reliance that loving partners have on each other, whether acknowledged or not, and how such relationships are sometimes flexible and forgiving, and at other times, tenuous and easily broken.
Dan White writes of his relationship with his trail-partner and lover, "Allison," with a brutal honesty. He writes of his own verbal abuse, his fear of being found-out (by her) to be an inept, incompetent and unworthy human being, of her strength versus his own weaknesses and fearfulness. He portrays her as a beautiful, ideal friend, lover and partner; a companion with a joyful personality, and a deep emotional reserve and fearlessness that got them both through some really tough spots. Time and again he refers, in amazement, at how she powered her way through her own physical pain and his whining and complaints to move them along.
There's something about the challenge of the open-road or the open-trail that is -- at one time or another in our lives -- attractive to some of us. We don't know why we have to do it, but we do -- and are forever changed by the doing. When I was eighteen, right out of high school, I left my high school sweetheart and the life that staying home and marrying her would have entailed, and hitch-hiked from my hometown in Florida, up the east coast to North Bay, Ontario, then across Canada to Vancouver, British Columbia and back across the border, down to Portland, across to Salt lake City, St. Louis, down to Nashville and Atlanta and finally back home. Like "Allison" and Dan White, the hundreds of people I met and the experiences of that journey changed me -- in ways that I wouldn't understand until many years later. So, without giving away the ending, I'll simply say that how their relationship ends-up is typical of the post-trail let-down one feels after such an adventure.
I enjoyed how White doesn't so much as "write," as he paints with words, images of the physical and emotional journey he took with "Allison." I wish that he had included many of the photographs that he alluded to in the text, and I would love to have read an Afterword of some 30-40 pages by "Allison" regarding her thoughts and views of Dan White, the journey and what the experience came to mean in her life. It's obvious that she gave so much to Dan and to the journey; it is also obvious that Dan could never have made the trip without her -- and, thus I hope she's getting half the royalties. (smile)
Bottom line -- an honest, well-written, well-crafted book that details the hardships endured by those who take on the challenge to one's endurance and sanity to hike the Pacific Coast Trail.
R. Neil Scott / Middle Tennessee State University
So, last month, during the most recent convention in Anaheim, California, when some publisher's rep shoved a copy of The Cactus Eaters in my hands with a 20-second "elevator speech," about it being "a wonderful new book about a couple's hike of the 2,650-mile Pacific Crest Trail from Mexico to Canada," I'm thinking -- "Well, how interesting could that be?" They're trying to "get a buzz going," on the book, while I'm more interested in getting to the next programming session on Copyright Law or Use of Social Networking Software at the CIA, DIA, Dept of State and Library of Congress, etc.
At the end of the day, however, I rely on my tested methodology regarding which books to keep and which to quickly get rid of (typically by leaving them on end-tables in the hotel lobby). I skim the blurb on the back cover and read a few paragraphs on three or four random pages. My reaction to this one? "Wow, this is really good narrative writing!"
There are a lot of books out there that promise a good story, but -- more often than not -- the writing usually doesn't convey the content well-enough to allow the reader to develop and maintain a mental picture clear enough to carry it through to completion. But, Dan White's account of his part of the "Lois and Clark Expedition" is *very* well-written. I, like a lot of readers, was quickly hooked and found myself absorbed by the details, personal reflections and pace of the story he tells. Soon, I found myself looking forward to time to slowly read it -- at night at the hotel, on the cross-country flight home, and for a few weeks of couple-of-pages-a-night reading at home just before turning out the nightlight.
It's clear that White wrote a first draft based on his trail journal, then wrote multiple other drafts, adding details as they came to memory. Then, later went back and added a *lot* of research content regarding the political, natural and geographic history of various segments of the trail. Finally, judging by the smoothness of the flow of the text, I would guess he went through the manuscript a few dozen times to get the timing, narrative voice and underlying themes just right. This isn't easy to do, as works like this tend to read more like a Botany student's master's thesis; it usually takes years to get a book "just right," like White did.
The book has multiple themes: on the surface, it's the tale of two young, naive journalists who enjoy each other's company, and -- on a bit of a whim -- decide to drop-out of the work-world to take-on the self-imposed challenge of hiking the Pacific Crest Trail. Another theme is that of the reliance that loving partners have on each other, whether acknowledged or not, and how such relationships are sometimes flexible and forgiving, and at other times, tenuous and easily broken.
Dan White writes of his relationship with his trail-partner and lover, "Allison," with a brutal honesty. He writes of his own verbal abuse, his fear of being found-out (by her) to be an inept, incompetent and unworthy human being, of her strength versus his own weaknesses and fearfulness. He portrays her as a beautiful, ideal friend, lover and partner; a companion with a joyful personality, and a deep emotional reserve and fearlessness that got them both through some really tough spots. Time and again he refers, in amazement, at how she powered her way through her own physical pain and his whining and complaints to move them along.
There's something about the challenge of the open-road or the open-trail that is -- at one time or another in our lives -- attractive to some of us. We don't know why we have to do it, but we do -- and are forever changed by the doing. When I was eighteen, right out of high school, I left my high school sweetheart and the life that staying home and marrying her would have entailed, and hitch-hiked from my hometown in Florida, up the east coast to North Bay, Ontario, then across Canada to Vancouver, British Columbia and back across the border, down to Portland, across to Salt lake City, St. Louis, down to Nashville and Atlanta and finally back home. Like "Allison" and Dan White, the hundreds of people I met and the experiences of that journey changed me -- in ways that I wouldn't understand until many years later. So, without giving away the ending, I'll simply say that how their relationship ends-up is typical of the post-trail let-down one feels after such an adventure.
I enjoyed how White doesn't so much as "write," as he paints with words, images of the physical and emotional journey he took with "Allison." I wish that he had included many of the photographs that he alluded to in the text, and I would love to have read an Afterword of some 30-40 pages by "Allison" regarding her thoughts and views of Dan White, the journey and what the experience came to mean in her life. It's obvious that she gave so much to Dan and to the journey; it is also obvious that Dan could never have made the trip without her -- and, thus I hope she's getting half the royalties. (smile)
Bottom line -- an honest, well-written, well-crafted book that details the hardships endured by those who take on the challenge to one's endurance and sanity to hike the Pacific Coast Trail.
R. Neil Scott / Middle Tennessee State University
surprisingly great!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-01
Review Date: 2008-08-01
My husband brought this home and I was nonplussed about reading it. Thankfully, I did open it and was hooked after the first few pages. Dan White's humor was terrific and addictive, and the narrative was very compelling. As a backpacker and also as an avid fiction reader, I wholeheartedly recommend this book!
a great read
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-29
Review Date: 2008-07-29
this book got me going immediately. Even if you dont love the author (I dont) he is still hilarious at times and the story is also very moving. If you have never thought of hiking the PCT, it doesn't matter, this is a great tale and well told. I wish I had another one just like it (by which I mean as good).

Dave Barry Is Not Making This Up
Published in Hardcover by Crown (1994-05-17)
List price: $20.00
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Collectible price: $20.00
Average review score: 

Laffs In The Palm Of Your Hand!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-11
Review Date: 2008-02-11
I first got a taste of Dave Barry after coming upon an essay of his online, which described his misadventures at one of those silly "self-improvement" seminars. Needless to say the cracks about Tony Robbins being an android & other stuff basically required a quick change of undies. So, I wanted to experience more of aching tummies & soggy panties, so I bought this book. Unfortunetely, the story wasn't in this one BUT I was treated to absolute hilarity such as Dave's trip to Bimini on his boat named "Buster".....and the embarrassment of being around guys with "more manly" names for boats like "Sea Biceps" & "Testosterone Torpedo" (guys are weird). Then there's his son, who makes poor Dave feel old with the former's earring & penchant for cutting-edge music such as the song "Detachable [...]" (this is a real song, by the way...or as Dave would say, "I'm not making this up". My sister used to hear all the time on the radio back in the 90's). So, if you want a blast, get this book. Oh.......and remember to visit the "Porcelain Throne", first.
Other Books
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-03
Review Date: 2007-09-03
A collection of amusing anecdotes from the American writer, humorist and columnist Dave Barry. He finds all sorts of weird, crazy, stupid and funny stuff that people do, say or come up with all across the United States of America, and puts them into print.
Dave doesn't mind a drop of the droll, Dave doesn't.
Dave doesn't mind a drop of the droll, Dave doesn't.
comedy at its best
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-28
Review Date: 2007-08-28
I have read nearly all of Dave's books, and it never ceases to amaze me that he can be hilarious on each and every occasion. He doesn't duplicate any annecdotes, he simply uses his comic genius to make up new ones.. you will never be bored with Dave's ability to make you rush to the toilet to save wetting the floor, or laughing so hard you feel sick, and the back of your head hurts. This book is my favourite. Every story is funny, clever, and even sometimes sentimental. Please buy this one, you won't regret it. He's on top form.
not my style
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-12
Review Date: 2007-07-12
Sorry, my husband and I listened to this for quite a bit and did not find it funny at all and didn't even want to continue listening to it, it just seemed long and boring--I guess we have a different sense of humor than most of the other reviewers.
Dave Barry is not making this up--except for the parts that he is
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-26
Review Date: 2008-02-26
In addition to following up 1992's "Dave Barry Talks Back" with a collection of his weekly humor columns from the Miami Herald through 1994, this book also includes several longer pieces Dave Barry wrote for other publications, including one about the "natural" birth of his son, an expose of a Western Florida UFO hoax, and a couple of travelogues (of a sort) about a trip to China on the eve of Britain's withdrawal from Hong Kong and a boating trip to Bimini Bay. Also included is a rather serious (for Barry) column about his son being hit by a car while riding his bike, which is actually quite touching.
But of course, the staple of any Dave Barry book is the zany humor, and it is plentiful here, including among many other classic columns the infamous "Bad Song Contest." If you are a Dave Barry fan, you will enjoy this book, and if you haven't discovered him yet, this would be a fine place to start.
But of course, the staple of any Dave Barry book is the zany humor, and it is plentiful here, including among many other classic columns the infamous "Bad Song Contest." If you are a Dave Barry fan, you will enjoy this book, and if you haven't discovered him yet, this would be a fine place to start.

Boss Tweed: The Rise and Fall of the Corrupt Pol Who Conceived the Soul of Modern New York
Published in Hardcover by Carroll & Graf Publishers (2005-01)
List price: $27.00
New price: $4.75
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Collectible price: $35.00
Used price: $2.50
Collectible price: $35.00
Average review score: 

Santa Claus with a diamond pin
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-14
Review Date: 2008-07-14
William M. Tweed didn't exactly invent voter fraud, patronage jobs, and grafting, but he made those shameful New York mainstays yield greater gains than ever before. In "Boss Tweed: The Rise and Fall of the Corrupt Pol Who Conceived the Soul of Modern New York", Kenneth Ackerman revisits the dark side of the Gilded Age, a time when robber barons and shady financiers like Jim Fisk and Jay Gould hatched plots that nearly demolished the U.S. economy, such as Black Friday 1869.
`Boss' Tweed's own underhanded bill-padding nearly bankrupted the city of New York, but unlike Fisk or Gould, he served the public while stealing from it. Recognizing that the influx of Irish and other European immigrants represented a tidal wave of voters, Tweed championed the working class and the poor, and turned Tammany into a semi-official welfare organization. He succeeded in accomplishing home rule for the City of New York and backed the development of Central Park and other beautification projects. But this appealing veneer was a smokescreen for his abuse of public funds, vendettas against political rivals, and gratuitous awarding of expensive `no show' jobs to friends. One especially flagrant abuse was the construction of the `Tweed Courthouse', which was budgeted in 1858 at $250,000 and ended up costing $12 million, with the surplus being pocketed by Tweed and other agents of the Tammany machine. It took the combined effort of New York Times owner George Jones, iconic cartoonist Thomas Nast, and future governor Samuel Tilden to expose him and put him behind bars.
Ackerman has handled Tweed's story well. He resists the temptation to portray his subject as "Santa Claus with a diamond pin" as one contemporary dubbed the cagey politician, but doesn't dismiss him as a total villain either. "Boss Tweed" is a balanced look at an era when New York's political arena was a circus, and the corpulent Tweed was its ringmaster.
`Boss' Tweed's own underhanded bill-padding nearly bankrupted the city of New York, but unlike Fisk or Gould, he served the public while stealing from it. Recognizing that the influx of Irish and other European immigrants represented a tidal wave of voters, Tweed championed the working class and the poor, and turned Tammany into a semi-official welfare organization. He succeeded in accomplishing home rule for the City of New York and backed the development of Central Park and other beautification projects. But this appealing veneer was a smokescreen for his abuse of public funds, vendettas against political rivals, and gratuitous awarding of expensive `no show' jobs to friends. One especially flagrant abuse was the construction of the `Tweed Courthouse', which was budgeted in 1858 at $250,000 and ended up costing $12 million, with the surplus being pocketed by Tweed and other agents of the Tammany machine. It took the combined effort of New York Times owner George Jones, iconic cartoonist Thomas Nast, and future governor Samuel Tilden to expose him and put him behind bars.
Ackerman has handled Tweed's story well. He resists the temptation to portray his subject as "Santa Claus with a diamond pin" as one contemporary dubbed the cagey politician, but doesn't dismiss him as a total villain either. "Boss Tweed" is a balanced look at an era when New York's political arena was a circus, and the corpulent Tweed was its ringmaster.
Great book!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-30
Review Date: 2008-04-30
Riveting, powerful biography of the life and times of Boss Tweed. Somehow this relentless recitation of the rise and fall of a politician both modernly generous and corrupt captures the spirit of the man and his contemporaries with humor and compassion. Couldn't put it down.
A fascinating book about one of the greatest political swindlers
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-27
Review Date: 2008-02-27
The story of Boss Tweed, one of the greatest political swindlers of all time, and how the New York Times and a cartoonist named Thomas Nast brought him down makes for a real page-turner of a book.
This book is illustrated with many of Nast's cartoons and excepts from the Times (including the table showing the routing of money through various bank accounts--discovered through painstaking researxch and tracing of money and vouchers across many accounts and ledgers--which was the astounding smoking gun that finally did Tweed in) giving the reader a real feel for the story.
Fascinating to see the man in all his complexity, he may have swindled millions from the New York coffers (at a time when you could live in comfortable affluence on around $5,000 a year) but he was also responsible for a great many public works, including the Brooklyn Bridge, and for helping the poor of his city.
Those in power over his arrest and confinement don't acquit themselves with honours either making Tweed's tale even more morally complex, especially as none of his co-conspiritors were ever jailed. An interesting man living in interesting times.
This book is illustrated with many of Nast's cartoons and excepts from the Times (including the table showing the routing of money through various bank accounts--discovered through painstaking researxch and tracing of money and vouchers across many accounts and ledgers--which was the astounding smoking gun that finally did Tweed in) giving the reader a real feel for the story.
Fascinating to see the man in all his complexity, he may have swindled millions from the New York coffers (at a time when you could live in comfortable affluence on around $5,000 a year) but he was also responsible for a great many public works, including the Brooklyn Bridge, and for helping the poor of his city.
Those in power over his arrest and confinement don't acquit themselves with honours either making Tweed's tale even more morally complex, especially as none of his co-conspiritors were ever jailed. An interesting man living in interesting times.
Great View of Old School NYC Politics
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-21
Review Date: 2008-01-21
Great book for those who love New York History. Or US history for that matter. From Sheriff of NYC to the White House! This book is an eye opener on how corrupt politics were and currently are.
Question: Can this or does this still happen?
Question: Can this or does this still happen?
Interesting Character
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-11
Review Date: 2007-07-11
William Tweed needed a book written about him. It is interesting to see how the city used to be run and how much more difficult it is to be corrupt today compared to then. Tweed changed america with his ways and I liked the fact the author points out in many ways he was the fall guy for many others.

Plague Maker
Published in Hardcover by Amazon Remainders Account (2006-01-10)
List price: $19.99
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Average review score: 

Tim Downs Delievers Again
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-01
Review Date: 2008-08-01
This story may sound every bit your run-of-the-mill thriller, but it has some unique pieces that keep it in its own category. Downs has an excellent sense of using dialogue to move the story along and using vivid descriptions when necessary. The stories within the story usually held my attention, though I found them slightly less interesting than the main storyline.
I love the sense of realism, the idea that the story may or may not end in a "happily ever after..." manner. Clean writing, snappy lines, and neat characters make this an enjoyable and worthwhile read. Although I must say, Nathan Donovan is no Nick Polchak. Bug Man books still rule, but when you're done all those come back for Plague Maker.
I love the sense of realism, the idea that the story may or may not end in a "happily ever after..." manner. Clean writing, snappy lines, and neat characters make this an enjoyable and worthwhile read. Although I must say, Nathan Donovan is no Nick Polchak. Bug Man books still rule, but when you're done all those come back for Plague Maker.
A little slow
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-08
Review Date: 2008-07-08
This was a good book, just a little too slow for me. The author drags out the plot but throws enough in twists to keep the story going.
Overall, a good novel, with enough action-packed scenes in the last 100 pages to make the whole story worth reading.
Overall, a good novel, with enough action-packed scenes in the last 100 pages to make the whole story worth reading.
The business of life is forgiveness
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-14
Review Date: 2008-02-14
This was my first Tim Downs book. I was very satisfied with his storytelling talent. Although there are some highly graphic and disturbing moments, along with a suspense that builds right down to the last couple of pages, this is not a book that leaves you frazzled. Instead it leaves you emotionally cleansed, sorry to see it end. The wisecracking between chracters is enjoyable. The glimpses of 20th century history are fascinating. The explanations of madman science are educational. I don't wish to rob you of your surprises by illuminating the plot. Another reviewer felt tricked at finding an underlying Chrstian theme. I didn't feel tricked, I felt gratified. Your worldview will definitely make the difference in your level of enjoyment of this fine novel. Strong recommendation.
A Superb Book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-26
Review Date: 2007-10-26
Since America was attacked on 9/11, there have been a plethora of books which utilized the FBI, CIA, Homeland Security as well as creating nimerous scenarios on what might happen if there were another attack. Plague Maker is a superbly crafted novel that lays out the option of using biological terrorism and the story is a disturbing one. It is extremely well researched with characters that have true depth to them. The writer carefully lays out the situation in the initial fifty pages of the novel and builds upon it from there. The book takes off rapidly and is difficult to put down. The various plots are skillfully handled by the writer leading to a satisfying conclusion. Perhaps the books most interesting line comes when one of the characters describes to the Protagonist that there is a great distinction between knowledge and true wisdom. Things that are interspersed through the book add much to its depth in this most satisfying read.
Well thought out
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-25
Review Date: 2007-10-25
I couldn't put this book down. Tim Downs did a beautiful job in developing the characters in the story, and you'll find yourself loving the three main characters. It's amazing how much wisdom the character Li has to offer.
Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm
Published in Hardcover by Golden Pr (1977-06)
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Average review score: 

Perfect book for little girls
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-11
Review Date: 2007-11-11
One of my three favorite books from my childhood. I have read reviews of how difficult this book is to understand or read by small children. Nonsense! I first read this book when I was 6 years old, one year after learning English and had no problem with it. I read it many times until my mother threw it away. I looked for it for a long time and finally found it 54 years after first reading it. I still love it.
Okay Book
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2006-10-22
Review Date: 2006-10-22
This book is okay. I wouldn't read it more than twice. It was really boring till the end. Then it got good. I would recomend this book to kids from ages 9 - teens. Rebecca has a life that i would never want. She is so happy and bouncy. I don't like that. In my opinion, this is book is not very exciting. I was so glad when I finished it. Because then I could read a better book. It was kind of hard to follow, cause a lot of things were going on at once. I really think younger kids should read it. I don't think it deserves a classic. But that is just in my opinon. Read it if you would like. I just didn't like it. It was okay though. So good luck!
Rebecca of sunnybrook farm, how dull.
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2005-10-27
Review Date: 2005-10-27
As I started to read this book I got a sense that it was not going to be the thrilling adventure that I usually look for in a book. This was okay because sometimes you need a book that can slow it down and you can relax with. I am sorry to report that this book was so slow it almost came to a stop. Although it is a story of a girl who moves from her farm home to a small town to live with her aunts nothing more exciting than Rebecca selling enough soap to get a lamp for some friends that aren't very well off happens. While it is a great thing to see family helping family to get an education, something more adventurous like a love interest, or a friend saving her best and most loved toy from the clutches of a wicked aunt could spice up a story. Maybe I am a reader who is not excited by someone learning to sew and this kind of book is your cup of tea but it is not mine. In my opinion the lack of substanance is almost suffocating and I will not be drowned by another reading of this book.
Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm: Unabridged (The Whitman classics library)
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2005-09-21
Review Date: 2005-09-21
It was well worth the wait; my father called me "Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm" when I was a small girl. It is a warm and endearing story. I may have to get some more of the books in the series!
The Eternal Rebecca Randall
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2006-10-16
Review Date: 2006-10-16
Rebecca has been my friend since I read her story in a cheap Whitman hardback when I was a little girl. A lively and creative 10-year-old girl is sent to her maiden aunts to receive a good education, but chafes under the restrictive yoke of her elder aunt. As Rebecca learns to channel her energies into positive action, she remains unquenched by her dour aunt and lends joy to both the younger aunt, but also the elderly Cobbs and her best friend, Emma Jane Perkins. The vocabulary in the story may be a bit high for younger readers as REBECCA was not actually written as a children's story; it was the best seller of the year 1904. There is a sequel, NEW CHRONICLES OF REBECCA, that is worth finding, with more adventures of Rebecca, the Simpson children, and even Emma Jane.

Following Fake Man
Published in Library Binding by Knopf Books for Young Readers (2001-05-08)
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Average review score: 

the most compelling book ever
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-04-17
Review Date: 2006-04-17
I really loved this book i loved the twisted and interisting lives of each caractor and how well the auther descriced wach of them. another thing i loved is how the auther descrided each and every thought of the caractor so well. one of the greatist and most compelling things the auter did is when he describes all the advntures that Homer has and the twinstng and turning adventures and the the auther does a good job in leading you on one way of thinking but at the end the end you find out that it was the rong way of thought and the twist that occures. and at the end how will the auther slowley and descriptlievely brings the story to a great close.....................................
FFM review
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-29
Review Date: 2006-03-29
The story is about Homer Winthrop, his mother and Roger, Homer's friend. The setting is in Maine, where their old house is located. The Winthrops return to Maine unexpectedly, from their home in Boston.
When they arrive, Homer goes to his old room which he thinks is special, because it still has some of his old stuff in it. Homer re-unites with Roger, a neighbor.
Roger tells Homer about a strange man who dresses up like an older person and wears a wig. They call him "Fake Man." As the story unfolds, Fake Man helps Homer find out about his dad, who had died when Homer was only two years old.. This is information that his mother would never talk to him about.
In the end, Homer and Roger find some old stuff belonging to Homer's dad. They use these things to make a tribute to his dad, since Homer now understands what actually happened.
I thought the book was interesting and would recommend it to my friends and anyone who reads this review.
When they arrive, Homer goes to his old room which he thinks is special, because it still has some of his old stuff in it. Homer re-unites with Roger, a neighbor.
Roger tells Homer about a strange man who dresses up like an older person and wears a wig. They call him "Fake Man." As the story unfolds, Fake Man helps Homer find out about his dad, who had died when Homer was only two years old.. This is information that his mother would never talk to him about.
In the end, Homer and Roger find some old stuff belonging to Homer's dad. They use these things to make a tribute to his dad, since Homer now understands what actually happened.
I thought the book was interesting and would recommend it to my friends and anyone who reads this review.
Following Fake Man
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-23
Review Date: 2006-03-23
This book was about a kid and he wanted to know about his Father, his mom will not tell him about him. So he and a new friend try to find him. When they are looking for info. they see some person sneeking around, so they think he Knows about his family some how.
I do recomend this book to someone. I really liked this book so I would think almost everybody my age would like it to! It would also be a good book for a teacher to read to his or her class. I thought it was a great book!
I do recomend this book to someone. I really liked this book so I would think almost everybody my age would like it to! It would also be a good book for a teacher to read to his or her class. I thought it was a great book!
My opinion
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-01-25
Review Date: 2006-01-25
Following Fake Man is definitely an extremely entertaining book for kids. I think this is one of the best books I've read, if you ask me I would say Following Fake Man is a book filled with surprises and would fall under the Mystery category. Although it is a mystery book, it's filled with emotions that teach us how diverse everybody's life is. Following Fake Man certainly keeps your interest throughout the whole book, even in the beginning. It also shows the different point of views from all the characters that vividly put the image in your head. I would give this book 5 stars no matter how old I was, I suggest reading this great book if you haven't already.
5 Stars with Thumbs WAY Up!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-02
Review Date: 2006-03-02
Following Fake Man is an excellent book for kids to read. It has mystery, suspense, and great wording! It is a book where the main character tries to find his past. With help from a rambunctious friend, Homer is tracking and following clues from his past. While following fake man, Homer realizes that it doesn't matter what his past is about, it is what the present is about. Will he find fake man or is it all just a mix up? This is an ideal book for grades 5-8. This book is a MUST read!
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