Clubs Books


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

Clubs
Westfall
Published in Hardcover by Writers Club Press (2002-10-22)
Author: Arthur Jackson
List price: $24.95
New price: $24.95
Used price: $26.91

Average review score:

excellent adventure
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2002-11-27
an excellent adventure, spiced with hints of symbolism. I loved the dialog between the characters. Well worth reading.

a look into the future
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2002-11-21
A candid look into the future as this conflict grows. Religon and science are the two giants of civilized mankinds mental and social discourse. The continuing conflict is something which involves all of us. Well done.

A wonderful peice of allegory
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2002-11-21
The use of people to personify the forces of religon and science was well done. I especially liked the charecter of Thomas. He adds a magical quality to the book.

A wonderful peice of allegory
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2002-11-21
The use of people to personify the forces of religon and science was well done. I especially liked the charecter of Thomas. He adds a magical quality to the book.

Execellent new novel
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2002-11-20
An excellent novel, of the growing dispute between church and state, the scientific state. Setting the novel in Pennsylvania with it's rich religous history was ideal. The development of juvenile law principles, and the rising use of behavior modifying drugs in this system is timely. Cudos to this author for being brave enough to say so.

Clubs
Where does the brown bear go?
Published in Unknown Binding by Trumpet Club (1992)
Author: Nicki Weiss
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Used price: $0.98

Average review score:

Where Does the Brown Bear Go?
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2001-11-08
I am eight years old. My teacher read us this book when I was in first grade. I like the end when they are all in the bed. My teacher sings it to us like a lullabye. We like that.

Cozy
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2001-07-03
The soft, simple city and country illustrations and the gentle rhythms and add-on patterns of the reassuring text make this warm and loving bedtime story a good choice for early readers and pre-readers alike. Since my toddler was 18 months old, this has been one of our favorites. We have fun adding our own animal sounds to the chain of events, and, of course our own nighttime snuggles and stuffed-animal cuddles at the end.

wonderful poetry
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 1998-04-24
This is sweet book with wonderful ryhmes.
The second page ties in with the first page's
ryhme and it does that throughout the book and at the end of the story you realize that the animals are the child's stuffed toys and that they were out in the places where the child's imagination placed them and that they are all home now because the child has gone to sleep.

This book helps young children get ready for bed.
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 1997-09-28
This book was written by my pre-K teacher. I am now in third grade. This book is a story about a dog, a cat, a monkey, a camel, a seagull, and a brown bear. Each animal has its own page, but the author repeats certain words to give the book rhythm. This is a good book for a parent to read to a child to make the child feel comfortable and at home. By Zoe Jacobson, age 8.

Rhythmic, repetitve text is fun to learn for young children
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 1999-02-06
Not only is this book fun to read for children, but enjoyable for an adult reader -- adding a little rhythm track to the text, and a pat-clap from the children, produced a wonderful lesson for my music students. They learned the text quickly and enjoyed the ending which reminded them of similar "toys come to life when you're not looking" stories.

Clubs
The Wolf Boys' Club
Published in Hardcover by 1st Books Library (2002-06-04)
Author: JJ Christopher
List price: $30.45
New price: $29.59
Used price: $18.94

Average review score:

God sent.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2004-02-02
J.J. Christopher is a breath of fresh air. Many authors come and go before we see one quite like this, but when it does... it makes it well worth the wait. To the author: Tremendous work, I hope you have many more to come.

Excellent book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2000-09-28
I am not a well known book critique but, I have read alot of books. I am not really into the whole sci-fi act because fantasy is more my thing. But this book really caught my attention. J.J. Christopher has awoken in me a urge to find out more about the Complex, the Wolf Boys and anything secretive about the government. The Wolf Boys relate to me and my friends so I can understand how important it is to "run with the pack" so to speak. This book is packed with action, and heart. I would say it is not for the faint of heart . But I could not put it down. This book is a great example of imagination and perfect writing.The plot was well thought out and the placement of words created a vivid picture in my mind. It took me a while to find the climax of the story because of all the action, and suprises. It was an excellent read and I am proud to say that I consider J.J. Christopher to be a good friend of mine. Soon to be author, J.D.E.

The Wolf Boys' Club is great!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2000-09-27
I'm 15, a high school student in Kansas City. My English teacher was reading this book and it looked cool so I got it, and you know what? I couldn't put it down! JJ Christopher's gonna be the next Stephen King, for real! Peace!

Very fast-paced!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2000-09-26
I read this book in about four days. I just couldn't put it down. The plot was enticing and well-thought out and the book flows well because of it. My only suggestion to the author would be to proofread for spelling and grammatical errors a little more carefully. All-in-all, a must read!

The Wolf Boy's Club
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2000-09-29
This book is absolutely riveting. It GRRRRRRabs you by the jugular from the first page and doesnt let go. The characters are stunningly vivid.I have not read such a captavating story in years and I can't wait for J.J. Christopher's next book. The next King?, I think not....This author has already surpassed King. I would absolutely recommend this book to anyone and everyone, In fact I have already started my campaign...The Wolf Boy's Club in every household library!!!!

Clubs
The Abhorsen Trilogy
Published in Hardcover by Science Fiction Book Club (2003)
Author: Garth Nix
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Used price: $3.45
Collectible price: $75.02

Average review score:

The Abhorsen Trilogy
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2004-04-20
This is an adventure that will keep you on your toes. You never know what will happen. Garth Nix develops the characters in detail and describes so well that you can almost feel what the characters are going through. It is a well balanced series that contains just the right amount of adventure, magic, and suspense.

Constant Action
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2005-05-12
I really enjoyed the trilogy, but it's my in my preferred genre of fantasy. This trilogy is great and throroughly recommended if you also like fantasy, especially young adult fantasy. There's tons of action, coupled with the coming of age stories of two girls which are quite compelling.

It's not as strong as His Dark Materials trilogy (which I recommend to everyone). I wouldn't recommend this to all adults regardless of their interests. I wouldn't even recommend this to all adults who are interested in fantasy, because it really does read like a children's book (things I know are supposed to be revealed in the end were predictable because of foreshadowing). I would however recommend this to all children.

A modern classic
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2004-05-12
Garth Nix delves into the dark heart of high fantasy in the Abhorsen Trilogy, three interconnected fantasies about a strange family of necromancers who lay the dead -- and forces of evil to rest. With detailed writing and nuanced, likable characters, this is a modern fantasy classic.

"Sabriel" is the story of a teenage girl living happily at a girl's school, while her necromancer father (the Abhorsen) roams around putting the dead to rest. All that changes when a sending brings her father's sword and bells, meaning that he is dead or incapacitated. So Sabriel takes on her father's duties... and the specter of a horrible evil creature that is reaching out from death to snare her.

"Lirael" takes us to the cold citadel of the Clayr, a race of seers. Young Lirael is depressed because she doesn't have the gift of Sight yet, even though everybody else her age does. But things take a sinister turn when she sets a horrifying, bloodthirsty creature loose, and must work (with the help of the mysterious Disreputable Dog) to get rid of it. But what Lirael doesn't know is that the outside world is in danger too -- from a new evil threat.

"Abhorsen" brings the series to an explosive conclusion. Lirael and her nephew Sameth (along with "cat" Mogget and the Disreputable Dog) are in danger from the Dead. What's more, the Destroyer Orannis has escaped from his prison and is being assisted by an evil necromancer and the Dead called Chlorr -- and a pal of Sameth's. Now Lirael has to stop the Destroyer before he... well, destroys all life in the world.

The Abhorsen Trilogy is a perfect example of dark fantasy, with its grotesque dead, magical bells, enchanted and shadowy beasties. It takes the trappings of high fantasy and lets us see them through a mirror darkly. Not to mention that the characters are likable -- especially the gutsy Sabriel -- and the acid-tongued animals and black humor add a wry spin to the fantasy stories. "Lirael" is a bit limper than the first and third books, since it takes a long time to get going, but it's still a worthy and spellbinding book.

Garth Nix's Abhorsen Trilogy is a thrilling fantasy epic, and not to be missed by anyone who enjoys a little chill down their spine. A must-read for fans of fantasy and horror.

Nix's Old Kingdom trilogy is one of the best ever
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2004-10-03
For those of you who feel that dragons, unicorns, and bards are a bit overdone nowadays, this fantasy trilogy offers up a heroine who binds the dead with a bandolier of bells. The Geography of Death is lovingly delineated, from the prologue where Sabriel is born and dies and is rescued from the First Gate of Death by her father, to the third book in the trilogy, where the new Abhorsen braves Death in the form of a river, a waterfall, pools of black water, strange currents that suck the spirit from the flesh.

Sabriel herself is an English schoolgirl, recently graduated from Wyverley Academy with a "first in English, equal first in Music, third in Mathematics, seventh in Science, second in Fighting Arts and fourth in Etiquette. She had also been a runaway first in Magic..." A visitation from the Dead sends Sabriel on a quest through the magical Old Kingdom, in order to reunite her father's body with his spirit which is trapped within the Fourth Gate of Death. She has to do battle with a really nasty necromancer-Adept, and rescue a prince who is a bit of a figurehead at first but who finally develops into a memorable character in his own right. Sabriel is both helped and hindered by a very non-cuddly cat named Mogget.

"Lirael" is the middle book this remarkable fantasy series. If I ever die and go to fantasy heaven, I hope it resembles Nix's immense library beneath glacier and mountain, where each door opens into a separate mystery. In the catacombs beneath the library, Lirael discovers how to turn herself into an ice otter or a barking owl, reads "The Book of Remembrance and Forgetting", and duels with the monstrous Stilken.

However, "Lirael" isn't just about Lirael. Prince Sameth, heir apparent to Sabriel as the Old Kingdom's champion against evil necromancers, also comes of age in this volume. There are plenty of evil necromancers to go around. In fact, at the end of this book, it appears as though they are winning the war to turn the Old Kingdom into a kingdom of the dead.

"Abhorsen" is a direct continuation of "Lirael," with the ex-assistant librarian and her companion, Prince Sameth carrying on the battle against Hedge and the evil he is digging up at Red Lake. Although Prince Sameth was meant to be the Abhorsen-in-Waiting, heir to the powers of 'The Book of the Dead' and the seven bells, Lirael now takes up that role, and Sam seeks his destiny as a descendant of the mysterious Wallmakers, who built the barrier between the magical Old Kingdom and the mundane kingdom of Ancelstierre. The two will need all of the magic they can conjure up against an enemy that threatens not only the Charter, but all living beings.

The swirl and cross-currents of life gradually ebb as the dead pass through gate after gate on Garth Nix's nameless river--a river like Styx or Lethe that runs through each of our subconscious underworlds as a legacy of our water-bound gestation. It is an eerie experience to remember that journey of birth--only this time in the wake of the dead--in this marvelous fantasy trilogy.



Clubs
The Absence of Space and Time
Published in Hardcover by Writers Club Press (2002-11)
Author: Christopher Scott Sarno
List price: $24.95
New price: $24.93
Used price: $25.28

Average review score:

Lyrical Journey to Self
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2005-10-25
The Absence of Space and Time is a gay themed novel about a 20something who arrives in the big city of Atlanta after growing up in a small town. Justin is the lead character in Absence and he narrates his youthful journey for the reader. Taking up prostitution as his means of self support, Justin provides a running social commentary on many things that are of concern to young gay men. He speaks to the Abercrombie and Fitch culture and its allure and simultaneous repulsiveness. The character is remarkably introspective and insightful and that is one of the most enjoyanle aspects of this book. Justin shares his candid thoughts and feelings on loneliness, self identity, the essential human need to belong and the anguish he wrestles with over the future of his life vrs. the reality of his economic need for survival in the present. While the book is set wihin the context of Justin's life as a prostitute, the book is not pulp fiction by any account.

While an offbeat path for a novel to venture into the developmental issues of a young gay male, the Absence of Space and Time does an outstanding job in doing just that. Author Christopher Scott Sarno is an extremely capable writer and I look forward to more of his works in the future. James J. Maloney, Saint Paul, Minnesota, USA

I can't wait for his next book
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2003-09-05
I heard about Chris' book from another writer, and as I enjoyed his work, took his word that this book would be good. I thoroughly enjoyed it. I only wish that Justin the main character, had followed his heart. We all know that in real life that doesn't always happen either. It was well written, and easily drawn in to the story and the characters. I look forward to his next book.

Sexy and Real
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2003-02-04
Spending my "coming out" years in Atlanta allowed me to relate to this book from the start, hence my initial reason for purchasing it. Set in Atlanta, it is an interesting and honest account of a boy's life as a reluctant prostitute. His humble beginning, noble attempt to define himself, and his subsequent downfall are chronicled with finesse and candor. While I can see why some have labeled this book "erotica," it really is more of a narrative with erotic moments. The story itself revolves around the sex but focuses more on the character's predicaments. All in all, it was a quick and enjoyable read that definitely delivered what it promised.

A fresh look at the gay coming-of-age process...
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2003-02-09
From the safety of his parent's home to the intoxicating streets of Atlanta, young Justin is rapidly thrust into a world of sex and sin. The events that unfold are told from the perspective of this "reluctant" callboy, and it's through Justin's singular interpretation and frank observations that we are delivered a fresh narrative revolving around a common theme. But beyond the basic story we find an underlying deeper message, rare with these kinds of tales. By providing a unique and thought-provoking study in duality, Christopher Scott Sarno blurs the boundaries between right and wrong in an attempt to understand the ways in which gay men behave. He forces us to examine our choices, our needs, and the consequences of our desires. A fine first novel.

Clubs
Addie Meets Max (Science I Can Read Book)
Published in Hardcover by HarperCollins Publishers (1985-01)
Author: Joan Robins
List price: $9.95
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $10.00

Average review score:

Addie Meets Max
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2002-08-26
My own two boys and numerous classes of my kindergarten children have truly enjoyed this book! It is the wonderful tale of a new friendship that starts out with a very bumpy beginning. This book lends itself quite easily to dramatic readings which my kinderkids thoroughly enjoy. I am delighted to find that there are two more books about Addie!

Addie and Max
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2001-12-10
Addie and Max is a great book for all the little ones around your house. This book shows that you can't judge someone (and their dog) before you get to know them. You never know, they could turn out to be your best friend. A good lesson to be learned from this little book. For that reason I rated the book a five.

Addie and Max
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2001-12-03
Addie and Max is a great book for all the little ones that you have around your house. This book show that you cant judge someone (and their dog) before you get to know them you never know they could turn out to be one of your best firneds. I rated this book a 5.

Great Illustrations; Simple Story and Characters
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-01-05
No big time social messages or sensitivity lessons here. Just a story about two kids who are new neighbors and who each have normal levels of healthy goofiness. Great illustrations, contemporary settings, simple story with a plot but no tension, drama, or irony. An easy reader for the advanced first grader or the average second grader. I've also read it aloud several times and found that my kids do not tire of these endearing characters. There are other books with these characters in the series.

Clubs
Alister MacKenzie's Cypress Point Club
Published in Hardcover by Wiley (2000-10-29)
Author: Geoff Shackelford
List price: $45.00
New price: $24.68
Used price: $24.67

Average review score:

Alister Mackenzie's Cypress Point Club
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-02
This books captures the spirit, the history and the grandeur that is Cypress Point Golf Club. Alister Mackenzie was a golf architect extraordinaire. The black and white photo's capture the essence of a dream and the genesis of one of the foremost courses ever built. I thoroughly enjoyed this book and recommend it to anyone that has a deep and abiding appreciation of the game and it's history. Makes a great "Coffee Table" book.

great history of cypress point
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-16
if you have ever visited the monterrey peninsula and are a golfer, you should read this book. great history. amazing stroy.

Fanfare for Cypress Point
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-14
An excellent read, great historical pictures, this documentary of the building of Cypress Point takes one back to another era of golf deveolpment. If you are a historian of the golf course, this piece of history is a must, Geoff has done a great job of putting it together. The book is timeless.

Exceptional Historic Document
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2000-12-22
If you have any interest in Alister MacKenzie's genius, or the great golf architecture of the 1920s, you must have this book. Called by many the Sistine Chapel of Golf, Cypress Point is one of the most exceptional courses on the planet. This book is an exceptional document of how it began. Magnificent full page b&ws show every hole of the early Cypress Point Club, while the text, much from the contemporaneous hand of Robert Hunter (MacKenzie's partner), tells how the course design and construction came together. Shackleford has done a wonderful service for golf historians everywhere by compiling this masterpiece.

Clubs
All Eagles Are Supposed to Soar: Positive Teachers Give Their Students Wings
Published in Paperback by Writers Club Press (2002-12)
Author: Janice K. Farley
List price: $14.95
New price: $4.99
Used price: $0.95

Average review score:

A dedicated self-help guide to improving teaching
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-10-07
Accessibly written by Janice Kathleen Farley (a high school English teacher of fourteen years' experience), All Eagles Are Supposed To Soar is a practical and "real world" guidebook to using patience, positive language, compassion, encouragement within a classroom context in order to motivate students to reach their highest potential. A dedicated self-help guide to improving teaching, and divided half into upbeat exhortations and anecdotes, and half into consumable pages allowing the reader to take notes on observations concerning positive and negative teaching styles ("Positive teachers listen" versus "Negative teachers turn away") All Eagles Are Supposed To Soar is especially recommended reading for novice instructors and has much of enduring value for more seasoned classroom teachers as well.

A book coming in the fullness of its time.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-05-20
Janice Farley's book title "ALL EAGLES ARE SUPPOSED TO SOAR" is another way of repeating the much-used political cliché, "No Child Left Behind." Her book chronicles the teaching paths of two people -- one has tenure and the other is newly on the job. Farley advances the story line with six sub-themes, each of which is the mark of a Positive Teacher. Each trait promotes the student to learn to soar. The book also contains a self-analysis section for the instructor, suggesting over forty ways to gauge and enhance the teacher-student relationship.
As a longtime volunteer in an adult education school, I have tutored many students in math and reading. Most learned the hard way that they need an education. Hearing opportunity knock from behind a locked door, they return to gain a key to open that door, their graduate equivalent diploma. If every teacher, either new or tenured, read and apply the basics that Farley itemizes in her book, fewer people would need this subsequent one-on-one tutoring.

ALL EAGLES ARE SUPPOSED TO SOAR
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-02-21
I THINK THE BOOK IS VERY WELL WRITTEN AND PROVIDES SOME POSITIVE POINTS FOR TEACHERS. IF ALL TEACHERS WERE TO HAVE THE SAME TEACHING TECHNIQUES AS THE INDIVIDUAL IN THIS BOOK OUR SCHOOL SYSTEMS WOULD BE A BETTER PLACE. I THINK THAT ALL TEACHERS NEED TO READ THIS BOOK. I WOULD RECOMMEND THIS BOOK, THE AUTHOR DONE A TERRIFIC JOB IN WRITTING THIS BOOK.

all eagles are supposed to soar
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-02-20
I THOUGHT THE BOOK WAS WELL WRITTEN. I THINK THAT IF ALL TEACHERS HAD THE SAME POSITIVE ATTITUDE AS THE TEACHER IN THIS BOOK OUR SCHOOL SYSTEMS WOULD BE A BETTER PLACE. I THINK THE AUTHOR DID AN EXCEPTIONAL JOB. I WOULD RECOMMEND THIS BOOK VERY HIGHLY TO ANY ONE WHO IS THINKING OF PURCHASING IT.

Clubs
AMC Guide to Outdoor Leadership
Published in Paperback by Appalachian Mountain Club Books (2003-04-01)
Author: Alex Kosseff
List price: $15.95
New price: $5.49
Used price: $3.76

Average review score:

A comprehensive and readable guide
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-07-06
Alex Kosseff has written a fine guide to all aspects of outdoor leadership, with outstanding sections on risk management and the consensus method of decision-making. An important purchase for trip leaders whether new or experienced and definitely worth the wait caused by the delay in publication.

Emphasizing necessary qualities in leadership and character
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2003-10-19
Alex Kosseff's AMC Guide To Outdoor Leadership is a solidly presented and thoroughly "user friendly", 280-page instructional guide to being a competent leader for outdoor excursions, up to and including activities with the potential to be life-threatening. Emphasizing necessary qualities in leadership and character, and taking into awareness the importance of group cohesion, balanced decision-making, keeping a cool head in a crisis and more, the AMC Guide To Outdoor Leadership is an excellent interpersonal guide offering principles applicable to all walks of life, not just the walks through a wilderness.

Enriching outdoor adventure
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2003-04-19
Alex Kosseff's Outdoor Leadership is a thoughtful and thorough review of the leadership qualities required for safe, fullfilling outdoor adventure. The book presents a balanced emphasis on the leader's need for hard or technical skills and soft skills such as dealing with group dynamics and caring for the participants. I read this book from the view of a parent who led his family on many wonderful wilderness adventures for which we were not completely prepared and found innumerable ideas that would have made the trips even more rewarding. Kosseff's use of stories from his own experiences and those of others tranforms a potentially dry subject into thoroughly enjoyable reading. The stories clearly illustrate the major points of the book.
Outdoor Leadership has a wealth of knowledge that will benefit an audience from adventuresome parents to professional guides.

Helped me be a better leader
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2004-05-13
I've been working as an outdoor leader and whitewater guide for three years, first with kids on summer programs and currently with a variety of age groups year-round. This book helped me to evaluate the way I work with trip participants and co-workers. It opened my eyes to new ideas and has greatly expanded the bad of tricks I use in the field. I appreciated the safety-first focus and the author's friendly tone. Also, the stories, some of which are classics, made the book entertaining. It is unfortunate I didn't read this book a couple of years ago when I was launching into this line of work. If you don't have a lot of education in this field (I was a biology major) but you're involved in some outdoor leadership role this book can be a great help to you. Personally I'm loaning it to all the guides I work with.

Clubs
Anton Chekhov: Selected stories
Published in Unknown Binding by Walter J. Black (1943)
Author: Anton Pavlovich Chekhov
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Used price: $5.00
Collectible price: $15.00

Average review score:

Stories in the 1960 Signet Edition
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-12-14
Stories in the Signet 1960 edition: 1. The Confession 2. He Understood 3. At Sea - A Sailor's Story 4. A Nincompoop 5. Surgery 6. Ninochka - A Love Story 7. A Cure for Drinking 8. The Jailer Jailed 9. The Dance Pianist 10. The Milksop 11. Marriage in Ten or Fifteen Years 12. In Spring 13. Agafya 14. The Father 15. In Exile 16. Three Years 17. The House with the Mansard -- An Artist's Story 18. Peasants 19. The Darling.

A good representative collection of Chekhov's stories.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2001-02-14
This collection of stories and tales are drawn from the years 1883-1898 and offers the reader a good sampling of Chekhov's prose style, as well as his insight into the nineteenth century Russian character. The characters that occupy places in these stories represent every segment of Russian society: from land owner to peasant, from the scholar to the merchant, from the honest to the perfidious. Chekhov was a doctor by education and training, and this scientific background allowed him to approach his subjects with an objective detachment with little inclination to make his characters "grow." Therefore, Chekhov portrays his characters as they actually were, and never makes a moral judgement as to any weaknesses that might be uncovered.

Chekhov wrote hundreds of these stories and tales in addition to his work as a dramatist, and this element of detachment runs through both genres. If, however, the author assumes a detachment from his characters, he never loses hope for a better day when poverty and ignorance will be eliminated. This theme is also repeated in his dramatic works.

The translation by Ann Dunnigan is a good one and enables the non-Russian reader to fully enjoy Chekhov's simple but beautiful style.

Chekhov in Top Form
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2000-10-29
Chekhov may have been from a different culture and era, however, his legacy still leaves an impact on millions of readers and writers worldwide. No storyteller thus far, has been able to blend humor and tragedy in the fashion that made Chekhov so universally loved. Selected Stories is a sampling of some of his finest works. With compassion and delicacy, Chekhov writes of the lives of ordinary people who are struggling to overcome conflict, however trivial their problems may be. One story deals with a man who must teach his young son not to smoke even though he himself is a smoker. Another story describes how a middle-aged man is thought peculiar by family and friends because he has never married. These are just a few examples of how this century-old Russian literature is still relevant to today's frame of mind. Chekhov's talent cannot be overstated. His life was short but what he left behind was majestic and grand.

A truly wonderful book from a great Russian wordsmith
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2000-05-28
In the introduction to this book, some compare Chekhov's writing to lace: the beauty of his stories are as much about what's left out as what's left in. Indeed, to a certain extent, that is true. In this book you will find some of the most gently funny and heartbreakingly poignant stories ever written. His writing is almost that of a parish priest recounting the tales of his town, in that he passes no judgement on even the most vile of the characters he has created, but instead allows us to judge each character for ourselves. It's a wonderful glimpse, not only at late-Czarist Russia, but at humanity in general. I highly recommend this book.


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