College and University Books
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A must read for anyone in higher educationReview Date: 2007-05-31

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A meaningful, gentle, and powerful storyReview Date: 2002-04-12

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A Book of Revelation as Love Takes Up the Glass of TimeReview Date: 2004-06-30
Ironically, what makes "Anne of the Island" so romantic is the way it challenges romanticism. Even as a young woman Anne creates a romantic fantasy around the world in which she lives, just like she did at Green Gables where there was the old Snow Queen at the window, the Dryad's Bubble, the Haunted Wood, Lover's Lane and all those "dear spots where memories of the old years bided." Now Anne and Priscilla, her school chum from Redmond, are renting rooms in Patty's Place, and making the home of Miss Patty and Miss Maria into their own. Meanwhile, after a thousand romantic drams and enduring both Diana Barry's wedding and the rejection of Gilbert Blythe's proposal (her second actually), Anne finally meets her Prince Charming, Royal Gardner.
He is handsome and rich, in short, everything that Anne ever dreamed that she wanted in a husband. Then comes the fateful moment when Roy proposes and Anne opens her lips to say her faithful yes. But this is but a false dawn in Anne's life and there is a fateful Book of Revelation that Anne has to endure before love takes up the glass of time. There is romanticism and then there is that which is romantic and Montgomery shows the difference. There is a reason that this character and these books are enduring classics of (supposedly) juvenille literature.
As usual this book is also filled with interesting and colorful characters, such as young Paul and the Rock People, John Douglas who finally speaks at last, and Anne's friend Phillippa Gordon, who also has her eyes opened to the what true love really means. For those who are familiar with the delightful Kevin Sullivan "Anne of Avonlea" sequel there is also the whole episode of "Averil's Atonement" as well as the entire end game with Gilbert. That is the most important part because at long last the final line of Montgomery's original "Anne of Green Gables" novel rings true for our Anne girl.

Heartwarming,touching and brings tears of joy to your eyesReview Date: 1997-01-18

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you feel like you're part of Ann's lifeReview Date: 1999-04-13

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Worth the waitReview Date: 2007-08-02
Aoi House in Love picks up where the second one stopped. It's right after Christmas and the gang is going off to Hatsu con. For some reason I was expecting it to have some of the same elements like in the series "Dramacon" . (The guy in the schoolgirl outfit for instance.) Hatsu con proves to be filled with drama itself. Aoi house collides with those-who-must-not-be-named(Yuri House) and Elle goes about being her bitchy self. The con does brew some romance has we see Alex and Morgan's inevitable romance brewing, Sandy and Maria shyly dancing together at New Years...and Elle realizing she doesn't really love Alex at all. With all this romance happening even Eichiboo gets some special attention.
Overall Aoi house in Love lives up to it's name seeing has most of the characters are falling in love. It was sad at the end beacuse Elle decides to leave with Uri House, leaving Sandy to drive back home.(With hilarious results I might add.)
I can't wait for the 4th book, if the title is a sign than I'm assuming it will be the last one. *tears* I hope not. *sniff* But hey, maybe that means a anime is in the works? *perks up* I hope so...

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Losing all their soulsReview Date: 2007-09-13
Aster fails on every count.
His contention is that, in addition to the older Fellows of All Souls who were appeasers, there was a younger group who wanted to stand up to Hitler, Mussolini and Japan. His evidence is "Salter's Soviet," formally the All Souls Foreign Affairs Group, organized by Arthur Salter. It met 15 times in 1937-8 and included several anti-appeasers, including Rowse, Gilbert Murray, Harold Nicholson, B.H. Liddell-Hart and Harold Macmillan.
The record shows these were not serious men. "Appeasement and All Souls" is primarily a collection of letters, memorandums and diary entries, with minimal commentary and annotation by Aster.
Salter's stated goal was to encompass the range of English (or at least, All Souls) elite opinion, except for the "extreme Right and extreme Left." Supposedly, Salter himself was anti-Government and anti-appeasement, if not as stridently as Rowse.
However, this is hard to believe, because he loaded up the group with fanatical pacifists. One, Lord Allen of Hurtwood, was named chairman, allegedly because of his masterly methods of conducting meetings.
This was, on the face of it, crazy. If you are aiming to move public opinion to a more forceful policy, you don't weight down your pressure group with appeasers, disarmers and League of Nations zealots like Lionel Curtis and Lord Allen. Especially not Allen.
Allen was fatuous, treacherous and indefatigable. Nearly half the book is comprised of his position papers (repetitive but relentless) in favor of giving Hitler what he wanted -- at one point, enunciating "peace at any price." As chairman, he tabled these papers. Of course the discussions were consumed with refuting Allen, so they never got around to opposing appeasement. Allen never tabled a paper for discussion that was critical of Chamberlain.
Had Salter and the rest really meant to challenge the government, they would either have thrown Allen and Curtis overboard; or seceded and formed a new anti-appeasement group.
One purpose of the group was to clear the minds of these academics about contentious issues. Another was, possibly, to issue a position paper. Czechoslovakia was the big issue, but the group never could decide what it thought about Czechoslovakia -- except Allen, who could not wait to throw the Czechs to Hitler's wolves. He was quite clear about the immorality of it; he spoke out again and again against morality.
In early 1938, the group nearly made up its mind that if the British government should ever do anything, its naval power argued for applying force in Spain, not central Europe. However, by the time they almost girded themselves up to bravely indite a letter to The Times, Franco was about to batter down the defenses of Barcelona, so they decided better not.
There is nothing good to say about Chamberlain and Halifax, but even they were not as feckless as these supposed stalwarts for democracy, who could not even stand up to an old, sick pacifist like Allen. How could anybody imagine they would stand up to Hitler?
This is a specialist book (one of three valuable records of English political thought published in the Camden Fifth Series, but the least valuable of the three), and the skimpy annotation will leave any reader not already deeply knowledgeable about Europe in the `30s mystified. It is worth reading (if not worth $90) because it shows how deep the rot had set in in England. Parallels to American politics in the 21st century will present themselves on every other page.

A Beautiful Addition to your library and HomeReview Date: 2003-07-22


the door to your successReview Date: 2000-04-03

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A Wonderful and Informative Guide!Review Date: 2000-03-22
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