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

England
Ultra-Violet's Pickled Egg Cookbook: Plucky Prescripts from the Show Me State
Published in Spiral-bound by Rexdale Pub (2000-12-01)
Authors: Violet S. Clayton and Carl T. Shepherd
List price: $16.95
New price: $13.73
Used price: $7.76

Average review score:

Ultra-Violet's VERY GOOD Pickled Egg Cookbook
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2002-08-13
I thought the recipes contained in here were very good. There are all sorts of recipes that will suit everyones tastes, from Super Hot to Very Mild. Things that you never thought would go into a pickled egg recipe, such as chili pepper, ginger root, cinnamon, hot pepper sauce, jalapeno peppers, and Old Bay seasoning are in a lot of these tasty recipes.

This book also has amusing tidbits of information about the author and her family interspersed with the State of Missouri facts. I highly recommend this book if you or your family enjoys pickled eggs and "something different".

WHAT A FIND!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2002-06-07
Here's a treasury of pickled egg recipes (more than 40),plus a mostly humorous collection of biographical highlights of author Violet May Steele/Clayton's very unusual life. There are also many , probably little-known facts about the state of Missouri, all in one convenient, spiral-bound book. Three different jars of eggs are pickling in our refrigerator right now, with Annie Campbell's Picnic Eggs (pg. 40) just test/tasted after 7 days in brine. They are outstanding and very mild! Divided between hot & spicy and sweet, there's a pickled egg here for everyone's taste, with added information on how to boil,peel and care for eggs. As a bonus, this must be the only book ever to be dedicated to a White Leghorn hen. Named Lady Macduff, this busy chicken holds the one-year egg-laying record of 303 eggs produced in 1913,according to the Oregon State Agricultural Experimental Station. This is egg-zactly (sorry!)the right gift for a cookbook collector, a true egg lover, or just a real fun read for anyone.

Ultra Violet's Pickled Egg Cookbook
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2002-06-02
Beside having great recipes for pickled eggs, this book would make a great gift for anyone living in Missouri or from Missouri. It has many historical facts, along with some funny stories. Happy pickling.

Peter Piper Never Picked a Peck of These Pickled Eggs!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2002-05-31
Ultra-Violet's Pickled Egg Cookbook. Just another cookbook? Ha! At first glance this book reveals itself to be both shocking and practical. Shocking in that one does not expect to see a purple chicken in apron and high heels -- the nature of which is revealed once you get into the book -- and practical because it has stain resistant glossy covers and is spiral bound, thus allowing it to lay flat, making it ideal for the kitchen. Open the covers and you will find a cookbook like no other. The topic, pickled eggs, is perhaps a little unusual. I had no idea there were so many ways to pickle eggs. The recipes are excellent and they are guaranteed to change your taste for pickled eggs, but it is the presentation which is absolutely delightful. It makes this book worth having if you never pickle a single egg. The anecdotes, historical references and trivia, and the wonderful style in which their story is told that makes this book a winner. You won't be able to keep a smile off your face, perhaps not a tear from your eye and certainly not a giggle from invading your heart, as you read this one.

Great Cookbook - Fun to read!!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2002-05-26
I love this cookbook. I never knew you could do so much with pickled eggs! The stories about Ultra-Violet were entertaining and heartwarming. I also enjoyed all the litte tidbits about the state of Missouri

I love the names of the recipes. I've never much cared for pickled eggs but I'm going to try some of these recipes. If Ultra-Violet's family enjoyed them all those years - they must be good!

England
Wilt
Published in Paperback by Overlook TP (1999-11-01)
Author: Tom Sharpe
List price: $13.95
Used price: $19.93

Average review score:

Tom Sharpe does it again.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-07-15
Henry Wilt is just a regular guy with 'semi' normal thoughts and ambitions, trying to get somewhere in life, except that those around him pay little or no attention to him at all. This drives him to conconct some wayward plan to remove the main thing that's kept him where he is: his wife, Eva. All things are going swimmingly until a chance-meeting with their new neighbours shifts his whole world to one where anything ridiculous and downright unbelievable ends up making a lot of sense.

It's the effortless way that Tom Sharpe interlocks the characters and circumstances in his books that makes them so addictive. I've never read a book where I literally burst out laughing, only to have to sink deeper into my seat to avoid the quizzical looks from those around me. I loved Blott On The Landscape and Porterhouse Blue (and I didn't think he could top them!), but Wilt is by far the best one I've read...and judging by the reviews that Amazon readers have been giving his other books, it seems the journey for me has just begun.

The Master of the Absurd
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-20
Wilt began Tom Sharpe's peculiar and irreverant view of life that is expanded throughout all his books since. One step outside the normal leads to two steps and before we know it we are in a parallel universe of the absurd that is very, very funny, outrageous, and essentially human, warts and all. Tom Sharpe has inspired some of the best new humour writer's of today. I think particularly of Robert Fox, who in Red Fox Goose Green takes the everyday in English village life -- the fox hunt, the church service, the pub -- and breathes Tom Sharpe style farce into the institutions that made Britain what it is.

Fantastic clever, witty and dirty British humor...
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2001-08-31
If you enjoy satire, and you like it laced with sexual innuendo, profanity and wit, you will love Tom Sharpe's books, but you will particularly love Wilt, which takes you into the world and never-ending irony of lower-class British academia. Henry Wilt is miserable in his existence as a "Tech" lecturer, married to Eva, his incorrigibly energetic, enthusiastic and critical wife. He attempts to escape by way of fantasizing how he might murder Eva, who has recently taken up with the sexually wacky American couple next door. After an embarrassing encounter with an inflatable doll, Wilt decides to practice murder on it, and ends up being accused of murdering Eva. A fantastic read.

I laughed like I was crazy....
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2002-08-06
I bought this book 15 years ago when traveling. While waiting for a change of planes at Heathrow, I started reading, and couldn't put it down. I started chuckling to myself, then laughing out loud, then laughing so it hurt!! Other passengers were staring at me. I showed them what I reading and some of them nodded knowingly.

It is the funniest book I have ever read!

Out Loud Funny
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2002-12-10
This is Sharp's best novel yet, the second detailing the life of Wilt a college lecturer and his severely disfunctional family. In what is basically a farce Sharpe's satire bites deep into every subject he touches, as Wilt comes under investigation by the police for drug dealing, infiltrates a US nuclear air base and has to use face cream to cool his burning uncontrolable penis. If my description of this novel sounds manic, the reason is simple, the book is manic. As an Englishman living in the US I am not sure if the humor travels well, but I hope my American friends can appreciate it, because this book is one of only three (all written by Tom) capable of making me laugh out loud wherever I am reading it (which can be most embarrasing). Try it and enjoy a different view of life and then be thankful you don't have to live Wilt's life.

England
Winter is Past (Regency Series #1) (Steeple Hill Women's Fiction #3)
Published in Paperback by Steeple Hill (2003-12-01)
Author: Ruth Axtell Morren
List price: $12.95
New price: $11.68
Used price: $4.34

Average review score:

Excellent novel, but with an exception....
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-11
Ruth Axtell Morren is a wonderful writer and one of my favorite authors, and I agree with the other reviewers that this is an excellent book.

However, I do take exception to one of the underlying ideas in the novel---that is, the repeated assertion (by the Methodist heroine to the Jewish hero) that Judaism and the Church of England are "dead religions" full of "meaningless ritual." I think such claims are offensive to readers who might be part of liturgical/sacramental Christian churches (Catholic, Orthodox, Anglican, Episcopalian, Lutheran, etc.). The implication is that one cannot truly encounter Christ in those churches and that people in those churches are just practicing a "works-based" sort of useless faith, which is an unfair generalization.

I had the opportunity to dialogue with Ruth Axtell Morren herself about this novel, and she explained to me that at the time she wrote the book, she was an "on-fire pentecostal" and that the Methodist church of the early 1800s was the closest thing she could find to the sort of church she felt most at home in. She also said that she has since grown a lot, as a Christian and as a writer, and that she now has a more generous view of Christian churches as a whole.

Originally, though I liked the story very much, I was rather disappointed in the novel because of the prejudice I felt was being demonstrated towards liturgical types of churches. But now that I've heard the author's side of the story, I can understand better and forgive the mistake.

Readers should enjoy this novel, but take care not to absorb the notion that one must be a Methodist (or belong to some other non-liturgical Christian church) in order to truly worship the Lord. There are a great many vibrant, Christ-centered liturgical/sacramental churches; the rituals are only meaningless if you refuse to see the meaning in them or to let the Holy Spirit work on your heart.

For my part, I am looking forward to reading more novels by this fabulous author!

A good romance!!!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-30
First, I would like to make mention that while this is the first book published in this series, I highly recommend reading "Dawn in My Heart" first. It clearly happens before this story on the timeline and gives you a good background on Althea, the main character. Although this truly is the better of the stories, references to the events in the other are made throughout this book.

That said, this book was a wonderful story, truly romantic. The characters are extremely likeable. Conversions are believable (which usually seem unrealistically abrupt in most books of this genre) and romance buds BEFORE it blooms (another thing rushed in other books). Everything about this story unfolds in such a subtle and wonderful way. Modern day struggles in faith are faced in this book and are faced in such a realistic and wonderful way. The emotions and feelings of Morrens characters are so well described you can feel what they are.

This is such a wonderful book. I recommend reading all of Morren's books. They are all spectacular.

Wonderful book!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-12-11
I just finished reading Winter is Past and absolutely loved it. I had intended to savor this book slowly but got so caught up in the story and beautifully written characters that I devoured almost 400 pages in a few days. I love Ms. Morren's books and have read every one of them - although I love all her books, Winter is Past was especially riveting. I loved watching Simon and Althea fall in love and the struggles they endure both together and inwardly made the book deep, rich and so very satisfying. I can't wait for more of her books!

An Inspiring Novel
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2005-10-23
Winter is Past
Ruth Axtel Morren has created her first compelling master piece. Winter is past an inspirational- historical novel that will captivates every reader's heart. After being raped Althea Breton renounced to her life of wealth and social position to serve the Lord. She lived her life working t at children orphanages and nursing the sick.
Simon Aguilar needed a trustworthy woman to care for his seriously ill daughter: Rebecca. Althea accepted to work for him as a favor to her brother even though she didn't want to do anything with a converso (as men like Aguilar were known) were more common in nineteenth-century England. Simon Aguilar, a Sephardic Jew who has made a nominal conversion to Christianity in order to realize his goal of a political office. The author herself descended from Shaphardim which makes the novel credible.
When Althea Breton arrives to act as Rebecca's governess she certainly has no idea what Simon is like. Althea hopes that when she is no longer needed in the Aguilar household, she can return to her life in service to the poor, never knowing of what would happen between them. The love between them grows and they acknowledge it, but they are wary because of their individual backgrounds and secrets.
Winter is Past is a very touching novel which captures the essence of time. This well crafted story gives great description of the living conditions in London and Sephardic culture in England at the time. Morren brings a lot of historical background, making the novel a success. I took great pleasure reading her novel; it is a great piece of writing which I personally can connect with. I recommended it to all Christian fiction readers, it will make you rejoice.

Maria A. Cervantes

Very unique book!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2005-05-12
I agree this book is very well written. The characters are very believable and well developed. Althea, the main character, will challenge you in your own walk as a believer. Simon, the male counterpart, is a Jewish man who is really in some ways is the family's "sacrificial lamb" to acquire their representative in the English government. This really is a very profound book for a first time author, or any author! My only complaint is that in giving Althea's traumatic past the author gives a more graphic description (I'm talking one line) than I think is appropriate for a Christian Novel. It compares to Christy by Catherine Marshall. My concern is not the married woman that read it but the unmarried Christian women. But other than that this book is superb!

England
Acadia Revealed: The Complete Guide
Published in Paperback by Destination Press (2000-07-01)
Author: Jay Kaiser
List price: $18.95
Used price: $0.35

Average review score:

Excellent, comprehensive guide
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2003-08-12
Used alongside a more comprehensive trail guide, this book kept my wife and me busy for the entire two weeks we were there. It offers an excellent insider's perspective, with a fresh view of the major tourist attractions and a lot of tip-offs to hidden gems.

Get a trail map and a hiking guide, though. Acadia Revealed contains some great ideas for cool hikes, but it's not so hot for showing you the actual trails. Thomas A. St. Germain's "A Walk in the Park" (incorrectly listed here as out of print) is an excellent guide to the trails. It's available on Mt. Desert Island at the Port in a Storm bookstore, Somesville.

Let Jay be your guide
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2002-06-30
Jay Kaiser has done a wonderful job writting a comprehensive, interesting and helpful travel guide to Acadia. The book has information for any sort of trip: Whether you're interested in adventure (camping and rugged hikes) or relaxation (staying at an inn and finding great restaurants), this book will take you where you want to go. Lots of lovely pictures, helpful maps and lively comentary. I'm so glad to have had this book with me throughout my recent trip to Acadia to make it clear what sights I couldn't miss. I can't wait to return because there is so much left to discover!

Comprehensive insider's guide
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2002-06-18
For the type of person who needs to know the intimate details surrounding your destination, this book is a must. It touches on history, geography, geology of the region in a concise, logical manner, while offering an encompassing view of the activities, layout, and surrounding area. Pictures and detailed maps are scattered throughout the book providing a sense of place and are a trip planner's dream. PLUS, Mr. Kaiser includes an overview of the Maine lobster including eating instructions. Talk about covering all your bases! All in all, a very informative, detailed covering of Acadia and its surrounding area with an insider's take to avoiding crowds and hitting little known spots.

Beautiful presentation
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2001-10-02
This guide is beautifully prepared & informative. Color photographs decorate nearly every glossy page; maps are large and easy to read. Whether you are looking for a B&B, a place to eat, historical information, a driving tour, or challenging hikes, the author takes care of you. My only caveat is that the book is rather expensive if all you want is to hike or drive the island for an afternoon. The park provides helpful maps for this purpose. Still, if you can find an inexpensive used guide , I'd recommend it even for a one-day trip.

Thank you Mr. Kaiser!!!
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2001-10-28
This book is a must have for those who have experienced the beauty or have the desire to experience the beauty and offerings of Acadia National Park. Mr. Kaiser has finally produced the guide to do Acadia justice. You'll learn all the side trips, cool lunch spots, etc. to enjoy on a Saturday afternoon hike with a buddy, and you'll also have the memory of your journey when you get home through Jay's pictures!

England
Acadia: The Complete Guide: Mt. Desert Island & Acadia National Park
Published in Paperback by Destination Press (2005-05)
Author: James Kaiser
List price: $22.99
New price: $14.30
Used price: $14.35

Average review score:

First-hand knowledge
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-26
I really enjoyed this travel book. We're heading to Acadia National Park this summer and I feel like I'm well equipped to make good use of our time. I particularly liked James' style ... young, smart, no BS. I'm taking him up on some of his off-the-beaten-path recommendations. I feel like I've gotten the inside scoop from a local down at the corner diner. Keep up the good work Jim. I'll look for your book when we get around to heading out west.

Great Guide
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-23
Only used the Bar Harbor and Acadia stuff, but overall it's a great guide to Mt. Desert Island. Hike the Beehive!

Excellent Guide Book!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-08
I highly recommend this guide book. The author takes you on a very personal look at this incredible state park in Maine. The photography is amazing, as well.

A must have for the first time visitor
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-18
Terrific book! We visited Acadia for the first time this year. The author's descriptions are excellent, but most important his recommendations (on restaurants, things to do, which hikes to make, etc) are excellent. He gives clues on where to go for those seeking to avoid the crowds, and he also describes the 'must-do' tourist things on Acadia. Of the various guides we brought with us on our Maine trip, this was hands down the most useful.

This is a beautiful book
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-22
I have many travel guides to beautiful places around the United States, but this book is the best I have seen. The photos are stunning, and there is just the right amount of information for a first time traveler to the area. I am really happy that I chose this as my guide to Acadia.

England
Blitz Cat (Piper)
Published in Paperback by Macmillan Children's Books (1995-10)
Author: Robert Westall
List price: $4.95
New price: $89.54
Used price: $0.13

Average review score:

A Cat's Love Story
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-21
Blitz Cat is the love story of a cat and her special person. When Lord Gort, a cat, discovers her special person has left, she goes in search of him. It's WWII and he's a fighter pilot she seeks through psi trailing.

The story reveals the vulnerability a lone cat faces as she traverses across countries. People and other animals can be friends or foes. Lord Gort's determination never waivers and you cheer her through myriad adventures.

great and interesting!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-02-06
Blitz cat is a great and detailed story about a cat who runs away from home during the war to find her true owner. Along the way she meats many friends,has many kittens and brings good and BAD luck to people she meets.

A blatant piece of antiwar propaganda, totally unsuited to its target audience!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-07-17
This book won the "Smarty Award" for children's literature in the 9-11 year old age group. If you understand that literary awards are given for political correctness, not literary merit, you'll know what's going on

The book is actually a rattling good yarn about life on the Home Front in World War II. The only problem is that it is written from the anti-war perspective of the 1980s. As a result, it dwells excessively on the horrors of war, especially the war in the air, with great emphasis on the gruesome details of what happens to people on the ground when bombs go off:

" ... the metal was all buckled and shiny where the bullets had knocked the paint off... And red seeped from the holes. A drop fell on his hand, and he licked it and it tasted of blood... "

"... a fireman being led by two others, his face like a cooked steak and his pale eyes unseeing, rolling in all directions..."

"... in the dim light of the distant fire he saw the dried foam around [the horses'] mouths, the tiny burns and wounds from the cinders..."

"... she went up in tiny bloody morsels for the birds to eat off the trees and the telegraph wires..."

" ... the man in the road was blown into eight separate pieces; head, torso, limbs flew up like curving birds..."

Is this the kind of thing you want your nine to eleven year old reading?

I was born in London, less than 4 years after WWII ended. The war dominated my childhood. I grew up with the people who lived through the blitz. And I heard and read story after story of the heroism and courage of ordinary people. Mr Westall chooses, instead, to focus on the ugliness, on the opportunism, on the occasional inevitable breakdown of human decency. Anything to make the politically correct point that war is ugly. Evidently Nr Westall never heard of John Stuart Mill, the rather pathetic english philospher whose one great statement amongst all the rubbish he spouted was

"War is an ugly thing, but not the ugliest of things. The decayed and degraded state of moral and patriotic feeling which thinks that nothing is worth war is much worse. The person who has nothing for which he is willing to fight, nothing which is more important than his own personal safety, is a miserable creature and has no chance of being free unless made and kept so by the exertions of better men than himself."

Did I enjoy the book? Yes I did. Would I recommend it to mature discerning adults for a slice of reality of life on the Home Front in WWII? Of course! Would I give it to my grand kids to read? Not just "no", but "hell no!!" Not until they're in their twenties!

very good book
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2002-11-22
this book was very good. It was a compeling story of a cat named lord gort who tries to find his way home. He is many miles from home and he makes his way throught many sad and rough parts of the war. On his way he meets many people of all ages and shares his story. I would recomend this book to many people of all ages.

Blitz Cat
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2000-01-14
This is one exrodinary book. This book combines the tragedy of WWII with the humor of several odd europeans. The cat is merely another character that joins together the basic outlines of True stories. Even if you aren't a cat lover or aircraft fanatic you can still enjoy the odd (and sometimes drunken) europeans. I am not usually such a book worm, but this book has turned me into such (only for this particular book though). Though I am in only jr. high this is by no means a kids book. It will most adults guessing at the constant flow of long past and forgotten terms and phrases. Yet this book does not include the graphic descriptions often related to wartime stories. The thing that most interested me was that all the stories were based around true ones. Sam

England
The Business of America : Tales from the Marketplace American Enterprise from the Settling of New England to the Break up of AT&T
Published in Hardcover by (2001-05-01)
Author: John Steele Gordon
List price: $27.00
New price: $10.98
Used price: $6.04

Average review score:

The best business history book I've ever read.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-01-31
This book details the heros and oddballs of American economic history and their various innovations and inventions that have shaped the development of America's economy over the history of our nation. From the man who invented the "Graham Cracker" to the founder of the Bank of Italy(Bank of America) the book illustrates what, and who, made this country great.
This is one of the greatest books I have ever read, bar none. The only down-side is that when you finish it you'll feel depressed because it's over. But that's OK, you can just read it again!

Excellent prose and great examples of U.S. Econommic history
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2002-06-16
I rank this book as a solid four star book. I didn't rank the book with a five star rating because it didn't cause me to have a "paradigm shift" or see the world from a different perspective. However, those interested in American History or economic history should thoroughly enjoy this book. I loved reading the book because Mr. Gordon's work clearly shows his in-depth knowledge of American history and his excellent storytelling capabilities.

These 47 articles, gathered from Gordon's 10 years as an American Heritage columnist, cover the post-Revolutionary period through the 1950s. Each article is written, as the title portrays, from an American perspective. Mr. Gordon talks, for example, about the railroads and the characters behind them in the American boom but rarely does he specifically address who invented a product / technology, unless an American did. Additionally, I found that little attention was given to air conditioning, as it has impacted migration patterns dramatically in the U.S.

...

Deserves 10 Stars
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2002-04-15
I so enjoyed this book I didn't want it to end. Please, Mr. Gordon, write another. My normal read is gory mystery thrillers, so this was quite a departure. I saw Mr. Gordon on C-Span and thought "The Business Of America" might be interesting. This book went far beyond interesting; it made the history of dull finance be as exciting as my normal gory thrillers!

Stories Capture the Romance of Business
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-03-05
We love stories. Since the time human beings crawled out of caves, stories have been the way that we pack lots of information into a digestible package. John Steele Gordon is a great storyteller, and this book is full of great business stories.

If your idea of the business book is the macroeconomics text that you slogged through when you were in college, the Business of America will come as a pleasant surprise. You'll find yourself engaged with the material and learning a lot about the history of American business and how business is done that you simply wouldn't get any other way.

Gordon writes the "The Business of America" column for American Heritage Magazine, and the stories that he tells there are the stories he tells here. He has divided the books into several sections. There are stories of the early days of the American dream that focus on the first years of Europeans on this continent up through about the Civil War. Other sections are divided into topical areas, such as Farming and Food, Manufacturing and Mining, Transportation, Banking, the Business of War, Business and Government, Retailing and Real Estate, and the Telegraph, Telephone, and Television. The final section is called After Hours.

Each of these sections includes several stories. There wasn't a single one of them where I didn't underline something or put an exclamation point in the margin, or write a note to myself. These stories are insightful, because Gordon understands the basics of how business works and the oddities of the human condition.

There are several stories that deal with how technology, in this case the cotton gin and the sewing machine and the steam engine, transformed whole industries. Gordon backs up his stories with facts.

For example, in the section called, "King Cotton," Gordon tells us: "Only five hundred thousand pounds of cotton were spun into thread - all by hand - in 1765. Twenty years later, sixteen million pounds were spun, by machine, and the price of cotton cloth had dropped from the caviar range to the mere smoked salmon bracket.

That illustrated the effect of the power loom on the spinning of cotton, but later in the same chapter, Gordon comes up with another statistic and description to describe how Eli Whitney's cotton gin transformed the cotton industry still further. "Whitney's machine could be built in an hour or so by any competent carpenter and worked by a single laborer, increasing his productivity fully fifty times. In a stroke, Whitney had reduced the labor cost of ginning from the dominant component in the cost of cotton cloth to a mere triviality. And the cost of cotton cloth dropped, as a result, from the smoked salmon range to the fish and chips bracket."

That's how of Gordon works and writes. He includes the stories and the statistics and the conclusions in a wonderful mix that delights, entertains, and informs.

If you are a businessperson, this book is for you because you will learn about how others before you have faced some of the same challenges that you face. You'll learn about how the economic wheel tends to revolve and good times follow bad, and times of great change follow times of stagnation. You'll be a better and more effective businessperson after reading this book.

This book is also for you if you think business is boring. Those of us who are in business know that it's endlessly fascinating and filled with things to learn, as well as with opportunities for profit. But the media as a whole tend to reduce business to the stock market and ignore the true human drama of what goes on. They miss some of the best stories, because they start from the assumption that the most interesting things in the world have to do with almost anything but business.

That's a point that Gordon makes at some length in the chapter called, "No Respect." It opens with this line, "If Rodney Dangerfield weren't a comedian, he would probably be an executive. Executives don't get any respect, either."

From there, Gordon goes on to point out that many famous inventors were not the people responsible for the changes in society brought about by their inventions. Alexander Graham Bell, invented the telephone, and has a giant entry in the Encyclopedia Britannica. But it washis father-in-law, Gardiner Greene Hubbart, who put together the system that became A T & T; and, not only made a lot of money for himself and Bell, but also changed the shape of the country.

In that example and dozens of others throughout this book, Gordon shows us the romance that goes with the business of America.

Economic history is educational and interesting
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2002-07-15
Ten years' worth of writing, these forty-seven essays capture illumuniating anecdotes about economic history, captured in the stories of people, ideas and moments in time. Booms and depressions, clever inventions and failed plans, tough competitors and grandoise government schemes all receive their due.

There is the story of King Cotton and how the gin made it profitable. Gordon reports on the California Gold Rush, the first television syndication (that's how Desi Arnaz earns a cover picture on an economic history book), war economies, the decision to build the World Trade towers (an eerie story to read today), steamboat races, railroad competition and more, each in pithy, five-page synopses of major historic studies or records. Brief as they are, there is not always a full story, but the histories leave the read impressed and engaged.

Gordon highlights well-known phrases, e.g., "The business of America is business," "The public be damned!" and explains how they came about (and the myths around same). Before we spoke of people "going postal", Gordon writes about the now-lapsed term, "postalization", another idea entirely.

In "The American Game" he shows how baseball is unique in that it was a business and not just a sport from its early years. A strange business, yes, where today "semiserfdom" of ballplayers has produced average annual salaries of $2.38 million and an industry prone to "work stoppages" and seemingly on the brink of disaster.

The better stories are of the visionaries who made and managed business in America, including the man who spent his personal fortune to make milk safe to drink for millions and the unsung heroes who saved businesses from failure. This is a good education for those who don't understand or who doubt the power of free markets, an idea whose time has come, or simply the American dream as it has been lived.

England
Carrington House
Published in Paperback by Meadow Gove Press (2003-11-11)
Author: John Mark Roberts
List price: $14.95
New price: $9.94
Used price: $4.27
Collectible price: $15.00

Average review score:

Best Summer Reading That Will Keep You Turning Pages!!!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-04-04
This is possibly the best thriller I've ever read! It keeps you on the edge of your seat from page one. It also has a moral undercurrent that reminds you of A Separate Peace...but better!

Can't wait for Mr. Roberts next thriller!!

A must read!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2004-07-02
I thoroughly enjoyed this book. It is a great book for summer reading. It is both provocative and insightful. Carrington House is a must read!

Such a wonderful book
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2004-06-14
Carrington House is such a gripping book! I randomly purchased it based on other Amazon reviews and to say the least it proved to be a successful gamble. Start to finish I read through this book in just two days. I thoroughly enjoyed reading Carrington House and hope to see more of Roberts' work. I recommend this book for leisure reading of the utmost degree.

An Exceptional Read
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2004-06-14
Carrington House is a book unlike any other. It is one that is truly fantastic in its suspenseful plotline as well as the social commentary that the author makes. Carrington House is a book that I will pass on to friends to read. I would like to read more of this author's work - for it is definitely one of a kind!

Truly Inspiring
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2004-06-28
Very amazed by such a fantastic story. I couldn't put it down once I flipped the first page. Can't wait for the next to come out!

England
Catherine's Heart (Tales of London Series #2)
Published in Paperback by Bethany House Publishers (2002-10-01)
Author: Lawana Blackwell
List price: $12.99
New price: $49.95
Used price: $2.45

Average review score:

Great sequel, wonderful and insightful historical read...
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-04
I read The Maiden of Mayfair a couple of years ago and bought its sequel shortly after. But then I forgot all about it. A few days ago, in the mood for a novel set during the turn of the twentieth century, I was digging through my rather large TBR pile and found Catherine's Heart. As I read it, I remembered the characters in The Maiden of Mayfair and was absorbed with the wonderful historical accuracy, which is set in the beginning of the 1880s. It is eighteen-year-old Catherine Rayborn's new life as an university student at Gilton. She meets two lovely friends and three potential suitors. One is a dashing young man who likes to pull pranks, but possesses a kind soul. He has a great deal of success at his father's business, but there is an empty void in his heart that he can't seem to fulfill. The other is an army officer that Catherine finds charming. The third one is the notorious Lord Holt, a rake and someone who had treated William Doyle, Sarah's husband and protagonists of The Maiden of Mayfair, with contempt for having no rank and being what he considered to be a low-class citizen. Catherine has her heart set out on Lord Holt, or does she? After all, he has admitted to his sins and seems to regret his past actions. But something tells her that not all is right, especially when he wants them to meet up in secret. Will she be able to listen to what God, her family and friends and her very own instincts are telling her about him before it's too late?

The second part of the Tales of London is beautifully written and wonderfully told. You get reacquainted with the characters from the first book and meet some great new ones. A lot of things brought up on the Bible -- including those about disobedient children and overindulging parents, which could be found in Proverbs -- are here, and Lawana Blackwell tells them with a great deal of insight and Christian soul without sounding preachy. But the historical elements are what most impressed me about this novel. I love the way Blackwell describes the turn-of-the-century setting with its development of technology and the way in which women begin to become independent. The telephone is brought up a lot in this installment, and I felt as though I had been transported to this fascinating time period, which happens to be my favorite. The characterization is also excellent. Catherine is sweet and relatable, but she is so naïve that sometimes I wanted to get into the book and shout, "Can't you see that the man you are secretly seeing is a total jerk?" I loved Catherine's Heart and I look forward to reading the Tales of London 3. I hope it won't take as long to get to as it did me with this one though!

Second book in a wonderful series
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-11-24
I really liked Catherine's Heart. It showed girls that not all men are what they seem to be, and you really should really get to know the guy before you agree to marry him. I was glad that this book also continued with the story of Sarah and William.

A great read
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2005-04-27
Four years have past since we left the lovable cast of characters of The Maiden of Mayfair. For the first part of this story the author splits the focus between Sarah, the main character in the previous book, and Catherine Rayborn, Sarah's cousin, who is leaving for her "fresher" year at Girton.
Young nineteen-year-old Catherine seems to fall in love at a drop of a hat, however, she's convinced she's finally found true love with Lord Holt. Despite warnings from her cousin Sarah, who has discovered their secret meetings, Catherine is determined to see Lord Holt no matter the price. And it is a steep one. Catherine begins a web of lies that could be her undoing. She begins scheming and lying to spend every free Sunday afternoon with the man she believes truly loves her.
Meanwhile, Sarah has married William, the love of her life and they are now blessed with an addition to their family. They've moved their family, and their extended family from Mayfair. The home they've moved into has ties to their past as well as Catherine's future.
Catherine gives up too much of herself for the man she loves, and she pays a dear price. When she finally discovers just what kind of man she's given her heart to, will it ever heal? Can she make things right with her friends and family, who she treated badly? And what about how she treated God?
This story is a good one, however, I did feel a few small lulls here and there. It was almost like, too little time spent here, and not enough time spent there. All in all it's a great read, and I'd recommend this book, and any other by this extremely gifted author.
Reviewed by Katharine L. Kroeker for ShortHand Publishing

Another beautiful story by Lawana Blackwell
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2004-10-04
Catherine Rayborn is enjoying her first taste of freedom and independence after a sheltered upbringing. Her head and heart are easily turned by any young man who looks her way and gives her a kind word. Even though she knows better and has loving, supportive people in her life to offer Godly counsel, she allows her heart to rule her head.

Kudos to Ms. Blackwell for another wonderful series. Her writing is warm and genuine, and her characters draw the reader into the story at the very beginning. Most series weaken with each new addition, but Lawana Blackwell's characters stay strong and true to form. The storyline does not grow tiresome after several books. Unlike most series, I always regret when hers come to an end. She is probably my favorite writer of Inspirational fiction today. I can't get enough of her realistic, endearing characters and their stories.

Great work, Ms. Blackwell. Thank you for an excellent read.

A must read for young girls...
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2005-05-03
I have been a fan of Lawana Blackwell for about 4 or 5 years now, and I've learned that you can't go wrong with her books. Catherine's Heart is no exception. This was probably the hardest book for me to get through, not because it was poorly written by any means (I sometimes think that Blackwell could re-write my phone book and it would be an interesting read), but because of the story. As a young girl who has yet to embark into the unknown world of boys and their charms, I found myself relating to the main character throughout the entire story. Catherine makes decisions that you know are not good for her, and it's difficult to watch someone you're investing time and energy into doing so. It was because of this that I believe Catherine's Heart is so powerful. I learned the importance of guarding your heart, especially as a young inexperienced woman. Every young girl should take time to read this book. I'm so thankful that I read it when I did before I do begin that portion of my life. Wonderfully written and beautifully told!

England
De Profundis
Published in Paperback by Overlook TP (1998-05-01)
Author: Oscar Wilde
List price: $14.95
New price: $7.09
Used price: $6.01

Average review score:

Strangely moving
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 2002-05-21
One of the most famous - and infamous - letters in all of literature, De Profundis is a strange little piece of work: either much more than it appears on the surface, or much less. It is something I think everyone should read, if only for its insight into the human character, particularly that of one under great personal suffering. Wilde wrote this extraordinarily long letter from prison to Lord Alfred Douglas, his friend, lover, and the man who - by all accounts - was the reason Wilde was in jail in the first place. Despite repeated assertions in the first few pages alone to the contrary, Wilde seems reluctant to blame himself. He clearly blames Douglas to the hilt, and harbors a certain bitter resentment towards him. And yet... he clearly still hold much dear affection toward - and even loves - Douglas. He still seems to be asking for forgiveness - despite the fact that, by all accounts hardly excluding his own, he was the man wronged. It is quite clear from reading this letter that, desite the view history holds of him, Wilde was clearly a man of very high moral character. Certainly, one would not put Wilde atop a pedastal as the zenith of ethics - he himself says that morals contain "absolutely nothing" for him, and clearly admits - and is proud of - his having lived the high life to the hilt during his youth - but Wilde was a man of principles, and he stuck to those principles to the tragic, bitter end. Perhaps you might say he carried them too far. One gets the sense in reading this letter - or a biography of Wilde - that, not only could he have stopped his immiment imprisonment, but could have severed his ties with Douglas completely - had he wanted to. Apparently, he had his own utterly compelling reasons for not doing so. Whatever the case, Oscar Wilde is one of the most fundamentally and perpetually interesting characters in the whole of history. A self-described man of paradoxes - Wilde was subsequently the true essence of his time, while also being far ahead of his time - De Profundis makes for required reading by one of the most endlessly fascinating individuals you'll ever read about, and also provides a startling - indeed, perhaps too much so - insight into human nature.

De Profundis, though long for a letter, is not a long work in the conventional sense. Consequently, as many editions of Wilde's collected works are available, buying this on its own may be deemed questionable. I highly reccommend purchasing a Collected Works of Oscar if you have not done so already - it's well worth the price - but, should you desire to have more compact editions of specific works, an edition such as this will be privy to your needs.

Bonafide powerhouse!!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2004-12-25
This is a very moving account of a heartbroken man who was betrayed by a person he loved dearly. The pain, the trauma, the love, the anger, the frustration is evident in every single well-written sentence. This book is not only a window into the mind of one of the best British writers of the late 19th century. It is also a timeless lesson on what can happen when one falls in love with someone who doesn't truly appreciate what they have before them. Of course there are other lessons to be learned in this book but rather than point them out here, I'd much prefer you pick up a copy of "De Profundis" as soon as you can.

Wilde's Masterpiece, By FAR
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2003-05-30
Not actually a "letter," though it had to be originally presented as such for him to be allowed to write it while in prison, *De Profundis* is Wilde's masterpiece--one has to have really lived and really, really suffered to have written it and it's amazing that he achieved it.

I only very recently read it--and "got" it. It rings true to me, and is very, very moving and "profound." It ain't summer beach reading.

Wilde is still and will probably always be best known as a "Personality"--that and the author of a couple of decent period plays, a short novel, a few stories, and lots of forgettable poems and such. But THIS--THIS is IT.

He really WAS a great writer, it turns out, after all.

Ignore Douglas
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2006-01-17
So many people concentrate on De Profundis' accusations cast towards Alfred Douglas. Yes, it's true that the letter was written to him and that Wilde is ruthless in letting Douglas know exactly what he thinks of him but that's not why De Profundis is a great piece of work. It is great for three reasons. Number one - It contains the best account of the life of Christ. Christ as the romantic artist is the only account that has moved me to tears and the only account I can personally embrace. Number two - it is chock full of the Oscar Wilde voice and wit and as a result it reverbates as a true work of art and number three - It is ultimately a work that celebrates the things in life worth feeling - failure, love, injustice, strength and forgiveness.

Don't waste your time with the accusations towards Douglas. He is unimportant. Oscar Wilde is what's important and De Profundis is Oscar Wilde bare.

The Wilted Lily: Oscar as penitent manque...
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2002-05-04
Ah, me...one doesn't know which to be more irritated
and exasperated with: whether it be Walt Whitman doing
his dissembling shuck-and-shuffle about the children
he had sired (to throw off a probing, serious John
Addington Symonds) -- or Oscar, in this "j'accuse," which
he should have spoken while looking in a mirror, rather
than writing it on paper to Lord Alfred.
This is without doubt a fascinating, horrifying,
and yet in places humorous, "piece de Miserere mei"
(to combine a bit of French with Latin).
If one chooses to believe Oscar, his only fault
was weakness in "giving in" to Lord Alfred. Oh,
come now. Blinded by Eros, reason flies out the
door...if ever reason was in control. There are
some sentences which are devastatingly revealing,
but Oscar doesn't seem to see it. "The trivial in
thought and action is charming. I had made it
the keystone of a very brilliant philosophy expressed
in plays and paradoxes." Ye gods, and little fishes!

And this man dared to call himself a "Classicist?!"
Yikes!!!
The best exercise for the reader is to just take
many of the things which Oscar accuses Lord Alfred
of, and turn them toward the self-blind, self-
justifying Oscar, to see their devastating hitting
of the mark. Never having met the young man, but
only having the "benefit" of hearsay (mostly from
Oscar's literary defenders) Lord Alfred seems to have
been calculating, temperamental (using anger to get
his way), manipulative, etc., etc., etc. The best
description of him may be Wilde's referring to him
with the lines from Aeschylus' play AGAMEMNON,
about the lion cub being raised in a house and
being let loose to wreak havoc and ruin.
But Oscar bears his share of blame -- more than just
that of the "sin" of weakness which he constantly falls
back upon in his own justification. Even in the midst
of what purports to be some sort of penitent cry from
the depths of hell...Oscar still is ever the poseur:
"And I remember that afternoon, as I was in the railway
carriage whirling up to Paris, thinking what an impossible,
terrible, utterly wrong state my life had got into, when
I, a man of world-wide reputation, was actually forced
to run away from England, in order to try and get rid
of a friendship that was entirely destructive of everything
fine in me either from the intellectual or ethical point
of view...." Er, when was the last time that the
"everything fine" had last seen the light of day?
Was Oscar an "Artist," as he consistently claims?
Was he the wronged, harmed Artist? Perhaps only the
reader can decide that for himself. Without doubt
he was witty, acerbic, funny, cute, clever, perhaps
even charming (to some -- sort of like a Pillsbury
Dough Boy with flair and a clever tongue), perhaps
stylish (in a frumpy, velveteen sort of way). Was
he wronged by a predatory clinger and manipulator,
and a hypocritical social prudery and class power
play (Oscar is no Socrates--that's for sure!)? He
hardly seems worthy, in some ways, of being a poster-boy
for Gay Pride parades. More likely, he is a better
warning poster boy for the self-excusing, and never
take-responsibility-for-your-own-actions crowd.
But this is an incredible piece to read and think
about. There is some of it that is mordantly hilarious.


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