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New Zealand Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

New Zealand
The Aquariums of Pyongyang: Ten Years in the North Korean Gulag
Published in Hardcover by Basic Books (2001-09-13)
Authors: Kang Chol-Hwan and Pierre Rigoulot
List price:
Used price: $22.75

Average review score:

Great Read
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-11-11
heart wrenching, couldn't put it down. gives you an inside look at the concentration camps in North Korea which not alot of ppl know about. I recommend you read this book and pass it along!!!

A heartwrenching story of survival
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-28
Not since Night (Oprah's Book Club) by Elie Wiesel have I read such a grippng story of a child's survival in the face of unspeakable cruelty & human suffering. Kang Chol-Hwan spent ten years in North Korea's infamous Yodok prison camp. After an alledged infidelity to communist party ideals by his grandfather, Chol-Hwan and his family were sent to the camp in the late 1970s when the boy was only nine years old. There he witnessed torture, suffering & death on a daily basis; seeing neighbors starve to death was a commonplace occurence. The courage & will to survive displayed by Kang Chol-Hwan in the face of such unimaginable horror is remarkable, although the experience did leave lasting emotional scars:

"I think the camp also changed me psychologically. As a child, I was outgoing and restless. When people meet me today, they find me reserved & somewhat distant. Growing up in the camp made me shut myself off from the world. I learned about suffering and hunger, violence and murder. For a long time I was angry at my grandfather. Only around 1983 did I begin to realize that not he but rather Kim Il-Sung and his regime were the real causes of my suffering. They were the ones responsible for the camp and for filling it with innocent people. All during my childhood, Kim Il-Sung had been like a god to me. A few years in the camp cured me of my faith. My fellow prisoners and I were the wayward sheep of the revolution, and the Party's way of bringing us back into the fold was to exploit us unto death. The propoganda, which exalted North Korea as the people's corner of paradise, now struck me as revolting."

This book should be read by everyone who needs to be reminded how fragile human rights & personal freedom can be in the face unchecked evil. "The Aquariums of Pyongyang" is destined to become a classic story of the struggle for justice and human dignity. This is a very touching book that cannot possibly leave a reader unmoved. The images created by this book will remain with me for a very long time.

Difficult to Imagine
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-07
This book is a "must read" for anyone conerned about personal freedoms and human rights. What the author has endured is unspeakable in any kind of civilized society. The detailed description of the concentration camp and it's workings will mesmerize the reader and then numb the senses. Why do the the Korean people tolerate this treatment of their citizens? Truly, Stalinism is alive and well in north Korea.

Frightening tale of the closed state of North Korea
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-03
This and Google Earth are pretty much your only looks into North Korea. A country we should all know more about with its nuclear weapons, and with the hard-to-understand reactor construction in Syria. Connections to Pakistan's nuclear program? There's a lot that would be good to understand. This book might help us a bit.

"In a Concentration Camp at the Age of Nine."
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-30
"You people don't deserve to live, but the Party and our Great Leader have given you a chance to redeem yourselves. Don't squander it and disappoint him." So says a guard in Yodok, the place which is featured in this book. It was identified as "Border Patrol of the Korean People, unit 2915," however, as the North Korean regime sought to disguise it's real purpose. Kang Chol-Hwan arrived at its gate at age nine, along with his sister, father, and grandmother. As the author states herein, "We weren't sent to the camp as criminals but as relatives of a criminal." That so-called"criminal" was his grandfather and the charge leveled against his grandfather was "a crime of high treason." The real reason that Kang Chol-Hwan's grandfather was arrested, however, was that the North Korean police state, having duped his grandfather into returning to Korea with the fortune he accumulated in Japan, no longer had any need of him once they had got their hands on his wealth. This book is replete with examples of many other well-off Koreans, also inspired by revolutionary propaganda, who likewise left comfortable lives in Japan hoping to contribute to building communism in Kim Il-sung's Korea, but who, instead, were fleeced of their assets and wound up spending time in places like Yodok, one of the "Aquariums of Pyongyang."

The author, though, tells us almost nothing about any concentration/work camp/slave labor camp other than Yodok, the place where he was imprisoned for ten years. So the book is really about one "Aquarium" (and he utilizes the term because he actually brought his fish bowl with him to this prison, as well as attempting to coin a Korean phrase reminiscent of the Gulag Archipelago).

The first 148 pages of this rather brief book concerns the author's first 8 years at Yodok. He discusses how he was forced to trap rats for food, how his fellow political prisoners were kept in rags, denied adequate food; how they were worked to exhaustion. He also describes the execution of some prisoners: "The Party was willing to forgive this criminal. It gave him the chance here at Yodak to right himself. He chose to betray the Party's trust, and for that he merits execution." The man supposedly betrayed the state by trying to escape from his slave-labor camp. Moments later the commanding officer directed his guards thusly: "Aim at the traitor of the Fatherland...Fire!" So much for the Democratic People's Republic of Korea.

After telling us about his first 8 years in the camp, the author admits this: "As the years passed, another feeling began to disturb my daily existence: the feeling of injustice, which grew sharper when I considered the discrepancy between everything I had been taught and all that I was living." The writing herein, unfortunately, is a lot like this; not particularly personal and bereft of much emotion. (Maybe this has something to do with the fact that the author told his story to a French journalist---whose name appears on the cover of this book---and the book was originally published in French, perhaps having lost something through two translations.)

The final two years the author spent in Yodok's labor prison are glossed over in 6 pages, then his escape to South Korea, via China, is addressed in the final 40 or so pages. In total the book only numbers 238 (rather large print) pages and there's no index. I wish there was a lot more to this book; more about how many places such as Yodok exist in North Korea, how many people might be incarcerated in them and the like, and more of the minute detail of goings-on in such places (as opposed to the broader brush strokes offered by our author herein) so as to be better able to "feel" what it must have been like for the author to survive 10 years in such a ghastly place. (07Dec) Cheers

New Zealand
Fire in the Sky : The Air War in the South Pacific
Published in Hardcover by Basic Books (1999-11-25)
Authors: Eric M Bergerud and Eric Bergerud
List price: $35.00
Used price: $3.38

Average review score:

Great Book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-19
I have read a lot of history regarding World War Two and Fire In The Sky is one of the better efforts. Its a good overview of the relatively
unexplored South Pacific campaign. Its not a detailed history of single
squadrons or units, but it contains a wealth of information not normally
contemplated from both the Allied and Japanese perspectives. So, why
is all this relevant? Its relevant because if a society doesn't know
where its been, how can it know where its going?

Bergerud is one of the best
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-23
If WWII interests you, Eric Bergerud shines a light into the dark corners of of the Pacific theater and illuminates actions and activities forgotten and neglected for years.

Ever wonder why vain, proud Douglas MacArthur was left in a position commanding a major front and leading the defense of Australia in the Pacific war? Can't figure out why he lead the surrender ceremony in Tokyo Bay on the deck of the USS Missouri, and not Nimitz or King?

Wonder how Japanese air power was destroyed after Midway? If you read Shattered Sword you understand despite the propaganda provided by both Japanese and US sources, Japanese Naval air power wasn't all sunk at Midway - that was a couple of hundred planes at most. And what about the Japanese Army's Air force? How did they disappear? How did Japanese Air Power get from Midway in 1942 - capable of sinking the US fleet - to the Great Marianas Turkey Shoot in 1944 - utterly prostrate and immediately afterward turning to Kamikaze attacks - hopeless of striking US forces and surviving.

Eric Bergerud explains all this and much more.

Mult-dimension book and more books from the author
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-16
The author writes a mult-dimension book about an unusual war where an entire theater of operations was depend on capturing, and defending an airfield and then the next military objective was another airfield. I agreed that author failed to talk about the K-84 Hayate (Frank), but he forgot that the Japanese also produce the Shiden N1K2 (George) Navy fighter plane. The author also seems to forget that American pilots had to fly for 8 to 14 hours from England and Italy to escort the bombers and then fight the Luftwaffe pilots just like the Japanese pilots had to do from Rabual. The only differences was that we had more fighter planes and pilots than the Japanese, and our planes could absorb much damage from enemy fire and bring our pilots back home.

The author seems to forget that much of the American population was also unskilled labor when it came to maintaining planes that were designed by Americans who were college graduates. We had no nationwide apprenticeship program system like they have in Europe when it comes to producing a skill technical labor force. Nowadays, we have been getting rid of such a technical skilled labor force for the last 27 years. The Japanese at least gave their enlisted soldiers and sailors a chance to become pilots since 1928 and continue it until the end of World War II. On the other hand, the US Navy, Marines and Army did not try to expand their enlisted pilots during the war.

I did not realizes how easy it was to be hit by the variety of diseases and illness in the tropics. Amazing how the tropics can be so beautiful in the photographs of the tourist industries' bochures and at the same time be so deadly. Of course, those people who fought in Burma from 1941-1945 could emphasize those who were expose to the diseases in the South Pacific and dealing with the jungle.

The way they said that it rain so much in the South Pacific, you wonder how both the Allies and the Japanses ever manage to fight such a war in a place like that. If it rain so much, there would have been no war at all because all sea and air operations could not operate in an environment at all.

The author should also have talk to members of the U. S. Navy Fighter Squadron 5 and 17 since they fought in that area. Furthermore, he should also have talk to members of the U. S. Army fighter groups that operate from Guadalcanel.

I hope the author writes two books about the air war over the Philippines in 1944. The first book would be from October 1944 to December 1944 with regards to Leyte Island. The second book should be about air war over the Philippines from January 1945 to the end of Japanese air resistance.

Overall, an excellent book given the complexity blending in so many subject matters and how each one play a part in the overall campaign.

Engineeriing approach and more
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-30
The strengths of the book have been mentioned in other reviews, so I will focus on certain weaknesses not emphasized by others.

The first main weakness is luck of technical understanding of several terms by the author. He seems to confuse the terms, power loading, and wing loading. He failed to recognize that the Japanese fighters' lower wing loading was actually a more significant benefit in terms of maneuverability at higher altitudes where the air density is lower (he supports the opposite, which is not technically reasonable). He also makes the statement many times that the maneuverability advantage of the Japanese fighters at the expense of heavy armor proved not to be the winning advantage. The statement needs to be corrected however, in my opinion. When a very skilful pilot is manning the more maneuverable fighter, the compromise for maneuverability can actually pay off. Early in the war, the Japanese had probably the best pilots in the world, which justifies their choice in the maneuverability/speed/armor compromise. This is well illustrated when Japanese ace pilots, even late in the war, often engaged large numbers of allied fighters sinle-handed, and not only usually survived by using the maneuverability of their "obsolete" fighters, but also gained victories over their multiple opponents. However, as the author properly states, late in the war, the lack of speed and armor was indeed a serious drawback when the majority of the Japanese pilots could not be properly trained, due to the lack of aviation fuel.

The second main weakness is that the book is heavily biased to the American side. It fails to emphasize the important role of serendipity that allowed the Americans to gain significant advantages (i.e., the victory in the Midway battle which was very much determined by luck, or the early discovery of a flyable A6M2 by the allies which allowed the early development of the proper tactics to deal with the Zero). Another example of bias is as follows: In the section where a P-40 pilot (justifiably biased) declared that his side had the speed advantage and therefore could dictate when and where to fight, the author (who should intervene in a more unbiased position) failed to mention that the Zero had almost twice the rate of climb of the P-40, and therefore a far stronger advantage to dictate the terms of the air battle. Finally, and possibly the most significant example of bias is the Author's failure to even mention the Japanese Nakajima Ki-84 Hayate (Frank) in the Japanese warplane section. The Hayate had completely outclassed the US fighters in almost every respect, and its impact in the air war was reduced only by the relatively small numbers and the lack of experienced pilots and mechanics. However, an experienced pilot in a Hayate was a very serious threat to any allied fighter, even if outnumbered.

Finally, the superior fighting spirit of the Japanese was only barely touched by this book. Even though it is not fair to compare aircrew individually due to the different cultures, the Japanese had a considerable advantage in this respect. At the end, quantity overwhelmed quality, as far as the fighting spirit was concerned. In my opinion, this is a serious deficiency of a historical book, that by definition should at least try to be unbiased. A more in depth understanding of the unusual Japanese culture would have helped the author develop a better picture of the cultural disconnect, and how the allied leadership took advantage of the cultural difference to motivate the aircrews, and minimize potential ethical doubts when the latter were employed in the extermination of tens of thousands of Japanese troops (and later hundreds of thousands of civilians). The author states that racism had little part in the war ethics, but that is a serious historical error. In my opinion, we have to say history as it was, in order to avoid similar mistakes in the future.

Excellent read, lots of "right stuff"
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-04
This'll keep you off amazon for a week or so if you're a slow reader [like me] i often mark up a book for errors or questionable statements, this one has only a few exclamation marks. combining personal accounts of US Army and Marine/Navy to Aussie and Japanese make for a better view than i've seen before. He certainly brings out how hard it is to understand what was actually going on, certainly no one participating could have known. My only suggestion for another edition would be better/more maps and pictures but that's only a quibble. damn fine book

New Zealand
Thinking differently about governmental reform in Florida (Florida Center for Public Management monograph series)
Published in Unknown Binding by Florida Center for Public Management, Florida State University (1992)
Author: Frank P Sherwood
List price:

Average review score:

Such Strength
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-10-23
I can't say why I chose this book to read but am very glad that I did. Such a sad story. I commend Julie Gregory on her strength to survive such an awful childhood and thank her for educating others to this awful problem.

Beautifully Written
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-17
Sickened is a story displaying the depth of a child's love for her mother and the strength it took to ultimately break away and save herself. I will not give away the story. It is enough to say this is a very interesting, well written book.

Interesting
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-18
The book was a very easy/quick read. The stories are heart breaking and tragic but good information for others to know. It is hard to imagine a mother like the one in the book but there are a lot of very sick people in the world that pass for 'normal.' Good to know that the author made it out and is recovering from the trauma.

Sad
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-04
It amazes me that this was allowed to go on as long as it did. Doctors, Nurses etc.. Just sad, and this is far from an isolated case, my heart goes out to this girl who is now a woman and I hope she has been able to truly put this behind her, but I'm not sure that is possible. Children are innocents and need protection, just sad.

Loved this book!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-17
I loved this book! I couldn't put it down! It really showed how this disease affected one family. The pictures in the book made it all very real!

New Zealand
In the Ghost Country: A Lifetime Spent on the Edge
Published in Paperback by Random Ho.,New Zealand (2004-03-05)
Authors: Peter Hillary and John Elder
List price:
Used price: $17.50

Average review score:

Poorly written
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-06
I got sucked in by the endless good reviews to be overwhelmed by a poorly written and uninteresting book. The switch between the author and Hillary's voice became confusing and often took place in the middle of thoughts without connection. The style of writing also differed too much making the whole read choppy. Then they added in dream sequences and back stories that did nothing to progress the book nor give any information of interest to the reader. The narrator tried to be artful to the extreme causing me to lose the point and consider his poor use of metaphors. Then comes the fact of how unprepared these three supposed professional adventurists are. They don't have the proper equipment, nor the proper training, nor the proper mindset. I assume Hillary's purpose for this book is to make money for some new ill-fated attempt.

A Wonderful Tale
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-07
This tale set on an epic trip to the South Pole, Peter Hillary displays the wonderful story telling skills of the classic adventurer. This books enjoys not only a great adventure, but flash backs to a lifetime of adventure from the great mountains of the world. From the tragedy of loosing his mother and sister, to following in his father's footsteps to the top of Mount Everest. You will love this great book and gain more insight into the legacy of the Hillary family.

I will never complain about being cold again!
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2004-12-29
For those of you who gave it one star, all I can say is: your little minds just didn't get it, or you really didn't read the entire book.

This is a powerful, heart-and-gut wrenching account of one of the most harrowing experiences of a man's life in the most hostile of all environments. Imagining the body and mind destruction as they trekked along the frigid, almost unnavigable routes in Antartica is unimaginable!

If you want to read a book that reads more like fiction because you can't believe anyone in their right mind would endure this Antarctica madness, then this is the book for you.

What a profounding disappointing read
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 2005-05-24
Perhaps I have just been spoiled by reading truly extraordinary survival accounts like: Adrift by Stephen Callahan, Touching The Void by Joe Simspon, Into Thin Air by John Krakauer and Endurance: Shackleton's Incredible Voyage by Alfred Lansing -- but this book just SUCKED. I bought it after reading the reviews and comments of other readers here at Amazon, and picked it up to read during vacation. I made it to around page 100 and started wondering when the book was going to really start hitting its stride. It never did. About 30 pages later I simply began skimming and spot reading until finally I reached the last page -- whereupon I literally pitched it in the trash.

WHY this book was written has much to do with why it is so bad: It's a rear guard action by Peter Hillary who, in spite of his famous pedigree (his dad, Sir Edmund Hillary, is the legendary conquerer of Everest) is a decidedly middlin' mountaineer with hardly any record of achievement worthy of true distinction, yet who nevertheless is saddled with an enormous ego (he goes on about living life in the spotlight? as if he were "a rock star'), got dissed by other members of this expedition who later wrote and spoke about what a laggard they thought Hillary was. This book is Hillary's pathetic attempt to repudiate some of that ... as if anyone out there in the world really cares. Peter who?

I was also dissapointed to learn as the book progressed that this was hardly any "tale of survival" ... Hillary and his crew 24/7 radio contact and could call in to be rescued at any time. Which, in the end, they did.

And then there's the endless memory replay Hillary dishes out for his "contribution" to the book ... the bulk of it so boring it could peel the paint off the walls. Did he really think we'd be interested in all those mundane and trite details of his life as a Hillary -- just becuase he was "a Hillary." Please.

The real tale of survival is the "ghost writer" who got suckered into co-writing this piece of schlock with Hillary. Someone should write a book about that.

That said, this book does serve some readerly purpose. Go ahead and order a copy. Read it first -- and then read the books I cited at the beginning of my review. Then they will really, really blow you away.

Peter's Ghosts
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2005-03-28
Peter Hillary with two companions tried to replicate Robert Scott's journey to the South Pole and back, manhauling (pulling by themselves) hundreds of pounds of equipment on sleds. They almost succeeded in matching not only Scott's route but Scott's tragedy - they barely made it to the Pole and had to be airlifted out.

Hillary and co-writer John Elder's non-traditional approach to the story is much more interesting than a straightforward narrative of an incomplete mission. The book is told in two distinct voices: Elder provides the basic narrative, while Hillary (set apart in boldface from the main story) tells the story of what was going on in his head as he pulled pulled pulled toward the Pole.

Sick and isolated, Hillary is surrounded by the ghostly memory of his family (Sir Edmund Hillary, the first to climb Everest; Peter's mother and sister lost in a Nepalese plane crash)and many friends from the climbing world, the majority of whom died while mountaineering.

These ghosts, or at least the memory of them, are as real to the reader as they seemed to the hallucinating Hillary. The two-voices 'device,' which might have seemed artificial, adds to the powerful emotional impact of Hillary's memories. It is a ghostly book, indeed. One of my favorite reads so far this year!

New Zealand
The Punishment of Virtue
Published in Kindle Edition by Penguin (2007-05-16)
Author: Sarah Chayes
List price: $16.00
New price: $9.99

Average review score:

Great Insight
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-09
"The Punishment of Virtue" gives the reader great insight into the political conflicts that went on in Afghanistan during the early years of US occupation. It has much relevence to what is going on today. The book also provides a brief history of the country as well as some cultural background, good book!

Pulitzer!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-19
Starting and ending with the death of an honest Afgan, his friend Sarah Chayes, NPR reporter-turned Afgan activist, gives a well written, often warm, and often shocking account of the warlords, friends of Pakistan, and some-time friends of the US that made up Afganistan after the Taliban fled and before they had fully returned. The fact that a woman reporter could become friend and advisor to so many people in power in Afganistan - including, the president, several governors, several warlords, a chief of police (the murdered one), AND US Military Officers-helped to show the depth of leadership vacuum that existed. Nobody knew what to do, really, except the Warlords, and their occupation was making themselves rich and getting rid of their enemies, often with the help of the conned US Military, and usually with the help of Pakistan, who played both ends against the middle - the most shocking revelation. Well worth reading, and if as true and well-supported as it seems, worth a Pulitzer!

Fascinating insights
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-08
Sarah Chayes, an NPR journalist and an historical scholar in her own right, provides an insider's look at Afghanistan before, during, and after the Taliban regime. Many provocative parallels can be drawn by the reader to the foreign policy problems facing the U.S. in Iraq, Afghanistan, and Pakistan today, for example: the primacy of tribal loyalties which supercede any national political identity, the misuse of American power to prop up questionable puppet governments, humanitarian aid which gets diverted by tribal elders to form their own militias, and the desperate economic instability which makes plundering and subsidy a way of life. In short, there appears to be an almost complete lack of cultural and anthropological understanding of the Middle East by U.S. policy makers. Whether you support or oppose the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, this treatise provides many fascinating insights into the Middle Eastern mind-set which could and should be applied by our government to the current conflicts. Highly recommended.

A gripping narrative of intrigue, assassination, personal dedication and courage
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-14
Sarah Chayes' instinctive compassion builds friendships in Afghanistan that take her on a remarkable journey. Her insights illuminate the political currents affecting Afghanistan with exceptional clarity. This book is a must read for anyone seeking to understand the region.

Interesting but poorly written
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-28
An utterly confusing account of the war in Afghanistan. Its merit is that it gives the reader a probably realistic impression of the complexity and intransparency of Afghan politics and history...nothing is what it seems. Its flaws are chronological disorder, personal grudges and reporter-centrism...("look at me getting the real dope against all odds" and "look at me, the only sensitive observer").

New Zealand
Understanding Wall Street
Published in Paperback by Random House New Zealand Ltd (1987-12-30)
Authors: Jeffrey B. Little and Lucien Rhodes
List price: $9.70
New price: $0.32
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $10.00

Average review score:

Understanding Wall Street
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-14
Understanding Wall Stret (most recent paperback edition) is an excellent book. Shipment arrived in time as promised and in perfect condition. I am completely satisfied with how this order was handled.

Not what I had hoped
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-10
I had hoped this would be a clearly written and interesting explanation of the general workings of the stock market for someone who has never really understood it. But it goes into far too much detail, defining every little term and process. Maybe it's just a subject that cannot be made interesting or relatively simple, but in any case, this book does not accomplish those things.

Consider "Understanding Wall Street" Your Best Initial Investment
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-24
In the late 80's, as a neophyte investor, I picked up more than I imagined I would from Understanding Wall Street.

In the late 90's, as an industry professional, I frequently turned through the pages of my tattered old 3rd edition for a great review from time to time.

Today, as an adjunct professor, I am still amazed at the book's scope and ease of understanding. And, I find myself recommending Understanding Wall Street before, during, and after it's apparent that 50lb text books don't always carry their weight.

If you have the slightest desire to learn about the world of investing, Understanding Wall Street just may be your best initial investment.

Understanding Wall Street
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-06
The first time I read this book was 20 years ago and was impressed with its thoroughness and ease in understanding. I teach at a junior college and offered the students an opportunity to learn a little more about investing that was not covered in their text. This book was complete enough to cover most of the topics and condensed enough for them to read considering their limited free time.

A Manual To Clear The Waters of Understanding.
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-14
Jeffrey Little and Lucien Rhodes' treatise "Understanding Wall Street" is a very valuable guide for the neophyte desiring the critical knowledge of how the financial nerve center of North America operates.

Rich with historical insight, this guide details the origins and subsequent transformation of some of the world's most prominent stock exchanges located on the street synonymous with wealth and power: Wall Street.

To that end the guide is easily readable and understandable. Complete with examples, explanations, and a comprehensive glossary I found the guide to complete and fill a hole in the much needed understanding of the financial facet of comparative government and civic theory studies.

I rate the text at five stars for providing a lot of information at only 300 pages. This review refers to the 2004 Fourth Edition.

New Zealand
Lonely Planet New Zealand
Published in Paperback by Lonely Planet (1994-02)
Authors: Tony Wheeler, Nancy Keller, and Jeff Williams
List price: $17.95
New price: $3.75
Used price: $0.01

Average review score:

new zealand is a beautiful place
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 23 total.
Review Date: 2004-03-19
new zealand is a beautiful place

Don't Buy This Edition
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2002-10-20
The Guide is very informative, but there is a new edition that has come out in October, so wait to buy the new one!!

The only decent Lonely Planet book
Helpful Votes: 16 out of 24 total.
Review Date: 2003-05-13
This book is a lot better than the other Lonely Planet books in that it is the same size as the others but as it is only about one small country, it can fit most (not all there's still work to be done) of the towns and attractions backpackers want to see in New Zealand.

The main difference between this and Let's Go is that this is written for a North American audience whereas Let's Go is more for your British, European, Australian, South African and the like markets. This means those not from North America may find a lot of the information as common knowledge, especially historic things and would prefer to have more further detailed information which is contained in the competitor Let's Go. Since the American education system doesn't teach this stuff American audiences will find it fascinating and will have a need for it maybe.

A fair amount of the hostels in New Zealand actually do appear in this book which is very surprising for a Lonely Planet as they usually miss about 75 per cent of them. Be aware that there are other hostels out there though, so don't completely rely on the book and use the best method word of mouth from other backpackers as well. Of course the price information is out of date as usual.

If only Lonely Planet could achieve as good a book for their other country/continent versions then they might be a worthwhile purchase. I'd say buy this if you're a North American but get Let's Go if you're not. Well actually I'd say don't bother with either as you're just reliving someone else's experiences and it's better to explore for yourself but for hostel listings and background info if you don't know much about New Zealand then this is useful.

Don't travel without this guide!
Helpful Votes: 26 out of 27 total.
Review Date: 2004-06-10
If you're going to New Zealand - and want to enjoy the country to the fullest - DO NOT LEAVE WITHOUT THIS GUIDE! I embarked on a 6-week long trip last June with this edition of 'Lonely Planet New Zealand' and fate as my only guides. I was impressed to the max! The only other guide I needed was a road atlas I picked up at the airport in Auckland (and since I was touring some of the Lord of the Rings film locations, Ian Brodie's lovely 'Lord of the Rings: Location Guidebook'). I do recommend renting a vehicle - as someone under 25 years old, Budget was a good bet for rental. Just remember, "Left, left left." It's a cinch! With the US dollar exchange rate favorable, we cheaply rented a top notch 4WD SUV for the entire time based on the recommendation of this book. I love the Lonely Planet series for the sheer fact that it gives you pointers on fantastic locations that may be slightly off the beaten path while at the same time informing you of the best of the best in those tourist meccas. It's a lovely balance. My only regret is that 6-weeks is far too short a time to see everything there is to see in New Zealand!

The top 5 places you shouldn't miss on the North and South Islands:

North Island
1) Take the short ferry ride from Auckland to Rangitoto Island and hike to the summit - otherwordly!
2) Do a touristy bus tour to Cape Reinga out of Paihia - on the bus to Cape Reinga you'll get to: learn a lot about the Maori culture, hug a Kauri tree, stop and surf down sand dunes, wonder in awe at the northern most point of the North Island where untouched white beaches are visible as the Tasman and Pacific Ocean meet and clash (an amazing scene), and to top it all off you'll cruise down 90-mile beach as waves lap the wheels of the bus (yeah, the beach is actually a registered roadway).
3) Drive around the gorgeous Coromandel Peninsula - leave the Thames area just before sunrise and the landscape will just take your breath away! You will come to understand the meaning of Aotearoa/New Zealand: land of the long white cloud.
4) Wander the volcantic parks of Rotorua - Wai-ti-pau was a highlight! Don't forget to sign-up for a traditional Maori concert and haka at the Tamaki Maori Village for a cool cultural experience!
5) Cruise Cuba Street in Wellington for food and shops, and don't forget to visit Te Papa - the national museum of Wellington.

South Island
1) Plan a kayaking trip out of Motueka: the Tonga Island wildlife option is cool - we saw wild Orca and New Zealand Fur Seals up close and personal and then lunched on a secluded beach reached only by kayak!
2) Take a helicopter ride up to Fox Glacier and do an afternoon hike - see where semi-tropical rainforest meets glacier meets the Tasman Sea.
3) Go white water rafting on the Shotover River in Queenstown (be sure you get an option with the Oxenbridge Tunnel)! Then go jet boating, then bungy jumping, you name, it they do it there! Don't miss Deer Park Heights either - say hello to the free roaming buffalo for me!
4) Head to the beautiful city of Kaikoura for whale watching and a dolphin swim.
5) If you love wildlife - head to Dunedin and take a tour out to the Otago Peninsula (you'll see albatross, fur seals, sea lions, yellow-eyed penguins and a variety of bird life up close and personal - by up close I mean walking on the beach less than 10 feet away from a Hooker Seal Lion twice your size). While in Dunedin, visit Baldwin Street, the steepest street in the world, and don't miss the Cadbury Factory! It's well worth the admission price!

There is so much more to see and do that I haven't listed - and this guide helped me find it all and point me in the right direction every step of the way. The only thing the guide failed to mention was the abundance of rainbows in this enchanted country - I don't know about you, but where I come from rainbows are a special once in a great while occurance. In New Zealand you see them on a daily basis. I guarantee that with the help of this guide you will leave New Zealand with enough fantastic memories to last a lifetime. Kia ora.

New Zealand--or bust!
Helpful Votes: 45 out of 49 total.
Review Date: 2002-10-24
I looked at and compared this to all the other guides from Frommer's, Eyewitness, Footprint, Rough, Insight, Moon, and Fodor's, and I thought this one was the best.

I used this guide on an intensive, 3-week trip to New Zealand several years ago in which I drove over 6000 kilometers and got to just about every part of the country except Ninety-Mile Beach on the tip of the north island. I visited spots ranging from Stewart Island, Doubtful and Milford Sound, and Queenstown in the south, to the Coromandel Peninsula in the east, to the Franz-Josef glacier and the small western town of Greymouth in the west, to Lake Taupo and the capital city Auckland in the north. I crossed the southern Alps several times, and got to just about every major city and town, and I found the book very useful and accurate and a very valuable resource on my trip.

New Zealand is one of the most beautiful and delightful places you can visit, and there is something here for everybody. There is still quite a lot of wildlife, and in the south I saw lots of Tui birds, who are like myna birds in that they can immitate just about any noise, and shellducks, which are larger than any American ducks I've seen. One of them even raced me in my car on a road crossing the Alps for a while, until he surprised me by flying under my car and losing all his feathers. Oh well, I hope he grew back those feathers.

If you're into wildlife, another fun activity is to see the little blue penguins and the yellow-eyed penguins in the southeast coastal town of Oamaru. But watch out for those big shellducks. The big Kea parrots in the southern mountains are surprisingly bold. They come right up to you and you can get great pictures. A famous kea was the one that lived in a park in Sydney, Australia. This might be the only world-famous bird I've ever heard of. He would let the air out of automobile tires while people watched and laughed, which he seemed to do for the fun of it. As the New Zealanders say, they're cheeky little buggers.

Another thing not to miss is the New Zealand Wildlife Refuge on the main road north of Wellington on the way to Auckland. Several of the other things that I enjoyed that I learned about first from the book were (on the south island) the Te Anau glow- worm caves, the big boat tour of Doubtful Sound, the boat tour of Milford Sound (the wettest place on earth at sea level, with 25 feet of rain per year), and (on the north island) the Maori cultural town of Rotorua, which smells like rotten eggs everywhere because of all the volcanic steam vents containing sulfur dioxide. In fact, the steam comes out of the ground just about all over the city.

If you're the adventurous type, don't miss Queenstown in the south, the self-styled (and rightly so) adventure capital of the world. There you can do things like bungee-jump from a helicopter, and fly this interesting plane around which is tethered to a central pole. I don't know how many people do those things, but a popular attraction here is a jet-boat tour up one of the rivers. The aerial tramway in Queenstown up to the top of a local mountain gives you a spectacular view of the entire area. There is a decent restaurant at the top, which makes for a popular dining spot with a great view in the evening.

On the north island, another interesting and fun thing I did in Auckland was to take the Rangitoto Island tour in Auckland Bay on my last day there, which takes you around this small, volcanic island in the middle of the bay. Also Waiheke Island made for an interesting overnight stay in Auckland bay before flying out the next day. Kelly Tarkington's Arctic Experience is worth seeing. And last but not least, Auckland has some surprisingly good restaurants and dining.

Overall, an excellent and well-written guide and worth the price. New Zealand is one of the best and most enjoyable countries I've ever visited, and this guide was an important part of that experience on my trip.

New Zealand
REBECCA OF SUNNYBROOK FARM
Published in Hardcover by RANDOM HOUSE NEW ZEALAND LTD (1962)
Author: KATE DOUGLAS WIGGIN
List price:
Used price: $3.97

Average review score:

Building a classic library for a granddaughter
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-10-30
They don't seem to require reading classic literature in the schools any more, so I decided to build a classics library for my 12-year old granddaughter. She has read them all, including this one, so it wasn't a bad idea. Now, if I could just get her to call her old grandfather more often....

Perfect book for little girls
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
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: 3 out of 7 total.
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
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.

The Eternal Rebecca Randall
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
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.

New Zealand
Eyewitness Travel Guide to New Zealand
Published in Paperback by DK Travel (2001-05-28)
Author:
List price: $25.00
New price: $14.98
Used price: $3.99

Average review score:

As good as Always
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-10-18
We have used the Eyewitness Travel Guide during all our trips to numerous places. They are consistently well presented and easy to use. The Eyewitness Guide to New Zealand was no exception. We are using to plan our itinerary and will use it during our stay there.

Primer for a trip to N.Z.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-10-10
It's a nice and thick travel review of all the places most people would want to visit, when going to New Zealand for the first time. The smallish pictures are good for giving you an overview of the history and sites, and all of the major cities are covered.

nice pics
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-23
This is a nice reference guide when walking around town -- there are good pics and maps and it's a pretty light book. However it does not provide many recommendations on where to stay/eat so it's not too helpful in the planning stage except to get you excited about what you are going to see. Probably could've gone without it, but giving it 3-stars for being pretty... :)

Best travel guide
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-28
The DK books are always great, if a bit heavy because the pictures are so good. Another benefit, if you don't get there the guide makes you feel like you have been there anyway.

New Zealand Eyewithess Travel Guide is great for planning
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-30
Eyewithess Travel Guides give the best overall overview of any travel book or other travel product - good organization; great pictures, maps and other graphics; interesting & concise text and descriptions about history, national foods and beverages, etc.; good suggestions for lodging and eating. They are excellet resource and reference books, but they are concise enough to give a relatively complete overview but short enough to quickly convey information, especially if you do not have a lot of free time.

I believe that carefully reading about a desination is important for planning any trip. The Eyewithess Travel Guides are the best way to obtain that overview and prioritize where you want to go. The New Zealand guide is enormous help to us with our planning.

New Zealand
The Floating Brothel : The Extraordinary True Story of an Eighteenth-Century Ship and its Cargo of Female Convicts
Published in Hardcover by Hyperion (2002-03-06)
Author: Sian Rees
List price: $31.95
New price: $18.78
Used price: $17.18

Average review score:

ordinary people doing extraordinary things at sea
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-16
Love, adventure and seafaring around the world. A little known but very real story of ordinary people doing extraordinary things, at the time of the last great world discoveries. That the protagonists were often performing heroic feats against their will, as in the case of the deported prostitutes, makes the tale even more captivating. This was enjoyable reading, instructive history and made you feel like you were one of the crew!

Great Historic Book
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-22
This was a wonderful book to read to get the facts on the Australian migration from England. I highly recommend it.

Great Story
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-17
Novel or not, this book should be suggested or required reading in any women's studies/history course. The description of the petty crimes for which women were convicted, and the circumstances under which they were convicted, followed by their punishment and survival mechanisms are both entertaining and thoughtprovoking. The settler mothers of Australia! I wonder how many people today could trace their lineage back to these brave women!

Fascinating event brought to life
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-27
This book was absolutely fascinating and Sian Rees did an exemplary job in bringing the time and events to life. Definitely worth adding to your library. On a side note, there is a 60 minute documentary now airing on "Secrets of the Dead" on PBS which tells the story of several contemporary Australian women doing research on their family histories. They discover that their multi-great-grandmothers were among those chronicled in this book. The episode, entitled "Voyage of the Courtesans" (2005), combines these women's searches with re-enactments and interviews with experts and Sian Rees herself. It is an excellent show to partner with an excellent book.

History Written To Make The Reader Feel Like They Were Really There.
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-23
Like most readers I was probably attracted by the title and cover of this book and I wasn't disappointed. After reading this true story its obvious that a person really doesn't want a return to the "Good Old Days." They weren't very good at all. This is how most people actually scratched their ways through life in those days. Men were hanged for minor infractions and women were often burned at the stake for the same tiny infraction. Being exiled to one of the colonies was a big improvement. However, getting to those far away colonies was dangerous and totally unpleasant from every standpoint. Those long ocean voyages on wooden sailing ships were terrible even in the best circumstances. There was nothing romantic about braving the elements on a ship where the entire vessel smelled like an open sewer all the time. There was nothing romantic about having to share your body with members of the crew. There was nothing romantic about being becalmed and suffering from starvation and all manner of shipboard illnesses. After finishing this book a person will have to catch their breath, wipe off the smelly sea water and readjust to living on land, and apprecaiting the wonderful benefits of this century. This is history as it really happened and much of it was absolutely brutal. It's an eye opening read and hard to put down until the last page is absorbed. Then the reader will want to seek out the memoir of Mariner John Nicol who provided the only first-hand record of this incredible journey. Much of this book was lifted from the published recollections he dictated to a helpful publisher when he was 60+ years old.


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