Breeders Books
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Puppies onlyReview Date: 2006-11-03

An early chapter in the Three Oaks seriesReview Date: 2002-05-03
There is more than enough going on in this mystery to keep anyone happy. Family squabbles, murder, swindlers, and goodness knows what else. I was a little offended by the author referring to Beth as John's mistress, but other than that, I enjoyed the mystery thoroughly and hope to work my way through the whole series.


Great Breeders and Their Methods: Leslie Combs II and Spendthrift FarmReview Date: 2008-09-16
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Wonderful keepsake, an easy and fun readReview Date: 1997-10-23

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Great inside look at the "Wiescamp horses".Review Date: 1999-06-13
Hats off to Hank...... Highly recommend this book for all. Pictures, pedigrees and stories. However, 207 pages could not begin to touch the surface of the 70 years it took to create the "Wiescamp horse".

A Revolution Is Not a Dinner PartyReview Date: 1999-12-26

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KnowledgeReview Date: 2001-06-12
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Wonderful autobiography of a famous sheltie breeder.Review Date: 1996-01-23

A warning perhaps?Review Date: 2008-11-20
Some of the other reviewers criticize Silverstein for including the background material on the nuclear power industry, but I think it put the events in the book into the right context, and help to explain how David Hahn was able to get as far as he did with his nuclear experiments.
While the book does have a sarcastic tone throughout, it is actually kind of scary to think how this one boy was able to concentrate enough radioactive isoptopes from various innocuous sources (like smoke detectors) to essentially have the makings of a "dirty bomb". If David Hahn had evil intent, he could have hurt a lot of people. As it was, he really was just a boy scout who went too far in his "hobby".
While Silverstein didn't dwell on it too much, we should take David Hahn's actions as a warning about how easy it is to construct a dirty bomb. I hope enough people in high places have taken heed.
The Radioactive Boy ScoutReview Date: 2008-09-26
Yes this book is a must on everybody's shelf.
From his former ScoutmasterReview Date: 2007-08-04
I learned that David and some friends were stopped by the cavaliering Clinton Township (Michigan) Police, who were randomly stopping teens and searching their cars for stolen tires.
David was not allowed to keep his experiments in his stepmother's home, so he kept everything in his car trunk. The cops found no tires, but saw his stuff and overreacted.
Days later, David's father phoned and said that David would no longer pursue the Eagle Scout rank.
A month or so later, a man claiming to be a reporter phoned my home, wanting to do a telephone interview about David. After a few moments, I refused. There was something negative about the line of questioning.
As a Scout, David was always clean-cut, polite, and well-liked by the other boys. My take is that David had the scientific curiosity of a Tesla or Edison; not of an evil prankster.
David's father, like so many divorced and re-married men, walked a tightrope between caring for his son and appeasing a new bride.
As for Mr. Silverstein, he should keep his story factual, and keep his opinions about Scouting to the editorial pages.
Excellent BookReview Date: 2007-08-12
I think this book is a worthy read. It is a fascinating story with great description. The author, Ken Silverstein, was very good at highlighting facts and things that happened in David's life that were related to his inspiration of building a nuclear reactor. However, I think Silverstein put a little too much history of atomic energy into the book. He is also slightly biased against nuclear power.
Overall, I think this book could have been written better, but still deserves a thumb up.
The Atom is Our FriendReview Date: 2007-07-30
Well, it was quick, all right. Author Ken Silverstein originally wrote this as an article for Harper's Magazine, according to the blurb. The article has been padded with several chapters on nuclear power, chemistry, and the history of the Boy Scouts. But The Radioactive Boy Scout is hardly a cartoon or a fun little story.
Although this is a story about how one teenager nearly built a nuclear reactor in his back yard, Silverstein wants us to know it is more than that. He emphasizes how David Hahn, the teenager, was neglected by his parents and not taken seriously by his teachers. If only someone had taken the time to take this boy under his wing, perhaps a near-disaster could have been averted. Certainly the fact that there was no disaster takes the edge off the story, but we already know what can happen when teenagers don't get the attention they need.
I enjoyed the main story as well as the chapters on science and the Boy Scouts. Silverstein describes how radium-based products were sold in the early 20th century as tonics, lotions, and even suppositories, to improve one's health. He recalls filmstrips (remember?) and pamphlets that cheerfully told us to "duck and cover" in the event of a nuclear explosion. He uses a hilarious passage from P.G. Wodehouse to illustrate a common view of the Boy Scouts in their early days.
Although I share most of Silverstein's opinions on federal government, the nuclear power industry, the Boy Scouts, and inattentive parents, I think the story would have been more effective if he had left his editorial comments out. Describing David's father as "pathologically oblivious" is unnecessary. True, but unnecessary.

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Major DisappointmentReview Date: 2005-10-10
Ten Little BloodhoundsReview Date: 2007-01-10
I needed bloodhounds to follow the plot...Review Date: 2001-08-14
If nothing else, any novel that would have a major character's murder trial occupy about two chapters squeezed into the end has got more problems than I care to think about. The fact that, under the circumstances described, the major character would probably never have been charged in real life only made that part more bewildering.
I plan to read a "How To" book about bloodhound training to cleanse my palate, and then never go near another book in this series ever again.
Stick with the earlier booksReview Date: 2000-08-28
Magical Man (and cat) Trailing HoundiesReview Date: 2000-09-23
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