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

Canada
LUCKY MAN
Published in Paperback by BANTAM (2003)
Author: MICHAEL J. FOX
List price:
New price: $31.50
Used price: $1.94

Average review score:

A thought-provoking intimate account
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-27
I was amazed at what an excellent writer Michael J. Fox is -- his story was candidly written with insightful accounts of his incredible journey. I was also impressed that the proceeds from the book all go to research for a cure for Parkinson's disease. Way to go, Michael!

A real Lucky Man of Hollywood!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-05
I bought this book on the recommendation of my Medical Terminology teacher. We were discussing neurological diseases and when we got to Parkinson's Disease (PD) she mentioned that she had read his book and how much she enjoyed it. So I got it. I was not a huge "Family Ties" fan but I have paid attention to Michael J. Fox's career especially of late since his disclosure of having PD. In the last few years he has been on a show here and there as a guest. He was on Boston Legal and I thought he was superb! You could clearly see that the camera did not stay on him very long but his acting was top-notch nonetheless.

That said, his book is written with extreme openness, heart and humor. He has such a wonderful outlook on life especially in the wake of learning he has PD. He writes from a place that we wish more stars would be able to go - the very sincerest depth of his being - so much so that I found myself in tears a few times as I read. He writes as if he were telling you, the reader, the story in person. He is himself more in this book than I've ever seen him in an interview on TV. This is a very true, revealing, heart-warming story that definitely gives the definition of what it takes to be considered a Lucky Man today. I highly recommend the book.

Engaging and Insightful
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-21
Michael J. Fox opens his 2002 memoir in late 1990, in the moment he first notices the pinky-finger tremor that leads, a year later at age 30, to a diagnosis of Young Onset Parkinson's Disease (PD).

Then he backs up for a hundred pages to describe his growing-up years in Canada and rising-star experiences in Hollywood -- including an interesting theory of "celebrity" (that it is a gone-haywire extension of the suspension of disbelief/emotional connection that are required of an audience during a performance). He devotes chapters to his PD diagnosis and treatment (including his concealment of it) and to his descent into career and personal crisis. Though it seems PD would top his list of problems then, he notices it doesn't even make the list which includes alcoholism. Fox finishes by describing his redemption, his "coming out" about PD, and his work toward PD research.

The memoir's structure and writing exceeded my expectations and I wondered about a ghostwriter -- until I read Fox's acknowledgements, where he mentions the writing of it and thanks his writing-mentor brother-in-law ... Michael ("Omnivore's Dilemma") Pollan! Lucky Man is an informative, engaging, and insightful memoir.

A memoir that is good and fun to read
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-02
I wasn't sure what to expect from this book. Would it be just about Michael J Fox's life or would it center too much on his Parkinson's disease. I'm not usually big on reading celebrity autobiographies and memoirs.
This one is definitely worth reading! Mr. Fox shares his story with humor and humility and a wonderful honesty. He speaks honestly about his struggles with Parkinson's and trying to hide it in order to continue working. He also speaks honestly about his personal struggles with alcohol and depression. But the struggles don't dominate the book. There are many fun anecdotes about his years growing up in Canada and about the world of acting.
In the end, what made the biggest impression on me was his gratitude. Gratitude for the life he was able to have as an actor, for his family, and ultimately, even for the disease that changed his life.
This is a book that I would recommend for anyone who is interested in celebrity biographies. And I would especially recommend it for anyone who has Parkinson's disease or has a family member or friend who has this disease. When you have a disease such as this, it can be difficult to articulate to others just what it is you go through without sounding sorry for yourself.
Now when I need to explain this to someone, I can just hand them this book and say, "READ IT. NOW."
Thanks, Mr. Fox!!

The Courage to Be Yourself
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-08
Michael J. Fox's memoir "Lucky Man" is a great and inspiring read. One thing I admire about Fox is that he's basically an average guy who was dealt some wild cards and has managed to thrive in life - including, not in spite of, his circumstances. One thing I found consistently striking and inspiring is Fox's courage throughout all of his life experiences to be true to himself. In some instances, this meant following his natural instincts in his career, and in others it meant hiding his disease from the public as a delicately-timed and balanced lifestyle. His honesty and lack of pretension is also refreshing; he talks not only of the Hollywood lifestyle he had when his career took off, but also of his self-doubts and fears.

If you were also inspired by this honest perspective on enjoying life to
the fullest, I highly recommend the books Being Here: Modern Day Tales of Enlightenment, as well as Working on Yourself Doesn't Work: The 3 Simple Ideas That Can Instantaneously Transform Your Life, by Ariel & Shya Kane. The Kanes talk specifically about living in the moment as a way of discovering magic in your life - how to do it, how to not do it, and how it is easy and effortless. In his book, Fox talks about how "his 'job' is whatever he happens to be doing at the moment - whether it's giving a speech, changing a diaper, writing a book," etc. If you'd like to discover a sense of truly being here for each moment and living your life as wholly as possible (without having to experience a major tragedy or disease), look no further than these wonderful books.

Canada
Mrs. Mike
Published in Paperback by Berkley Trade (2002-01-08)
Authors: Benedict Freedman and Nancy Freedman
List price: $14.00
New price: $7.00
Used price: $1.95

Average review score:

FOND MEMORIES
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2009-01-05
I have such fond memories of Mrs. Mike. I have purchased it as a gift for the 13-year-old daughter of a friend for Christmas. I know she will enjoy it as much as I did when I was her age. When I was 12 years old our teacher would each day, just after lunch, read us an excerpt from Mrs. Mike. We always looked forward to the story and what was going to happen next. I am no longer 12; I am 62, and the teacher is now 84. I see her often in the town in which we both still live. And we have often mentioned this book to each other. She has said that many of her students from those days have commented to her on the book through the years about how much they had enjoyed it. I was so delighted to see a few years ago that it had been re-published so I could read it again.

Thank you.

A book you will never put down!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2009-01-04
As is mentioned in the introduction by the authors, all you need do is glance at the comments made by instant fans to know that this is a book you will never put down. It is a compelling story of a woman whose travails speak to the heart of anyone who has longed for adventure and suffered through hardship.

Refreshingly real but romantic
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2009-01-01
If you liked Anne of Green Gables or These is My Words, you will like this book. The main character comes to age in the Canadian wilderness and finds love. When heartache comes, her decision to survive is admirable and encouraging. A strong, graceful woman, Mrs. Mike will remind you of some of your best girlfriends.

An Amazing Tale of Canadian History (Alberta in early 1900's)
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-11-12
This is the 2nd time I've read this saga of an ailing young woman who is sent by her Boston immigrant family in 1907 (or so) to her uncle who is pioneering on a farm not far from Calgary, Alberta, to recover her health. Her indomitable spirit in the wilderness makes a wonderful true tale of the peoples who lived in this part of the world at that time -- the native peoples, the immigrants, the "characters", the nuns, the wildlife, the winters, all wonderfully portrayed. I loved it 30 years ago, and I loved it again in 2008.

A Beautiful Story
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-11-05
This is a wonderfully written book. It won't take long before feel that you know the characters and are part of their world. It's not that often that I'm really drawn into a book to the point of laughing and crying with those the story is about. Half way through I went out and bought the next book.

Canada
Blue Castle, The (Canadian Classics Library S.)
Published in Paperback by Simon & Pierre,Canada (2001-10)
Author: L.M. Montgomery
List price:

Average review score:

A really good and comfy book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-11-17
This book is so sweet and filling. Its written by l.m. montgomery so it fills your soul up. What I like best about this book my Montgomery was that it was limited and finished in one book. It wasnt like Anne of Green Gable (which I do love but) in which the story was going over seven books. This book is about a shy and timid girl that when she hears that she has a year left to live, goes and lives her life to the full extent and enjoys it.

I give it 4 1/2 stars
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-10-08
I am a faithful L.M. Montgomery reader; I've read all of the Anne and Emily books many times over. I've read many of Montgomery's other works, too - but I hadn't read The Blue Castle. I bought it on recommendations I read here.

First off, I was pleased that I wasn't just reading another "Anne" or "Emily" book, as much as I love them. The Blue Castle is truly different. The story is clever and very interesting. It was also refreshing that the heroine, Valancy, isn't a writer (also the case in the Pat books)! ; ) But, I felt that Valancy is the most self-absorbed "good" character I have ever read; everything (except that one instance, when she stepped out of herself to care for the dying girl) is about Valancy to Valancy. I take away half a star for how annoying that is!

Also, for anyone who is at all weak-willed, I highly recommend this story; to see how badly a life can be wasted when all a person cares about is what other people think of them!

My favorite book of all time.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-12
"Spoilers, read at your own risk"

I can't even explain in words how this book touched, inspired, and warmed me.

A middle-aged old maid, Valancy Stirling, had problems with her heart. Because she doesn't want to raise a fuss, she visits the doctor which none of her relatives go to, and gets a check-up with him.

But the doctor gets news of his son being injuried in another town, so he rushes out the door, leaving poor Valancy alone, wondering again what's wrong with her.

The next day however, Valancy recieves a letter telling her that she had a uncurable heart disease, and if she takes care of herself, she will live for one more year.

Valancy is crushed. She has never really had a life, because of her over-bearing family, and a shy nature. She has never even been kissed, never loved anyone, and never actually BEEN loved.

So Valancy decides to make the most of the life she has left. Leaving her home, she goes to her friend Cissy Gay's house, and house-keeps for Cissy and her father. Valancy buys pretty clothes, and stops wearing stiff, ugly hair styles. She begins to become happy, loving Cissy, and being loved by her.

Barney Snaith, the supposed criminal of the town, (whose only real known crime is that he keeps away from society) becomes the object of Valancy's love. She wishes she weren't dying because of him, but she knows he probably wouldn't love her anyway.

Then Cissy dies of consumption (tuberculosis) and Valancy's relieved family expects her to come back home and act like a prim, boring person again. But instead, Valancy shows Barney Dr. Trent's letter, and asks him to give her one happy year, and to marry her. He agrees, and Valancy is more embarrassed then she would have been if he had said no.

The next day, they marry and go to Barney's island. The Stirling family is horrified, and give up on her completely.

Then, a surprise ending, and horrifying truths shatter Valancy's dreams, only to bring them back together again in a satisfying, well written ending.

My All Time Favorite Book
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-21
This book is by far my all time favorite. It is not like the Anne of Green Gables series to me, although I love those. It is a seperate and sweet story of someone who is forced to see life in a completely different light when death is thrust upon them. I can relate to the character in a very personal way so this book moves me to want to be more of myself. Maybe that is why I love it so much. I find the light humor and the romance to be enchanting and I recommend this book to anyone that I meet. It is short, but I like that part too. It moves me every time I read it.

:D
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-07
Though I love Anne, Emily, and Pat, I also love Valancy. I feel hands down that this is the best book LM has ever written, at least for adults. I felt myself so angry for Valancy at first for the way she is treated, but it was so awesome to see her stand up for herself and become happy. You go girl!

Canada
Jamberry (Early Bird)
Published in Hardcover by Nelson Canada (1991-01)
Author: Bruce Degen
List price:

Average review score:

Great book for very young children
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2009-01-08
Wonderful rhyming book with terrific pictures. Perfect in a block book for very young children. One woman I gave it to said it is her child's big favorite.

So catchy! It stays with you!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2009-01-06
Our family LOVES the rhyming in this story! So cute! We find ourselves counting, "one berry, two berry, pick me a blueberry..." at random times! This is a fun one to read to kids and allows you to really ham it up and be really animated and silly. The pictures are very elaborate and detailed and fun to look at. The kind where you notice something there a second time that you never noticed there before. This is certainly becoming one of our all-time favorite children's books!

wonderful book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-12-01
wonderful book . My daughter loves the rhyming words and the wonderful colorful illustrations. I would definitely recommend this book.

Delightful
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-11-20
Just a delightful book. I remember reading this during library time when I was little, so I had fond memories of reading the playful words and looking at the fanciful illustrations. You'll enjoy the book if you like fun rhyming that doesn't necessarily use "perfect" words but creates an enjoyable experience for your child anyway. Although another reviewer gave this book one star because it wasn't "educational" enough due to its use of playful words, some books are just meant to be read and enjoyed without teaching a lesson. It's okay to let kids be kids and to foster their imagination!

Now I'm an adult with a toddler. I found "Jamberry" at our local library and checked it out to read to my daughter who was 12 months old at the time. She kept saying "again" whenever we'd finish it. Whenever we check it out at the library, she wants to read it everyday, multiple times, at least 3 times in a row. Although this may annoy me slightly (especially after the 15th time reading it in one day), I'm thrilled she's so excited about a book and am proud to help foster her love for reading at an early age.

As an aside, we haven't checked "Jamberry" out at the library in at least 2 months and tonight I said "One berry, two berry, pick me a blueberry" and our daughter wanted to read the book. We tried explaining to her that "Jamberry" was still at the library and she got pretty upset that the book wasn't here to read for the twenty-millionth time. Never making that mistake again! No quoting "Jamberry" unless you have the real thing to back it up. That's why I've gone ahead and put it on my daughter's wish list.

Fun rhythm for babies and tots
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-11-17
This was one of my daughter's favorites, and it's one I didn't mind reading again and again. It has a fun rhythm and innovative text, and is not repetitive or "moralizing" like many kids' books. It's not meant to teach a lesson, just fun-- and really, don't we all need that sometimes?

Canada
Emily of New Moon
Published in Library Binding by (2008-05-16)
Author: L. M. Montgomery
List price: $14.50
New price: $14.50

Average review score:

The reason she was named...
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-12-23
I named my daughter after the beloved little Emily Starr in this fantastic series of books! After reading all three by L.M Montgomery I found myself wanting to take a walk with young Emily as she grew. And when my daughter was born I hoped beyond hope that she would be much like her in spirit and heart! A must read for anyone who has a young daughter or for anyone who is still a young daughter at heart!

A great, honest, straight forward book.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-12
Emily Starr is a daughter of a faith-confused father that her mother's family has shunned for his poverty. Her mother, Juliet Murray, died when she was five, and then when she is older, her father dies of consumption, leaving her an orphan.

Her mother's family takes her in, and teaches her all their traditions and strict codes of honor and pride.

Emily makes new friends, grows, and even has a few love intrests, despite her young age.

The only problem I had with this book was her father way of thinking of God. He says everyone has their own God, and that Emily shouldn't worship their housekeeper's God.

That is very untrute. Every one has their own PERSEPTION of God.

Get it right L.M. :)

One of Montgomery's BEST!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-24
"I think I shall be a great poetess or a distinguished novelist."
That is Emily Starr talking, the young blossoming writer, that will touch your heart, with her creative and interesting, ways and ideas.

Within just the first chapter of the book, you'll already be intrigued by Emily's charm, and her topsy-turvy imagination. All through the story, Emily meets new people and friends. Some will help her on her way to becoming a writer, "a painter that uses words". Others will shoot her dreams down, as if they were nothing but mere dust. Just watch her take on all the distressing incidents that she overcomes with an intellect beyond her years.

She's always on a new enchanting romp, that'll keep you guessing. From giving up her beloved cat, to clashing with Miss Brownell (her unjust schoolteacher), to unraveling an age-old puzzle with her whimsical mind, you'll stay right by Emily's side the whole time.

Here's a small excerpt that I especially enjoyed:
"But there is a destiny which shapes the ends of young misses who are born with the itch for writing tingling in their baby fingertips, and in the fullness of time this destiny gave to Emily the desire of her heart---gave it to her, too, on the very day when she most needed it."

Personally, I have to state that this book is very inspirational for anyone endeavoring a priceless dream. I have read the entire set of the "Anne of Green Gables" books (that are written by the same author), but in my opinion, "Emily of New Moon" is much more enthralling! It is at the top of my list of my favorite books.

Classic and More Complex Than "Anne"
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-18
It is difficult for me to write an objective review about this beloved classic. Emily is like a childhood friend to me. Created by the author of Anne of Green Gables, she is a more complex character than Anne - introspective, determined, and deeply sensitive to life's joys and shadows. Her love for writing, or her need to write, defines her; indeed, much of the story is told through her writing. And yet this first book of the Emily trilogy is mostly lighthearted, though not without its passages of intense experience. Emily is orphaned in the beginning of the book, and moves to the farm of New Moon to live with two estranged aunts and one uncle, their brother. She thrives and flourishes in the beautifully prosaic, quaint world of New Moon and Blair Water on Prince Edward Island. Though she is a private and secretive person, she gives lavishly of herself in her closest friendships.

Montgomery's writing is at times indulgently over-descriptive, but not without vividity, wryness, feeling, and rich character development. Perhaps the most eloquent aspect of Emily of New Moon is its flavorful honesty about life both light and dark. Emily is a complex character, full of both faults and virtues, neither of which are expressed simplistically. The reader's sympathies are always with her. Montgomery's indirect insights into the writing life are also very valuable. Emily has writing in her blood, sees it as something intrinsically personal and sacred but wants to share it, does it with abandon yet later throws it away, and yearns to climb the ladder of fame. In this sense, I feel more kinship with her than with her more popular sister Anne Shirley.

An intriguing heroine...
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-26
Sheltered by her loving father, 10-year-old Emily Byrd Starr has never minded her isolated life. What child notices poverty and a lack of playmates when her intelligence and imagination make each day special and exciting?

Then one terrible day, Emily finds herself an orphan. A mass of never-before-met aunts and uncles descend upon Emily, criticizing and making plain the fact that whoever takes the child is only doing so out of their sense of duty.

Still reeling from the loss of her father, Emily must also leave her beloved little home and pets for New Moon, her mother's childhood home, where unmarried aunts Elizabeth and Laura currently reside. It is with stern matriarch Elizabeth, gentle, loving Laura and "simple-minded" Cousin Jimmy that Emily must now learn to form a family.

Despite the hardships, Emily's new life is quickly filled with many joys, as she makes friends at the village school and develops her interest for writing. Emily also experiences -- at the most unexpected moments -- "the flash," her word for the brief startling glimpses of other-worldliness, which has the power to change both her life and the lives of others around her.

Ask most people what they associate with L.M. Montgomery, and they'll likely say Anne of Green Gables. Yet despite the fame of Montgomery's "other orphan," the Emily books are quite possibly even more memorable and beautifully written. Like Anne, Emily is thrust into an unfamiliar world, where she must make the best of circumstances; but unlike Anne, Emily is possessed of a strangely adult maturity even at the tender age of ten, a glimpse of darkness which will accompany her through the years. This streak makes readers both more concerned for her well-being and perhaps more able to relate, as she is not nearly as happy-go-lucky and childlike as Anne in her early years.

If you enjoy this book, be sure to read "Emily Climbs" and "Emily's Quest," which follow the girl through her years at high school, through romantic relationships and her writing career as a young woman.

Canada
If Only
Published in Hardcover by Doubleday Canada, Limited (1999)
Author: Geri Halliwell
List price:
Used price: $1.15

Average review score:

Awesome Book, Awesome Girl!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-02
I bought this book after seeing a spice girls documentary. Even though I wasn't a big fan of the Spice Girls I always found Geri likable and decided to read her book.
The book is awesome. She takes you from her childhood up until she left the band. She and her friends reminded me of my friends and I. The book is very frank, down to earth and fun. I highly recommend reading this one and then following it up with her second book, Just for the Record. The second one starts right where this ones leaves off.
A great fun interesting read. This Girls is great!

Fascinating read.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-08
If Only by Geri Halliwell is her account on life as a ex-Spice Girl and so much more. Halliwell actually has some talent as a writer, this book was hard to put down. Geri talks about her issues with food, her rise and exit from being Ginger Spice, and the death of her father. Geri doesn't leave anything out, she is open, frank, and quite hilarious as she goes deep into her past. I highly recommend checking this great book out. It was a pleasure to read it. Enjoy!

Ginger was really the best of the Spice collection
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-10-19
Geri Halliwell shocked many of her fans when she left the Spice Girls in 1998 after a 2 year mega successful time. The Spice Girls were the biggest girl band in music history.... and Ginger Spice (her moniker back then) was the most exciting personality. Like her childhood idol Madonna, Geri Halliwell grew up in a working class suburb and had a dream to be famous since she was 12. She got it and yet she found that fame had an interesting impact on her life. This book answers a few questions as to why her sudden departure happened at the height of the Spice Girls fame ... and it reveals more of Geri underneath all the Ginger.

Superficial, Attention Seeking And Very Shallow!The Book That Is!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-01
This book reads like a very tedious conversation with Ms. Halliwell over a long lunch that you can't get away from until she finishes her dessert.She writes about her early impoverished childhood and how she craved the attention of an audience and wanted everybody's approval which sadly most people of any maturity know that this is something you will never get. Ms. Halliwell's "definition" of her "Personal Growth" is when she tries on an outfit which is too small so she asks for a bigger size.The last time I saw Ms. Halliwell in a photo she was being carried away to her limo by a big bodyguard after suffering from "Champagne Fatigue". The only good thing about this book are the revealing photos that were taken during her days as a "Glamour Model". It is no wonder that this woman likes living in Los Angeles.Her greatest accomlishment in life was to stop singing in a Pop Group and start singing solo. Big Deal.

Geri Halliwells book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-04-13
I really enjoyed this book. It was awesome to see into the depth of Geri's life. I had no idea that she actually had eating disorders while she was a spice girl. It really helped me to understand more about her and that she really worked hard for her career. I would love to meet Geri although I don't know that that will ever happen. Her book makes me want to meet her even more if only to say that she did a great job and I understand some of the things she went through. I've been there. I highly recommend this book.

Canada
Paddle-to-the-Sea (Unabridged)
Published in Audio Download by audible.com ()
Author: Holling Clancy Holling
List price: $14.95
New price: $3.71

Average review score:

Paddle-To-The-Sea
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-12-26
I've owned this book since I was about 10 years old. That would be 60 years ago. It's a great adventure with terrific illustrations that capture the story. Best to read a chapter a day and savor the memory. I recently purchased a copy through Amazon (exactly the same as the one I've owned since 1956) for my great nephew. The latest "paddle Person" in our family.

Remarkable achievement, though a slow read for young ones
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-10-24
I think the temptation here is to give "Paddle to the Sea" five stars. After all, the book is a dazzling display of art and narrative, an educational and interesting tale. But five stars is the voice of the adult reviewer, and this book is mostly read by and to young children.

I was excited to stumble across this book in the library: I remembered it from my childhood. But I was surprised to find how little of the book I remembered. Mostly I remembered the general idea--perhaps my parents were not too keen on reading the entire book.

From the perspective of my daughter (nearly 6), the book was well worth reading, though not terribly compelling. She was curious to learn about Paddle's journey, and interested in the geography (we live right on the route). She liked many of the illustrations, though not nearly so much as I. The book is quite lengthy: it took us several bedtimes to finish it. I was drawn back to the book each night, eager for more of the art and story. I liked the altruism of the people who find Paddle, and the solidarity they show with a maker they will never meet. There is a beautiful selflessness in the land and in the people of the land. But I found that it was I who wanted to read the book each night, more so than my daughter. For young ones, the art is less impressive and the story is a bit slow. And since children's books ought to be ranked with children in mind, we'll have to give this book fewer stars than it otherwise deserves.

Paddle to the Sea
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-17
I purchased this as a gift for my daughter. She is delighted. The art work is beautiful. She was so happy I purchased the rest of the set and they are just as beautiful.

Excellent reading material, especially for boys
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-27
This is a great book to read. I would highly recommend this book and others by the author for fun reading and at the same time great learning opportunities.

A Childhood Memory
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-17

I read this book 60 years ago as a young boy of 10. It made a tremendous impression on me with regards to the geography of the Great Lakes of the US and Canada. I was thrilled to find that it is still being printed and the pictures are the same as I remember--excellent. A wonderful story.

Canada
Anne of the Island (Anne of Green Gables Novels)
Published in Audio Cassette by Blackstone Audiobooks (2000-06)
Author: L. M. Montgomery
List price: $44.95
New price: $28.32
Used price: $15.00

Average review score:

Anne of the Island -- a cherished favorite!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-12-04
The Anne of Green Gables books are my absolute favorites!! There is something unspeakably wonderful about them that makes you return to them again and again. Maybe it is that imaginative, romantic, red-haired (auburn, sorry Anne!) girl named Anne (spelled with an E) ... for me, it is! Every time you open one of the Anne books, you are swept into Anne's world. Some of you that are well acquainted with Anne, dream that you are Anne, and I know from my own feelings that most girls probably dream about playing Anne in a movie.

In the last book, Anne of Avonlea, Marilla tells Anne that she can go to college with Gilbert. The book ended with the veil of girlhood being dropped, and Anne stepped into womanhood. In this book, Anne of the Island, Anne finds herself in a new chapter of her life. She is now at Redmond College in Kingsport. Gilbert Blythe (every girl loves Gilbert, right? I fell in love with him myself!!! J) has earned his way to go to college with Anne. Anne's old friend, Priscilla Grant, comes to Kingsport, and together, Anne and Priscilla settle in their boarding house where Miss Ada and Miss Hannah live. At Old St. Johns cemetery, Anne meets Philippa Gordon. Phil is a sweet, frivolous girl who says that she could never marry a poor man. Oh dear, this review is making me homesick for Anne! J

Anne and her college friends, Phil, Pris, and Stella, settle into Patty's Place with Aunt Jamesina to keep house. At Patty's Place many wonderful adventures take place, including trying to chloroform Rusty, a forlorn cat. One day, Anne took a walk in the park, and on her way a heavy rain was falling. Poor Anne, her umbrella blew out, but... "Pardon me -- may I offer you the shelter of my umbrella?" When Anne looked up, she saw the man of her dreams with all of the qualifications that Anne wanted in a husband -- tall, handsome and distinguished-looking -- dark, melancholy, inscrutable eyes, and a melting, musical, sympathetic voice. His name was Royal Gardner, or Roy for short. Their courtship started. Gilbert had proposed to Anne but Anne rejected him. Anne told Gilbert that she could give him nothing but friendship. Gilbert wanted her love.

At Redmond College, gossip got around that Gilbert and a girl named Christine Stuart were in love. Anne thought that Christine looked a lot like her pretend other self -- Cordelia Fitzgerald. (Any of you girls that have read Anne of Green Gables know what I am talking about). Though Anne did reject Gilbert, she was still upset about Gilbert and Christine. Roy's mother and two sisters came to visit Anne at Patty's Place, though the girls at Patty's Place did not know that they were coming that day. Well, Pris, in a desperate situation, totally lost her head and plunged her newly iced Chocolate Cake under a cushion on the inglenook sofa!

During the end of the book, in the chapter "False Dawn", Roy proposes. Anne opens her lips to say her fateful yes. It never came. Anne at last comes to her senses and realizes that she was swept off her feet by Roy's good looks and knack of paying romantic compliments, but that she could never marry Roy because she did not care enough for him. As Lucy Maud writes, "There is a book of Revelation in everyone's life, as there is in the Bible." Anne met hers when she got home from college -- Gilbert was dying.

I am going to end my review there to get you to read the book! Quite a horrible place to stop, but I do not want to spoil the end.

All of the Anne books are so well written. I think that Lucy Maud Montgomery put a lot of time and effort into them. I am glad that she did. Every girl should read the Anne of Green Gables series, and I assure you that if you do read them, you will LOVE them! I can't find words to express how much I love them! Also, these books wouldn't be good without Gilbert, Diana, and all the rest of those memorable characters. When I get married and have a daughter, I will go and get my well worn but precious set, and hand them to her and say, "Here are the best books that you will ever read. I had this set when I was a little girl, and I loved them, and I still do. Read these, please, and I hope that Anne will be your friend as much as she was mine." - P. Charles

P. S. I hope that my review has been helpful to you.

Quaint and Sweet
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-31
This third installment in the beloved Anne series is one of my favorites. Having just completed two years of teaching in Avonlea, Anne, along with friends Gilbert and Charlie, is ready to leave the Island and make her way to Redmond College. Her four years there offer quaint-seeming insights into college life a hundred years ago. After spending her freshman year in a boarding house, Anne and chums Priscilla, Stella, and Philippa move into a little house called Patty's Place. Even though they are committed to their studies, life is never dull. Anne has no lack of suitors, turning down no fewer than five proposals during the course of the story. And her summers are full of adventure, whether it's back in dear Avonlea or teaching as a country schoolmarm.

I've read Anne of the Island each year I've been in college, and as I finished it this time, I couldn't help but relate to Anne's excitement for the future, mingled with regretful nostalgia about the college life she was leaving behind. College is a once-in-a-lifetime experience. Having attended a small Christian university, I relate to Anne's old-fashioned values and the safe, wholesome environment of Redmond.

Montgomery has such a pungent writing voice, alive to the quirks of human nature and the beauties of outdoor nature. She brings spice, optimism, and a touch of cynicism to the story and the characters. Anne's most personal experiences are recounted with poignancy, and are rooted in reality, although they may seem whimsical to modern readers. The ending is sweet and satisfying. I just love Anne, and especially this tale of her college experiences. Don't miss it.

Sup, lolz
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-21
Anne of the Island is the third installment of the smash Anne of Green Gables series. The book begins with Anne leaving for college to further her education the second time. When she arrives, she encounters a slew of minor domestic problems, a new group of friends, and Love. All of which she deals with using that famous atypical personality of a "Kindred spirit"



Although the book deals with more serious subject matter than the preceding books, as a reflection upon Anne's growing older, the book starts with the lighthearted catchy fun that made Anne famous in her prequels. Most of this fun is centered on the Anne's encounters with her roommate cats Rusty, Joseph, and Sarah-Cat. Anne's exclamations of fear at being stalked by the docile house cats is classic Anne and delicious fun.



The Book also dives into more serious matter, with Lets be friends-Lets be more than friends-Lets be friends-I hate you-Marry me! Gilbert abandoning his indecisiveness and aggressively courting Anne. Although this relation is of little interest to male readers, it is made a key plot element, most likely because it is attractive to the books target demographic, pre-teen girls. Luckily, most of the content on Anne's romance does nothing to affect other parts of the story much and as a result are harmless to skip when they become drab.



Anne of the Island is a solid installment in the Anne series. Although not equaling or surpassing Anne of Green Gables, "Of the Island" leaves little to be desired besides not having a near constant usage of the word "eh". If you an Anne fan, pick up her third book. Eh.

i read this over and over again.
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-15
this book never gets old. i've had it for so long and now i'm off to college and i still enjoy reading it cover to cover. anne is a great character, one who is easy to love and who explains herself well. the other characters are also quirky. something about this book is very universal, which i think explains why even in this century i still find myself being able to relate to Anne. the plot, while essentially a love story, is not overly sappy. and while most people would probably expect the ending, the twists and turns throughout the novel keep you entertained and engaged.

Delightful
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-06-22
"Anne of the Island" is my favorite Anne book, and the last chapters of my copy are worn and torn because I have read it so many times. I loved it as a young girl, and I loved it again when I read it from my college dorm room (in fact, I think it's time for another rereading!). Plus, of course, a college education makes many of the literary references more relevant than they were at age 11.

Anne fans already know how wonderful are these chapters of Anne's life. This book outlines an important epoch in the series and answers the all important question of whether they will or they won't--a turning point on which the next five books hinge. And since you must start at "Anne of Green Gables" to appreciate any of it, this review cannot convince to you read just book three. It is just one more love letter to "Anne of the Island" added to this review panel.

Canada
I Want to Go Home!
Published in Paperback by Scholastic Canada, Limited (2004)
Author: Gordon Korman
List price:
Used price: $9.90

Average review score:

Hilarity abounds!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-21
I read this book for the first time in the 6th grade, and now, 20 years, later, it is still as hilarious as ever. All ages can enjoy this wonderfully funny book! If you like to laugh, then give "I Want to Go Home" a try. You won't be disappointed!

Funniest book of all time?
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-15
I've probably read this book about 20 times (over the past 20 years) and it never gets old. So many funny characters and situations. It's kind of surprising it never got made into a movie, but maybe the camp movie genre is already saturated.

If you haven't read it already, it's worth the time and effort to hunt down a copy of this book.

I love this book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-26
I had this book when I was a kid. I lent it to my friend and never saw it again. It was my favorite book, and I wanted a copy for my boys. I just rolled with laughter when I read it as a child, and when I read it with my wife and kids, they did the same thing. It is a shame this book is out of print, because kids love it. You will not be disappointed.

I adore Gordon Korman
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-08
and this would be one of my favourite books by him!

it is laugh out loud funny and I read it over and over again.

I am an adult, and I adore his books. If you are looking at buying something for kids who don't like to read, something like this should get them hooked!

I Want to go Home!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-10
This is one graet book! It is about a boy named Rudy Miller, who is not very socialized, being sent away to summer camp. He does not take part in any sports, though he is a true Olympic champion back at home. He meets a shy friend, Mike Webster, who is a very bad liar, unfortunatly! With Mike as his companion, Rudy plans a million ways that he could escape this summer camp he dreads. In class, our teacher read "I Want to Go Home" to us. It was hilarious reading about Rudy and Mike's impossible escapes! Read this great story about Chip, the cabin councsiller, Harold, a mean campmate, Pierre, the arts and crafts teaacher, and of course, Rudy and Mike! You will love it!!!

Canada
Eleventh Hour
Published in Hardcover by Don Mills, ON, Canada: Stoddart Publishing, 1993 (1993-09-20)
Author: Graeme Base
List price: $11.95
New price: $21.60
Used price: $6.20

Average review score:

A mystery combined with beautiful illustrations
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2009-01-08
This book contains some stunning illustrations and some great text. That said, each page contains clues to solving the mystery of the book. Each page also contains a mouse hidden in the illustration. By combining the clues on each page your child (or you) should be able to solve the mystery. However, the mystery is pretty hard to solve. Takes patience and an eagle eye! Children and adults who enjoy putting together puzzles will find the book fascinating. Children with little patience with most likely love looking at the illustrations and reading the prose. The back of the book contains the answer as well as the locations of the hidden mouse.

A book for all ages
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-10-08
Yes, it's a book with easy words and big pictures of animals in costumes going to a birthday party. In that respect, it's a children's book. But the depth of the mystery and clues are beyond the reach of most 4-year-olds (and many adults, for that matter).

My own life is a good example. I got this book for Christmas forever ago and loved the pictures, but as I grew older I began to appreciate the intricacy of the clues, and as such still pick it up well into my twenties.

Yes, it's possible that your toddlers may get frustrated by the mystery being over their heads. But don't let them cheat and look up the answers (given in a special sealed section in the back, along with all the clues hidden in the illustrations); instead, let them figure it out - it serves as a great learning and perception tool.

Truly amazing and so much fun!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-17
I read this book on the recommendation of a friend. I say that I read it, but really this is more like a book you do. What do you do? You solve the mystery of the poetic story by searching the detailed illustrations for clues. Some clues are more obvious than others, but most clues take real sleuthing to discover. I had so much fun with it, and after about two days of study, I came up with the answer, but there was still so much that I had overlooked. Thankfully, the author reveals all to you in a sealed section at the back of the book. I encourage you to resist seeking the answers until you've tried your hardest to find as many clues as you can. Even if you can't figure out the who dunnit, you will be exited with every clue you find, and will likely hear yourself exclaim, "Ah-ha!". This book is marketed to children but it takes a sharp mind to solve the mystery and discover the clues, so it is really better suited for teens and adults, but even small children will enjoy the story and the amazing pictures. I would give this book as a gift to anyone who enjoys a good brain teaser. So get out your magnifying glass, a notepad and pencil, and have fun!

This is for Kids and Adults
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-02
The story is about Horace the elephant who has decided to celebrate his eleventh birthday, with 10 of his friends in the eleventh month (November) on the eleventh day. After all have arrived the eleven characters participate in eleven games in anticipation of a birthday feast at the eleventh hour of the day. Thus the title of the book - The Eleventh Hour. The day is filled with musical activities, indoor/outdoor games, board games, cards, party games and more. The eleventh hour arrives disappointing the guests with the unexpected disappearance of their birthday feast. Apparently a theft perpetrated by one of the invited guests. Horace saves the day by serving healthy whole wheat sandwiches to all and the birthday cake remains because it had been stored away from the feast. With everyone enjoying the birthday cake, the story closes with a happy ending.

However, this is where one story ends and other mysteries begin. On each page of the book there are puzzles to be solved and clues to lead a more intrepid reader along the trail to the thief of the birthday feast.

Worth every penny!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-22
I'm a freshman in college and I still love this book. My third grade class room had a set but we were NOT allowed to open the pages in the back! The entire class spent lots of time pouring over the sumptuous pictures and trying to spot each and every hidden...well, I won't give it away. I came across the book in a bookstore recently and bought it immediately because I had such fond memories. Do yourself or your kid a huge favor and buy it!


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