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

Canada
The Viking Discovery of America, 985 to 1008: The Greenland Norse And Their Voyages to Newfoundland (Scandinavian Studies)
Published in Hardcover by Edwin Mellen Press (2006-01-31)
Authors: Niels Vinding and Birgitte Moyer-vinding
List price: $99.95
New price: $99.95
Used price: $186.62

Average review score:

It was the Vikings!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-20
This book is a good read, even for those of us who are neither historians or archeologists. The idea that the Vikings "discovered" America, well before Columbus, is still controversial. History has been dependent on "storytelling" for much of the timeline of America's "discovery." The author has done original research and come up with new evidence; he presents the information in a way that is interesting to the general reader. The translation is clear and direct, and the photos add even more interest to the book.

An Important History
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-09-25
This is essential reading for anyone who ever thought that Columbus discovered America. Niels Vinding's original thesis regarding the actual landing site of Erik the Red reads like a thriller thanks to Birgitte Moyer-Vinding excellent translation. The Vikings set sail from Greenland to find a land with enough wood to supply their needs on their barren island. They discovered Vinland which is now Newfoundland making them the first Europeans to land in the Western Hemisphere. If you like history you'll enjoy this wonderful book.

History of the Vikings
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-05-16
Those interested in the Vikings will find this book informative and thought provoking. I expect the author's intriguing thesis regarding ballast stones will stimulate further investigation on the subject.




New Evidence of the Location of Vinland
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-04-17
To answer the question "Who discovered America?", Danish author Niels Vinding provides original and inciteful evidence that Leif Ericksson landed in North America in 998, 500 years before Columbus. The Vikings left few written records, but Vinding does an accomplished job of presenting his theory, interpreting evidence from the Vinland Sagas, the accounts of the Norse settlement of Vinland. In addition, his impressive detective work uncovers original archeological evidence that Vinland is the Avalon peninsula of southern Newfoundland. The book leads the reader through seven voyages in a lively and engaging style. It's a pleasure to read such a stimulating work on such an important topic. Well designed, the many illustrations include maps and drawings in addition to color photographs of Viking artifacts. The pictures are well chosen and are reproduced with exceptionally fine clarity and rich colors. A timeline, and lists of books conclude the volume. Visually appealing and quite informative, the book will delight curious browsers as well as Viking scholars. Neils Vinding received his MBA from Stanford University. This book is the result of years of intensive study of the Greenland Norse and the Icelandic Sagas.

Canada
Wait! Don't Move to Canada: A Stay-and-Fight Strategy to Win Back America
Published in Paperback by Rodale Books (2006-09-19)
Author: Bill Scher
List price: $10.00
New price: $0.70
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Average review score:

Good Advice
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-15
Solid advice for surviving these trying times and helping our fellow citizens into the light. Several books have been written outlining some of these principals, this one is simple to read and lighter than most; and in these trying times sometimes we need a break.

Hallelujah!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-09-21
It is time to reclaim this great nation for the people in it! This book isn't just about reviving the Democratic party, but reviving America's zeal to be part of their own government again. so many people in recent years have given up. They feel powerless in the shadow of a government that has been snatched from the hands of the Americans it's supposed to represent.

Bill Scher's book is "call to arms" for all those people who have given up. It's time to get back in the game to reclaim OUR government and this book is a great guide for the "everyday American". Mr. Scher shows us that deep pockets are not the only way to control a government and shows us different ways WE THE PEOPLE can once again be involved in governing ourselves. His mantra of Representative, Responsive and Responsible use of taxes should be the biggest buzzwords in every election for public office from now on. I will happily pay my taxes when I know that the money is not being recklessly squandered by the elected officials sworn to protect and preserve this country.

From now on I'll be making my elected representatives accountable for where my tax dollars go. This book has actually given me, the average citizen, concrete ways to do that. Thank you, Mr. Scher!

Thanks for a great education...and Hope!
Helpful Votes: 29 out of 32 total.
Review Date: 2006-09-23
Bill's book is awesome. It explains very clearly the ideals of the Democratic Party, better than I've heard any of them explain it. I want to get all Democratic Senators and Congressmen a copy of this book so they can explain to the public what they (we) stand for and end the confusion. I don't know how Bill figured it all out, but his writing is very logical and clear. It's freshness cuts thru all the BS we hear every day. Bill, please stay in the political landscape...we need you badly!

Indispensable Must Read Book for Every Liberal
Helpful Votes: 52 out of 55 total.
Review Date: 2006-09-19
Well written and fun to read, I believe it is not overstating the case to say that this is the most important book on liberal politics currently in print. With amazing clarity, it details the precise strategy the Democrats need to win back America and save it from years of disastrous Republican policies. Don't let the title fool you -- this a serious and wise book that everyone should read.

Scher's book methodically lays out the values that liberals embrace and that the Democratic Party has been mysteriously running away from for years. It is the perfect companion to "Crashing the Gate," Markos Moultitsas Zuniga's book on the mechanics of transforming top-down Democratic Party politics into a more democratic and broad-based entity infused and enlivened by grassroots values. Markos purposefully avoids describing in that book what those values are. Don't Move to Canada describes those liberal grassroots values and how they can best be articulated.

Scher, who has a background in public relations, explains how "liberal" was transformed into a negative label by the Republicans and how it can be rehabilitated by accurately framing the political debate, among other things.

If the Democratic Party adopted the platform Scher outlines in his book, they would have a chance to remake America as a country that embodies the ideals on which it was founded and which we have come to identify as making America great.

Canada
Wake of the Green Storm: A Survivor's Tale
Published in Paperback by Marlor Press (2001-04-01)
Author: Marlin Bree
List price: $13.95
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Collectible price: $35.95

Average review score:

Without Warning
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2001-06-08
This is a true story about a lone sailor on the biggest, most beautiful, and most violent lake in the world. The lake that can swallow a modern day 730 foot lake freighter in an instant. LAKE SUPERIOR! Marlin Bree was caught, without warning, in a storm that wreaked havoc across the land and exploded on to Lake Superior. It is the story of the skill and luck it takes to survive a short lived hurricane with winds in the 100 mph range. It tells the stories of others who were surprised, and survived the green monster. I witnessed this same storm, and can attest to the ferocity of it. This book tells about the stark contrast of the changing moods of what has become known as the inland sea. It is a lesson on the unpredictable nature of such an immense body of water that has been known to create it's own weather systems. It's no wonder most choose to admire her from the safety of her rugged shore line. This is the type of intense adventure that makes it difficult to put the book down.

A truly Superior Storm..
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2001-06-02
It's been a long time since I have read a book that I truly enjoyed as much as "WAKE" It's one of those books where you just don't want to and CAN'T put it down because you sense and feel that you are there with Marlin sharing the adventures. Superior is well known for the fierce storms that drive across the lake. Ships of all types and sizes have sailed into these storms, never to be seen again....Marlin tells about some of these storms and his voyage aboard PERSISTENCE... a first hand account of the infamous "Green Storm", and other tales along Superiors North Shore..........

Wake of the Green Storm
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2001-05-23
Treat yourself to this true sailing adventure that will transport the reader into scenes of terror beauty, serenity and whimsey. It is the next best thing to being there!! Marlin Bree takes us along as he sails his 20 foot sloop, Persistence on the unpredictable and sometimes merciless waters of Lake Superior. Among other things, he tells the story of how he and other boaters were caught in the July 4, 1999 storm which devastated the area with 100 mph winds. The story of the green storm, as it came to be called, is masterfully interwoven with tales of the people and the history of this vast body of fresh water to create both a gripping and heartwarming story. Being a solo sailor myself, of course, one might expect that I would love the book, but non sailing friends have repeatedly thanked me for bringing their attention to the book. It is a story that will be loved by all those who appreciate the hardy characteristics of adventurers everywhere: preparedness, self-reliance, dogged determination in the face of adversity and most important, humility. Marlin is to be respected not only as an author and a solo sailor, but, for his ability to have it all, that enviable balance of family, work and personal passion. Do not miss this pearl among adventure stories, but beware that it may stir some sleeping inner longing and inspire you into action! (-:

Review of Bree's _Wake of the Green Storm_
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2002-03-01
This is Bree's third cruising narrative. The first was _In the Teeth of the Northeaster: A Solo Voyage on Lake Superior_ followed by _Call of the North Wind: Voyages and Adventures on Lake Superior_.

Bree is one of the better writers in a small sub-set of cruising narratives by singlehanded sailors who go coastal cruising in small yachts. Other writers in this genre include Philip Teece (_A Dream of Islands_ and _A Shimmer on the Horizon_) who cruises the waters around Vancouver Island and Robert DeGast (_Western Wind, Eastern Shore_ and _Five Fair Rivers_) and Howard Walker Schindler (_Between Two Bays and the Sea_) who sail in Chesapeake Bay.

Just as reading Teece makes you want to go sailing around Vancouver, Bree does the same thing for Lake Superior. Bree is an excellent story-teller and his books are always lively and filled with historical information and yarns that will shiver yer timbers.

Bree's latest work is extremely tense in parts and you will probably have a hard time putting it down after you start reading (especially since the 'Prologue' is a nail-biter). The book is centered around his experience with the July 4, 1999 "Green Storm" in which his home-made 20 foot wooden centerboard sloop *Persistence* was caught out on the Lake and knocked-down -- and experiences by other boaters with the same storm. There are other exciting moments -- like grounding on a reef and tense moments navigating through very narrow channels in the fog and dodging floating trees.

Like the other books referred to above, this book shows that you don't have to cross an ocean or own a big and expensive boat to find some adventure. And, for sailors cruising in other areas, it will instill some respect (if they don't have it already) for "Lake sailors".

Canada
A Wall of Light
Published in Hardcover by Random House Canada (2005-09-13)
Author: Edeet Ravel
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Used price: $12.99

Average review score:

Exciting Novel
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-12
It started out slow at first, then I thought I wasn't going to enjoy this book, as I started to read into the novel the story went form one character to character the story started to fit into place. I couldn't put the book down; it became so interesting to read the difference in the time line story from the different characters. Over all I would recommend this novel to read.

A wonderful conclusion to the trilogy !
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2006-02-17
After reading Edeet Ravel's first published novel, "Ten Thousand Lovers" last winter, I was delighted to read her second novel, "Look for Me." (Lucky for me, both had already been published!)

During the period of waiting for novel #3 to be published, I took my family on our first trip to Israel. Our first stop was Tel Aviv, the setting for all three books. How exciting to be in the city where 'Ami,' 'Lily,' 'Daniel,'and 'Dana' "lived." I emailed Edeet (via her website), and she graciously replied, informing me that the Italian restaurant where we'd just dined was the setting for Dana and Vronsky's weekly Wednesday dinners! Too cool!

We travelled with a private guide through Israel for 2 weeks, just before the removal of the Israeli settlers from Gaza. We were struck by the peaceful attitude of the Israelis and Palestinians we met -- many people wore either orange or blue ribbons to announce their feelings re: the pull-out, but there was no violence, no problem. EVERYONE has at least one opinion, but most manage to live fairly peacefully with the situation - perhaps because it's been going on for so long. Our tour guide, an Israeli, made a point to expose us (safely) to Palestinians -- food vendors in Akko and Jerusalem's Old City, shop-keepers everywhere. Of course, most of these Palestinians were Israeli -that is, they spoke Hebrew and were desirous of living within the borders of the State of Israel. We had many friendly discussions with many people; politically, our tour guide apparently is close to Edeet Ravel's position.

Individually, the Arabs seem peaceful and reasonable. I think that a large part of the problem is that they do not have organization, and a leader who is democratic. Democracy is not on the anti-Israel Palestinian agenda. Neither is "recognizing" the State of Israel.

Back to the book:

Well, I've waited anxiously for the third in the series to be published, and was not disappointed even one whit!

The brilliant conceit of this book is the revolving sequence of chapters, each using a different, but consistent, point of view. One chapter was a piece of Sonya's story (which collectively detail just ONE DAY!!); then, a bit from Noah's diary; then one in a series of letters written in 1957 by Sonya's mother to the lover she left behind in Russia. The sequence of authors continues through the book; we are able to get a view into the heart of each writer, and are also able to see the same events through different eyes.

I also loved that Ravel "recycles" several characters through the books. I was so happy to "see" Lily, from "Ten Thousand Lovers" again! This seems entirely plausible, as Israel is a tiny country, and, really, everyone is connected somehow!

A lovely story, about characters you will love and care about!

I recommend reading the series in the order written, but it is not imperative. You probably will re-read them all anyway!

Kirkus review
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2005-06-23
From Kirkus: "The last of a trilogy (after Ten Thousand Lovers, 2003, etc.) portrays the emerging character of Israel through the relatively low-key, emotionally limpid diary entries of three characters from different generations.

An epiphanic day in the life of a deaf Tel Aviv University math professor, Sonya Vronsky, holds center court, while Sonya's mother and cousin also offer journal entries containing some family history. The mother, Anna, a new refugee to Israel, writes to her lover back in Russia during the late 1950s, while her cousin, Noah, in his youthful diary reveals the milieu he and Sonya grew up in during the 1980s. First, though, Sonya, at 33, has been living with her attentive older brother, Kostya, in a gorgeous house in Tel Aviv he purchased out of guilt for the defining catastrophes of Sonya's life: her deafness, caused by an overdose of medicine given when she had a kidney infection at age 12; and a vicious rape she survived as a young student when twin drugged-out teenagers broke into her deserted university classroom. Sonya, as she reveals in her breezy journals, is a remarkably resilient character devoid of self-pity or sense of entitlement; she is determined to live her life her own way-that is, lose her virginity properly and take a lover. Goaded by a flirtation with one of her students, she proceeds to seduce the Arab taxi driver who brings her home, and afterward she convinces her brother and friends to help her find him again. In her journal, Anna, newly escaped from the Soviet Union and living with young son Kostya, records her involvement with an amateur theater production; Anna will learn of her lover's death, precipitating her dark journey into alcoholism. Noah, in turn, will venture into adolescent flirtations and the trial of serving in the Israeli army.

Handling a tricky juxtaposition of three disparate lives with grace and wit, Ravel shows her characters forging a country out of trauma."

I loved it.
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-19
This is the third book I have read by Edeet Ravel, and I loved each of them. I'm Israeli, and I find the characters real and complex, not cardboard stereotypes like so much literature set in a political context. All the books are a very good read, and left me thinking and caring about the people whose story she tells. This book would be a great gift for people who care about Israel.

Canada
War Against the Family: A Parent Speaks Out
Published in Hardcover by Stoddart (1992-11)
Author: William D. Gairdner
List price: $32.95
New price: $6.93
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Average review score:

One of the most important books ever written
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-06-13
This book is by far the most important book ever written on modern-day Western collectivism, and it provides a startling analysis of the advanced degree of our cultural decay and loss of personal liberties.

Compelling ananlysis of modern social trends
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-06-13
I first purchased this book in 1994 and have found it to be enormously useful, well written and very cogent. It has not gotten stale with time only more accurate as the effects of family breakdown that he predicts become even more apparent. I use it as a reference and have referred several people to this book who have thanked me for that advice.

I will keep this short as I think that G.W. Thielman's opus review tells it like it is.

Excellent
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2002-12-30
An excellent, well written book detailing many of the problems with our society. Written for Canadians, but will show Americans where they are headed if they follow in our intrusive, "Big Brother" government footsteps.

Factual and Reasoned Refutation of Social Engineering
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2000-06-06
Be no more... carried about with every wind of doctrine, by the sleight of men, and cunning craftiness, whereby they lie in wait to deceive. Ephesians 4:14

William D. Gairdner, a Canadian citizen and former professor at Stanford, has written a book warning the citizenry of the state-subsidized efforts by collectivists to destroy the nuclear family and atomize people into autonomous servants of the state. This opus is titled _The_War_Against_the_Family_ and should be read by all who are concerned about the policies behind the popular rhetoric labeled "family values" by public ofÞcials. Despite its 644-page length, the temptation to underline everything is compelling.

Dr. Gairdner begins his book outlining the efforts of the therapeutic state to subsidize and coerce the private lives of its citizens in exchange for votes, before launching a critique of popular illusions employed to justify this intrusion. The ten tenants eviscerated are listed as: Individualism--the dissolution of interdependence for state-imposed autonomy, Communalism--the exchange of voluntarism with the compulsory society, Freedom--the replacement of and moral obligation with license, Rationalism--"from a worship of the God-man (Jesus), the people... worship the Man-god (ourselves)", Relativism--the decline of critical assessment, Victimism--the guarantees demanded by self-serving professional victims, Tolerance--the new thought-control, Rights--indulgent desires that have been transformed into claims against society, Equality--the votary of universal mediocrity, and Determinism--the denial of free will.

Many critics of the traditional family claim that the nuclear family--father, mother and children with mutual love and division of labor among the members--is a rather recent development, born in the industrial age. The author shows this notion to be nonsense. He also disabuses the arguments alleging familial oppression--"It is not the individual who creates the family, but rather the family that creates individuals." He further emphasizes the importance of protection to private property and the dangers of excess taxation in injuring domestic tranquillity. The impersonal treatment of human beings can leave emotional scars on mature adults, but when waged against children, the results can be tragic indeed. Dr. Gairdner defends the family a "the only social institution ever invented to provide children... with a form of love that is unconditional"--in contrast to the impartiality of day care as espoused, among others, First Lady and NY Senate candidate Hillary Rodham Clinton.

Dr. Gairdner critiques the philosophies of the great collectivists, from Plato to Rousseau to Sartre and lays to shame their allegedly noble objectives. Then, the author contrasts the results of state intrusion by comparing nations with limited interference--Switzerland and Japan versus the most collectivist among democratic regimes--Sweden and Canada and those in between--United States and New Zealand. Statistics on these countries range from taxation burden to the illegitimate birth rate and much more besides.

The state-funded schools receive their share of criticism in four chapters. Intellectual, moral and physical education are evaluated and are found wanting. While the costs of public education have increased exorbitantly, objective measurements demonstrate failure to teach knowledge or skills to their students, and instead have focused on political agitation and sexual indulgence.

This is followed by scathing attacks on modern feminism with its emphasis on lesbian rights and abolition of the family instead of protecting children from outside forces, and radical homosexuality which has contributed to civic breakdown and spread of com-municable diseases. "The right to be treated equally by the State is transmuted into the right to have equal privileges from society--privileges formerly reserved for those who earned them." A few pages later he writes, "wise societies have always known that the general sexual energy of humanity, unconÞned by any hierarchial moral order, will always seek ap-proval for what is essentially narcissistic, masturbatory self-indulgence, and be loosed to maraud against the larger social order."

The context of Dr. Gairdner's argument is largely moral, so it is no surprise that the author turns to abortion and euthanasia as the moral perils of our times. He outlines the degradation clinically--"we seem to ignore... that only four crucial and very simple elements are necessary to fuel the Þres of barbarism, ancient or modern. The Þrst is... _progressive_ moral degradation..., the second is _ofÞcial_sanction_ of such behavior..., third is the idea that all potential victims of barbarism must be ofÞcially deÞned as _non-persons_, under the law..., and fourth comes the belief that designated classes of élites may be empowered to _substitute_ their judgment for that of the victims... [emphasis original]" His graphic descriptions of third-trimester abortion procedures (dilation & evacuation, saline amniocentesis, prostaglandin, and hysterectomy)--often for organ harvesting--make for disturbing reading. A brief summary of an article mentions a federal subsidy for medical experiments on live aborted babies purchased from Helsinki, Finland. Advocates of these procedures hold sway in government and the media on the basis of political expediency and in a vacuum of debate. We may seek solace in believing ourselves are exempt from such treatment, but as Dr. Gairdner writes, "nothing whatsoever can protect a single human soul from the ambitions of a group, except for the obedience of the group itself to some higher inviolable standard of behavior that declares each soul to be worthy of preservation and dignity." With public conÞdence in moral absolutes waning, the threat to each of ourselves, inside the womb or in the nursing home should serve as a warning that society has degenerated from the abstract principle of _eros_ or life to _thanatos_ or death.

Meanwhile, Dr. Gairdner asks why so many religious leaders have ignored the warnings--and instead, proclaim a social gospel of political advocacy, often in favor of leftist socialism and multiculturalism. This reintroduction of the church's Þrst heresy--Gnosticism (of which New Age is merely a sect) has transformed a portion of the clergy from promoting faith to endorsing élitism.

The author calls on families to familiarize themselves on the war against them that is waged ostensibly on their behalf. He condemns the Canadian ratiÞcation of various United Nation treaties advocating rights on this or that--"so-called `human rights' really amount to a set of obligations on a State only too happy to take everything you have in order to give you everything you want." Many of the policy suggestions pertain primarily to Canadian politics, but the basic message is universal--mothers and fathers must guard their families against encroachment by the governmental élite. A more timely and philosophically argued defense of the family could hardly be found.

Canada
A Way to See the World: From Texas to Transylvania With a Maverick Traveler
Published in Paperback by The Lyons Press (2005-06-01)
Author: Thomas Swick
List price: $14.95
New price: $1.95
Used price: $0.89
Collectible price: $24.95

Average review score:

A first-person journey which is stimulating, fun, and never too predictable
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-11-08
Thomas Swick's A Way To See The World: From Texas To Transylvania With A Maverick Traveler isn't your usual travelogue of wild and woolly adventures; for Swick chooses no ordinary path for his journeys. His accounts are unconventional at the least; from attending a hobo convention in Iowa to his search for James Thurber's spirit in Columbus, OH and his entry to the forbidden Cuba on a cultural exchange program. Colorful observations of counter-culture and local color provide a first-person journey which is stimulating, fun, and never too predictable. A fine armchair adventure awaits.

The world's mine oyster, which I with pen will open.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-09-27
Delightful! Thomas Swick's writing is elegant, his observations about the places I've been to are perfect, and his descriptions of places I haven't seen make me feel like I've just been there. Highly recommended.

Travel writing to take with you.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-13
Reviewed by Olivera Baumgartner-Jackson for Reader Views (1/07)

Being professionally involved with the travel industry for years, I've met my share of travelers and my share of tourists. Same thing applies to travel writing - some writers are tourists, some are travelers. Thomas Swick is without a doubt a traveler. His "A Way to See the World" is subtitled "From Texas to Transylvania with a Maverick Traveler" which immediately gives you an inkling on the scope of his writing. What the title does not convey is how deeply Mr. Swick explored every place described within this marvelous book. He delves into the usual topics of history, landscape and culture; and while all of those are great reading, in my opinion he truly excels when describing the people and their everyday lives.

No matter where his travels take him, be it to Cuba on a cultural exchange, to the Croatian seaside, a carnival in Trinidad or the one in Mobile, Alabama, a dinner with cartoonists in Russia, a baseball game in Chicago, the last leg of Oregon trail or searching for Hungarians in Transylvania, Thomas Swicks discovers the people and talks to them. More importantly, he lets them talk when they so desire. And he listens real well. His explanations are brief and only added when necessary. He discovers real people everywhere he goes, even on board of a cruise ship and in a tennis tournament in Miami.

His observations are keen and detailed and he captures the spirit of each place wonderfully well. Take, for example, this brief scene during the carnival in Trinidad: "At nine the next morning - five hours after the soca stopped - eight middle-aged Germans sat eating fried eggs and tomatoes on the terrace. `Winston, what time is it?' one of them asked the manager. `Time? I don't know. It's carnival.' Then Winston went and put on some calypso."

Or this absolutely brilliant description of Americans: "Restlessness is in our genes. It shows itself in everything from our national literature - `Moby Dick,' `Huckleberry Finn,' `On the Road' - to the short life of the average address book. [...] It seems no coincidence that our largest export company is Boeing. From a historical perspective, no other country could have beaten us to the moon. If, as is said, England is people and France a civilization, the United States is an experiment in perpetual motion."

Each of his stories in "A Way to See the World" is different and every single one is wonderful reading. Take them with you on your next trip, keep them in your car for when you have to wait somewhere or devour a whole book in one sitting when you are too broke or too busy to get on the road yourself - in each and every case they will open your eyes to how life-changing, exhilarating and wonderful travel could and should be.

Beyond travel
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2003-11-16
Tom Swick has written not just an exceptional travel book, but an exceptional book. Period. Horizon broadening, mind opening, amusing, pure pleasure.

Canada
When Cats Go Wrong
Published in Paperback by Raincoast Books (2006-02-07)
Author: Norm Hacking
List price: $9.95
New price: $1.99
Used price: $0.02

Average review score:

Fun and Educational Story for Kids
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-02
This is a cute, funny story to share with your kids, or any other little ones in your life. Most people (especially cat owners) will get a kick out of the antics of this cat, and the anxiety those antics produce in his owner, a little boy who's trying to keep those antics hidden. Comes with musical CD, so you can "sing" along with the words to the book. Gives kids, especially the young ones, both the reading and the musical stimulation so valuable in young life. And fun for adults, too.

When Cats Go Wrong is Addictive
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-25
My daughter gave this book to me as part of a Christmas gift. The tune on the CD is catchy and humorous. My three year old grand daughter loves it. The singing is different than she has experienced and that, together with the tango beat, has fascinated her. Nice to follow along with the pictures and words as you listen to the CD, so more dimensions. Beautifully illustrated with vibrant colors.

Cats
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-15
Great book for any cat lover

author of "Hobo Finds A Home"

When Cats Go Wrong
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-24
The grandkids love this CD and book! They think it's very funny, and it's easy for them to follow along with the CD!!

Canada
Whispers of War: The War of 1812 Diary of Susanna Merritt (Dear Canada)
Published in Hardcover by Scholastic Canada (2002-01)
Author: Kit Pearson
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Average review score:

My Favourite Book Ever!!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-12-03
I read them all and this one is most exciting novel on the face of Earth! It is about Susanna Merritt's life during the war of 1812. Her father is the Sheriff of an army in Canada in Niagara, so she hardly ever sees her. With her father, brother and pregnant sister not living with her, Susanna only has her Mother, other sister Maria, and maid, Tabitha. One night, while in Niagara visiting, Susanna buckles on Governer Brock's sword before a very, very, very important battle, and if you read this novel, you will find out if the Canadians or Americans won this battle.

The saddening story of young Susanna Meritt.
Helpful Votes: 15 out of 15 total.
Review Date: 2006-04-01
Susanna Meritt lives near Nigarra in Canada, 1812. A war is whispering around her, and soon troops of Canadians are leaving Canada to fight America, determined to end their war of 'who owns Canada' once and for all. Susanna constantly worries for her family and herself, but mostly for her friend- Abigail Seabrook and her family, who are Americans, and are against the idea of going to war against their home country.

Whispers of War was an amazing book that cleverly told the 'War of 1812' in an intelligent and innocent way, immitating the voice of an innocent young girl as she watches her beautiful home- Canada, die around her.

Another wonderful Dear Canada book.
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2003-02-03
This book is one of the Dear Canada series, which are historical novels, written in diary format, about fictional girls during different periods of Canadian history.

Susanna Merritt is a young girl living near Niagara, Canada in 1812, the youngest in a large family. Susanna fears for her family as the war begins, but she is also very worried about her best friend, Abbie Seabrook. Abbie's family are Americans, who are reluctant to go to war against their home country. In her diary, Susanna describes what happens to her family and friends during the first few months of the War of 1812, and during the battle that takes place near her home.

As an American, I really enjoyed getting a different view of the War of 1812 from Susanna's Canadian perspective. I really liked the setting and the characters came alive in Susanna's diary. I'd recommend this book to readers who enjoyed any of the Dear America or Dear Canada books.

Whispers of War
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2005-10-21
This is absolutly one of the best historical books i have EVER READ!
I have read this book about four times, and i never get bored of it. Heres my review - -

This book is about 11 - year - old Susanna Merritt, who lives in Upper Canada (around Ontario..) In 1812. Her family is constantly fearing about war, and talks about how many family members were killed in different wars.
Susanna Merritt lives a peaceful, safe life in the small town of St. Cathrines, with her sister Maria (15), mother, father, brother Hamilton Merritt (age 19) and her many pets. She goes to school, although the teacher is not very good at, well, ... Teaching.

When news comes that there IS going to be a war, Susanna and her family are devestated, as her brother and father must go off and fight.

Susanna also fears her friendship with Abby, who just moved to Canada from America two years ago, will not last.

But through everything, Susanna stays strong, and follows in her brother's footsteps by writting a diary.

Some interesting points in this book are:

- - When Susanna meets General Brock in Niagara.

Sad parts in this book are:

- - When General Brock dies.

- - When Susanna worries that her sister, Caroline, is going to die.


Overall, this is a fantastic book, and i recomend it to anyone that is looking for a fun book to read, that is also educational!

Canada
The Wild Silk Moths of North America: A Natural History of the Saturniidae of the United States and Canada (The Cornell Series in Arthropod Biology)
Published in Hardcover by Cornell University Press (1996-06)
Authors: Paul M. Tuskes, James P Tuttle, and Michael M. Collins
List price: $95.00
Used price: $199.63

Average review score:

Hooray for Saturniidae !
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-05-15
At last a book I can put on my bookshelf next to Holland's Moth Book.

Excellent book that not only deals in the taxonomy of Saturniidae moths but of collecting and rearing as well. Great illustrations and maps.

Previously much of this information was only available in bits and pieces on the Internet and in obscure publications and has never been previously compiled in one volume.

For those of you not familiar with Saturniidae they are the family of giant silk moths. Some species are the size of a small bird. Just about every location in America is home to at least one species of giant silk moth and they even live in our big cities.Why do most people not see them? Well one reason is they are nocturnal and high flying. If you look in wooded areas however you will often see their cocoons. One can purchase live silk moth cocoons and the females readily attract males by a phermone that can be detected by the male of the species for miles.



As a moth breeder I welcome this book.

The most comprehensive book to date on N.A Saturniidae!
Helpful Votes: 12 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 1999-03-24
Very impressive coverage on the Wilk Silk Moths of Noth America. Most known species are shown in exellent photographs,some in the larval stages also. Good range maps and detailed text make this the laymans best friend when exploring and learning about the habitats and life histories of some of our most magnificent moth species. The best book I've seen on the subject period!

Impressive details of each moth's life cycle. Easy to read.
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 1996-11-13
For each moth there is a color picture of last instar caterpillar and one or more pictures of the moth. There is also a range map and detailed descriptions of each stage of the life cycle with notes on rearing.
This is a well-written, well-researched, easy to read book. I would recommend it to anyone interested in these largest and showiest of the U.S. moths.

Excellent Moth Guide
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2001-04-13
I have been looking for a guide like this for years. This book shows great pictures of all the bigger moths of North America including their caterpillars. Loaded with maps and drawings of the cocoons this book is a must have. Don't let the price scare you away.

Canada
Wilderness Beginnings
Published in Paperback by Caitlin Press (1997-09)
Authors: Rose Hertel Falkenhagen and Rose Hertel-Falkenhagen
List price: $18.95
New price: $13.87
Used price: $10.00

Average review score:

Learning about my own past
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2000-01-03
I truly loved this book. For once, because it's part of my own past, Paul Hertel was my mother's uncle. And second, I like Mrs. Falkenhagens style. It was great for me to learn about my ancestors. Now I understand much better my own urge to discover the world.

A German-Canadian Adventure
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 1998-11-11
"Wilderness Beginnings" is truly an adventure story about two people facing seemingly insurmountable odds both in Pre-WWII Germany and in the wilderness of British Columbia during the 1930's. This true-life book is extremely well written and an easy read. The story draws you in from the start and holds your attention throughout the remarkable journey. There are times it is difficult to believe this is not fiction. I highly recommend this book to readers of all ages.

A personal wilderness adventure
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 1998-10-20
A true life adventure of a young German immigrant who migrates to the wilderness of British Columbia during the mid 1930's. The adventures and brushes with death from the natural elements remind me of Jack London's "Call of the Wild".

Human interest story of a young man's wilderness adventures.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 1998-08-25
A wonderful true-life story of the adventures of a young German immigrant who becomes a 20th century pioneer in British Columbia. After falling in love with the BC landscape and learning to live in harmony with the forces of nature, he returns to his home in Germany to marry his sweetheart. They both return to BC to share the natural beauty of the country and indure the challenges of the Great Depression, which are intensified by the general distrust of Germans in Canada as Hitler invades Europe, and Canada and the United States are drawn into World War II. Inspite of these obstacles, Paul and Grete Hertel raise a family and eventually settle on a farm on Vancouver Island.

It was with a sense of sadness when I finished this story, knowing that I could no longer look forward to reading any further adventures of the Hertel family. I wish to thank the author for sharing this fasinating story of her father's early years in British Columbia.


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