North America Books
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loved it!!!!!!!Review Date: 2001-08-28
A TIMELESS LOVE STORY!!Review Date: 1999-04-08
A TIMELESS LOVE STORY!!Review Date: 1999-04-08
A wonderful historical romance for teens.Review Date: 2002-09-13

Used price: $7.70

INSPIRING, SPIRITUAL, POWERFUL !Review Date: 2001-02-12
WOWReview Date: 2000-03-24
My search is ended.........Review Date: 2000-03-14
This is history told from a fresh perspective.Review Date: 1999-05-05
Used price: $3.99
Collectible price: $23.93

Ultimate shell reference!Review Date: 2004-07-13
There are several editions made of this guide, from cheap paperback to hardcore turtleback. The paperback and hardback are the best to buy, as they are both great deals and cost less than the turtleback, which is also durable. Any edition will serve you very well in shell collection ID or snorkeling discoveries.
This is the book that got me started.Review Date: 2000-10-18
SeashellsReview Date: 2007-01-12
For the Ageless Avid BeachcomberReview Date: 2006-06-28
Used price: $2.22

Destined to be a ClassicReview Date: 2008-03-30
Magdalena Gomez, Poet
www.myspace.com/magdalenagomez
Beautiful, inventive poetry.Review Date: 2008-03-29
Vivid, fierce, powerfull, deepReview Date: 2008-03-28
It belongs on the top shelf, if you must keep it on a shelf...Review Date: 2007-01-19
Collectible price: $24.95

Good to read again!Review Date: 2007-06-18
It's half a century since Enid Blyton first wrote this book, and it is still captivating enough. I'm surprised that these books are not as popular any more. When I used to read these books, we were sharing them with friends and making sure we read all the books in the series. Nowadays, television and game consoles seem more interesting to children. Maybe, the publishers are aware of this -- and they made the covers look more interesting!
One of the rewards of reading Enid Blyton titles like this Secret Seven book is that it improves your language skills. And yes, this is the first book in the Secret Seven series.
Pity Americans do not read Enid BlytonReview Date: 2001-09-13
secret sevenReview Date: 1999-11-27
If you have children, share Enid Blyton with them!Review Date: 2002-05-20
Used price: $8.49
Collectible price: $23.00

enid blyton is a very good writer!!!Review Date: 2006-03-26
i am really crazy abt Ms. enid blyton's novels.
i really love them a lot. she is a very good writer and she has just got a lot many innovative ideas and she has put them all into her works to make them more interesting and adventurous.
she is just awesome and her so are her books!!!
shravya,
india
This Book Took Me Back To My Wondrous Childhood!!!And It's Better THan Harry Potter!!!Review Date: 2005-11-13
twenty years later i still love her booksReview Date: 1998-12-11
What a shameReview Date: 2000-01-26

Great reading for schoolkids!Review Date: 2003-01-08
Aiken againReview Date: 1999-04-30
The book shows great realistic deatail.Review Date: 1998-12-04
No curse on thisReview Date: 2003-02-14
After his mother and older brother mysteriously vanish, Cosmo Curtoys is sent to live with an eccentric mathematician relative in England. While Aunt Eunice is pleasant (though odd), Cosmo rapidly makes enemies of almost every other kid in school. What's more, strange things have begun lurking nearby, including a tadpole-like thing that fell off of his sleeve -- and grew.
Soon Cosmo finds out about something linked to the disappearance of his mom and brother -- a family curse that dooms every eldest brother to die in battle, and every mother to die of grief. Because of this curse, he is visited by "shadow guests," a Roman gladiatior, a naive Crusader... and a sinister force that threatens to kill him.
It's definitely above the average ghost story, and makes good use of Cosmo's social isolation to let him encounter ancestors who are also burdened by the curse. Cosmo is a likeable hero, who alternates between not understanding what's happening, and knowing all too well what is going on. Cousin Eunice is a nice (mathematician) twist on the usual weird relative; the kids at school often seem like their friendliness or hostility has some bearing on the story, but ultimately that peters out.
Aiken's writing is pleasant, although the pacing is a bit odd -- one minute we're reading about kids snubbing him at school or playing jokes on Bun, then we're reading about ghosts and ancient warlocks and family curses. Moreover, some of the details in the book must have passed me by, because I didn't quite understand a few parts of the ending. But the haunting (pun intended) atmosphere and mix of the unearthly and the solidly, likeably British is very fresh-feeling.
While this book isn't quite as stellar as "Cockatrice" or "Mountain," it's a solid ghost story with a pleasant storyline and hero. Well worth the read.

Used price: $4.29

A Spiritual Message Woven into the Fabric of a Fantasy NovelReview Date: 1997-12-08
A wonderful Native fantasy novelReview Date: 1997-12-09
"A wonderfully creative,Native fantasy debut."Review Date: 1997-09-03
A Grabber!Review Date: 1998-01-21

Giambastiani has outdone himself. Again!Review Date: 2003-06-07
This novel continues the saga of George Custer Jr., estranged son of the President of the United States, in a slightly different late nineteenth century America. See reviews of earlier books in this series for more details. In this new story, we gain much more insight into what makes father and son tick, but not at the expense of sweeping adventure. This is still very much a thrill ride that will keep you turning pages long after a sensible person would have turned out the lights.
I eagerly anticipate Giambastiani's next tale of adventure set in the wonderful world he has created.
The best of the series... so farReview Date: 2003-05-02
One: More detailed character development. My main complaint about "The Spirit of Thunder" was that the plot was moving too quickly, which took away from painting a deeper psychological picture of the main characters. In "Shadow of the Storm," the progress of time slows down considerably, and details such slowdown allows to incorporate make the book a vivid read.
Two: Improved writing depth. While previous installments were perfectly readable, "Shadow" goes one step further. It reads like a Hollywood epic, with characters and events flashed out to such a degree the readers can actually see them in their mind's eye. For example, the scene of Indian cavalry maneuvers in a San Francisco corrida arena is nothing less than "The Gladiator" transferred in all its glory from the movie screen to paper.
Three: Stronger emphasis on human drama. While the first two books touched on George Custer Jr.'s emotional struggle with conflicting allegiances, "Shadow" brings it to a climax, but not on the inaccessible level of national politics, but rather on a very close, and thus painfully real, personal level. The tone for the most important question of the book - what constitutes family and what role blood connection plays in it - is set from Chapter 1 and is brought to a heartrending climax with the novel's final scene.
Overall, I highly recommend this book. While I will await the next installment with impatience, a certain degree of trepidation will also be there. Mr. Giambastiani has set the bar of my expectations pretty high with "Shadow." Will he be able to reach it with Book 4? Only time will tell...
Well-plotted and rousing adventureReview Date: 2003-03-30
The Offensive ActReview Date: 2003-03-04
In this novel, George Armstrong Custer, Senior, wins re-election to his second term as President of the United States. Not everybody is pleased, to say the least, and trouble is brewing between the labor unionists and the industrialists. The common people, however, are mostly pleased at the prospect of free land made available with the Homestead Act, property in the lands of the Cheyenne Alliance.
In Little Italy, Cesare Uccido tries to protect his twin sister, Fortuna, from the hustlers and pimps, but is unsuccesful. In despair for the hard life of her family, Fortuna agrees to couple with a rich man for a golden coin, yet Cesare finds her with the man and tries to take her away, but the man attacks him and Cesare fights back, finally taking out all his rage on the man, killing him thoroughly. Afterward they flee, to find themselves with the man's clothes containing a large amount of cash and coin. With this money, the Uccido family flees to the frontier to stake out a homestead.
Back in New York, the new Ambassador from New Spain takes on his duties after the degraded death of his predecessor in a house of ill-repute. On his introductory visit to the White House, he overhears the President disparaging the Spanish government and leaves angrily. Since the Ambassador has a prior hatred for Custer, he looks for a way to pay back the President for his misdeeds.
Among the Cheyenne, George Armstong Custer, Junior, called One Who Flies by his Cheyenne family, is still trying to stop the slaughter of his adopted people. He is still weak from his wounds, but agrees to leave early with Mouse Roads and Picking Bones Woman to join Storm Arriving and Speaks While Leaving for the birth of their baby. One Who Flies is happy to travel early since he wants to ask Storm Arriving for permission to court Mouse Roads. Before he can be answered, the death of Picking Bones Woman causes the family to leave for the deathgrounds on the shore of the Big Salty, the Nebraska Sea.
All these elements converge on Washington for a major confrontation between the US and the Cheyenne.
This novel is well written and enjoyable, not only for the plot, but for the details on the lives of the Cheyenne people. The twists and turns of the plot are frustrating to the reader as well as the main character, but are necessary to sustain the story. After all, a peaceful life is boring to most readers, yet most of the really good sections were just everyday life among the Cheyenne.
Recommended for Giambastiani fans and anyone who enjoys tales of exotic people and international intrigue in a fantasy setting.

Used price: $5.20

you're never too old for fairy talesReview Date: 2008-06-13
SHE-CALF AND OTHER QUECHUA FOLK TALESReview Date: 2002-06-30
Couldn't put it down!Review Date: 2001-06-16
A presentation of the flavour of Quechua cultureReview Date: 2000-10-26
The stories are presented both in the Quechua language and in English translation, and it is possible to see the shape and patterns of the language with careful text comparison; it makes it worth considering learning the Quechua tongue to pick out the nuances which are inevitably lost in translation.
Related Subjects: Mexico United States Canada
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