Youth Books


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

Youth
Kids at Work: Lewis Hine and the Crusade Against Child Labor
Published in Paperback by Clarion Books (1998-03-23)
Author: Russell Freedman
List price: $9.95
New price: $3.27
Used price: $2.01

Average review score:

Great book with good quality printing.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-30
This soft-cover book is written like a children's textbook, but Hine's photos look great all throughout. There are quite a few full-page prints, roughly 8x6 sized. I'm very satisfied with the purchase; only Aperture would print a book with better quality reproductions, and that's out of my price range right now.

Cholden's review for Dr. Overstreet's lit block 2007
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-25

Lewis Hine was a photographer who took pictures of young children at work. There were many different jobs that children held during the late 1800's into the early 1900's. Hine's photographs were extremely powerful. Each photograph provided information about the types of jobs children held and gave some family history. The majority of the children had little to no education because their parents relied on them to work and earn an income. Many of the factories preferred the work of younger children compared to adults because the children were quicker and were too young to complain. Hine has displayed photos in this book of children as young as four years old shucking oysters. The most dangerous job that was portrayed in the book was coal mining, unfortunately it was also the best paying job; a child had to be at least fourteen to perform the tasks. Parents often lied about their child's age to get them into the mines. The book would have been just as powerful without any of the information. The pictures were enough to convey the children's stories. Russell Freedman has done a wonderful job putting this book together. Seeing the children physically working was moving and emotional, which helped the author get his point across.

The meaning of tough
Helpful Votes: 13 out of 13 total.
Review Date: 2002-03-04
...

This book weaves Hine's story together with his photographs of kids working in Maine's sardine canneries, Texas cotton fields, New York laundries, Tennessee and Georgia cotton mills and in textile mills all over the U.S. south. He took some of the most haunting photos of dark tunnels and grimy breaker rooms in Pennsylvania coalmines. He went inside glass factories, to farms, and onto city streets at 1 a.m. to photograph children distributing newspapers and 1 p.m. to watch them shining boots.

...

If your kids occasionally gripe that they have it tough, get them this book and show them what the word means. Alyssa A. Lappen

kids at work
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-05-04
This is a nonfiction photographic essay book that will touch any reader's heart. Mr. Freedman seems to know the facts and life of Mr. Hine very well. There is an extensive bibliography at the end of the book as wee. The information at the end seemed hard to believe but true. The book is only 11 years old so the facts aren't that dated. There are many saddening facts in this book. It reveals the truths about child labor in the text and photos.
The book was written to shine light on child labor history and to showcase some of Mr. Hine's photographs. The book is very interesting to read. There are quotes from some kids who worked in the factories and also some quotes from Mr. Hine who took great pride in accurately recording the facts about his subjects. This book could spark an interest in further study of this topic.
The information in this book is broken down and presented in an understandable order. The text is a harsh reality but it is presented well. The style gets the reader emotionally involved. The language is relatively simple and easy to read.
The information is laid out well and the references are listed in the back. There is a table of contents and bibliography and acknowledgement page.
The photos are a wonderful enhancement. The book would be nothing with out them. They are strategically placed and make the book what it is. There are captions that describe the pictures and they are discussed in the text.
This book could be used in the classroom to show what life was like and to talk about immigration and economic conditions.

Hate school? Your life could be so much worse...
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2004-04-11
Freedman has collected dozens of black and white photographs taken by Lewis Hine during the first decades of the twentieth century. Hine worked as an investigational photographer for the National Child Labor Committee (NCLC). The NCLC wanted the United States government to pass laws concerning child labor, and thought that photos of the work children did would be more effective persuaders than mere speeches and statistics. Hine traveled the nation with his camera taking photographs, sometimes despite risk to his person.

The text of the book serves partly as a brief biography of Lewis Hine, and partly as explanatory backdrop for the scenes in the photographs. Freeman gives enough background information to put the images in their context, but not so much data as to overwhelm the reader. The machines, tools and environments are so strange to the modern eye that without clarification, many pictures would be meaningless.

The most shocking photographs in the collection are of the young boys involved in the coalmines. The filth on their faces, hands and clothing is astonishing. By comparison, the dangers and deplorable conditions of working in a cotton mill are not as readily apparent as those of working in a coal mine. However, reading Freeman's text exposes the dangers of moving machinery and smothering lint and humidity not so clear in the photos.

The book concludes by sharing the changes in child labor laws that Hine's photographs helped bring about, as well as information on the child labor situation of today.

This book is full of eye opening and shocking information for the unaware. School may be hard, but without child labor laws things could be so much worse.

Youth
The land remembers: The story of a farm and its people
Published in Paperback by Stanton & Lee (1986)
Author: Ben Logan
List price:
Used price: $0.97

Average review score:

Right Time - Right Place
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-10
Raised on a Wisconsin dairy farm about 15-20 years later than author Ben Logan, I have long since concluded that for me it was the Right Time - Right Place. Logan's living history of family values, relationships and life lessons, told in the context or rural farm life, lets me relive my life through his, and glean our mutual past for the source of our values. I just read The Land Remembers for the second time. I think I'll read it every year.

Sticks in your head for years
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-01-23
I'm biased, because I'm from Gays Mills, WI (I used to mow Leita Slayton's lawn!) - but I recently re-read it, and was surprised at how many of the anecdotes and images I remembered were actually from The Land Remembers, and not from Steinbeck or anyone else better-known. Parts of this book will stay with you for years and years. It's like going home again every time I pick it up.

One of my all time favorites
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2001-08-27
This is one of those books I will always remember. My children were young when I read it and I felt that it contained many lessons on how to be a good parent. And all in the context of very enjoyable reading. The story about learning to use the horse drawn cultivator shows how a parents help their child develop self-confidence, which is something I see so many people lacking. I can't say enough good things about this gem of a book.

One of my favorites!
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2000-01-26
This book is full of humor and spends wonderful time on how a farm is run, explaining the land, the chores, the wonder of living on a farm. Ben's antics with his brothers are delightful, and his account of his evenings with his family are memorable. I read this anytime I need a lift, and share its richness with anyone who will listen.

A time capsule of growing up on a farm.
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2000-01-16
One room school house, the changing of the seasons and the farm chores for each one...a memior of one man's boyhood experiences. I liked this book and my husband liked it even more than I did. He was born and raised in rural WI, picking rocks, milking, and going sledding with his brothers. This book is well written and reads like a time capsule...the people & chores on a family farm. I would have given it a perfect 5 stars, but there is too much about bees. Less bee watching and the author would have a classic here. Great that his story goes full circle. We learn what happens to the people we've read and cared about...which is always gratifying to us readers.

Youth
Lies That Bind
Published in Paperback by Arbor Books (2006-05-14)
Author: Thomas Domenici
List price: $14.95
New price: $14.95
Used price: $11.85

Average review score:

An excellent, poignant read
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-02
Dr. Domenici does a superb job detailing the lives of around a dozen characters and how their interactions helped shape their personal psyches and those around them. It is a heart-wrenching story of emotional, physical, and sexual abuse, yet it is also a blueprint of how love, understanding, and personal ties can save someone from personal demons.

This book was an emotionally difficult read, and those who have been abused will find a part of their own story in this one. For anyone who has done coursework in psychology, "Lies That Bind" should be a must-read book.

I would highly recommend this book to any parents of teens, particularly if the teen has expressed questions or difficulties with sexual orientation.

Lies that bind
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-12
Extremely well written and educational "page turner" written in a very comfortable style. The book is thought provoking, and interesting, parallel themes interweave throughout the story. I loved it and would consider this one of the best short contemporary novels I've every read.

Superbly written and highly recommended
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-09-14
Lies That Bind is written with an unusual authority by psychologist and psychoanalyst Thomas Domenici who, in addition to being homosexual, works extensively with gay youths, teens and young adults, as well as treating child molesters and victims of sexual molestation. Lies That Bind uses the format of a novel to lay out and illustrate the issues of a young gay boy coming to terms with his same-gender sexual orientation who can no longer play the "I'm-not-gay" game with his family that has resulted in severe depression. Lies That Bind is also about a young gay teenager embracing his reality, healing emotional wounds, and ultimately obtaining a social and more comfort zone and acceptance. Of special note are the embedded messages for the reader as to the process sexual predators and molesters use to lure gay boys. Lies That Bind is a superbly written and highly recommended caution regarding the dysfunctional consequences of trying to change a child's innate, biologically driven same-sex gender preference.

For EVERYONE who is or has been an adolescent
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-07-25
This novel is written in a beautifully lyrical style and is about the terrible lies we believe about ourselves, especially when young and abused by adults we trust. The characters are people who are now part of my life; I recognized myself and many others in them. The narrative hooked me on the first page and kept me reading all day because I was interested, scared, and needed to know what happened. Although the book's 2 young protagonists are gay, this first novel will interest and has much to teach any of us who struggle or struggled with identity and with loving and being loved. Dr. Domenici knows his stuff, can write, and exhibits great emotional strength and compassion. Please, read this book, and learn to love teenagers again, either the one you were or the ones you know today!

For anyone who has kept that "secret".
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-07-10
There were so many instances in this book where tears ran down my cheeks as the story echoed similar situations from my childhood. I loved the relationship between Chris & David. It was very real to me, what I had dreamed about as a young gay man. The child molestation in this story and its explanation is something anyone who has been molested should read, it very much puts it in perspective - revealing how destructive it is and the long road to healing.

I couldn't put this book down!

Youth
Lingering Memories
Published in Paperback by Five Corners Publications (1999-10-10)
Author: John W Reynolds
List price: $9.95
New price: $9.94
Used price: $5.42

Average review score:

read it again and again
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2000-08-28
Lingering Memories is a book that will NOT be read once and then placed on a shelf to collect dust. Some of my greatest memories are the ones of sitting with my dad and listening to stories of the "good ol' days". Dad has been gone for several years now, but when I pick up Mr. Reynold's book I feel I have a little re-visit with him. Thank you, Mr. Reynolds, from the bottom of my heart for sharing Lingering Memories with us!

Lingering Memories
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2000-08-15
My wife and I enjoyed this book very much. It portrayed life in the delta when times were simple and gave insight into southern culture during the mid-1900s. Many descriptions associated with farm life were familiar, but there were some unfamiliar ones as well. We learned much from reading this book. The southern "phrases" at the conclusion of the book were delightful. Thank you, Mr. Reynolds, for helping us remember our past as southerners.

Lingering Memories
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2000-06-14
This is truly a poignant collection of stories and descriptions of how it really was. Throughout, it evokes a wide range of emotions from painful to very happy ones mixed well with humor. It reflects the strong moral fiber and self determination required to sustain a generation experiencing devastating economic conditions. The grueling work, hardships and lack of resources reflect the faith and foundation for better times to come. Without social programs or governmental assistance the phase, 'root hog or die' clearly reflected the times. An excellent picture of 'the best of times and the worst of times, serving as a bridge to our heritage. (With the difficult start in life, these same young men by the millions with characteristic resolve and determination selflessly engaged in a global conflict to preserve freedom.) A book to keep.

Transformed in time.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2000-03-19
Mr. Reynolds sent us his book, Lingering Memories, after a telephone conversation about a car that he had for sale. I read it in one evening! I read some of the passages to my ten-year-old son, he became very interested and read it himself. Lingering Memories will definitely not be forgotten here. I thank Mr. Reynolds for opening our eyes to see what living back then was really like. We all take today's modern conveniences too much for granted. It really makes me appreciate what we do have. Mr. Reynolds, you really are a true "Country Gentleman". I am glad to have had the privelege of chatting with you.

A childhood revisited
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2000-01-04
Reading LINGERING MEMORIES was a delightful way to revisit my childhood. I'm sure not everyone would remember using butter on your freckles to try to "cure" them. Mr. Reynolds makes everything seem so realistic. It was truly a pleasure to read this book. Thank you, Mr. Reynolds, for reminding us of our roots.

Youth
Memories of Mayberry: A Nostalgic Look at Andy Griffiths Hometown, Mount Airy, North Carolina
Published in Hardcover by Dynamic Living Press (2002-01-15)
Author: Jewell Mitchell Kutzer
List price: $19.95
New price: $4.76
Used price: $4.73
Collectible price: $24.75

Average review score:

A Simple Life
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-07-28
I did not think I would like this book when I started it. but as I got into it I found it to be very interesting. I loved the story about the twins and just how easy going life was back then it is a shame it is not still like that! this book will take you back to a very simple time when andy was growing up. you will learn a lot about Mt Airy. which is very very much like mayberry. any mayberry fan would like this book.

Home in Mayberry
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-06-21
I recently moved to Mount Airy, the fabled Mayberry, and wanted a resource to help me learn a little bit about the "lore" behind this community. This was an excellent resource and a fun read at that. For me, it helped bring to life not only the ties of my new hometown to the TV show, but also to learn a little bit of history about this community.

Memories of Mayberry
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-03-18
My wife just purchased this book for me and it was very interesting, especially being in the first person from Jewell. Brings back so many memories from my wife's family. I will be sending it to my 92 year old mother-in-law to read and I know she will enjoy it. Thanks, Jewell, good talking with you. Bill Tarpley

Mayberry, U.S.A.
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2004-10-15
Hardly anyone who has been exposed to television over the last forty years has not come in contact with the good people of Mayberry. Walk up to most people on the street and ask them to name three justices of the U.S. Supreme Court and you just might get a blank stare. Ask the same person to name three residents of Mayberry, North Carolina and very few people will have a problem. Andy, Barney, Opie, Aunt Bea, Otis, Goober and Floyd have become so much a part of American culture that to most of us they are just like family. Mayberry is as real to most people as Chicago or Los Angeles and almost everybody knows that you have to go to Mount Pilot to get Chinese food.

Mayberry of course is not a real place but is instead a product of Andy Griffith's mind. Griffith's mind was however heavily influenced by his hometown and Mount Airy, North Carolina has become to most people, the real Mayberry. Jewell Kutzer grew up in Mount Airy and is just a few years younger than Andy. This book therefore, depicts on a very personal level the Mount Airy that has become America's most famous small town.

Many of the stories that are related in this book had a very obvious influence on the happenings in Mayberry. One story involves a young man who went on a small crime spree that included throwing rocks through most of the windows at the school. The authorities kept catching the young man but he would escape from jail almost as quickly as they locked him up. It all sounds a lot like Earnest T. Bass to me. If you remember Barney's very off key rendition of, "Welcome Sweet Springtime" you will not be surprised to learn that this song was a favorite of Andy's grammar school music teacher. Over and over, as one reads this book, they will be reminded of some happening in Mayberry.

There are many stories in this book that do not relate to Mayberry at all but are personal reminiscences of the author. At first I felt like these stories should not have been included since I bought this book to learn about Mayberry. As I read however, I changed my mind for these stories add greatly to the reader's ability to relate to life in a small southern town. Thank you Mrs. Kutzer for giving us all the chance to feel like we grew up in Mayberry just like you and Andy.

American Heartland Nostalgia
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2003-01-20
Thousands and thousands of us faithfully watched the television classic, The Andy Griffith Show and its sequel, Mayberry RFD. We followed Sheriff Taylor, Barney, Aunt Bea, and the rest through 249 episodes from 1960 through 1968. From 1968 through 1971, we were treated to 78 episodes of Mayberry RFD. Watching these shows today is a heartwarming nostalgic experience. Why, there's even an active The Andy Griffith Show Rerun Watchers Club!

Mayberry has its roots firmly and deeply planted in Mt. Airy, North Carolina, a small town nestled in the mountains between Winston-Salem and the Virginia state line. Andy Griffith is celebrated there, along with all the traditions of hometown America, during community festivals and other events.

Jewell Kutzer grew up in Mayberry, just a couple of years behind Andy Griffith. She shares many of the memories that inspired Griffith to create Mayberry and the character of the popular television show. In Memories of Mayberry, she shares her experiences growing up in this now-famous small town. It's a pleasant, comfortable book to read, like having a conversation with a friend. Mt. Airy was a microcosm of life in a changing country, in a changing world. Lives were interwoven with the lives of others in the community. People were real, they were caring neighbors, they led simpler lives in the 1940s and 1950s. This book takes the reader back to those uncomplicated times.

Did I say uncomplicated? Well, compared to today's complex lifestyles. But for Jewell, growing up in a small town, life brought one adventure after another. Her tales of yesteryear are referenced to episodes in The Andy Griffith Show that relate to the memories. Readers will gain a deeper appreciation of how Griffith made the show so real in the earlier days of television.

Want a trip back to our roots? To the values on which our country was built? Pick up a copy of Memories of Mayberry to open your mind and heart to our wonderful past, not just in Mt. Airy, but in hundreds of other small towns across the land. Definitely designed for readers over 40 (we were there), but offers valuable insights for younger readers, too.

Youth
Mentoring and the Rites Of Passage for Youth
Published in Paperback by RALVON Books (1998-12-18)
Author: Ralph Steele
List price: $13.99
Used price: $55.58

Average review score:

A Must Read
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2002-06-12
I enjoyed your book, it is a must read for the single mother.

Exciting
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2000-02-11
I found your book to be very pleasing as well as inspiring...keep up the good work

Mentoring and the rites of passage for youth
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2002-11-29
This book is good enjoyed it very much. Would have been helpful if I had a teaching tool of this kind when I had two young males in my home as a single black mother. But as a director of a mentoring program I have to pick and choose what I want and can use becaues we mentor to kids of all race and teaching diversity. I would like to recomend this book to others but it is focusing on the black youth only we need help with all youths.that has problems.and need mentors.

Our youths are our futures
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2001-07-20
Our youths are our futures, and it is wonderful that someone has picked up the banner to fight for their futures. Mr. Steele, your book was an enjoyment to read. We all must understand that today's youths lack motivation. If there are mentors, and a curriculum or guide to being a better mentor, we will then produce better children and a better society. WELL DONE!!! I cannot wait to read more of your works.

Very good book
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2000-02-11
Mr. Steele , I found your book to be very interesting..I think you have all the right ideas...Would love to read more of your work...

Youth
Moving Target: A Memoir of Pursuit
Published in Paperback by Bilingual Review Press (AZ) (2002-12)
Author: Ron Arias
List price: $17.00
New price: $2.53
Used price: $0.76
Collectible price: $17.00

Average review score:

A Fascinating Tale of Discovery
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2004-06-08
Moving Target succeeds in transforming what could be a pedestrian topic into a fascinating tale of discovery. Ron Arias manages masterfully to make the reader a committed member of the author's family and his relentless quest to uncover the truth.

Arias accomplishes this considerable feat with an effective approach composed of painful candor, suspense and clean, compelling writing.

Moving Target - A Memoir of Pursuit
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-10-13
Moving Target was one of the best books I have read ever. It was a moving story of a family and the hunt for a father they knew or didn't know. I was jealous of the young mother, wishing she had been mine. Later on I was glad she wasn't! Her death was an enigma. Her writings were truly unbelievable and know that's where Ron got his talent for writing. I read this book several months ago and it took this time for me to write. It is tragically moving, poetic with an uncanny melodic verbage. The quest to find this father again took Ron to many places, winding up in of all places, California. The perseverance to not quit gave this reader a gut-wrenching mystery that kept me riveted to my seat. Once you start you cannot put it down. I will read this book again. I hope Ron continues to write as he haa a talent that needs shared with the world!

chronicle of a military family
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-05-31
Moving Target, by Ron Arias, is the story of an American family, but not your typical next-door-neighbor kind of family. This is the story of a military family from the perspective of a sensitive, intelligent boy. While fellow army-brats will nod their heads in recognition as they read this memoir, most civilians would be astonished by the impact war and the warrior culture of discipline and rootlessness can have on a marriage and family.

Once begun,this book is not easy to put down. It is a chronicle written in a clear, accessible style, and often reads like a mystery novel. It takes a trip through recent history, putting personal faces on the Korean Conflict and the Cold war. As the writer matures and explores his father's military career and his mother's aspirations and marriage, many questions emerge. I felt compelled to follow Mr. Arias on his search to find the "real" man who shaped his life. Both his parents are brought fully to life, and as a bonus, Mr. Arias shares his adventures as a journalist. It is a courageous, heartbreaking, intimate life story that I will not soon forget.

Remembering Our POW's
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2003-04-17
The author has captured the depth and spirit that keeps our POW's alive, knowing that we cannot forget them and the sacrifice that they have made for us. It does not matter if they are held three weeks or three years, we must keep them in our hearts, minds, and prayers. This book should be required reading by the Military and their families, and those that are quick to find fault with the men and women in uniform. I came away from each chapter as a member of the family and their ordeal after the war. We must remember that the families are just as much POW's!

I couldn't put "Moving Target" down for even a moment
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2003-05-17
I made the mistake of starting to read "Moving Target" before going to bed one evening; at 3 am I was still unable to put this book down. It's the memoir of Ron Arias, a staff correspondent for People Magazine. It starts out as a biography of Arias' parents. His father, Armando, is being held as a POW in Korea. His mother holds the family together until Armando's return. But this happy event is soon overshadowed by many troubles; Armando is being discredited by the Army, his promotion to captain is delayed (is it because he's Hispanic?) And he's a changed man, brooding, a strict disciplinarian but now with an edge since his return from near-starvation and survival of a Korean POW camp. Ron and his brothers find the household tense and troubling after Armando returns.

And there are more mysteries. Why does Ron's mother refuse to take communion at Sunday Mass? There is truth to be uncovered here, and Arias takes us on a young man's journey to find himself and his family.

The memoir also shows us Arias' development as a writer, from a chance encounter with Hemingway in Pamplona, to a course in English literature in Argentina from a Professor Borges (yes, Jorge Luis Borges.) And in Argentina, Ron begins a career as a journalist. We follow Ron through a stint in Peru as a Peace Corps volunteer and watch how a young and talented journalist develops. But the story of his family and his identity is an equally compelling thread.

This is probably one of the best memoirs I've read in years. The writing is crisp, the description of everyday details sharp and focused. Arias has the ability to go back and look out of the eyes of innocence and ignorance-we follow him along in the book as if we all were sent back in time in his life. If you liked "The Color of Water" or "Angela's Ashes" this book will resonate with you. You really should read it. I promise you won't be disappointed.

Youth
Nearfall: Book One - The Adventures of Matt and Mike
Published in Paperback by Standel Publishing (2007-05-18)
Author: Joe Reasbeck
List price: $14.95
New price: $14.95
Used price: $10.99

Average review score:

nearfall
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-25
This probably isn't where I need to say this but I was looking at one book to order and in the mix of looking for a better offer and so on I ended up with two books ordered from two different people and couldn't change it so I inadvertinatly bought both. I did not know that I had until I recieved conformation of order and billing. One book came right away and the other took a few weeks. I'm still waiting for a dvd. I'm not sure that I like Amazon............ I love the book and will loan out my 2nd copy to young wrestlers in the area to read.
Thanks
sportsmom

Highlt recommended
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-04
Awesome book...It is easy to relate to all the characters and we have all known someone like Matt, Mike, Dan, Billy, TJ and even Kimberly during our childhood. Joe Reasbeck does an excellent job sharing their problems and opportunities plus how they all adapt and overcome the challenges of adolescence. My son loved it as well. Great book for any school age boy whether they wrestle or not...Great Book

Great Life Lesson Book
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-26
I am a father of six, five of whom are girls. The boy would not read, until I got this book for him. I think he's actually read it twice! This is also a great book for anyone interested in wrestling, as it is written by a former college wrestler who knows of what he writes.

What an inspiring story!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-30
This is such a wonderful story that both children and adults will enjoy. The dynamic between the brothers and the family is incredible and each character is so well written that by the end of the story, I was left wanting more. I couldn't put it down and can't wait for the next one.

Great Book
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-09
I am a 13 year old boy, and the first page of this book had me hooked. I may not be a wrestler, but it showed me situations that happen at my age, and ways to get out of them. This book will just keep you turning the pages, wanting to know what will happen next. Thank you for this book.

Youth
Ophelia's Mom: Women Speak Out About Loving and Letting Go of Their Adolescent Daughters
Published in Paperback by Crown (2001-08-21)
Author: Nina Shandler
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mother of honey "i want to kill a girl named debbie"
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-06-24

just wondering why i was never contacted to contribute to this book. my daughter, jasmine [pen name HONEY], wrote the powerful entry in "ophelia speaks" about feeling like killing a girl her ex-boyfriend was going with.

i'm dissapointed to say that sara never kept in contact with jasmine, nor did she even send her a copy of her book when it came out.

it might be nice to support the girl authors by getting them together in a chat sometime!

Ophelia's Mom - from one of the contributing authors
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2002-04-09
As a contributing author to Ophelia's Mom I feel this book shares a message of hope, inspiration, and courage. During signings of this book, I have spoken about the personal growth I went through while struggling with with the ups and downs of my daughter. I feel all the moms who contributed showed courage in finding their voice. Many moms did not answer the call to contribute and half of us who did, wrote under assumed names. Personally, I would not have minded going public, however, I chose to protect my daughter's privacy. My daughter was not in a frame of mind to understand this project, therefore, I did not seek her permission to write about her. Yet, I felt immensely compelled to get my message of hope out to the public - so we changed the names. Other moms had their own reasons and I think that's what makes the book so special. As a life coach, I use Ophelia's Mom as a resource for my clients who are struggling with teen issues and who are trying to 'let go' and find themselves.

straight talk
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2001-10-13
I read this book and looked at my seven year old thinking "will this happen to you?
A fascinating, truthful, touching and sometimes painful look at the mother's point of view. I was amazed by the strength of many of these women and grew to see myself as a mother differently. Definitey a good book for a mom like me who realizes that letting go is not as easy as it sounds.

Breaking the silence
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2001-10-12
sorry- the follwoing is a correction: the title of the exhibit at National Museum of Women in the Arts is "Rapunzel, Rapunzel! Let Down Your Hair." thru Jan.27. (don't know how to retrieve the original so hope this will do. kmg

Broken Silence
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2001-10-12
"Sometimes,ofttimes, women had to keep silent, have not spoken or named the unspeakable. With their men, they have seen with clear vision, and yet they have not spoken. Wisely, unwisely,they have kept their own counsel and held their tongues.
"With each other, women have also kept silent, and if they have spoken to eachother, their men never knew. All these centuries, the vast underground murmur of women confiding to each other,consoling, grieving, laughing in a separate world,apart from men."
I wrote these words for a juried art exhibit (Collaboration Between Writers and Artists) at The Washington Women's Art Center in 1981. An artist friend had created a quilt of a woman's head. The woman had no mouth.
I also added brief versions of the tales of Procne and Philomel and Maiden Bright-Eye...(both stories address the forbidden territory and dangers of women who speak or put words to the unspeakable...)
Shandler's anthology breaks the silence of women who are mothers in a new way-revealing that when it comes to their experiences with their daughters- women rarely have shared the truth or depth of their feelings with each other --until now.
Anyone who lives near The Women's Museum of the Arts in D.C. should take the time to visit and delight in the exhibit of around the world writers' and artists' versions of the story of Rampunzel.(til late Jan.20002) --"Loving and Letting Go" ..as Shandler says is the task we must all face... as mothers of daughters, there are many pitfalls and pleasures along the way..

Youth
Recycling Jimmy
Published in Hardcover by Kunati Inc. (2007-09-01)
Author: Andy Tilley
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A thoroughly modern, uniquely brilliant dark comedy
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-17
A lot goes through your mind when you're precariously dangling upside down from a bridge - blood mostly, but also plenty of vivid insights. You might suddenly, by way of example, realize that your fiancé wasn't all that to begin with and that your best friend is really pretty annoying, so who cares if you caught the two of them sharing a morning-after kiss, and why in the world did you ever set about trying to kill yourself over the whole mess. That's just where Jimmy Gee finds himself, though, as this novel opens. While he doesn't walk away from the situation unscathed - well, actually, he does walk away, just not very far - this brush with death eventually serves as the impetus for a grand scheme that's possibly just crazy enough to work.

While recovering in the hospital, Jimmy strikes up a rather unusual friendship with one of the interns, a bloke named Kevin who can't resist playing rather sick practical jokes on patients waking up in the suicide ward, including Jimmy. A practical joker of some skill himself, Jimmy responds in kind, and a bond is formed. With nowhere else to go when he is finally released from the hospital, Jimmy moves into his new best bud's apartment and it is there - during one of their senseless brainstorm sessions - that the idea for "Quitters" is born. As Jimmy knows from experience, some people are just too timid or downright clumsy to do themselves in properly. After all, if every suicidal person did the job right the first time, there would be no need for suicide wards. Many of these individuals will just keep trying until they manage to kick the bucket properly, so what would be wrong with helping them along a bit? And if you can profit from the deal, so much the better.

Here's the deal. "Quitters" (i.e., Jimmy and Kevin) will offer assistance to anyone seriously determined to commit suicide, as long as the suicide is of a spectacular nature. Each such suicide will be filmed and eventually included on a DVD Jimmy and Kevin intend to release. Knowing full well that there are plenty of weirdoes in the world who would pay good money to watch such a morbid video, the guys expect DVD sales to earn them a right good income. Things go surprisingly well - at first - but the guys can only dance around the Kevorkian Curse for so long before things take a rather nasty turn.

Recycling Jimmy is black comedy at its best - ludicrous yet believable, and consistently funny throughout (which is not to say there isn't a serious moment here or there along the way). Jimmy's first two encounters with a potential love interest are beyond memorable, and the setting for their first official date is uniquely surreal to say the least. The one-upmanship of Jimmy's and Kevin's friendship also offers the reader a plethora of humorous moments, although I must say the increasingly extreme and seemingly non-stop pranks the two play on each other eventually grew a tad tiresome for me. Even the suicides are capable of drawing laughs, especially one in particular that puts one of Kevin's Loony Tunes-inspired theories to the test once and for all. And if you think you know how everything is going to play out in the end, think again - Tilley lays down a pretty mean literary land mine or two along the way.

We all know that the wittiest of writers in the world today tend to hail from Britain, and Andy Tilley would certainly seem to be taking some mighty self-assured baby steps in the sizable shoes of such brilliant comic writers as Douglas Adams and Terry Pratchett. This is only his first novel, but his unique voice and acerbically effective brand of humor bespeak a wealth of potential. I for one will be most anxious to see what he comes up with next.

P.G. Wodehouse Meets Monty Python
Helpful Votes: 13 out of 13 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-12
To say the least, in Andy Tilley's brash novel "Recycling Jimmy", antihero Jimmy's judgment is suspect. He's foolish, irreverent, and passive; just what you'd expect from a bloke whose emotional development got euthanized sometime during his teens. In the opening scene Jimmy dangles from a bridge, eighty feet above ground. Even then, he's hard pressed to do anything, anything at all, right. Still, somehow, he's just likeable enough and the situation just foolish enough, we begin to have our hopes...

Whatever the roots of author Tilley's eccentric humor, he delivers the goods with elan despite a narrative laden with passive form. It works, but repetition of some verb forms might irritate some readers. Fortunately, in the opening he's just getting his dark funnybone warm and before long at all prose issues recede. It's while in hospital after the bungled suicide attempt, after Jimmy encounters kindred spirit Kevin, that the full effect of the author's special form of humor comes to bear. Suffice it to say, in Recycling Jimmy, the unusual is commonplace, the incredible comfy as an afternoon pint at the local pub, and the unthinkable...why of course, the unthinkable is central to the plot.

Will Jimmy change his ways? Will he learn how to take responsibility for his acts? I'm not tipping over the crumpets. You'll have to read to find out. Warning: the laughs get you by surprise. If no one in the family is trained in the Heimlich Maneuver, don't get caught with a mouthful of chips.

Art Tirrell is the author of the 2007 adventure novel, "The Secret Ever Keeps", of which reviewer Joan A. said, "The first book...my significant other...and I have agreed on since 'Kafka on the Beach'." See all the reviews on Amazon at /product/1601640048

Black humor for the chav class...
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-29
I almost never laugh out loud while reading... I laughed myself into tears several times while reading this book - It would make a great movie (hopefully with British unknowns..), but a movie would miss out on the author's sneakily profound philosophical musings...

Recycling Jimmy
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-03
This novel is truly hilarious. Such an original idea one has to consider the writer an exceptional talent indeed. I absolutely loved it and was entertained all the way. Loved the writing style; engaging, imaginative, brilliantly vulgar, delicious. Do yourselves a favour people and read it. Five stars and counting.

Find a Need and Fill It
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-11
Jimmy Gee decides to end it all and jumps off a bridge, but the suicide attempt goes awry and Jimmy awakes in a hospital bed attended by a practical joking orderly. So begins the story of his "recycling".

Jimmy and the orderly eventually become associates in a scheme to make money. They both agreed that committing suicide is not as easy as it looks. Moreover, doing it well; or doing it in a way that it means something is even more difficult. Aha, thought Jimmy, we have found a need and if we fill it, so the adage goes, we make money.

Andy Tilley has done the same in a way. He has found a need, l,e, the craving for rich dark comedy, and he has filled it with his novel Recycling Jimmy. The story is outrageously funny.

Jimmy and Kevin form "Quitters" an outfit dedicated to helping the suicidal but, not in the way you expect. They won't help the suicidal out of their depression. Instead, they will help the suicidal carry out their suicide in a spectacular fashion and on video tape!

Ah, the entrepreneurship of the British. It all works out for the best in the end because Jimmy finally learns that life is more useful than he thought. The reader learns something about that too, but not before pages of delightfully funny reading.

Red Evans author On Ice


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