Clubs Books
Related Subjects: A B C D E F G H I K N P Q R S W M L
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Honest, Funny , True, Yet still Unbelieveable!Review Date: 1999-05-10
Funny bone tickler of a book! Great reading!Review Date: 1999-05-09
Outrageously, Intense, and entertaining!Review Date: 1999-04-10
lots of action and keeps your attention.Review Date: 1999-03-29
A great read!Review Date: 1999-12-20

Old New YorkReview Date: 2007-09-03
This collection is particulary good and Up In The Old Hotel contains more of the same style. The latter book is more readily available although I found a copy of this at the Strand bookstore off Union Square.
TopsReview Date: 2008-09-06
Mitchell was unquenchably curious about everything and everyone connected with the harbor, beginning with the hard-working fishermen and other workers, whom he presents with sympathy and matchless skill. And, yet, the human interest here is only one layer of his marvelous literary constructions. A strong recurring theme is the wasteful degradation of the environment in search of commercial gain. Another is the frailty of any individual life. Yet another is the poetry produced by the artless arrangement of names for fish or for wildflowers. And still another is the magic of stories, and of stories within stories, and of stories within stories within stories--the magic of suspended time. Although some of what Mitchell mourns has actually since improved, such as the ability of the Gowanus Canal to support underwater life, for the most part the New York harbor of 2008 has lost much of what he chronicled elegically 50 or 60 years ago. Even so, Mitchell's world--personal, individual, reflective, informed, invested with considerations of mortality shot through with graveyard wit--remains vital and real and so accessible that it would be dangerous to let high school, much less college students get their hands on the book. It might prompt a tragic optimism in them that it's possible to make a living as journalists by trying to write this way, a possibility as long gone as the once-thriving oyster beds around the shores of Manhattan.
A note about years: the pieces in "The Bottom of the Harbor" are arranged according to their tones and subject matter to make the book a good reading experience, rather than according to the chronology of their first magazine publications. If you look at them from the earliest to the latest, though, you find that the early ones are written in the omniscent third person and then, as the years go on, the voice goes into the first person, increasingly confiding on the page. "Mr. Hunter's Grave," first published in The New Yorker in September 1956, and described on the jacket flap as "widely considered to be the finest single piece of nonfiction to have ever appeared in the pages of The new Yorker," also ends on the darkest note. However, the book concludes with the youngest of the pieces, "The Rivermen," from 1959, whose ending, an apology from one man to another (also, as it happens, named Joe), reads: "'As far as I'm concerned,' he said, 'the purpose of life is to stay alive and to keep on staying alive as long as you possibly can.'" As the essayist and historian Luc Sante writes in his estimable forward to this centennial edition of "The Bottom of the Harbor": "This book of ostensibly journalistic feature stories turns out to hold at its core some of the fundamental questions of existence."
So descriptive, so tellingReview Date: 2008-07-18
Mitchell came to New York from rural North Carolina, and quickly found a fascination with life in the city. His essays, a combination of oral history, natural history, and psychological observation, reflect his love for the people and the surroundings of New York, with a special emphasis on fishermen and others involved in life around the harbor.
The first essay in the collection, "Up in the Old Hotel," is a kind of mystery--from a restaurant on the ground floor of a building near the Fulton Fish Market, Mitchell leads the reader to wonder along with him what the abandoned floors above may hold. It is this idea of mystery, things hidden from view, which permeate his stories. Whether he is describing the rat infestations on board ships in the harbor or the wild flowers growing in graveyards, his eye for detail is captivating. The narrative in each essay unfolds slowly, following a kind of wandering trajectory like the paths Mitchell takes to visit the individuals whose stories he relates with charm.
The Bottom of the Harbor is a book to be enjoyed slowly. The characters and settings are vividly drawn. The historical detail will delight those readers with an interest in New York's past, and the oral histories will captivate those readers who have a penchant for dialogue and psychology.
Armchair Interviews says: First-class essays all will enjoy.
He takes you placesReview Date: 2005-04-26
This is the first I've ever read of Mitchell, but he's already one of my favorite authors. Journalism at its finest.
Exquisite portraits wonderfully writtenReview Date: 2003-07-10
But the best part of the book are the characters Mitchell writes about. They come alive through his portrayals and you will find yourself thinking about them, their thoughts, and their ways of life long after you stop reading.
The book contains six separate stories, each about 40 (short) pages long, so you can absorb them at your own pace without losing the thread. Personally, I had a hard time putting the book down.

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One book, one Saturday cover to cover readReview Date: 2005-07-17
The story, the characters, the lesson learned (for those like myself that see one even if it wasn't necessarily there) this book is one to be shared with others. In a different way it was hard to put this book down for the most basic reasons which is why I still read it cover to cover yesterday.
Well done and thank you Diane, I look forward to reading more of your work.
Details make the differenceReview Date: 2005-03-17
Enjoyed this one!Review Date: 2005-03-04
One of the best books I have read in a whileReview Date: 2005-03-03
Don't Read Before You Go To SleepReview Date: 2005-01-23

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Breaking the Ice-it really lived up to its title!Review Date: 2000-04-30
Shows the ups and downs of the sportReview Date: 1999-04-14
Excellent book for kids...Review Date: 1998-06-24
A little like the Babysitters Club, The Gymnasts, etc., this is a "club series" that focuses on serious ice skating. Children unfamiliar with ice skating terms will find them easily explained. The reality of the situation that Nikki found herself in with Tori is typical of the ice rink, but the subplots will be very familiar to those readers of Babysitters Club and The Gymnasts books - they're very predictable, as one other review said.
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!Review Date: 1998-03-15
DONT THINK JUST ORDER!!!!!Review Date: 1998-12-11

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We love books!!!Review Date: 2003-05-06
Ms. Kelley's greatest accomplishment ever!!!!Review Date: 2003-05-01
best work ever. They should plan on writing a sequel. ...
A thought-provoking read!Review Date: 2003-06-18
Go Ms. Kelley!!!!!! Success!Review Date: 2003-05-02
I hope we don't get in trouble for this and if anything we should get extra credit.PLEASE!
At & Am
A "Bridge" Over Troubled WatersReview Date: 2004-06-22
This prologue sets up the bittersweet tale that follows, a story of teenagers traversing through the certainty of their high school lives, grappling with the uncertainty of the days that will come after graduation. With the gloomy prologue casting its shadow over every aspect of the story, a foreboding sense of inevitability hangs over each page. What is not known though is what, if any, kind of victory might be drawn from a narrative whose conclusions find only tears and regrets ten years later. This is a credit to the authors, who give the readers a vague sense of the future that forewarns them of some things but surprises them all the more for the many twists of the tale and how the characters react to them.
Everything about "The Bridge Club" is accomplished. The teenagers sound like they ought to, seeing the world in black and white, and we marvel at the possibility that we might have seen things in such a way once upon a time. The adults speak like the parents and teachers we recall and perhaps have become, murky shades of grey. We read what the adults have to say half-understanding the ways in which they negotiate life's problems and half-wishing they were not so quick to dial down the ideals and dreams of their children and students. All the characters are well-written, defined by the struggle between idealism and compromise. This inner conflict provides the dominant theme of the book, and, framed by the prologue and subsequent epilogue, our own journey with "The Bridge Club" causes us to consider what we have given up in our lives, what we have lost, what we have gained, and most importantly we wonder if those parts of ourselves we cherish and have lost might be found again. "The Bridge Club" is a wonderful tale of adolescence into adulthood, and well-worth the time you invest in it.

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Pretty goodReview Date: 2007-02-14
Hungry for KnowledgeReview Date: 2005-08-28
Profound and revealing!Review Date: 2005-08-27
Biblical Clues to UFO'sReview Date: 2007-12-03
Amazing how it all fits together...Review Date: 2005-07-21

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Growing up in the SouthReview Date: 2003-03-25
Growing up in the SouthReview Date: 2003-03-25
Authentic HumorReview Date: 2003-04-07
It's a Funny Funny Book!Review Date: 2003-03-28
A Tasty, Hearty Meal of WordsReview Date: 2003-03-26


Provided a ray of hope for divorced daughterReview Date: 2001-05-01
An example of Everyday livingReview Date: 2001-05-01
Corrections about reveiw about lady with daughter strugglingReview Date: 2001-05-22
The courage to go on with God's help.Review Date: 2001-05-01
Life EnrichmentReview Date: 2001-04-18
O. King School Social Worker
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The Darkness of Life - At it's BestReview Date: 2007-08-03
Historical GemReview Date: 2005-08-17
An utterly absorbing taleReview Date: 2004-07-10
AN ABSOLUTE CLASSICReview Date: 2001-06-22
For a coalminer's granddaughter, Scot heritage, it was gold.Review Date: 1997-12-24
It seems to be such a true thing. Gillan and Meggie, so far apart in nature, are equally compelling characters, and each of their children's personalities have been developed well.
Remembering my Great Uncle's accent, I was moved by even the language and syntax. In my childhood in Southern Illinois, we lived in a coal town. Classmate's fathers died in the mines sometimes, bazarr crafts involved shining chips of black coal. We burned it in the basement furnace for fuel, and I pulled many a glowing klinker from the flames to drop into a washtub until they cooled and were used to augment the sparse gravel in our driveway. So the story interested me greatly.
Since reading it, we have moved twice, and amidst the laughter of my family, I made sure we had a dark and handsome man as our "first-footer", for good luck. And I cannot read MacBeth without remembering the line where Gillan,reading it for the 3rd time underground, suddenly found Shakespeare to be beautiful....
I want this book again, to read again and to pass on to my boys.
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Steven Kellog keeps imagination aliveReview Date: 2006-07-29
This book is just pure and humorous, of what a young child's imagination and thought process is.
Steven Kellog is a favorite authur at our house.
Enchanting for kids & adults! Review Date: 2005-08-02
Looking for a friend? Try these ideas...Review Date: 2000-09-06
In this book by Kellogg a lonely little boy is in search of a friend. In the natural course of events the little boy either brings home or asks his mother if he can bring home animal after animal for a pet. Thus the book's title, "Can I Keep Him?" His mother's responses are typical, but the translation of her responses in her son's head (shown in picures also done by Kellogg) are hilarious!
A definite hit with children and adults alike!
Give it a try.
Definitely 5 stars.
Alan Holyoak
Great BookReview Date: 2000-11-12
Great BookReview Date: 2000-11-12
Related Subjects: A B C D E F G H I K N P Q R S W M L
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