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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Used price: $0.32
Collectible price: $24.00

Stories for Children Magazine 5 Star ReviewReview Date: 2008-07-07
Perfect Castle Unit StudyReview Date: 2008-05-16
Fascinating and engaging book!Review Date: 2007-06-08
Fascinating BookReview Date: 2007-12-28
This is a really neat, intricately drawn and written bookReview Date: 2007-05-18


An Excellent Read...Review Date: 2007-02-14
Good BookReview Date: 2007-02-08
Excellent read by fireplace on cold winter's nightReview Date: 2005-02-01
CHEETAH FILES: ROGUEReview Date: 2003-08-30
International intrigue, who could ask for more...Review Date: 2002-08-21

Used price: $0.47
Collectible price: $29.00

It depends on your personalityReview Date: 2006-05-16
If you grow impatient with an author who takes 9 pages to discuss an idea that could comfortably fit into 2 - 3 paragraphs, then you should look for a different book. The writing style reminded me of Charles Dickens, who reportedly was paid by the word.
Yes, the book is beautifully written, but I simply lost patience with it. I also found it to be a bit preachy, as if the author believes herself to be the only one who knows the joy of simply being in a garden, observing all of its wonders, and must teach it to the rest of us morons. (I'm a bit sensitive to preachiness, however, and the average reader might disagree!)
It all depends on your personality.
Read this book in your garden!Review Date: 2002-06-30
This is a MUST read for all gardeners no matter what your experience!
A Joy to ReadReview Date: 2002-07-12
The author not only recounts delightful anecdotes, but also offers abstract ideas with precision clarity, utilizing graceful and wonderfully chosen vocabulary. Her metaphors and similes sometimes make you gasp, they are so fresh and original. They are also beautifully couched within the overall garden theme.
This book puts the reader in touch with the richness, depth, and beauty of life. It is true writing by a gifted writer.
Dear Sister, We have a new best friend!Review Date: 2002-05-22
We have a new best friend.
Joy! Today is Book Club day, and Joyce McGreevy, the author of "Gardening by Heart" is coming to talk to/with our group. We just finished her book and I loved it. It isn't a novel. It is not a self-help book. It isn't a gardening book. It isn't a poetry book. It is a poetic story about nurturing our hearts, our gardens. Hmm, is it a story? No, actually. There is no story-story, just a string of anecdotes and remembrances involving the author's mother and siblings and friends and jobs.
Her writing is the thing.
She writes like a poet, but it isn't poetry per se. Well, I'll go upstairs and get the book and excerpt it for you...hold on...
Without looking, I just opened the book to this page:
Strawberries at Dawn
"The first pale amber rays of sun have backlit the somber mountains. A coastal live oak rustles. The birds are stirring. In my garden, the poppies are rolled up tightly like saffron scrolls. I'm on my knees, coffee within easy reach, as I set a blue salvia into the ground the way a parent might ease a sleepy child back into bed."
Dawn is the best time of day to do almost anything. The phone holds its tongue and there are no appointments. One's mind is fertile with dreams whose meanings flower best in a hushed world."
[Isn't that wonderful?] more...
"In the garden, time itself seems to expand. Later in the day I may fret about getting to this appointment or achieving that task "on time", but early in the morning I seem to have all the time in the world. The killing frost of anxiety is held at bay, letting ideas and insights establish strong roots."
She starts each chapter with a quote from another author or poet.
"Everything that slows us down and forces patience, everything that sets us back into the slow circles of nature, is a help. Gardening is an instrument of grace."--May Sarton, Journals
She advocates keeping a nature journal...at the office.
"...it consisted of a burgeoning collection of index cards, each of which bore a hastily penciled sentence or two about something I had observed, whether on the way to work, from my window, or during a lunch break....The French say of good gardeners not that they have a green thumb but that they have un main vert, a green hand. With every entry I penciled in I was keeping my hand green and subsequently nurturing the heart, even in the midst of computers, stark white partitions, and fluorescent lighting."
Don't you just love her? I can't wait to meet our new best friend.
Love,
Your sister
Grow your plants; grow your soulReview Date: 2001-09-04

My Favorite Children's Book for Over 30 Years!Review Date: 2008-08-17
Giggly piggie silliness!Review Date: 2007-08-23
Piggly WigglyReview Date: 2007-05-31
Good Clean Fun: The Piggy in The PuddleReview Date: 2007-03-11
Best Read-Aloud Picture Book of All Time!!Review Date: 2007-05-25
Charlotte Pomerantz has created a work of art - the ending and internal rhymes, the way she plays and puts words together, the right amount of repetition. This is why people think it's So Easy to write a children's book. This is a deceptively simple title, but if it were easy there would be more books out there like this one. This one of the few books I truly look forward to and love reading aloud - the words taste delicious!!
If you like this one check out "How many trucks can a tow truck tow" also by her.
Collectible price: $31.01

Get the DVDReview Date: 2007-04-02
Tar BunnyReview Date: 2006-03-27
Song of the SouthReview Date: 2005-11-21
Song of the SouthReview Date: 2004-03-06
Song of the SouthReview Date: 2003-01-06
This day and age we need more old stories of being happy in tough times. Please release this movie. It is a part of history that should not be hidden.

All military forces want waspsReview Date: 2008-06-16
One of my favorite Science Fiction authors is Eric Frank Russell. He served in the RAF during World War II, and many of his stories have a military setting and with the clever hero destroying much larger opponents. The hero always finds the Achilles' Heel. "Wasp" is the first Eric Frank Russell story I ever read. I go back and reread it every couple years. I just reread it, probably for the fifteenth time.
The background for the story is Humanity is fighting for its life. We've expanded out to the stars and settled several colonies. We bumped into Sirian Empire. We got along with them for awhile, but they then decided to try and conquer us. Earth has more advanced technology, while the Sirian Empire has about ten times the number of people.
Our hero, James Mowry, is recruited to be a "Wasp." James is told a story of a small wasp that stung a driver. In trying to kill the wasp, the driver wreaked the car, killing three people, including himself. After months of training James Mowery is sent to a Sirian colony with the goal of destabilizing the colony, single handedly, to be a wasp!
This is a funny story. Eric Frank Russell does a great job of telling an interesting story while weaving in humor.
If you like classic Science Fiction from the 1950s, check out Wasp, or "Entities" which includes several of his novels. A couple dozen short stories by Eric Frank Russell's collected were put together in "Major Ingredients."
A book I have been trying to relocate for years!Review Date: 2007-12-12
What can you say about a book that has haunted you for over 45 years? It is great. An entertaining and enjoyable combination of spy and sci fi.
WARNING! CAUSES SF ADDICTIONReview Date: 2007-11-13
A classic on assymetric warfare!Review Date: 2007-01-03
A powerful lesson on propagandaReview Date: 2007-06-20
The book is set in the future, with the Earth up against the Sirian Combine - a galactic conglomeration of planets intent on conquering the Earth. While the Terrans (read: Earthlings) have superior weapons and technology, the Sirians have vastly superior numbers. As the war drags on, the Terrans feel the best way to defeat the Sirians is through propaganda. The theory is that if a wasp can distract the driver of a car, destroying the vehicle and all 4 adults, causing havoc, death and destruction grossly disproportionate to the insect's size, that one man, armed with the right tools, can also cause havoc to a whole planet. So they recruit James Mowry to land on the Sirian planet of Jaimec, to effect such disruption. In theory, with enough distraction, more attention and resources will be concentrating on the internal strife, enabling the Terrans to launch a quick and successful attack on the planet.
To effect this goal, Mowry creates a fictitious underground rebellion called DAG, making the authorities believe that there's a whole group set against the overthrow of the government, when in reality it's just one man.
The book can be seen as a how-to in propaganda, playing into the fears of the enemy, forcing over-reaction and panic with minimal effort and maximum results. Some of the technology doesn't seem that advanced. Granted, there's space ships that can travel between planets, but there are also cars and telephones. However, considering that it was first published in 1957 - 50 years ago - it's hardly surprising. With the brilliance of the story, it is also unsurprising that the book is still in demand - the copy I have is out of print, but there are new anthologies of the author's works being brought out.
I cannot recommend this book highly enough.

A modern classic for kids of all agesReview Date: 2008-07-02
It's short enough to read to a toddler but interesting enough for an older child to read on his own. You can't go wrong with Taxi Dog!
Excellent Children's Book!Review Date: 2008-06-24
I highly recommend this book!
we LOVE this bookReview Date: 2007-10-17
Its a great story about companionship. The rhymes roll off the tongue and the pitcures are rich with color and detail.
We have since shared this book with many of our friends and we have heard great things about it from them as well.
Howie NYC
A wonderful book for children about New York CityReview Date: 2007-03-19
Most children who visit/live in NYC will ride a taxi. So, the book's topic is very relevant to their own experience. Things about the city are subtly tied into the the wonderful rhymes of this book (e.g. dogs, Central Park, the Circus, Broadway) without being too "touristy."
Buy it now!Review Date: 2006-12-07

Used price: $8.29

A Great Read!Review Date: 2008-08-02
An absorbingly well written tale Review Date: 2008-07-25
The Man Who Got AwayReview Date: 2008-03-07
Michele Cozzens' A Line Between Friends captures--in heart-wrenching detail--the bittersweet passage of time, the memory of teenage love, and the necessity of growing up and accepting the choices we've made. I found myself cheering for Joel and Noelle, but I also wanted to slap some sense into them. "Look," I felt like shouting, "You're perfect for each other! Wake up! Get it together!" But Joel's and Noelle's family obligations, jobs, and other relationships get in the way, causing them to miss obvious opportunities to express their love for each other. Ultimately, in an ending that's both satisfying and sad, they learn to accept the meaning of their friendship.
Cozzens has sprinkled her very real characters with a healthy dose of charm, and planted them in an era and environment that will strike a chord with anyone who came of age in the late seventies and eighties. I recognized myself and my friends in many of Cozzens' wacky and lovable college kids. At one point, I swear I could smell the marijuana.
Cozzens has a knack for writing about balance and choice. Her memoir-- I'm Living Your Dream Life: The Story of a Northwoods Resort Owner-- reveals the tightwire act performed by women who decide to combine motherhood with a career. Although I'm not considering dragging out the bell-bottom jeans and the bong, A Line Between Friends made me long for a time and place that I miss, just a little, when the doors in my life seem to creak shut. Oh, to go back, to sort it out differently, to take the chances I wish I had taken! Cozzens points out, with skill, humor, and a clever plot, that the road away from true love can sometimes help us discover ourselves.
Robin Meloy Goldsby is the author of Piano Girl: A Memoir and the solo piano artist featured on Songs from the Castle and Twilight.
a line between friendsReview Date: 2008-08-08
the author's way of writing makes me love word description. i recommend this book for a delightful read thru time.
s. neely
A LINE BETWEEN FRIENDSReview Date: 2008-07-25
Joel and Noelle meet in high school, go to the same college and then go their separate ways. But something binds them together more than other college friends who fade from their lives just as easily as they entered. They stay in touch through the occasional call or Christmas card, yet neither really pursues a deeper friendship once they each marry someone else and move ahead with their lives. This is why it's so strange to Noelle when she receives a note from Joel (how the story begins) that very abruptly asks her to end all contact, and why she goes back in time to examine their relationship. The story isn't only told through Noelle's perspective. Joel has equal time as the chapters alternate between the two.
The author captures the era of the 1970's and 1980's with sights, sounds and smells, and her characters are highly believable. It's a quick read primarily because you can't help but wonder what conclusion they both will draw about the friendship coming to an end. The He-said, She-said format is the perfact way to tell this story.

Used price: $5.52

18.. AND STILL READING THEM...=)Review Date: 2003-11-06
The Best Book EverReview Date: 2006-06-25
When I was young...Review Date: 2002-03-14
Perfect for your Pre-Teen girlsReview Date: 2003-07-11
The babysitters club seriesReview Date: 2001-01-22
Used price: $0.01

A classic, and a book for everyoneReview Date: 2008-10-02
excellent word funReview Date: 2008-09-06
C D BReview Date: 2008-07-27
Great book, but needs the answersReview Date: 2007-07-24
CDBReview Date: 2008-04-27
I was very excited to find this book for my grandbaby. We had great fun with it when her aunts were small. Who would have thought back then that William Stieg invented 'text speak'. I even stumped my youngest daughter with NQ!
Related Subjects: A B C D E F G H I K N P Q R S W M L
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Anyone who enjoys learning about the Middle Ages will like this book. The description is sometimes technical but is written so that young children can become familiar with the terms, and the marvellous illustrations are very helpful in visualizing what is being done. From the choice of location, through the building of the walls and the inner ward, to the completion of the castle and the establishment of the surrounding town, the reader will follow, step by step, Master Engineer James of Babbington and all his workers in their labors. The story ends with a visit from King Edward, followed by an attack from the Welsh under Prince Daffyd of Gwynedd whose defeat leads to the decision by the Welsh to end their resistence, although the complete "conquest" did not occur until 200 years after Edward's death. This book won a 1978 Caldecott Honor award.
REVIEWED BY: Wayne S. Walker