Searching for America: A Novel of Survival in a Nation Without Laws Review

Searching for America: A Novel of Survival in a Nation Without Laws
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These days it's difficult not to fall into a doom mentality when watching the evening news. We persistently hear the pundits say, "The nation is headed for financial collapse and skyrocketing inflation." Some say let it collapse while others still have their hands out looking for a bailout. The fact is that a financial collapse and potentially worse collateral failures are definite possibilities. This thrilling novel begins when the bailouts end, because the government has collapsed, no longer able to sustain the fiscal policies we see in place today. Rarely have I read a book that had such an integral relevance to my long term well being and way of life (I actually can't think of one that affected me like this one did). As a believer in the sovereign American spirit of self-reliance, freedom, and the pursuit of happiness, I deeply enjoyed reading page after page of that very same spirit rising to the fore to tackle the problems and life-threatening situations faced by the Floridians. For me, this book comprises the best of what reading is all about: the joy is in each and every page, not just in getting to the exciting ending. I give this book five stars for its vision and spirit. I also give it five stars for further cementing in my soul the idea that you can't keep good people down, no matter what obstacles get in their way!

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A Marvelous Mustang: Tales from the Life of a Spanish Horse Review

A Marvelous Mustang: Tales from the Life of a Spanish Horse
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We all like animal stories. But, how many have you read told from the view of the animal itself. This book is truly a rare fantastic treat. Years of close observation, exact notes, personal experience and skill let the author tell this story. This is the world as the horse views it. You do not have to like or know anything about Spanish Mustangs to enjoy this one. There is not a trainer, horseman or animal lover that will not enjoy and benefit from this tale. I only wish I could give it more than five stars.

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Books about horses are written by humans for humans. This fascinating memoir is written from the horse's point of view. It allows a real horse to tell us what he thinks of humans and how he feels about what they do with him.

To educate and entertain his herd mates, a marvelous mustang has created many tales about the first four years of his life. Humans call him Skan. His special human translates his tales in this entertaining autobiography.

Whether he lives in the wild or with humans, a horse's world seethes with predators. When humans take Skan off the range to live with them, his instincts and nose tell him that they want to eat him for dinner, but they don't behave like predators.

As he studies humans, he is torn between what other horses tell him about them and his own experiences with them. Do they intend to eat him or hurt him? Can he trust them to take good care of him? How do they feel towards him? Will they treat him well or ill?

As he survives multiple ordeals, he discovers how to communicate with humans. To learn what a horse needs to know to live safely and comfortably with humans, he struggles with lesson after lesson. Can one person earn his respect, his trust, and his love?


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Mack EB-EC-ED-EF-EG-DE 1936-1951 Photo Archive Review

Mack EB-EC-ED-EF-EG-DE 1936-1951 Photo Archive
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Just like the Mack trucks of old, and what the reputation of the brand was built on, this book is top notch. The legendary E model Mack's lighter end of the scale is examined in detail with excellent photos showing factory fresh and working trucks. Excellent for anyone into modelling, dreaming of owning one or currently restoring a survivor. Some of the supplied model information is pretty basic but the pictures speak thousands of words. A fan of classic trucks will get a real kick out of this and will no doubt want to get the EH-ES photo archive to continue the journey through the E Model.
The photos in the copy I own seem to be printed a bit funny. They are still excellent but seem to have a kind of semi-gloss finish, almost facsimile look, to them. Odd when compared to other Iconografix books in this series but nothing to be too stressed about!

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Lights Out: A Working Man's Mystery Review

Lights Out: A Working Man's Mystery
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Terry Saltz is the protagonist, a carpenter who is also a pizza delivery guy for Carlo's Pizza. Every morning he and his friends have breakfast at Brewster's, and that is where Terry's (ex) wife, Marylou, tracks him down. She asks him to help her move, and he says 'no' emphatically.
Gruf's dad Smitty is setting up the bar he owns for Gruf to take over, so he's hired Terry to make some improvements. In the midst of all of this, Terry and his roommate John hear gunshots down the street at some awful hour of the morning and find Marylou wasted (drugs and alcohol) with a shotgun in her hand. John, the cop, takes control. Terry and his friends know that Marylou didn't kill the man found in the empty trailer, so they work to find out the real story.
Again, LT Fawkes has written a story I couldn't put down. It is an interesting read, different from most mysteries in that I find it fairly down to earth. There are a lot of day to day things that most people don't include in their stories, but I like that it adds some more to the characters. And I've become fairly attached to Gruf, Bump, and Terry. ok, maybe Danny, too, but not as much.
I don't know too many read-alikes for these - they aren't bloody or gruesome, but there is swearing. A lot of new characters are introduced, and there is some (not a lot) romance.

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After stewing in jail and getting dumped by his pit-bull of a wife, Terry Saltz is finally getting his life back. But then a man is knocked off in his trailer park and who's caught holding the gun? His soon-to-be-ex-wife, Marylou-drunk as a skunk. She may be mean, but Marylou is no killer. Now Terry has to butt in and get her off the hook. Because no one is getting away with murder in his backyard.

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The Modern Homestead Manual Review

The Modern Homestead Manual
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When I picked up The Modern Homestead Manual, and opened the front cover, I read the dedication - the forward - the introduction - chapter 1 ..........all the way to the reference section!
Unlike many books that I pick up, this book held my attention from page one! There is nothing more frustrating than reading through a "how-to" manual, and never really getting to the good stuff! There are volumes of books that tell "what" you should do, it's so refreshing to read a book that actually gives you some "how-to" information.
If you're desire is to be more self sufficient, this book is a great place to start! There are so many opinions as to the real meaning of homesteading. I love the simple meaning that Skip & Cat give:
Homesteaders  =  Homesteaders are worthy stewards of the earth.
The Modern Homestead Manual builds hope and confidence, dispels myths, and tells it like it is. Because Skip & Cat are actually living the homestead life, they are able to give us true insight on what it really takes to live beyond the power lines & sidewalks.

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What it really takes to succeed beyond the sidewalks and power lines.Discover the tried-and-true secrets from those who have made wilderness living a success.This is the rest of the story: the information you don't see in most "homesteading" publications!The Modern Homestead Manual builds hope and confidence, dispels myths, and tells it like it is.

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Shut Out Review

Shut Out
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Kody Keplinger blew me away with her debut novel The DUFF, so I went into Shut Out with the hopes that she could pull out something even half as good. Shut Out was definitely that, I would say that I loved it almost as much, and that is saying something. I was hooked from page one of Shut Out, and devoured it in one sitting.
Shut Out is a battle of the sexes, a love story, a tale of friendship, and more. I'm not sure how Kody Keplinger managed to put so much into one fun-filled story, but I'm so glad that she did. I can't count the number of times I found my self laughing out loud. I experienced the characters emotions (and trust me they were many, and wide ranging) but that is what made this story so enjoyable.
Each character was so relatable, whether you loved them or hated them. From Lissa, the well meaning, and slightly neurotic main character, to the sexy guys that she is battling, to the best friend who is who always seems to be right (even when Lissa doesn't want her to be), to the bitchy other friend that never has anything nice to say. They are all well written and so easy connect with.
I would recommend Shut Out to anyone who loves a good battle of the sexes, loves a good laugh, or just loves a good read, I don't think you will be disappointed. Shut Out brings all of that and so much more.

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Most high school sports teams have rivalries with other schools. At Hamilton High, it's a civil war: the football team versus the soccer team. And for her part,Lissa is sick of it. Her quarterback boyfriend, Randy, is always ditching her to go pick a fight with the soccer team or to prank their locker room. And on three separate occasions Randy's car has been egged while he and Lissa were inside, making out. She is done competing with a bunch of sweaty boys for her own boyfriend's attention. Lissa decides to end the rivalry once and for all: She and the other players' girlfriends go on a hookup strike. The boys won't get any action from them until the football and soccer teams make peace. What they don't count on is a new sort of rivalry: an impossible girls-against-boys showdown that hinges on who will cave to their libidos first. And Lissa never sees her own sexual tension with the leader of the boys, Cash Sterling, coming.

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The Cowboy Way: Seasons of a Montana Ranch Review

The Cowboy Way: Seasons of a Montana Ranch
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If you want to retain the cosy illusion of the cowboy as a gun-toting, chain-smoking, horse-riding champion of open ranges, you will find little of it reinforced in David McCumber's excellent first book. But as he says, I have always been a Westerner, which means I have always thought about being a cowboy. Thinking and doing are different."
McCumber is former assistant managing editor of the San Francisco Examiner and founding editor and publisher of Big Sky Journal, who, at 44, decided to spend a year slaving as a cowboy on a huge cattle ranch in the high mountains of Montana.
It turned out to be a labour of love for this award-winning journalist who at the time was facing a mid-life crisis and gives the reasons for his sabbatical as: "journalistic curiosity about a lifestyle glorified to the point of religion in our culture. It was the final step of letting go, signing on as a gray-headed greenhorn, proposing to make my living out-of-doors, with my body as well as my brain."
His detailed description of the Montana cowboy's unenviable daily grind is thoroughly engrossing. In fact this book would be the perfect manual for the ignorant Dude who fancies working on a ranch: there's everything here from rousting renegade steers to the right way to build and repair fences in a snow-drift halfway up a mountain, learning new mechanical skills in the ranch's machine shop and garage, assisting with veterinary operations, and fighting brush fires.
McCumber's Montana is a harsh world where cowboys from disparate backgrounds bond while working against extremes of weather. Sadly, the cowpoke's four-legged friend - the horse - has been largely replaced by the more cost-effective small all-terrain vehicle (one driven by petrol not grass), occasional sorties in the Boss's helicopter, and Shank's Pony. By the end of the book, I felt as worn out and exhilarated as the author, whose every moment and enthusiasm for hard work I felt I'd shared.
"Many Montanans see their homeland turning from a great place to live and work," he says, "into a virtual theme park full of designer-dressed Westerners who don't understand what it really takes to make a living on the land." Who would blame them for there must be an easier way of making a living than the one vividly described in McCumber's book. After reading it I no longer dream about being a real cowboy but at last I now understand why some people still do.
But a cowboy without the comfort of a cigarette still seems a contradiction in terms.

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Italian Camping: The Guide to Camping and Caravaning (Dolce Vita) Review

Italian Camping: The Guide to Camping and Caravaning (Dolce Vita)
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I visited Italy in March 2007 armed with my copy of this camping guide, relying on it to advise me about which campgrounds were open during the off season. Of 10 campgrounds I visited which were categorised as open-all-year, all but one were closed for the winter. This caused me considerable inconvenience, including two nights on the back seat of the car. It almost ruined my holiday.
Interestingly, one campground I found that was open, was not mentioned in the book.
My advice, bitterly learnt, is that one cannot rely on this book for off-season travel. It is inaccurate and incomplete.

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Dancing Backward In Paradise: A Novel Review

Dancing Backward In Paradise: A Novel
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Dancing Backward in Paradise is the debut novel of award-winning theater actress Vera Jane Cook, about one young women's quest to find herself in "Paradise" - New York City in the 1960s, a place beset by hippies, ambition, and the turbulence of the civil rights era. At first, nineteen-year-old trailer park resident Grace Place enjoys amorous trysts with her lover, Lenny Bean, more than anything else; but urged by her mother to seek fame and fortune in New York City, she works as a cleaning lady for the wealthy Betty Ann Houseman. When her lover betrays her and seeks to steal Betty Ann's estate, Grace is shocked, yet remains intent upon fulfilling her mother's wish and seeing New York City with her best friend, Ginny Jo. Together they will discover unforgettable surprises in this Eric Hoffer Award-winning novel. Highly recommended.

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At the Paradise Trailer Park in Hixson, Tennessee, life for Grace Place is all about sucking on "meat jerkys" and having amorous encounters with Lenny Bean, her handsome lover. However, Grace's mother has loftier plans for her daughter and insists that Grace save her money and move to New York City so she can find fame and fortune as an actress.

Intent on pacifying her mama, Grace works as a cleaning lady for wealthy Betty Ann Houseman so she can pool her pennies for the trip north. Grace soon discovers that Betty Ann has a passion for men more pronounced than her overbite, and it isn't long before she's parting the sheets for Lenny Bean. But just before she leaves Hixson, Grace uncovers an insidious plot the eccentric Bean family has devised to steal Betty Ann's estate.

Filled with anger but intent on keeping her promise to her mama, Grace and her best friend, Ginny Jo, flee to New York City. Amid the drama of the 1960s, and the absurdity of her life, Grace faces her darkest hours and her greatest opportunity to flourish. In a world of surprises, and unforeseen events, Grace truly discovers paradise.


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Phantom Stallion: Wild Horse Island #6: Sea Shadow Review

Phantom Stallion: Wild Horse Island #6: Sea Shadow
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Yet another good WHI book. This was probably one of my favorites. Kit finally gets his horse, a pewter mare (I think) named Medusa. She sounds pretty, and Cricket seemed nice, too. It was maybe a little surprising when Duxelles helped a foal.

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When an earthquake sets off a tsunami on the shores of Wild Horse Island, the mustangs of Crimson Vale are chased by the waves and left stranded on a dangerous hilltop.

Darby knows the lead mare, Medusa, will do anything to save her herd—but will she let the ranch hands bring her to safety? Or is it up to Darby to save Medusa and her band—before they're lost forever?
--This text refers to the Kindle Edition edition.

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Nine Months at Ground Zero: The Story of the Brotherhood of Workers Who Took on a Job Like No Other Review

Nine Months at Ground Zero: The Story of the Brotherhood of Workers Who Took on a Job Like No Other
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Wonderful book that captures what really went on to clear out Ground Zero and how recoveries were handled.. Charlie Vitchers is an amazing man and is so modest for all that he accomplished. He brought compassion to recovery. Without his direction and authority recovery and clear up would have been chaotic. I highly recommend this book if you want to know what really happened at Ground Zero on Sept 11, 2001

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White Trash: Race and Class in America Review

White Trash: Race and Class in America
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Skip "White Trash : Race and Class in America". It's pretentious and obviously written by authors who've never done a hard day's manual labor, let alone been to a Monster Truck rally. Amazon offers Jim Goad's "Redneck Manifesto" - a much smarter and grittier look at America's white working class (written from someone who's been there).

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Slow Death Review

Slow Death
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The account of this case by Jim Fielder is the closest you can get without having access to the case files of the State Police and the FBI. Fielder did not get his information from court transcripts but was present for the hearings, trials and sentencing in this case. While other books and articles guessed as to what the items in David Ray's "toy box" looked like, Fielder gained acces to the photos used as evidence and presents them to his readers.
The information and accounts are accurate. His fresh approach to the book, as a story rather than "just the facts" gives the reader some insight into the persons who participated in this case which lasted 2 1/2 years. While Fielder takes some license as far as the interaction between the participants in this case, nothing about the case is factually inacurate. Jim Fielder takes you on an eye-opening journey into the world of criminal sexual sadism practiced by David Ray, a man the FBI described as so dangerous that if he were ever released from custody "he would re-offend before he got home." How do I know how accurate the book is - I prosecuted the case. Jim Yontz, Deputy District Attorney, Albuquerque, New Mexico

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Beside New Mexico's Elephant Butte Lake stood a windowless trailer which owner David Parker Ray, 59, and his girlfriend Cynthia Hendy, 39, called The Toy Box. A $100,000 homemade torture chamber, it was equipped with whips, chains, pulleys, straps, clamps, leg spreader bars, and surgical blades and saws. A camcorder stood next to the leather-padded torture table-set up for making "snuff" videos - while a ceiling-mounted video monitor allowed female victims to see every excruciating detail of the agonies inflicted on them by their captors."Never Trust A Chained Captive". That was one of the rules David Ray kept posted as a reminder to himself and his followers. Its truth was proven on March 22, 1999 when, after surviving a three-day torture orgy, Cyndi Vigil, 22, stabbed Hendy with an ice pick and escaped, clad only in a slave collar and padlocked chains. She told police that she'd been kidnapped, raped and tortured by Ray and Hendy. A second victim, Angie Montano, 27, came forward to describe how she'd survived a similar ordeal less than a month before.Satanist Ray was the centre of a web of sadism, sex slavery and murder.His disciple, drifter Dennis Roy Yancy, confessed to strangling to death Marie Parker, 22, while Ray took photos. Ray's daughter Jesse, 31, was convicted of helping her father kidnap and torture Kelli Van Cleve, 22. Cynthia Hendy told authorities that Ray had killed 14 women. Police believe that he may have slain more than 60. On September 20, 2001, Ray was sentenced to 224 years in prison.

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Going to Bend: A Novel Review

Going to Bend: A Novel
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Everything there is to know about Hubbard, a small tourist town on the hard-weather coast of Oregon, is succinctly rendered in the first two paragraphs of Diane Hammond's Going to Bend. The real story begins in the third paragraph: "In this town ...lived two women..."
Since an accidental seating arrangement in third grade, Petie (Patricia) Coolbaugh and Rose Bundy have been best friends. Each is 31 years old now. The stark differences between the two and a clear summary of their long relationship are nailed-down-solid in a few well-crafted sentences.
From that point forward, a remarkably poignant story unfolds - but ever-so-gently; easing the reader slowly into a vice-grip awareness of hidden circumstances that made Petie and Rose the formidable survivors they are today - and poised them to soon make decisions that would change their lives forever.
In case it's helpful to anyone: thrillers are my usual choice (you know, the books that grab you by the throat on page one and nearly choke you to death on adrenaline before you find out who did it, on the last page.) While Going to Bend is absolutely nothing like that, it's intriguing and even thrilling at a whole different level. Hammond's incredibly skillful writing, interesting characters, and very good story pulled me in quickly and held me tightly until the last wonderful sentence. Along the way I smiled a lot and, every now and then, had to press a hand to my aching heart - and blink back tears - so I could go on reading. Today, a month after finishing the book, Petie and Rose are as easily and fondly remembered as any of my real-life friends.
Diane Hammond is a great story teller.


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In the small coastal town of Hubbard, Oregon, your man may let you down, your boss may let you down, life may let you down . . . but your best friend never will.Welcome to Hubbard, where Petie Coolbaugh and Rose Bundy have been best friends since childhood. Now in their early thirties, both are grappling to come to terms with their age and station in life. As they struggle to make ends meet and provide for their children and the good-hearted but unreliable men in their lives, they takejobs cooking for a brand-new upscale restaurant, Souperior's Cafe, starting from scratch every morning to produce gallons of fresh soup from local recipes. The proprietors of the cafe, Nadine and Gordon, are fraternal twins from Los Angeles with adjustments of their own to make, but Rose's warmth and the quality of the women's soups quickly make them indispensable despite Petie's abrupt manner and prickly ways.The strains of daily life are never far, however, and the past takes its toll on the women. Petie's childhood as the daughter of the town drunk—a subject she won't talk about—keeps her at a distance from even her best friend, until an unexpected romance threatens to crack her tough exterior. And despite Rose's loving personality, the only man in her life is a loner fisherman who spends only a few months of the year in town. In this fishing village, friends are for life and love comes in the most unexpected ways. As the novel draws together lovers, husbands, employers, friends, and family, each woman finds possibilities for love and even grace that she had never imagined.

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Phantom Stallion #15: Kidnapped Colt Review

Phantom Stallion #15: Kidnapped Colt
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I do like the Phantom Stallion series a great deal, but I was disappointed in the last couple of books. In the book before this one, the author left a lot of things unfinished and I was hoping that she would pick up where she left off. In the last book, the dangerous hunting dogs were still on the loose, Linc Slocum was in trouble in the mountains, and Blaze the River Bend Ranch dog was missing. I wanted to hear where Blaze was, how Linc was helped, and what they did to catch the dogs.
Instead, the story just picks up with Blaze back (never once even mentioning that he was missing), Linc being his normal "evil villain" self (which is getting more and more extreme with each book), and they mention once that the dangerous hunting dogs were sent back to Louisiana. But how did all this happen? How did they catch the dogs again, where was Blaze, and how did they manage to get Linc out of trouble? We don't know because the author says nothing.
The book itself is not bad, but it did get off on a bad note with me because all the problems and issues that the last book left open were more or less forgotten and she just charged into another story. The story is about Shy Boots, the colt of Apache Hotspot and Diablo, mentioned in the second book of the series: Mustang Moon. Apparently Ryan, Linc Slocum's son, is very fond of him and is trying to protect him from his father who wants to get rid of the little colt. Ryan gets Sam to help at the same time as the HARP program on River Bend starts up again. However, Ryan goes from being a sort of shy guy that is rather competitive with Jake, to being a total and absolute spoiled brat all the of the sudden. I mean, honestly he was never really unusually nice or anything in the other books, but he was polite and not nasty or anything. In this book, he is all the sudden being a manipulative jerk and thinking he can pay for anything he wants, etc. and gets Sam into some trouble through this. Because of Ryan pushing Sam into doing something not so smart (she means well, but acts on a bad idea trying to help), Hotspot and Shy Boots disappear. Shy Boots ends up being sold to a petting zoo, but Ryan rescues him with Sam's help, though he still acts like a brat. Hotspot ends up running wild with the Phantom (huge surprise there, not trying to be rude to the author, but I saw that coming a mile away). There is the brief intro of the character, Karl Mannix, who is supposed to be working for Slocum, who ends up (like all the people who work for Slocum, except the Kenworthys) being a crook who is responsible for Hotspot and Shy Boots being missing, though he is not actually caught at the end of the book.
The book itself is not bad. I love the author's writing style and descriptions, but if you are hoping to have some of the loose ends of the last book taken care, you will be a little disappointed. If you really enjoy the series (as I do), I do recommend reading it because the story is a good one and Sam develops (at least a little) into a stronger, smarter person in this book. I liked it, but it was not quite what I was hoping for. Still, for the die-hard fans who own all the books (like me), then it is a nice addition to the story line.

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The wildly popular series continues with more adventures of Samantha and her mustang, the Phantom Stallion!


Girls love horses! The appeal of horse stories spans generations.


Set in the modern–day Wild West, Phantom Stallion has cowboys, horse rustlers, mustangs–exciting new territory you can't find in other series.


Continuation of a popular series.


Dedicated fan base.

--This text refers to the Kindle Edition edition.

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Mama's Boy, Preacher's Son: A Memoir of Growing Up, Coming Out, and Changing America's Schools Review

Mama's Boy, Preacher's Son: A Memoir of Growing Up, Coming Out, and Changing America's Schools
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Very few books I've read have touched me as deeply as Kevin Jenning's book "Mama's Boy, Preacher's Son." The author does an excellent job hooking the reader in with descriptions of life growing up in the South, with feelings of not being "normal."
From the depths of despair in a childhood gone wrong, Kevin managed to form an idea of how to change the climate in schools, and make them a better place for kids to learn. The things he went through as a student trying to get an education and putting up with bullying and harassment are amazing, and incredibly sad. This book should be required reading for teachers entering the field, so they understand why bullying and harassment isn't just "kids being kids" and can cause significant and lasting damage to the victims.

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Devil's Slew: A Barrett Raines Mystery Review

Devil's Slew: A Barrett Raines Mystery
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Florida Department of Law Enforcement Agent Barrett "Bear" Raines attends a little league game when duty calls. In the Devil's Slew swamp, Afghan vet Quentin Hart has taken his girlfriend prisoner. Bear and Sheriff Smoot Rawlings arrive at the scene hoping to talk down the angry former combat soldier with no body getting hurt. Instead, Quentin races out of his home holding his automatic rifle pointed at the cops. They kill him as each knows the veteran committed suicide by cop.
Bear feels depressed over the incident though he knows he and Smoot did the right thing. He investigates Quentin's last days trying to understand why he snapped. Aided by other law enforcement officials he soon uncovers a connection to vets involved in counterfeiting and money laundering. The FBI believes they kidnapped and beheaded one of their agents in New Orleans. As the evidence mounts that this is a dangerous gang based in Florida but working in Mexico and Afghanistan, someone is targeting these vets for death.
Devil's Slew is a fascinating police procedural in which the chaotic story line showcases how convoluted an investigation can become. Fast-paced from the moment Bear and Smoot arrive in the aptly named swamp and never slowing down, readers will appreciate Darryl Wimberley connecting dots between Florida, Mexico and Afghanistan in Bear's latest thriller (see Pepperfish Keys).
Harriet Klausner


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