A Star Discovered (Lucky Foot Stable) Review

A Star Discovered (Lucky Foot Stable)
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
Nice book, also found the author lived in the same county as we do. My Grand daughter should enjoy it.

Click Here to see more reviews about: A Star Discovered (Lucky Foot Stable)



Buy Now

Click here for more information about A Star Discovered (Lucky Foot Stable)

Read More...

Waking the Wilderness: Where tragedy sparks obsession Review

Waking the Wilderness: Where tragedy sparks obsession
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
Well thought-out, well written and a hard book to put down. Tension builds on almost every page. Lots of twists and turns. Lots of surprises. The characters ring true. Waking the Wilderness is about folks who subsist on just the scraps from life's banquet table, and if you've ever spent time around hardscrabble Northwest logging towns, around inner cities of the Northeast or in the backwoods of Southern Appalachia, (as in In Search Of America's Heartbeat) the characters will remind you of people you've known. For readers who like realistic suspense, Waking the Wilderness is more than worth their time. A great job by Clayton King.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Waking the Wilderness: Where tragedy sparks obsession



Buy Now

Click here for more information about Waking the Wilderness: Where tragedy sparks obsession

Read More...

Turtle in Paradise Review

Turtle in Paradise
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
Eleven year old Turtle doesn't like kids 'cause they are nothing like Shirley Temple (and Turtle doesn't like HER either). See, Turtle's had some bad experiences with the children of her mother's various employers. No kid is nice to the housekeeper's kid.
When Mama's new employer Mrs. Budnick shares Turtle's low opinion of children and refuses to let Turtle stay in her house, Mama sends Turtle to Key West and the home of an aunt and far too many boy cousins none of whom Turtle's ever met. New environment, new culture, new family, new rules.
Her eleven-year-old cousin Beans (everyone has a nickname, so Turtle fits in THAT way) runs the Diaper Gang, a babysitting service with a secret weapon against diaper rash & they have a rule: no girls allowed. Turtle usually tags along anyway because despite the colorful locals (including a very familiar mustached author) there isn't much to do on the island.
Her mother may have Hollywood dreams, but turtle is down to earth. She views life as more like the story of the three little pigs: you just set up a new house & a big bad wolf comes to blow it down (Mama's not the best at picking men)...but Archie could be different...but the two of them are up in New Jersey--while Turtle's stuck in the mud and the heat.
Holm again mixes her family's history with a well told story (much like she did in "Penny from Heaven" in 2006). This one has all the local color you could want and rum runners and pirates and a heroine who's just the right mix of snarky and charming. A winner for fans of Holm or historical fiction.
(And now full disclosure: I read most of this while walking on my treadmill right next to a framed manuscript page from "Penny from Heaven." I have met Jenny Holm & she's just about the nicest person you'd ever want to meet...so I may not be entirely unbiased. However, I have never been a fan of historical fiction & I really did not want to put this down. Holm & Cushman are the only ones who do that to me consistently!)
PS to the publisher: this cover has nothing to do with the book--it's very misleading!

Click Here to see more reviews about: Turtle in Paradise



Buy NowGet 46% OFF

Click here for more information about Turtle in Paradise

Read More...

Slab Review

Slab
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
The Slab is the freshest thing I've read in years. With a touch of the subtlety of F.Paul Wilson, some of the strangeness of Dean Koontz, Jeff Mariotte has captured the minds and actions of "real feel" people in a not so normal situation.
Staged in Salton Sea California, this book gives the reader the real feel of this desert isolation and it's quirky residents. Combining a mix of characters that includes a greedy real estate broker, a socially inept but morally strong sheriff, his corrupt deputy, and a cast of outcast characters that mix so well together that the reader feels right at home inside the heads of most of them. The book is a trip!
Written with a supernatural undertone, the pieces of this puzzle flow so well together that as I read, I was not at all disappointed with the prospect of this excellent suspense thriller ending with "more than human" powers being exerted. What starts as a thriller, ends with a supernatural event.
If you like F Paul Wilson you will love The Slab. I did!

Click Here to see more reviews about: Slab

An original horror novel by Jeff Mariotte. In the grim days following 9/11/2001 three veterans of different wars, whose lives have been intersected by magic, find themselves thrown together in California's cruel desert - while a group of serial killers ply their deadly trade, and an ancient evil grows beneath them.

Buy Now

Click here for more information about Slab

Read More...

Evil Among Us: The Texas Mormon Missionary Murders Review

Evil Among Us: The Texas Mormon Missionary Murders
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
In EVIL AMONG US, author Ken Driggs provides us with a glimpse into the seriously deranged mind of Robert E. Cleason - forger, con man, gun nut, murderer. Cleason is a dyed-in-the-wool sociopath, commonplace in the world of true crime, but he brings a breath of fresh air to the table in that he is schizophrenic as well.
Cleason, though unaccomplished, made his way through the world by lying to people, presenting himself as a ranking member of the Mormon Church and a former CIA agent whose life was in constant danger because he "knew too much." And this is only a partial listing.
Along the way, he obtained drivers licenses in a variety of names, physically abused his wife, forged documents, shot up a hospital emergency room, and did a number of stints in jail. He was as well an avid hunter who, while he killed animals for meat, also just plain enjoyed killing. And during one of his periodic Mormon episodes, Cleason, for no other apparent reason other than it just seemed like the right thing to do, shot and killed two young Mormon missionaries who had come, at his invitation, to visit him.
Driggs does a fine job of research in EVIL AMONG US, and the depth of his investigation into the mind of Robert Cleason is outstanding. What I found particularly interesting is that apparently Cleason had episodes, which became more frequent and longer lasting as he got older, during which he lost contact with reality, increasingly believing his delusions to be real. While the CIA man thing seems to have originally been part of Cleason's con, he came to believe it himself due to his steadily worsening schizophrenia.
Driggs' writing is adult and professional, eschewing the lazy drama in which the hacks (you know who you are) indulge in their eternal quest to turn true crime into marginally true soap opera. I had a little trouble following the time line due to Driggs' tendency to jump around early on in the book, but after the first 100 pages or so this ceased to be a problem.
This is a good true crimer, well written, and with a slightly different feel than most.
Highly recommended for fans of the genre.


Click Here to see more reviews about: Evil Among Us: The Texas Mormon Missionary Murders

Introduction About a year after arriving in Texas in 1993 as an attorney, I chanced upon newspaper reports of the 1974 incredibly brutal murders of young Mormon missionaries Gary Darley and Mark Fischer. I recalled hearing about them years earlier in my own LDS congregation when the news first broke, and started investigating the case with an eye toward an article or two. The more I dug, however, the more compelling and heart-rending the story became. Stories, actually, of alleged murderer Bob Kleasen's mental illness and pathetic life, of well-meaning Mormons responding to troubled new converts, of loving families dealing with unimaginable loss, and of a tortuous death penalty case.In the mid-1970s death penalty law in the United States was unsettled. In 1972 the U.S. Supreme Court had invalidated all death penalty statutes because of the gross racism in how they were applied. Nearly every state was then attempting to enact new constitutional statutes which the Court was just beginning to rule on. This was the situation when Kleasen was brought to trial for killing Darley and Fischer.Even though there seems to be little doubt Kleasen was the killer, his conviction was reversed on appeal and he was never retried. As a lawyer who specializes in death row cases, I was particularly interested in how the criminal justice system responded to such a situation. All of this clearly added up, I felt, to a story worth reading.What follows isn't intended to support the death penalty. Personally, I'm opposed to all executions. Nor is it an indictment of the American criminal justice system. In some ways, I realize, justice was frustrated in this case. However, it also illustrates how cases can work out in the real world of criminal law. And while I believe Kleasen was a murderer and, like everyone else, would prefer that he be locked up, I found considerable evidence of the forces that shaped him. I believe that understanding these forces--however much we may want to ignore them or tell ourselves they could never affect us--may help to prevent future Kleasens.As with many religious and cultural communities, Mormons sometimes have a language of their own and concepts peculiar to Latter-day Saint life. I have attempted to explain these terms and beliefs for non-Mormon readers. Mormonism is more than a religious denomination; in many ways, it is close to an ethnic community.Much of this book is drawn from Texas, New York, and federal court transcripts. Additional information comes from extensive newspaper coverage of Kleasen over the years. Quotations from those sources didn't always translate neatly into writing, so I've occasionally taken the liberty of slightly rewording some to make them read more smoothly. In every instance, however, the plain meaning of the quotes has been preserved. Whenever the quotation is ambiguous, or its language is critical, it's used exactly as found.This book would have been impossible without the help of many people, some of whom were kind enough to revisit old, often unpleasant memories. I conducted about fifty interviews of varying lengths. For most, recalling events twenty years in the past in great detail was difficult. In many instances recollections didn't always square with the existing documentary record. Whenever such conflicts were present, I chose to rely on the contemporary written record. Periodically, some of the people I spoke with still feared Kleasen or had other reasons for not wanting to be identified. In other instances I felt that some of the parties who couldn't be located wouldn't have wanted to be identified by their real names. For these reasons I've used several fictional names in the book. Each of these instances is identified.Several Austin Mormons who knew Kleasen offered invaluable insights, along with a few former LDS missionaries who served in Texas and N

Buy NowGet 22% OFF

Click here for more information about Evil Among Us: The Texas Mormon Missionary Murders

Read More...

Ceramics Review

Ceramics
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
This conveniently sized and well illustrated book on "ceramics" does not initially state what kind of ceramics the writer is writing about. In the USA, we differentiate between earthenware [low-fire] and stoneware [high-fire] before reccomending materials or techniques and it wasn't until I flipped back to the section on firing that I discovered that the author was referring only to EARTHENWARE. Therefore, the book should be entitled, "LOW FIRE CERAMICS," not simply "CERAMICS." If it would have been titled correctly, I never would have bought it because my interest is in cone 5-6 stoneware. Many of the techniques translate to high fire work but none of the engobe recipes, firing tips or glaze information are applicable. This seems like quite a BIG oversight on the part of the writer and the publisher that I think they should be informed. Any clay artist working in earthenware will love this book and be able to get past the other small things, like silica being called quartz or Seger cones being used instead of Orton cones, so I do highly reccomend the book to them...a lot of good info for the money!

Click Here to see more reviews about: Ceramics

The profusely illustrated books in the growing Decorative Techniques Series are designed to help readers master a variety of arts and crafts related to home decoration. This title instructs in methods of making handsome ceramic items, including vases, bowls, tiles, lamps, and other accessories to enhance a home's appearance. The necessary materials are highlighted, and directions include methods of molding and shaping clay, firing in the kiln, painting, and glazing.

Buy Now

Click here for more information about Ceramics

Read More...

A Filly Called Easter (Holiday) Review

A Filly Called Easter (Holiday)
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
I read the entire series of Laura Hesse books. "Oh my. I don't think I've ever seen any book about horses so cute in my life. A warm, friendly story about children and horses.
I laughed and I cried and I understood everything that author had to say.
The story flows very fast, and I had trouble putting the book down.
This was a great read, from the start to the finish.
If you haven't read this one, you don't know what you've been missing.
Bozena Klejne

Click Here to see more reviews about: A Filly Called Easter (Holiday)



Buy Now

Click here for more information about A Filly Called Easter (Holiday)

Read More...

Foghorn Outdoors Washington Camping: The Complete Guide to More Than 650 Campgrounds Review

Foghorn Outdoors Washington Camping: The Complete Guide to More Than 650 Campgrounds
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
I recently returned from a Pacific Northwest camping venture and purchsed this book based on the advice of a good friend and avid camper. I found this book to be very informative. Stephanie & Tom Stienstra lead us to some awesome camping spots off of the beaten path. They are very knowledgeable and I will definately use more of their books in future adventures!

Click Here to see more reviews about: Foghorn Outdoors Washington Camping: The Complete Guide to More Than 650 Campgrounds



Buy Now

Click here for more information about Foghorn Outdoors Washington Camping: The Complete Guide to More Than 650 Campgrounds

Read More...

Inside Box 1663 Review

Inside Box 1663
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
Much has been written about the technical and scientific work done at Los Alamos, but this book tells about the human side of the effort, from the perspective of a wife of one of the scientists who was recruited for the project. It paints a tale of a families uprooted from their homes, living in conditions that would be considered intolerable by contemporary standards, completely isolated from their relatives. It describes the horrific hours of work by the scientists and other workers as well as numerous other sacrifices, by people who *knew* that they might possibly be the only obstacle to totalitarian world domination.
One of the thoughts I couldn't help but consider after reading this is that Americans in the 1940s were made of tougher stuff than we are today. I'm far from confident that, in this day and age, we'd rise to the occasion in the same manner as the heroes of '1663'.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Inside Box 1663

As the author herself put it, this is "the lives of men and women who lived and worked in grimsecrecy to hasten the end of the war." It is the story of stressful lives, cryptic conversations between husbands and wives, leaky faucets and water shotrages, censored mail, and sharing a post office box with every other person in town- PO Box !1663, Santa Fe, NM. Life was filled with difficulties, but it was also filled with determination to overcome the hardships and reach a goal. Tying it all together was a sense of pride, of patriotism, and communal spirit that surpassed anything they knew before or after those days of the manhattan Project.

Buy Now

Click here for more information about Inside Box 1663

Read More...

Retracing the Journey: Teaching and Learning in an American High School (0) (0) Review

Retracing the Journey: Teaching and Learning in an American High School (0) (0)
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
Finally a book that tells the truth about teaching English. Christenbury, a writer and education professor with impeccable credentials, honestly records her not-so-triumphant return to high school teaching. Discouraged teachers will take heart at the story of a good educator whose best efforts, experience, and sound pedagogy collide with student apathy, an enabling district, and a feel-good culture. I finished this book with a thankful sigh of relief--somebody else understands.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Retracing the Journey: Teaching and Learning in an American High School (0) (0)



Buy Now

Click here for more information about Retracing the Journey: Teaching and Learning in an American High School (0) (0)

Read More...

Irish Travellers: Racism and the Politics of Culture (Anthropological Horizons) Review

Irish Travellers: Racism and the Politics of Culture (Anthropological Horizons)
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
The recent TLC series and a trip to Ireland prompted my interest in Irish Travelers. The book is interesting, although the writing style is at times a little awkward. It is well researched and thought provoking.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Irish Travellers: Racism and the Politics of Culture (Anthropological Horizons)


The Travelling People constitute a Gypsy-like minority population in Ireland that has been a long-standing target of racism and assimilative state settlement policies.Using archival and ethnographic research, Jane Helleiner's study documents longstanding anti-Traveller racism in Ireland and explores the ongoing realities of Traveller life. Through analyses of constructions of Traveller origins, local government records, the provincial press, and debates of the Irish parliament, a history of local and national anti-Traveller discourse and practice in the independent Irish state is revealed and linked to the legitimation and reproduction of other social inequalities, including those of class, gender,and generation. Helleiner's research, conducted in the course of long-term residence in a Traveller camp, supports her historical analysis with an examination of how travelling, work, gender, and childhood become sites for the production and reproduction of contemporary Traveller collective identity and culture even as they are shaped by oppressive forces of racism. These phenomena are located within political struggles at local, national, and European levels.

Buy NowGet 20% OFF

Click here for more information about Irish Travellers: Racism and the Politics of Culture (Anthropological Horizons)

Read More...

Collectors Guide to Diecast Toys and Scale Models Review

Collectors Guide to Diecast Toys and Scale Models
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
I must say that I really regret buying this book. After waiting anxiously to receive it I was, upon opening it, almost immediately disappointed. It turned out to be an alphabetical listing of companies which produced die-cast models, with a brief (1 paragraph in some cases) description of company history. While it does list each model produced by the various companies and offer a valuation, it fails to describe the models in any detail. Therefore, a prospective collector has virtually no useful information to go on. It doesn't even tell you the various colours the models have been released in, or any details which might differenciate one model from another.
As for photos. This is another area where this book falls down. Very few graphics; once again - a real let down.
All in all, a very poor showing. Save your money and buy a different book!

Click Here to see more reviews about: Collectors Guide to Diecast Toys and Scale Models

This updated second edition now includes over 575 brands, as opposed to the only 170 brands presented in the first book. Once again this full-color guide will include popular contemporary brands such as Majorette, Tomica, Hot Wheels, Matchbox, Siku, Maisto, Bburago, Johnny Lightnings, and many others featured together in detail, showing the different models and thousands of variations. This extraordinary book is arranged alphabetically by brand name with hundreds of color photographs, manufacturers, model numbers, descriptions, scales, colors, distinguishing marks, and current market values. It provides a helpful bibliography and guide to resources for finding more diecast toys on the secondary market. 1998 values. AUTHORBIO: Dana Johnson is an authority on collectible toy cars, including Matchbox, Hot Wheels, and many diecast models. His extensive personal collection includes mostly diecast models from all over the world. He has written several books: Matchbox Toys, 1947 to 2003, Toy Car Collector's Guide, and Collector's Guide to Diecast Toys & Scale Models. REVIEW: This book shows collectors how affordable diecast toy collecting can be as a hobby and demonstrates the value of collecting new models as well as old ones. It is one of the most comprehensive guides on the market to Corgi, Dinky, Hot Wheels, Matchbox, Tootsietoys, and other diecast toys & scale models.

Buy Now

Click here for more information about Collectors Guide to Diecast Toys and Scale Models

Read More...

Moon Baja RV Camping (Moon Outdoors) Review

Moon Baja RV Camping (Moon Outdoors)
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
Recently took a trip to San Felipe and used the Moon guide, I never checked publication date but it appears to be a bit outdated even though it is still very useful in the most part and worth every penny that I paid.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Moon Baja RV Camping (Moon Outdoors)



Buy Now

Click here for more information about Moon Baja RV Camping (Moon Outdoors)

Read More...

All That I Have: A Novel Review

All That I Have: A Novel
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
What a wonderful, fantastic novel. Last year I read this author's book, Go With Me, which became one of my top reads of that year. I already know that this book, All That I Have, is going to make this year's list.
Both books are short - you can easily read them in a few hours. But they are both jam-packed with such clever and funny prose that you will want to reread certain passages over and over again, just for the joy of it.
Short summary, no spoilers -
This is a story about Lucian Wing, a humble, laconic, and very wise sheriff in a rural part of Vermont. Suddenly his quiet and relatively uneventful life is challenged by a series of events - a local dimwitted hoodlum nicknamed Superboy picks the wrong house to burgle - and makes off with a strongbox owned by some suspicious and violent Russians who have just moved in the area. Needless to say, they want it back.
Throw into the mix Wing's overly ambitious deputy, an exotic female photographer of dubious age, a guard dog described as a "bull mastiff-wolf-alligator hybrid" and a crew of truly eccentric characters and you can see this gets interesting. Oh, and Sheriff Wing may be having his own marital strife, to boot.
But as I stated earlier it's not simply the plot that makes this book sing. It's the incredibly clever and witty prose and Freeman's ability to string together a series of words that not only make you laugh, but make you shake your head in recognition of their veracity.
While reading this book, I placed little stick-it arrows in all the passages that I wanted to remember. Looking at it now, if I threw this book in the air, I believe it might fly on its own - I used up a lot of those stickies.
Needless to say, highly, highly recommended. I believe this author is so talented, and his writing style unique. I am already looking forward to his next book.

Click Here to see more reviews about: All That I Have: A Novel



Buy NowGet 15% OFF

Click here for more information about All That I Have: A Novel

Read More...

How To Raise Horses: Everything You Need To Know Review

How To Raise Horses: Everything You Need To Know
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
I loved this book. Very informative for a beginner like myself.
Defiantly would recommend this book for beginners.
Thank you much

Click Here to see more reviews about: How To Raise Horses: Everything You Need To Know

The show horse or the racing steed, the friendly mount or the breeding stallion, the draft horse or the companion: Whatever sort of horse you're raising—or even thinking about raising—this book provides all the information you'll need, such as basic health care, housing, feed, and raising foals. An essential primer for the newcomer to horse care as well as an invaluable resource for the veteran, this clearly and amply illustrated guide covers the basics and the finer points of breeding and health care, housing and exercising, feed and nutrition requirements. It should find a place in every horse lover's library.


Buy Now

Click here for more information about How To Raise Horses: Everything You Need To Know

Read More...

Gas & Oil Trucks (Crestline Series) Review

Gas and Oil Trucks (Crestline Series)
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
If you ever wanted to know how these trucks looked like since the beggining of the oil industry, and its evolution throughout the years, this book will give you a very clear picture. It has lots of fantastic photos, drawings and other interesting details, but in my opinion it's very short of explicative/support text. Although it's only focused on American oil companies, the book is very good, and I had some great moments with it.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Gas & Oil Trucks (Crestline Series)



Buy Now

Click here for more information about Gas & Oil Trucks (Crestline Series)

Read More...

Isn't That Bigamy? Review

Isn't That Bigamy
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)

You have just broken up with your girlfriend who leaves you in a busy restaurant with no way home, a tough waitress dumps a drink in your lap for no reason, and now you have to walk home with a wet crotch. If that is not enough, while walking across a bridge, you witness a mob hit quite by accident. This is what happens to womanizer Stan Smith in Mike Vogel's Isn't That Bigamy.
But wait, there is more. The waitress turns out to be Asian undercover agent and lesbian, Becky Li, who is charged with the ungrateful task of posing as Stan's wife in the witness protection program in Utah.
Through a series of events, witnessed from all points of view, Vogel takes us on an entertaining romp into fictional city, Tamarind, Utah, where Becky mistakenly takes Stan and where polygamy is not just practiced, it is the law. To attempt to blend in, Stan not only marries the mayor's daughter, whose twin has an unhealthy obsession with her, he marries the town lesbian, who has more than an eye for Becky.
And if things are not messy enough, Becky is recognized by the murderer's associate as she and Stan board the plane headed for Utah in the first place.
Vogel's writing engages the reader through multiple accounts of the same events. Isn't That Bigamy will also find a following in fans of Seinfeld, who enjoy a story that just snowballs into hell through a series of unfortunate coincidences.
The characters are brought to colorful life, with the exception of Stan, who remains nondescript throughout the novel. One would be hard pressed to remember Stan's hair color, let alone his physical appearance.
However, Stan's womanizing personality comes through loud and clear.
Isn't That Bigamy is a light, enjoyable, summer read.


Click Here to see more reviews about: Isn't That Bigamy



Buy Now

Click here for more information about Isn't That Bigamy

Read More...