A Guide to the Allegheny National Forest Review

A Guide to the Allegheny National Forest
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Written by Tom Dwyer, A Guide To The Allegheny National Forest is a marvelous pocket reference packed with history, detailed commentaries, maps, area-specific information and much more concerning this grand, 513,000 acre historic forest that makes Pennsylvania truly sylvan. Of especial note are the many hiking trail descriptions in this concise, easy-to-read, straightforward and friendly guide. If you are planning a vacation, hike, or just a plain day off to enjoy the beauty of the Allegheny National Forest, you should consult A Guide To The Allegheny National Forest without delay!

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Funeral Food (Tory Bauer Mystery) Review

Funeral Food (Tory Bauer Mystery)
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If you have not already read Kathleen Taylor's Tory Bauer mysteries, you've missed some sprightly good times. Not to worry, though. As it turns out, FUNERAL FOOD, her latest book published by Avon is actually the *first* in the series. It was originally published in a very small edition as THE MISSIONARY POSITION and was tied up with legalities. Avon, knowing they had something good, went ahead and published two other books in the series, SEX AND SALMONELLA and HOTEL SOUTH DAKOTA. Now, the legal issues out of the way, Avon offers us the prequel. Tory Bauer is a widowed, mature, Rubenesque waitress in Delphi, South Dakota's only cafe. She lives in a trailer with her ex-husband's lusty cousin, Del, and Del's teen-age son, Presley. Delphi is filled with memorable characters we like because of or despite their respective eccentricities. Working as a waitress and living in Delphi are uneventful until Tory finds a young Mormon, new to the community, in.....you got it.....the missionary position.....that is, "flat-out, stone cold dead." In trying to understand why anyone would kill the young missionary, Tory discovers many things about herself, about those she loves, and her neighbors. The ending is, well, a Kathleen Taylor ending. You don't stop thinking about this book when it's finished. You want to read the other two.....again, if you've already read them. Kathleen Taylor's terrific good humor, careful characterizations, and interesting plots place her among the best of the new mystery writers. She leaves you with a charming turn-of-phrase here, a delightful metaphor there, and many, many laughs along the way. Harry Barnard

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Now and Forever Review

Now and Forever
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I have been reading Danielle Steel for at least 15 years. I believe this is one of her best. It is about a woman who is married to the perfect man, who happens to be a writer. However, he is blamed for a crime and taken away to jail. The wife is left to deal with him not being there. It has been a while since I have read this but I think at some point they separate. However, with everything she goes through she becomes stronger and learns to lean on herself. With this new found independence will she go on alone or will she find her way back to her husband? Read and find out!!

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The Fisherman's Electrical Manual Review

The Fisherman's Electrical Manual
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Packed with useful, need to know information for the average boater, in an easy to understand format. Great read.

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The modern sport fisherman can customarily be found aboard a 12' to 26' trailerable boat equipped with an outboard motor and an astonishing assortment of electrical and electronic devices. The Fisherman's Electrical Manual is the first book to sort through this bewildering array, helping readers to make the right choices for their individual needs. Subjects covered include: outboard electrics, trolling motors, downriggers and ion systems, trim tabs, batteries and battery charging, boat wiring, sonar and fish finders, VHF and DSC radio, GPS, charts, radar, and autopilots. Thorough, well-organized, and written with clarity and insight, The Fisherman's Electrical Manual will enhance the skills of any small boat fisherman through a better understanding of the installation, troubleshooting, and repairs of any and all electrical systems associated with the rod and reel.

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The Earthmover Encyclopedia Review

The Earthmover Encyclopedia
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Following the resounding success of his "Giant Earthmovers - an Illustrated History", Keith Haddock has gone the full distance to produce a masterpiece in heavy equipment. Arranged by machine manufacturer and equipment category for quick reference, this comprehensive guide covers every significant manufacturer in North America and many others. Vital stats. on each machine with emphasis on record-setting achievements and significant milestones in machine development are included. Each manufacturer's history is covered in detail in the photo captions and text. Vividly illustrated with over 900 spectacular photographs, most never before published, this encyclopedia explains the creation and evolution of each equipment class and follows their development right up to date (2002). Provides in-depth information on crawler dozers, wheel dozers, crawler loaders, wheel loaders, loader-backhoes, scrapers, graders, off-highway trucks, trenchers, and all types of excavators including shovels, draglines, bucket wheels and hydraulic machines. A must for everyone in the earthmoving industry and every equipment enthusiast.

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Nowhere Near the Sea of Cortez Review

Nowhere Near the Sea of Cortez
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Nowhere Near the Sea of Cortez blew me away. The book is laugh outloud funny while at the same time reveals several thought provoking themes and beautiful, lyrical prose. Harris' portrayal of character is outstanding. The short, creatively titled chapters allowed me to closely observe the inner workings of these incredible people and fall in love with all of their troubled souls. The plot's many twists and turns and the author's understanding of all walks of life (young, old, male, female, academics, hippies, mad poets, jehovah's witnesses, and crazed existentialists) prove he is a master storyteller. I can't wait for his next novel.

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A phone call reunites Jacob Belmo and his cousin Dorina after fifteen years apart. Dorina has been unjustly imprisoned for shooting a naked lawyer in a parking lot, but Dorina isn't angry. She just wants to talk about old times. The most magical time of t

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The Toothache Tree Review

The Toothache Tree
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It is difficult to imagine a more adversarial relationship than that which begins THE TOOTHACHE TREE, by Jack Galloway. In this thoroughly satisfying read, 15 year-old Ham Caine is kidnapped, bound, gagged, stuffed into a cotton sack, then hauled off to deep, foreboding, Texas woods to be held for ransom. His kidnapper maintains a gruff, stern demeanor while the boy hopes for some way to kill him. Plans for ransoming take an immediate tumble when the boy divulges that his parents are somewhere in the South Pacific on a self-indulgent sailboat cruise, forcing a more prolonged togetherness there in those sweltering woods than the kidnapper had anticipated. In short order, the real characters of the pair are revealed-the boy is desperate for a caring, loving father, but no wimp himself. A lot more soft-hearted than a kidnapper ought to be, the man-dubbed "Bill," after a Teddy bear the boy once had-finds in that spunky kid something that had been missing in his life: a son. A one-time loser, matrimonially, he had long been aware of that basic, masculine need, but he never allowed himself to think about it. To no one's surprise, the pair form a quick bond-however unlikely, under the circumstances-there in those beautiful but tough, unyielding woods. It's almost as though there is too much to enjoy in their newfound relationship, and too little time to enjoy it, to maintain the original hostility. The kidnapper-a private pilot who once flew for the company headed by the boy's greedy, power-hungry father-is a natural teacher, delighting in enlightening the kid about the woods, about nature, and about life. The boy, no longer a captive, loves every minute of it, rejoicing in the discovery of a freedom and a sense of personal joy and companionship that he had never even imagined. The forest puts on an entrancing show: on a morning squirrel hunt, to provide breakfast, a ground fog rises up to become an "awesome" pink cloud in the trees above the pair, while squirrels gambol from limb to limb like will-o-the-wisps as man and boy begin quietly to enjoy each other. On a trek down the tree-arbored creek, they discover fresh cougar tracks in the sand. A poisonous snake dangles from a tree directly in their path. Coyotes, and wolves howl at night. The kid learns much of woodcraft, while the man learns the joys of having a son. There is badminton on a makeshift court beneath the trees, and skinny-dipping in the icy creek. And soap that floats. All the while, a skillful, clever FBI agent is doggedly determined to discover and capture the kidnapper; and a mother and father almost too easy to hate are more concerned about their appearance at a press conference on their return from the South Seas than for the safety of their only son. The son would be happy if they never returned. But fate is fickle, and for all the joy the idyll brings to the man and boy, things get pretty rough there in those Texas woods-dishing up a major helping of nerve-tingling action and edge-of-your-chair suspense. Twice. This book just won't let go of you. The major characters in THE TOOTHACHE TREE are fully developed, and abetted by a handful of delightful minor ones as well-including a pair of conniving Indians and a rollickingly dim-witted deputy sheriff. With all of the entertainment and joy of discovery the book provides, it is the heart-warming relationship between the kidnapper and his captive that carried this first novel of promising author Jack Galloway to the top of my must-read-it-again list.

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Serpent Girl: A Novel Review

Serpent Girl: A Novel
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I should have listened to the guy at the book store who said I should not spend the twenty bucks on this book. I figured the salesman must be an embittered unpublished author because after all, on the back of the book there are props from the likes of Elmore Leonard, it's called "funny" by the very funny Mike Myers and John Ridley claims it's got the "best opening line in modern American literature and just gets better". The best thing about the book is that it's short and simple so at least MC doesn't seem to take himself as seriously as his supporters do. By the time I was done I couldn't help but wonder if the fact that Helen Hunt is this guys girlfriend not only helped him to get the blurbs but a publishing deal in the first place. It's not the worst book I've ever read, just very half baked. Aside from a thin story, the characters are nothing but faded caricatures. Not only does the writing show MC is far from a literary genius but his return to his Hollywood roots provides a predictably flat ending. It just occured to me that MC reminds me of a grungier male version of Gigi Grazer in that they both writes books with potential but no ambition.

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Coaching Fast Break Basketball (The Art & Science of Coaching Series) Review

Coaching Fast Break Basketball (The Art and Science of Coaching Series)
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All the situations for developing an effective Fast Break are explained. Cliff ELLIS illustrated these situations with Fast Break continuities he had already used. All the choice made inside the Fast Break continuities are explained. It means that you will have to read very carefully all the explanation if you don't want to miss relevant informations. However, we expect to find other types of drills. All the drills are known and well known. This part of the book is really poor.

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Knife Lake Review

Knife Lake
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A veitnam vet/recovered drug addict/ex-cop, now private detective is hired to find a missing person. Definately worth more than the asking price! A quick but good read.

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One Step Over the Border: A Novel Review

One Step Over the Border: A Novel
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If you don't pay close attention, you might just slide over some of the subtle witticisms that make this book stand out. The banter between two good friends is worthy of old western movies when the language and plots were still clean. Stephen Bly doesn't hit you over the head with theology either, but if you miss God in this book, you must have your eyes closed. I finished this book ten minutes ago, and wish I had another three or four chapters to go, because I just wasn't ready to leave these wonderful characters.

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Award-winning author Stephen Bly weaves the tale of a pair of contemporary cowboys on a quest across the West. As a boy in Wyoming, Hap Bowmanfell in love with a girl namedJuanita. Ever since, he's experiencednothing but failure and misfortune.Laramie Majors--quiet,reserved, and patient to a fault--hasn't left Hap's side since theybecame rodeo partners right out ofcollege. Now, after spending mostof his adult life looking for Juanita,Hap wants to do one last bigsearch that will take them all overthe Southwest before he admits defeat.Together these two cowpokesfind themselves reluctant heroes ina series of misadventures as theytravel the West, all the while thinkingthat Hap's--or Laramie's--true love may be in thenext town.

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Some Babies Grow Up to be Cowboys: A Collection of Articles and Essays (Western Life) Review

Some Babies Grow Up to be Cowboys: A Collection of Articles and Essays (Western Life)
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The fifth and latest volume in the University of North Texas Press "Western Life Series", John Erickson's Some Babies Grow Up To Be Cowboys is a collection of articles and essays previously published in a number of local Texas and Oklahoma based publications. Some of the pieces are anecdotal, based on Erickson own experiences and observations regarding life on a working ranch. Other required some research and are more historical accounts of cowboy life. Still other essays showcase Erickson's views on contemporary American life through the lens of cowboying. Erickson is a gifted story teller who writes with humor, thoughtfulness, an attention to detail, and the reader's informed entertainment.

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Day by Day to Alaska; Queen Charlotte Islands and Around Vancouver Island Review

Day by Day to Alaska; Queen Charlotte Islands and Around Vancouver Island
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I found Day By Day to be compelling reading as I share the same love and awe of nature as Mr. Petersen and his family. We enjoyed a cruise from Vancouver to Sitka, Juneau and Glacier Bay some years ago. The observations of these areas in the book were particularly interesting to me. To experience Glacier Bay cruising alone in a small boat was truly an awesome feat. The book describes the wild life viewed in detail indicating how to keep oneself safe while viewing bears, etc.
Tips on fishing these beautiful waters also were of interest. The catching of about every game fish, crabs, and digging clams was included in the book. This book is also a guide to great places to eat along the way, on land sights not to be missed, hot springs for bathing and best places to anchor.
To anyone owning a boat, the mechanical problems described and how they were corrected would be very helpful. Also, a novice would find invaluable the detailed descriptions of tides, times to avoid certain waters and highlights of the many inlets and coves he explored and which are named in the book.
There are numerous instances of protection and guidance as the result of his leaning on the almighty and trusting in God's care.
To read this book is a must for anyone contemplating cruising these waters and it would be a valuable companion on one's trip.

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The Harmony Project: Part One (Pt. 1) Review

The Harmony Project: Part One (Pt. 1)
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I have read this book from cover to cover 4 times now and keep going back for reference. An invaluable training aid for those of us with youngsters and of course anyone interested in Natural Horsemanship looking to broaden your understanding of the equine mind. The book is brilliant and congratulations to the aurthor it has been a fantastic tool in the training of my horses.

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Ashleigh #13: The Prize Review

Ashleigh #13: The Prize
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Travel through Ashleigh's in her shoes with this book. Ashleigh really needs a new saddle, and the prize for the horse show competition is just what she needs! But that means she's going to compete against her best friend, Mona. Is the saddle really worth losing Mona's friendship? Read this book to find out.
I've read a lot of reviews of people saying this series is going downhill. But I think everyone should just enjoy the book instead of hanging on the small mistakes.

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Before Thoroughbred, Ashleigh Griffen lived at Edgardale, her family's farm in Kentucky. Nothing could be more perfect than life on the farm with her family, her favorite horses, and her best friend, Mona. Ashleigh loves helping with the horses -- and dreaming of becoming a jockey someday...But is the prize really worth it?
Ashleigh needs a new saddle, and the prize for champion on the local show circuit is a beautiful new one. But Ashleigh has never been confident in the show ring -- does she dare even try? Her best friend, Mona Gardener, loves to show and promises to help out. Ashleigh decides to go for it.

As the shows progress, Mona becomes more and more competitive, trying to score the most points and win the saddle herself. Ashleigh doesn't know what to do. Will a friendly competition put an end to a lifelong friendship?


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The Budget Book for Film and Television, Second Edition Review

The Budget Book for Film and Television, Second Edition
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Written by film, video, and television production manager and producer Robert J. Koster, The Budget Book For Film And Television is a step-by-step walkthrough of how to create and fine-tune film and television budgets. Based upon the widely popular budgeting software packages "Movie Magic" and "EP Budgeting", The Budget Book For Film And Television uses screenshots and explicit instructions, as well as general warnings and discussions of sudden expenses, pitfalls, easy-to-miss items that can make or break a budget, and much more. A superb guide to figuring out costs for a large-scale production in a methodical, accurate manner.


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The American Freight Train Review

The American Freight Train
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This is a good book for folks like me, that don't know much about freight trains. The info starts simple, & while it includes some technical info, doesn't get too technical. Very relaxing read, & good pics.

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