Showing posts with label hanover. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hanover. Show all posts

Tears in the Darkness: The Story of the Bataan Death March and Its Aftermath Review

Tears in the Darkness: The Story of the Bataan Death March and Its Aftermath
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This book may be history, but it reads like a novel. The authors have obviously done a lot of interviewing- more than 400- and it really shows. They have woven a story that's hard to put down. My only knowledge of the "Bataan Death March' was from the movies. This is some story. They take you to the Philippines before the battle and set the stage for it. Then they take you into the battle itself, right into the action. It's like you are there with the men. Then comes the surrender on April 9, 1942, 76,0000 men under American command, the biggest military defeat in our history. Then comes the death march. I think it's the longest chapter in the book. It was both hard to read and hard to stop reading. The details that these writers have accumulated are just unbelievable. You can see the work that went into this. Two things I especially like. First, although there must be literally more than a hundred characters in this book, they keep coming back to touch base with one character, a guy named Ben Steele, who was a young cowboy who grew up in Montana. His story really drew me in and I liked following him from the first page to the last. He became an artist after the war, and a many of his sketches, from that time in his life, are in the book. Surprisingly, I enjoyed reading about some of the Japenese soldiers. What's interesting is that you are angry at the Japanese and also feel for them at the same time. That's the way this book is written. Sometimes the good guys are bad and sometimes the bad guy are good. In the end, of course, the American and Filipino soldiers really suffered, so this is really a story of great courage and endurance. This is now my favorite war novel. Five stars all the way through the read.

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Venice Revisited Review

Venice Revisited
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I'm leaving for Venice soon and this book makes me feel a familiarity with this city as though I've been there before. It covers everything that I'm interested in doing and seeing as well as even expl aining the # of the various vaporetto and water taxi lines that would get me from the hotel to wherever I want to go, and includes off the beaten track restaurants and bistros.

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Beware the Dragon: China: 1,000 Years of Bloodshed Review

Beware the Dragon: China: 1,000 Years of Bloodshed
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If a satirist set out to parody a right-wing, born-again Christian with a deep hatred for traditional Asian culture and religion, the result would be something like this book. Much of it is devoted to writing about the noble Christians who set out to save the souls of the poor savages, only to get raped and slaughtered. Durschmied has no sympathy for the victims of cultural or economic imperialism. If, at any point, Chinese people fought back against their invaders and oppressors, Durschmied portrays them as sexually deviant murderers. The non-Christians among the Chinese, Durschmied would have us believe, all resemble Hannibal Lector without the fastidiousness.
This book espouses a bloodthirsty, insane worldview, based on fanatical Christian dogma and racist portrayals of the Chinese that read like they came from the pages of dimestore pulp novels.

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A Stephen Crane Encyclopedia Review

A Stephen Crane Encyclopedia
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The only comprehensive guide to Stephen Crane's life and works in print. Entries are informative and succinct, and the critical commentary is incisive, well-written, and astute, without pedantry or jargon.

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Baseball in Baltimore: The First Hundred Years Review

Baseball in Baltimore: The First Hundred Years
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Baseball historian James Bready has researched professional baseball in Baltimore for more than 50 years and served for many years as an Editorial writer for the Baltimore Sunpapers. In "Baseball in Baltimore" Mr. Bready combines his colorful, enjoyable style of writing with his wealth of knowledge on the subject resulting in a topnotch account of baseball in Baltimore from the 1850's up to (but not including) the modern American League Orioles. Bready had already authored three editions of "The Home team" that were the forerunner of this excellent book. Jim has also collected many hard-to-find photos over the years and many of them are featured. Subjects include amateur Baltimore clubs of the 1850s and 1860s, the Orioles of the American Association and the National League pennant winners of the 1890s, the American League Orioles of 1901 and 1902, and the Orioles of the minor leagues (Eastern league and International League). Mr. Bready gives an interesting account of Jack Dunn's minor league Orioles that won 7 straight Int. league pennants from 1919 thru 1925 and Baltimore-born Babe Ruth's first stint in professional baseball (Jack Dunn's 1914 Orioles)> Highly recommended for any baseball historian or reader interested in baseball in Baltimore.

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The Essential Daughter: Changing Expectations for Girls at Home, 1797 to the Present Review

The Essential Daughter: Changing Expectations for Girls at Home, 1797 to the Present
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What was life like for American girls through the ages? What can we learn from them today? I recommend this book to historians and parents of daughters and sons. Collins not only introduces readers to real American girls through the ages, she invites the reader into her own thought process. Just as Collins changes her mind about the importance of "housework," you might too!

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By age nine, Mary Ellen could start a fire and make breakfast for her family on the Great Plains as they traveled West. By age 11, Connie's family had her hanging the laundry and doing the dishes for a dozen people. By age 13, Beverly had no responsibilities at home and no confidence in herself. The portraits of 14 girls aged 6 to 14, when their ideas of duty and self remained in flux, are used as a starting point for discussion on how to bring daughters and their brothers back into the flow of American home life. The author explores how Americans might make girls feel essential on the home front without denying them the right of self-definition.



Few American parents expect their children to play an important role on the home front. The average daughter does fewer than ten hours of housework a week; sons do only two. What are the consequences of this dramatic cultural shift? Collins posits that nothing we can give our children in the public sphere can offset the loss. Collins concludes that Americans must rebuild a domestic culture that moves beyond the damaging sex-based division of labor so common in the past.


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The Shadow of God: Stories from Early Judaism Review

The Shadow of God: Stories from Early Judaism
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I purchased this book hoping to get a feel for what post-exilic life was like for the Jews. I knew the basic historical dates and events, but I wanted to learn more about this relatively unknown period of Jewish history.
Sandgren's book met all of my expectations. The stories are clearly based on accurate historical research, and they are well-written. They emphasize the life of the people rather than the decisions of the powerful. The author also ties the stories together in the epilogue by highlighting certain themes that emerge from the narratives.
If a reader wants to learn more about the background or find suggestions about where to do more historical research, the endnotes will provide all that the reader wants. Another helpful feature is the detailed timeline at the end of the book.
This is historical fiction at its best.

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Using the medium of historical fiction, The Shadow of God covers six centuries of Jewish history, from the Babylonian exile to the destruction of the Second Temple. Fifteen stories, each centered on a historical event, explore typical Jewish characters of the era. Women and men, some historical, some fictional, grapple with changing views of God, Torah, and the attraction of Hellenism. The narrator, Leontius, weaves the stories into an organic saga that answers the ancient call to be a Jew and worship the Most High God. Here, students will unearth up-to-date scholarship on early Judaism, teachers of Bible backgrounds will discover a supplemental text that engages while it instructs, and lovers of fiction will be delighted by the good story of The Shadow of God.

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Fort Benning Blues Review

Fort Benning Blues
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Mark Busby's FORT BENNING BLUES will appeal best to male readers who were subject to the Vietnam War draft, an entire generation of American men who, one way or another, had to wrap their heads around the idea that though there was now such a thing as "limited war," there was still no such thing as "limited death." In other words, they had to confront the very real possibility that they could give their lives for a war with very uncertain goals. Their fathers and grandfathers may have fought in World War II or Korea (or both), but the objectives of WWII were never in doubt, and Korea came early enough in the "cold war" that almost everyone believed Communism both monolithic and omni-threatening. Vietnam was 'way different, and Busby explores that difference via his protagonist, Jeff Adams, a Texan with a proud sense of heritage and common sense to go with it: enough pride to recognize his legacy and responsibility, enough common sense to be fearful and to desire a defensible meaning to the risks he faces.
We follow Adams as he takes the route many bright young men of the era took--Officers Candidate School. Adams's "blues," then, have to do with the dues he knows he must pay, and the novel's resonance comes from the way Busby re-creates those troubled times, times that exacted internal wars of conscience among most Americans, regardless of whether or not they were of draft age. Some readers might consider Busby's literary debts ranging from William Faulkner to British World War I-era poet Henry Reed a bit too artificial; still others might think he makes too much use of coincidence (Adams happens to be William Calley's driver during the My Lai trial, and he manages to see newspaper headlines that inform him of the Kent State killings).
Adams's resolution of his conflict--his Fort Benning Blues--may not please all readers, but it is a resolution many of that era found, making this as genuine a tale of courage as any told by other "veterans" of the Vietnam War, a war that we now know even our President, Lyndon Johnson, tragically questioned, tragically could not bring himself to stop.

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The Wind in the Trees Review

The Wind in the Trees
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The Wind In The Trees: From The Farm To The Front Line Of Television's Influence by television broadcast executive James E. Duffy (a 46-year veteran of the American Broadcasting Company), is the compelling story of television's pervasive ability to influence American society and culture. Written by an "insider" familiar with the complex business of corporate television and its inescapable bottom line of network programming, The Wind In The Trees combines history with an invaluable and eyewitness view of power politics, scandal, the struggle for artistic integrity, and much, much more to present the non-specialist general reader with a fascinating, informative, "behind-the-scenes" look at this American institution and pastime that has formed and shaped a universal part of American and global culture.

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The Wind in the Trees is a personal tour through the evolution and emergence of radio and television as major corporate entities. Additionally, it chronicles the personal and professional life of a broadcast executive who struggled to balance the business of running a television network with the social responsibility that is inherent in the industry.This is a candid, poignant, powerful and often humorous story based on Jim Duffy's life and professional experience in the worlds of broadcasting, media, and entertainment. A farm boy from Moweaqua, Illinois, Duffy spent fifty years in the business, and in a dizzying ride, reached the executive suites of Manhattan and Hollywood.The reader gets a revealing look into how decisions are made by the powerbrokers of the broadcasting industry, which affects millions of lives every day. Duffy has strong feelings on the growing influence of the mega-mergers in communications by the giants of industry. He writes candidly how those mergers, often strained by heavy debt loads and with an insatiable thirst for profits, affect the quality of programming and messages that are received by the American public.As the president of the ABC Television Network, Duffy rubbed shoulders with dignitaries, athletes, international celebrities and show business personalities in America and Europe. The book delineates his adventures with some of the personalities, and features pictures from his own life and with many dignitaries and celebrities.The author also describes the public service dimension of broadcasting, illustrated by his work with Barbara Bush in the Project Literacy US (PLUS) campaign.The book's title has strong personal meaning to the author. Duffy found inspiration and guidance from listening to "the wind in the trees" from the time he was a young boy. Later in his life, he suffered severe tragedies, losing three children. From those deaths, he has found solace and a spiritual connection to the sounds and beauty of nature.In a much broader sense, Duffy, with deep love for the broadcasting industry, feels the wind in the trees symbolizes the programs, messages and commercials that are presented to television and radio audiences everyday. He expresses great concern that too many programs and producers are conveying and portraying inappropriate and destructive messages to the value system and basic principles of our country.The Wind in the Trees issues a critical challenge to those who will steward the communications industry into the twenty-first century.

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War Story Review

War Story
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Scottish lass Maggie Dunlop works as a nursery maid at Dulcimer Hall when war breaks out in Europe. Maggie and others are evacuated to America where she meets and falls in love with her employer's cousin David Voist, married with children. Because David's eyes and secretly his heart constantly search for Maggie, her beloved's spouse sends her back to England.
As the war hits England hard, Maggie joins the effort as a driver. When she goes to pick up an American airman, she meets David. Though both recognize their mutual love for one another, she knows he would never leave his wife for he cannot "abandon" his children. Even as Maggie tries to start anew back in her homeland of Scotland, she dreams that, one-day when David's children are adults, they will be together.
Though the probability of David and Maggie encountering each other by chance during the war seems somewhat remote because the circle they share is so vast, readers will appreciate the depth to this World War II romance though the war itself plays a tertiary role. The background brings to life the era more so in England, but somewhat in America also. The cast is fully developed so those key secondary players enable the audience to value the star-crossed lovers and obtain a sense of 1940s life while demanding Sara Hely deliver more period pieces like this delightful historical.
Harriet Klausner

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None but the Dead and Dying Review

None but the Dead and Dying
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With "None But The Dead And Dying" Ellen Behrens weaves and wonderful tale about the ongoings of a small village, and the wonderfully eccentric and well drawn characters that live there add a lovely touch. Often her words read like poetry, and her only drawback is a tendancy to over-emphasize a moment. The book is not incredibly long, and really, if you love tender, sweet and often humerous stories in the vein of something Nicholas Sparks might write, and as visually and emotionally stirring as "The Bridges Of Madison County" you have to give this a read. It's well worth the time and money, as I believe this is quite possibly a sadly overlooked and underestimated treasure.

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Deckstyle: Design, Create, and Enjoy Your Deck Review

Deckstyle: Design, Create, and Enjoy Your Deck
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This book covers everything you need to know from designing a deck, constructing a deck, information on plants for your deck or yard. I am so impressed with this book that I ordered 2 more so each of my children can be ready to upgrade their yards.

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Glory Be to Mars Review

Glory Be to Mars
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Thomas W. Cronin has given readers a satisfying, exciting, nail-biting conclusion to his Mars series. The underlying themes of self-reliance, independence, and self-determination inform a book that is very different from the first two books of the series. Glory Be To Mars is a novel of war and strategy that takes place about 30 years on from Give Us This Mars. The Earth and the U.N. are determined to take Mars from the Martians. Their impetus for war is an alleged weapon of mass destruction that has been developed by the Martians. The Earth has superior numbers and technology - the Martians have their own Martian desert fox. The war plays out on an accurate version of Mars that is informed by data from the latest Mars missions. The children of the characters from the first 2 books are the main players. Once the story gets rolling - an Earth attack on a nonmilitary Martian operation - the action never lets up [leave yourself a big block of time for reading - once you get started, you won't want to quit reading!]. My only concern involves Cronin's use of current biological knowledge [genetics] and that concern didn't take away from my ability to suspend my disbelief - hey it's fiction! - but I would love to have a discussion with Cronin about what traits are heritable in humans. I shall say no more on the subject since I refuse to be a spoiler and I want you to read this book. Besides fans of the first two books in this series and lovers of Mars fiction, Glory Be To Mars should find a whole new audience in lovers of military fiction. I hate to see the series end here, so if Mr. Cronin can find another creative and nonrepetitive way to extend the series, I know I'll be ready for another great Martian read!

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The author's earlier, widely acclaimed Mars stories were about the beginning years of the first human settlement on Mars, but you don't have to read them to enjoy this latest, fast-paced, stand-alone novel. In the first story, As It Is On Mars, three explorers, abandoned in 2038, found a prosperous settlement on Mars. A stand-alone second story, Give Us This Mars, takes place in 2048, as rival European and American "rescue" missions fight to take control of the fledgling settlement. This latest story takes place twenty-six years later. It has new lead characters, and enough of the settlement's early history for new readers to join the tale effortlessly. Two scheming, aristocratic brothers, Harold and Oliver Derk, are the instigators when a United Nations coalition dispatches a massive armada to attack the settlement in 2074. The independent settlement is illegal, but has been growing prodigiously, thanks to a secret machine the Martians have built. It is very well defended too, and getting the better of it is now a serious military matter. The Martians also control a vital copper deposit, the largest ever found, now worth over ten trillion dollars. Gaining control of that copper will make the brothers rich and powerful beyond dreams. Their lust for the copper is matched only by their passion for avenging the public disgrace of their father, years earlier; the Derk brothers are determined to erase the demeaning stain of dishonor that Martians have etched on their ancient family name. One shadowy brother, Harold Derk, is the CEO of the world's largest resource company, Condor Copper Inc., and a master of political intrigue. He paid corrupt, warmongering political leaders to terrify their citizens, and deceive them into believing that the secret Martian machine is a horrible weapon of total annihilation, capable of wiping out all human life on Earth. The fabricated fear worked as intended, and led to popular support for the obscenely expensive armada, to put an end to the dangerous, illegal settlement and its abominable machine. The other brother is the armada commander, four-star General Oliver Derk. He is a rogue general, with genocide in mind. He has all the military strength he needs to defeat the settlement quickly, and kill everybody in it. As this very fast-paced tale opens, we find a ten-man Martian work crew in a desolate place south of Mariner Valley, over a thousand miles from home. One of them is a mysterious young man called Edward Russell. The ten have just finished hiding the secret Martian machine, to keep it out of the hands of the coalition. But that evening, they make a fluke discovery. Coalition forces have made a stealth landing, unexpectedly early, clearly intent on an overwhelming surprise attack on the settlement. The workers now have to get home at once, and sound the alarm. They have no choice but to take an impossible shortcut, up along the treacherous thirty-mile long Hell Ridge. But then, in Chapter Two, with their four rovers perched high on the ridge, over three miles above the floor of Coprates Canyon: Disaster! Shortly after, a deadly enemy of the coalition appears out of the southern waste, at the head of a dusty column of tanks and rovers, intelligent, nuclear-powered predator drones flying overhead. It is Edward Russell, with desert warfare in his genes, and for good reason. Soon he will be known on two planets as the desert fox of Mars, feared for his vicious, lightning attacks on the coalition, but revered for his tactical genius. The elaborate setting for this epic novel takes in a great deal of the Western Hemisphere of Mars, which the war turns into a gigantic military chessboard. The plot is multi-threaded, and tragic too, a subtle blend of politics, war, human relationships, and the relationship of man to his planetary environment. It's even a tale that is not primarily science fiction, that anybody can enjoy at any time of life, and likely find something profound in too. The story unfolds at a rapid pace, as the war intensifies and the suspense builds. The plot also builds to a perplexing tactical puzzle, which armchair generals will no doubt try to solve, as they pit their brains against the desert fox. It is also the story of the daring journey of a courageous Martian company in search of an elusive goal, as the company is sought high and low, and attacked too, by the forces of the coalition. The journey starts south of Mariner Valley in Chapter 1, and weaves its way through the entire novel, and over much of the Western Hemisphere, and does not end until the novel's final Chapter 20. The author deploys military technology in the Martian war consistent with the known Laws of Nature. His intelligent nuclear-powered tanks, predator drones, and laser-gun armed fighter drones are all extrapolations of current capabilities that we can reasonably expect. The book has five separate maps of the spectacular terrain of the Western Hemisphere. They are strictly not necessary, but are included for readers' convenience and enjoyment.EXCERPT From CHAPTER TWO: Hell Ridge [SCENE: A rocky outcrop is blocking the company's upward advance along the treacherous ridge. They are trying to blow up the outcrop, about to detonate a second blast sequence, when a predator drone spots the four rovers.] ...The predator drone was now almost upon them. Two seconds later it shot across the ridge, directly over the lead rover, barely thirty meters above them. This time the booming scream from the jet motors was quite loud. "Stop driving, everybody! Now!" shouted Edward. Astrid obeyed. "It didn't fire. How come?" cried Lucy, looking out the driver side window to her left, as the aircraft shot away to the west. "Our sudden motion confused it, I think," explained Edward, still watching the drone through his field glasses. It was now turning toward the escarpment wall to the north. "It had set things up for a stationary target. Probably didn't have time to reconfigure for a moving target. But you can be sure by now it's figured out the best way to attack us as a moving target-head on, or at our tail." "That means it'll come at us along the line of the ridge," said Astrid. "Right," said Edward, his field glasses focused on the drone, "probably from the north, out of the sun." The predator drone had already turned right, to the north, and climbed, and turned right again. Now it was headed back eastward along the top of the northern escarpment wall. "I think you've won us only a few minutes reprieve, Edward," said Astrid. "Any more good ideas?" "Don't know," said Edward, still tracking the aircraft through his field glasses. "A sudden motion won't help us next time, if it comes at us along the ridge." "What if we try and drive off the crest, down the slope to the right?" suggested Lucy. "Wouldn't help. There's no shelter on the slope either, and anyway we wouldn't get very far. It'll be here in twenty seconds." The machine now began to veer to the south, as it approached the point where the north-south running ridge met the east-west running escarpment wall. The aircraft was just under three miles away. "The explosives!" cried Freda, suddenly. Neither Astrid nor Lucy responded. They were both very frightened. They did not need to be reminded about the explosive charges in the trailer, equivalent to over a quarter ton of TNT. Edward just said: "I know, Freda." His mind was racing, thinking tactics at high speed. But thinking time was short. The predator drone was now coming straight at them again, very fast, this time along the line of the ridge. "ETA fourteen seconds," shouted Edward. "Quick! Switch seats, Freda! Quick!" Freda was agile, and almost jumped over Edward. Edward quickly pulled himself into Freda's seat at the right side of the rover, his eyes never leaving the oncoming aircraft. The deadly predator drone was shooting down along the ridge, slightly to the east side of the crest. Edward now estimated a ten-second time to arrival. "Call out the seconds, somebody! Quick!" shouted Edward. "One...two...three...four...five...six...seven...," came from Astrid, calm despite a feeling of impending disaster. The nuclear-powered aircraft was now within a second of flying past the ridge outcrop that had been blocking their advance. Suddenly, Edward jammed his finger onto the third button on the communications panel on the dash in front of him. Once more they saw the explosion before they heard it, the outside audio sensors picking up the sound, a machine-gun-like rattle of twenty rounds being fired. The explosion was even more spectacular than the first one. A long strip of rock at the outcrop on the ridge once more lifted in small fragments, starting at the south end, producing an even larger cloud of dust, with rocks flying out of the dust cloud and at least thirty or forty meters into the air. For an instant the cloud of dust and hail of flying rocks completely hid the oncoming aircraft from view, and the sun too. But then, less than a second later, the machine appeared again, above the dust cloud, just to the right of the hail of debris. It was still headed straight for them, apparently undamaged. At the same instant they saw it fire the missile. Everything now happened so fast there was no time for anyone in the lead rover to react. Whooosh. The missile streaked past them on their right side, only a few meters from them, so close they actually heard it. A split second later they heard a sharp bang, not very loud. It was followed a fraction of a second later by a booming screech, as the supersonic jet shot above them, also on the right side. "Missed us," said Edward, with a sigh of relief. "The explosion debris must have affected its aim in some-" "But that bang-it's hit something!" cried Astrid. Her hand flew to a button on the dash to open up the voice communications channel. "Paul, Werner, Carol! Report damage!" "No damage," said Paul, at once. "No damage here," said Werner. "Loud bang behind." There was no reply from Carol and Eva's rover. "Carol, Eva! Please report!" Still nothing. Astrid began feeling sick. The tail rover must have been hit. She wanted to believe that there was only damage to the rover's communications equipment, maybe only the antenna, but her gut told her it was not so. The idea of something happening to Eva and Carol was too painful even to think about. "Bastards!" hissed Freda angrily. "And it's still got three more missiles." "That first missile was intended for this rover," said Astrid in a much calmer voice, although she was still feeling sick. "Looks like your explosion saved us, Edward. I just hope Carol and Eva are all right. Can you save us one more time?" Edward shook his head. "That was my best shot. I'd hoped to damage the drone with the explosion. It obviously didn't work...

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A Splendid Madness: A Man, a Boat, a Love Story Review

A Splendid Madness: A Man, a Boat, a Love Story
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This book could have been set anywhere, but it takes place on the Hudson River, a half hour North of NYC. It is written by an editor by trade, and it shows. It is a well written book! It explores the writers chance notice of an ad for a beginners sailing class, and how that class reawakens a former love of sailing. Then it goes on to his adventures and misadventures as he continues to learn the art of sailing and then goes on to buy his own boat, a 22 foot tanzer, and join a local club. It has a lot of detail about this section of the Hudson River, but very little about other areas. The brigde in the background of the bookcover is the Tappan Zee. An enjoyable read, nothing earthshattering, a nice story of why sailing is so appealing to those of us with busy lives, a chance for some adventure!

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What a Time I Am Having: Selected Letters of Max Perutz (History) Review

What a Time I Am Having: Selected Letters of Max Perutz (History)
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This is a fascinating book on many levels. It is somewhat unfamiliar to learn of important events through the personal letters of a participant. Max Perutz writes of pre-war Europe, his experiences during the war and his life after it, all interesting. The book is not a history of molecular biology, but many of the letters touch on this and some excellent background is given. Not only was he a great scientist, but his contribution in causing the MRC laboratory of molecular biology to be built in Cambridge and then in directing it was immense; some of this is apparent in his letters. Above all one gets the impression of an unusually rounded, humane and generous man. The editing and selection of the letters are excellent, so it never becomes dull. A thoroughly good read.

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Pane E Salute: Food and Love in Italy and Vermont Review

Pane E Salute: Food and Love in Italy and Vermont
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New Englanders are fortunate enough to be within a reasonable driving distance to Woodstock, an idyllic Victorian town nestled in the Rutland region of eastern Vermont--perhaps one of the last places one might look for exquisite, authentic Italian cuisine served in an atmosphere that could just as easily be in Siena or Florence as Vermont. For everyone else, there is--thankfully--this book. While Heekin and Barber are not themselves Italian, their long love affair with Italy, its culture and its people have inspired them to the fine culinary heights that come from immersing oneself in the fundamental laws of simple, full-bodied living. They KNOW Italy. Heekin's exquisite, finely crafted prose introduces each section of the book, which is organized by season, and Barber's brilliant recipes (and his flair for imparting them in a way that is truly inspirational) make this lovely volume a must-have in ANY cook's kitchen, especially if you love Italy, real Italian food and what can only be called "authentic living." Live and cook by their recipes, and you'll transform your kitchen and home into a warm, cozy, sun-filled haven for you, your friends and family.

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Peter Peter Picks a Pumpkin House Review

Peter Peter Picks a Pumpkin House
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Peter and Wanda are pumpkin farmers. They live for and in a pumpkin! Their pumpkin house has a leaky roof. Peter and Wanda have no money so they must sell their goat. Peter sets off for town and ends up trading their goat for a bag of treasure! This treasure will make or break Peter and Wanda! Read the book to find out which.
This is a perfect fairly tale of children who are first staring to read chapter books. Great for a fall time read.


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Peter Peter and Wanda love to watch their pumpkins grow fat in the field. Life is lovely, until the rains come and make their mud hut sad and soggy.

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