D-A Books
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Civil War reenactors, buy this!Review Date: 2004-11-30
The Story of the Soldiers of the Civil War!Review Date: 2004-01-10
Charles W. Reed, the illustrator, was ALSO a Civil War veteran.
He served in the Ninth Massachusetts Battery and won the Medal of Honor at Gettysburg for saving his commanding officer, Captain
John Bigelow, who had been seriously wounded in the fight at the
Trostle Farm on 2 July 1863.
My favorite chapter was the one on the army mule.
Buy, read & enjoy this book!
Hardtack and Coffee: A Must for Teachers and StudentsReview Date: 2006-02-25
A Sympathetic and Educating Examination.Review Date: 2004-07-01
The book is filled with anecdotes, observations, and songs arising from the era. (I very much appreciated the introduction which details the election of 1860 and started the whole terrible tragedy that ensued over the next half decade.) The generous amount of illustration truly helps evoke the period. "Hardtack and Coffee" is a perfect companion to Bell Irvin Wiley's "Life of Billy Yank: The Common Soldier of the Union" and "The Life of Johnny Reb: The Common Soldier of the Confederacy". And it is a perfect part of anyone's Civil War/American History library.
Rocco Dormarunno, author of THE FIVE POINTS
Good laughs, good read and first-hand real historyReview Date: 2004-06-18


RealizationReview Date: 2005-12-31
outstanding in this category!Review Date: 2002-09-24
with a grounded, helped feeling...hopeful, too. I'm not crazy about the word "empowering," but this book is empowering, I think. If you're looking for help in this area, this book is worth reading. (I know Bill Blass used to say in those magazine perfume ads that he didn't like people (women) who thought they could be helped by self-help books--remember?--but I don't care! This is a truly good one!) If you are in pain and you suspect past emotional abuse might be a factor contributing to it, please check this book out. You might even be moved to pass it on to friends--I am already plotting to purchase additional copies!
ExcellantReview Date: 2007-12-18
Emotional AbuseReview Date: 2007-04-07
Healing the Scars of Emotional AbuseReview Date: 2003-05-21

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War through the eyes a P-47 veteranReview Date: 2008-11-28
Mssrs. Dorr and Jones retell these stories eloquently, not holding back on the emotional state of pilots and the ugliness of war. We see the consequences of inexact targeting among civilian and military targets, the detachment pilots had to maintain in order to focus on their jobs, German citizens taking retribution out on downed pilots, distain for incompetence of ranking officers and the sheer heroism displayed by the pilots and ground crews as they trudged through the mud and inhospitable living/operating conditions to complete their missions.
This book provided me a much better understanding of a less recognized but critically important aspect of the war.
As a collection of stories, the book was at times disjointed. More detailed maps and a glossary of protagonists would have helped me to keep track of the story. All in all, this is a great book and an appropriate tribute to those men of the 365th FG.
A Band of Brothers With PlanesReview Date: 2008-11-20
The rugged, heavily armed P-47, affectionately known as "the Jug," was built in greater numbers than any other American fighter, but rarely receives recognition. (The Pima Air Museum, for example, doesn't have one to display.) The men of the 365th Fighter Group, who supported, maintained and flew the P-47 across the Continent, waged a grim, gritty, mostly air-to-ground war in which the enemy was personal, the fighting point-blank. Viewed from above, one appreciates what a crucial role air power played in the Allied victory.
The pilots' description of their aerial life-and-death dogfights against skilled German fliers is gripping reading, backed up with gun camera shots of winged prey in their sights. More often, however, they were bombing and strafing military targets on the ground: vehicle convoys, railroads, strategic buildings and German tanks attacking Allied forces.
Co-authors Jones and Dorr spent five years researching and interviewing 171 of these ordinary men who became heroes. Jones is an Air Force Academy distinguished graduate, a former B-52 pilot, and an astronaut who flew four shuttle missions. Dorr is an Air Force veteran, a retired U. S. diplomat, and an author.(Disclosure: I met Bob Dorr when he was a diplomat in Seoul in the 1960s.)
Hell Hawks! uses never-before-published photos and first-hand personal accounts to create a fascinating narrative of WWII. As the 365th leapfrogs its temporary airfields eastward across Europe - from France to Belgium and right into Germany - one watches the war progress like a giant chess game, much as General Eisenhower must have seen it on his tactical maps.
Hell Hawks! is recommended for any military history buff, or any student of the 20th century.
Reviewed by John Stickler.
Combat History of a 9th AF Fighter-Bomber Group!Review Date: 2008-09-27
HELL HAWKS is certainly well-written and does a good job of relating the combat activities of the 365th. According to the book, over 80 Hell Hawks personnel or family members were interviewed for the book and it shows in the vivid descriptions of air combat found in the book.
To be honest, I would have given HELL HAWKS 4 1/2 stars if that was possible. It did a marvelous job of relating the Group's combat achievements but didn't have as much information on behind-the-scenes/life-in-the-squadron matters, etc. which I personally enjoy reading about.
The book has an 8-page photo insert and, as others have mentioned, a cover photograph showing an 8th AF 78th FG ace!
HELL HAWKS will do just fine for air combat enthusiasts. It's a well-written, fast-paced account of air combat and equally thrilling ground attack missions 9th AF-style. Recommended.
****
Damn, Am I sorry I sold my copy of Johnson's book years ago...$350.00!?!
Well done!!!Review Date: 2008-08-24
Dorr Scores Well, As ExpectedReview Date: 2008-08-18
Dorr and co-author Thomas D. Jones (USAF Academy grad, ex-B-52 driver, veteran of four NASA space shuttle flights) also rightly recognize the guys who weren't strapping into the 365th Fighter Group's P-47s: "The men with stripes on their arms didn't pilot Jugs, but they made warfare in the Jug possible." We tend to forget that the aircraft of WW II, after all, were just 15 years removed from Lindbergh's Ryan NYP of 1927 but were very complex machines. The authors salute the men with the stripes well.
The results of close to 200 interviews of 365th FG veteans, other combat vets, family members, and more, plus four years of research, "Hell Hawks!" is loaded with the day-to-day details of fighting a tenaciously fierce enemy, demonstrating throughout the book that ground attack combat was a deadly way to earn your flight pay. The authors bring the personalities of the young pilots alive as well as provide a big picture of Allied strategy and the pace of war from D-Day to victory. This is an excellent book not only for military historians but for anyone who enjoys aviation writers at the top of their game. Splendid!

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Her Place At The TableReview Date: 2005-04-17
Well done...a helping hand for women on the way UP!Review Date: 2005-03-16
Also at the conference, panelist Carol Frohlinger shared solid negotiating tips with the attendees. Impressed, I bought this book. WOW! This information levels the playing field. Get out there. Decide what you want. And, GET IT in a win-win way. Thanks, Carol, Judith and Deborah for doing your part to help women get to the top floor.
xoxo$$$ Ellen Rohr
Great Read for Women in New Management RolesReview Date: 2005-01-22
From One Woman to AnotherReview Date: 2006-02-22
Highly Recommended !Review Date: 2005-02-23

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John Davies "A History of Wales"Review Date: 2008-08-24
Long overdueReview Date: 2003-06-05
Perhaps history is to blame here -- the Welsh have been only marginally protected by geography; the mountainous area was difficult terrain to conquer, but the supply lines to those mountains were relatively easy to maintain and sustain, unlike the trek to the northern reaches of Scotland or crossing the sea into Ireland, areas that (however much English history might want to contradict this statement) never were completely conquered and subdued, remaining under the hegemony but outside the total control of Londinium/London from Roman times to the recent past. Wales was never so fortunate. Indeed, it is a miracle that the Welsh survive. The Scots lost land, language and independence, but retained administrative and legal systems separations that preserved many aspects of nationhood. The Irish never completely lost independence. The Welsh, however, lost everything of nationhood, and barely sustained an independent culture. Thus, when the 'nations' of the British Isles began to re-exert their independent interpretations of history, the Welsh were among the last.
However, sometimes the last shall be first. In terms of quality of writing and interpretation, the volume by John Davies, `A History of Wales', is indeed in a class of its own in terms of Welsh history. Dafydd Elis Thomas read into the `Hansard' (the British Parliamentary equivalent of the `Congressional Record') that this is 'the greatest of book of Welsh history ever written'.
It was, in fact, originally published in Welsh, under the title of `Haynes Cymru' in 1990. From the Ice Age to the 1980s miners strikes and efforts to reassert a national identity, Davies traces in some detail a history of Wales from a Welsh perspective, inextricably tangled with English and continental history, but nonetheless deserving of its own perspective as one of the last major surviving Celtic groups.
`A number of factors, the increasing prominence of the European dimension in particular, have caused the devolution issue to return to the political agenda.... From 1911 to 1981 the number of Welsh speakers declined census by census. In 1991, however, those claiming a knowledge of the language were marginally more numerous than had been the case in 1981, and the increase among the younger age groups was especially remarkable.'
Davies confesses that he contemplated writing a different book in English, as this was meant to be a Welsh book, and he would have envisioned a different book had his first thought been in English. However, given the demand of non-Welsh readers to read the same history treatment as those who do read Welsh, Davies consented to a translation rather than a re-write.
The time frames are not the same as those of standard British histories, which tend to follow the broad sweep of royal affairs. While there is some parallel of necessity, the time factors and dates here have far more interest to the direct concerns of Wales than to the rest of Britain.
The reader should also be prepared for an array of names, of both persons and places, that are very confusing to the average reader of English -- Gwydir, Llangeitho, Aberffraw, Catraeth, Llantwit, Penmynydd and Llyn Cerrig Bach. However, it is worth the effort to learn these names and places. Particularly in America, where so many people have Welsh ancestry (the Jones now outnumber the Smiths in America as the greatest number of people by last name, and Jones is a Welsh name by and large), this is part of the collective history of America, too.
Well written, well researched (Davies was educated in Wales and at Cambridge, taught Welsh history at University College in Wales), this is perhaps the currently-accepted definitive history of Wales available today.
History of Wales,John DaviesReview Date: 2005-07-25
A History that will EndureReview Date: 2003-09-05
Beginning with the earliest evidence for human occupation of Wales, Davies brings us up to the end of the 1980s. Each of his ten chapters covers a particular time period, and each chapter title features three place names that represent, and figure into, the theme of that chapter/period. Davies touches on nearly every aspect of Welsh history--the political, the social, and the cultural. If some themes garner less attention than others, that is to be expected in a survey of this kind. One theme, of course, dominates this volume (as it should), and that is the relationship between the Welsh and their much more populous English neighbors to the east. That the Welsh were able to resist English domination for so long is miraculous; despite eventual English hegemony, the Welsh have managed to preserve their language, while over the past century there has been a revival of Welsh culture.
The writing is clear and concise, a testament to Davies' skill as both writer and translator. Davies has included a wealth of maps and graphs to illustrate many of his themes. If I have one complaint about "A History of Wales" it is the complete absence of photographs and other illustrations that would have benefited Davies' narrative immensely. That being said, however, this is a fine introduction to a part of the British Isles that we in the US hear very little about. Four and a half stars.
definitive book for the history of WalesReview Date: 2002-10-16
It covers the history of the country from the dawn of time to 20th Century. So if you wish to know about Ffynnon Beuno or the Rebecca Wars, this is your book.
Excellent reference for Historical writers.

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The Human Bone ManualReview Date: 2008-12-06
Excellent Review Date: 2008-10-08
This book makes my bones rattle. In a good way.Review Date: 2008-09-30
Forensic PrimerReview Date: 2008-08-28
excellent reference bookReview Date: 2008-02-25

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I want more Adam!Review Date: 2008-12-30
In the Beginning- A Joyfully Recommended Title Review Date: 2008-12-14
As Eve struggles to come to terms with the wealthy vampire who makes obsession seem like a simple word, Adam's enemies plot to use his one weakness against him, his love/hate relationship with Eve the only being with the power to cripple him. The resolve of a vampire will be tested by the woman who is powerful in her own right and unwilling to allow even the strongest of vampires to bend her to his will.
In a series sure to rival some of the best vampire lore available, the all consuming love of an immortal will send one human woman to the brink of madness. In the Beginning is ,as it states, the inception of the love story of Adam Omega and Eve. Eve is a human woman who i has the spirit of Adam's wife but with a personality of her own. With a strength that far outweighs her predecessor's, Eve refuses to give in the lull of Adam without a fight. Using her own gifts she brings an excitement to Adam's world that he never foresaw in his wildest dreams.
F.D. Davis created a being that I'm sure will leave readers with more ill feelings than not. Abusive in his treatment of Eve because of a deep-rooted anger he still harbors for his dead wife and the refusal of Eve to come to him easily, Adam on more than one occasion made me pause. Not in a good way either! This is not a gentle love story filled with wooing and passionate embraces. It is however a battle of wills between to people, a powerful vampire and Eve a woman who with her keen mind and body withstands what would send the average woman to her demise.
In between getting to know each other and fighting to stay on top these two actually fall in love. A love laced with fear, danger and threat but one just as strong as the two beings sharing it. F.D. Davis did a phenomenal job of stepping outside the norm and bringing to light a tale that captivates and tantalizes. I look forward to the next installment because like most exceptional series the final scene leaves you anxiously wondering what will come next. For digging deep inside her creative soul and providing readers with a story that forces you outside your comfort zone, I Joyfully Recommend In the Beginning as a December's Recommended Read.
Indy
Reviewed for Joyfully Reviewed
New vampire on the blockReview Date: 2008-07-20
The story opens in 1005 A.D. Adam is a priest and gives up his priesthood to marry the love of his life, Eyanna. The local townspeople believe her be a witch because of her ability to heal. Already alienated from his God yet not entirely from his faith, Adam volunteers to be turned into an immortal to save his wife from being burned at the stake. To his horror, events turn against him. What happens next sets the stage for the rest of Adam's eternal life.
Davis brings the story into today and Adam is still grieving over the lost of Eyanna. He believes that the mortal lady Eve that he meets in church (yes, in church), is Eyanna reincarnated.
Eve is also frighten of Adam, believes him to be evil. Her emotions swing between love and hate for the vampire. (Is hate a ramification of love? I wonder.) But that does not deter Adam from his quest to reclaim his wife through Eve. His confusion about Eyanna and Eve turns into a nightmare for Adam and Eve. She may well be Eyanna's reincarnation. Eve's quest to save Adam and strengthen her wavering belief in God aligns her with Eyanna. But will she lose her soul in this quadrilateral perplexity? It becomes a battle of wills and faith, Adam's being the strongest and Eve coming very close behind. I could go on but will stop here. You decide.
I was totally involved with In the Beginning. The issues are clear: true love is forever, faith is shaken and best of all, even immortals have a soul and a sense of right and wrong.
If you are willing to suspend your logic, you will enjoy this interesting tale of love. Looks like F.D. Davis has a vampire series on her hands. I look forward to more from Adam Omega.
Minnie E Miller
Author
real vampiresReview Date: 2008-04-29
GREAT JOB!!Review Date: 2008-04-30


An Excellent Biography of an Amazing Woman!Review Date: 2005-11-21
The Original Goth Girl!Review Date: 2005-01-03
Clearly Fabulous!Review Date: 2004-11-29
Casati Raves On!Review Date: 2004-10-26
"This meticulously researched and completely updated biography vividly details Luisa Casati's extravagant life...Fashionistas, art history buffs, aficionados of Belle Époque and Jazz Age culture-and general readers-will be pleased."-Lorraine Thompson (Primo Magazine)
Elegance Supreme!Review Date: 2005-04-14

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GREAT RESOURCE!!!!Review Date: 2003-05-17
Kick of InspirationReview Date: 2002-06-26
Inspiration for Student Leaders a must read!Review Date: 2002-06-10
As one of the co-authors, I'm extremely proud of the finished product. In addition to getting a great resourse for your library, every purchase of this book gives a $1 donation to the National Association for Campus Activities (NACA) Educational Foundation - NACA provides scholarships for college students across the US.
Need Something uplifting?Review Date: 2002-05-29
Long on wisdom, short in length!Review Date: 2002-05-23
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The Jesus StyleReview Date: 2008-06-17
recomended readingReview Date: 2007-03-17
Bill Bracken, Pastor Calvary Stanberry
Outstanding!Review Date: 2005-09-14
If you consider yourself a Christian, other than the Bible, this is one of the most important books you will ever read.
This book will tell you what legalism IS NOT. And it is something in which we all need to be fluent. and it saved my life.Review Date: 2006-06-13
Awesome, Wonderful, Insightful, UsefulReview Date: 2004-04-16
Written in plain language, this is an easy read. I found it to be an absolute joy to read it and gained some interesting insights in to the style of our Lord and Savior.
Truly a delightful, useful book, I recomend it to everyone.
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