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Janet Guthrie: A Life at Full Throttle
Published in Hardcover by SportClassic Books (2005-05-25)
Author: Janet Guthrie
List price: $24.95
New price: $14.88
Used price: $0.93
Collectible price: $39.99

Average review score:

The Best I've Ever Read
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-30
I'm a librarian and an auto racing fan, and I've read a lot of motor racing books. This is the best racing biography I've EVER read, and she wrote it all by herself. Whether your interest is the Indianapolis 500, NASCAR, sports in general, or women's studies, you'll find something to enjoy in this book, and you will be impressed by the quality of the writing.

BTW, her opinion of Pat Patrick is hilarious; or at least, it's a lot like mine.

Enjoy

Excellent Book
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-29
I was in third grade when Janet Guthrie made the headlines. I remember reading a kid's book on her life and learning that she had a job as a physicist before going into racing. I had always admired Ms. Guthrie for what she did. A couple of years ago while reading an article on Danica Patrick, I came across the Janet Guthrie website and found the book Janet Guthrie: A Life at Full Throttle. I went ahead and purchased it. It has taken me almost two years to finish the book, but I have found it very enlightening and reading. It gives a great overview of her life and how hard she had to work to get into racing and the obstacles she had to overcome. It is a must read for anyone who wants to learn about an amazing female athlete from the mid 1970's. Thank you, Ms. Guthrie for sharing your life with us.

Against All Odds
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-12-12
Janet Guthrie was more qualified than many drivers who had quality rides in open-wheel and stock-car racing. She was a graduate of the University of Michigan (B. Sc. in physics), an aerospace engineer and flight instructor while race-car driving as early as 1963 in a Jaguar XK 140 that she prepared.

But being a female in a male-dominated business made for a career that had a very rough road. Guthrie persevered under very trying times to reach the pinnacle in the sport in 1977, qualifying for the Indianapolis 500 - becoming the first woman to qualify and compete in the event - and Daytona 500 - finishing the race as the top rookie driver.

And after nearly 20 years in search of a publisher and several hundred pages cut from her manuscript, Guthrie delivers an excellent read that covers her life on and off the track.

Guthrie wanted to be known as a race-car driver, but there were too many people who couldn't get past her gender. That was from the boardrooms of potential sponsors to initial tough comments from competitors like Richard Petty and Bobby Unser and workers at venues like the Indianapolis Motor Speedway who were determined to make Guthrie know in so many ways that she wasn't welcome & could never compete financially with the top teams.

Though Petty and Unser eventually gave Guthrie props - Petty saying in 1978 that she may win a NASCAR event with a better ride & Unser stating she has done a good job - there were drivers like Tom Sneva and Buddy Baker and others in the industry who assisted her in reaching for the stars. Even though Guthrie blazed a trail, it ultimately smacked into a brick wall when a lack of sponsorship dollars prevented her from competing in the top events.

In 2006, Guthrie was inducted into the International Motorsports Hall of Fame. A Life at Full Throttle is a story about struggling against institutionalized gender discrimination and how the road to true equity remains under construction.

Too short by far.
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-27
I started sports car racing about the same time as Janet, also had no money, and enjoyed all the years of scratching and clawing for a ride. I could not have written this book, though, because not only did she do something special, she tells the stories so well. I learned more about her in the book than I did at the time, and as a result of the book, feel the shared history and experiences deeply.

As a mutual friend said, "...it's exposed more about her and what she did and how she did it than most (of her comtemporary racing friends) either knew or understood...it's established more of a camaraderie with other racers ..." than was thought to exist at the time.

I wish she would publish the other several hundred pages she had to cut out of this beek, as I am sure I would enjoy it also.

What a lady, what a life!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-05-26
I was in junior high school when Ms. Guthrie ran in the Indy 500, and was wowed by the fact that a woman could make it auto racing. Those who of us who remember the era before Title 9 know how tough it was for female athletes in any sport, but especially auto racing which remains a male-dominated field to this day.

Cheers to you, Ms. Guthrie, for your excellent career, for opening the doors, for your marvelous record on the track, and for an exciting memoir that's as fast-paced as your race car! Five stars!

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Parris Island Daze: My Drill Instructor Was Tougher Than Yours
Published in Paperback by Infinity Publishing (2006-09-22)
Author: Bob Shirley
List price: $19.95
New price: $12.35
Used price: $12.25
Collectible price: $24.98

Average review score:

My Dad The Marine
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-12-24
I feel like I discovered a whole new side to my Dad after reading this book. Actually relating to his trials and tribulations, some frustrating, some funny, in Marine boot camp, I felt like I was going through Parris Island as well. I think any wife, daughter, sister or girlfriend will enjoy reading, sharing and understanding how the strong bond develops between these young men and women. Although a lot of the training is in deadly earnest, I laughed dozens of times during this book. One of my favorite hilarious parts is when the hero loses part of his rifle on the parade ground. One that made me cry was the farewell speech of the drill instructor. If you are related to, or know a Marine, you will understand him or her ten times better after you read this book.
Proud daughter of a former Marine.

Parris Island Daze
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-08
As a former Marine I enjoyed many memories of my days at Parris Island in 1957. These days most of the book had me smiling if not outright laughing. We will always remember our D.I.'s and the influence they had on our characters. I'm sure any former Marine will get a little lump in his throat when reading the D.I.'s talk at graduation. He said they were now part of the brotherhood and they would always be Marines. Great memories!

A must for older marine corrps veterans
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-18
Harsh but true stories from the Old basic training marines went through. I only hope new Marines get the training we went through. Only complaint is too much TURDS as our drill instructor thought of us as men in training and did his best not to demean to the point of the instructor in this book. How can you build men today by acting like a power-hungry maniac

A tell-it-like-it-is account
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-09
Written by Marine Corps Association member and Parris Island graduate Bob Shirley, Parris Island Daze: My Drill Instructor Was Tougher Than Yours is a tell-it-like-it-is account of what Parris Island (or any other American military boot camp) is really like. Recounting the experience of grueling yet invigorating training, and illustrated with twenty-eight black-and-white boot camp photographs, Parris Island Daze reminisces the forging experience without pulling any punches as to its severity. Parris Island Daze is especially recommended for anyone preparing to join the military, the better to inform them of the hurdle they are about to encounter, as well as the character and manhood-building rewards they can achieve!

Terrifying Then, Funny Now
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-01
I started laughing on the first page of Chapter 1. He's describing arriving at the train depot and the MP's coming on board and immediately starting to scream at him. It was 1958. Step forward five years and it was me that they were screaming at. Just like with him, it was in the early hours of the morning, I was tired, sleepy, and wondering what I was getting into. I didn't realize that it was their intent for us to arrive in the dark to have you dazed, confused, and disoriented. Oh Yeah! For me, just like for him, it was also raining and cold. I wonder if that was part of the plan as well. How did they do that?

To be sure, I was Army rather than Marine, but it differed only in detail. It was terrifying at the time, funny now.

The basic rules of how to do basic training, how to take a civilian and turn him into a soldier were first developed a couple of thousand years ago by the Greeks training young men to fight in the phalanx. It worked then, and it works now. It's a carefully graduated psychological program to develop mental and physical fitness of the type the military wants.

A delightful book, especially recommended for the parents of people going into the service.

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Stiff Upper Lip, Jeeves: A BBC Radio 4 Full-cast Dramatisation (BBC Radio Collection)
Published in Audio Cassette by BBC Audiobooks Ltd (1992-06-08)
Authors: P.G. Wodehouse and Richard Usborne
List price: $22.70
Used price: $52.14

Average review score:

The Alpine hat, a amber statuette and Totleigh Towers...
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-23
Horror, of horrors, it looks like Gussie Fink-Nottle may have finally broken off with Madeline Bassett and there is little or nothing that even Jeeves can do about it. Diets, steak and kidney pie, mute lutes. Add Spode who will take anybody who makes Madeline cry and tie them into a painful knot and you have the makings of a tragic ending for poor, poor Bertie. Or do you? Either way, there is tons of fun from the first page to the last and lots of twisted plot lines, weird happenings, and buckets of hard drinking.

SOOO JEEVES
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-09
This was the first Bertie and Jeeves' book I'd ever read. If you're interested in British humour, exquisite-snobbish language and witty puns, or in bizarre but classy situations, this is just the book for you. Wodehouse possessed this wonderful characteristic of balancing an unfortunate situation with a good dose of modest humour. The title says it all! Thoroughly recommendable.

A Tonic for the 21st Century
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-10
What could the Nobel Prize for literature signify if PG Wodehouse not only didn't win one, but never made the short-list? Good grief. What other writer living or dead, in Nobel's own words, "help[s] dreamers, as they find it hard to get on in life."

Take STIFF UPPER LIP, JEEVES, for example. If you want to read a book that'll grab you by your lapels and hoist you out this mundane, dynamite-scarred world, try this one.

Crisp dialogue, intricate plotting, witty wordplay, amusing situations, and distinct characters make this book satisfying to read repeatedly. In fact, it is astonishing that STIFF UPPER LIP, JEEVES and many other Wodehouse creations seem just as fresh the second, third, and even seventh time around.

I would liken reading this book to drinking one of Jeeves's famous pick-me-ups "and their effect on a fellow who is hanging to life by a thread on the morning after." Wodehouse writes: "For perhaps the split part of a second nothing happens. It is as though all Nature waited breathless. Then, suddenly, it is as if the Last Trump had sounded and Judgment Day set in..."

If heaven's half as delightful as reading PG Wodehouse, (should I get there) I'll be in paradise.

British Humor Wonderfully Read.
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-25
This unabridged audio version of "Stiff Upper Lip, Jeeves" was wonderfully read by Cecil. This is not my typically genre of book and I was pleasantly impressed and surprised by this book. I have not read the prior books in this series and had no problems following along so the priors are not a necessity. In a nutshell, this book is about a dim-witted Bertie and his attempt to keep from inadvertently becoming engaged to a sappy Madeline. The dry, British humor of this story is excellently portrayed by Cecil and I would highly recommend this book to anyone looking for a refreshing change of pace!

WODEHOUSE + CECIL = A SPLENDID READING
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2005-10-30

Just as we believe some actors were born to play a certain role or a singer was born to sing a specific song, I'm convinced Jonathan Cecil was born to read P. G. Wodehouse. The British accented Cecil voice delightfully inhabits the personas of Jeeves, Bertie Wooster and sundry other characters with charm, humor, and distinction.

My first introduction to the talents of Cecil was with his stunning reading of "Jeeves and the Mating Season." Since that time no other voice will do for the born to the purple Bertie and his long suffering butler.

P.G. Wodehouse is quite another story. Obviously, one of the greatest humorists to ever take up pen his tongue-in-cheek take on the British upper classes is pure laugh provoking perfection. With "Stiff Upper Lip, Jeeves" we find Bertie returning to Totleigh Towers, a place he had hoped never to see again as it is the domain of Sir Watkyn Bassett, who lined his pockets with fines he collected. Bassett's daughter, Madeline is always on the prowl and Bertie wants no part of her.

Fortunately, Madeline has fallen for and captured another - Gussie, a friend of Bertie's. Now, Madeline is not only a huntress but she is also passionate about changing her quarry to suit her own tastes. In this case, the word "taste" may be taken literally as she wants to change the meat loving Gussie into a vegetarian, which is where most of the trouble begins. Bertie, as usual, finds himself embroiled in this sticky situation.

Alas, once again it's left up to Jeeves to come to Bertie's aid.

Wodehouse has been dubbed a "comic genius;" Cecil is his full partner in this splendid reading. Enjoy!

- Gail Cooke

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Tales From Pixie Hollow 2 (4 Copy Box Set) (Prilla and the Butterfly Lie, Masterpiece for Bess, Fira and the Full Moon, Rani in the Mermaid Lagoon)
Published in Paperback by RH/Disney (2007-09-11)
Author: Various
List price: $23.96
New price: $15.96
Used price: $14.73

Average review score:

Great for my just turned 4 year old
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2009-01-03
My daughter got this set for her 4th birthday. I absolutely love it. We've been reading a chapter a night at least. (Along with another book she picks out.) Most nights we read more then that because she asks to have more. She has even brought me the books in the middle of the day. I can't wait to get her the other set.I'd highly recommend. They are definately helping her with her patience.

Tales From Pixie Hollow 2 (4 Copy Box Set)
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-12-20
My Daughter just loves these books and I think we have purchased every box set now. She is so into fairies and these books are great reading and exciting for my second grader!! I will buy all of them eventually as she reads through them.

Brand new! Wonderful series
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-12-20
Great series for young girls! We read this to our kindergardner and she loves it!

Get a princess reading more...
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-10
Our daughter was reluctant to tackle chapter books. These books are pretty, the chapters are short, and the font/spacing is easy on the eyes of a new reader. They were a hit and she is reading more all the time!

We LOVE this series!!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-02
We own all of this series! Started reading them when my daughter was 4 (she just turned 5 now), and they are age appropriate. Not too scary and always a happy ending. One book only takes us about 4-5 nights worth of reading together. The longer ones are good too "Fairy Dust and the Quest for the Egg" and "Fairy Haven and the Quest for the Wand", but they are a little bit scarrier than the short books (more appropriate for ages 5-7 I would think).

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When Love Meets Fear: How to Become Defense-Less and Resource-Full
Published in Paperback by Paulist Press (1997-05)
Author: David Richo
List price: $16.95
New price: $10.87
Used price: $9.99

Average review score:

Too often Gender biased
Helpful Votes: 13 out of 82 total.
Review Date: 2005-01-19
In beginning to read the orientation, it turned me off completely when it began with the fear of females. It's so overdone. But hasn't been tackled is the fear of men who have a completely different style when they meet fear, and often become aggressive because of it. Is there any more insulting rejection to a women than hearing, "there are plenty of more fish in the sea?" This proves not only the lack of integrity of the presumed lover but also the lack of mature perspective in appreciating the fact of one so committed and enamored. Just as men prefer to be the "one and only," so also women expect to be the "one and only." The fear of being alone doesn't necessarily produce the anxiety of feeling excluded if the flaws are seen in those who exhibit them, and operate more as malice than rejection. There is a huge difference. Faced with love that is generated within, and not because of trophyism and a misperception of external comfort may be frightening to men because it makes them dependent on the emotional consistency of that secure feeling, and delight in its glory. Fear of loss inevitably follows. But mature love accepts loss graciously in knowing that if love is not reciprocal within the range of adequacy deemed honorable and pure, generated from inside not outside, the result of well considered contemplation of strengths as well as weaknesses, flaws as well as perfections, the result hopefully of a really long and committed second, third or fourth look. Most of the rest is merely the passing of time for lifestyle comfort, and always subject to a tenuous existence, focusing upon quantity not quality of the relationship. It is the reason women wait, and it is the reason men refrain from being steered to other momentary pleasures. Isn't all real love like that?

One of the best!!!
Helpful Votes: 15 out of 15 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-07
I have not even read half of this book yet, and I can already say that it has helped me change my self and my life. It has such insight and wisdom in it - I can't say enough about how wonderful it is. I have been working on the issues in this book for around twenty years, and I only wish I had bought it twenty years ago. If you are dealing with any of the problems this book is about (and if you are human, you probably are to some degree), do yourself a favor and get this book!

Richo's best book
Helpful Votes: 25 out of 25 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-27
Having first read Richo's "How to be an Adult," calling When Love Meets Fear: How to Become Defense-Less and Resource-Full his "best book" is quite a statement. The former is a wonderful and life changing tome that teaches the keys to meaningful relationships with others.

When Love Meets Fear builds on that message with a book expressly on the subject of fear. The root of anger, frustration and stonewalling in relationships, understanding and accepting our fear is our greatest journey in life.

One caution: This book takes many sittings to read properly. I was able to read only a few pages then I needed to put the book down and spend a day or two thinking about what I had just read. Almost like magic, I found myself time and again reading just the few pages I most needed to hear as I worked my way through.

The key to life.
Helpful Votes: 41 out of 42 total.
Review Date: 2003-12-16
This book simply explains the key to happiness. It is to let go of our fears, which is at the root of unhappiness, hate, aggression, apathy, and everything negative in the world. Once we are able to do that, we can open our hearts and embrace each other with love, respect, empathy, hope and forgiveness. It is a simple idea but something very difficult to do because our fears run very very deep within us all. Once we are able to do this to some extent, we try to help others do the same. It is simply the mission of all of our lives, whether we are aware of it or not. When you think about it, nothing else really matters as much. This is what this book tries to help us understand. It is a wonderful message! In another excellent book called "The Ever-Transcending Spirit" by Toru Sato, the author explains how this works in relation to human development and evolution. It shows us how we consciously begin living this life when we are naturally ready for it. These books are absolutely exquisite!

If you live in fear order this today!
Helpful Votes: 52 out of 52 total.
Review Date: 2004-06-18
I cannot say enough good things about this book. I have tried a lot of self-help techniques but the ones contained in this book are unlike any I've encountered.

The biggest lesson I got out of this book is that so many of our problems nowadays occur because we had painful experiences earlier in life but instead of facing them and accepting the ramifications - we chose to lie to ourselves instead. Richo explains the most common lies: life is just, suffering is avoidable, things don't change, etc.

I understand from this book that it is much better to just experience those original painful feelings instead of spending your life overanalyzing every minute of every day trying to make the world something it is not.

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Bureau 13: Full Moonster
Published in Paperback by Wildside Press (2006-12-01)
Author: Nick Pollotta
List price: $15.95

Average review score:

Yee-haw!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2002-06-28
This is my favorite B13 novel, and I have waited years for it to finally get back into print. My old copy simply fell apart from all the rereading. (g)
So when is a NEW Bureau book coming out?

Lunatic plot and crazy action sequences.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2004-08-23
Mr. Pollotta writes fight scenes worthy of The Matrix--grand and chaotic. He uses a fair dose of humor, but never so much that the narrative turns goofy.

When you read the opening chapter, you will not think my description above applies. He starts each of his Bureau 13 books with a separate scene that sets up the plot, but is not part of it. In these opening chapters, he writes with a steady hand worthy of Stephen King or Tim Powers, proving that he doesn't write humorous stories because he is incapable of being serious. One day we will see a book from this man that transcends the fantasy-comedy sub-genre. Nevertheless, I hope the Bureau 13 stories keep coming, because they are immensely entertaining.

Worked with the author, and recommend his works
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2003-07-19
I have playtested and contributed to the upcoming Bureau 13 D20 System Handbook, also from Wildside Press. Mr. Pollotta has captured the essesnce of the Bureau 13 world with his humor and wit. I had to research for the writing and playtesting by reading all three of the Bureau 13 novels. I was visibly laughing while reading the books. I have roleplayed for 20 years and the books have only added to my own Bureau 13 campaign. Mr. Pollotta has added new things to the Bureau 13 canon, and has made it so that we fans await the fourth B13 novel eagerly.

Best in the series
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2003-02-14
This was the first one of the series that I read. I loved it so much that I dug up the other two books and the original RPG. Next thing I know, I ran the game every Sunday for years. All thanks to this book.

If you're a fan of the Evil Dead series, Men in Black or Buffy; then you owe it to yourself to check out the start of it all. Read these books and you'll laugh, and wish they made this into a movie/tv show instead.

Beyond Funny
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2004-03-05
I have a vast library of books, including great classics...but it is THIS book that gets the most reading time. Its truly funny each and every time that I read it. The characters are well fleshed out and unique, the B13 world was masterfully used and the book is just a fantastic read, over and over. Highly recommended.

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The Codex Borgia: A Full-Color Restoration of the Ancient Mexican Manuscript
Published in Paperback by Dover Publications (1993-06-22)
Authors: Gisele Diaz and Alan Rodgers
List price: $20.95
New price: $14.87
Used price: $8.38

Average review score:

Magnificent reproduction of the Mixtec Codex
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-28
This Codex is remarkable at any price. The colors and reproductions are simply gorgeous and the text is helpful. Present are a bewildering number of religious pictograms, some calendric and other representing the mystical or dreamlike journey of the strange character 'one-eye.'

The characters are, overwhelmingly, bloodsoaked and violent. There is decapitation, dismemberment and heart sacrifice. This document gives the lie to those anthropologists who claim that the mesoamerican societies are 'misunderstood' and were not human sacrificial--that tales of human sacrifice and cannibalism were tales perpetrated by the Conquistadores to justify their conquest and subjugation of gentle cultures.

Well, not quite. Judging my this and other codices, as well as archaeologic revelations, suggest that these societies were just as bloodstained as advertised. This is not to justify the Spanish Conquest but just a simple fact.

At the same time, many of the characters in this codex require major interpretation. Virtually everything is split, injured or vomits blood. Depictions of people [children?] being tortured and blinded are especially disturbing. Nevertheless, this is a document well worth owning.

Ron Braithwaite author of novels--"Skull Rack" and "Hummingbird God"--on the Spanish Conquest of Mexic

Fun to show off
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-14
Even if you, like me, don't have much of a knowledge base about ancient Mexican history, it's cool just to show people the book. I've flipped through it and gained a vague understanding of how it fits into history, and I appreciate that it brings to life an aspect of a culture that I really only know through mythology. The preface to explain the Codex is probably well-written, although, admittedly, I felt rather daunted by it. Skimming through it was still valuable, though. A good conversation piece!

Un libro que no puede faltar
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-09
Sin duda este es un título que no debe faltar en ningúna biblioteca personal, ya que la restauración de uno de los principales códices es perfecta, para aquellos interesados en la cultura y ciencia ancestral este códice es de gran ayuda.

A Gem
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 14 total.
Review Date: 2005-02-15
This is a very strange and beautiful book in pictures. It reads like a dream if you tune in to it, and reveals very deep meanings about the relation between life and death, the human relation to the forces of nature, and time. Even though there are no words, it is possible to understand. If you get into it the symbols become more and more recognizable, and they begin to speak. the calendrical symbols and the spirit deities are completely recognizable. The sequences are all about times, and there is a big element about sacrifice. It has to do with the consequences of change; there is no life without death. The book has a very powerful image of life and death fused back to back that pretty much is the epitome of all the book is about. It's all about life and death in relation to time.

The Other 5 Star Reviews are Right
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-16
I will not go over their 5 star comments except to say that I agree. The amazingly colourful and crisp art in this short book is rivetting. As much as one may credit the reknowned author, deep congratulations should also go to the publisher for a masterful print job.

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Disney Fairies Book 6: Fira and the Full Moon (Unabridged)
Published in Audio Download by audible.com ()
Author: Gail Herman
List price: $11.98
New price: $5.96

Average review score:

Imagination Central !
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-02
My nine year old daughter loves fairy books about Tinkerbell and her friends. She absolutely devours them as soon as I get them. What a boost for her imagination!

We LOVE this series!!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-02
We own all of this series! Started reading them when my daughter was 4 (she just turned 5 now), and they are age appropriate. Not too scary and always a happy ending. One book only takes us about 4-5 nights worth of reading together. The longer ones are good too "Fairy Dust and the Quest for the Egg" and "Fairy Haven and the Quest for the Wand", but they are a little bit scarrier than the short books (more appropriate for ages 5-7 I would think).

Better Title: Fira's Kids Are Unruly
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-25
Fira is outnumbered by her triplets and has to apologize to her townsfolk a lot. (Single mom + 3 bickering kids = go away now please.) But the day is saved when her kids disobey her instructions to stay home and follow her deep into a dangerous mine! Yay!

Actually, the story was pretty good. A fun read.

The CD version is read by the talented Debra Wiseman.

Excellent
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-12
The book arrived and was practically brand new. My daughter loves it. It came in the mail very fast.

2nd Grader loves these books.
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-13
My 8 y.o. has fallen in love with these books. You typically can't fail with Disney products and these are no exception. The stories are interesting and unlike some series books for this age range, these books stand alone and are not "formula" books where only the names and places are changed, but the same event takes place. Each fairy has a talent and her talent solves the problem in her book. The illustrations are vivid and imaginative. Apparently there's a movie about Pixie Hollow that will be coming out soon and there are also toys starting to come out with the fairies.

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The Dragon of Doom: Moongobble and Me
Published in Audio CD by Full Cast Audio (2004-06-01)
Author: Bruce Coville
List price: $14.00
New price: $14.00
Used price: $7.99

Average review score:

Fabulous
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-11-04
Excellent book for a read aloud. The chapters end with suspense, ther's plenty of humor and the illustrations are wonderful. Highly recommended for younger audience.

Great Read Aloud For 4 and 5 year olds
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-22
There are not all that many good books that you can read aloud to 4 and 5 year olds. Moongobble (a series, currently there are 4 books) is a good example of a book that young people will enjoy listening to, and the adult won't be bored out of his mind.

This is the first book in the Moongobble and Me series. Edward, a young boy apprentices to a neophyte wizard, Moongobble. Moongobble has a habit of messing up his spells and turning things to cheese. The Moongobble series has all the elements of fantasy: knights, dragons, witches,... but none of the violence usually present: the dragon of doom turns out to be roughly a foot long. The writing is witty, but simple enough for a four year old to understand.

great read for clever 1st graders
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-10
My son loved this book. He just turned 7 and is only just beginning to read more fluently to himself. This book is great to read himself (large print) and fun to read to him as well.
P.S. It was on the school recommended reading list for my 9 year old!

Delightful!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-12
A splendid trilogy of sweet but not syrupy fantasy books for young children (I'd say around 3-7). With a bit of dragons, a bit of magic, a bit of questing, and a bit of coming of age tale to them, I found these to be must read books for my kids.

Moongobble and Me
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-10-31
Moongobble and Me
by Bruce Coville

Do you want a jolly good book to read about a wizard who makes stuff into cheese? How about reading about a wizard and his helper who go on a mission to get golden acorns away from a dragon? The wizard is Moongooble and Eddy is his helper. If you want to read about their adventures pick up this book.

Herbie, Age 9
Cunniff Elementary
Watertown, MA.

Full
Full Moon - Bloody Moon: Chase Dagger (Unabridged)
Published in Audio Download by audible.com ()
Author: Lee Driver
List price: $23.99
New price: $12.59

Average review score:

Great Book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-30
Great book! Full of suspense and humor. If you like Laurell Hamilton or Kim Harrison, you will like this book.

A tautly written, reader-gripping, mystery thriller
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2001-02-14
Private detective Chase Dagger finds an Indianapolis cop and auniversity professor on his doorstep revealing their theory behind arecent series of homicides. The professor beliefs there is an evilthat has been passed down from generation to generation and is at itsworst during a full moon on Friday the 13th. Dagger feels theprofessor knows far to much about the murders and the killer. FullMoon-Bloody Moon is an X-Files style mystery that brings back ChaseDagger for another tautly written, reader-gripping, mysterythriller. Also highly recommended is Lee Driver's debut novelintroducing Chase Dagger and an unusual blend of horror and mystery inThe Good Die Twice (5-3,...). END

A series to watch
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2001-07-04
FULL MOON-BLOODY MOON is the second in the Chase Dagger series. This one combines mystery and horror in a story about a little known phenomena -- the combination of a full moon and a Friday the 13th. Dagger is confronted by an Indianapolis cop and a university professor who have a theory behind a series of murders. They believe a man has inherited an evil passed on through generations that is at its worst during a full moon on a Friday the 13th. This book pits an evil shapeshifter against Sara, Dagger's shapeshifting partner. As in THE GOOD DIE TWICE, Sara's shapeshifting is the catalyst in this series. And the existence of this evil shapeshifter becomes real when it starts communicating telepathically with Sara. This is a tightly written thriller that will have you looking at a full moon quite differently. To show you how rare the combination is, October 13, 2000, was only the thirteenth time since 1800 that it has occurred.

YOU WILL LOVE THIS ONE
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2001-03-04
FULL MOON BLOODY MOON is the second Chase Dagger mystery; the first was THE GOOD DIE TWICE.

Chase Dagger is back, but this time he will need more than luck to catch a killer that has been around for more than 200 years.... Knowing that Oct. 13th a Friday was not even here yet, the worse was yet to happen.

FULL MOON BLOODY MOON has the same unconventional and fetching characters as THE GOOD DIE TWICE. Einstein the bright red macaw that has a big mouth, Chase's right hand woman, Sara, Simon the mailman who knows everybody's business. Padre and Skizzy are also back as well as some new characters. FULL MOON BLOODY MOON is a ferocious horror-filled ride that will stick with you well after you have finished reading the book. Mixed with sex, violence and plenty of fast paced action. I hung onto every word.

Lee Driver (aka S.D. Tooley ) you have done it again, keep up the good work.

Even better than its predecessor
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2004-05-12
Author Lee Driver returns with the second in her series starring mysterious private investigstor Chase Dagger and his Native American shapeshifter associate Sara Morningsky and scarlet macaw Einstein--Full Moon Bloody Moon. This entry finds them with a more gruesome case as the bodies keep piling up, but no logical suspect can be found.

Lisa was a really good cop, a quick and accurate shooter. So, it was a real surprise when she was found dead along her regular jogging path with her gun still holstered and with the safety still on. The other surprise was that she was found twenty feet up, stuck in the V of a tree branch. Of great import to this case is the rarity of the combined occurrence of a full moon on a Friday the 13th. The story takes place during the five days leading up to Friday, October 13, 2000, when it is believed that the killer will attain his greatest level of power during the upcoming full moon.

Meanwhile, Chase and Skizzy are also working on a case involving weapons thefts from a local police station. Skizzy's invention of the "Mick," a mechanical spider-shaped surveillance camera, provides much of the intrigue in this subplot, which otherwise feels much like another day on the job.

Things really take a turn in Full Moon Bloody Moon when it is discovered that the killer can communicate with Sara through the telepathy that, until then, the reader had thought that only she and Chase could share. Is the killer a shapeshifter, too? Chase's ability to overhear their conversations causes his pragmatic worldview to begin to crumble. Able to accept Sara as a shapeshifter, because that was how he discovered her, the idea that there are more is almost too much for him. And the closer he comes to a solution, the more it seems that the killer is something that Chase is not entirely prepared to deal with.

The sexual tension between Sara and Chase continues building, with their friends invariably making comments to Chase about questionable situations. These are still some of the most intriguing characters in fiction, and any male reader is undoubtedly going to want to be Chase and want to be with Sara. Their relationship is an engaging combination of sibling and romance that succeeds because of not engendering any untoward feelings whatsoever. I'm becoming as comfortable with these people in just two books as I did Ed McBain's 87th Precinct crowd. I can only hope that Lee Driver exhibits McBain's longevity. Add to that her skill at writing epilogues that make me want to begin the next book immediately (in this case, The Unseen), and what we have is a terrific fantasy mystery series that deserves bestseller status.


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