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GR Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

GR
Rimwalkers
Published in School & Library Binding by Topeka Bindery (1999-10)
Author: Vicki Grove
List price: $14.55
New price: $14.55
Used price: $20.00

Average review score:

Taking Risks
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-10-01
The book Rimwalkers by Vicki Grove is about two boys and a girl finding out who they are over the summer, which has its ups and downs, its goods its bads, they bond and figure out a mystery that has been haunting the farm for years.
I would recommend this book to fifth or sixth graders. It has just what kids this age are looking for: adventure, mystery, friendship, and danger. I am a sixth grader and I really enjoyed Rimwalkers. It has two hundred and twenty-three pages. It teaches an important lesson to never judge somebody by the way they act or the way they dress. One should take risks, and not always stand on the sidelines, but jump in the game.
The book Rimwalkers by Vicki Grove is an all around good book. Even though it might be aimed more for fifth or sixth graders, readers of any age would probobly enjoy it. So go ahead, get your copy of Rimwalkers, I promise you will enjoy it.

The Three Musketeers
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-01-10
Rimwalkers was an awesome book. I would give it five stars.
Tory was older than Sara, her younger sister, yet she was always walking one step behind her. Until one summer vacation at her grandparents' farm and unexpected cousin named Rennie showed up. He was a daredevil and he helped Tory and Elijah, another cousin just as shy and quiet as Tory, to be more outspoken and to try new things. Tory, Elijah, and Rennie became really good friends, but they always left out the snobby little sister, Sara. Then on the last day of their summer vacation at their grandparents' farm tragedy struck and the tables turned.

It really brings out the truth to peoples lives
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2002-01-09
I thought that it was a touching story made with realistic characters. The details were amazingly beautiful. Every thing about it was either dramatic or excitingly *daredevilish. I would definitly let a lot of my friends read this. I think most of them would really enjoy it. My favorite part was when Tory and Sara was on the bus and Tory was day dreaming about her and Elijah's past times together.

It really brings out the truth to peoples lives
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2002-01-09
I thought that it was a touching story made with realistic characters. The details were amazingly beautiful. Every thing about it was either dramatic or excitingly *daredevilish. I would definitly let a lot of my friends read this. I think most of them would really enjoy it. My favorite part was when Tory and Sara was on the bus and Tory was day dreaming about her and Elijah's past times together.

Wow!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-03-10
Torie and her sis, Sara have to go visit their grandparents for the whole summer. Niether of them are jumpping for joy. They go and meet two cosins. One whom they haven't seen for five years. Elija is tall, quiet, and shy. They meet Reenie for the first time. He is a highschool drop-out, mean, and a JD (Juvinile Deliquent) Torie befriends these two boys, yet they shut Sara out because she is stuck up, snoby, rude, and a sissie. The four kids soon discover an old secret in an old house. Torie, Elija, and Reenie come closer together suffering though fights, bother verbal and physical, yet these very fights make these cousins as close as PB&J. A tragic accident causes them to almost loose Sara. This part is sad because they had just yelled at her. She pulls though. Then the secret to the old house is revieled. In the end, someone dies. I won't tell you who, you'll just have to read it for yourself, but personally, he was my favorite character. This book shows how family relationships can effect eveyone, including a dead boy who haunts the house nextdoor. This book should be made into a movie. I can just picture the characters and how they would look and act. I bought this book out of desperation today. I went to the 75% off Bookstore and got it just because I would have to do a report on a book and just gravved Rimwalkers. I finished it about ten minutes ago and cried at the end. If you love romance, mystery, science fiction, family reationships, and death as well as life, THIS IS THE BOOK FOR YOU!!! I loved it and I highly recomend that you read it. It is very fast-pace and can easily be read in a day or two. Next time you are at the library, pick up RIMWALKERS BY VICKY GROVE. I KNOW THAT YOU'LL LIKE IT. I laughed, I cried, and I was a little scared. BELIEVE ME, YOU'LL LOVE EVERY FAST PACED PAGE OF RIMWALKERS

GR
A Time of Angels
Published in Paperback by Hyperion Book CH (2008-09-09)
Author: Karen Hesse
List price: $6.99
New price: $3.42
Used price: $2.25

Average review score:

Read this book
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 2003-02-20
I read the book called A Time Of Angels by Karen Hesse. This is a historical fiction book.
This book is about this girl named Hannah that gets separated from her parents and has to move to her Aunts house in West Boston. After she got there she started working in a store to help her Aunt with food & clothes.
Weeks later she got the flu and got real sick. The flu had killed ten thousand people so far. After she gets her energy back. Tanta Rose and her went to try to get her family together. After month of hard work she got her family together.
I didn't like this book because it was boring. It barley had any action. If you are boring and like boring things you should you should read this book.

GrEat bOok
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2002-04-20
I got this book at a school event where we could choose one book (for free) to take home. I chose this one because I thought it sounded interesting, and although that was over a year ago I still read it. The author has a beautiful way of writing the story so that you can imagine what you would feel like in Hannah's shoes.

Amazing, engaging, imaginative ... must read!
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2003-11-12
I was frankly shocked to read reviews that found this book boring. I've read all of Karen Hesse's works, and find this to be far and away the best. I am a fifth grade teacher, and can usually count on my 14-year-old daughter to let me take her cast-off books to supply my classroom; this was one that she won't part with, even after several years. "A Time of Angels" is high on my list of books to recommend for my higher-level readers.

The story line, taking place during the influenza pandemic of 1917-18, is grippingly realistic -- entire neighborhoods are nearly wiped out by the dreaded disease, and panic-stricken residents don't really know how to deal with the enormous problem. Meanwhile, Hannah and her two younger sisters are left in Boston with an aunt, since her mother is trapped in WWI Russia caring for relatives and her father is off fighting in the war -- and neither have been heard from.

When influenza tears Hannah's family apart, circumstances take her far away where she ends up in the care of a gruff old farmer who has been isolated from other townsfolk because of his German heritage. The relationship that forms between the two of them is sweet and tender, and Hesse crafts it beautifully.

Truly, Hesse's characterizations and descriptions make this book nearly magical to read. She weaves in bits and pieces of Jewish culture, American history, and wonderful mystical interludes with an angel who saves Hannah's life more than once.

Boring? Don't believe it. This is a book you shouldn't miss!

Open your mind and heart to the enemy....
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2002-03-07
With all of the recent events our country has been through I believe this book should be read in classrooms everywhere. Taking place during WW2 you are drawn into the difficult, poor and often painful life of a young girl. As she loses loved ones to the plague, she herself is spared and she believes she may have seen an angel. Circumstances lead this young jewish girl to live with an old German man who the town shuns, but she learns to love. I learned that every war has two sides, and tolerance is the key. The young girl ends up happy in the end through small bits of fate in her favor, but I believe there were many different endings that would have worked for the girl - just like us.

A view from a future teacher
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2002-04-23
I truly enjoyed this book by Karen Hesse. As a future teacher I will add this to my list of historical fiction in teaching social studies and language arts. I had no idea so many people died of the flu in 1918 - nearl two and one half times the number that died during WWI! Karen Hesse does an excellent job of placing ourselves into the life of a young Jewish girl named Hannah. She and her two sisters must live with her two aunts in a crowded Boston apartment because their father is fighting in the war, and their mother is trapped in Russia. She must eventually leave Boston alone because the flu is ravishing the city and her loved ones. She gets lost and is also stricken with the deadly flu. She is nursed back to health by a German farmer and a beautiful friendship develops. She eventually returns to Boston with the help of an angel to find the fate of her family. This is a must read book!

GR
Tomb Raider
Published in Paperback by Aladdin (2001-06-01)
Authors: Mel Odom, Patrick Massett, John Zinman, and Simon West
List price: $4.99
New price: $4.50
Used price: $0.01

Average review score:

Highly recommended seller
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2009-05-17
Product arrived in good shape and very, very promptly. Seller communication was excellent and very willing. Especially impressed by the swift delivery (roughly 3 days) as per request due to necessity. Highly recommended.

Embedded with same heart-pounding action as movie predecessor
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-29
Based on the same-titled movie released in 2001, Mel Odom's novelization of the Angelina Jolie flick is top-notch, enveloping every quality that made the archaeologist one of the most popular icons of the video game franchise.
Lara Croft observes the first third of a complete planet alignment - an event that happens once every five thousand years - through the high-tech telescope at her home, Croft Manor. Little did she know, only hours later, she would become an integral part in protecting the alignment's omnipotent power from ill-intended hands.

Through her deceased father's gift of a planetary clock, she travels from one exotic location to another to locate the pieces of the power's medium, a triangle emblazoned with the All-Seeing Eye, the Masonic symbol of omniscience. But an internal desire to see her father again brings her motives to locate the triangle halves into question. If she finds the pieces, will she use the power it contains for herself? Or will she snatch the godly control away from her foes and bury its abilities for another five thousand years?

Odom's literary portrayal is accurate and engrossing, detailing the emotional impact of each event and discovery, someting that may be lacked in the film version. Rather than drooling over Angelina Jolie, Raider fans can envision the described settings and locales in the book with relative ease, with every exotic touch in place. There are only very slight changes in the book, such as Croft enemy (or perhaps not) Alex West's naked romp from the shower to the bedroom in response to mysteriously lurking shadows (provided by Croft, of course); that differs from the movie's ending locale of the dining room and its strategically placed dining table.

But the story proceeds with the same heart-pounding action and romantic passion that's found in the box-office seller. Though short, it makes the reader feel as though they are in Croft's military-booted shoes, even as much as the video games do.

- T.C. Robson

Excellent! The movie followed the book very well too.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2004-02-24
Long ago a meteor fell onto Earth with a magical, metallic form within it. Witnessing its power, it was forged into the (thought of) holy form of a triangle and a temple was formed to protect it. A city grew around the temple, The People of the Light were there. During an invasion, the nine planets aligned and the power of the Triangle was shown. Realizing no mortal should possess such power, the High Priest ordered it cut into two smaller triangles. One stayed at the temple. The other was hidden at the end of the Earth. However, the Craftsman who cut the Triangle in half secretly made a highly advanced device. It could serve as a guide to find the hidden piece, and preserve the Triangle's powers for future generations. It was a magic clock.

Lady Lara Croft was much like her father had been. Beginning with a clock he had hidden for her to find someday and tales he had told her as a child, she must set out to save the world. The Illuminati, a secret group of powerful people, were out to find the two triangle pieces before the planets aligned (which happened only once every 5,000 years). At her side was Mr. Hillary, her butler, and Bryce, her technician. Two tombs must be entered and survived or the world would belong to Manfred Powell.

***** I made that brief as possible, but left out much to do it. Even though the movie, as of now, has not been released, I can already tell that the book gives much more insight to Lara and the adventure in which she finds herself. However, many scenes have the potential to be much more vivid and exciting on the big screens! I found it to be a wonderful book! I plan to be in the theater, with a huge group of friends, on its first night out! *****

Reviewed by Detra Fitch of Huntress Reviews.

A GREAT NOVELIZATION OF THE FEATURE FILM!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2002-05-11
This book is great. It is just like the movie, only with a little more dialouge. There are even parts before Lara's dad died telling how he tried to stop the evil. The deleted scenes only able to watch on the DVD are in this book, and I thought that was great! The action level seems a little less than the movie. The book seems to just speed by the action and to the point. I didn't really like that factor. If you liked the movie, read the novel, it is GREAT!

Really good for a novelization
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2002-01-12
Very good in fact. It adds alot to the movie. More fleshed out characters and such. It's only 6 bucks, so what do you have to ose? Another plus is the 8 pages of pictures featuring the amazingly beautiful Angelina Jolie.

GR
The Vision of a Champion: Advice and Inspiration from the World's Most Successful Women's Soccer Coach
Published in Hardcover by Huron River Press (2002-06)
Authors: Anson Dorrance and Gloria Averbuch
List price: $24.95
New price: $47.62
Used price: $4.36
Collectible price: $45.00

Average review score:

The Vision of a Champion
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2009-04-02
This is a wonderful book about soccer and training, and the mental toughness girls possess that will help them all through life. This book will also help any parent who struggles with the proper involvement level with a soccer-daughter, and the reinforcement needed to help make the correct choices as she evolves with the game of soccer.

This book also gives extraordinary attention to the evolution of leadership roles for females, and the developement of these leadership skills in all young women.

There were hundreds of times i wanted to read passsages or paragraphs to each of my soccer-daughters after i was brought to near tears by the passages of empowerment and success for female athletes.

Awesome
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2009-03-30
This is a great book for the beginner and the advanced coach and I think it would serve parents and athletics as well.

Simply put a wonderful insight into the game of soccer.

The man's record says it all...
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2009-01-10
This book is well written and presents ideas for all level of player from rec through ODP and beyond. I recommend every coach who wants to improve read the book. Womens coaches benefit the most in light of Coach Dorrance's experience and well known success.
In the book you'll get advice (to varying extents) on just about every aspect of the game. This book is not written toward coaches, but to players. If you read the book as a set of guidlines for players, you'll be able to gather some insight about coaching and driving women to higher competitive levels. Great book.

Essential Reading
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-12-20
If you coach, this is a must read. If you coach women, this should already be on your shelf. If you coach womens soccer, I'm sure you've read it a dozen times. But if you're a parent or a player you may have missed this one. Dorrance is arguably the best in the business regardless of sport and there's not one thing he's touched that is shoddy. This book is a must-read, and I recommend you follow it up with "The Man Watching".

Great Coaching Advice
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-02
This is a well written book about the game of women's soccer. There are a lot of practical advice as well as several diagrams and plays for success on the soccer field. I would highly recommend this book for coaches as well as others who would like to learn about competitive soccer.

GR
3 NBs of Julian Drew
Published in Paperback by Graphia (2004-06-07)
Author: James M. Deem
List price: $6.99
New price: $0.40
Used price: $0.01

Average review score:

Excellent book!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2001-11-14
This is a great book!It is written in secret code and is very hard to understand.But it is still an excellent book with a good plot!

Excellent book!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2001-11-14
This is a great book!It is written in secret code and is very hard to understand.But it is still an excellent book with a good plot!

Great!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-06-17
I read this book 2 years ago, and still I can not forget how good it was and how much it helped me understand there are other people out there going through the same things as I do and worse. I am now 14 years old, and couldn't image going through what Julian went through in this book, AFTER the death of my mother.

Although the book was kinda confusing in the beginning, I caught on. Deciphering each and every messaged coated with numbers and codes until I cracked each and everyone one of them and recorgnized them once I spotted them.

Author James M. Deem is without doubt the most amazing author I've ever read books from. Since this book, I look and look for his books and read them and never I repeat NEVER has he let me down. I think that everyone who reads his material should cherish it, and hold on to his thoughts [ they are amazing ] just as I have done, because he's simply...the best. <3 James!

-Ashley

A survival story.
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2002-05-24
Julian is an abused child. His mother is dead, his demented stepmother starves him and locks him in his room and makes him do all the chores in the house, and his father lets her. The story is told in diary form of Julian's three notebooks, or "Nbs" as he calls them. The notebooks are written in code so that if his father and stepmother should discover them, they would have difficulty reading. The reader also has difficulty at first, as it takes some detective work to decipher the code.

The thing I liked most about the book is Julian's strength of spirit. With the support of his English teacher and a classmate, he is able to get a job, run away, and make a new life for himself. When I looked at James Deem's website, it says the story is based on the author's own experiences. And you can tell. It's really good, though the code can be a bit annoying.

No word Can Fully Describe This Book
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2002-07-03
This book seriously defies the mind. When I picked up this book + read the 1st page I knew that it was going 2 B like no book that I have ever read. I had some knowledge of pager code before hand so it was not as difficult for me as it would B for someone who hadn't. I was intrigued w/ 16 y.o Julian who's life + everything in it couldn't be described as anything but [the underworld]. This book kept me turning page after page determined to find if he gets away 4rm his abusive parents or ever meets this "U" th@ he obsesses himself over.
This book is a puzzle and unraveling it is only half the fun. I recommend this book 2 everyone. I thought it was a great story + if u take the time 2 sit down + read it, I'm sure you will think the same thing 2.

GR
Archer's Goon
Published in School & Library Binding by Greenwillow (1984-04)
Author: Diana Wynne Jones
List price: $16.00
New price: $4.99
Used price: $1.58
Collectible price: $55.00

Average review score:

Full of non-stop action and wickedly funny
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-06-28
He is large, ugly and not leaving their kitchen. He is a Wizard's Enforcer. He is Archer's Goon. But what is he doing in the Sykes' kitchen, claiming to be sent by Archer and demanding the "two thousand" promised by Howard's dad, Quentin, who had better come up with the payment--and quickly?

At first Howard is relieved to find the two thousand is only words, and that his writer father has already sent them. But he sent them to Mountjoy, the man with whom he usually deals. What does a man Quentin has never heard of want with them?

Howard is determined to find out, and before he knows it he is drawn into a bizarre plot that threatens not only his own family but the whole world.

Wickedly witty and full of Diana Wynne Jones's usual non-stop action and amazing plot twists (though the plot is not as convoluted as in many of her later books) Archer's Goon is a great read for both young and not-so-young.

(BTW, I find it extremely irritating that the BBC turned Archer's Goon into a TV serial but Television New Zealand never bothered to buy it. While it's probably available on DVD, DVDs from the BBC are horrendously and inexcusably expensive.)

best example
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-08-05
This is my favorite of all her books that I've read (that being most of them). It's absolutely excellent, and the best example of her juxtapositions of mundane and esoteric reality there is. This trick of hers is something other authors try in vain to do - a very difficult trick indeed!

Out to take over the world - if they can leave town
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-06-01
"A Goon is a being who melts into the foreground and sticks there."
"All power corrupts, but we need electricity."
"It pays to increase your word power."
- from the author's note

Although Jones seems to be classified as a "children's" author, I've found her a very fine fantasy writer with a sly sense of humor ever since I took amazon.com's advice and first read HOWL'S MOVING CASTLE. While ARCHER'S GOON (a stand-alone work rather than a volume in any of Jones' series) has a young protagonist, but like Jones' other work can be enjoyed by any fantasy reader, since she doesn't talk down to her audience.

On the morning the story opens, Howard Sykes faces a typical day of school, avoiding violin practice, and the usual clashes with his little sister (nicknamed 'Awful', with a voice like an ambulance siren). Just an ordinary day in an ordinary little town, right?

Then the title character, a huge thug promptly nicknamed 'the Goon', shows up.

"What's Dad done?"
"Told her. Sykes got behind with his payment. Archer wants his two thousand. Here to collect it."
"Who *is* Archer?"
"Archer farms this part of town. Your dad pays, Archer doesn't make trouble."

In exchange for being let off his taxes - and maybe other things - Howard's father has been sending 2000 words in an envelope to City Hall every month for years. Sykes tries to laugh this off, saying it's a private joke he used to break his writer's block years ago - but now one sibling after another of the seven siblings running the town wants to get hold of the last batch of words and figure out what Archer's been up to all this time. Despite being adults, the siblings don't get on any better than Howard and Awful do; they've just got a truce by which they've divvied up the city. (One sister runs law enforcement while her twin handles crime, for example; Archer runs city power, Hathaway transportation. The brother who got last choice got waste management.) We eventually meet each sibling in turn; in some cases, the main characters must work out where that particular sibling's HQ must be, given their discipline.

The siblings settled into town about a decade before the story opens, planning to use it as a base for taking over the world - but they can't even get along with each other except for staying out of each other's way, and some seem to have changed their minds about running the world. But at least one appears to be interfering with all the others - all of them seem magically constrained to stay within the city limits, although they all deny knowing who did it, how, or why. The siblings have different personalities, and one or two really *are* efficient enough at organization to run the world if they can get free of the town.

Sitting down and asking myself why I like this book so much, I think it's basically the same reason I like some of GK Chesterton's grand conspiracy stories: on the surface we have an ordinary, apparently completely mundane and boring setting - but underneath that surface, even the most mundane activity may cover the activities of some agent of a colorful conspiracy. For instance, Hathaway doesn't get out much, which explains the town's disorganized road construction programs and why potholes don't get fixed properly. Archer has his secret lair in a bank vault and likes gadgets. The brother who runs entertainment travels with an entourage of disco dancers and the local cathedral choir when he wants to foil eavesdroppers.

The Goon himself *looks* very threatening, and refuses to leave without Archer's overdue batch of words, but he's easily bullied about little things like where he puts his feet, and can almost be overlooked like a large pet or easygoing protector - a dangerous assumption to make, perhaps.

Hare today, goon tomorrow
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2004-06-23
I'm not gonna lie to you. This book is about a Goon belonging to Archer. To be exact, it is about the repercussions of living with a Goon for an extended amount of time. I've slowly been devouring the collected works of Diana Wynne Jones and so far I haven't been disappointed by a single one of her titles. Each book is even odder and more bizarre than the last, often causing the reader to clasp his or her head from time to time and shout, "How does she think this stuff up?". "Arthur's Goon" is no exception to this rule. A brilliantly warped view of absolute power corrupting absolutely and the power plays that go on between siblings (no matter what their age), this book deserves to be remembered as one of the best children's novels out there today.

Walter comes home one day to discover a Goon sitting in his family's kitchen. Your typical hired heavy, the Goon has been sent by the mysterious Archer to collect from Walter's dad about 2000 words. It seems that for the last 13 years Walter's father (Howard) has been writing 2000 words a month and sending them off to a mysterious somebody. Now the words have become misplaced and the Goon has been sent to collect. As Howard steadfastly refuses to type any more, things start to go a little crazy. It isn't long before Walter and his family come to realize that their town is run by seven power mad sibling wizards. These wizards have been trapped in the town and each one runs a different part of it. For example, Dillian farms (that means runs) the police force while Shine farms crime. Now it's up to Walter to solve the mystery of the seven mysterious beings and to figure out who exactly is behind their entrapment within the town.

Author Jones is equally a master at engaging peculiar characters as she is creating complex multi-layered plots. You grow to love the Goon as he grows horribly lovesick for a young college student staying with Walter and his family. And who wouldn't identify with Walter when he has to deal with his appropriately nicknamed little sister Awful. I would venture to guess that she's the worst little sister character I have ever encountered in a kid's book, and that's saying a lot. Then there's the mystery to contend with. As Walter meets more and more of the seven the reader slowly is given clues to understand who's behind it all. Not since Raskin's, "The Westing Game" did I have this much fun with a mysterious kid's book. And to be honest, I never guessed the ending until I was told. The surprise twist this book carries is a doozy. If you figure out who's behind it all before they tell you then you're probably the kind of person who downs Agatha Christie novels like pop tarts.

Unfortunately, I have a bone to pick with this book. Sad to say, either I wasn't bright enough for some of the loose ends here or they were just too darn loose. The ending of this story is never fully explained and (to be frank) I don't believe we ever do find out EXACTLY how the seven brothers and sisters were trapped in the town at all. Some of these points are glossed over so beautifully that it takes a full three hours after putting the book down to realize what it is that you have missed. Now I'm 26 years of age and if I can't understand parts of this tale it's probably a fair guess that your average 10 year-old reader with have similar problems.

Still, that's my only quarrel. There's so much to love here that I feel a little dour making these kinds of comments. I mean, how can you dislike a book where a character like Awful is constantly asking the seven wizards where they come in order of birth so that she can better understand the pecking order in the family? It's a delightful tale about family fights and what it is that exactly makes up a family at all. And then of course there's the goon. Last of all I display for you the fabulous goon that starts this book rolling and, quite possibly, ends it. Here's to goons, ladies and gentlemen! May they grace the pages of more and more children's books in the future.

Totally fun (and not outta print anymore!)
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2004-02-06
This book was way fun to read, full of humor, magic and character. Amazing to think that when Diana Wynne Jones wrote this even SHE didn't know what was going to happen.

Howard Sykes comes home one day to find a goon- a huge dirty guy, anyway- sitting in his kitchen, saying that he comes from Archer, and refusing to move until he gets the 2000 words Howard's father owes him.

But the words got misplaced by Fifi, a college student who stays at the Sykes's house. So Fifi, Howard and Howard's little sister, Awful (who can live up to her name at times) go to find it.

Well, one thing leads to another and they soon find out that the whole town is run by 7 wizards (who are all related).

For me to give you a play by play here would take too long, but if you're thinking of reading this or just looking for a great book to read, I HIGHLY recommend this.

GR
Babylon Boyz
Published in Turtleback by Demco Media (1999-04)
Author: Jess Mowry
List price:

Average review score:

Rocks!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-16
Babylon Boyz by Jess Mowry kept me up all night reading to see what happened next. This is a story about Dante, Pook and Wyatt, three brothers who live in Oakland, Cali. Dante has a heart problem caused by his mom's addiction to crack before he was born. Pook is gay. And Wyatt is a cool fat dude. Babylon Boyz is a story about life in the hood and thuggers and drugs, but it's really a story about friendship and that it's more important to stay true to your friends than the game. Friends care about you, the game doesn't. If you like this book you should also like Voodu Dawgz, Skeleton Key, and Way Past Cool by Jess Mowry.

Babylon Boyz
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2001-10-31
Babylon Boyz, by Jess Mowry, is a thrilling novel about inner city life. It's based around the lives of three youg teens. Starting out with the words "Hey Homo," it captured my attention right away. Pook is the homosexual who is out of the closet. Wyatt is very overweight and Dante is a Rastifarian with a serious heart condition. These boys are best friends who want more than anything to get out of Babylon, their dangerous ghetto. Throughout the story they encounter many problems including: dealing drugs, fights, gang problems, tagging bathrooms and running from Air Touch. (A big gangster/bully)
A quote that particularly stuck in my mind was: "We all just little black ants in Babylon, waitin' to get stepped on and too stupid to see it." It's kind of true because these boys know that they will never be good enough with society looking down on them all the time.
I guess the whole reason I liked the book was, even though the characters may come off rough edged or as black trouble makers they are not. If other people took the time, they would find a bunch of passionate young men.
I would recommend this book to all mature audiances because the content may not be appropiate for children.

The Oakland Ghetto-DON'T MISS THIS!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2005-02-01
Since childhood, they have been best of friends, three troubled boys, Pook, Wyatt, and Dante. They want nothing more than to escape their ghetto, crime-filled neighborhood, where everyone around them seems like "little black ants...waitin' to get stepped on an' too stupid to see it." They have no way of reaching their dreams-until they discover two packets of cocaine worth thousands of dollars.

What would you do? Would you sell drugs at your school, deteriorating your community and getting the money YOU desperately need for medical school, a heart operation for your dying friend, and most importantly, a one-way ticket from behind the bars of your own neighborhood?

That's exactly what these three boys had to decide when Pook and Dante witnessed Air Touch, a rich and popular drug dealer, throwing a suitcase full of what they thought was money, out of his car window during a police chase. Later, they bring the suitcase home realizing they had brought home the same terrifying evidence that had killed Dante's own mother.

And everyone knows, "It only gets worse before it gets better." Not only was this incident a problem, dilemmas rained in regarding Pook's homosexuality, the homelessness of a younger boy the trio makes friends with, and Wyatt's obesity. And the new homeless "boy" has a great surprise for us all!

I would recommend this book to all mature readers age twelve and up, regardless of gender. Also, just because a tree died to make this book, doesn't mean you'll die reading it. Actually it's the complete opposite. Reading this book gave me a much closer view into our own great neighboring cities about how life really is for some kids like you and me. And not only does Mowry do a spectacular job of revealing the secrets of Oakland, California, she verbally indicates the setting of lower class residents all over the United States. If you're also in to fiction, this book is definitely calling your name! This book deserves to be put in every hotel side drawer in America!


Monique K.
Des Plaines, Ilinois

Life ain't always like you want to live it.
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2004-05-20
(Submitted by Justine Spencer)

Life ain't always like some of you may live it the easy way- sometimes life sucks, and sometimes it ain't fun at all. And that's the way it is for these three homies, the Babylon Boyz.

Take Pook, tall, gorgeous, and gay. Always fighting for who he is, always wanting to get outta Babylon and be a doctor.

Take Dante, who's never had a chance. His mom was heavy into crack when she was pregnant with him, and died when he was born-born with a bad heart. If he's really good, no smoke, no alcohol, no excitement of any kind, he might live till he's 30.

Take Wyatt, over 300 pounds of flab with a 300 pound attitude to back it up. Don't mess with him-you don't want to know how he sneaks his gun into school every day.

For these brothers, life is not fun. Life is not easy. Everyday they fight the gangstas in the street and the jocks at school who hate gay boys, fat guys, and guys with bad hearts and a worse attitude.

These are the good guys, Pook, Wyatt, and Dante, but what will happen when they witness a crack dealer's arrest, and end up with his gun and the briefcase he threw out of the car just before the cops caught up with him? It could be money-money for a new heart, a medical education, a new start. It could be crack, crack that they could sell for that money. But either way, that briefcase is guaranteed to be danger. What will they do with it?

To be one with the Babylon Boyz
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2003-09-24
Jess Morwy wrote the awesome book, Babylon Boys about friends sticking together to stand strong in Babylon. The Babylon boys stick through rough times making good or bad choices to stick with one another. The book is written in third person narrative explaining what kind of life people in Babylon live. (Troubles you face in Babylon are watching for cops, protection to family, drugs, and even school problems as well). Babylon relates to real life in Chicago's South side and also New York's crime and hatred. Most cities face problems with drugs, cops, and wrong decision just like this book and more problems. There are lots of things to like about this book, such as when they make fun of one another in a profanity kind of way and get in fights with older people because they think they are not the same because they of a bad heart, are fat, or even gay. This book is an adventure for thrill seekers, or even a book to imagine and learn what it would feel like to live with troubles everyday and only way out is a illegal way out would you take it.

GR
Betrayed
Published in Kindle Edition by Simon Pulse (2004-01-07)
Author: Francine Pascal
List price: $5.99
New price: $4.79

Average review score:

The Best Book in the Series
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-06-23
Hands down this was my favorite book out of the entire series. There was action between all of the characters. Can Tom and Natasha get out of the Caymans alive? Will the injection end Heather's life? Will Gaia finally give into her urges to be with Ed? Will Tatiana go crazy without her mother? There's even action with Loki and his goons. If you got sucked into this series like I did... you must buy this book. I guess the main question in this book is this: Can Gaia actually have a normal life?

Shining Star of a book in this wonderful series!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-03-26
I always thought the first six books in the series were the I'd risk my life to save from a raging fire type books. None of the following grabbed me quite like those six fast paced, wonderful books had.
Then #23 and #24 arrived at my door.
They are wonderful! Things are definetly getting more exciting in Gaia's world. #24 is a shining star of a book, and high above #13,14,ect (which I liked but did not love). Often the books would blend together because the conflict was drawn out to0 long and there was imo, no stand out story line. Not so in #24.
Heather has recovered from her brush with death after getting tangled up with a psychotic hottie who poisoned her with a drug that would make her fearless but also a loopy fruit loop. The damage has been done though and Heather now lives in a world of darkness. The change of her in this book is amazing. She went from self-centered prima donna to mother teresa type character who's found some amount of peace. That's the one word I would use to describe this book-peace. Each of the characters finds an amount of peace in this book. The struggles are over (for now). Gaia also has found a peacefullness now that Loki is no longer tearing her life apart like a human bulldozer and she and Ed relish the break from chaos and confusion by spending time with eachother.
But how long will this serenity last?
Hello! This is Gaia's world so we know it ain't going to last long!

YESSSSSS!!!!!!!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-02-17
Oh how the excitement bubbles from me.

Heather is now blind.

Josh is dead.

Things are looking up for Gaia and Ed because she has finally told him the truth.

And Loki finally learns the truth about his relationship to Gaia.

This book was excellent. And the ending was a huge surprise! Hopefully though we will not end up being subjected to the same droning and wallowing from the last few books. Can't wait for Lost(Fearless #25)

Wordless
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-01-20
This book was, oh it was just so, you can't imagine how... (Taking a second to regain composure.) This book left me utterly wordless. I mean it was just so good. Thats all I can think of right now. It left such a profound after taste that right after I finished it I had dreams about it all night. In this book, Gaia goes through the most world rocking adventure than any other in her past. She finds answers to some myeteries that have been taunting her. To make it more better, there is actually some her and Ed time in this book. Some parts in this book will leave you astonished, others will make you yelp for joy. Caution, while reading the end of this book, I advice you to not sit on anything that is more than 1 ft off the ground. Because what happens will surely just make you fall off and dance to the floor. Read this book, you will eat it right up!

Really great book!!!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2003-01-02
This book was great. I couldn't wait to read it because of what happened at the end of #23. You'll love this book. Heather comes out fine and I really hope Tom is okay. What's with the ending. I really want to read #25. I can't wait! If you want to know if this book is worth your time it is!!!

GR
Black & White
Published in Paperback by Simon & Schuster Children's Publishing (2007-01-09)
Author: Malorie Blackman
List price: $7.99
New price: $3.49
Used price: $0.23

Average review score:

magnificent read
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-11-29
If your ever i the mood for a thriller/ gripping romance pick up this book.It was basically the human version of twilight. Sephy has this unconditional love for Callum and she doesn't even give up that love when Callum along with the Liberetion Malitia take her hostage. I also loved the fact that she wouldn't give in and have an abortion. Even though her father told her too and she would be in alot of trouble with alot of people for her choices. This is a down to earth novel that shows what could really have happened to our world if the roles were switched and shows that us caucasins may take our luxuries like the color of our band-aids for granted. I would recomind this book to any one. It should be read by everysingle person when they get old enough to understand it.

1 best books i've ever read!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-09-16
oh my i love this book, i didn't want it to end!
this is a very deep and meaning ful book, with alot of dramas and deaths. it really opened my eyes, and the story line of the book stayed with me for weeks after reading it.
however doesn't like this book either have a bad taste in books or cant read!

Good premise but ultimately disappointing
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2009-01-21
This book annoyed me very much. At first I enjoyed the characters and the great gimmick that is the setting but as it progressed it revealed too many plot deficiencies to be comfortable with. It is simply not executed to perfection, which I personally think is a great disappointment. It had all the potential of a classic but will end up only a good youth book. A crying shame.

The plot deficiencies:
1.An absolute hinge of the plot is Callum's father and brother getting arrested. Yet this arrest is brought about so clumsily as to render it completely unbelievable.Why the charade with the hospital? If they had fingerprints on their ID cards then the fingerprints would have already been in the government database. Also, believing any modern terrorist to be so clumsy with their fingerprints is simply not realistic.

2.Another hinge is Callum's sister getting beat up. In light of the McGregor later propensity for vengeance I find them doing nothing about it for three years highly unbelievable.

3.Callum's mother is the focal point of their family for the first half of the book but later disappears without mention. Sloppy.

There are other things that bothered me but nothing as major. On the positive side, the book has great pace and enjoyable if aggravating characters.
It is an OK book and will help young people to come to terms with racism from outside the box. Sadly, it missed out on greatness.

More Like 4738914631204321 Stars
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-11
I thought this book was amazing, one of the best I've read. I'm a kid, fourteen, so it's not what I'd normally read, and I admit that I chose it only because I didn't understand completely what it was about and wanted to find out more....It's so sad and scary that this was so real in our history, even now. The book does an excellent job to capture Callum's simultaneous hate and love of Sephy, love for her and hate for what she was brought up to be, Sephy's ignorance in knowing just how bad things were, and her hunger to please Callum and help, and both character's emotions in general. This book made everything real, and I appreciate it knocking more sense into me.

Courtesy of Teens Read Too
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-12-30
In NAUGHTS & CROSSES, the author creates a very believable alternate world that is almost like our own--but the main difference is a major one. Everything you think you know about race relations and prejudice holds true, but is switched. The ruling class to which Sephy Hadley's family belongs are the black Crosses, named for their supposed closeness to God. The other, the white Naughts, like Callum and his family, are second-class citizens. In this world, it's unacceptable for a Naught and a Cross to be real friends, and unthinkable for them to fall in love. Callum and Sephy are breaking all the rules of the society they live in.

The two have known each other from a very young age, when Callum's mother worked in the Hadley household. Even after she loses her job, though, Sephy and Callum remain secretly close. They meet in secrecy, forced to tell lies and make up excuses, but they never stop seeing each other, no matter how difficult it is. Soon, though, they'll see each other every day--but that's not as good as it sounds. A new law has been passed, and a limited number of Naughts will now be allowed to attend Cross schools. Callum has been accepted into Sephy's school, and Sephy's excited to see her best friend more often. Callum, however, knows that letting their friendship be public could prove very dangerous for both of them. Things continue to get worse when Sephy and her mother are nearly caught in a terrorist bombing. Sephy's life is saved when Callum pulls her out of the building just in time, but nobody's fooled--that's no coincidence. Suspicion falls on Callum's family.

Callum's father is the prime suspect in planting the bomb, supposedly on the orders of a radical Naught terrorist group, the Liberation Militia, or L.M. They're devoted to their goals of rights for Naughts, and they'll go to any length to achieve them. This world even has a parallel to Martin Luther King, Jr.; Alex Luther is an activist whose goal is to achieve equality peacefully. Callum's mother is a supporter of his, but Callum's father and brother don't believe that Alex Luther's way of doing things will actually get anything done. The events that unfold after the bombing threaten not only Sephy and Callum's relationship, but their very lives and the lives of those around them.

NAUGHTS & CROSSES is a fantastic story, and one that will keep your mind occupied long past the final pages. The world created in Malorie Blackman's novel is one that is much like our own, and inspires a lot of "what if?" questions. What if that was our world? It's not so far off to imagine. How would our lives be different? They almost certainly would be. You wouldn't be where you are now. You wouldn't be who you are now; everything would be remarkably different, but still so much the same.

Malorie Blackman's writing does plenty to draw you in and keep your attention with the story, not bothering with the excessive and often boring detail used by some authors. It's definitely a page-turner! Sephy and Callum are very well-developed main characters, and the secondary characters are quite believable, as well. The story is told in alternating chapters narrated by Sephy and Callum, which really adds a lot to it. Sephy and Callum are remarkable people, showing the strength that love can have, the bridges it can cross, and the determination to see past what's on the outside. That last quality is one that is, sadly, not as common in our world (or Sephy's and Callum's) as it should be. Sephy and Callum also show how willing children are to love, regardless of the prejudices of their world, before their minds are poisoned by their elders. Sephy and Callum became friends at a young age and, remarkably, they stayed that way (and became more), despite the prejudices of their society. NAUGHTS & CROSSES is a remarkable book, one that you won't want to put down once you've started reading.

Reviewed by: Jocelyn Pearce

GR
Black Stallion and Satan
Published in School & Library Binding by San Val (2003-07)
Author: Walter Farley
List price: $16.00
New price: $16.00
Used price: $23.99
Collectible price: $24.00

Average review score:

Great book for young people.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-07-31
Walter Farley is a fantastic author about horses. He knows his stuff.

Black Stallion and Satan
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-21
This book is extrodinary.While you're reading this book El Dorado gets swamp fever.The other horses are checked for swamp fever.There's a wildfire and Alec tries to save the horses.Any girl that loves horses I recommend this book.

Black Stallion and Satan
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-21
This book is extrodinary.While you're reading this book El Dorado gets swamp fever.The other horses are checked for swamp fever.There's a wildfire and Alec tries to save the horses.Any girl that loves horses I recommend this book.

They just keep getting better!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-06
Abu Ishak died! Alec inherits the Black! Now he has both the Black and Satan, his son!
The two horses are to run in the same race, the Black ridden by Alec and Satan ridden by another jockey Alec trusts. But when one of the horses at the race comes down with a deadly disease and must be put down, all the horses are quarantined will the race even go on?
At the end of the book it's not just a race for fun but more for survival.
AMAZING BOOK!

The Black Stallion and Satan
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-12-22
The Black Stallion and Satan is a great book by Walter Farley. It is the 3rd book in the Black Stallion series. This 178 page book was just as amazing as all the other Black Stallion books, so if you enjoyed the other book I suggest you read this one as well.

Right from the begining this book is exciting and suspensfull, you wont want to put it down. Alex gets a letter from Abu's daughter, telling him that her father has died, when he was thrown from the black. In his will Abu has left the Black to Alec. Abu has entered the black in a race. So Alec decided to let the Black run in that last race before his retirment, instead the Black and Satan end up in a race for there lives!

This is a great book that you will love just as much as the other Black Stallion books, but if you haven't read the other books I suggest that you read them before this one. This book would be good for anyone in there teens to adult.


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