Hard-currency


Related Subjects: Hard-capital-rationing
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Book reviews for "Hard-currency" sorted by average review score:

Hard Times Tokens 1832-1844
Published in Paperback by Krause Publications (September, 1996)
Authors: Russ Rulau, Russell Rulau, and Q. David Bowers
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Comprehensive guide for all but one known Hard Times Tokens.
If you are a Hard Times Token enthusiast or simply wish to find more about your own token like me, this is the Bible. It is an easy to read guide with quality photos of coins that are roughly life size. Throughout the book one can find references to many experts in the field of Hard Times Tokens. However, I can find no suggestions in the book as to where those of us go from here when we find that our own Hard Time Token is not included. Perhaps I can find some of the experts through the internet?


Hard Currency
Published in Audio Cassette by Blackstone Audiobooks (December, 1995)
Authors: Stuart M. Kaminsky and Barrett Whitener
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Cuban Crime and Russian Pursuit
Assigned to investigate a murder in Havana, Cuba by a Russian citizen working with the Cuban government, Moscow Police Inspector Porfiry Rostnikov journeys to the island capital with junior detective Elena Timofeyeva. Rostnikov's preliminary investigation reveals that there were others who wanted the murdered woman dead. Following the thin leads that he has, believing that someone has framed Igor Shememkov in an effort to discredit his country, Rostnikov steps into the dangerous underbelly of the city and comes face to face with a religious group that practices African Santeria. Meanwhile, back in Moscow, police detectives Emil Karpo and Sasha Tkach pursue a serial killer who has killed and mutilated over forty victims. Karp and Tkach are up against the lack of manpower and a kill zone that spreads across the city. And in only a short time, the sadistic killer known as Case 341 and as Tahpor marks Karpo for death.

Stuart Kaminsky's HARD CURRENCY is the ninth novel of the Inspector Porfiry Rostnikov series. Other books in the series include DEATH OF A DISSIDENT, BLACK KNIGHT ON RED SQUARE, RED CHAMELEON, THE MAN WHO WALKED LIKE A BEAR, and MURDER ON THE TRANS-SIBERIAN EXPRESS. In additions, Kaminsky also writes the Toby Peters Hollywood private eye series set in the 1940s during Tinseltown's heyday. He also does the Abe Lieberman police detective novels set in Chicago, and has written two novels about Lewis Fonesca, a process server in Sarasota, Florida.

One of Kaminsky's favorite writers appears to be Ed McBain, the author of the 87th Precinct novels set in Isola, New York, which is basically New York City. In the Inspector Porfiry Rostnikov novels, Kaminsky weaves the police procedural novel into the Russian tapestry, bringing the readers into close contact with the Moscow police investigators, their families, and their fears. The cases both sets of detectives undertake are well thought out and expose a lot of culture and beliefs for the reader to think about. Kaminsky's writing is solid and entertaining, mixing bits of history, geography, and culture in the narrative as well as the dialogue while never losing sight of the chase and the mystery. Inspector Porfiry Rostnikov and his crew of inspectors all emerge as human and fallible, with touching insights into their lives.

As well done and well researched as the novel was, the characters and the cases come across a little too thin with not enough meat. Rostnikov and his crew go through the motions of the investigations, but too little seems at stake.

Fans of Ed McBain's 87th Precinct novels will enjoy the stories Kaminsky has written about Rostnikov and the Moscow police department. Also, regular readers of Martin Cruz Smith's Arkady Renko series also set in Russia will enjoy an additional look at that country, the politics that drive it, and the everyday life of those who live there.

good stories, but no tour book of Havana
While some readers disliked that the two plots never intersected, I didn't mind that. Both were excellent, suspenseful crime stories.

What did bother me was the minor errors in the Havana portion. The practitioners of the religion brought to Cuba by Yorubas are called "santeros," not "santerias." "Santeria" is the name of the religion. I was in La Floridita in November 2000, and it didn't resemble the description in the book. It is my understanding that the bar -- basically, a shrine to Ernest Hemingway -- is unchanged from the 1940s. There were some other faulty descriptions. It's as if Kaminsky's never been to Cuba but got muddled descriptions second-hand. It makes me wonder how true to life his Russia is.

Incorporates the crime motifs, but transcends them.
Marvelous tale of Havana and Moscow with Kaminsky's collection of carefully developed and in-depth detectives and fleshed-out other characters. Socialists and most liberals won't like the novel's honest and forthright portrayal of a fetid Havana--some socialist/communist pipedreams and delusion die hard. The plots were interesting and the development of Karpo's character was enjoyable and intriguing. The villain in Moscow was depicted multi-dimensionally--I could feel viscerally and emotionally the psychosis which enslaved him, conflicted him, and evoked sympathy from this reader at least. The description of the "cult" and its members in Havana was awesome. When people are virtual slaves, these kinds of secret societies have to evolve so that the slaves can have something to live for. Kaminsky writes effortlessly and at times beautifully. Also, unlike so many suspense/crime books, I felt as though I was learning more about other people and also examining and questioning myself and my values, affections etc. Highly recommended


Hard currency constraints and East European grain imports (SuDoc A 93.44:AGES 880125)
Published in Unknown Binding by U.S. Dept. of Agriculture, Economic Research Service, Agriculture and Trade Analysis Division (1988)
Author: Nancy Cochrane
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The hard money book : an insider's guide to successful investment in currency, gold, silver, and precious stones
Published in Unknown Binding by Capitalist Reporter Press (1979)
Author: Steven K. Beckner
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The hard money book : fighting inflation through investment in stable currencies, gold, silver, and precious stones
Published in Unknown Binding by Hawthorn Books ()
Author: Steven K. Beckner
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Hard Times Tokens
Published in Paperback by Sanford J Durst (December, 1994)
Author: Lyman H. Low
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Intergirl: A Hard Currency Hooker
Published in Paperback by Bergh Pub Group (July, 1991)
Authors: Vladimir Kunin and Antonina W. Bouis
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Money Hard and Soft on the International Currency Markets
Published in Paperback by John Wiley & Sons (January, 1978)
Author: Brendan Brown
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Soviet Union's Hard-Currency Balance of Payments and Creditworthiness in 1985
Published in Paperback by Rand Corporation (April, 1983)
Author: Gregory Grossman
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The Standard Catalog of Hard Times Tokens 1832-1844: The Most Complete Catalog Ever Assembled of the Coin Substitures, Merchant Counterstamps and Satirical Scrip of the Jacksonian Period
Published in Paperback by Krause Publications (January, 2002)
Authors: Russell Rulau, Q. David Bowers, and Russ Rulau
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Related Subjects: Hard-capital-rationing
More Pages: Hard-currency Page 1 2