" ▶▶▶ June 2010 | Children's Books "

Wednesday, June 30, 2010

Great Price for $15.43

Magic Tree House: Books 33-36: #33 Carnival at Candlelight; #34 Season of the Sandstorms; #35 Night of the New Magicians; #36 Blizzard of the Blue Moon Review



Magic Tree House: Books 33-36: #33 Carnival at Candlelight; #34 Season of the Sandstorms; #35 Night of the New Magicians; #36 Blizzard of the Blue Moon

This group of stories continues from the previous 4 stories, taking Jack and Annie into more mystical and magical settings. They are longer and more complex than the early stories. My 5 year old still "gets it" even tho there are a lot of questions when we finish a story.
They continue to teach about a wide variety of things that are interesting and fun. I highly recommend all the MTH stories.
In these Merlin is directing the kids to accomplish tasks instead of Morgan. I miss Morgan's quiet charm and her sweet interactions with the kids. I hope she returns later in the series.



Magic Tree House: Books 33-36: #33 Carnival at Candlelight; #34 Season of the Sandstorms; #35 Night of the New Magicians; #36 Blizzard of the Blue Moon Feature


  • ISBN13: 9780739362747
  • Condition: NEW
  • Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.



Magic Tree House: Books 33-36: #33 Carnival at Candlelight; #34 Season of the Sandstorms; #35 Night of the New Magicians; #36 Blizzard of the Blue Moon Overview


Carnival at Candlelight
Merlin has asked Jack and Annie to help on another Merlin Mission. This time they head back into history to Venice, Italy, in the 1700s. With the help of some new friends, a research book, and a mysterious rhyme from Merlin, the heroes will save the beautiful city from a flood!

Season of the Sandstorms
Armed only with a research book and a book of magic rhymes, Jack and Annie go back 1,200 years to the Golden Age of Baghdad. Their mission is a mystery until bandits attack a camel caravan and Jack and Annie are given a strange box to protect. What’s in the box? And how will it help the ruler of Baghdad spread wisdom throughout the world?

Night of the New Magicians
A mysterious note from Merlin sends Jack and Annie to Paris, France for the 1889 World’s Fair. Their mission: find four “new magicians” and protect them from an evil sorcerer who plans to kidnap them and steal the secrets of their magic. How will they ever find the magicians in the bustling crowd? And will their own magic be any match for the powers of the evil sorcerer?

Blizzard of the Blue Moon
Merlin has sent Jack and Annie to New York City to rescue a beautiful magical creature–the unicorn. Where will they find a unicorn in a big city? And what about the blizzard that’s burying New York in snow? Only once in a blue moon do all the right elements come together to make magic in such a special way.


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Customer Reviews





Attentive - E. Frazier - Bethesda, MD
My son just loved this book. I started reading him just one chapter and he before I knew it we had finished the book the same night we got it. We Love Magic Tree House books!



Magic Tree House: Books 33-36 CD - Suzanne - Seal Beach, Ca
Purchased for my 8-year-old grandson, upon request. He absolutely loves it. Best of the Tree House series so far. He likes to listen to these stories as he is going to sleep.



Magic Treehouse lives again - J. Pinney - Akron, Ohio
This edition of TMTH is as good as the others. It contains 4 complete books read by the author, Mary Pope Osborn, and is very intriguing to my 4 1/2 year old daughter. We listen to them in the car whenever we are driving anywhere. They are easy enough for her to comprehend and we have listened to all of them thus far. It also keeps her quiet while we are driving. :)

*** Product Information and Prices Stored: Jun 30, 2010 18:05:05

Tuesday, June 29, 2010

Check Out One Crazy Summer for $5.23

One Crazy Summer Review



Reviewed by Madeline McElroy (age 9) for Reader Views (05/10)

This is a story about three young girls that will make you laugh and cry. Their names are Delphine, Vonetta, and Fern. They live in Brooklyn, New York. Delphine is the oldest followed by Vonetta and then Fern. After Fern was about a year old, their mom Cecile ran away from them and moved to California.

One day their dad decides they need to meet the mother who left them many years before. The three girls travel to Oakland, California to stay with her for four weeks. When they finally get there, they all find out that there mother is really mean and nasty. She doesn't cook them meals or do their laundry, and doesn't take care of them. Every night Delphine takes her sisters with her to get Chinese food; they ate this every night for dinner for the first three weeks.

Cecile sends the sisters to a Black Panther summer camp, which was like nothing they ever knew before! They come to discover that their mother is somehow involved with the Black Panthers. The girls didn't like going to the camp, but after weeks of learning about "their rights" they started to like the idea of standing up for themselves. One of the funniest parts of the story was when the kids from the summer camp went around town trying to get the shop owners to put up fliers for the freedom fighter rally. Fern, the youngest sister when into the Chinese restaurant where they ate every night to ask the owner of Ming's if she would put one in her window. The woman walked up and Fern said, "Mean Lady Ming, would you please help us and put up our flier?" The girls had always called her Mean Lady Ming behind her back! They didn't really think she was mean anymore, but for some reason the name stuck.

I enjoyed this book because I could really imagine the story and all of scenes seem to be played out in my head like a movie. When y'all read the ending you will cry just like I did because it was such a happy moment. Everyone who would like to read this book needs to be ready for the surprises in it.

Parent: What a fantastic book! I read "One Crazy Summer" with both of my daughters and thoroughly enjoyed it as an adult. We are a homeschooling family and this story gave me so many opportunities to revisit the Civil Rights Movement with them. I loved the history lessons that were sprinkled throughout the chapters. What an eye-opener for my girls to read about a life with so much contrast from their own. A mother who doesn't cook or hug and kiss you good-night? We had so many discussions after each chapter. Honestly, I wanted to read the whole book on day one!



One Crazy Summer Feature


  • ISBN13: 9780060760885
  • Condition: NEW
  • Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.




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An excellent book --- brave, bold, funny, sad and endlessly interesting - Kidsreads.com - New York, NY
Eleven-year-old Delphine and her two sisters, Vonetta and Fern, live with their father and Big Ma, their guiding light grandmother, in Brooklyn. Their birth mother, Cecile, is in Oakland, California, doing her own thing during the summer of 1968. However, against her wishes, Delphine must spend her summer vacation with Cecile. She hopes she can put together some of the mysteries of her childhood and her mother's life, but is not excited about leaving home and having to continue to take care of her younger sisters in a strange place.

Cecile is a revolutionary, and having kids isn't really her main focus. She isn't a completely absent mom, but neither is she a particularly curious or protective one. She works with the Black Panthers, the revolutionary black movement that fostered controversy throughout the late '60s and early '70s. Like their Greenwich Village equivalents, these activists saw their activities as upstanding and necessary as a response to the craziness of the world at the time. It's a fascinating period to set a coming-of-age story against, and Rita Williams-Garcia does it without making the story too dark or frightening.

ONE CRAZY SUMMER captures both the unpredictable energy of the time and sets Delphine and her sisters right down in the midst of the some of the most politically charged and psychedelic experiences that closed out a decade of extreme change in the United States. When Cecile ends up getting arrested, the girls, especially Delphine, learn a valuable lesson about political intent and the democratic system. Delphine is a thoughtful, sweet 11-year-old, so the author has the opportunity to see this remarkable cultural period through new but attentive eyes, which makes the book a genuine page turner as well.

Family is such an average topic for books written for this audience, but Williams-Garcia finds new and interesting ways to discover the ins and outs of "family" in various incarnations. The Panthers are a family, too, and Cecile finds them easier to deal with than the family she created biologically. But as time goes on, her maternal instincts start to make an appearance, and she and her girls find common and uncontroversial ground they can tread together towards a new future where their own family shares Cecile's favors with her political family.

ONE CRAZY SUMMER is an excellent book --- brave, bold, funny, sad and endlessly interesting --- and will start many worthwhile discussions with your favorite young reader.



One Crazy Summer - Genie E. Enders - Evergreen, CO
When eleven-year-old Dephine and her younger sisters, Vonetta and Fern, are sent from their home in Brooklyn to spend the summer in Oakland, CA, with the mother that completely abandoned them years earlier, I was very skeptical about this vacation and fearful for the girls. And when I met their "mother", Cecile, my fears were realized in spades.Cecile was the coldest, most indifferent "mom" I have ever met, in fiction or otherwise. Why did their nurturing dad and grandma send these three innocents to a place that was hostile and downright dangerous?
They were made to fend (and pay!) for their own food, sent off (they had to find it themselves that first day!) to a Black Panther summer camp for kids every week day, so that Cecile, the poet, can "create". And, by the way, why does she refuse to call her youngest (the one she abandoned as an infant) by her name? Fern. It's always "Little Girl"?
Of the three sisters, Daphine, the oldest, considers herself the plain one. Nothing fancy. Maybe so. But she's the real "mother" in the story. Never mind that her sisters are showier and more dramatic. And she's the girl that the heartthrob of the Black Panther camp, eleven-year-old Hirohito (he's half Japanese, half black) falls for.
Is there a redemption story about Ceceile? A reason for her being the way she is? And why does (the last straw of hurtfulness) refuse to call her youngest by her name! And is she really a poet?
I found out the answers by reading this intriguing story. Now it's your turn.



GreenBeanTeenQueen Reviews-www.greenbeanteenqueen.com - GreenBeanTeenQueen - MO
I really fell hard for this book-I reviewed it for TeensReadToo.com and it recieve a Gold Star award from me-I loved it that much. It's hard to express how wonderful this book is and how much I adored it. I was pretty sure I would enjoy since I had been hearing a positive buzz around this book. But I was completely unexpected for how much this book would pull me in and not let go-I couldn't put it down.

This is a quiet book. It's not an action filled book, and there wasn't any suspense that made me keep turning pages. It was just the beautifully written story of three sisters discovering their mother and themselves. There was just something about it that really resonated with me as a reader and I had to keep reading this one-I couldn't stop.

The writing is superb-this is a middle grade novel, but the author never writes down to her audience and the characters are beautifully realistic and the dynamics between the sisters is spot-on. I loved Delphine-I think she's one of my new favorite characters in children's lit. In many ways she is wise beyond her years, being the oldest sister and having to care for her younger sisters and mediating their quarrels. But she's also a child herself and she lets herself finally be a child during this summer. The reader gets to know Delphine so much during the course of the book, that the reader ends up growing with her and Ms. Williams-Garcia pulls it off beautifully.

I think what I loved most, that even though this is a middle-grade tween book, there are so many layers that readers of all ages could read it get something different. I was honestly amazed at how much I fell into this book and how much I loved it.

One Crazy Summer has five starred reviews and I think it's extremely deserving. I really could keep gushing about this book, but instead you should get yourself a copy. This one is on my Newbery Award shortlist (along with The Night Fairy) Highly recommended for tweens and up.






*** Product Information and Prices Stored: Jun 29, 2010 20:20:06

Check Out Coming Of Age In Mississippi (Turtleback School & Library Binding Edition) for $17.20

Coming Of Age In Mississippi (Turtleback School & Library Binding Edition) Review



What an amazing book!! To know this book was bravely published in 1968, when the Civil Rights issues were still a hot topic, is telling of how Anne (Essie Mae) Moody unabashadly tells the stories of her life in Mississippi. She didn't wait for controversies and prejudice to cool down. She let her voice be known at a time when immediate influence was necessary.

She draws readers into this autobiography that reads more like a novel than a memoir, with tales of herself, a little girl exchanging work for milk for her family. She then shares her teenage years, as a beautiful girl struggling though work, school and family upheaval. Then as a young adult putting her life and that of her family at risk fighting for Civil Rights.

This is a touching story of leadership, accountability, struggle and victory.

Having missed this historical generationmyself by being born in the 70s, it is incredibly angering to know that there was such a distinction made between races. Even worse,that it was a LEGAL distinction.

This book was really incredible. I can see why it continues to be ppular more than 40 years after it's original publication.




Coming Of Age In Mississippi (Turtleback School & Library Binding Edition) Overview


FOR USE IN SCHOOLS AND LIBRARIES ONLY. A widely hailed social commentary, this contemporary classic is the autobiography of a young black girl growing up in the Deep South.


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There are very few reading experiences like Anne Moody's autobiography... - Nathan Schmathan - Charlotte, N.C.
This book will really suck you in. It's hard for people who aren't from the South to understand the family dynamics, the method of speak, the rural center of it all, etc. But the time period covered while (possibly) somewhat far-removed from today's standards of living is what drives the story forward. The conditions described are both deplorable an' fascinating, an' anyone who thinks slavery ended in 1865 would be greatly challenged by the childhood stories recounted by Anne Moody. One'a the most vivid to me being her description of the chicken factory she worked at in New Orleans. There's no traditional arc here either an' no false hope, possibly because it was published in 1968 at the height of social unrest, but I wouldn't call it a downer either. Its as straightforward as it gets; tumultuous, surreal at times, filled with disillusion an' ultimate uncertainty. But, you will be better for having explored it. I've passed it on to several friends and (if I ever get it back) I intend to read it again.



Highly Recommended - R. Gull -
This book is so clearly written and so interesting that I wanted to read on and on. Every so often I would stop and think that the storyline is so good and then I would remember that it's a true story which would further amaze me. I would forget that I am actually reading it for history class. We've always heard of the achievements of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. but this gives us the story of one female activist who was in action during that time. We learn in more detail about how some of the less mentioned people in history conducted protests and sit ins and strived towards uniting African Americans to gain equality. The life story of Anne Moody is sure to keep you interested.



amazing account of history - Kathy L. Murphy - rochester ny
If you want to understand truly the insanity of the prejudice in the south, this book is the truth. Written from a woman who lived it and fought for her freedom and that of her race. It is difficult to read at times. I had to put it down in disgust at the hatred and cruelty that white men have shown to Blacks in our country. It is so well written and should be used as a historical novel in English classes in our schools. Moody had so much courage at such a young age. Pass this one on. Use it in book clubs. Excellent.



Great Book. American History - Jane Tompkins -
Great Book. I had to read it for my History Class, my mom later read it and loved it.

This is American History, everyone should read it.

*** Product Information and Prices Stored: Jun 29, 2010 13:20:06

Monday, June 28, 2010

Great Price for $0.95

The Knights of the Kitchen Table #1 (Time Warp Trio) Review



When my son was in elementary school, he did not like reading, but this book (and the other two in the series) totally captured his attention. They're funny, imaginative, and just the right level of difficulty for a child who's not a great reader. He's in his 20's now, but the mention of these books still brings a smile to his face.



The Knights of the Kitchen Table #1 (Time Warp Trio) Feature





The Knights of the Kitchen Table #1 (Time Warp Trio) Overview


Everyone’s favorite time-travelers are changing their style! The Time Warp Trio® series now features brand-new, eye-catching art in a modern design, sure to appeal to longtime fans and those new to Jon Scieszka’s wacky brand of humor.


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Great book - sped teacher and mommy-to-be - VA
My students have been reading this book and giving it great reviews. It's a faster read than most of our Reading Olympics books, but they really seem to enjoy it.



Teacher's Grade: A- - N. Bilmes - Vernon, CT United States
I love reading this book aloud to my 2nd grade students. There is abundant humor, a lot of action, and excellent dialogue. The kids especially love the disgusting giant with flatulence issues, and the fire-breathing dragon.

This is an excellent springboard into reading for reluctant but capable boy readers.



You would think it was the authors fifth not first...... - -
You knew this was the authors first book, but you felt far into the story while reading....which made it good...I would like to read more books by this author.

*** Product Information and Prices Stored: Jun 28, 2010 20:40:05

Check Out The Indigo King (Chronicles of the Imaginarium Geographica) for $5.84

The Indigo King (Chronicles of the Imaginarium Geographica) Review



I got my family hooked on this book series and they insisted I buy this one. It may not be what you're used to because of the dramatic twist of events that occur throughout the book that will keep you guessing but it is still an excellent book to add to your collection
It is amazing how James Owen interweaves so many mythological, historical, and legendary stories together into one frame of reading with each of his books. I would recommend this to anyone; especially for those who have read "Here, there be Dragons" and "The Search for the Red Dragon" books.

This time the book revolves around the Holy Grail, Camelot, Odysseus, and events past. It continues the tale surrounding John, Jack, and Charles but this time puts a dark twist on the events that they themselves cast into the frame and that they will have to unravel through time; or more like through the unraveling of time. They will have to travel to the past to fix the present which is not looking to be a very nice place to visit let alone be stuck in.

The Winter King returns and this time you get a chance of understanding who he is and how he became the Winter King. Also, the answer to the identity of the Cartographer of Lost Places is finally revealed.
There are also new characters to join the fray of things including: Hugo Dyson, Uncas son of Tummeler, Fred grandson of Tummeler, Hank Morgan, Chaz, and quite a few more.

From inside of the cover - On a September evening in 1931, John and Jack, two of the Caretakers of the Imaginarium Geographica discover a cryptic warning on a medieval manuscript--which is not only addressed to them but seems to have been written by their friend, Hugo Dyson! But before they can discover the origin of the strange book, Hugo walks through a door in time and vanishes into the past.
And in that moment, the world begins to change.
The Frontier, which separates our world from the Archipelago of Dreams, has fallen. Dark and terrible beasts roam throughout England. No one can be summoned from the Archipelago. And both worlds have fallen into darkness under the reign of a cruel and terrible king.
The only hope to restore the proper order of things lies on a forgotten island at the edge of the Archipelago, where a time travel device left by Jules Verne must be used to race through history itself--from the Bronze Age to ancient Alexandria and the founding of the Silver Throne--in one night. And in that single night, John and Jack will find that the only way to save their friend and stop the chaos destroying the world is to solve a 2,000-year-old mystery: Who is the Cartographer?



The Indigo King (Chronicles of the Imaginarium Geographica) Feature


  • ISBN13: 9781416951087
  • Condition: NEW
  • Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.



The Indigo King (Chronicles of the Imaginarium Geographica) Overview


"Answer the question unanswered for more than two millennia, and perhaps you may yet restore the world."

On a September evening in 1931, John and Jack, two of the Caretakers of the Imaginarium Geographica, discover a cryptic warning on a medieval manuscript -- which is not only addressed to them but seems to have been written by their friend, Hugo Dyson! But before they can discover the origin of the strange book, Hugo walks through a door in time -- and vanishes into the past.

And in that moment, the world begins to change.

The Frontier, which separates our world from the Archipelago of Dreams, has fallen. Dark and terrible beasts roam throughout England. No one can be summoned from the Archipelago. And both worlds have fallen into darkness under the reign of a cruel and terrible king.

The only hope to restore the proper order of things lies on a forgotten island at the edge of the Archipelago, where a time travel device left by Jules Verne must be used to race through history itself -- from the Bronze Age to ancient Alexandria and the founding of the Silver Throne -- in one night. And in that single night, John and Jack will find that the only way to save their friend and stop the chaos destroying the world is to solve a 2,000-year-old mystery: Who is the Cartographer?


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Customer Reviews





The time traveling here almost gave me an aneurism. - Kris - King of Prussia, PA
Books that involve too much time travel make my brain hurt. I thought this one was going to give me an aneurism. This is much more about time travel and the implications of the time paradox then anything else. Yikes. And it still had lots of the holes/problems of the first two. Granted, I think I liked the story of this one best - finding out who the cartographer is. But, I am utterly unsatisfied with the way it ended. Learning that there were additional conflicts between who the Winter King was and Arthur - but none of them amounted to much... really? That's what you are going to tell me?

The first thing I had to do was accept that the time travel stuff makes virtually no sense. If Verne could do all he could, and knew all that he knew, so that our trio (as modified here) could change history, why didn't he just do it himself? Because the author would have to be even lazier then he already is and we wouldn't need all these pages!

You need the background of the first two books for this one to really make any sense. This author, unlike a lot of then in the serial YA novel business, doesn't really provide much summary/background if you've missed the predecessors. So, one would probably be a little lost without having read the first two books. Although after reading the first two, my brain was a little overloaded with all the (what I am calling) "name dropping" that went on here. Back to the display of all that the author has read. And if you are not as well read as he is, then it's hard to appreciate some of this.

The idea to better tie the Arthurian legends to all the other stuff going on here is a neat idea. Although these days, it seems that's what everyone is trying to do. But, here, the author is again trying to cram thousands of nods to hundreds of legends and myths into very, very little space. I again found myself reading at a much slower pace then normal to make sure I was paying enough attention, trying to catch all the clues. But often, the characters would say something like "Could it be..." like the reader has come to the same place and has the conclusion in their minds - and my thoughts at those moments were "what in the world is this about?" And the conclusion left me totally perplexed.

As for the characters here - well, Chaz is the most interesting. And he's sort of a new character. The new badgers are cool. And so is Archie. Jack, John and Hugo - almost don't need them in this book. Which is a shame. But, then again, all three of these books so far have been pretty poor when it comes to the character development. The trio is clearly not the trio, with Chaz instead of Charles. And Hank? Well, my opinion of that was that he was unnecessary and merely another way for the author to show off what he's read.

The method for time travel here was interesting. A projector? Really? The talking animals and the Whatsit are more believable.

I struggled with the idea of Jesus being a "myth" - I am not saying that he was real or not. My problem is the fact that it is really hard for me to see how modern religions mesh with the notions of ancient mythology or fictional writing and putting it all together. If I was a religious fanatic (which I am totally not) I probably would have been very offended by a number of things in this book.

It turns out to be an awful lot about "faith" - in what, it's left for each reader to decide. But that's the end message.

I would have loved to have some of the time travel stuff make a little more sense - or be explained a little. I don't like that in the universe Owen has created is the idea that I don't have many of the rules. It feels like he makes them up as he goes along. Which is very inconsistent with what he must be doing because of the way all the characters are weaved together. There were also a number of abrupt chapter jumps in this book which did not have smooth transitions. When we first meet Circe we don't have any clue as to why. Why introduce us so early if we don't have any idea why.

Again, this too tries to weave together too many legends, myths, etc., in much too little plot and writing. And the premise that we need to find out the true name of the Winter King - it turns out to not matter at all. So, why send me on that wild goose chase. Finally, I really don't like the wimpy half-hearted effort to set up what must be the next book. The last little chapter with Burton - please. That was a waste of my time. I am left wondering if I really want to read the 4th book. I know at a minimum, I am reading a few other things first.

I am bored of this world. Which is a shame since I think it's a great idea, I am just not sure the writer has faith that it is too. And I am bummed that they changed the cover art with my version of this one. But, oh well, not buying the 4th installment anyway (might library loan it, if I can get the energy to do so).



Sadly disappointed - Chad Lawrence - Lewisville, TX USA
This book has probably the best prose and most engaging story of the Chronicles so far. I also enjoyed seeing how the characters developed in other timelines. Except for one major disappointment with the book, I felt this was the most enjoyable of the series.

The major disappointment I have with this book is its reference to the ridiculous idea that Jesus sired children during his time on earth. I'm not sure why the author decided to include this plot element, since it played a minor part in the story and the problem it dealt with could have been resolved some other way. But the fact that it's there almost made me put the book down for good. I decided to finish the story, hoping something would come to light showing this idea is completely false, but nothing of the sort happened.

Adding and subtracting elements to myths and legends that everyone agrees are false is not an issue. But when you make major changes to a historical figure that is worshiped by many, it becomes a problem. It's especially disturbing because the protagonists in the stories are all well known Christians, and none of them believed that Jesus had children. In fact, they would have been quite offended at the notion. The author mentions in his notes at the end that part of the inspiration for this story was a C.S. Lewis letter that mentioned a walk with Tolkein and Dyson that led him to believe in Christ. I wish the author would have focused more on what the conversation would have really been about instead of including this ridiculous idea about Christ's children that completely undermines the hope given by the true story of Christ.

I understand that this is fiction, and the author has made changes to myths and other fictional stories throughout the series, but I believe that this issue crosses the line of what is appropriate and what is not. I've already purchased the fourth book in the series so I will be reading that hoping that a better explanation is given for the Rose character. If not, my time with the Caretakers of the Imaginarium Geographica will be done.



Another Amazing Story - C. L. Strand -
The Indigo King takes us not to the Archipeligo but to times within our own 'history'. The premise behind this novel is very intriguing, and the author's note confirms the real life event that inspired parts of the story. While this book is much darker than the previous stories it also leaves alot to be considered. There were drawbacks, namely that I missed 'scowler Charles' Chaz just wasn't the same and I just couldn't bring myself to accept Fred and Uncas as a replacement for Bert.
One last thing, which I felt was glaringly obvious and I would wish to ask the author: If the binding requires your true name how would you bind with the names Uncas and Jack?
Overall, great read, amazing series and just the right amount of mystery and confusion. Also the historical/ literary referances abound.
Another great book from a great author!

*** Product Information and Prices Stored: Jun 28, 2010 15:55:07

Check Out Journey Across Time: Early Ages, Course 2, Student Edition for $39.75

Journey Across Time: Early Ages, Course 2, Student Edition Review



Ordered a second copy of my daughters Social Studies textbook for home. The book I received was in very good shape. It was the correct edition and the book I received was as described. I hope to do this next year. I hope all sellers are as good as this vendor. Thank you for the quality product and quick service.




Journey Across Time: Early Ages, Course 2, Student Edition Overview


The perfect combination of story and standards

Journey Across Time: The Early Ages, Course 2 is an all-new middle school world history program organized chronologically from A.D. 500 to A.D. 1750. Co-authored by National Geographic and Jackson Spielvogel, Journey Across Time: The Early Ages, Course 2's engaging narrative and outstanding visuals transport students back in time. The result is a standards-based program with important geography skills embedded in every lesson.

Journey Across Time: The Early Ages is available in a full volume and also as Course 1 (7000 B.C. to A.D. 800) and Course 2 (A.D. 500 to A.D. 1750).


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Journey Across Time - J. Santos - Charleston, SC
Book arrived in a timely manner by the stated date. Book was in excellent condition. Would recommend ordering from this site.



Nice but not fast - R. D. Jones -
The book was in super shape however it was the last book in the 6 I ordered the same day.



This is dumb - -
I have to use it every day in school, it is so dry you could dump the ocean on it and it would not get wet. I always fall asleep while reading it. This is a boring book in a 12 year olds veiw, I dont know about you but DONT BUY IT! IT SUCKS! Well only nerds and geeks will like it.

*** Product Information and Prices Stored: Jun 28, 2010 09:45:06

Sunday, June 27, 2010

Great Price for $15.95

Heroes Review



"Write about it, Francis. Maybe you can find the answer that way."

So he'll find that typewriter and get started.

Really a poignant narrative, this story. It had the potential to be ugly, full of vengeance, revenge, hate and self-pity. But the circumstances that led young Francis, our war veteran and hero, to be in the predicament in which he finds himself would have justified his vengeance, hatefulness, self-pity and - "the worst sin of all" - despair. Thankfully, in the end this was not an ugly story of hate and revenge, though hateful events are portrayed.

There are various thematic discussions that could be had by those who read this story, but the one that captured me the most is the societal notion of the "hero" and what defines such. As young Francis finally discovered - a discovery that saved his life from the sin of despair - heroism is not determined by how society and the masses might define it. It goes way beyond...and is very personal.

I appreciated how the author uses his protagonist to present themes to the reader that might provide for some introspection. I would certainly read more by Cormier.




Heroes Overview


In Heroes, Robert Cormier explores the nature of heroism through a young and tragic life.

Francis Cassavant returns from World War II to seek revenge on his childhood hero. He lost his face in France when he fell on a grenade, earning the Silver Star for Bravery. His hero also holds the Silver Star for Bravery--but do either deserve it? Examine the nature of heroism in the latest powerful novel from Robert Cormier.


Heroes Specifications


Eighteen-year-old Francis Cassavant has returned from World War II an unwilling hero. Although he can still see and hear, a grenade has blown away his nose, his ears, his teeth, and his cheeks, leaving him faceless. Hiding his ghastly wounds with bandages and a white silk scarf, Francis welcomes the anonymity his mutilation brings him, for he has returned to his hometown with a secret mission--a plot for revenge (against his enemy Larry LaSalle) that he values more than his own life. Francis's eerily matter-of-fact acceptance of his hideous mien, along with his sweetness and selflessness, contrast sharply with his obsessive need for vengeance. No one recognizes him as the quiet kid who once loved Nicole Renard and hung out with fellow teens at the Wreck Center. LaSalle, formerly a charismatic youth leader, has also come back from the war a hero, and only Francis knows the dark side of this older man's concern for young people. But does LaSalle's one evil act wipe out all the good he has done? And is Francis just as guilty because he could have prevented it and didn't?

Robert Cormier--winner of the Margaret A. Edwards Award and many other honors--has once again crafted a riveting yarn of psychological suspense. Francis's story is revealed only gradually in hints that keep the reader guessing. Young teens will find it a quick and absorbing read, and older adolescents (and full-fledged adults, too) will relish pondering the many-sided ethical questions Cormier raises about heroism, guilt, and forgiveness. (Ages 13 to 16) --Patty Campbell

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A story of hope: "Maybe I should buy a typewriter and get started." - Not Miss Havisham -
From the very first introduction to Francis Cassavant, I was taken with this powerful narrative. To have no face, to be misunderstood, to be anonymous, to have every action misinterpreted in a confused and rapidly changing world...to have a plan of revenge, to learn valuable lessons, to gain hope, to live...
Cormier is economical and powerful in this book, as in the villain Larry's question, "Does that one sin of mine wipe away all the good things?", followed by his own answer, for which you will have to read the book. He creates a picture (of a period in history and of a community and a character) which was very moving. This piece explores what makes a true hero, which the reader discovers together with the protagonist. It is only when Francis finds the answer that he is able to move on and find hope and future, "Maybe I should try...".

A beautiful story which was introduced to me by an esteemed colleague, when talking about favourite reads, with the line "It's amazing that the heart makes no noise when it cracks."



An interesting take on the word 'hero' and what it means to us - Helen Simpson - Leeds, England
I have to admit that I'm not the target audience for this book (being forty something) but that's certainly not stopped me enjoying other books aimed at teenagers. This however, whilst keeping my interest, isn't one of my favourites although it IS thought provoking.

The story highlights the innocence of youth and how impotent we can be when we're young. Our emotions and feelings can be confusing during those teenage years and this particular story highlights how some adults abuse the trust put in them.

The title of the book plays on the concept of what a hero is. Some people we admire and consider to be our heroes aren't heroes at all, they're weak and disappoint us...yet without them would we be the people we are? Others are more ordinary in our eyes and we don't always consider them to be heroic...but are they the real heroes?

Even as an adult I had conflicting feelings about one of the main characters and one line in particular made me think.
"Does that one sin of mine wipe away all the good things?" Instinctively the answer is yes, yet it's a little more complex than that.

This is a sombre book which deals with the pain of growing up, guilt and disappointment. Although the ending cannot be described as uplifting and didn't end happily ever after as I think we instinctively would like sometimes - I like to think it was hopeful and that Francis went on to learn from his experiences and get over his guilt - the guilt he didn't deserve to carry.



My favorite Cormier - -
I have heard great recommendations of this book. However, when I started it, I wasn't exactly thrilled. It was okay, but so far it didn't seem like anything completely different or amazing. As soon as I was really starting to feel let down, though, Cormier caught my complete attention with his mysterious ommissions and made me start to wonder "what on earth is going on?" In Heroes, Robert Cormier uses the reader's curiosity as a tool to lure them, absorbing them in the book.
When I finally figured out why everything was happening as it was, I was once again left with a question: Does one sin wipe away all the good things? The main character, Francis' childhood hero, Larry LaSalle, is suddenly revealed for a rapist as Francis realizes that LaSalle is ravaging this poor teenager's own girlfriend. Francis struggles to realize if deep down, there is still good in Larry LaSalle.
Heroes stirs curiosity, startles with imagery, and completely dissects the word "hero", letting you discover what it really means. Hero will never be the word it was after reading this book.

*** Product Information and Prices Stored: Jun 28, 2010 01:45:05

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I Have Lived A Thousand Years: Growing Up In The Holocaust Review




There have been many books written about the Holocaust.No matter how much they try;nobody seems to really be able to condense the horror that Hitler and the Nazis perpetrated into one book.Many books make use of photographs that show and prove the evil that these people and their system carried out.Some might say ,you don't need a lot of pictures.One photo alone can describe the evil that took place.Then one must remember,the photos that survive;have captured only a miniscule amount of what took place.It is impossible to translate from the pictures that we have of of those that were tortured,murdered,and eliminated;into the uniminaginable numbers of over 6,000,000,human beings.
In this book,the author tackles this mass assault against millions ;and by telling her personal story of how she and her family were targeted,suffered through unspeakable atrocities ,and through unsurmountable odds,a precious few managed to survive.
It is so supurbly written and constructed,that the author is able to give the reader a bit of a feel what it was like;even though it was all so horrimle that words and pictures simply can never do justice to this monstrous monstrosity of demonic barbarity.
One can only imagine the real extent of what she experienced and saw take place;and think how it must have played on her mind all these many years ,and how she was finally able to to write about it.
If there is anything to be learned from what happened,it is certainly that the nations of the world must never permit it to happen again.All the reasoning,debate,accomodation and appeasement in the world is useless in the face of evil;and the longer time goes on before evil is confronted and destroyed;the worse the consequences will be.Similar evils are afoot in the world today;and we owe it to those that suffered from such ;that their lives were not in vain.
If you think it can't happen here in North America,just remind yourself,that they didn't believe it could happen in Europe.It is even more unbelievable that many in Europe didn't know,or perferred not to know;even while it was taking place.
If we permit it to happen again;we have only ourselves to blame.



I Have Lived A Thousand Years: Growing Up In The Holocaust Feature


  • ISBN13: 9780689823954
  • Condition: NEW
  • Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.



I Have Lived A Thousand Years: Growing Up In The Holocaust Overview


FOR USE IN SCHOOLS AND LIBRARIES ONLY. The author describes her experiences during World War II when she and her family were sent to the Nazi death camp at Auschwitz.


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I Have Lived a Thousand Years - Carole - Idaho
I enjoyed this book very much. The story was great, and her story of the Holocaust was so remarkable and unique. It pulls you into the life of a young girl--you experience the challenges, struggles, and trials of Elli. The one problem I had with it was the language. Not the German, but the profanity. I didn't like some of the words she used.






This book was fascinating!! - Rebecca L. Dillow - Martinsburg, WV USA
I was looking for a biography from the holocaust, I was not too sure of this one, however---it was great. It was very touching and has inspired me to read more on the subject. I cant wait to get the other books written by this author...



Moving and to the point - Joanna Mechlinski - CT, USA
At the age of 13, the author - then called Elli Friedmann -- was taken to Auschwitz as part of the campaign to rid her native Hungary of Jews.

Young Elli enjoyed a relatively normal existence in 1944, worrying about capturing the attention of a boy she liked, or whether she would make the honor roll, when her entire life changed in a matter of weeks. First, the Jewish families in her tiny village were forced to leave their homes and move into a ghetto, where they remained for several weeks until transport to the labor camp was available. There, Elli and her mother Laura were separated from her aunt Serena and brother Bubbi, forced to work endless hours in extreme temperatures with little food, water or rest. Meanwhile, the family worried about the fate of Elli's father, who had been taken with other Jewish men from the ghetto shortly before their deportment.

The book, divided into short vignette-like chapters, details Elli's experiences in the camp -- meeting her other aunt and two cousins in such diminished circumstances, contrasting with the happy childhood summer she once spent in their large, boisterous household; watching others die horrific deaths at the hands of the Kapos; struggling to maintain a sense of dignity and girlishness amongst such ugliness and insanity; and more.

Despite having read a large number of other Holocaust memoirs, Bitton-Jackson's story still stands distinct. This young girl's story, full of plain-spoken facts, is guaranteed to make a lasting impression in readers' minds for years to come.


*** Product Information and Prices Stored: Jun 27, 2010 17:50:06

Saturday, June 26, 2010

Check Out Shh! We're Writing the Constitution for $2.25

Shh! We're Writing the Constitution Review



Jean Fritz has been writing books about U.S. history for decades, and SHH! WE'RE WRITING THE CONSTITUTION, originally published in 1987, is another fine addition to her collection. The first 44 pages (minus a few - the story actually starts on page 7) are a history of how the Constitution came to be written and ratified, followed by four interesting pages of notes, and then the Constitution itself (excluding any amendments), for a total of 64 pages. I am surprised to see that AR has this listed at a reading level of RL 7.1, but I am assuming that this reading level includes the actual Constitution at the end of the book, which would certainly drive up the overall reading level - the earlier parts of the book seem somewhat lower to me. I had never read the Constitution in its entirety, so was glad it was included in the book. And though I'm a bit of a history buff, I did learn several new things about our Constitution and how it came to be.

We often take our country and its beliefs for granted, but this book does a nice job of showing that there was plenty of disagreement during the hot summer of 1787 while delegates from the Colonies wrote this founding document, our blueprint for a Republican government. Fritz does a nice job showing the different personalities of some of these delegates and how this factored into the proceedings, mentioning things like some delegates falling asleep during the presentations of one boring speaker. While the temperatures boiled, so did some of the tempers, with some members even storming out in anger at times. Nothing about our founding was cut and dried, nor could anyone take for granted how things would turn out, and this book makes that fact come alive. The Colonies had already drafted the Articles of Confederation years earlier, and these had largely turned out to be a failure - Colonies followed them when they felt like it and didn't follow them when they didn't feel so inclined.

Tomie dePaola's illustrations complement the story (as with other books in this series by Fritz), with pictures on most of the first 44 pages, none afterward. I would rate this book an 8 on a scale of 1-10.



Shh! We're Writing the Constitution Feature


  • ISBN13: 9780698116245
  • Condition: NEW
  • Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.



Shh! We're Writing the Constitution Overview


The award-winning author takes readers behind the scenes at the Constitutional Convention for a good-humored history lesson, enlivened by dePaola's quirky illustrations. Full color .


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Constitutional Primer - -
Writing in a conversational storytelling style, Jean Fritz describes the writing of the Constitution and the development of the Bill of Rights. Quick to clear up any misunderstanding about how the colonies came to form a new nation - those fifty-five delegates from the fledgling sovereign states did not come to Philadelphia singing sweet refrains of "one nation under God" - the text clearly and thoroughly covers the arguments, debates, negotiations, and compromises that hallmarked that Federal Convention. The text is compelling, interesting, and complete; and along the way, Fritz takes the time to show the human side of such historical icons as George Washington, Benjamin Franklin, and James Madison as she fills in the details about the forming of our nation. Also of particular note are the references appended, which include the complete text of the Constitution, a complete list of the signers, and a list of references supporting specific pages in the book.

And as always, Tomie Depaola's well-researched, uncomplicated illustrations thoroughly support the text and lend historical accuracy to the content, further facilitating reader understanding and augmenting retention.




Delightful reading for all ages - Ace - East Coast
Great narrative -- engrossing and educational for ALL ages.

De Paola's (of Strega Nonna fame) illustrations are absolutely perfect -- they convey the individual's character as well as their emotions during this 4 month stressful, enlightening brilliant and difficult time in our nation's history -- the rewriting (which turned into the total re-write) of the Articles of Confederation which became our nation's Constitution.

This appeals to all ages -- and having just completed the reading and study of several wordy tomes having to do with the Constitutional Convention, "Shh! We're Writing the constitution" provided a delightful conclusion to my studies, as well as welcomed comic relief.



A gem for introducing youth to the basis of our United States government. - San Francisco Anna-Marie - San Francisco, CA
Shh! We're Writing the Constitution, Jean Fritz, pictures by Tomie dePaola, G.P. Putnam's sons, Penguin Putnam books for Young Readers, New York, N.Y., 1987, 64 p.
This nonfiction book written in storytelling style describes how the United States Constitution came to be written and ratified with the disagreements, debates, negotiations, and compromises. It also reveals why the Bill of Rights was developed. Jean Fritz introduces the ordinary human aspects of significant historic characters such as George Washington, James Madison, Benjamin Franklin and John Hamilton. The book includes a listing of notes supporting the text with references to specific pages, the text of the Constitution, and a list of the signers.
Jean Fritz has created a delightful vehicle to learn about the United States Constitution. She uses a conversational style with humor and entertaining anecdotes coupled with de Paola's engaging and colorful illustrations on every page. Although aimed at readers from age 8 to 12, this is an excellent introduction for reluctant readers as well as anyone seeking a lively and fascinating introduction to the United States Constitution.




*** Product Information and Prices Stored: Jun 26, 2010 20:20:05

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Let's Review: Global History and Geography Review



Like many high school New Yorkers, I was super-worried about doing well on my Regents exam. But thanks to Mr. Mark Willner's book, I not only passed, I excelled! I was so satisfied, I told everyone to use it. If you are taking a Global Regent, get this book. This, in addition to your Global History class, will definately assure your success. Mr. Willner's thorough analysis and explanation in crucial areas in the subject is comprehensive and thorough. He is the Social Studies chairman at my school and was named best in the country, so he must have done something right! Get this book, you'll be glad you did.




Let's Review: Global History and Geography Overview


Books in this series have been completely revised and brought up to date to reflect recent large-scale changes in New York State's High School Regents exams. Let's Review books have been especially designed to prepare students for Regents finals in New York, but also make fine textbook supplements that can be used in high schools everywhere. In addition to subject reviews, each title contains either model exams or actual recent Regents exams with answers. Many teachers prefer to use Let's Review book as classroom companion texts to Barron's Regents Exams and Answers books. This review book, like the current Regents exam, reflects a new emphasis on basics of geography, now part of the high school curriculum. Formerly, this book's title was Global Studies.


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Comprehensive - JFA - Brooklyn, NY
Appears to be a thorough review for NY State Regents in Global History and Geography.



Not the best way to go... - A New Yorker - NY
I don't know why some reviewers said this book was accurate. It was filled with obvious errors in the answer key. The information was poorly organized, and many times the exact same page appeared repeatedly in different places. The actual review is pretty informative and all the information you need is there. As long as you really pay attention to what you're reading and are able to pick up on the errors, you should be alright. If you don't though, and blindly accept their answers (despite the fact they they plainly contradict the text) you'll end up very confused and very mistaken. My friends ordered the Prentice Hall review book (straight from their website, I don't think Amazon sells it) and they seemed to like that better.



It depends what you want this book for - Becky Kolacki - New York
I got a 99 on the Global Regents, but it was thanks to my notes from class rather than this book. I had taken AP Euro the whole year and we just reviewed Global at the end of the year, about a month before the regents. At first I tried to use this book, but there was no way I could read the whole thing in a short amount of time with so many other regents I had to take, and frankly, I didn't need to. I was just hoping to get some good review questions to practice with. The questions themselves were all right, but the answer key had many, many mistakes. It was incredibly frustrating and I soon gave up using this book.

If you want this book for the whole year, for the actual information, then it would be a good book to have. However, if you want it as a quick review before the regents I'd probably go with something else. Also, if you want practice questions while preparing for the regents, get the red Barrons book, with all the old regents- you'll be better off that way.



Let's Review: Global History and Geography (Barron's Review - Josh -
I am a 10th grade World History teacher in California. This book is the best resource I own. It not only helps the students, but allows me the chance to review prior to lectures and activities. It is must for any world history or global history student or teacher.

*** Product Information and Prices Stored: Jun 26, 2010 14:30:07

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The Autobiography of Benjamin Franklin Review



Benjamin Franklin's Autobiography is one of the very few books that all Americans should read, and virtually everyone else should also. Its greatness and importance can hardly be exaggerated. Aside from being a great autobiography, the book cuts to the very heart of what it means to be American; it is indeed hardly hyperbolic to say that Franklin created the American dream, and this details it. The work thus has strong inspirational potential, not least because it is a great and unusually practical ethics primer. In addition, it is a fascinating glimpse at late colonial America, and we get plenty of Franklin's wit and wisdom.

The book would of course be invaluable if it were only an autobiography, as Franklin is one of the most notable and interesting people to ever live. His life was long, and he accomplished more than almost anyone in history; a simple list of his achievements would almost be a book in itself. That he did not come close to completing this is thus extremely regrettable; it goes only to 1758, when Franklin was in his early 50s, well before his famed public career. Those wanting coverage of this important era will thus be disappointed and must rely on later biographies. However, Franklin's long list of accomplishments even at that point does much to atone. It is also important to realize that this is not a formal autobiography but was written in four stages over nearly twenty years. The first and probably best-known part was as a 1771 letter to Franklin's son. The much shorter Part Two was written in 1784, continuing the former narrative for the public. Part Three was written in 1788 and the very short Part Four, which breaks off somewhat abruptly because Franklin was near death, in 1790. The book - no part of which was published until after Franklin's death, and then only in French, and which did not come out in full until well into the nineteenth century - as it stands was thus not meant to be cohesive and is indeed far from it; there is a little overlap and no real transitions. No one should expect polish, but there is no arguing with what is here, though Part Four is clearly less substantial. We learn about Franklin's family background and early life, his near-literal rags to riches rise, his printing career, his writing, his scientific exploits and inventions, his early political actions, etc. This encompasses an astonishing number and variety of important and worthy deeds. The sheer number of things that Franklin began or pioneered is simply incredible - and almost unbelievable considering the circumstances. We see everything from the founding of the first American fire department and library to the founding of the University of Pennsylvania to the famous electrical experiments to the invention of the Franklin Stove and other devices - and far more. It is an excellent story well-told, and anyone at all interested in autobiography will be endlessly intrigued.

Franklin's rise from humble origins to world fame and acclaim is endlessly amazing and ever-admirable. One of the first truly self-made men, he had the kind of can-do optimism, resolve, and perseverance of which few people can even conceive. Franklin details how he did it, thus delineating the American dream that has attracted the down and out but hopeful from all around the world for over two centuries. The book's influence is simply profound - and quite direct in that it is still widely read, though indirect ramifications are even more enormous. Hundreds of millions have imitated it whether they know or not - and many have known -, but probably none have equaled it, and few have even come close. Yet it shows no sign of ceasing to be inspirational; Franklin shows, as no one else has ever come close to doing, that hard work and determination really can pay off. It is remarkable enough that his story is real, but the truly remarkable thing is how little it owes to luck. Many have of course been disappointed, often tragically, in trying to emulate Franklin, and it is undeniable that monumental intelligence and a plethora of other assets gave an edge that only a very small number of people can ever come close to reproducing. For all this, though, his story's bare reality is the best kind of inspiration one could ever hope for.

As if listing his accomplishments were not enough, Franklin also relays his truly noble self-improvement experiment; knowing his faults all too well but determined to be virtuous, he developed and rigorously applied a near-mathematical improvement system. He did not fully succeed, but the degree to which he did is highly noteworthy. There is much to be learned here as elsewhere; many have used his system, some with considerable success, and nearly everyone can get something valuable from it. On top of everything else, the book is thus a great ethics introduction - the kind that simply has not existed for some time. Franklin combines the best aspects of Spartan, Roman, and Puritan ideas of virtue - a combination that cannot be found in the innumerable tripe now littering self-help bookshelves. Unlike those wretched works, this is intellectually and even aesthetically pleasing - and more importantly, is eminently practical and supremely accessible.

Franklin was great in nearly every sense - full of virtue and true nobility as almost no one has been. He has rightly been an American hero for centuries, revered around the world. That said, he has always had critics, and it is easy to latch onto negative things. Some - famously including D. H. Lawrence - have condemned Franklin as hopelessly materialistic, obsessed with what the latter elsewhere called "the way to wealth." There is definitely some truth here, and it would be quite hard to deny that perversion of Franklin's scheme has led to significant harm. One can of course say this is not his fault, but more to the point is that it is hard to criticize considering Franklin's circumstances - and only the envious will begrudge his success. This in any case sells him very short; Franklin after all refused to patent that would have made him unspeakably wealthy or accept money for public office. It is also very unfair to claim or even imply that he cared only for wealth. We must not forget that Franklin was one of his era's greatest scientists and intellectuals and an extremely well-read polyglot - all his own doing, as he had almost no formal education. However, he may be otherwise criticized - not least for the book's profusion of barely-disguised vanity, which he admits many times. In the end, though, this is hardly worth mentioning. Being Franklin, the only surprising thing is that he was not much vainer still; nearly anyone else would have been, and who can deny it would have been almost entirely justified? An arguably more substantial point is Franklin's infamously innumerable sexual trysts, including many with prostitutes. He refers to this himself, including what he calls "low women," but some may disparage him for not being more open. That said, it is only fair to note that he is often surprisingly honest - not only in mentioning such dalliances at all but in many other ways, not least the blunt description of his failed marriage proposal. Some will value this, while others will think Franklin honest to a fault, and still others will think it does not go far enough. We must remember in any case that this part was written to his son and that the book was meant to be practically applicable rather than confessional.

Practicality is indeed Franklin's core trait and the one that should get the most attention; it goes a long way toward erasing any doubts. Regardless of how famous or rich he became, Franklin was never highfalutin or pretentious, always retaining the hard common sense that served him so well. This led to great improvements not only in his life but in countless others; for example, despite a fearsome intellect, vast self-education, and highly impressive accomplishments in nearly every field, Franklin could still concern himself with things like reducing street dust and making street lights brighter. How many in his position would have even noticed such things - except perhaps to complain? Flawed as he clearly was, only a handful of people even compete with him for widespread benefits to humanity. We can - and should - admire and appreciate this, whatever else we think of him.

His wisdom also comes across in many other ways, benefiting us further. Franklin had great insight into human nature and has much practical advice about virtually every interpersonal relations aspect, including how to advance agendas without making enemies and even how to turn enemies into friends. His observations on everything from literature to religion also have great value; simply put, he could hardly write boringly, and what he has to say is very far from boring in any case.

Additionally, it must be pointed out that the book would be of great value even if it did not deal with someone as important as Franklin because it is an excellent primary source about a very important period. We get a very vivid idea of what it was like to live in early to mid-eighteenth century America socially, economically, politically, and otherwise. The work's historical value is probably impossible to calculate.

Finally, one must not neglect to mention that Franklin is a prime American prose stylist. He deliberately wrote in a very simple style that was clear, concise, and generally accessible - a distinct contrast to the mainstream writing of his time. Some may doubt this, but it is easily proven by comparing the book to other late eighteenth century ones - or even many from less than a century ago. How many can be easily read without footnotes and other glosses or extensive introductions? Spelling and punctuation have of course changed significantly, but anyone can still pick this up and get into it quite quickly and easily, which is not its least notable feature.

All told, this is absolutely essential for anyone even remotely interested in Franklin, American history, self-improvement, or any of the many other topics on which it touches despite being under 150 pages. The world would undeniably be substantially better if everyone read this and took its most inspiriting aspects to heart, and there can be no higher praise.




The Autobiography of Benjamin Franklin Overview


The book has no illustrations or index. Purchasers are entitled to a free trial membership in the General Books Club where they can select from more than a million books without charge. Subjects: Statesmen; Biography


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A difficult read and can be boring - Helen Golod - California
I had to read this for a college course and thought it was just ok. I love history and I do like to read, but to keeping me interested in a book is important and the writing can becoming very difficult to get through. Probably would not recommend this book to friends it might turn them away from reading history books.



great book, amazing price - John F. Weiss - Texas
This is exactly what the kindle was made for! allow people to understand and enjoy classics in the public domain for free! It is the distribution of knowledge that the educational system was created for. Anyone can read this, anyone can download this. Not only a classic book, but free. This could be the entrance to a better world.



Wonderful - E. Stanford -
Ben is one of my favorite historical persons. One needs to have a dictionary to hand to read this as he uses real English words which aren't often used today. A wonderful read...and free, too. Thanks Ben.Thanks Amazon.



Great - dgt - Gilbert, AZ
The book was in great condition I just didn't realize it wasn't the book with the foot notes....But service was great!

*** Product Information and Prices Stored: Jun 26, 2010 04:27:38