More Pages: States Page 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100


And You Thought the Navy SEALs were the best.
Flesh and blood heroism in our serviceThis is an amazing book. Every page is full of bravery, loyalty, and heroism beyond understanding. Well, there are a few shameful pages of cowardice and treachery and those few pages will anger and sicken you as much as the deeds of the heroes will amaze and fill you with awe.
SOG is the acronym for the Studies and Observations Group, which was a euphemism for a very secret and elite special operations team that was the forerunner of groups such as today's Delta Force. They gathered intelligence about enemy activities and slowed enemy advances through Cambodia and Laos down the Ho Chi Minh trail and other places the NVA denied being.
I certainly can't do justice to the history of all this activity, but if you pick up this book you will have a very hard time putting it down. You will be reading about actual flesh and blood men who are very extraordinary people and who did unbelievable things in service to America. The writing is captures the events very effectively and moves quickly. For me, it was more exciting than any fiction.
John Plaster has done a service in taking us through the history of this group. He shows us the formation of the group and its early development. He covers its history through its most effective years to the way it was handicapped by policies that really ended up allowing the North Vietnamese to strengthen their position rather than bringing them to serious negotiations. Finally, we suffer with them through the last days of the group as the war wound down.
Whatever your position on the war, you shouldn't diminish the nobility of these soldiers. When I think about these stories I am profoundly moved by their sacrifice and feel a deep gratitude to each of them and all soldiers who put everything on the line for me and mine.
Thanks to Mr. Plaster for this vital and amazing book.
These brave men, (SOG) /all vets, deserve utmost respect!

A Chance encounter you'll remember.Set mostly in Camas, Washington, Duncan's poignant novel follows the memorable Chance family through three decades, the 1950s through the 1970s, and around the world to Vietnam, Canada, and India. Along the way, the Chance siblings (four precocious brothers and their twin sisters) establish their independence from their parents, Papa Hugh, a talented bush-league pitcher with a toe for a thumb, and Mama Laura, a devout Adventist with a painful secret in her past. Through Kincaid Chance's narrative, we also follow the lives of his brothers, Everett, a draft dodger, Peter, "a scholar monk" (p. 414), and Irwin, a gentle, Christian foot soldier. At one point in the novel, Kincaid finds his family rallying together, "headed for an insane asylum in California. We looked more as if we'd escaped from one. But in the pouring gray rain, I felt clarity. With the war still raging, I felt at peace. With Papa in despair, Everett in prison and Irwin in the asylum, I felt release. I didn't understand my feelings, didn't even desire them, really, but they kept filling me so full that my eyes began to well" (p. 564). THE BROTHERS K is a novel about crash landing in a good place (p. 398), and a novel you won't soon forget.
G. Merritt
!
Epic & addictive.Still, somewhere out there is the rare reader who likes the challenge an epic presents, loves to get lost in fascinating, multi-layered characterizations and plots that expand over decades.
For those readers, there is David James Duncan's 1992 offering, "The Brothers K." It excels on all those fronts I just mentioned, and on several more.
But when a friend recently handed it over to me, suggesting that I take a look, I too balked at its size:
"Look at it! Are you trying to kill any semblance of a social life I may have? This thing is mammoth and unwieldy!"
But my friend was persistent and so I went home and took a look. And soon became lost in the words, the story, the characters.
"Brothers K" is about the Chance family. Father Hugh is a mill worker who used to be the most promising baseball player around, until an accident at the mill cost him his dream. Mother Laura clings obsessively to her Adventist religion, since it once protected her from the darkest hour of her past.
Together, they have four boys and two twin girls. Everett is the oldest, a charming, witty rogue who doesn't share Laura's faith. Peter is next, and is a fellow cynic. Irwin is the large and innocent third child. Kincaid is a blank slate, who serves as the readers' eyes in the guise of the book's narrator.
The twin girls, Bet and Freddy, come later and more or less fulfill the role of younger sisters to the four brothers and little else, although they have a heartbreaking scene involving their grandmother's death that paves the way for the story to come full circle later.
Those are the characters. There is a plot, but Duncan takes it so lackadaisically and slow across the sands of time that in essence it can all be summed up in one word: Lifetime. For this is very much the saga of the Chance family, and all of their adventures therein.
We literally see the Chance boys grow up before our very eyes, watch as their characters age and grow, or regress, experience life and flirt with death.
Around halfway through the book, the four brothers (the "K" is an allusion to "The Brothers Karamazov," by Fyodor Dostoyevsky) each go off in search of their own way; Everett becomes a draft-dodger, Peter a philosopher, Kincaid a hippie, and Irwin goes to fight in Vietnam.
There is no rush on Duncan's part to tell the story, and so there can be no rush from the reader to finish it.
For this is a book in which the getting there is very much the draw, and readers are rewarded their patience by Duncan's sense of humor, sometimes gentle, other times abrasive, many times subtle and always hilarious.
But if you're the sort who seeks immediate gratification and "lite" escape from your reading, "Brothers K" is told in a series of broken up chapters and chapters-within-chapters, making it easier to simply pick it up, read a section or two and then return to whatever else you were doing.
If you can, that is. It's a hypnotic, intoxicating read, which will make putting the book down difficult.
And when you finally do finish, if you're like me, you will be so moved from the whole experience you will have to leave the room and walk the book off. It's that good.
Upon returning to your room, of course, there will be the brand-new temptation to pick it up and start all over again.


Love that L. J. SmithI loved pretty much everything in this book. The characters, plot, and romance were all great. I look forward to learning about more of the side character in future books. I usually like the first book in all of L. J. Smith's series the best but I think this series can only get better. L. J. Smith is quickly becoming one of my favorite authors and I want to read every book she's written.
WiCkEd!!!!!!!!*****Cassie Blake didn't want to move to New Salem, Mass. and have to leave her home towm in California. But her mom told her they have to because her mother(Cassie's Grandma) is sick. When Cassie had a vacation with her mom a week in Mass. before they really moved there, before her mom broke the news, Cassie met a mysterious guy with red-wine hair. She thought she saw a silver-cord connection between them. Cassie moved into the new town, and thought that she would never see the handsome stranger again, but when she enter the new school, she did see him. He belonged to a club and had a girlfriend, Diana. Diana was nice to Cassie, and Cassie felt warmth toward her. But Diana's cousin, Faye, was cold and mean and nasty to her. Cassie met the rest of the gang: tough-girl Deborah, boy-crazy Suzan, weird Sean, nice Laurel, interlectual Melanie, crazy-and-wild Chris and Doug Henderson, Faye's-wannabe Kori Henderson, cold-and-distant Nick, who had a warm side toward Cassie that no one know of. Cassie became Diana's adopted-sister but feeling like an outcast compare to the closeknitted club members. The club was already full until one of the club member died and they needed another person, and Cassie's it. She discover that she's a witch and the club is not and ordinary one, it's a witch club, where all members are witches. Cassie felt torn because of Adam being her favorite person's boy friend. She felt that Adam's her soulmate but because Diana that Cassie have to back off. Will she ever fit into such a new surrounding? Would she be accepted by her new clubmates?
Down right enthralling! You gotta read it!Everyone, adult or student, feared the eleven people who belonged to The Club, aka The Circle. All members of the Circle lived on Crowhaven Road. Some members were nice. Some members were almost evil. Kori was suppose to join the Circle on her fifteenth birthday. Instead, she died. Currently there were eleven members, but a Circle was worthless without 7 girls and 5 boys. One more female was needed, Cassie.
Cassie had no idea how dangerous being initiated into the Circle would be. Or how the evil ones in the Circle would snare her in a web of deceit and betrayal!
***** A stunning beginning to the trilogy! Down right enthralling! *****


If You Love Lucy You Have To Get This Book
too hard to put down!!
Very moving.......Lucy lives on forever

WOW! What a phenomenal guidebook!Their off-the-beaten-path places are just awesome. From exploring a lava tube that empties out 20 feet over the water near Pu`uhonua o Honaunau National Historic Park to driving (with a 4WD SUV) down into Waipio Valley; from touring the top of Mauna Kea (the highest point in all of Hawai`i) to hiking out to touch the molten lava flowing from Pu`u O`o; from seeing a "lava tree" at Lava Tree State Park to tasting some organically grown fruit at a roadside stand.....you'll find the details in this book. And their accurate maps and directions to the out-of-the-way places will keep even the most wayward soul from getting lost.
My wife and I cannot recommend this book enough. If you like to explore the places you visit, this book is for you. Well worth it's weight in gold....well, almost. :)
downright incredible!If you're the adventurous type, definitely rent a 4WD as the book suggests. There's a lot of wonderful places on the island that just can't be accessed without one.
We found the book's accuracy to be nearly 100%, even though it's been out nearly 2 years now. It was so exciting to see and experiece all the things in real life that I first learned about through this book. Don't miss the snorkeling at Kealakekua Bay. It's beyond the imagination!
The excellent restaurant reviews were also very helpful to us. 11/24/00
The New Gold Standard in Travel GuidesThe best feature of the book is that is is organized as a set of driving tours from the Kailua-Kona and Hilo areas. Almost everyone visiting the Big Island travels by rented car and stays in either of these areas. The struc- ture is perfect for a tourist, right down to listing the mile-marker numbers where unmarked sideroads lead to beaches, volcano view spots, and other points of interest not on the rental car maps. It is loaded with color photographs, maps in many level of details -- including hiking trails -- and easy-to-spot icons of the things to see and do. We visited friends who have lived in Kailua for years who were surprised at how many new things they learned.
I have to stop now before I embarass myself. If you visit the Big Island and don't take this book with you your trip will be that much less fun.


Moving And Inspiring...Nice Read
Wonderful book! Spiritually enlightening!In 1912 nineteen-year-old Christy embarks on a journey to the Appalachian mountains as a "missionary" to the mountain people, hoping to bring them spiritual nourishment and awakening. But in the process, it is Christy herself who undergoes some spiritual awakening.
This story is in some way an indictment of Calvinist theology. Christy asks Alice Henderson, the Quaker missionary from Pennsylvania who God could allow a girl to be raped and a woman to be hanged. In other words, how can a sovereign God of omnipotent power allow His own created being to do evil. Alice responds that God would HAVE TO if He has given us our own free will.
But the greatest test Christy faces is when a typhoid epidemic hits the mountains in early autumn, and her dearest friend, Fairlight Spencer, is the first victim. What were the power of a few germs to that of the Sovereign Omnipotent Ruler of the Universe? Christy rants. ...
This book says a lot about human responsibility and how not to blame God for everything that happens, especially when people do wrong to others.
Way up there with Lord of the Rings!I'm definitely not saying it's anything *similar* to LotR, because it's not, I'm just saying that it's *almost*
as good. It's about a 19-year-old girl named Christy Huddleston who goes to teach school at a mission
in a place called Cutter Gap in the Great Smokies of Tenessee. The year is 1912. This is an incredible
book about a citified girl who finds adventure, hardships, challenges, maturity, God, joy and (of course)
romance. It's very wonderful to find such perfect balance of all elements. It's quite rare to find a book
that actually mentions, (gasp!) *GOD* that is not way overboard and in the preachy department. In fact, I
think the way that religion was tied in was just perfect. Then, my favorite part would have to be the
romance. A very frustrating one, one of those where she thinks she's in love with one, but is actually in
love with the other. Not too frustrating though. I've read plenty of those (Anne of the Island, cough
cough!). My brothers, who are adamantly against romance, and always bury their heads in pillows when
anything romantic comes up anywhere. In Christy's story, they are fascinated, and my youngest brother,
who at first really didn't like Christy, says that "I only keep going to see who Christy marries," :)
The thing is, the romance is only a big thing if you make it so. There just happens to be a cute young
preacher and a hot doctor with a sexy Scottish brouge in the vicinity, both of whom have a major crush
on Christy! :)T his is by no means a romance novel. I just personally am a fan of one of Christy's
admirers, (who is, dare I say it, hotter than Aragorn:)
But more than the romance, this is an incredible story and the characters are so real to me now. I'm actually now doing some research on Catherine because I'm so interested in this whole story.
A must-read!!!...


True life adventures of two first-time entrepeneurs
American Bootstrap - A Business Parable of Truth and Humor
It's not the (thrilling) fall that kills you...I decided to give the book a go anyway since it was a gift from a friend. Surprisingly, I was unable to put it down. Even though I am an Asian doing my MBA in Europe, I believe the experiences of the authors hold true for all aspiring entrepreneurs.
And what experiences! I won't give the story away (go to mousedriver.com and look at their Insider newsletter for a summary of some of their tales),but DO consider this book to get an idea of what it means to passionately believe in a product, get that product to the market -- and how to deal with all the obstacles in the way while preserving your sanity and bank balances.
If, like me, you have thoughts about being an entrepreneur but are not sure of what to start being passionate about, read this book and "Just Drive It" ! The marketing slogan for the MouseDriver (that's what these guys are trying to sell, a mouse that is shaped like a golf club) is certainly effective shorthand for all those who have always THOUGHT about being their own boss but have have not dared to fall out of their 8 to 8 routines (Worry about the landing later:-)
MouseDriver Chronicles is a true, compelling story that deserves a wider audience. I now understand why my friend (who gave me the book) actually went on to help publish it. Happy AND educational endings, anyone?


The book is a guide to military & non-military leadership.This past weekend I saw a huge write-up in the Minneapolis Star and was suprised that the book had that big of a following. I am re-reading the book again, for the third time, and I find my self re-identifying with the characters. I recommend this book for all young NCOs and young officers to help them formulate a mentoring guide book, like a set of rules to work towards, that they can use in the daily experiences that will make up their careers. If you use the book to help focus your committment to leadership, you will have a great experience, a great career, and a love of adventure.
A book well worth reading
Anton Myrer's "Once an Eagle" a must-read for leadersThe book is a youth-to-death story of "Sad" Sam Damon, a midwestern boy who steeps himself in military history and a code of honor that requires him to step forward and take the lead in almost every situation. Myrer has tapped into a simple truth. That's what real leaders do; they lead.
While Sam Damon is a military hero, he's no marble monument. Myrer shows us that real world leaders are assailed with doubts, real fears, and insecurities that can lead them to cave in to expediency under extreme pressure. But in Sam Damon, Myrer shows us that true leadership can consist of recognizing your mistakes, swallowing hard, and stepping up to the plate again to do the right thing.
Such a strong protagonist clearly needs a strong opponent. Myrer delivers with Courtney Massengale, a supremely brilliant and ruthless adversary whose weakness, as Sam Damon realizes, is that he does not love any man. It is the byplay between these two characters that Myrer uses to telling effect in illustrating how love is a key element in leadership. I know of half a dozen executives who have patterned their management styles on Sam Damon's lessons. They are the best bosses I ever had. This is a book that should be required reading in our service academies, and as part of every MBA program and civil service exam in the country. Fortunately, it's also a wonderful read.


Absolutely Wonderful!That all changes when Catey and her brother Tomas are captured while on their way to school.
Catey is determined not to keep the Indian ways, but she finds herself liking it after a while. And she falls in love with an Indian brave named Snow Hunter who was actually a captive white like her. But when given the chance to go back to her village, will Catey follow the leading of her heart?
I absolutely love this book. Even though it's sad enough to make you want to cry, it possesses a sort of charm that keeps you reading till the end.
I felt so sorry for Catey. And you will too, once you read this book. I won't spill the beans regarding the ending, so you'll just have to read it your self. I promise you, you won't be sorry!
A great captive storyIt tells, in diary form, about 13 year old Caty Logan who is growing up in her Quaker village in the 1760's. She is perfectly happy, with boys, learning housewifery, and schoolwork to keep her busy - but that all changes one day when she and her younger brother are captured by Lenape Indians.
At first Caty is desperate: she hates living with the rough Indians, who watch her diary writing curiously and force her to follow their Indian ways. But later, she learns that they are good people, though different than the Quakers, and she begins to make friends - and loved ones.
This was a great book! You really care about what will happen, if Caty will stay with them or return to her village. It was sad, but I love it!
I'd recommend this for ages 10 - 14, and I'd recommend some other captive stories: Trouble's Daughter, I Am Regina, Indian Captive, and Calico Captive.
Standing in the Light- A Review

Moves the reader with its' strengthThis book is an excellent autobiography that allows readers to understand Ms. Boylan's need to always say "yes" to the FBI even at the price of her marriage. Her story is simply fascinating and this account provides high drama yet insight into a family friendly approach to police questioning. Ms. Boylan is a hero and her book deserves best-selling status, as it is a well-written autobiography that may be the genre's best of the year.
Harriet Klausner
A true detective story
Portraits of GuiltBut, above all, this is the story of a woman, considered a maverick in her field, dedicated to helping investigative authoritites change the way eyewitness investigations are conducted. As I read each case history, her "unorthodox" method of interviewing a witness seemed to make perfect sense - Psychology 101.
You wont put this book down until you've turned that last page, still in thought, and closed the back cover.