Badlands: Library Edition
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    Badlands: Library Edition
    Peter Bowen
    Manufacturer: Blackstone Audiobooks
    ProductGroup: Book
    Binding: MP3 CD

    LiteraryLiterary | General | Literature & Fiction | Subjects | Books
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    ASIN: 0786188626
    Badlands: Library Edition
    Average customer rating: Not rated
      Badlands: Library Edition
      Peter Bowen
      Manufacturer: Blackstone Audiobooks
      ProductGroup: Book
      Binding: Audio CD

      LiteraryLiterary | General | Literature & Fiction | Subjects | Books
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      ASIN: 078619037X

      Mt. St. Helens: Surviving the Stone Wind
      Average customer rating: Not rated
        Mt. St. Helens: Surviving the Stone Wind
        Catherine Hickson
        Manufacturer: Tricouni Press
        ProductGroup: Book
        Binding: Paperback

        Earthquakes & VolcanoesEarthquakes & Volcanoes | Earth Sciences | Science | Subjects | Books
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        ASIN: 0969760159
        Wind of the Journey
        Average customer rating: Not rated
          Wind of the Journey
          Irina Ratushinskaia
          Manufacturer: Cornerstone Press Chicago
          ProductGroup: Book
          Binding: Paperback

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          ASIN: 0940895447
          The Painted Desert: Land of Wind And Stone (Desert Places)
          Average customer rating: 4 out of 5 stars
          • paint it personal
          • Collection of anecdotal encounters and experiences
          • A first-person survey of the author and photographer's encounters in the area.
          • A worthy effort
          The Painted Desert: Land of Wind And Stone (Desert Places)
          Scott Thybony
          Manufacturer: University of Arizona Press
          ProductGroup: Book
          Binding: Paperback

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          1. Escalante: The Best Kind of Nothing (Desert Places) Escalante: The Best Kind of Nothing (Desert Places)
          2. Zion Canyon: A Storied Land (Desert Places) Zion Canyon: A Storied Land (Desert Places)
          3. Grand Canyon: Little Things in a Big Place (Desert Places) Grand Canyon: Little Things in a Big Place (Desert Places)
          4. The San Luis Valley: Sand Dunes And Sandhill Cranes (Desert Places) The San Luis Valley: Sand Dunes And Sandhill Cranes (Desert Places)
          5. Joshua Tree: Desolation Tango (Desert Places) Joshua Tree: Desolation Tango (Desert Places)

          ASIN: 0816524807

          Book Description

          Most people who are familiar with the Painted Desert of northeastern Arizona know it only from having pulled off at the Petrified Forest exit on Interstate 40. If they happen to come by it at midday, as most do, they find a landscape drained of color and flattened under the direct sunlight. But this remote pocket of the Arizona desert, sandwiched between the Little Colorado River on one side and bold escarpments on the other, is much more than most tourists ever experience. An ethereal landscape of sculpted rock, wind-fluted cliffs, and elegantly drifting sand, the Painted Desert is a rich storehouse of natural beauty, colorful history, and scientific wonders. Here the strongest winds in Arizona blow across extensive dunefields, where less than ten inches of rain falls each year and only a few desert-savvy Navajo are able to live. Now, for the first time award-winning writer Scott Thybony and freelance photographer David Edwards offer an intimate look at a place that remains inhospitable and inaccessible to so many. They share insights about the geology, paleontology, anthropology, and human history of the region as well as personal stories that dispel the misconceptions and mysteries that surround this delicate and difficult landscape. With fifteen stunning photographs gracing the text, this book offers a vibrant portrait of one of the Southwest's most barren, and most colorful landscapes.

          Customer Reviews:

          5 out of 5 stars paint it personal.......2007-02-20

          The Painted Desert is one of those landscapes that most Americans have heard of but few have a chance to discover. Much of it is remote, accessible only on bad dirt roads. Even at the one national park made from the Painted Desert, the star billing goes to the Petrified Wood. As a tourist attraction the Painted Desert has to compete with the more famous and more dramatic geo-architecture nearby. Fortunately the University of Arizona Press has given us its Desert Places series, teaming up writers and photographers who know their places well, offering a more personal and literary experience of a place than you'd find in the average guidebook.

          The writer/photographer team for the Painted Desert is well-chosen. Scott Thybony is the only white person who has both herded Navajo sheep and discovered dinosaur fossils in the Painted Desert. Dave Edwards is a world-class photographer who has spent decades exploring deserts from the Grand Canyon to Mongolia.

          Edwards might seem to be placed at a disadvantage by the Desert Places format, which is limited to black-and-white photographs for a place defined by its colors. But his keen eye for desert shapes, light subtleties, and weather moods succeeds in bringing out the personality of the Painted Desert.

          Thybony takes us on a personal trek into the desert, letting us meet its geology and famous residents--both its fossils and its Navajo residents today. He shares stories of some of the unlikely characters who have come to the Painted Desert, from fossil hunters to movie makers.

          Best of all, Thybony offers us a poetic eye: "A mythic perspective comes easily in the desert. I find myself drawn to places where the normal sense of time collapses...Out here the tracks of strange life-forms punch holes in the solid present, weakening its hold."

          2 out of 5 stars Collection of anecdotal encounters and experiences.......2006-12-06

          The book is 76 short pages of anecdotes, some apparently taking place during a trip the author took with a photographer through the region, and some apparently as flashbacks of previous experiences. I learned nothing about the geology or geography, little about the people of the area, and got no useful information for planning a trip to the area. The book includes what look like some nice B&W photos, but the photos are reproduced using about half the page in the already-small format of the book (remainder of photo pages is blank space).

          Fast and pleasant reading, but only mildly entertaining, not at all useful, and not worth the $10+ I spent to get it.

          5 out of 5 stars A first-person survey of the author and photographer's encounters in the area........2006-11-07

          Arizona's Painted Desert area is not only overlooked by most tourists because of its inhospitable terrain and difficulty of access, but has received relatively little mention - so any who would understand the region must have THE PAINTED DESERT: LAND OF WIND AND STONE in their collection. Black and white photos of the landscape by David Edwards accompany a first-person survey of the author and photographer's encounters in the area.

          Diane C. Donovan
          California Bookwatch

          5 out of 5 stars A worthy effort.......2006-09-18

          This is the latest book to be published by the University of Arizona Press in their Desert Places Series and it is an absolutely wonderful offering.
          For some time now they have been publishing books on selected desert places as diverse as The San Luis Valley, The Black Rock Desert, The Grand Canyon, Organ Pipe Cuctus, and now The Painted Desert. One factor that has tied these diverse landscapes together for the reader is the top notch writers and photographers selected to present what turns out to be both a wonderful rand and stunningly beautiful photographs.
          This relatively short book, just 96 pages, will take the reader from the Grand Canyon to the Petrified Forest National Park in a landscape rarely seen by the traveling public, especially those that take the Petrified Forest exit off Interstate 40. The Painted Desert runs some 200 miles across northeastern Arizona and most lies within Indian country, Navajo and Hopi. It contains not only the largest collection of petrified wood in the world but an abundance of natural beauty, scientific phenomeon's, and an intriguing history within its windswept, sandy, difficult landscape. It is believed the land dates back some 225 million years to the Late Triassic period and indeed some of the best fossil records and rock formations are found in this area that receives less than ten inches of rain yearly and where the strongest winds in Arizona blow sand into dune fields and cover and uncover treasures long sought after by scientists, collectors, and photographers.
          Not only is there a discussion of the geology, paleontology, anthropology, and human history of the area but just enough personal stories and insights to make the reader think Thybony is sitting with them sharing a cup of coffee and his experiences in this national treasure little known to most travelers.
          It addition to the book being a real plaeasure to read, thanks to award winning writer Scott Thybony and his highly readable literary style, the photographs are strinkingly beautiful and a credit to David Edwards, himself a sixteen year veteral of photographing for the likes of National Geographic.
          This is a worthy addition the the Desert Places series. But beware, after reading this book the reader is liable to just have to order the others in the series. They are that good and inexpensive to boot. Highly recommended.
          I Sit Listening to the Wind: Woman's Encounter Within Herself (Circles of Stones , Vol 2)
          Average customer rating: 5 out of 5 stars
          • A riveting flute solo in the symphony "Journey to Wholeness"
          I Sit Listening to the Wind: Woman's Encounter Within Herself (Circles of Stones , Vol 2)
          Judith Duerk
          Manufacturer: Inner Ocean/Innisfree Press
          ProductGroup: Book
          Binding: Paperback

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          1. Circle of Stones: Woman's Journey to Herself Circle of Stones: Woman's Journey to Herself
          2. Circle Continues Circle Continues
          3. Sacred Circles: A Guide To Creating Your Own Women's Spirituality Group Sacred Circles: A Guide To Creating Your Own Women's Spirituality Group
          4. Imagine a Woman in Love with Herself: Embracing Your Wisdom and Wholeness Imagine a Woman in Love with Herself: Embracing Your Wisdom and Wholeness
          5. Crossing to Avalon: A Woman's Midlife Quest for the Sacred Feminine Crossing to Avalon: A Woman's Midlife Quest for the Sacred Feminine

          Accessories:
          1. The Journey to Wild Divine Biofeedback Software & Hardware for PC & Mac: The Passage The Journey to Wild Divine Biofeedback Software & Hardware for PC & Mac: The Passage
          2. Airborne Effervescent Health Formula, Original Orange, 10 Tablets (Pack of 3) Airborne Effervescent Health Formula, Original Orange, 10 Tablets (Pack of 3)

          ASIN: 1880913372

          Book Description

          I Sit Listening to the Wind is the newly revised companion volume to the classic Circle of Stones. As Judith Duerk powerfully shows, the world is crying out for a developed Feminine voice, a voice that can mediate, once again, the ancient values of the Feminine. These are values of interiority and of the sacredness of the earth, that honor the privacy of individual process; values of the deeper Self held within us all. Many women experience a battle within themselves between the critical, dismissing voice of their masculine side and the interior, self-sustaining voice of their feminine side. Without coming to terms and seeking balance with our masculine side, our feminine side can never reach its full potential. For those seeking balance between the masculine urge to DO and the feminine desire to BE, Duerk's mixture of prose, poetry, and reflective questions creates a model for integration.

          Customer Reviews:

          5 out of 5 stars A riveting flute solo in the symphony "Journey to Wholeness".......1998-12-29

          Judith Durek's sensitive descriptions and testimonials give light to the tunnel. If you are on or just beginning the inner journey, this book will give comfort, guidance, and encourage you to find your own circle of women. This book and her first book "Circle of Stone" is essential on the journey home. I look forward to the next book in this series.
          Select Editions Reader's Digest: Step Ball Change; the Stone Monkey; the Wailing Wind; the Smoke Jumper (2002) (vol. 262)
          Average customer rating: Not rated
            Select Editions Reader's Digest: Step Ball Change; the Stone Monkey; the Wailing Wind; the Smoke Jumper (2002) (vol. 262)

            Manufacturer: reader's digest
            ProductGroup: Book
            Binding: Hardcover
            ASIN: B000ENKSCI
            Ride Like the Wind (A Stepping Stone Book(TM))
            Average customer rating: 5 out of 5 stars
            • A great book
            Ride Like the Wind (A Stepping Stone Book(TM))
            Stan Berenstain , and Jan Berenstain
            Manufacturer: Random House Books for Young Readers
            ProductGroup: Book
            Binding: Paperback

            FictionFiction | Bears | Animals | Children's Books | Subjects | Books
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            3. The Berenstain Bears and the School Scandal Sheet (Big Chapter Books(TM)) The Berenstain Bears and the School Scandal Sheet (Big Chapter Books(TM))
            4. The Berenstain Bears' New Pup (I Can Read Book 1) The Berenstain Bears' New Pup (I Can Read Book 1)
            5. The Berenstain Bears by the Sea (Step-Into-Reading, Step 2) The Berenstain Bears by the Sea (Step-Into-Reading, Step 2)

            ASIN: 0375812733
            Release Date: 2002-06-25

            Book Description

            Love at first sight!

            That’s what happens when Sister Bear sees the horses at Miss Toni’s Riding School and Stable. Sister goes horse crazy! She dreams about horses. She writes stories about horses. She even finds a way to work horses into her math homework! Her dreams soon come true when she gets to take riding lessons with Old Bess, a sweet, slow mare. She may not be the fastest horse in the stable but when Old Bess veers off the beaten track, Sister is in for the ride of a lifetime!

            Customer Reviews:

            5 out of 5 stars A great book.......2003-03-13

            This is the best book I have ever read. I really like horses and I'm taking riding lessons and I think the authors did a very good job.
            The Four Winds Guide to Indian Trade Goods & Replicas: Including Stone Relics, Beads, Photographs, Indian Wars, and Frontier Goods (Schiffer Book for Collectors)
            Average customer rating: 4 out of 5 stars
            • great book w/ lots of color pictures, and prices too.
            The Four Winds Guide to Indian Trade Goods & Replicas: Including Stone Relics, Beads, Photographs, Indian Wars, and Frontier Goods (Schiffer Book for Collectors)
            Preston E. Miller , and Carolyn Corey
            Manufacturer: Schiffer Publishing
            ProductGroup: Book
            Binding: Paperback

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            1. Indian Trade Relics Identification & Values: Identification & Values (Artifacts and Collectibles) Indian Trade Relics Identification & Values: Identification & Values (Artifacts and Collectibles)
            2. The New Four Winds Guide to American Indian Artifacts (Schiffer Book for Collectors) The New Four Winds Guide to American Indian Artifacts (Schiffer Book for Collectors)

            ASIN: 076430531X

            Book Description

            This is a companion volume to the authors' excellent book of last year, The Four Winds Guide to Indian Artifacts. In this new book, over 800 color photographs of trade goods to American Indians over the last hundred and fifty years, and more, are featured. These important cultural relics of American history are avidly collected today by museums and enthusiastic individuals alike. Trade beads, frontier goods, military goods, stone relics, photographs, paper goods, and modern replicas of some of the best items are identified in great detail, and the actual auction estimates and prices realized are included in the captions. The authors are traders at the Four Winds Indain Trading Post in St. Ignatius, Montana. Here they have gained over fifty years of experience with authenic goods, and they conduct annual mail/phone/fax auctions which have established the values recorded here. You cannot find a more accurate reference.

            Customer Reviews:

            4 out of 5 stars great book w/ lots of color pictures, and prices too........1998-12-10

            Great book if you're into indian trade goods. The trade bead section is especially great w/ lots of color pictures. Auction prices are included which gives a great idea as to the worth of the goods. It's also good just to get an idea of what the trade goods were, not what hollywood says they were. Pretty authentic. Worth the $$$.
            Wind against the stone: She reached beyond his granite exterior, he captured more than her image
            Average customer rating: Not rated
              Wind against the stone: She reached beyond his granite exterior, he captured more than her image
              Katherine Myers
              Manufacturer: CFI
              ProductGroup: Book
              Binding: Unknown Binding

              United StatesUnited States | World Literature | Literature & Fiction | Subjects | Books | 18th Century | 19th Century | 20th Century | African American | Asian American | Classics | Collections & Readers | Drama | General | Hispanic | History & Criticism | Humor | Jewish American | Letters & Correspondence | Native American | Poetry | Short Stories | Women Writers
              GeneralGeneral | Literature & Fiction | Subjects | Books | Classics | Comic | Contemporary | Literary
              ASIN: 1555170625
              Reader's Digest Select Editions: Step-Ball-Change, The Stone Monkey, The Wailing Wind, The Smoke Jumper (Vol 4)
              Average customer rating: Not rated
                Reader's Digest Select Editions: Step-Ball-Change, The Stone Monkey, The Wailing Wind, The Smoke Jumper (Vol 4)
                Meanne Ray , Jeffery Deaver , Tony Hillerman , and Nicholas Evans
                Manufacturer: Reader's Digerst Association, Inc.
                ProductGroup: Book
                Binding: Hardcover
                ASIN: B000J1KSKW

                Product Description

                4 condensed books by wellknown authors
                Wind in the Stone
                Average customer rating: 2.5 out of 5 stars
                • Wind in the Stone
                • Horrible!
                • Confusing, shallow and unsatisfying
                • Good Book
                • it's not at all bad!!
                Wind in the Stone
                Andre Norton
                Manufacturer: EOS
                ProductGroup: Book
                Binding: Mass Market Paperback

                Norton, AndreNorton, Andre | ( N ) | Authors, A-Z | Science Fiction & Fantasy | Subjects | Books
                GeneralGeneral | Fantasy | Science Fiction & Fantasy | Subjects | Books
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                ASIN: 0380795566

                Book Description

                Once the Wind united the Valley with the Forest, enveloping them in the strongest of magics which protected the land and banished the threatening Darkness. And there was peace for many centuries...Until the Dark returned.

                A mage, seeking to enslave the Valley and destroy the Forest, has brutally sundered a family. A mother has fled into the woods with her infant girl-child, while the depraved sorcerer holds the babe's twin--a boy--captive in a black tower. The mother dies but the girl survives. Adopted by the strange denizens of the Forest--safe from the mage's malevolent influence--she grows to young womanhood, cultivating a cherished skill that has been denied the others of her kind: the ability to truly hear the sounds of her world. But her future will be fraught with trial and terror, for only she can smash the chains that shackle the Balley and its inhabitants. It is her destiny to confront sorcerer and demon minions, and to oppose the one she must conquer and free: the magician's protege and her most powerful adversary. Her bane and blood. Her brother.

                Customer Reviews:

                3 out of 5 stars Wind in the Stone.......2007-01-15

                Wind in the Stone is the first novel I have read by Andre Norton of her apparent 100 or so novels, and I enjoyed it though with some hesitation to quickly recommend the novel to others.
                It is quite wordy and unexplanitive in some parts in which we are used to and the phrasing can quickly become distracting, although effective to create a fairytale effect. It took me some time to get around the way the shortish novel (280 pgs) was written, but after this I quite enjoyed it. The plot is realatively simple and leaves gaps in which the reader must fill with their own imagination, but this I don't mind at all. - If you want to read a book that throws all the details in your face , this book will not do. It is neither cheesy, nor epic but a tale of Good VS Evil.

                The narrative follows various stereotypical characters: a twisted mage turned from Light to Darkness,the lives of simple people living in a village in which the Wind still abounds unlike the rest of the world, from which the Wind has left alone for many years. The two twins that are meant to be main characters are only introduced past halfway through the book and are rather shallowly developed. But as I said, the story is told in a kind of Renaissance style of writing, not ovely descriptive in character development but instead focuses on other areas.

                Recommended to those who are at least marginally sick of modern fantasy writers trying desperatly to be different, and want a enjoyable, descriptive and simple storyline. The book has sparked in me an intrest to track down Norton's other books.

                1 out of 5 stars Horrible!.......2006-01-18

                I've always heard Andre Norton is a master of SF/F, and that her books are spectacular. I picked this one up thinking that it had the potential to quickly become my favorite. Instead, I have to rate it as one of the worst books I have ever had to read outside of classes. The main characters were unlikeable, the antagonistic blood-enemy was not at all evil; he was cowardly and more good than bad, and to top it all off, the final confrontation was so disappointing that it left me in literal tears. This book sucked. Normally I let people draw their own conclusions and opinions about things, but this one was bad enough I feel I should warn others away. It was such a flop!

                1 out of 5 stars Confusing, shallow and unsatisfying.......2005-06-10

                I bought this book based on the summary in the back cover. I've never read any other books by Andre Norton, so I was untainted by great expectations.
                The book is a disaster. The plot is nearly incoherent: many scenes simply don't fit in with the general narrative and only serve to confuse the reader. Often a scene will show some action being performed, only to have it be completely ignored for the rest of the book. Also, the book tends to repetition (how many times do we *really* need to hear the venerable old mages sighing hopelessly and/or saying that everything hinges on the twins?). Many important plot points were left completely unexplained, characters are introduced abruptly and for no good reason (*cough* Cerlyn *cough*), and too many things happen by happy happenstance. For example, the heroes will often acquire various magical objects, but their nature and manner of acquisition is often completely unexplained (in some cases these objects are simply lying on the ground waiting to be picked up!).
                As for the writing style: it bordered on purple prose, in many cases crossing the line. There is hardly a single page without mention of some "He who this" or "She who that" (e.g. "Her who waited for them there"), and the author often gets the capitalization wrong. The grammar could be improved in some places--most noticeably, comments are often placed in inappropriate places.
                In general, the characters didn't win my sympathy, and the conflict between Dark and Light wasn't convincing. "Dark" was simply too stereotypical to be believed.

                I recommend to readers who want to read *real* fantasy the "Fortress" series by C.J. Cherryh. Her writing style in those books bears some resemblance to Norton's, but Cherryh carries it off, while Norton fails.

                4 out of 5 stars Good Book.......2004-03-11

                Though this is the third book I've read by Norton, I do agree that it could have used a little help. It did start off slow and there were times when you were totally confused. However, Norton redeems herself as the book progress by the sheer imagination that exist inside of her. The characters were a little hard to understand at first. That's in part one of the book but in part two, they all seem to come together. Whereas I am a loyal fan to Norton, I would still read all of her books and feel lucky to be part of that crowd that knows good fiction when she's see it.

                4 out of 5 stars it's not at all bad!!.......2003-07-22

                ok, i was very unhappy with what other people wrote. but i respect their opinions. i admit that it was very dense, and the names sometimes got confusing, but it is a really good book. at first i was intrigued by the simplicity of it's description on the back, (i needed summer reading and i love fantasy) so i bought this book.
                at first i had a lot of trouble, because it is a style that is hard to read, but i got used to it, and i really enjoyed the plot and the overall ending. i was very satisfied, so much so that after tearing apart my room and realizing i had lent my copy to an ex-best friend and never got it back, i am going to by a new one!!
                happy reading! and just try the book, it's really good once you get into it!

                SPOCK, MESSIAH! (Star Trek)
                Average customer rating: 4 out of 5 stars
                • A female Enterprise crewmember would not do what turns Spock into a madman
                • This should be the movie!
                • Follows the Star Trek Formula but still holds up.
                • A novel from the "Let's Pick on Spock" school of thinking!
                • Not my idea of a messiah...
                SPOCK, MESSIAH! (Star Trek)
                Theodore Cogswell
                Manufacturer: Spectra
                ProductGroup: Book
                Binding: Mass Market Paperback

                FantasyFantasy | Science Fiction & Fantasy | Subjects | Books | Alternate History | Anthologies | Arthurian | Contemporary | Epic | General | Historical | History & Criticism | Magic & Wizards | Series
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                GeneralGeneral | Star Trek | Media | Science Fiction & Fantasy | Subjects | Books
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                5. Perry's Planet Perry's Planet

                ASIN: 0553246747
                Release Date: 1993-09-01

                Customer Reviews:

                2 out of 5 stars A female Enterprise crewmember would not do what turns Spock into a madman.......2007-07-26

                In this story, the crew of the Enterprise is surreptitiously observing the inhabitants of a primitive planet. In order to blend in, each member of the crew that is on the planet has an implant that is to keep him or her in constant contact with a native with a similar temperament. The native, referred to as a "dop" which is short for "Doppelganger" has their emotions and other mental patterns channeled through the implant. This will allow the observer to understand the language, interpret the culturally significant gestures, in general to blend in and avoid all social and cultural faux pas.
                However, something goes terribly wrong and Spock appears to take on the persona of a religious madman. He claims to be a powerful religious figure that is going to unite the nomadic tribes and conquer the cities. In his madness, Spock beams to the Enterprise and steals the trilithium crystals, which seriously weakens the Enterprise. There is also a powerful cosmic storm brewing, which will soon destroy the Enterprise if power is not restored.
                Kirk, McCoy and others beam down to the planet and try to get close enough to Spock to break the implant connection and release him from the madness. However, Spock is a powerful intellect and he is able to thwart their every action. However, by a series of maneuvers that involve a female member of the crew acting as a stripper, Kirk and company are able to sever the connection and save the ship.
                I did not like this story because of the fundamental premise. A female member of the Enterprise crew deliberately altered the person who was to be Spock's dop. Rather than use the selected native with a non-emotional personality that would be compatible with Spock, she changed it to someone who is a lecherous, scheming madman. The powerful flood of emotions overwhelms Spock, which causes the whole problem. Her reasoning was that she wanted Spock to experience more emotions and become more human. This is absurd, this woman made a deliberate error that could have plunged a planet into a genocidal civil war and destroyed the Enterprise. Rather than court-martial her, Kirk does not even reprimand her, saying something like, "what is done is done."
                This compounded absurdity is such a logical flaw in the story that I found it difficult to read. An Enterprise officer is portrayed as a petty female interested more in her emotional gratification than in doing her duty. That would not happen in the Star Fleet that I envision.

                5 out of 5 stars This should be the movie!.......2006-11-28

                Maybe this book portrays what many might feel is an unrealistic Messiah, but throughout history this is exactly what religious zealots have been like.

                More importantly, though, I think this is a book that follows the Star Trek "formula" while developing a very interesting story. Trouble with first contact, ship Commander seemingly mad, Enterprise struggling with problems and space anomolies, Kirk and crew trying to deal with a foreign culture with humourous and frightening results. And a suprise ending.

                This should be a Star Trek movie.

                The only criticism I have is the manner in which a female crew member is depicted as a sexpot who everyone -- McCoy, Spock, and others -- just can't keep their hands and eyes off. Very sexist and in this day-in-age quite vulgar.

                5 out of 5 stars Follows the Star Trek Formula but still holds up........2005-01-24

                The title describes it all here. Spock is implanted with a defective micro chip that has the personality of a madman. It plays like a 1970's version the show. It's one of those novels that would have been a script for the show if it stayed on in the 70's. If you are a Spock fan. Or even a fan of the original show; it's not the dog everyone says it is. It will entertain you for a few hours and isn't a total waste of time.

                4 out of 5 stars A novel from the "Let's Pick on Spock" school of thinking!.......2001-08-18

                Don't get me wrong, I liked the novel (I read it in less than a week). It was a good story and certainly entertaining. The only problem was that, in my mind, it seemed like an alternative version of James Blish's "Spock Must Die" novel. It seems the Star Trek novels of the 1970's just couldn't focus on anyone else but Mr. Spock and/or Captain Kirk. There were other people on board the USS Enterprise. Unfortunately, the book just was not outstanding enough.

                3 out of 5 stars Not my idea of a messiah..........2001-04-21

                This book makes my "Dreck of Trek" list for its absolutely abominable "Messiah" ideas that are based on negative stereotypes of Mohammed and Islam that will make modern Muslims cringe -- yet another "let's make Spock act totally out of character" story. If it wasn't so well-written otherwise, it would get one star. But it does have some interesting characters and twists, so I won't trash it completely. Definitely not a hack novel, but not one that I really enjoyed, either.
                Spock, Messiah!
                Average customer rating: 2 out of 5 stars
                • A female Enterprise crewmember would not do what turns Spock into a madman
                Spock, Messiah!
                Theodore R., and Spano, Charles A. Cogswell
                Manufacturer: Bantam Books
                ProductGroup: Book
                Binding: Mass Market Paperback
                ASIN: B000IRXWWI

                Customer Reviews:

                2 out of 5 stars A female Enterprise crewmember would not do what turns Spock into a madman.......2007-07-26

                In this story, the crew of the Enterprise is surreptitiously observing the inhabitants of a primitive planet. In order to blend in, each member of the crew that is on the planet has an implant that is to keep him or her in constant contact with a native with a similar temperament. The native, referred to as a "dop" which is short for "Doppelganger" has their emotions and other mental patterns channeled through the implant. This will allow the observer to understand the language, interpret the culturally significant gestures, in general to blend in and avoid all social and cultural faux pas.
                However, something goes terribly wrong and Spock appears to take on the persona of a religious madman. He claims to be a powerful religious figure that is going to unite the nomadic tribes and conquer the cities. In his madness, Spock beams to the Enterprise and steals the trilithium crystals, which seriously weakens the Enterprise. There is also a powerful cosmic storm brewing, which will soon destroy the Enterprise if power is not restored.
                Kirk, McCoy and others beam down to the planet and try to get close enough to Spock to break the implant connection and release him from the madness. However, Spock is a powerful intellect and he is able to thwart their every action. However, by a series of maneuvers that involve a female member of the crew acting as a stripper, Kirk and company are able to sever the connection and save the ship.
                I did not like this story because of the fundamental premise. A female member of the Enterprise crew deliberately altered the person who was to be Spock's dop. Rather than use the selected native with a non-emotional personality that would be compatible with Spock, she changed it to someone who is a lecherous, scheming madman. The powerful flood of emotions overwhelms Spock, which causes the whole problem. Her reasoning was that she wanted Spock to experience more emotions and become more human. This is absurd, this woman made a deliberate error that could have plunged a planet into a genocidal civil war and destroyed the Enterprise. Rather than court-martial her, Kirk does not even reprimand her, saying something like, "what is done is done."
                This compounded absurdity is such a logical flaw in the story that I found it difficult to read. An Enterprise officer is portrayed as a petty female interested more in her emotional gratification than in doing her duty. That would not happen in the Star Fleet that I envision.
                Star Trek Spock Messiah
                Average customer rating: Not rated
                  Star Trek Spock Messiah
                  Theodore R Cogswell And Charles A Spanno
                  Manufacturer: Corgi
                  ProductGroup: Book
                  Binding: Paperback

                  GeneralGeneral | Star Trek | Media | Science Fiction & Fantasy | Subjects | Books
                  ASIN: B000PD7P2I
                  Star Trek: Spock Messiah!
                  Average customer rating: Not rated
                    Star Trek: Spock Messiah!
                    Theodire R. and Charles A. Spano Cogswell
                    Manufacturer: New York Bantam 1993.
                    ProductGroup: Book
                    Binding: Paperback

                    GeneralGeneral | Star Trek | Media | Science Fiction & Fantasy | Subjects | Books
                    ASIN: B000MXZSWK

                    My French Kitchen: A Book of 120 Treasured Recipes
                    Average customer rating: 5 out of 5 stars
                    • Excellent and easy
                    • Gorgeous!
                    • Who Can Resist?
                    • Like a trip to France!
                    • The flourless chocolate cake is superb!!!
                    My French Kitchen: A Book of 120 Treasured Recipes
                    Joanne Harris , and Fran Warde
                    Manufacturer: William Morrow Cookbooks
                    ProductGroup: Book
                    Binding: Paperback

                    GeneralGeneral | Cooking, Food & Wine | Subjects | Books
                    FrenchFrench | European | Regional & International | Cooking, Food & Wine | Subjects | Books
                    Similar Items:
                    1. The French Market: More Recipes from a French Kitchen The French Market: More Recipes from a French Kitchen
                    2. Sleep, Pale Sister (P.S.) Sleep, Pale Sister (P.S.)
                    3. Gentlemen and Players : A Novel Gentlemen and Players : A Novel
                    4. Five Quarters of the Orange Five Quarters of the Orange
                    5. Holy Fools : A Novel (P.S.) Holy Fools : A Novel (P.S.)

                    ASIN: 0060820942
                    Release Date: 2006-01-03

                    Book Description

                    In My French Kitchen bestselling author Joanne Harris, along with acclaimed food writer Fran Warde, shares her treasured collection of family recipes that has been passed down from generation to generation. All the classics are here: Quiche Lorraine, Moules Marinière, Coq au Vin, and Crème Brûlée, plus an entire chapter devoted to French chocolate, including cakes, meringues, and spiced hot chocolate.

                    Customer Reviews:

                    5 out of 5 stars Excellent and easy.......2007-09-22

                    I cannot say enough wonderful things about this cookbook. People have mentioned the beautiful photos and yes, they are certainly there. The writing helps to weave a spell about the recipes. You are not just making a soup, but the soup her aunt used to make when...

                    The recipes will knock your socks off. The roasted tomato tart is worth the price of the book. My book club was blown away by the bluberry tart. A gluten intolerant guest was thrilled with Gateau Lawrence. (Flourless chocolate. Easy, intense, and will make you a legend among your friends). The soups are excellent too. Oh yes, and the cabbage pie (galette) I made just because it sounded so weird, that was wonderful too. The recipes seem to 'work' if you know what I mean. You may choose to reduce the butter and make adjustments, but they turn out beautifully as written.

                    One complaint and it is an issue of layout, not content. The recipe introductions are, for some mind boggling reason, printed in very light grey and can be hard to see. Probably the layout design person was in their early 20's with perfect vision! Pretty is nice, but books are meant to be read people!

                    I'm going to get her other cookbook too, while it's still in hard cover. Buy this. You will use the recipes and love them!


                    5 out of 5 stars Gorgeous!.......2007-01-16

                    This is an excellent cookbook. Even if you haven't read Joanne Harris' great books, this cookbook is filled with great simple-yet-elegant recipes and wonderful photos along the way.

                    5 out of 5 stars Who Can Resist? .......2006-10-20

                    Who Can Resist a cookbook written by the author of Chocolat?
                    Come on...I couldn't resist. The book is a sumptous delight with loads of pictures of French food and French life. I sat down with a French press and read the book from cover to cover before deciding what to cook. The recipes and the writing are unpretentious and yet elegant--just as good French food should be. A great find.

                    5 out of 5 stars Like a trip to France!.......2006-08-14

                    This is a very beautiful book. Get a cup of cafe au lait and read this book. You will feel like you took a mini-vacation to France, and visited Ms. Harris's French Kitchen. Beautifully photographed, and so many good recipes to try. Highly recommended! It would make a wonderful gift for anyone interested in France or cooking.

                    5 out of 5 stars The flourless chocolate cake is superb!!!.......2004-05-28

                    This book is beautiful.

                    You'll love looking at the photographs. But, what you will love more, especially if you love the combination of chocolate and nuts, is the "Gateau Charles", which is a flourless chocolate cake. I bake this cake [at least] once a week, for I like to eat a slice, daily. The cake is easy to prepare. (The recipe calls for the use of 70% chocolate. My suggestion, if you're in the United States, and if you can get your hands on it [the company is located in northern California], is to use the Scharfenberger brand of chocolate. No, I don't work for them; I'm just a "foodie".)
                    My French Kitchen : A Book of 120 Treasured Recipes
                    Average customer rating: Not rated
                      My French Kitchen : A Book of 120 Treasured Recipes
                      Joanne Harris; Fran Warde
                      Manufacturer: Morrow Cookbooks
                      ProductGroup: Book
                      Binding: Paperback
                      ASIN: B000OEV696

                      Books:

                      1. Blurry and Disconnected: Tales of Sink-Or-Swim Nihilism
                      2. Bogeymen Don't Play Football (The Adventures of the Bailey School Kids, #27)
                      3. Breathe Deep the Passing Wind
                      4. CAFE ROYAL
                      5. Cape Cod Stories: Tales from the Cape, Nantucket & MarthaÆs Vineyard
                      6. Classic Nasty: More Naughty Bits: A Rollicking Guide to Hot Sex in Great Books, from the Iliad to the Corrections
                      7. Dead at Daybreak
                      8. Dreaming Me: An African-American Woman's Buddhist Journey
                      9. Dusty Answer (Virago Modern Classics)
                      10. El Hombre Duplicado/the Double (Punto de Lectura)

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