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EXCELLENT RESCUER
AN EXCELLENT MANUAL

AQUATIC SHENANIGANSOne never really knows what's going on, who's zooming who, or who is the bad guy and who is the good guy. You almost feel you're being set up for a really bizarre "psycho" head game, but no, it's just a mystery with some unusual characters, and a strange twist at the end. Borg's style is a little rambling, and at times, I felt frustrated by the many corners the book turns, but in all, it's a fresh and original story, and one that's hard to put down.
So, where is your follow up Mr. Borg?
This was a wonderful book. It kept me interested.

Excellent Book
Hilarious first person account of foibles of war

GOT PARENTS? -You should have this book
If the death of a loved one is a new experience for you....
Excellent, Simple Overview

What a nice book!
Enjoyable Paintings and Easy-to-Follow InstructionsShe obviously has much familiarity with these kinds of animals and enjoys their company. Her commentary includes personal anecdotes about her interactions with her subjects, as well as easy to follow instructions for painting them, or simply understanding the color and detail of their anatomy.
Her book fills a needed niche in small animal painting instruction. Her step by step approach and honest, detailed descriptions of how to achieve painting effects will enable anyone interested in painting or drawing to create beautiful renderings of these animals. The animals showcased in her book include: rabbits, squirrels, foxes, raccoons, woodchucks, otters, mice, hamsters, ferrets, guinea pigs, gerbils, prairie dogs and chipmunks.
Jeanne Filler Scott has been included in numerous wildlife art books and magazines. This, her first book, is an excellent, clearly illustrated and clearly written work, and will undoubtedly become a collectable. Enjoy it!


Excellent 2nd in Trilogy From the back cover:
TRAPPED BETWEEN TWO WORLDS...Half-human, half-vampire, Danielle Walthers was caught in a twilight world between human desire and inhuman need. In the dangerous streets and wild nightclubs of Los Angeles, 19 year-old Dani was fighting the call of her own blood heritage. But dark temptations and thrilling sensual pleasures were luring her closer to the edge. Unless she found a way to regain her hold on humanity, Dani feared the god-like powers and gnawing hungers within her would drive her forever into the night...FORCED TO WAG A BRUTAL BATTLE...One young woman held the key to Dani's salvation. But the vampire cabal, lurking beneath the glitzy world of show business, had its own agenda. Now Dani was forced to wage war againts them--a war that would brand her a Wildling, a vampire who killed its own kind. And in the vampire world, there was only one punishment for Wildlings--complete annihilation...
LOVE IT!

An unexpected gem!With a long, nonfiction, reference-y title like you see above, I wasn't exactly expecting entertainment when I picked up this book. What a nice surprise!
While I'm guessing you're familiar with the name William Fox (as in the Fox Film Corporation), I'm also guessing you've never even heard the name "Sol M. Wurtzel." And why would you? After all, he was just a lowly personal assistant... or so Fox would have liked us to believe.
This book, which is a collection of the actual letters that were exchanged between Mr. Fox and his "personal assistant" (nowadays, Wurtzel would be known as CEO, or "studio head"), paint a dramatic, cartoonish, sometimes hilarious, sometimes pitiable view of what it was like to work in the film industry in 1917.
That was the year when Fox, whose office was in New York, decided he needed a presence in Los Angeles. He didn't want to travel, though, so he sent Wurtzel. Fox wasn't exactly a generous boss; although his "precious" letters were always addressed "My Dear Sol," the pretentiousness of his formal and contrived language is quickly recognizable as just that. Not far below the surface was a demanding, moody, penny-pinching, nearly un-pleasable man who needed a scapegoat to blame whenever things didn't go perfectly.
He couldn't have picked a better punching bag. Wurtzel did backflips to please his boss; always catering to his every whim, apologizing for things that weren't his fault, trying to be everything to everyone while receiving no credit and only one-third of the salary of the man he replaced.
This book again proves the idea that fact is often more interesting than fiction. The scandals, the deceit, the nepotism... pampered stars who ask for advances for their "mothers' operations" and then skip town, sons of studio owners who steal raw film... it's all here, and every piece of it is piled onto Wutzel's overburdened shoulders.
Only once is he brave enough to ask his boss for a little help; he talks about the family he hasn't been allowed to visit for three years, and the fact that Fox himself hasn't met with him the entire time he's been there. But he's quickly put in his place by the man who demands to know if his ego has "grown too big for his position."
I'm not sure if I was supposed to laugh out loud, but I did, through many parts of this book. The passive-aggressive comments (along the lines of "You've given me no other choice but to blame you for this,") along with the laughable scenarios in which Fox's New York secretary would pretend he was out of town whenever trouble arose, made this book feel like satire. But I suppose the stereotypes have to come from somewhere! I couldn't help but to picture Ebenezer Scrooge and Bob Cratchit, and I kept waiting for the Ghosts of Christmas to come knocking on Fox's door.
In a sense, I suppose they did. Fox was eventually ousted from his own corporation, and Wurtzel stayed on, producing successful B movies and launching many careers.
This book, brought to publication by Wurtzel's daughter and grand-niece, is a compelling and fascinating character study. So, ignore the clunky title and read the book as the editors originally wanted it titled: "My Dear Sol."...
A surprising page-turner

Perfect for those seeking intro to Shakespeare for kidsThere are two things that are very impressive about this book. First, the compiler manages to introduce very adult themes about power,loyalty, etc., as well as the vocabulary of 400 years ago,even a brief explaination of iambic pentameter in a tone so chatty that you hardly realize you are learning. Second, the rich pictures impart a thirst for MORE Shakespeare. You'll hear, "Can we hear more? What's the rest of this story?" often!
Any publication that presents the Bard as accessable and enjoyable deserves a place in every school or public library, and certainly every home. Add this to Charles and Mary Lamb's "Tales of Shakespeare" as a new classic.
Fabulous!!!!!

Excellent Narrative. Beautiful Pictures.
Best book on woodies and mandarins ... a real delight !

Revitalizing words of song!
Revitalizing words of song!