Related Vacation Book Subjects: Arkansas
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Books to read if you're planning a vacation in "Stone", sorted by average review score:

Manual De Oracle JDeveloper
Published in Paperback by McGraw-Hill/Spanish Imports (30 March, 1999)
Authors: Cary Jensen, Loy Anderson, Blake Stone, and Loy Jensen
Average review score:

Manual De Oracle JDeveloper
No Match! Just Trust! No Evidience


A Marine Remembers Iwo Jima: Dog Company, 2nd Battalion, 27th Marines, Fifth Marine Division
Published in Hardcover by Eakin Publications (October, 2000)
Author: Alfred R. Stone
Average review score:

Nightmare on IWO
This is an outstanding transcript of one Marines personal account of the many men who fought on IWO JIMA. The Author Patrick Caruso more importantly wishes the reader to draw their on conclusions from these personal accounts. The history of these events is depicted in the most accurate rendition, more importantly the writer wants the reader to understand these events as they unfold from that standpoint


Marley and the Big Stone Castle
Published in Paperback by Emmaus Press (01 April, 2001)
Author: Dick Tunison
Average review score:

A Sweet Tale
This endearing story about Marley and his friends brings to mind stories of yesterday, of sitting on Grandpa's lap by the fireplace and listening to tales of friendship and love. I must say, I enjoy reading this book to my young children. I cherish the opportunity to teach them about the values of kindness, friendship, and cooperation portrayed by the animal characters. It is a lovely way to teach children that all creatures are special and that God has given everyone talents that are unique and valuable.


Marrying Stone
Published in Paperback by Jove Pubns (August, 1994)
Author: Pamela Morsi
Average review score:

Travel to a world passed by and experience good simplicity.
This is a wonderful story of an unlikely romance in the Ozark Mountains, a place that time has passed by and forgotten traditions are still commonplace. You will find yourself or someone that you know in the simple goodness of early rural America.


Mary Chapin Carpenter: Stones in the Road
Published in Paperback by Cherry Lane Music (February, 1995)
Authors: Milton Okun and Mary Chapin Carpenter
Average review score:

wonderful...
Beautiful pictures and presentation. If you like this album, you owe it to yourself to buy the sheet music; "The last word" sounds so good on piano and guitar and is suprisingly easy to play!


The Maze Stone
Published in Hardcover by Putnam Pub Group Juv (June, 1983)
Author: Eileen Dunlop
Average review score:

Mystery, ancient magic, loneliness, loosing a loved one.
The Maze Stone has been a favourite book of mine since I was quite young. It is a memerable story, one that no person can ever forget, and which will take the imagination to different levels. Fanny is a a girl who has been heartbroken by the recent loss of her grandmother, who has raised her since her mothers death. She is to now live with her father, step-mother, and step-sister Heather in a new housing estate. Because of her sadness and unfamiliarity of her surroundings, Fanny withdraws into herself, rejecting her new family, and spends most of her time alone on top of the big hill that shadows their house. It is a mysterious hill that contains the ruins of an ancient stone circle. Her new house was once part of of much bigger house that contained a mystery that was lost through the ages, until now. A young man dissapeared in that house many years ago, as Fanny soon found out at a display at the local library. And it was uncanny how similar his picture looked to the new English teacher at school that Heather had a crush on. After finding a strange round stone with a maze design on while digging in the garden, Fanny decides, for some strange reason, to hide it away in her room. But during the next few weeks the design seems to pop up everywhere; on a stone on top of the hill, on one of the old stones in her fireplace, and even on a pendant worn by the strange new English teacher. The book becomes more and more exciting with every new mystery that Fanny uncovers, and the ending is by no means predictable with Fanny and Heather facing off with the most evil beings imaginable, and finally forgetting their differences and becoming true sisters. I would recommend this book to any child or teenager that has an imagination that likes to wander, or who has had hardships moving to a new area. Gemma Smith, Wichita Kansas, Mizogg@aol.com


Meadow in the Sky: A History of Yosemites Tuolumne Region
Published in Paperback by Albicaulis Pr (May, 1984)
Authors: Elizabeth Stone O'Neill and Elizabeth Stone O'Neill
Average review score:

Seductive
I bought this book yesterday and finished it last night. I couldn't put it down!


Medicine Stone: Poems
Published in Paperback by Daniel & Daniel Pub (October, 2002)
Authors: John L. Coulehan and Jack Coulehan
Average review score:

Deals with the sensitive subjects of personal tragedy
Medicine Stone is a collection of meditational poetry by Jack Coulehan that deals with the sensitive subjects of personal tragedy, inspiration, loss, and the effects of cosmic forces. The distinctive and emotional free verse is uniquely inspirational. Mongoose: Here lies the mongoose that I carried across the world/by steamship from the steamy woodlands of Ceylon/to the breathless, frozen forests south of Moscow.//In the summer my guests cooed hen they saw the mongoose/popping his head from our picnic basket. The creature/was a real show-stopper. The lazed twitch of his whiskers//and pointed nose delighted them all, and his bush tail/could write such unexpected endings, like last week/in the woods--the mongoose bit off a piece of mama's nose//while she crawled around on her knees collecting mushrooms./No feigned affection there. No holding back or holding forth./Indeed, the mongoose was a trick of the universe,/a quick correction to easy assumptions. The trickster/could worry a cobra, but if you left him in a room/alone, he'd whimper for hours. May the mongoose rest in peace.


Medieval Ireland: The Enduring Tradition
Published in Paperback by Palgrave Macmillan (May, 1996)
Authors: Michael Richter, Brian Stone, and Adrian Keogh
Average review score:

Brief but not superficial
The book is a brief history of medieval Ireland. It covers the times from the prehistoric times to the fifteenth century. However, brief does not mean superficial. The author chooses some subjects he is interested in and discusses them trying to be impartial - from many different points of view. He does not try to describe the past in detail, but rather to point out the most important moments, problems and aspects in Irish history. Richter also poses some questions significant from the point of view of a contemporary person some of which remain open.
The book is suitable for beginners as it is quite short and written in a comprehensible way as well as for people truly interested in the matter thanks to reliable bibliography record and references. It helps to understand the unusual political organization and the complicated and quite uncommon social structure of the Island in the middle ages. Obviously, history of medieval Ireland was greatly determined by the history of church, that is why the book deals mainly with the church's history, which was not less interesting in Ireland than political history. It is a very good book for a great start.


Memoirs of a Cold War Son (Singular Lives: The Iowa Series in
Published in Hardcover by University of Iowa Press (01 April, 2000)
Authors: Gaines Post Jr., Albert E. Stone, and Gaines Post
Average review score:

Memoirs of a Cold War Son
This is a wonderfully introspective book, written by the intellectually driven Prof. Post. There are similarities to 'Remembrance of Things Past', by Marcel Proust. The obvious exceptions are Post's evident heterosexuality and the length of the works. Post is continually in search for his identity and his role in the world, which is apparently a dynamic of his life. The level of detail is at times a bit overwhelming, especially in his military sojourn in Germany, although this is also a crucial episode, not only in his life, but in the search for meaning of 'the cold war son'. He has a most wonderful interaction with his close knit family and his constant search for the meaning of his mother's psychological collapse during and post WWII, appears to be a driving force in his search for the meaning of his life. This is truly a gripping rendition of a man's struggle with his own psychology and a glimpse of the world events surrounding his formative years of identity.


Related Vacation Book Subjects: Arkansas
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