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Books to read if you're planning a vacation in "Kings", sorted by average review score:

Arthur Rex : a legendary novel
Published in Unknown Binding by Delacorte Press/Seymour Lawrence ()
Author: Thomas Berger
Average review score:

Just plain awesome.
One of the best King Arthur stories. Definately the funniest. I don't know what else to say. Just read this book.

Camelot meets Dr. Strangelove -- humor with a heart!
Most of the books on the Arthur legends are steeped in battle glory and mythical images, though Bergers imagery is good, what you'll take away from Arthur Rex is the emotions.Berger has a tremendous way of making you feel for characters while being able to see their funny side at the same time. They feel like real people who happened to live extraordinary lives nearly a thousand years ago. It's not all Arthur and Lancelot either, you'll get to know Gawaiyne and Gareth. the stor about Tristram and Isolde with melt the iciest of hearts. This book is a treat for anyone who loves Arthurian stories or satires. With vicious wit and strong characterization, how could you go wrong?


Attention's Loop: A Sculptor's Reverie on the Coexistence of Substance and Spirit
Published in Hardcover by Harry N Abrams (01 April, 1999)
Authors: Elizabeth King and Katherine Wetzel
Average review score:

A truly original modern artist
Ms. King is not only a great artist but an original thinker. Her sculptures, mechanical self-portraits fashioned from wood and metal, are amazingly realistic and beautiful yet at the same time a step beyond reality. As a craftsman, she is truly gifted with her hands. As a writer, she is able to examine the fields of history, philosophy, and science through the lens of her art and make us rethink the meaning of the human brain and senses. Especially fascinating was her research into the history of the homunculus.

As an added bonus, the book is beautifully designed (even won an award for book design).

Crystaline romp
A crystalline romp reflecting tension and reverie involved in the creation of that which is in our image. King's prose is elegant, pithy, never prolix, illuminating topics from the Golem to ETA Hoffman's Olympia while passing on the way thorough Jacquard's loom and Vaucanson's creations.

Throughout this shimmering work are dispersed aching photographs of King's Pupil, a jointed movable sculpture; her Galetea, who seems, at any moment, about to spring to life.

I without reservation recommend this work to anyone interested in the creation of works in the image of "Man," from sculptors to professors of AI.


Back Labor No More!!: What Every Woman Should Know Before Labor
Published in Paperback by Plenary Systems (June, 1994)
Author: Janie McCoy King
Average review score:

A must have for posterior babies!
I highly recommend this book to any woman who has posterior babies or back labor. My first 3 babies were all posterior and my 4th was until I used this technique through 4 contractions and she turned anterior. So simple, but so helpful!

EXCELLENT
A must read for anyone who is going to have a baby and doesn't want to suffer the agony of back labor!


Beating the Anti-King's Indian
Published in Paperback by International Chess Enterprises (01 December, 1996)
Author: Joe Gallagher
Average review score:

Excellent for KID players and all 1. d4 players
This entertaining and well-written book should have a large audience, as a huge percentage of chess players play king's indian systems all the time with black. This book pretty much describes everything white will throw at you (other than most traditional king's indian lines), including Torre Attacks, Trompowskys, Veresovs, Averbakh, Four Pawns (those last two are the only regular king's indian lines given), Barry Attack, London System, Blackmar-Diemer, and others. The book has lots of explanatory text and twenty-nine annotated games flesh out the main ideas. It is a repertoire book, meaning that the book focuses on recommended lines for black. Burgess' writing is, as always, clear, entertaining, instructive, and witty. The Batsford production is excellent. A fine chess book.

A must have for any King's Indian Player
I love both sides of the King's Indian, and nothing frustrates me more than to have white avoid it with some offbeat system, such as the Torre or London. This book does an outstanding job of showing black how to handle these offbeat openings (which are showing up more and more often in tournament play).


Bib: KJV Promise Keepers Men's Study Bible (Bonded Leather - Black
Published in Hardcover by Zondervan (September, 1997)
Author: Zondervan
Average review score:

Excellent mens resource
The Pomise keeper's guide throughout the bible functions as an excellent tutor pointing out essential passages and how they can be applied specifically to a man's life.

Easy to read, with helpful insites to today's life.
This is easy to follow. It provides a chronology table with each book of the bible, and character profiles. Complete introduction of the Bible's 66 books with background and a biblical narrative. There is a column running down the center of each page which cross references linked words or phrases in the text. This makes it particularly easy to reference like passages. A dictionary is provided for any unusual terms.

Over all this is a very practical bible for today's english language.


Bible King James Version Children of Color, Imitation Leather Burgundy
Published in Hardcover by Riverside World (January, 1995)
Author: World Bible Publishing
Average review score:

Excellent
Excellent for Young pre school through grade 3 age. Easy to understand and the color in the pictures is great.

What a find!
An excellent source for parents of color and their children. Now these families can explore a bible that reflects themselves through the lovely pictures and familiar spirituals included.


The Bible On Cassette - Complete Old & New Testaments On 48 Lifetime Cassettes
Published in Audio CD by International Cassette Co (May, 2000)
Author: Steven B. Stevens
Average review score:

The Audio Bible Perfected
The Audio Bible in the NASB is clear and accurate to the paper text. By combining hi tech audio reproductions features with the New American Standard Updated Edition (NASU), the goal of bringing the Word of God into everyday activities is finally achieved.

Great Book ! Living and active !
I love Mr. Stevens narration. Whenever I read the bible, I hear it in my mind with his voice. I listened to this everyday for about 2 years and I'm able to memorize the scriptures that start each CD.


The Blood of Kings: Dynasty and Ritual in Maya Art
Published in Paperback by George Braziller (May, 1992)
Authors: Linda Schele, Mary Ellen Miller, Justin Kerr, and Kimbell Art Museum
Average review score:

Required Reading for the Maya Enthusiast
Mary Ellen Miller and the late Linda Schele put this book together in 1986. The field of Mayan studies is a fast-moving arena, and Mayanists already know a lot more now than they did when this book came out, but in my opinion this book is still the place to start if you want to begin learning about the Maya.

For one thing, the photography of the artwork is fantastic - the book is worth acquiring for that alone. Secondly, the commentary is by the greatest names in the field, including an introduction by Michael Coe. Thirdly, the book never strays from academic discipline, unlike a great deal of New Agey-type material written about the Maya. In fact, the book studiously avoids making any observations that cannot be substantiated - perhaps a reaction in the field of Mayan studies against the sometimes too pat assumptions that Eric Thompson made when he dominated the subject. Fourthly, it covers all the major cultural features of the Maya, providing abundant commentary on each piece of art portrayed. Last but not least, it tackles the thorny subject of Maya iconography. This is a field about which we already know a great deal more about now than we knew in 1986, but in fact if the book were written today there is probably very little that would actually be changed.

The book was printed in Japan, for some reason. No harm in that - the Japanese have a tradition, and a reputation, of producing quality bindings and excellent photographic reproductions, both of which are evident in this edition and which add to the quality of the book. I can't recommend it too highly to anyone interested in the Maya.

Understanding the Ooze of LIfe
The Blood of Kings by Linda Schele and MAry Ellen Miller was written on the occasion of the Kimbell Art Mesuem's exhibition of Maya Art in 1986. The hope was to draw attention to the rich legacy of Maya art along with a book that would give texture to these artistic recordings of the singificant ritual events in the lives of the Maya. What better way, since art has been our keyhole to understanding the magnificance of there thought, language, science and culture? Schele and Miller do an incredble job of focusing on these artifacts to bring us inside the current understanding of what th experts perceive the maya ritual and life to be about-- including the deciperment of the syllables of the maya language.

The book begins with a history of the road to understanding the Maya culture, complete with its meadering and diversions. This "age" delights in knowing that the Maya are filled with blood, both their own in bloodletting and those of captives that they sacrifice, unlike previous interpretations of a more peaceful existence. Blood, the ooze of life, was offered to eh gods in hopres that they would continue to give their ooze of sap, rain and other life-sustaining things. The book is based on 8 sections of art and interpretation: person, accession rites, courtly life, bloodletting, captives, the ballgame, and death, and the kingship of the Maya Cosmos. Of note as weel is the colors on p.158 where one can get an interpration of what the colors might have been in the Classic period.

In this book Coe prefaces the book commenting on the profound understandng that the world of the Maya is filled with notions of death. But the myth of the Mayas is that the hero twins went to the underworld and by trickery defeated death and those rose to take their place in the Mayan night sky. Perhaps these indiscernible Maya have continued to trick us as well in our attempts to traverse the road of their culture-- and their greatest preoccupation, enscribed on their ceramics and reliefs ---is not death, but life, in all its oozing forms.


Blood Thirst: 100 Years of Vampire Fiction
Published in Hardcover by Oxford University Press (October, 1997)
Authors: Leonard Wolf, Stephen King, Ray Bradbury, and Richard Matheson
Average review score:

A must for horror/vampire fans
This novel brings together works of so many amazing talented writers: Stephen King, Richard Matheson, Anne Rice, Tanith Lee, Chelsea Quinn Yarbro, Algernon Blackwood, Joyce Carol Oates...just to name a few! Be on the lookout for "Count Dracula" by Woody Allen; whether you love him or hate him, this short story is a hoot!

This one lets you sink your teeth into some quick, sometimes chilling, sometimes humorous, sometimes just plain weird vampire stories. It will also introduce you to some incredible authors, and I bet you'll race to buy more of their works. Wolf breaks down this collection into categories: The Classic Adventure Tale; The Psychological Vampire; The Science Fiction Vampire; The Non-Human Vampire; The Comic Vampire; and The Heroic Vampire. Horror and vampire fans will recognize some of these stories (King's is an excerpt of SALEM'S LOT) from other novels or collections. But this one is a tasty treat (yes, all puns intended) that I found delightful!

Excellent Collection of Stories
I great collection of modern vampire stories. Several of the stories are actually chapters from longer novels, which only entices the reader to read those novels too. Wonderful read, but with the lights on!


Arthur and the Sword
Published in School & Library Binding by Atheneum (October, 1995)
Authors: Robert Sabuda and Thomas Morte D'Arthur Malory

Related Vacation Book Subjects: California
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