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

Eagle Down
Published in Paperback by Kensington Pub Corp (Mass Market) (July, 1985)
Average review score: 

Another winner for William Johnstone.This book is over looked by most people, but if you ever get the chance to read it you will know right away who the Author was. William Johnstone has a style of his own. The other book by this author""Dagger"" is also well worth the search. Both are great books in their own right. But try to find a copy....Good luck.

Eagle in the Sky
Published in Textbook Binding by HarperCollins (June, 1948)
Average review score: 

ExcellentThis book is great. I read it and it made me feel as if Mr. Mason was a genius. Absolutely brillant! I recommend this to anyone who thinks they have problems in thier lives. This book will help.

EAGLE ISLAND
Published in Hardcover by Vantage Press (01 November, 2000)
Average review score: 

Eagle IslandI Loved it. A great deal of research went into this story. This book is very real and a must read by all. It is well written and thorough as if watching movie, hard to put down. The characters, places, events and overall story is so believable. A scary senario. This would make a great movie.

An Eagle Nation (Sun Tracks, Vol 24)
Published in Hardcover by University of Arizona Press (August, 1993)
Average review score: 

One of the best books I've read in years. . .Revard is a wonderful storyteller, yet his poems are lyrical and beautifully wrought. His range is impressive--whether he's writing about the Oklahoma of his childhood, his years in England, or medieval monsters, the poems are always compelling, the voice in them engaging. I would recommend this book not only to avid poetry readers but to anyone who likes a good story.

Eagle on the Street: Based on the Pulitzer Prize-Winning Account of the Sec's Battle With Wall Street
Published in Hardcover by Scribner (November, 1991)
Average review score: 

Amazingly funny anecdotes of Dr. Gregg Jarrell's lifeThis book provides an insightful look into one aspect of the life of the "Peter Pan of Chicago", Dr. Gregg Jarrell of the William E. Simon Graduate School of Business. Quotes such as "Its easier to beg forgiveness than ask permission" should be a part of any financier's repertiore

Eagle Rock: The Memoirs of a Little Girl, 1941-45
Published in Hardcover by Reflection Pub Co (April, 2003)
Average review score: 

A nostalgic memoir of a simpler life and timeLake Pylant Monhollon's Eagle Rock: The Memoirs Of A Little Girl 1941-45 is a nostalgic memoir of a simpler life and time. Quaint black-and-white silhouette-drawings by George Ann Brock nicely embellish this warmhearted remembrance of a wonderful childhood and an era when possessions were not necessarily seen as the key to all happiness. Eagle Rock is commended as an especially well written and refreshing read.

Eagle Strike
Published in Audio CD by Walker Books (07 April, 2003)
Average review score: 

eagle strikeRelaxing in the south of France with Sabina Pleasure and her family , Alex is able to act and do things as a normal teenager would and he doesn't even think of MI6 until someone who Alex does not know who attacked his hosts.This sends him back into the world of decieving and spying.Alex is determind to defeat his hosts enemy and find out why they did it.He knows his enemy is going to be smart when he finds out it is Damian Cray the mastermind behind the new games console Gamelayer which has pain synthesis installed.Damian Cray tries to outwit Alex time after time but the young MI6 spy doesn't give up.It is a great book for suspense and tension.

The Eagle's Call
Published in Paperback by Diamond Sage Coaching, Inc. (May, 2002)
Average review score: 

Truly Inspirational!The Eagle's Call is the most inspirational and thought provoking book I have ever read. This book has had a profound impact on me and has caused me to think a lot about my own life journey.
Two things that strike me the most from this book is the author's strong ability of intuition and the fact that he is not afraid to take action.
Mr. Ryan provides an interesting and inspiring account of his life journey. Reading about his life journey will encourage you to examine yours in a positive light.

Eagle's Shadow, The (The Collected Works of James Branch Cabell - 46 Volumes)
Published in Library Binding by Classic Books (01 April, 1919)
Average review score: 

Complications of great wealth fueled by vanityThe "eagle's shadow" is a metaphor for great wealth: "The Eagle suffers little birds to sing, And is not careful what they mean thereby, Knowing that with the shadow of his wing, He can at pleasure still their melody." The Romans were keenly aware of the effect of the "eagle's shadow" as evidenced by the translation of the Latin quotation on the title page of the book: "Futhermore, in that place under the shadow of the eagle: The mob trembles, the Senate dawdles, the nobility gaze on impotently, the judges are compliant, the theologians remain silent, and the lawyers are obsequious while law and custom are ignored." The story is a narrative by Richard Fenton Harrowby who called his tale "the comedy of Margaret Hugonin and the eagle. A story which he completed on 14 April 1923. Margaret Hugonin was the daughter of Col. Thomas Hugonin, an English cavalry officer, and Margaret Musgrave. The colonel's wife had a twin sister named Martha Musgrave who had married Frederick R. Woods, a stock trader on Wall Street who had amassed a fortune. Harrowby wrote: "For the scene of this comedy is laid in the ineffably remote strange days of Colonel Roosevelt's first presidential term. Looking backward, I can remember, but not quite believe in, the queer world we then inhabited: and most droll of all do I find our faith in its stability. For it seemed a fixed and eternally ordered place, a place which was, with minor improvements here and there, to last forever: yet neither Sidon nor Sumeria appears--now--to be more remote than is the America of that day." In the early 1880's, when Frederick R. Woods turned 65, he retired from Wall Street and moved to a site near the Lichfield town of Fairhaven that had once belonged to a 17th century ancestor named Lt. Gervase Woods. On that site he built a handsome Tudor style home which he named Selwoode Mansion. He hired a genealogist who traced his ancestry back to Woden, and determined that the family arms of the Woods sported an eagle. The eagle so fascinated him that he had it carved into the woodwork, set in mosaics, chased in the tableware, woven into the napery, and glazed into the China of Selwoode. Frederick and his wife were childless, but his brother William had one son named Billy Williams, and Frederick named him as his heir. However, when Billy turned 18, he informed his uncle that he intended to study to become a painter, much to his uncle's disapproval. Billy went off to college, earned his degree in fine arts and returned to Selwoode to find that his uncle had invited Col. Hugonin and Margaret to be long-term guests at Selwoode. Frederick ordered Billy to wed Margaret Hugonin. Billy refused to marry her and left Selwoode. In turn, Frederick named Margaret as his heir and when he died Margaret came into a fortune, after which, she struggled to come to terms with her vast wealth while supporting an entourage of hangers-on, and warding off marriage proposals. Later Billy returns to Selwoode, conflicting wills are found and Margaret and Billy struggle to come to terms with one another. The story line is fluent, entertaining and contains gems of subdued wit.

The Eagle's Voice : Tales Told by Indian Effigy Mounds
Published in Paperback by Prairie Oak Press (April, 2001)
Average review score: 

A kind of anthropological detective storyGary Maier's The Eagle's Voice: Tales Told By Indian Effigy Mounds is a kind of anthropological detective story based on Maier's research involving a group of about fifty Indian effigy and conical mounts located on the north shore of Lake Mendota, in Madison, Wisconsin. In his explorations Maier developed a new understanding and insight into these structures which had fascinated and puzzled Europeans and Americans from the 1830s down to the present day. Exceptionally "reader friendly", The Eagle's Voice is enthusiastically recommended reading for the non-specialist general reader with an interest in Native American culture in general, and the effigy mounds of Wisconsin in particular.