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Guts, vision, Brad Lewis got the gold!!
The Best Book on Rowing. Period.
If you can put this book down you must be grabbing your oar!

A Classic
Country Greats!!
Perfect addition to the cook's libraryThe preparation and cook times are very accurate -- great for when you have guests arriving for dinner at a certain time and the directions are easy enough to follow for when my 15 year old wants to try her hand at dinner.
This book is not just for dinners either! There are great dessert and sandwich recipes as well. All recipes contain quite a bit of butter (it IS a Land o'Lakes cookbook) so they are not for those cooking light, but are very tasty.
The skillet pizza is the only recipe I have not liked so far. My favorite recipes are the deep dish apple pie and chicken Kiev.


A brutal murder of a child that went unpunnished for 22 yrsAs a parent myself, I will never forget what happened to little Dennis Jurgens.
Karen, OHIO
Living in White Bear
A stellar performance

Best Outdoor Book Ever!
Pure Lore of the North
CACHE LAKE COUNTRY -- LIVING YOUR DREAM

Little Town at the Crossroads
Great Continuation!
Great!

WowThis book just kept pounding in the excitement. I was seriously dazed from the intensity and the emotion that seemed to never let up. Evan Fuller is one tough SOB...
This book kept my attention from beginning to end.
A "can't put down" thriller!

The Lusty Life of Loon Lake LloydMichael Thessen
Eugene, Oregon
The Lusty Life of Loon Lake Lloyd
Exellent!

Northern woodlife (first person perspective)
I'm pleased to find this book again
I learned so much and laughed a great deal, too.

Maybe my favorite sci-fi book of allScientifically, much of this stuff doesn't hold up after a hundred years. And the device he comes up with to get his characters to the moon -- Cavorite -- is without basis, an arbitrary magical tool not unlike the time machine. Even when Wells' science is iffy, though, he presents it in such a clear, convincing fashion that you are only too glad to suspend disbelief while the story unfolds.
In the Selenites we have a metaphor for a different type of society -- rigidly hierarchical, with the needs of the individual sublimated to the whole. The metaphor obviously comes from social insects; though it became a sci-fi cliche, it was still fresh circa 1901. In the remarkable last section of the book (Cavor's communications from the moon), Wells describes the Selenite society with delightful attention to detail. He ends with a haunting, unforgettable image, and probably the best closing sentence of any sci-fi novel.
A seminal book in the development of science fiction
Two men left for the moon...but only one will come back...

SHARK LAKE IS INFESTED WITH ADVENTURE!
Bought the Trilogy
Doesn't Disappoint