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

BUDGIE THE LITTLE HELICOPTER
Published in Hardcover by Simon & Schuster Children's Publishing (01 September, 1989)
Author: Sarah Ferguson
Average review score:

Budgie: The Little Helicopter
My Granddaughter received this book for Christmas two years ago when she was two. She still enjoys hearing the stories about Budgie. It is a throughly enjoyable book for children. The video is great too. Wish there were more of them.

Budgie is enlightening
Budgie: The Little Helicopter is wonderfully illustrated and catches the child's eye with all it's bright colors. The story is intriguing and my two children, 5 & 6 at the time (now 7 & 8) were totally absorbed by it. My son slept with the book for weeks.


The Jewels of the Duchess of Windsor
Published in Hardcover by Rizzoli (October, 1987)
Authors: John Culme and Nicholas Rayner
Average review score:

A RARE FIND
THE JEWELS OF THE DUCHESS OF WINDSOR 1st edition,is a lush vicarious view of the golden age of royalty. The illustrations are breathtaking, done by some of the world's most famous photographers including Lord Snowdon..a marvelous addition to any collection.

A Visually Stunning Masterpiece!
I adore this book! It's an oversize publication which increases the beauty of the photography. The photos of the Duchess'jewelry are breathtaking, and it also provides a full account of the famed auction, including the amounts paid for the jewelry. There are great pictures of celebrities who purchased some of the pieces. There's even a stunning photo of Liz Taylor wearing the Prince of Wales Plume Pin for which she paid over $500,000. It also recounts the story of their lives along with pictures, including copies of newspaper clippings during the abdication. I highly recommend this book to anyone interested in Duke and Duchess or the forthcoming auction of the Windsor's household possessions at Sothebys. This book is the jewel in my collection of royal books!


Killing Time
Published in Library Binding by Harpercollins Juvenile Books (October, 1980)
Author: Patricia Windsor
Average review score:

The Willie Mays of Contemporary Novelists
As different from the author's best known work, The Little Big Man, as that novel is from another comic masterpiece of his, Reinhart in Love, which was completely different from Arthur Rex, Berger's gleeful subversion of the historical novel, which is .... If I were one of those vitamin-deficient, pellagra-ridden geeks who believe in conspiracy theories, I'd believe that there is one, and has been for 35 years, to keep this author down. If this author's books aren't forthwith reprinted, someone ought to die. The body of his work is so rich and varied, in style and subject matter, that he makes Updike seem like the schoolmarmish fuddy duddy he essentially is and Roth the sophomoric he would like to be. Killing Time (now, get this) is about a lovable killer, a man who kills certain people because he felt sorry for them. Yes, Joe Detweiler seems to be a mystic, but at the same time he seems very much a down to earth naif who only wants to become one with the universe (that's why he like to have his penis amputated). Along the way to the transcendent awakening he so devoutly seeks, Joe befriends and mystifies the detective who is trying to solve the murder case, Tierney, the woman who Tierney is having an affair with, who is the sister and daughter of the victims, and (not least) the attorney Melrose, who thinks he has it altogether and who wants to save the childlike Detweiler from himself and an world that just won't understand Detweiler, even though Detweiler thinks his reasons for what he did are so obvious they should go without saying (he himself had forgotten he had committed the murders). And that's just a glib from-the-hip abstract of this highly original novel.

One of the best crime novels I have ever read.
The most serious crime involved in Thomas Berger's "Killing Time" is that the book is out of print. The author lets you know early on who committed the triple murder that's discovered in the opening pages. The joys of the book are the why, the personality of the killer, how it ends, and the kinky truths in the lives of the other characters, major and minor, who Berger creates with a reality, a wit and a way with words that are, simply, tops. Hunt down a copy, read it, and cajole the publisher to reissue this classic


A King's Story - The Memoirs of the Duke of Windsor
Published in Paperback by Prion Books (01 November, 1998)
Authors: Edward Windsor, Duke of Windsor, and HRH The Duke of Windsor
Average review score:

A King's Story
The greatest love story of our century is an understatement.
A King's Story is well known to be ghost written for the Duke and even with constant prodding, he suffered from selective memory.
He seems to forget all his previous "friendships", those familiar with the saga will know this means the married women in his life before Wallis. A great addition to royal book collection, but if you are looking for the facts, hunt them down in Donaldson book. Companion book is the Duchess Heart has it's reasons. Maybe they should have gotten together so the facts in each book matched.

Fascinating historical document and surprisingly good read
The Duke of Windsor wrote this book in the 1950s while living in Paris. Reading it you begin to get some sense that for all his faults here was an individual of extraordinary personal charm. It was certainly a singular life. Here was a boy who was led to believe he would inherit the throne of the greatest empire on earth but who ends up as a sad fixture on the international cocktail party circuit in the arms of an ageing American divorcee of uncertain past. What happened! The anecdotal style of this simply written book is very enjoyable to read. The passing of the certainties of the Victorian age, the Edwardian twilight, World War I, the thrill of all things new and American in the 20s and 30s: the would be Edward VIII is a uniquely placed witness. History increasingly casts the Duke and his bride as ridiculous even sinister figures. This book helps you to remember that they were human too, falliable, and at the mercy of political and world historical forces beyond their control.


Make a Windsor Chair With Michael Dunbar
Published in Paperback by Taunton Press (April, 1985)
Author: Michael Dunbar
Average review score:

Make a Windsor Chair , Dunbar
Excellent book dealing ONLY with the construction of the Windor chair. Dunbar takes the reader through the selection and riving of wood, adzing of the seat and turning of the chair legs, through to the finished construction of the chair. Dunbar also explains the construction of a steaming setup and jigs for the bending of wood(s). Dunbar runs a school on the making of Windors and this would be the textbook students use to learn Dunbar's methods. A "can't miss, no regrets" purchase.

Clear, Concise, & to the point
I not only have this book, I have made a chair in Mike's workshop in New Hampshire. Mike has been instrumental both through his writings and teachings in the recent revival of interest in the making of Windsor chairs by hand much as they were made hundreds of years ago. His book is my definitive resource for questions about Windsor chair construction when I am working in my shop. In this day and age where most of our furniture is mass produced by machines using wood composites and other man made materials it is refreshing to see how fine furniture was once (and in certain places still is) crafted directly from the forest with nothing but hand tools and the skilled hands of the chairwright


Ruskin's Venice: The Stones Revisited
Published in Paperback by Lund Humphries Pub Ltd (October, 2003)
Authors: Sarah Quill and Alan Windsor
Average review score:

The stone that the builders rejected...
I read an original copy, circa 1890. It was a three volume set with beautiful, color stone lithographs and, of course, no editorial abridgement. I gave it away as a gift to a friend wanting to learn about architecture, as the best possible starting point.

I personally have very little patience for people who want to abridge Ruskin's work. And Ruskin's illustrations really make this work.

So, having said this, IF one is willing to overlook these editorial wiseacreings, this book is obviously a classic. It is a marvelous experience to be able to look at a building, any building, when driving or walking down a street, and know the history, name, and significance of each of its facets & adornments.

Unless you happen to live in an area with considerable architectural variety, you will find your newly-acquired skills only serve to confirm your opinion that we live in an age of totally bland and meaningless construction.

I cannot recommend this book highly enough.

Ruskin's Venice
This is a deeply inspiring photographic account of Ruskin's commitment to Venice. It serves as a remarkable and revelatory companion to Ruskin's THE STONES OF VENICE and, to any one who cares about this city, it is an entirely necessary book. It is difficult to imagine how it might have been done better.


The Sandman's Eyes
Published in Paperback by Laureleaf (March, 1992)
Author: Patricia Windsor
Average review score:

Did he do it or not?
The Sandman's Eyes is a great mystery and is worth reading for anyone who loves mysteries. In this book Michael Thorne is committed and put into a mental hospital for something he didn't do. He has to find out who is the murderer and then maybe be could live a normal life. A man named Gary is writing a book about Michael and helps him figure out clues that may prove his innocence. With the help of Gary, Michael will find out who murdered the woman the night in Monrovia Park.

I really enjoyed this book. It kept me guessing about who committed the crime. Michael also faced many other problems that kept me thinking about other things, and not just the murder. While reading it, I had to think about Michael's other problems. It kept me side tracked and the author tried to keep me from figuring out the real problem, the murder.

Great
I thought that the book was very interesting. Good Story.


The Windsor Style in America: The Definitive Pictorial Study of the History and Regional Characteristics of the Most Popular Furniture Form of 18th Century America 1730-1840
Published in Hardcover by Courage Books (November, 1997)
Authors: Charles Santore, Thomas M. Voss, and Bill Holland
Average review score:

Great
I didn't know much about Windsor Chairs, and now probably won't find much more than is here in this book.

Very interesting
This book on the Windsor style was an easy-to-read reference on identifying Windsors. Other books on the subject are simply too "heavy" for enjoyment. The Windsor Style in America both enjoyable to read and very informative. I feel that it is an excellent resource for both collectors and those who simply enjoy antiques.


All About Tropical Fish Keeping
Published in Paperback by Barrons Educational Series (May, 2000)
Authors: Steve Windsor and Barron's
Average review score:

All About Tropical Fish Keeping
THIS IS A REAL GOOD BOOK IF YOU WANT TO KNOW ABOUT KEEPING TROPICAL FISH


The Ark's Anniversary (Windsor Large Print Series)
Published in Hardcover by G K Hall & Co (August, 1992)
Author: Gerald Malcolm Durrell
Average review score:

Light-hearted but educational - classic Durrell
In this book, the legendary Gerald Durrell (author of The Amateur Naturalist) uses the occassion of the 'birthday' of his zoo and conservation trust to reflect on a long career of adventures and misadventures with animals (human and otherwise) in the service of saving the planet. There are many laugh-out-loud funny moments, many triumphs, and a few depressing failures looked at with head-on honesty. A recommended read for all Durrell fans and animal lovers.


Related Vacation Book Subjects: Connecticut
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