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Workshop Review
A Fascinating Read

Good information, but index does not match page numbers
Great Book!

Not so crazy about it
Truly Delightful and a Perfect Gift!

OK on wells, but weak on septic systems.If you are interested mainly in wells, this is probably not a bad choice. If your desire is to design your own septic system, then I think this book is lacking.
Matt
A textbook on wells and septic systems

Not one of Anne Perry's best
Thomas and Charlotte Pitt at their best!
Just SuperbWhenever she comes! to town, my question to her is usually, "What is your next book about?" She always, remarkably responds, "I am working on two now, and I think you will find the plots interesting." Her mind is as creative and active as anyone I have met. Amazing.


Good, could have been better
Birdsong still shines through the Gray clouds.In itself, 'Charlotte Gray' is an accomplished novel by a gifted storyteller. - Our eponymous heroine is a complex and fairly intriuging lady, but in my opinion was less well conceived than the characters who accompany her in wartime France. The Jewish father and son, who aid Charlotte in the Resistance and in her search for her missing lover, are particularly compelling.
In criticism, the concentration camps present in 'Charlotte Gray' would have benefited from the visceral style Faulks' employed in his description of the First World War trenches of 'Birdsong'. Unfortunately, the horrors of the Second World War are not described with the clarity or power present in his earlier book.
Could not put it down!

Wow, no talent and no brains either!
Please, Who are you?
Silly and now datedThe fact is that a lot of the book is not much more than adolescent chatter about her family, her friends, and her hometown, some of it is charming, but some of it is no more than filler and no help to a reader who wants insight into her or her music. In fact, she does not talk a great deal about her songs or her music except in the most cursory way, especially those on her first two albums (although admittedly the book was out before her fourth album). However, the attentive reader of this book will be less surprised at the coming changes in her music, as she all but comes right out and says she isn't into classical music and longs for a more pop direction.
Also notable is the fact that Charlotte is somewhat inconsistent about things like her faith, talking in one chapter about how going to church isn't about being Catholic and how she prays in her own way, and in another about how meeting the Pope is the closest you can come to meeting God. Most notable is that she talks about having learned the lesson about watching what she says in public after joking publicly about how she wanted to to snitch a teaspoon from the White House and the media being all over her case, yet the lesson was apparently unlearned in the wake of September 11th.
There is absolutely no mention of her change in management except in the most cursory terms, when in fact the change led to a lawsuit by her fired manager, Jonathan Shalit, in which Charlotte counterclaimed "inappropriate tactile conduct" (per People Magazine). The fact that the suit settled for 2 million pounds paid by Charlotte casts some doubt on those allegations.
The fact is that with the coming changes, this biography is both out-of-date and incomplete, and it will be interesting if ever there is an unauthorized one.


consequence...
Very Disappointed
A light-hearted visit to Austen country

very dull and witless
dreadful - inconsistent with Austen and itself
Kudos to Ms. Julia Barrett for Jane Austen's CharlotteI think the aspect of these novels, and most recently "Charlotte", that impresses me the most is the prodigious imagination required of a writer in today's world to imagine and bring to life these very real-seeming characters in an age not like ours at all in so many ways, especially in language. Julia Barrett definitely has a "felicity" with language much like the "great lady". I loved the turns of phrases, the chapter beginnings, the extremely insightful observations on human nature, both its strengths and foibles, and above all, the way she, like her wonderful predecessor, makes the characters individualistic and memorable without a lot of physical description or observation.
And, the satirical asides and situations in "Charlotte" seem to have more contemporary resonances than in the previous novels or even in Jane's. I was constantly smiling and even laughing out loud at Lady Denham and Mr. Parker and how they got caught up in the seashore health fads and get-rich-quick enthusiasms of the "new day" dawning in England in the early 1800s. If they could only see the modern world mania for "development" and dubious investments as well as today's corruption and avarice gone wild almost everywhere.
Like Jane Austen, Ms. Barrett brought the story to a close most satisfactorily with the heroine getting her fairly predictable education in life and a fine, upstanding husband to boot, and with little collateral damage to those relatives and loved ones least guilty of the shenanigans that brought Sanditon to near ruin. Barrett really did open up "Charlotte" to the rest of the world, hinted at in her two previous works as well by the "great lady" herself in her later novels, but she also somehow maintained the high level of wit and charm and intelligence that are so enjoyable in her mentor. So, kudos and many thank yous for another very enjoyable visit to Jane Austen land. As with a few other books I've really enjoyed, I'm sure I'll take them down in a couple of years to re-read. And, I'll definitely recommend them to whomever I run into who seems capable of enjoyment of such a high order. To those who think no one should "sully" Jane Austen's memory or tread on her legacy, I say nonsense and challenge them to give Julia Barrett a try. Jane Austen has indeed a worthy successor these days. I eagerly await an addition to the canon.


A flawed concept though a quick and entertaining read
It's not that badThe one thing I particularily did not like was the fact that Rochester wore an eye patch over his blinded eye. I just can't imagine him wearing one. Edward Fairfax Rochester was definitely not a pirate!
Too many errors