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Checkered Demon Anthology
Fantastic formfitting freewheeling mindblowing mastery!
Great book from a classic underground cartoonist.

Colorful projects ranging from basic to challengingIt's unfortunate that there's no real indication of level of difficulty in the projects; they don't follow any logical progression. Some of the early projects use very basic techniques only - jelly rolls, marbling - which could probably be discussed in the introduction section. However, just a few projects in, there's a geometric pattern that would be quite difficult and frustrating to do as your third or fourth PC project. I'd advise careful consideration when selecting a project from this book.
Dierks does provide a much more detailed ingredient list, including things like findings and clay amounts, which other books tend to skip. She even specifies particular brands and colors, but it isn't necessary to adhere to them.
On a more personal note, I got less use out of this book than most of my PC books, simply because the projects were very bright, busy, and colorful - and that's very far from my style. But for those who love the casual, cheerful look that polymer clay can provide, this book might well be great.
I love this book
Inspiring Pictures and Easy-To-Understand Instructions

Not Found in any History Books
My Hometown in PrintMr. Anderson. It shows that not all black Mississippians in the early days were cottonpickers living on plantations. The town of Greenville has a rich history, this book gives a minor glimpse of it. I wish the photo index had of had exact names of the people in them, that would have made it even more personal and touching.
An Unexplored HistoryH.C. Anderson snapped the deceptively simple but beautiful photographs, and they are a revelation. Through the lens of his camera, he documented a segregated but proud society aspiring to its own version of the "American dream." Anderson provides us a personal glimpse into the lives of children and families celebrating special events - beauty contests, weddings, proms, birthday parties - and they are truly dressed for the occasion!
One of the more striking photographs depicts a mid-wife who has just helped deliver a baby in a family home. The bedroom floor is covered in newspaper, as the new mother looks on from her bed, covered by a clean crisp white sheet. Although the photographs primarily focus on the every day lives of their subjects, there are also powerful photographs documenting the burgeoning civil rights movement, and a grim reminder of the fate suffered by some individuals who chose to play an active role.
The essays accompanying the photographs provide insight into Greenville's history. As seen through the wide-eyed amazement of a child, noted writer Clifton L. Taulbert paints a vivid picture of his youthful visits to the prosperous and magical Greenville, the "Queen City of the Delta." Taulbert along with Shawn Wilson provides the reader with a fascinating insider's view of the process involved in bringing this book to print. In a personal and touching essay, Wilson reflects on how the search for an old photograph of his mother, long since deceased, led him back home to Greenville and Mr. Anderson. It was there in Anderson's now defunct photography studio, that Wilson discovered the wealth of photographs comprising Anderson's life long work. Reluctant but trusting, the aging Anderson handed over his photographs so that Wilson might share them with the world. In doing so, we have the opportunity to view images of a rarely explored segment of society, one that combines both the struggle AND celebration of life during the period of Southern segregation.
This wonderful book would make a great holiday gift for those that love history or photography!


This book truly an American Grotesque
Government tyranny
Behind the scenes of the only JFK assassination prosecution

not funny
A Christmas Tale...The Perfect Gift
That's great.

It's Country
Excellent Book
Wild, Wonderful West Virginia

Not as polished as it could beWhile there are some interesting techniques for sculpting figures in this book, I found myself not wanting to make any of the animals presented. They appeared raw and somewhat unfinished to me.
Sherian Frey builds the animals bit by bit, using flattened sheets of clay cut out in the desired shapes. I found this method interesting. Overall, The instructions are well written and the pictures are helpful, but I do not reccommend the purchase of this book unless you really like what is on the cover.
Excellent book!She supplies tips and suggestions for each project as well as patterns on completing each one in the book.
It's great for those anthro styled animals from fairy tales and cartoons.
Adorable characters and good instructions

Availability is this book's best feature
The Marauder Men Read It
This is the best book on the Marauder out there.

The Mystery of The Stone Markers
Finally, a decent book for young boys!Take for example, Cory, the main character of the story and a boy with the opportunity to be more popular within his school, who purposely CHOOSES not to be. He remains true to his brother and his friends ... period. Of course he's fictional, but for a self-conscious thirteen-year-old, how comforting is it to read about a boy his own age who makes the right decisions instead of the easy ones, and is comfortable with that? This young group of detectives - The Willard Aspen Detective Agency as they later name themselves -- is able to operate because they never get far from the bond of friendship and equality they share. In fact, in almost every scene in which they are all together, each one has equal input in the problem-solving process. There are no egos here.
What I think is most impressive about the story is that, though the mystery revolves around a serious crime, the author never loses sight of the fact that his characters are just kids. The injection of a "bully" element in the form of two classmates, Serge and Trevor, adds even more realism to the book. These boys, both obviously envious of the relationship that Cory and his friends share with one another, try to intimidate the group rather than understand the bond. We all know kids like Serge and Trevor. This is a wonderful story about the bond of friendship, the innocence of youth, the spirit of adventure and above all, the idea that fitting in with peers is not nearly as important as discovering who your true friends are. I feel confident in saying that no parent will object to his or her child hanging out with the Willard Aspen Detective Agency. I can't wait to see what these boys get into next!
A good page turnerSix boys band together to form the Willard Aspen Detective Agency to solve the mystery surrounding strange happenings in their local woods.
Cory, his twin Connor, Jake, Jerry, Mac and Len are all somewhat misfits at school. They are considered geeks and therefore are on the fringes of the "teenager" things that are beginning to consume all their thirteen year old classmates. As a response they have banded together in friendship and conduct the normal boyhood adventures and feats of bravado together.
Their activities soon are ranging outside the normal when they discover a set of mysterious stone markers in the nearby woods, and are suddenly the subject of the menacing attention of the shadowy stranger who has recently come to haunt the woods.
The boys are not scared off, but are drawn further into an investigation of the shadowy stranger by some close personal encounters and by the disappearance of a local boy.
They formalize their investigations by setting up the Willard Aspen Detective Agency, complete with filing cabinet and pc in the basement. However, the shadowy stranger is not content to sit by and be investigated. While the boys go about finding the clues to the mystery in the woods, the stranger stalks them one by one, and his intentions are deadly.
The boys are depicted as independent, adventurous and normal with all the teenage concerns of girls, sexual identity and schoolyard bullies. The book is written for teenagers, but it can be read by adults who will experience with some wonderment and aprehension the daring do of the boys.


Sophocles on the citizen's responsibility to the stateMeanwhile, back at Troy, Odysseus and the other Achaean chieftains have learned from an oracle that Troy will fall only with the help of Philoctetes and his bow (a juicy tidbit it certainly would have been nice to have known eight or nine years earlier). Odysseus and Neoptolemus, son of Achilles, are sent to bring Philoctetes and his bow back to the war. Of course, Odysseus dare not show himself to Philoctetes and sends Neoptolemus to do the dirty work. Neoptolemus gains the confidences of the crippled man by lying about taking him home. During one of his agonizing spasms of pain, Philoctetes gives his bow to Neoptolemus. Regretting having lied to this helpless cripple, Philoctetes returns the bow and admits all, begging him to come to Troy of his own free will. Philoctetes refuses and when Odysseus shows his face and threatens to use force to achieve their goal, he finds himself facing a very angry archer.
In "Philoctetes" Sophocles clearly deals with the balance between the rights of the individual and the needs of society. But this is also a play about citizenship and the need for the idealism of youth to be give way to the responsibilities of adulthood. In fact, this lesson is learned both by Philoctetes, who is taught by the shade of Hercules who appears to resolve the tenses conclusion, and Neoptolemus, who finds his duties at odds with his idealized conception of heroism based upon his father. Although this is a lesser known myth and play, "Philoctetes" does raise some issues worth considering in the classroom by contemporary students.
"Philoctetes" is similar to other plays by Sophocles, which deal with the conflict between the individual and society, although this is a rare instance where Odysseus appears in good light in one of his plays; usually he is presented as a corrupter of innocence (remember, the Greeks considered the hero of Homer's epic poem to be more of a pirate than a true hero), but here he is but a spokesperson for the interests of the state. Final Note: We know of lost plays about "Philoctetes" written by both Aeschylus and Euripides. Certainly it would have been interesting to have these to compare and contrast with this play by Sophocles, just as we have with the "Electra" tragedies.
Pretty good book, overall.
A play of intrigue.