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Attempt precisely to reconstruct the expedition' course

It is so unbelievable it must be true!
They walk among us.
Aliens are here to help us, taking a human form.

Montgomery's best
This book was fun and adventure packed!This book takes place in the deep Atlantic in the lost city of Atlantis. In this book you are the character. What happens in the book is that you are an underwater explorer. This is your biggest mission. You must find the lost city of Atlantis.
A fascinating and unique adventure

Mountainman Crafts and Skills: A Fully Illustrated Guide...
A Great Book
Great Book

Useful, But Narrow
A very important compilation
Marxist Zealots?

This is from the back of the soft cover book!!!!Nam-Huong cries lots of onion tears...It's only when she laens to smile inside, andd finally laugh, that her tears fall like drops of dew.
Coping with adoption
GREAT book!

Good idea, bad execution
Will you find the Abominable Snowman?

The Glass Menagerie
The Glass MenagerieOne thing in particular that I didn't like about the play was the fact that the characters were so engaged in their fantasies that they could not snap back to reality.The mother, Amanda, is so consumed with controlling the lives or her children and attempting to make their lives what she wants them to be, that she has missed out on living her own life. Laura and Tom allow themselves to be whisked away into her world and they become stranded on their own island of fantasy in her fantasy world. Tom walks away leaving the entire situation behind him, but is never really able to forgive himself for not finding a way to save his sister.
Overall, the play is engaging and fun to read and even more interesting to see on stage. I would recommend it whether you've never read a play or read one hundred plays ,it will definitely keep your attention.
An Outstanding Drama

No stars for this book!
Not for everyone
Not for everyonesort of bio of emotions about growing up gay, not about building and decorating dollhouses.


Not very helpful in understanding EvitaThe over-all tone of the book is very "noir-ish." In other words, the author works to portray Evita as a "spooky" figure, rather than just recount her life as it was. The reason Evita can seem "spooky" in some ways is because of cultural misunderstandings. For example, the spectacle of her dramatized "dying in public" and her funeral falls well in line with the Hispanic preoccupation with death; in Hispanic culture, death is not something that is swept up under the rug. In Hispanic culture, death is often associated with a form of dignity. It is common in some Hispanic cultures, for example, for people to commemorate the death of loved ones by actually having picnics on their graves; this is not something you see in Anglo Saxon-based cultures. Without bridging the gap between the cultures, a biographer runs a risk of succumbing to what Robert D. Crassweller terms "the legacy of incomprehension," or "the inability of one ethos truly to understand another."
Opportunist or saint? Depends on who you ask.The second half of the book illustrates just how strong Evita's power was. Juan, a pedophile, shopped for mistresses in the school system. He was unable to control his staff, and the people revolted. His hold over the Argentine people was released, and he was forced into exile.
There are many books about Eva Peron. This book paints a better picture than others I have read; it also casts Juan Peron in a more unfavorable light. "Eva, Evita" goes into depth about the embalming and preservation of Evita's corpse, its theft, and the doctor who spent three years preserving her for posterity. These sections are incredibly morbid, but are important to the history of the legend of Eva Duarte de Peron. There was a bit more political background than I expected; however, this gave me a more broad view of everything surrounding the events that led to Juan Peron's election and fall from grace.
Just a Dictator Thug Tyrant with Good HairThe Perons were merely opportunist thugs. They and their associates got into power by force, then systematically looted Argentina's wealth. Propaganda forced everyone to pretend to admire them, and force required that everyone obey them.
Evita's life, according to this book, generally follows the path portrayed in the Webber/Rice musical, but differed significantly along the way. The musical version integrated apochryphal information, legendary stories, rather than employing hard fact. A major example is "the first man to be of use to Eva Duarte." In the musical it was a popular tango singer named Augustin Migaldi -- as it was so in Evita's accepted local legend, since Migaldi was a relatively prominent performer. The real guy, though, was a second-tier fellow named Armani, who helped Eva settle in the big city then pretty much vanished from history.
I wish the book had delved into more detail regarding more of Eva's specific activities -- such as the mechanisms/laws enacted to take over all the British holdings in Argentina -- but it was a good overview, a good foundation for moving on to other explorations of that blonde thug's puny excuse for a life.