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Nice, but not serious
Good Book to Get You StartedIf you are looking for all model specs, histories and options listing for the El Camino/Sprint/Caballero you will need more than this book but it is a good starting place.


nice story
A mysterious beautiful woman asks Gus Pike for help...
Gail Hamilton writes the novelization of her own "Avonlea" teleplay or "A Dark and Stormy Night," which was notable for the performance of Christopher Reeve as the dark and dangerous Robert Rutherford. Although the adventure is not actually based on anything Lucy Maud Montgomery wrote about in "The Story Girl" and "Chronicles of Avonlea" volumes, at the heart of the episode is the budding romance between Felicity and Gus. It was made quite clear in "The Golden Road" that the high and mighty Felicity King was not going to marry some handsome, rich stranger, but the lowly stable boy she so disdained. On "Avonlea" the original stable boy is replaced by the character of Gus Pike and the fun of this particular story is how Felicity is too proud to admit to any feelings for Gus whatsoever. Of course, what is going on is perfectly plain to Sara. So while Miss Stone and Mr. Rutherford engage in their theatrical feud, it is this early chapter on the road to love that is going to strike a chord with young readers. I know wanting to see Felicity finally admit her feelings to Gus was why I kept subscribing to Disney, just to watch this series.


Full of errors. There are better books.
helpful

Not very dramatic or entertainingVolume II: In this volume Pike is no better. There is an extremely boring journey across Kansas and into Colorado, and he the real drama sets in. Pike and his men are without winter clothing and now in the Colorado Rockies. The frostbite on some of his men forces them to stay behind, unable to continue. This occurs day after day, week after week, until the expedition reaches what is believed to be the source of the Arkansas River. Otherwise the volume meekly runs through Pike's capture by Spanish authorities and his return to the U.S. via Spanish escort. This last is a daily log of conversations with French or Spanish military figures, and of little interest in general.
Impressive

Not as good as the show!
The return of Roger King turns the King farm upside downIt is also interesting to me that while the first dozen "Road to Avonlea" novelizations focused primarily on Sara Stanley and her young King cousins, the second dozen is focusing much more on the adults. Certainly an interesting choice for a series that you would have presumed was geared towards young readers, in which case the romantic side of Hetty King is not necessarily all that big of an attraction. The "Family Rivalry" storybook is written by Gail Hamilton from Jerome McCann's script for the "Avonlea" series. Although this is not one of the better episodes focusing on my favorite character, Alec King, it is nice to see him be the focus on a story.


The starter of the series
Sara Stanley, the Story Girl, comes to Prince Edward IslandThis first volume in "The Road to Avonlea" series is based on the Sullivan Films Production written by Heather Conkie, which, in turn, was adapted from the novels of Lucy Maud Montgomery. "The Story Girl" was Montgomery's favorite novel and its sequel "The Golden Road," along with two collections of short stories known as the Chronicles of Avonlea, are the material from which various episodes are developed.
What becomes fascinating in this first episode is how the premises of "The Story Girl" are redeveloped for this series. In the books Sara would come to visit her King cousins each summer, heading back to Montreal in the fall. However, the situation needed to be altered so Sara was a more permanent part of the Avonlea community. They could have made Sara an orphan, in the grand tradition of Montgomery's most famous literary creations Anne of Green Gables and Emily of New Moon, but it is important that at least on some level Sara WANTS to stay on PEI. At the heart is one of Montgomery's strongest themes, how a young girl forges bonds of affection with a spinster. Aunts Hetty and Olivia certainly recall Emily's Aunts Elizabeth and Laura and there are strong echoes of that novel in this story.
Consequently, whether you are a long time reader of Montgomery's works eager to devour new tales using her literary creations, or a young reader who is working their way through these books and then on to the one actually written by Montgomery, you will find these tales to be kindred spirits. I used to have the Disney Channel just so I could watch "Avonlea" and honeymooned last year on PEI, staying at the "White Sands Hotel." So, it is pretty clear that I am just one of countless millions of enraptured fans.


Can't you see I'm an officer? Salute me!
glaring omission
The Anzac Illusion

disappointing
AACN Pocket Handbook of Critical Care Nursing

A lot of details, few insights1) the author has a tendency to get lost in details many of them insignificants for the story, and some of them plain wrong (and the author could have corrected them).
2) the book is in the stream of war histories watched only by one side. It is interesting to note that the author never mentions the unusefulness of the battle of El Alamein: it is in fact well known that the Torch landings will have forced the Axis army to withdrawn anyway and therefore the British could have attacked the Axis much more easily. But this it would not have been a British-only victory, but an Anglo-American victory.
Therefore it seems a little pretentious to call this book the "definitive" history of the western desert war. Given the boredom caused by the plethora of details, it is more likely the "bed-time" history of desert war.
The Ferret vs. the FoxAfter the quick and unexpected fall of Tobruk on June 21, 1942, to a carefully orchestrated air and ground attack by Rommel's Afrika Korps, the German advance in North Africa once again threatened the British hold on Egypt and the Suez Canal. Churchill flew to Cairo on August 3, split the Middle East command by creating Eighth Army, relieved Auchinleck and Ritchie, and placed Gen. Harold Alexander in command of Middle East Command and Lt. Gen. Bernard L. Montgomery in command of Eighth Army. Throughout the remainder of 1942, Montgomery led his Eighth Army to successive victories against the Desert Fox.
Montgomery had his work cut out for him, but he and his men inflicted a defeat on German forces at Alam Halfa on September 7, and thereafter methodically pressed the Afrika Korps back toward El Alamein. Rommel, who could no longer hope to regain the offensive in North Africa, now found his forces practically surrounded at El Alamein. From October 23 to November 4 the battle raged, and when it was over the Axis had been decisively defeated, their losses staggering. It was a prelude to Allied landings farther west on November 8, and the success of Soviet forces against the German 6th Army at Stalingrad in February the following year.
Thoroughly researched and written in a delightful, fast-paced style, Pitt gives readers their money's worth. I came away from "Montgomery and Alamein" with a far better appreciation of the man who arguably was Britain's most irascible commander, but also the most successful. It was once said of Montgomery that he was "quick as a ferret; and about as likeable." But in war there isn't room for nice guys. Montgomery knew that.
In the end, one has to give credit to Cassell & Co. for introducing all three volumes of their "Crucible of War" series on North African fighting-you won't want to buy one without purchasing the other two.


Delightful, irreverent history
How the West Was Almost LostMontgomery's perspective is mildly revisionist, his tone is ironic, and his story-telling is crisp and colorful. He uses the present tense to draw the reader inside the frame of the story. His narrative uses intercutting -- as a novel might -- to keep us abreast of the progress each of the groups is making toward its objective, as well as what Jefferson is doing back in Washington. Lewis and Clark's adventures provide the main thread of the story, while the conspirators and Pike supply the villainy and the comic relief. The hapless Pike's energetic but incompetent leadership serves to highlight the skills and foresight of Lewis and Clark.
Jefferson and the Gun-Men, in little more than 300 pages, does better than thicker academic histories at putting the Lewis and Clark expedition in the context of its time. A time very different from our own -- not just for the absence of truck stops and shopping malls. It is a time before the gospel of manifest destiny and a civil war had resolved the question of how many nations would occupy the continent. It is a time when a Vice President of the United States could kill a man in a duel and then preside at the impeachment of a Supreme Court Justice. (Montgomery has the wrong justice Chase being impeached, however) It is a time when the commanding general of the US Army is taking Spanish bribes at the same time he and Burr plot for empire. Montgomery works hard to show us not only Lewis and Clark, but Jefferson, Burr and the other figures in this story not as icons, but as complex human beings -- capable of great vision and great acts, but afflicted with blind spots and shortcomings peculiar to thenselves and to their times.
The title is taken from a speech Jefferson made to a group of Indian chiefs sent east by Lewis and Clark and others. He begins by telling them that "we are united in one family with our red brethren"; a sentiment few of Jefferson's white brethren would have endorsed. Then Jefferson says (untruthfully) that he plans to establish non-profit trading posts for their benefit. He closes with a plea for peace among the tribes and between the tribes and whites. In case the Indians do not opt for peace, he warns them, "My children, we are strong, we are numerous as the stars in the heavens, and we are all gun-men." We present-day Americans, the beneficiaries of those gun-men, can learn a great deal from this book.
History poised on a knife edgeHe worked with the Commander of the United States Army, General James Wilkinson, a traitor and spy who worked for the Spanish, and with Zebulon Pike (the Pike's Peak or Bust Pike) to amputate the West from the United States.
But Burr's timing was awful. During his conspiracy Lewis & Clark led The Corps of Discovery to Astoria, Oregon and back to St Louis, setting in motion a doubling of the size of the United States.
Read this fascinating, engrossing story of those times, when it seemed as if the United States might double in size -- or be cut in half.