

Gives advice I want my teenager to hear
A must for everyone
A wonderful guide for living!

To a Time so Long Ago!
Eye Opening Experience !
simply written expression of complex experience and emotions

An Excellent Book! Michael Seggie, Cranston, R.I.,
Informative and Interesting
Excellent

A fascinating and riveting readI usually wind up with a list of technical and/or historical errors whenever I read space history books, but I only noticed a few typos in "Lost Spacecraft".
For someone who was not personally involved in Mercury, Mr. Newport certainly did an excellent job of describing how all the capsule systems worked.
I especially enjoyed the photos, most of which I had never seen before.
This book is worth 10 stars.
A Fascinating AccountOn a personal note, when I was six years old in 1961 and living in St. Louis County, just a few miles from where this Mercury spacecraft was built, I remember my father coming home from work (he worked at McDonnell Aircraft as an engineer and perhaps did a bit of work on this very spacecraft) and said "it sank to the bottom of the ocean", referring to the sinking of the Liberty Bell 7 that occurred that day. Liberty Bell 7 was recovered in the summer of 1999, restored , and during a national tour I finally got to see it at the St. Louis Science Center in the summer of 2001, in the city where it was built, closure in a sense to me. It is, or soon will be, on permanent display in Hutchinson, Kansas, at the Kansas Cosmosphere and Space Center, can't wait to go there!
The Search for Liberty Bell 7Newport was uniquely qualified to lead the expedition to recover Liberty Bell 7. He was a pioneer in the developement and operation of Remotely Operated Vehicles (ROV) and an experienced veteran of underwater operations all over the world. His fascination with the mystery concerning the lost space capsule led to 14 years of research into the flight, probable location, condition and possible methods of recovery.
The highlight of the book is the detailed description of the search for Liberty Bell 7, and its subsequent recovery from a depth of nearly 3 miles. The narrative reads more like pulp fiction than a factual rendering of events, with moments of elation followed by despair and ultimate victory. This is a must read for space and underwater exploration buffs alike. I only wish that the team had been given the opportunity to recover the hatch cover, surely, one of the targets in the vicinity of the capsule, and a key element in resolving the mystery and controversy concerning the premature hatch release.


The Vanderbilts would be proud!
Very cool CDI like it because when you visit the mansions there isn't time enough to see them all, and with this CD I can see them all. Also, I can go back to the rooms that I like and study the details in that room. It is very interesting.
Anyway, I would recommend this CD. It makes great use of new technology and is fun and easy to use.
Love those mansions!Also, it's great because I haven't been to all the mansions and through the virtual tours I can see which one I most want to visit next.
Now, if they could just figure out a way to get the CD to give you that musty dusty smell of the actual mansions...
Seriously, this is very cool and if you are only visiting Newport for a short time, it's worth it to see which mansions you really want to see in person.
Jilla


Vitally Important Book
Apocalypse and Millenium Review

The cultural and social life of the North and the South

AuthorZone.Com Book ReviewA repeat murderer must be at work. Maids have been dying. However, Detective Matt Devlin realizes that while the battered woman lying along the cliff walk is wearing maid's uniform she has hands much too soft and unblemished to be that of a maid. Before long Devlin is thrown together with one of the well-to-do inhabitants of the 'cottages' to work toward the solving of this puzzling mystery.
Brooke Cassidy and Devlin had been childhood friends during the years before the death of her working class parents to a carriage accident and Brooke's subsequent leaving of Newport, Rhode Island for a very different life in New York City. Now Brooke is back and living as the ward of her affluent relatives, the Olmsteads.
When all the clues begin pointing to Uncle Henry as the murderer, Matt has no choice but to arrest him. Brooke's 'damn the torpedoes full steam ahead' tenacity coupled with Matt's superior, thought plodding, investigative ability do uncover the true killer. Their discovery comes too late to prevent the death of another but not before another woman falls prey to the mad man.
What an interesting tale is to be found on the pages of Death on The Cliff Walk .
Set in 1895 Death on The Cliff Walk is a suspense filled historical novel. This is a gripping tale filled with intriguing well developed characters, credible dialogue and plenty of uncertainty. Duplicity abounds as the pair works toward solving the conundrum. Brooke as the bemused amateur sleuth is a sensible young woman who knows that she cannot simply live the life of the idle rich as her wealthy relatives want her to do. Rather she is determined to help solve the case. I've known people like this peppy girl!
Matt Devlin is the perfect quiet, introspective foil to Brooke's headstrong determination. Kruger's Brooke Cassidy is reminiscent of Brenda Bolden's Bird Series' Alex Masters. Both girls are determined, impatient and intent upon finding answers, right now. It is their willingness to rush forward despite all odds that often brings Cassidy and Masters both face to face with real, personal problems in addition to the one they were trying to solve.
Watch those red herrings. Do not fall into their grip or you may find yourself surprised when you reach the last paragraph of this action packed thriller. Good book for a 'lazy afternoon on the porch reading day.'
I hope this is not the only book in which we will find Matt Devlin and Brooke Cassidy working together to solve a perplexing case.
Reviewed by: molly martin


The Invention of American LeisureHe shows through lively anecdote, public records, brief biographies, and other primary sources, how these resorts at first document the free sociality of the antebellum period, a period during which Americans self-consciously created the institutions and practices of the first democratic society. He then shows how after the Civil War the concomitant rise of class distinctions based on wealth, the commercialization of leisure culture and its increasing privatization meshed with new consumerist values in such a way as to scuttle these egalitarian and democratic ideals as expressed through the relatively open culture of early resorts.
Sterngass relates, for instance, how it was that during an age of extreme religious piety (the Second Great Awakening) resorts were able to prosper in a still largely Calvinist society. He argues persuasively that early resort goers were part of long tradition of pilgrimage that had blossomed back in the Middle Ages.Saratoga's early entreprenuers touted the "healing" waters as"therapeutic," the "bathing" at Newport and Coney Island was touted by doctors as "restorative" and "re-creative." Not unlike the opium-laced patent medicines of the time, the healing waters were a cover for loosening of the usual social restraints. When tourists got to these early resorts, the hotel ballrooms (which featured nightly dancing), dining rooms (where twenty guests unknown to each other would be seated at table -- a practice which scandalized the European aristocracy who visited), and vast lobbies and porches (which fostered mingling, talking, and voyeurism) served as liminal spaces where the unexpectedly erotic or socially fortuitous meeting might occur. By contrast, the guest's rooms were tiny and ill-ventilated, a fact that seemed to bother no one -- after all the point was to see and be seen. And, just as importantly, there was no set formula, no expectation as to what accommodations in a resort hotel should be like. He also notes that for a country believed to be resolutely puritanical in its beliefs and industrious in its practices, that almost all Americans of the antebellum period went on vacation, and that a vacations of a month or more were common among the bourgeoisie and the aspiring middle class.
Saratoga's water were free for visitors and residents for better than fifty years. Early in the 1800s the town fathers passed a law to that effect, and in effect zealously guarded the amount of water that was drawn from the springs. Eventually, as leisure became more commercialized, the springs were fenced in, the water sold, and the springs, not surprisingly, were almost depleted -- an early parable of sound husbandry of natural resources giving way to the destructive forces of unbridled capitalism. Similarly, Newport's beaches were open to all from the early antebellum years until just after the Civil War, but soon after Newport was colonized by the robber barons and their friends, who attempted to privatize what had been held in common. When"cottage" dwellers like the Rockefellers and the Carnegies had trouble rescinding public access to the beach, they simply decided that bathing was not an activity people of their sort should engage in, thus creating just one of many rules that would police the boundaries between themselves and those unlike themselves. Coney Island, perhaps the most democratic of these resorts by virtue of its proximity to New York City, drew millions to its beaches and amusement parks every summer for decades, ending only in the 1940s. Sterngass shows how Coney Island's carnivalesque egalitarianism in the Gilded Age was the gift to New York of an amazing Irish politician, John McKane, whose great style and cunning helped create a safe escape for the city's burgeoning factory and office workers searching for diversion and excitement . The world's first great amusement space, nutured by the cagey McKane and his cronies, was very quickly copied the world over. Eventually brought down by reformers who consolidated the district with the rest of New York City and shuttered its rowdier establishments and attractions, the reformers drove McKane to an early grave, and instigated a process which eventually destroyed Coney's unique charms. The process continued to play out well into the 1950s when Coney's vitality finally succumbed under the weight of ill considered public housing projects, the massive infusion of money into suburban developments and the rise of car culture.
Well-illustrated with maps, photos, handbills, and other fascinating documents, this attractive book was published with great care by Johns Hopkins Press. Clearly, they believe they have a winner. I think they're right.


The Fortune of owing "Titanic: Fortune & Fate"Believe me, this "Fortune" is one exellent investment!!![...]
Titanic Fortune and FateAs you read the book, you can't help but feel as though you've been transported back to 1912 and feel a part of history...
This book is definately a keeper, Good Work!
Excellent