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Books to read if you're planning a vacation in "Bates", sorted by average review score:

Just You and Me
Published in School & Library Binding by Candlewick Press (March, 1998)
Authors: Sam McBratney and Ivan Bates
Average review score:

Just You and Me .... What a fabulous book
My son and I have enjoyed this book countless time. He's a middle child, two siblings, all very close together in age. There are not many times that he and I have alone together. This book has brought a smile to his face EVERY SINGLE TIME we have read it together, from age three until now, he's almost five. We only read it when it's just the two of us. I can't recommend it highly enough. The story is sweet, the pictures are marvelous, and just wait till your child looks at you with adoring eyes when you read "Just you and me". It's a keeper.

A sweet story with beautiful illustrations
I really love the illustrations in this book. It is a very nice story for a father to read to a child. It addresses fear of rain storms in a very gentle way. It is sure to result in "again again" from your child, as it did mine.


Kids Can Cook: Vegetarian Recipes
Published in Paperback by Book Pub Co (January, 2000)
Authors: Dorothy R. Bates and Suzanne Havala
Average review score:

With kitchen safety rules and helpful cooking hints
Now in a newly revised and expanded edition, Kids Can Cook Vegetarian Recipes is a truly "kid friendly' compendium of delicious, nutritious, easy-to-make recipes that will attract the attention and approval of children. There are simple recipes ideal for beginners, party foods to make and share, as well as kitchen safety rules and helpful cooking hints. From Peanut Butter Bread; Black Bean Soup; Tofu Pot Pie; and Macaroni Salad; to Gram's Peach Cobbler; Baked Bananas; Cocoa Pudding Cake; and Popcorn Balls, Kids Can Cook Vegetarian Recipes is an ideal addition to any family's vegetarian cookbook collection!

Great book for young chefs!
This is the perfect book for older vegetarian kids who want to try their hand in the kitchen. And its forward by dietitian and author Suzanne Havala is a simple, reassuring guide, especially for non-vegetarian parents who have concerns about their independently vegetarian children or teens. For more than ten years, the author of Kids Can Cook Vegetarian Recipes, Dorothy R. Bates, has been hosting Friday afternoon cooking sessions for the teens from the Farm School near where she lives. You may have heard about the Farm, a community in Summertown, TN that is known for raising healthy vegetarian children. The recipes are simple, easy to follow, and there is nothing too out of the ordinary. The Farm kids used these recipes to create 3-course meals, and a place setting diagram is included in the book in case your kids want to host a meal, too (or just learn how to set a proper table). And in case you think it takes seasoned young chefs to recreate such a feat, keep in mind that the author has also used these recipes to cook with disadvantaged inner-city children in the Farm's "Kids to the Country" summer program.


Little Rabbit's Loose Tooth
Published in Paperback by Crown Pub (December, 1988)
Authors: Lucy Bate and Diane de Groat
Average review score:

Book Review
I enjoyed reading this book about her loosing her first tooth. It is a good book to read, because it makes you think about when you lost your first tooth. In the story, little rabbit looses her first tooth and doesnt really know what to do with it. Her mom tells her about the tooth fairy. She still is not sure if she wants to put it under her pillow or not. If you read the book, you will find out what she does with the tooth.

Wonderful Illustrations and a cute story
This was a childhood favorite of mine and now that I'm grown I would like to have a copy for my own children. Wonderful story, your kids will love it too!


Mediums: Speakers With the Dead
Published in Paperback by White Wolf Publishing Inc. (September, 1997)
Authors: Richard E. Dansky, Justin Achilli, Andrew Bates, Roger Gaudreau, Robert Martin, James A. Moore, Ronni Radner, Tracy Rysavy, Lisa Daigle, and John Daigle
Average review score:

Great sourcebook! Tremendously useful.
This book is well-written and covers a vast scope. Contrary to what the title might lead you to believe, this book covers a lot more than just plain mediums. In fact, it offeres detailed information on just about any faction in the Skinlands that might interact with the Restless Dead: "Boardwalk mediums" found at carnivals and circuses the ruthless Giovanni vampires, even charlatans and frauds who possess no real talent, but manage to offend wraiths with their very presumption and chicanery.

This book is definitely worth the purchase price- it will enrich virtually any Wraith chronicle.

Mediums done right
This is a fine resource for mediums, much better than the Quick and the Dead. The systems stuff is vastly improved, with a battery of new merits and flaws for mediums that I actually found useful (and can be used to supplement or replace the hedge magic paths for interacting with wraiths). There is some good stuff on summoning, a large section on Native American medicine men and shamanic dealings with the dead, a fresh look at many of the old ghost-dealing groups, and a new ability for those people who have had enough with wraiths shouting in their ears.


Midnight Horse (Sandy Lane Stables Series)
Published in Library Binding by Edu Dev (March, 1998)
Author: Michelle Bates
Average review score:

The Midnight Horse
This book is about a girl who loves the horse named Midnight. He is special because he is very calm and gentle. She was very sad bacause he was being sold to a different family, and she did not want that to happen. He was not her horse and her parents would not let her have him. This is the story of how she got the pony.

Midnight Horse
I thought this was a great book. It is the 4th book of Sandy Lane Stables. I think this is a good book for girls and boys that love horses.The Midnight horse was the best book I thought. I hope that you love reading it I could not stop reading.


The New Economic Disorder
Published in Paperback by Word Publishing (December, 1999)
Author: Larry Bates
Average review score:

Best expose on the "real" economy in years!
Dr. Bates really exposes the truth behind our currency and banking system and how it affects all of us in our daily lives. This is a must read for all trying to make heads or tails of the turmoil in our economy today. While it was written five years ago, the information and basic principles it uncovers are timeless and will be as true one hundred years from now as they are today. If you are concerened for your financial future or that of future generations, you will find solutions to the economic problems that we are facing today. For those who need to know what to do to protect their hard-earned assets, this is again, a must read.
I am impressed with this book and recommend that every household read a copy. It should be required reading for all business and economic majors.

I THANK GOD FOR THIS BOOK AND THE KNOWLEDGE HE GAVE L. BATES
THIS BOOK EXSPOSES FED.RESERVE,OUR GOVN'T,BANKS AND ETC. IF YOU ARE A CHRISTIAN THIS BOOK IS REVEALED IN THE BIBLE. SOME FOLKS MIGHT THINK THIS BOOK IS A JOKE BUT THEY ALSO THOUGHT NOAH WAS A JOKE ABOUT THE FLOOD. DO THE INVESTIGATION YOURSELF?


Normandy: The Search for Sidney = Normandie: A La Recherche de Sidney
Published in Hardcover by Bates Books (01 March, 2000)
Author: Tom Bates
Average review score:

An Outstanding Addition to any Library
Many of us dream of visiting the sites of great battles of WWII or Korea. That is, indeed, the reason KilroyWasHere.org was started. See the Foreword (Volume 2). Tom has actually done it and written a gripping, historic book about his adventure. We have read a lot about the landings at Omaha (USA 1st Div.), at Utah, (USA 4th Div.), but little about the landings at Gold (British 50th Div.), Juno (Canadian 3rd Div.), or Sword (British 4rd Div.) This great book changes that about Sword in an up close and personal way.

It is really three books. Each could be a book by itself and well worth the read! The first is Tom's own. He discovered and was intrigued by Corporal Sidney Bates (same last name but not related) whose single-handed efforts, firing a Bren gun from the hip, stopped an attack by panzer grenadiers after D-day. For this he won The Victoria Cross, ". . . his sovereign's highest decoration for valour . . . " Tom's search is for the exact place where Sidney gave his all. Tom, himself a WWII veteran in Burma, was helped by two Sword survivors and many French locals who ". . . gladly gave their liberators the 'freedom of their fields' in return for the blood their comrades had spilt there."

An interesting aside is that the book is written in English and French side by side in two columns per page. It is done this way as a tribute to a very brave French woman, Madam Lenauld whose story is told in the second book. Her father was the gallant French mayor maligned in the Movie "The Longest Day."

The third book is a detailed battlefield account of the 1st Battalion, The Suffolk Regiment who, having survived Dunkirk, landed at Sword.

All three are worthy of being stand alone books but together, they make an outstanding addition to any library.

An amazingly detailed chronicle of the 1 Suffolk infantry
A dual language book with its text in both English and French, Normandy: The Search For Sidney by Thomas J. Bates and Eric Lummis is an extensively, meticulously researched history and vividly presented narrative journey, which reveals the authors' search for the battle site in Normandy where one man, Corporal Sidney Bates, held back a force of panzer-grenadiers almost singlehandedly and paid for his valor with his life. Normandy: The Search For Sidney also reveals the courage of a French woman and her family in the tumultuous events up to and surrounding D-Day, and an amazingly detailed chronicle of the 1 Suffolk infantry during the D-Day battles that changed history. Black-and-white photography enhances this vivid, visceral narrative which is an especially recommended contribution to Military History collections in general, and World War II European Theatre military buff in particular.


Once upon a Time: A Book of Old-Time Fairy Tales
Published in Hardcover by Checkerboard Pr (June, 1993)
Authors: Katharine Lee Bates and Margaret Evans Price
Average review score:

Delightful stories for even the very young
My mother received this book from her mother as a Christmas gift in 1926 when she was just 6 years old. She so loved the book. She tried to copy the pictures over and over by tracing over them. Her book is worn now, but still very treasured. She read the stories to me when I was small and reads them now to my children, now just 4 and 1. The 4 year old loves the book. The stories are not told in a scary manner but are very magical and also moral, with the good people winning out in the end. The illustrations are beautiful. I highly recommend this book. I am very hopeful that I will be able to find another copy of it.

A Tradition of Fairy Tales . . . Well, You Know the Rest
I can recall as a young child curling up next to my mother, while she read to me from her favorite children's book, "Once Upon a Time, A Book of Old-Time Fairy Tales," by Katharine Lee Bates (Rand McNally & Company, 1921). She had received this book for her own fifth birthday. In time I knew all my favorite illustrations by the marvelous Margaret Evans Price, and could recite most of the book's stories by heart. My favorites were "Furball," "Hop O' My Thumb" and "The Dancing Shoes." The stories contained in "Once Upon a Time" are part of the time-honored tradition of fairy stories which relied on the imagination of the child and the voice of the storyteller to ignite. Edited by Bates, Professor of English Literature at Wellesley College, the protagonists of the stories are good and often beautiful; they always find love and/or good fortune. By comparison, the antagonists get their just desserts; however, they are obviously bad, and merely scary rather than terrifying. There's something solid and safe about these tales; they're not explosive or bigger than life, just extraordinary in the nicest way. "Furball" tells the story of a motherless princess, who is sold by her feckless father into marriage to an ogre. Innocent but resourceful, she agrees to the marriage on the condition that her father provide her with four lavish and presumably impossible-to-furnish items of clothing: a dress "as golden as the sun," another as "silvery as the moon," a third as "glittering as the stars"; and a coat made of "a thousand different kinds of fur" from "every animal in the kingdom." To her chagrin, her father presents her with all she has requested. Now, faced with marriage to the ogre, she sees that her only remedy is to run away. So she folds her new clothing into a packet so small "she could shut them up in a walnut shell." Wearing her fur coat and staining her face and hands with walnut juice for concealment, she runs until she comes to a forest, where she falls into exhausted sleep. Discovered slumbering in the hollow of a tree by a neighboring young king and his huntsmen, and thought initially to be an odd sort of animal, the young king decides to rescue her and takes her to his castle. Recognizing neither her beauty nor her royalty in her disguise, he assigns her to work as a scullery maid in the castle kitchen. Eventually wooed by her cleverness, soon revealed beauty and unexpected culinary expertise, he. . . well, you know the rest. "Toads and Vipers" is the story of a widow with two daughters. The elder, who resembles her mother in face and character and is therefore favored by her mother, is homely and rude. But the younger takes after her late father, and is pleasing in her appearance and sweet-tempered. One day, a fairy, disguised as a crone, hobbles up to the fair sister and asks her for a libation. The young girl graciously proffers the woman a drink from her pitcher, and, in return, the fairy/woman graces her with a magical gift: "At every word you speak there shall come out of your mouth a flower or a jewel." When the girl's mother perceives the great riches which could come her way, she sends her favorite daughter out to the well, but to very different effect. The grumbling, unpleasant sister rudely rebuffs the crone's request for water, and the fairy/woman bestows upon her an appropriate curse: "At every word you speak there shall drop out of your mouth a snake or a toad." Blaming the beautiful daughter for the ill fortune of the wretched one, the mother chases the innocent girl into the woods, where she is later found crying by the King's son, who happens to be riding by. Impressed by her beauty and the obvious riches that fall from her lips at every word she speaks, the young man takes her to his castle and. . . well, you know the rest. These are just two of the 16 famous and not-so-famous stories that have been compiled into this wonderful book. Also included are Jack and the Beanstalk; Briar Rose, or The Sleeping Beauty; Hop O' My thumb; Drakestail; Jack the Giant-Killer; Cinderella, or the Little Glass Slipper; King Hawksbeak; Little Red Riding-Hood; The Dancing Shoes; Beauty and the Beast; Rumpel-Stilt-Skin, or Tom Tit Tot; The Frog Prince; Tom Thumb; and The Goose Girl. I could also recap these beloved stories, but . . .well, you know the rest.


Parrots and Related Birds
Published in Hardcover by TFH Publications (October, 1981)
Authors: Henry J. Bates and Robert I. Busenbark
Average review score:

Invaluable Resource of information!
Owning a professional aviary housing over 300 exotic parrots I require an extensive library of easy to read and well indexed books. This book is always the one I grab first. In addition to it's valuable and well-written content, it also contains a huge collection of fantastic photographs. I highly recomend this book for pet owners and breeders alike.

Outstanding book
The author was Henry Bates, my uncle, who passed away in 1968. He was a kind and brillant man who I continute to miss. I am gratified that his works are still available. Thanks, Dan Meador


The Perfect Pony (Sandy Lane Stables)
Published in Paperback by Usborne Pub Ltd (December, 1999)
Author: Michelle Bates
Average review score:

A Wonderful and Exciting Book!
Alex Hardy is much more into soccer than horses, so lately he hasn't been spending much time at the stable while his sister, Kate, practically lives there. He's trying to raise money for a soccer tour in South Africa. He wants to go on the tour he's trying to raise money for he finds the perfect plan- he'll buy a pony, fix it up, and sell it! The small New Forest pony he buys is anything but perfect: he may have to be put down. Alex slowly retrains "Puzzle" until he's won the a big show! Puzzle and Alex become very attatched to each other.

Meanwhile, he hasn't exactly told his parents about Puzzle yet. When his parents do find out, that are angry and tell him he has to sell Puzzle. Alex is heartbroken. Puzzle is so special to him now. No one at the stable wants to see the little horse go, but maybe that's not enough. Will Alex have to courage to say good bye to Puzzle- forever?

Chevara's Review
Alex Hardy needs to raise money for a cricket tour that he desperately wants to go on. He has to raise GBP850-00 and all three ponies at the stables are lame. He thinks he has the perfect solution but he soon finds that he has let himself in for a whole lot more than he bargained for. Read the book to find out how Alex manages to resolve the problems. A very exciting book.


Related Vacation Book Subjects: Missouri
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