Related Vacation Book Subjects: Missouri
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Books to read if you're planning a vacation in "Carter", sorted by average review score:

The Nemesis of Evil
Published in Paperback by Wildside Press (December, 1999)
Author: Lin Carter
Average review score:

PULP SUPER HERO
ZARKON had been born a million years from now,in a strange and mysterious future world. He represented the ultimate result of a program of genetic engineering conducted by the rulers of his weird world of tomorrow to protect against the extinction of the human race. Superhuman,rather than human,he was the end result of an experiment in selective breeding conducted over thousands of generations to produse a perfect superman. Aided by his OMEGA CREW of five human sidekicks,ZARKON books are a lot like the DOC SAVAGE books only with better spelling and without DOC SAVAGE'S habit of dumping radioactive waste out of his windows so that he can follow radioactive cars or people from outside his office,and gifting cancer to hundreds of passing innocents. This book is set in August 1970,and while it is the first book in the series it is the twelfth case Zarkon has solved since he arrived in the past.


Never Babysit the Hippopotamuses
Published in Hardcover by Henry Holt & Company (October, 1993)
Authors: Doug Johnson and Abby Carter
Average review score:

Never Babysit the Hippopotamuses
I enjoyed reading "Never Babysit the Hippopotamuses", to my four year old nephew. He really enjoyed the wacky chain of events in this book. This book enables a small child to really use their imagination. At the end of the story, you can ask the child, if they would rather babysit the Hippo's or their next door neighor the Monkeys? We both liked the colorful illustrations. I would highly recommend this book.


The New Three-Year Garden Journal: With Regional Planning Guides
Published in Hardcover by Fulcrum Pub (June, 2003)
Authors: Louise Carter, Allen Rokach, and Joanne Seale Lawson
Average review score:

The New Three-Year Garden Journal:With Regional Planning gui
This is a great book. There is plenty of space provided for you to write about your garden for every week of the year. It is also very informative. It gives specific info. for every zone in many different gardening topics for every month. And it has a special topic it goes into depth for for every month of the year. There are beautiful photographs throughout the entire book. It also has graph pages for designing gardens. I have recommended this book to quite a few friends who have loved it.


Nick Carter, Master Detective
Published in Audio Cassette by Radio Spirits, Inc. (01 January, 1998)
Author: Radio Spirits
Average review score:

awESOME BOOK!
WHEN YOU READ THIS BOOK YOU WILL FALL IN LOVE WITH NICK CARTER. THIS IS IF YOU ALREADY HAVEN'T


No Copycats Allowed
Published in Library Binding by Hyperion Press (April, 1998)
Authors: Bonnie B. Graves, Abby Carter, and Abbey Carter
Average review score:

One of a kind
My third grade son is probably not who this book was written for, but we took turns reading it aloud in bed one night and he wouldn't let me quit until we reached the last page. It has a good plot, and kids that are real. It's a page turner and funny too. Haven't we all felt the need to copy someone else's style, look, or actions? I hate that in myself, but I find it happening in the never ending quest to be liked or at least noticed. Maybe I'm insecure, like Gabrielle. This book rings true for kids and adults. It's not easy being a third grader enduring her first week at a new school. But Gabrielle conquers her fears and figures out the ultimate truth in the end... being your own person always wins out.


No Excuse: Seven Principals of Low Income Schools Who Set the Standard for High Achievement
Published in Paperback by Heritage Foundation (July, 1999)
Author: Samuel Casey Carter
Average review score:

Carter scores one for the Real World
Its title aside, this is a book about children, an empirical treatment contra the entrenched, racially tinged "Poor Kids Can't Learn" bias. What makes these success stories more than just a "position paper" for policymakers is the human face Carter puts on seven school principals who, far from being "out of touch" with students, go to great lengths to ensure their radical accessibility. Carter provides a counterexample for everyone who believes that poor, minority students should be relegated to the Dumpster of the tired, spendthrifty DOE/AFT Leviathan. And he shows us that an intellectual but straightforward, sympathetic but demanding approach to teaching can yield not merely average, but outstanding results. Like the grass that emerges green from cracked and dirty concrete, the principals Carter studies have achieved more with hope, faith and confidence in their charges than most "well-off" schools have with mere money. Get copies for every member of your school board.


Noodles: An Enriched Pop-Up Product
Published in Misc. Supplies by Harpercollins Juvenile Books (August, 1900)
Authors: Sarah Weeks and David A. Carter
Average review score:

Buy this if you find it! Please print it again!
I love this book, an early David Carter work. The rhymes are really wonderful (see below) and the pop-ups are adorable too. They are clearly David Carter creatures, but these are all different pasta noodles instead of bugs. I'm sad this is out of print- they should bring it back!

Here are a few excerpts from my memory:
Ladies and gentlemen, guess what we've got?
A feast like no others- a show in a pot
Get ready, get set- now lift up the top!
-------------
Gertie Gemelli will flutter and flirt
and hula up high in a green noodle skirt.
---------
Stan Manacotti that great muscle man,
eats ravioli right out of a can.
------------
Barron von ziti- that fire eating clown
takes flaming fusilli and gobbles it down!
------------
Lena the limber linguine queen
will crank herself out of a pasta machine!

Eddie tubetti- he juggles spaghetti
he says when it sticks to the ceiling- it's ready

Ollie and twin sister Mollie farfalle
bring down the house with a sparkling finale


The Nothingness Beyond God: An Introduction to the Philosophy of Nishida Kitaro
Published in Paperback by Paragon House (March, 1998)
Author: Robert E. Carter
Average review score:

Something to Say About Nothing
Carter's "The Nothingness Beyond God" is a beacon that opens up for discovery new possibilities of a meaningful dialogue between Eastern and Western philosophical traditions. Dedicating a chapter to each developmental stage, the book clearly illuminates the evolution of the philosophy of Nishida Kitar . Initiating the inquiry with the concept of pure experience, Carter deftly, yet with eloquent brevity, extricates the essential elements of Nishidan thought from a complex of the philosopher's writings. Carter demonstrates how Nishida never lost sight of his founding concept, pure experience, while he continued to tender increasingly more elucidated refinements that saw the genesis of the Logic of Basho and the concept of Self-Contradictory Identity. The refinement eventually produced a philosophical stance which he called The Dialectical World of "Acting Intuition", and of which this edition offers a substantially expanded exegesis. But Carter does not rest here, he suggests that issues of religion, morality and ethics, in short of value in general, can be, and indeed must be, tied to an understanding of the essential unfolding of the individual, without which, these concepts, lacking a form for expression, would be essentially empty.. In other words, what Carter sees as groundbreaking in Nishida is an insight that offers an ontology that can participate in the resolution of contemporary world issues. Ecology and environmental issues now become deep issues that are inseparable from our own well being. In what has clearly secured itself as a masterpiece of comparative philosophy, its contemporary relevance has additionally advanced the endeavour to bridge the gap between East and West. Yet, one of the more salient features of "The Nothingness Beyond God" is its range of accessibility. It is equally stimulating for the neophyte as well as the seasoned comparativist, in that its accessibility does not come at the expense of scholarly exactness. Well done.


Nova Scotia Patchwork Patterns: Instructions and Full-Size Templates for 12 Quilts
Published in Paperback by Dover Pubns (February, 1982)
Author: Carter Houck
Average review score:

Novia Scotia Design Patterns
Novia Scotia quilt designs often are hung (as a diamond, or herringbone shape) versus the early American tradition of sqares. So, the patterns listed, are often on this angle.

Patterns include: Nine-patch quilts, square and triangle variations, Windmill "hung" with herringbone, basket quilt, t-square quilt, jacob's ladder quilt, snowball quilt, whirligig quilt, giant tulip quilt (with appliqued stems), and rose of sharon wreath.

The full-size pattern pieces are included, with 1/4" seam allowance included (my preference).


Official Nba Guide 1998-99 (Serial)
Published in Paperback by Sporting News (September, 1998)
Authors: Sporting News, Mark Broussard, and Craig Carter
Average review score:

It is definitely worth the price.
I wish The Sporting News would be this thorough for their hockey and baseball guides. They did a fantastic job of putting together a fact guide that not only encompasses the most recent completed season (1997-98), but all previous seasons that the NBA was in existence. I would highly recommend this as a companion to the NBA Official Encyclopaedia, in years the NBA Official Encyclopaedia isn't published, this can make an excellent companion update. Another alternative would be to buy the annual sports almanacs that are offered by CNNSI or ESPN.


Related Vacation Book Subjects: Missouri
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