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To learn Spanish or English

Banana thinking .... Indeed!

Helpful book

A solid juvenile biography of President Benjamin HarrisonFrancis divides this Our Presidents volume into four chapters. The first details the political histor of the Harrison family, the second Benjamin Harrison's service with the Union army during the Civil War, and the third how his career in the U.S. Senate made him a prime candidate for the Presidency. Surprisingly, Francis reduces the turmoil of the 1888 campaign to the briefest of descriptions, and deals with his term in office as "The Centennial President." The few things of significance that happened during those years, most notably passage of the Sherman Anti-Trust Act, are dealt with along with Harrison's final years after leaving office. The book is illustrated with dozens of historic black & white photographs, including one of outgoing President Grover Cleveland holding an umbrella over Harrison while he took the oath of office. One of the treats of these books are the interesting facts that are scattered throughout the margins, informing us about how Harrison was the second shortest president at five-feet-six and how Mrs. Harrison led the efforts to refurbish the White House. In fact, electricity was installed in the White House during the Harrison administration, but the President refuesed to touch the switch, afraid that he might be shocked. You have to appreciate these sort of details, which is why the Our Presidents series is the first place young readers (or teachers) should go to for information about anyone of our nation's Presidents.


Nowhere near 'boring'...

Not the best but good

Excellent - Good balance in science & engineering!!

Great Intro to Women Blues

First Novel from one of New Zealand's best writers

Teasing with the horrors of pop culture.Faust sold his soul for eternal Knowledge: Harrison's characters sell their souls for a wink from an assistant producer. In "Pretty Girl and Fat Friend," when pickup "auteur" Jerry is beaten to a pulp by two women, he's ashamed enough to tell the cops it was two guys but not ashamed enough to not tap out the same tired messages to a flight attendant as soon as he can walk again.
In the title story, a hunky security guard is so mesmerized by the hazy veil of fame that he'll continue working for the boss who shot him in a desperate publicity stunt. In "The Rocky Hills of Trancas," an ambitious son gradually usurps his wayward father's talent.
Harrison's old standards are here too: "Roller Ball Murder," "The Arsons of Desire," & the great interior monologue, "The Warrior," in which a restless soldier of fortune takes revenge on an outdoor film festival.
Of course, it helps that the reader is familiar with the media-driven world his characters inhabit, but when Harrison starts teasing you with the horrors of our pop culture, then the girders of our emotional structure, like those of the weather tower, become brittle & snap.