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THE best puppy book written!
The best puppy book I've ever read
Every first time puppy owner should have this book.

Top Beginner Book
Good
Read this book!!!

Jesus and the Celestials give us the True Gospel
Incredible & wonderful - it will change your lifeDo yourself a favour, read this book... God's Divine Love is waiting for you & this book tells you how to receive it.
The most important, life-altering book I've ever read

A consistent pleaser
Captivating and Unique
A masterful presentation

*small* book
The Illuminati Manifesto Compliments This Great Book!
The most lavish visual treatment of Masonic symbolismThis volume is especially eye-opening to students of esoteric symbolism who have not previously considered Masonic plant and animal symbolism grouped as such.
Non-Masons may find this book difficult to read unless they are already experienced in Masonic jargon, but all will find the photography beautiful to look at.


the best print media demo of taijutsu
very helpful for every martial art student
Ninja Fact not ...Fiction!

Truly interesting.
Great book for any dog-loverI ended up reading this book one chapter at a time before bedtime, and each night I'd go to sleep with a smile.
If you loves dogs, you'll enjoy this book -- which also makes a great gift for the dog-lovers in your life.
Rave reviews for Uncle Boris in the YukonBuy it! You will not be disappointed.


Great fantasy mystery novel!
A Fantasy Whodunit!This was a fabulous book in that Daniel Hood continues his excellent development of characters and beautiful writing style. The story was easy to follow (maybe a little too easy...), but full of fascinating characters and descriptions. Buy the book A Familiar Dragon and get the first three books in one hardbound edition (available used online for about half the price of a normal hardbound) - it is well worth your time and effort!
Excites and Amuses.

Great Book,Great Series
This is the best series of books i've ever read in my life.
awasome book, mind boggling.. on the edge of your seat

incoherent, but funMoreover, I read the book on travel and while I enjoyed it on a long train ride, I remember virtually nothing now - that is a sure mark for me of the fact that this is more fluff than real historical writing. This is one of my tests for meatiness: if I remember a lot and feel like I need to learn much more, I feel the book is a success. Well, this one fails on both counts.
Recommended as throwaway entertainment. If you want real history, look elsewhere.
Quest for CommunityHistory books which have bored me have relied excessively on the indiscriminate accumulation of detail. While this obsessive desire to be thorough might be necessary for the education of students, quantity of detail alone fails to give the complete, balanced view of reality that I look for in all kinds of reading. One reason I like Boorstin is that he writes narrative history, favoring theme over chronology, thus allowing the continuities and significance of history to emerge. His American story comprises many smaller stories. What I thought were signs of the times often turned out to be peculiarly American characteristics.
Boorstin writes, for example, that government paid for railroads and colleges in order to serve the growing community. Spencer's dichotomy of "The Man Versus the State" in 19th century Europe was meaningless in 19th Century America because distinctions such as public and private were often blurred. It is fitting that Boorstin divided his book into "Community" and "Nationality" because community preceded government. Contrary to the myth of the rugged individual explorer, Americans traveled in groups. Settlers who headed west, regardless of motive, wrote their own Mayflower Compact before loading the wagons. Venturing into lawless areas, they formed laws for their protection. Even vigilantism was a way of maintaining order rather than flaunting it.
The second half of the book examines vagueness as a source of strength. The country grew and prospered before its geographical boundaries had been explored. Here are also passages on American ways of talking, the creation of myths and legends, the establishment of the national holiday, and the importance of political parties.
Nearly every page of Boorstin's history contains some nugget of Americana which in isolation appears to be trivial but in historical context emerges to reveal something profound about American life.
Enlightening and enjoyable historyI find Boorstin's works very readable, and the style enjoyable. My only concern is that sometimes it seems that some complexities are ignored in favor of developing an overall theme. However, this remains one of very few histories I pick up for fun to read a few chapters.