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

Child's Work: Taking Children's Choices Seriously
Published in Paperback by Holt Associates (October, 1990)
Authors: Nancy Wallace and David Sullivan
Average review score:

A must have for worried homeschoolers
This book is a must have! It is the most reassuring, child affirming book that I have read on homeschooling. Whenever I have doubts about what I am doing as a homeschool Mum, I turn to Nacy's book to give me the ressurance that I need. This book shows you what kids are capable of when left to follow their instincts. Nancy's honesty is refreshing and the reader is left feeling like a friend of the family.

A must read for those who'd oppose Home-education.
An honest, well written assesment of what children are capable of achieving on their own without any coercion or interference from the adults in their lives. It thoughtfully explains how children, left to their own devices, are capable of learning about what ever subject they chose inspite of what some professional educators would have you think.

The homeschooling book which is most respectful of children.
Nancy Wallace's book has been in print for almost 10 years now, and there have been dozens of homeschooling books since - how-to's, diatribes, anthologies, talk with the experts, etc. - but there is no book which is more respectful of the intellgience and in-born learning quests of children. Almost uniquely, she looks at "homeschooling" (a label which does not do justice to the book) from the perspective of the children themselves, rather than from that of overanxious, or overeager, parents. Belongs in every home library dealing with "alternative education".


Everyday People: Profiles from the Garden State
Published in Paperback by Rutgers University Press (15 July, 2001)
Author: Al Sullivan
Average review score:

Looking for real people
I am the author of this book
When I put together the pieces for this book, I wanted to share with readers the sight and sounds of those people I interviewed. Each person, each story is special to me because they seem to capture the person as I felt. Each person I talked to seemed to want to share their secret lives with me. It was fun.

A Breath of Fresh Air!
This review is long overdue. I picked up Al's book almost a year ago at a local book sale. I'm not a big reader, but having met Al in person led me to buy the book. I began skimming the book later on that night. Eventually, I stopped skimming and began reading. The profiles in this book are interesting. Yes, these are 'everyday people', but Al's insightful writing sheds electricity onto their lives. It was really like a breath of fresh air to read about the lives ordinary people lead. It's not everyday, in this fast-paced world of ours, when you take the time out to sit down and learn about the strangers who come and go. I highly recommend this pleasurable read.

Sullivan: gritty realism, a pure reading pleasure
If you ever met Al Sullivan, the last thing you'd do is picture him as a dashing young soldier long ago at the height of the Vietnam war - much less baby sitting a bunch of freaky rockers outside his helicopter at a place called Woodstock. Yet, that's one of the duties he 'volunteered' for.

In his essay "By The Time I Got To Woodstock" Sullivan briefly notes his 1st visit to the upstate refuge - and his overwhelming fear of helicopters. It is one of the rare times in Everyday People that he uses "I". It's to be forgiven him because he immediately uses his modern day visit to Woodstock as a newspeg to compare that town with Secaucus - his current tour of duty.

Sullivan worked for me for a few months in 96-97, and though the months were few, the impact has been long-lasting. He covered the mundane meetings, sure, but there was always something else lurking behind the touseld hair and the distant stare. He had the ragtag Tandy laptop blinking on one desk, the company terminal blinking there, a notepad in front of him - all while he was on the phone talking to another source. Sullivan was always on the go, always three steps ahead of the sunshine, so to speak. It is a pleasure to read him again.

It was there, in those other stories that Al set himself apart. If he workd for me now, he'd be a 'special writer' - that's someone who does his beat, and also turns in outstanding stories from left field, Clark's Pond, the emergency room and just about anywhere else fate takes him.

"Down and Out in Hoboken" relays the chance meeting with a panhandler at St. Mary's Hospital. The panhandler - whose name Sullivan never learns - says "People give me money to make me go away..." And in just a couple hundred words, you learn an awful lot about the panhandler - and the skill of Sullivan's perception of people. That's what makes Everyday People in its gritty realism a pure reading pleasure.

Perhaps the editors of Everyday People could have selected a few longer profiles, but as Sullivan notes in his Preface, "the word count has always been my curse," and I'll vouch for his observation here, "as it is for all prolific journalists," and again I agree. While we await the next volume, dig in here, and meet some interesting everyday people.


Listening for Coyote: A Walk Across Oregon's Wilderness
Published in Paperback by Oregon State Univ Pr (15 May, 2000)
Author: William L. Sullivan
Average review score:

A wonderful, insightful, inspiring book
Reading this book felt a lot like taking a very long walk with a smart, aware, brave and sensitive friend. Here is someone who really knows how to live in the present. It's so inspiring that after I'd finished reading the book, I just wanted the journey of discovery and insight to continue. So today I'm going out to see what new paths I can discover on the outskirts of the city of Ashland. This is a book I know I'll revisit again and again.

Better than "A Walk in the Woods"
This is a great book! I've had my copy for several years, and I think I have re-read it once a year since I got it. If you sometimes appreciate living vicariously through the adventures of others, pick up this book. It might even spur some real adventures of your own. It's similar to "A Walk in the Woods" by Bill what's-his-name, only Bill Sullivan walks across Oregon (on a diagonal), and the background and history in this book is even more interesting. Includes funny adventures, and insights into long-distance hiking. If you want to hike in Oregon, check out some of Sullivan's excellent guide books.

An amazing tale of adventure
This is one of those books that you can pick up every now and then and enjoy it just as much as you did the first time around. This account of his hike from the western most point in the state of Oregon to the eastern most point makes for some wonderfully exciting and enjoyable reading. I love to buy this book for people as a gift and every single one of them has thanked me for introducing them to this terrific book. Do yourself a favor and order it now!


More Than Meets the Eye: The Story of a Remarkable Life and a Transcending Love
Published in Paperback by Joan Brock (12 May, 1998)
Authors: Joan Brock, Tom Sullivan, and Derek Gill
Average review score:

An Inspiration to many
I was recently fortunate enough to hear Joan speak at the ICAN conference in Omaha. She is truly amazing! Hearing her story puts all of the little bumps in my life into perspective. I would recomend this book to anyone!

Joan is a wonderful positive person.
I knew Joan when she was going through her loss of vision. She is a very positive and uplifting person. Her book is true to the experiences we all had with her and her family. You have to read the book and feel that your outlook on life can be just as positive and happy!

Joan is truly a gift to us all.
I had the pleasure of hearing and seeing Joan Brock while at a convention in Oakland, CA in May of 1999. This woman has been through so much, yet still manages to see the good in life and in people. She will inspire you and lift you. The book make my mother cry with joy as she read it. I hope to have the pleasure of reading more books of Joan's should she choose to write them. Thank you Joan for the joy you have added to my life.


Bedford Forrest and His Critter Company (Southern Classics Series)
Published in Paperback by J S Sanders & Co (April, 1992)
Authors: Andrew Nelson Lytle and Walter Sullivan
Average review score:

A Stunning Achievement
Cunning as the Devil was Nathan Bedford Forrest and this book indicates just how quick and clever this military genius was. Little wonder then that Lee considered this dark knight to be his finest soldier, above even the legendary Stonewall Jackson.

Great reading, but definitely not for the "P.C." crowd.
In terms of his impact on modern warfare, no general of the Civil War had more than Lt. Gen. Nathan Bedford Forrest. Not Grant, not Lee, not Longstreet or Sherman. This is the man. No less a general than Erwin Rommel studied Forrest's tactics and implemented them with modern weaponry when his Afrika Korps marched all over Libya and Egypt in World War II.

The reason I say this book isn't for the "politically correct" is that it was written some 70 years ago, by a man of the old South who obviously idolized Forrest and everything he stood for. As you know already, not everything Forrest stood for was good. He was 100 years ahead of his time as a soldier, but stuck in 1860 in his personal beliefs.

But...getting into the book. He was a brilliant commander who never had enough men under his command to turn the war in the South's favor. Still, he was a hero to the people of the Tennessee river valley where he won most of his victories, with good reason. When the Union troops overran these areas and placed them under military rule, Forrest made sure they treated the citizens decently. Once he even saved a group of innocent men from a flaming death at the hands of vengeful Union soldiers whom he was defeating in battle. Reading these and other stories makes you understand why he was such a hero to the author, who would have heard first-hand accounts of Forrest's exploits.

Lytle believes that the South would have won the war if Forrest had been placed in command of the main Confederate army in the west, and he's probably right. Forrest was an extraordinary individual who had more impact on the 20th century than any other Civil War general.

Great
I never fully appreciated the intellect of Forrest until I finished this book. It peels away the myths about the man, and tells about what he was really like. I loved it, and often flip around in it from time to time. A must for Civil War buffs!


Excel Expert Solutions
Published in Paperback by Que (April, 1996)
Authors: Brian Underdahl, Donna Payne, David Maguiness, John Green, Bob Umlas, David Hager, Shane Devenshire, Heidi Sullivan-Liscomb, John Lacher, and Conrad Carlberg
Average review score:

the home garden handbooks
I am looking for someone that knows something about old books like the home garden handbook published in 1927

No finer book for the finer points of Excel
I am a heavy duty user of Excel and I support users of the application too. This is one of the best books I have seen on Excel's most powerful features. The chapters on array formulas and range names are the best I have read on the subject. This book is outstanding. I am here writing this review because I was hoping to order a copy for work.

Very good for those who want to know Excel more
One of the excellent book of Excel. However it is out of stock. I lent it from the library and can't find it from any book store. I hope the publisher will re-printed it.


Lethe
Published in Paperback by Bantam Spectra (July, 1995)
Author: Tricia Sullivan
Average review score:

left me wondering where the sequel was...
I found this to be a really enthralling book, imaginative and with compelling characters. I bought it for 50 cents at a bazaar, and it was one of the best uses of 50 cents I've found! I was somewhat disappointed in the ending, however, as it seemed to leave a lot of questions unanswered. I'm actually on Amazon.com today because I was wondering if there was a sequel (unfortunately, there doesn't seem to be...).

Still Intrigued
Oooh, did I burn up with jealosy when I realized that Trish Sullivan wrote this wonderful 400+ page book at twenty-six! It meant two things: 1) We are the same age and 2)Dern, I hadn't written it.

Sincerely, it is a wonderfully imaginative book that still tickles my imagination when I look up at the woods surrounding my house.

The first chapter is a doozy; you won't understand it at ALL until much much later in the book, but don't let it throw you--it's a wonderful read.

I do recommend it to adults, however, and older teens due to some, er, tricky sexual content. It's a very moving read, that draws you in completely into the powerful struggle which faces the protagonists.

Susanne Koenig

This is one of the coolest sci-fi books I've ever read!!
This story combines almost every emotion you can imagine. You cry for the characters who have grow up and die. You feel angry for what they do to their children. Your soul rejoices when something good happens. You feel revulsion at the thought of the Pickled Brains. I picked up this book two summers ago at my brother's house. I didn't know what to expect, but now I tell everybody I know to read it. Thank you Ms. Sullivan for writing such an awesome book!


Murder & Sullivan
Published in Hardcover by St. Martin's Press (May, 1997)
Author: Sara Hoskinson Frommer
Average review score:

A fine work, especially for Gilbert & Sullivan fans
Sara Hoskinson Frommer has taken all the best elements of a murder mystery. She gets you caring about the characters and wanting to find the killer, and when you find out whodunit, you say to yourself, "Of course, I should have seen that." I loved the Gilbert & Sullivan references at the beginning of each chapter, and what an ingenious, Gilbertian plot twist to murder a "ghost." The only problem is that I am a Gilbert & Sullivan performer, and I'm going to be afraid if I ever get cast in the role of Sir Roderic Murgatroyd.

Like Gilbert and Sullivan, Murder & Sullivan Scores Big!
Perhaps the best of the Joan Spenser mysteries, Murder and Sullivan is soooo much fun! The main character is this ordinary music-loving lady, Joan, and she's always up to her neck in danger! I love all of Sara Hoskinson Frommer's books. They're fabulous reads if you like mysteries. A writer friend of mine says she thinks Frommer is the best mystery writer out there today..and she might be right, too.

Sara Frommer does it again!
Murder & Sullivan is another gem from Sara H. Frommer, a writer who understands music and real people. I'm not a professional book reviewer by any means, but I know what's good when I read it. I've read other books by this author and all of them are I think, wonderful.


Soul Rescuers
Published in Hardcover by Thorsons Pub (15 February, 2000)
Authors: Terry O'Sullivan, Natalie O'Sullivan, and Natalia O'Sullivan
Average review score:

Review from ....
A fascinating book, if you have had frequent brushes with those that have died and not gone to a heaven of some sort or other then this is a book for you. I spent the first part of the book wanting to meet the O'Sullivan's to compare ghost busting notes, the second part being slightly frustrated by the emphasis on Tibetan Buddhism. I came away with the decision that the overt Buddhism did not outweigh the help that this book would give to searchers on the path towards understanding the nature of the unquiet dead.

The personal stories recounted in this book range from the tragic to the down right frightening! The first story of Kadamba Simmons and her murder is perhaps the most tragic, yet it also leaves us with a feeling of hope as she finds peace in a shower of butterflies at her burial.

Their information regarding possession would be of help to a lot of the living. I have found that those who 'dabble' in the paranormal seem to expect to be possessed at some time or other. As I have always considered that notion to be daft perhaps the chapter dealing with the subject will help answer some questions.

I do not agree with everything that they say, but the majority of it is the 'real macoy'. I also found the style of the book made for easy reading.

A wonderful book about helping Spirits/Souls....
I am nearing the end of this book and am saddened by that fact since there doesn't seem to be a whole lot written about understanding ghosts/spirits who have not left this dimension. I have found this book to be a wonderful resource for what I have felt and known all along, but have now found validated in print. It's encouraging to know that people, as sensitive as these authors, are out there helping others, even if we cannot see these 'others'. Ghost therapists, who would have thought! Good job Terry & Natalia!

A Truthful Account
A quite amazing and honest account of how a young boys open mindedness brought him on to a road of clearing wandering spirits. A book to take away the fears of anyone who has been bothered by bumps in the night. Easy reading and interesting.


Same-Sex Marriage: Pro and Con
Published in Paperback by Vintage Books (April, 1997)
Authors: Andrew Sullivan and Joseph Landau

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