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Excellent for beginners

Insightful!

Story of La Santa de Cabora / La Nina de Cabora

RecommendedJeff Banning left his father's computer business two years ago to become a tour guide. While he had loved programming, he resented his father's remarriage to a much younger woman so quickly after his mother's death from cancer. But when owner Vince Banning becomes certain that someone is stealing software through the company web site, only Jeff is in the position to stop the crime before the company is driven out of business.
Jeff uses his position of tour guide and family influence to land a transfer to Minneapolis where can accompany Banning employees on their upcoming cruise. What he didn't know was that he stole Diane Foreman's chance at promotion and fulfillment of her dreams.
Diane has long dreamed of accompanying the tours she schedules. Certain she has at last earned her promotion, she was deeply resentful to learn that some rich playboy had landed her much coveted position. Worse, when Jeff shows up at the office, she finds herself making foolish mistakes because he makes concentration so difficult. But, when Jeff invites her to help as tour guide for the Banning Corporation, she quickly agrees.
The resulting sultry nights in Mexico certainly build a beautiful backdrop for romance. But what's a girl to think when one moment the man is kissing her, and the next working intensely with another woman; one who's obviously sexy, available, and interested. As the tropical nights heat up, Diane finds herself succumbing to the tropical heat. Yet for every moment of pleasure, there seems to be another of mystery, as she can't quite unravel the connections that Jeff holds to his father, the sexy secretary, and the secrets he's obviously keeping.
A light hearted tropical romp in the sun, TRAVELING BUG definitely warms the imagination with its tropical delights. Lovers of light romance will find this traveling adventure quite enjoyable.


My thought on Unix System Security

and a dash of Star Trek 6
It's probably worth your time.If you didn't make it through Herbert's original 6 books, don't start with this one, because the master himself definitely tells the story best, but if you're like me and have read pretty much everything the man ever wrote, just can't possibly get enough Frank Herbert, this is definitely worth your time.
Brian Herbert and Kevin Anderson do a credible job of bringing Frank Herbert's characters and universe back from the dead. The book is a "prequel" to the original series, and further good news is that there are clear hints that there will be at least one additional prequel book and a "postquel" book as well.
A Fitting and Welcome PrequelEmperor Elrood and his son Shaddam, as well as Shaddam's ever-present companion, Hasimir Fenring. Baron Vladimir Harkonnen. Leto Atreides and his father, Duke Paulus, as well as Thufir Hawat, the Duke's faithful Mentat. The Spacing Guild. The Bene Tleilaxu. The Bene Gesserit, along with their on-going breeding programs and their constant struggle to create the god-child they call the Kwisatz Haderach. Pardot Kynes, the Planetologist. The mysterious Fremen.
Dune: House Atreides is full of political and religious intrigue: Watch as Shaddam and Fenring wrangle their way into power. Watch as the Bene Tleilaxu work a most devious and conspiratorial plot against House Vernius and the Planet Ix. Watch as the Bene Gesserit make an unexpected move in their ages long plan to birth the Kwisatz Haderach, or "Shortening of the Way," a male Bene Gesserit "whose organic mental powers would bridge space and time."
Watch as a certain Bene Gesserit Reverend Mother gives action to the Bene Gesserit Dictum: "History has seldom been good to those who must be punished. Bene Gesserit punishments cannot be forgotten." Watch as Pardot Kynes becomes the Imperial Planetologist to Arrakis, the Planet Dune, and as he befriends the Fremen and begins a plan of his own making, one he sees as taking hundreds of years to fulfill. And watch, as Baron Vladimir Harkonnen works a most exquisite revenge against the Harkonnen's old rival, House Atreides.
Written in a style that complements that of Frank Herbert, Brian Herbert's father, Dune: House Atreides is a fitting and welcome prequel to this longtime favorite series of science fiction fans.


Anne's imagination astounds me!
Another masterpiece by Anne Rice!
I really enjoyed reading the 3rd book of the Mayfairs.

5 Into 2 Won't Go
Everything is better with an Andy Warhol cartoonIntroducing Postmodernism was a bit vague, but i guess so is postmodernism itself. To completely understand the book, you first must have an idea what postmodernism is, and if you have such an idea, you don't really need a postmodern study guide.
It gives alot of examples of postmodernity in society without actually stating what postmoderninsm is, but who CAN acctually state what postmodernism is?
It discusses everyone from Stephen Hawking to Madonna, everything from "Cyberia" and genetic cloning to Disneyland and karaoke.
It might give you some ideas if you have to write a paper, than again it just might frustrate you and cause you to spin off into cyberspace.
A graphic study guide introducing you to Postmodernism

Not bad, but could have been a lot better
An improvement, but still probably only for Dune fanaticsStill, it's a decent read -- especially for Dune fanatics like myself. It fills in the history of the Imperium. And the fight between the Tleilaxu and Vernius; between the Grumman and Ecaz -- are interesting. In fact, the book might have been better had it focused entirely on these conflicts -- with Leto and the others serving merely as secondary characters.
The narrative style is improved and the higher rating I give this book is mainly due to the incredible villainy we get to see in House Harkonnen. This actually *improves* your appreciation of Dune. (Spoiler warning again). You smile knowing these monster will eventually get what's coming to them.
And, of course, I'm buying the next book -- which tells my real opinion of this one (3.5 stars).
Fun, satisfying space-opera page turner...manages to be so philosophical, pulpy, and entertaining at once. This book follows the stories of many familiar characters, Duke Leto, Jessica, Baron Harkonnen, Reverend Mother Helena, the Emperor Shaddam IV, Rabban, Duncan Idaho, Gurney Halleck, Count Fenring, Piter De Vries, Liet Kynes among others, and adds a few new ones such as Rabban's father and mother, a renegade household, the Verniuses, and C'tair a rebel on the planet of Ix who is the twin brother of a HUMAN Navigator, D'murr. There is certainly a lot of material here, and at times it seems almost too much, but that is what Space Opera is for, and the resulting "brings up as many questions as it answers effect" is kind of nice. Perhaps one day we'll find out a little more about the Butlerian Jihad. (And it's all still hugely symbolic.) There are discrepancies, which is to be expected in any long running epic series. The only one which really bothered me was that Fenring supposedly built the Conservatorium in the Palace on Arrakis for his wife, the Bene Gesserit Lady Margot. I believe the primary works implied its origins were a little bit more legendary. But it's still a fascinating portrait of a VERY SICK human race imperceptibly struggling, one hopes, for recovery, and it's all the more a fascinating read for the dark, conflicting and increasingly ironic philosophies that permeate. I hadn't read House Atreides, and I didn't really have very much trouble with using House Harkonnen as a starting point for the new series. But you do need to know the base characters before hand. You'll learn about Paul's brother, Jessica's sister and how Rabban got to be called "the Beast." And if you're like me, you'll think Reverend Mother Helena has a heck of a lot of nerve testing anyone for being human.


One of the most disappointing books I have ever read.
Castway meets Latin and Psychology 101The worst part is having the main character stranded and unmotivated just off the shore of this fabulous island. As a reader, I'm dying to get off the boat and onto the island! But the main character is happy to sit on the boat and just fantasize--it's more than a little frustrating.
Another troublesome part is the very creative Latin-based words that the author--or perhaps the translator--uses. I'm an active reader and, as such, keep a list of any new words that I find in a novel. I actually reference the list, look them up, and then read again in context. During my reading of Island, I often found twenty such words per chapter. Some of these are archaic words from the middle ages (e.g. 'arquebuses' meaning heavy matchlock guns) while others seem to be creative constructions from Latin that do not appear in my collegiate dictionary. People with an unabridged dictionary (if these words are even in the unabridged dictionary) may not mind, but for me it was annoying to find many words, and thus important phrases, left undecyphered.
Okay, now we're getting to the better parts of this novel. First, the characters are multi-dimensional, complex, funny and often somewhat contradictory: i.e., they seem real. You are drawn into a colorul, chaotic medieval world of intrigue, philosophy, romance and power politics. The characters are unforgettable, as are the crazy theories espoused in that time period...which get considerable play in the novel.
Finally, the best part is the mental creation, on the part of the main character, of an identical twin brother who becomes resonsible for every misadventure and misfortune of the main character. He becomes so convinced of the other's existence that it starts to affect his destiny. This ongoing theme is likened to the new, at the time, Paris-spawned talk of 'unconscious concepts' that steer a man and thwart his otherwise conscious life. For the main character, this imaginary brother symbolizes the unconscious concepts and shows--even today--how often we have only ourselves to blame for our most tenacious problems.
Overall, the writing makes reading the book a delight. Still, I give it only three stars because: a) Eco should know better than to write a novel where so much time is spent stranded alone on a boat with a more-than-a-little depressed main character, b) certain vocabulary choices--esp. the invented, dictionary-thwarting, Latin-based words--detract from the author's effort to reach even the seasoned reader, c) the ending leaves me feeling that Eco just stopped writing, rather than neatly ending this multi-threaded novel by tying a suitable bow. If you can stomach these aspects, perhaps by reading quickly, you'll yet enjoy the colorful characters and artful writing.
Maximus Liber!