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A Great Read
A Page-Turner
This was a nice ending to the series

A must have book...however
Tons of Resource Information at Your Fingertips!Whether you are a lay person in the pews who wishes to know more or an academic who sometimes forgot just where you read that interesting biblical insight, McKenzie's work is for you. The topics are myriad and in-depth, but are also very readable. They cover every possible angle of biblical interest, including history, ritual, individual persons, and even biblical criticism. Once you have familiarized yourself with this dictionary, it will become a constant and invaluable companion.
One of the very best - A great bargain.

Prequel to Taash and the JestersIn general, I think Ms. McKenzie has wonderful ideas, but I didn't like Kashka as much as Taash and the Jesters. The plot in Kashka was a little too convoluted, and too much time was spent on side characters that weren't particularly interesting. Also, it's not an easy book to read out loud. Still, if you like Taash and the Jesters, you will probably want to read Kashka, and you might even want to reread it. I would recommend starting the series with Taash, and if you are interested go back to read Kashka and the Golden Band of Eddris (I haven't read that book yet, but I'm looking forward to it).
This is one of my favorite books!i THOUGHT THAT THE ILLUSTRATIONS OF THE BOOK WERE PURELY AWFULL AND HIDE THE BOOKS' INER truth and wish it be reprinted with a better cover.
I also wish that there was alittle more info on the author. Still it is one of the best books of all time
My favorite book of all time!!!

Seeing Sydney
pretty much
Doesn't make a local cringeLike all the books in this series, it is lavishly illustrated and the maps are good. I use it for inspiration for weekend activities. It is a good general guidebook, which could be supplemented by more specialised volumes if you want to concentrate on one aspect of Sydney - eg guides to walks around the harbour, or activities specially for children, guides to national parks etc. but this book seems to cover just about everything at least in an introductory sense.


"The Home" made me alternately cry and laugh.
The Home: A Memoire of Growing Up In An Orphanage
Valuable Childhood Lessons

Brief for the ProsecutionThis is a smart assumption but the suspicious reading it generates results in a biography of David that would make Ken Starr's portrait of Bill Clinton look like a panegyric. The only virtue McKenzie can allow David is that of being an effective guerrilla warrior because, if he hadn't been, he couldn't have reached the throne in the first place. The rest of the story is viewed as pro-David propaganda. If the story tells us that David spared the life of the worthless Nabal and that Nabal subsequently died of natural causes, it means that this is the cover story and that David must have killed him or had him killed.
The problem for the reader comes when you ask if there is any way David could have had any attractive qualities. Given the way McKenzie reads Samuel, the nice things that are said about David must be spin, and the nasty facts reported about David (and there are plenty of them, including his adultery with Bathsheba, his inability to control his sensual and ambitious children, his vindictiveness against political enemies) are facts too well known to be denied. Given McKenzie's method, David simply cannot have done anything right.
The fact is that, like almost every figure in the Bible, David's life exists in the text and only there. There aren't any alternative witnesses to who he was and what he did. The story in the book of Samuel contains all we are ever likely to know about David, and any method that insists on reading past the story to the REAL David is going to come up either with a panegyric or a lampoon, depending on how suspicious a method of reading it adopts.
But the book of Samuel itself is far more complex than any of these simplifying readings. It presents a warrior and a king who was decidedly human--sometimes all too human--and depicts his world with a richness of texture that lawyer's briefs, like McKenzie's, are necessarily going to flatten out. McKenzie's book will be useful if it makes readers turn back to Samuel and read it closely and attentively, but the story it tells is a prosecutorial brief that, seen against its source, seems thin and unconvincing.
Very goodThe story of David in this book is in a sense quite negative in that David is portrayed as a power hungry person. However to me it made him more real. I certainly have not my sense of grandeur in David. Some of his explanations somehow appear to be pretty weak. But he does present his evidence but that is not the writers fault as much as the lack of historical information.
He does leave us with a bad taste to the writer of the bible who he states "is trying to promote or excuse David". This may be true because we really do not know very much about who the writers were or there motives.
It well written and I would recommend this book to you.
Excellent blend of historical writing and historical method

Sisters Stand Tall in the PulpitThe need for the 21st Century church to recognize the outpouring of the Holy Spirit on the daugthers as well as the sons to speak for God is expressed clearly. The writer is also forthright in stating the fact that African American women who lead as ministers in the contemporary churches are the exceptions. Sister McKenzie shows in her book that the Biblical women leaders of the Old and New Testaments were also the exceptions and uses them as role models for women pastoral leaders today.
Interesting, Insightful & intriguing
Enlighting

Yikes....scary outdated
Excellent Book!
Trivial Pursuit's Grandpa -- Great Trivia

Need Last Minute Gifts? Then This Book Is For You!I found all the projects to have a country feel but just by changing the fabric, these items can be turned into folk arty projects.
The only down side is that you have to enlarge the patterns; but they have over 100 projects in the book that there would not have been room for full sized patterns. I found that the best way was to trace the pattern and then enlarge on the copier.
All in all, this is a great book and I found that most projects took less than two hours to complete. I do recommend this for beginning quilters and it's a good way to learn applique and pieced techniques in a quick and gratifying way.
great book for quick but gratifying results.
Great for beginners

Under The Bridge Book ReviewThe best part is when Ritchie and his little sister,Rosie,rescue his mother from the troll. The worst part is when the troll dies, and just wanted somebody to talk to.
The conflict and the climax are the best story elements in the book. Ellem Kindt McKenziedescribes the conflict between the troll and society, as well as the troll and himself. He is exluded from society because he is inhumane. The climax also is described well as Ritchey's feelings and his mother's feelings when she is being taken from Ritchey.
I Love it!
i can read this book over and over again