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my favourite book, and I'm 25
My Childhood Favorite
Must-have kids book with nonsense, geography & lots of fun.

Wyborny wybor rozmowcow!Polecam kazdemu, kto interesuje sie swiatem, ludzkimi doswiadczeniami, historia i jej zagmatwianiami. Podoba mi sie, ze Autorka rozmowcow pokazuje jako zawsze waznych i traktuje ich zawsze z szacunkiem. Nigdy nie wysuwa siebie na pierwsze miejsce, prowadzi rozmowe w taki sposob, nie by pokazac siebie czy swoje sady, ale swoich bohaterow. Jakze czesto w innych wywiadach rozmawiajacy chce pokazac swoja wiedze czy przekoanc do wlasnego sadu, jakze czesto po prostu sie madrzy. Nie zauwazylem tego zjawiska w tej ksiazce. Autorka kieruje uwage czytajacego na swojego rozmowce, nie siebie.
Bardzo ciekawa jest rozmowa ze slynnym w Polsce dr Burzynskim. Dopiero teraz zrozumialem istote jego walki z amerykanskimi korporacjami. Jestem po jego stronie w 100 procentach!
ciekawy dokument i ladna story o wielkiej aktorce
The most interesting story about Ingrid Bergman!

Excellent Commentary in the footsteps of Vatican IIThis volume is not overly verbose, unlike some commentaries, yet it packs in a lot of material to help even the lay-reader understand and apply the canon in his/her life/situation. It is a highly practical and pastoral commentary, that seeks to help the reader understand the canons in the light of the tradition of the Catholic Church enunciated through the teachings of Vatican II. Strong theology and ecclesiology permeates through the entire commentary, and in my opinion, it does a far better job than other American commentaries I have read. A fresh approach of this commentary is its views of canon laws as guides on the path to salvation, rather than as the ecclesiastical counterpart to civil laws aimed at restricting freedom.
Pope John Paul II described the 1983 Code as "the final document of Vatican II." This commentary can be described as permeating with the authentic teachings and thoughts of Vatican II. You need not agree with all the commentaries of the canons, but it has done an overall excellent job with providing a scholarly and faithful interpretation of this venerable tradition of the Catholic Church called Canon Law.
Pastoral and FaithfulAs a canonist who does freelance writing on the side for a variety of popular Catholic publications, and who often finds himself teaching canon law to non-canonists, this is the commentary I most often cite when doing so. Again, because it is orthodox, pastoral and written at a level most Catholics can understand. Its larger print layout only facilitates the ease with which one reads it. For those seeking a commentary for reference purposes, this is the way to go. It is very much like the family Bible one keeps on one's bookshelf.
Pastoral and Scholarly

A Canadian in America
To Everyone who loves Canada....
To all Americans

It Works!
everyone should read this book,
everyone should read this book...

Short, but still a gem.Kate is a great character. Strangely enough, the title poem "Hey World, here I am" is probably the one I liked the least in the whole book. I haven't read any of the other books that include Kate, but this book does stand alone. With this book, the reader gets an insight into Kate that is refreshing.
Rather than using long journal entries, Kate relates little things in her world through poems and through short stories. Some of these things are quite moving, such as the time that Kate's mother yells at her to clean her room. Later, Kate's mother comes back to apologize, saying she had a bad day at work, etc, and that she didn't mean to snap like that. Kate's observation on the situation is that she could deal with being snapped at, but having to deal with her mother's sadness was something much harder. Other observations are more joyful, such as the hope for spring (in February in Canada!) or being happy to have a best friend like her friend Emily.
I think this is a wonderful book. Don't let it's shortness put you off. Not every book is meant to be 300 pages.
I'M GLAD KATE IS HERE!This book delighted me because Kate is such a strong, female protagonist. She's wonderfully believable and her voice is certainly heartfelt. Kate is also funny.
Sweet - AND honest

So funny, so true, so...CANADIAN
The best Ferguson book yet!Forget the pretentious pontifications of Pierre Burton and Margaret Atwood, this book tells the real story of Canadian society in hilariously frank language.
Will Fergusons really has a talent for writing hilarious, iconoclastic Canadian literature. "Bastards and Boneheads" was clever, "Why I hate Canadians" was funny, yet rambling, but "How to Be Canadian" is truly hits the mark.
The book is written in a very fast-paced, self-referencing, Dave Barry-eque style, with footnotes, script-style conversations, and hilarious chapter titles. Unlike some of the other Ferguson works, this is a book that is 100% humor, and contains no hidden morals or agendas. It's giant in-joke that only true Canadians can get.
I think one of the best parts was the province-by-province synopsis, especially his description of Prince Edward Island as a repressive police state unwillingly subjected to the massive personality cult of Anne of Green Gables. His ill-fated attempt to describe Canadian sex is similarly hilarious.
This is a book that all Canadians should read.
The hoser's guide to being Canadian, eh?"How To Be A Canadian" conveniently packages our national heroes, cuisine, regional differences, literary endeavours, phobias, and odd social customs into a laugh-out-loud tome that is the literary equivalent of Timbits: tasty, bite-sized chapters on "Who To Hate and Why," "How To Waste Time Like A Canadian," "Mating Rituals," "Art and Stuff," "Progressive Conservatives, Responsible Government and Other Oxymorons," and "Twelve Ways To Say You're Sorry," along with how to insult Canadians, the official Canadian haircut and dress code (mullet, plaid shirt, skidoo boots with fake buckles), provincial "fact sheets" (Ontario: "Gaze Upon our Humble Magnificence and Bow Down Before Us!" Formal name: The Centre of the Universe. Provincial motto: "Celebrating over 100 years of narcissistic self-absorption") and more. To top it off the Ferguson brothers have written a clever little quiz at the end to test your Canadian knowledge (If you hear the name "Elvis" and immediately think of figure skating, give yourself one point. If you still don't know what the capital of New Brunswick is, give yourself 10 points. If you can't remember if you curled or not, because of how drunk you were: 50 points) You get the idea. Nothing is sacred for Will and Ian, which is what makes the book so funny.
So, if you're American and want to learn more about those mysterious neighbo(u)rs of yours to the north, this is the book for you. If you're a Canadian who needs a quick reply to "What makes a Canadian" (other than *not* being an American), this book is for you. I have bought "How to Be A Canadian" for a number of friends with different tastes and it's been a success all around. A funny, thoughtful book that hits the mark on all the issues and is certainly entertaining in the process (that's PROcess, not prahcess, eh?) Have fun, and good luck to any Future Canadians out there!


Zwarta i madra ksiazkaI tym, ktorym bliska jest piesn "Czerwone maki na Monte Cassino". Ktorzy cenia Wielkiego Zbigniewa Brzezinskiego, dokonania polityczne Jana Nowaka Jezioranskiego.
Ktorych poruszyl los zmarlego niedawno Jacka Kuniczaka (jakze go nie tylko Zydzi w Ameryce upupili, ale rodacy w Polsce, skoro nie mamy jego ksiazek przetlumacoznych na polski!).
Tym, ktorzy chca sie dowiedziec o sprawach Polonii, nielatwych i trudnych,naukowych... czy o sprawach Ameryki okiem Kanadyjskiego polityka Jesse Flisa.
Tym, ktorzy nie wiedza (bo nie slyszeli,jak ja ), ze profesor Andrew Schally,syn polskiego generala, Noblista, jest Polakiem, ale nie chce mowic po polsku. I tym, ktorych denerwuje, irytuje nasz wielki Noblista Milosz.
Pisze piekne wiersze, ale zgryzliwy, upupiony we wlasnej legendzie, zle napisal o Herbecie, ktory przez niego nie dostal zasluzonego Nobla. Ktory sluzyl komunistom jako konsul najlepszych placowek (Paryz i Waszyngton)i nie chcial miec nic wspolnego z narodem polskim. A dostal Nobla poparty przez Polakow, nie przez innych. Tymczasem w ksiedze poswieconej zdobywcom tej nagrody, ktorzy pisza wlasne zyciorysy przedrukowane w tej publikacji, jeden jedyny raz wymienil slowo "Polska, polski" w kontekscie, ze pisze "po polsku". Pisze, ze urodzil sie na Litwie i potem mieszkal w roznych krajach. Milosz sam przyznal (patrz "Rok Mysliwego"), ze Konstanty Jelenski, wielki emigrant z Paryza, ktory go wywindowal i naprawde mu pomogl, zerwal z nim stosunki przed smiercia, bo nioe mogl mu wybaczyc faktow, o ktorych sie dowiedzial...Ze Milosz donosil, pisal raporty... Pogarda, ktora Milosz zywi do swoich ziomkow na emigracji budzi zdumienie... Poeta powinien miec delikatniejsze serce i na pewno subtelniejsza dusze. Wybaczam mu jednak. Nobel dla Polski sie przydal.
Zrodlowa, ciekawa...
Wonderful story about Isaak Singer!

wonderful book of magical baseball stories
the perfectly-crafted short story
Read It NOW

Good fun book
The best book of it's kind in Canada!
Wonderful & emotional!Marty takes you with him as he explores and cares for his territory. He teaches you what he can, but the lessons only sneak up on you...like the time I rounded a corner on a narrow trail and found myself face to face with a moose and her calf...'never get between a grizzly and her cub, that's when you're in trouble'...the lesson seemed applicable in this case, so I slowly made my way past rather than reaching for my camera.
I find I value the parks much more after reading Marty's book and hope for their future.