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

Licensed to Sin (Loveswept)
Published in Paperback by Loveswept (September, 1996)
Author: Faye Hughes
Average review score:

Breathtaking
Nick Valdez will make any woman take a chance on love and romance. A gamble well worth taking !!


A Listener's Guide to Mozart's Great Operas
Published in Paperback by Dover Pubns (June, 1972)
Authors: Patrick Cairns Hughes and Spike Hughes
Average review score:

Charm and expertise...
If I am not wrong, this book has been previously released under the title "Famous Mozart Operas. An analytical guide for the opera-goer and armchair listener", that's at least the title of the second edition I now have in front of me. For the readers acquainted with it, this new title may be a little misleading and suggesting a new revised edition. Equally misleading may be the double authorship: the Amazon.com database gives both Spike Hughes and Patrick Cairns Hughes as the book's authors, but this is simply a confusion resulting from the fact that Spike Hughes's real name - Patrick Cairns - has been used for copyrights. Hughes's book is a wonderful guide for anybody interested in Mozart operas - beginners will find here expert guidance through the operas' complicated plots, advanced Mozartians - a series of delightfully written essays highlighting many important points too often taken for granted. In the author's words, the book is meant to "serve as a supplement to those programmes found in most opera houses or to the analytical notes on the picturesque "sleeves" of L.P. records (I imagine that the new edition has "CD" here) which tell the story in more or less intelligible terms but do not always explain why the tenor should suddenly want to burst into a song, nor what he is singing about when he does". The guide contains 343 musical illustrations usually no longer than 5-6 bars, designed, according to the author, with the student of orchestration in mind, but this shouldn't set off anybody without a reading knowledge of music. Even without it, one is able to follow and enjoy Hughes's musical arguments easily - his language is simple and devoid of heavy specialistic jargon, though readers with no theoretical knowledge of music may sometimes need to consult a little dictionary of musical terms. I can't help thinking how wonderful it would be if such a delightful book - one of its kind - could be re-edited in our CD-room era with these musical illustrations actually played - or, even easier, supplemented by references to certain milestone recordings (just little notes on the margin referring to tracks and timing - nothing more simple in the CD era!). The book is divided into 5 chapters, each devoted to one opera ("Entfuehrung aus dem Serail; the three Da Ponte operas; Die Zauberfloete). Musical illustrations are inserted along the text and, where necessary, shortly discussed. These illustrations together with Hughes's insightful comments are the high points of the book and it would be difficult to find a popular introduction to Mozart's operas done with more charm combined with expertise. The guide is also very helpful in following stage productions of Mozart's operas either in the theater or on video. We have to remember that Mozart's stage instructions are very often skimpy and most of the important staging hints can be found in the libretti themselves (this seems to be of no importance to some opera directors today). Hughes's book offers its readers a vivid description of an "ideal" production, taking into considerations even the smallest of Mozart's stage directions. It also highlights certain difficult points, easily unnoticed, but important for the dramatic action. It is so easy to get lost in some of the plots - "Marriage of Figaro" being the best example - and Hughes does everything to make them as clear as possible, often borrowing helpful hints from literary works or other operas (here Beaumarchais's original play and Rossini's "Barbiere"). How many times did you wonder about the relation between Rossini's and Mozart's characters? If you are not eager to read Beaumarchais, this guide will answer all your questions. Here and there the author makes some mysterious statements that make you feel like a bad student who didn't do his homework. In the chapter on "The Magic Flute", page 200, description of Tamino's encounter with Papageno, brings a surprising piece of information about Papageno's past (supposedly told by Papageno himself): his "mother had been in the service of the ". I was really surprised, since the libretto - at last in the form I know it - never says anything about Papageno's mother, even more - the bird-catcher, asked by Tamino about his parents, declares that he knows nothing about them. Everything he knows, he continues, is that he has his straw hut nearby, which protects him "from the rain and cold". I don't know where the idea of Papageno's mother comes from, but before I suggest a mistake I would like to hear from more experienced Mozart opera lovers. The other strange statement appears in "Cosi fan tutte", when Despina, laughing at the two "Albanian" visitors' appearances, says - in Hughes translation: "What clothes! What faces! What moustaches! Are they Poles or Turks or what?" I am Polish and I was very surprised to find an allusion to Poles in no less than one of the Mozart's masterpieces, while the whole operatic literature contains maybe two or three. Despina, however, doesn't say Poles, she says "Vallacchi", what - if you listen to the opera without following the printed text - can easily be taken for "Polacchi". But Poland was hardly exotic in Mozart's times (in fact, it never was because of generally Western character of its culture) and making Guglielmo and Ferrando look like Poles wouldn't help create an exotic aura around them. "Vallacchi" are simply Wallachians or Rumanians, if we want to use a more familiar term, Wal(l)achia being a province of Rumania. These are, however, minor complaints about the book that cannot be praised enough for its charm, general expertise and beautiful language - the world of Mozart's operas as seen through it is now even more delightful (if it were possible). Indispensable!


Little Fingerling: A Japanese Foldtale
Published in Hardcover by Eager Minds Press (November, 2001)
Authors: Monica Hughes and Brenda Clark
Average review score:

Charming book
This is a perfectly charming book, beautifully illustrated and delightfully told, from the opening page to the thoroughally satisfying ending. The story is gently and sweetly told, and the pace and the courtesy of the characters toeach other have captivated my four-year-old grandson. This is one we reach for often.


A London Child of the 1870's
Published in Audio Cassette by Isis Audio Books (May, 2000)
Authors: Molly Hughes and Celia Montague
Average review score:

Autobiography: a warm family story and riveting read!
An autobiography of Molly Hughes who grows up in 1870s north London. Family life and early schooldays. Lots of period detail about London life and a fascinating read. The first of a series (later books deal with her education at North London Collegiate School, her training as a teacher in the very early days of teacher training colleges, her marriage, and her work as an inspector of schools. The books were first published by Oxford University Press in the 1930s and 40s, appearing as very popular OUP paperbacks in the 1980s. The paperbacks frequently appear in the secondhand market. Highly recommended.


A London family, 1870-1900 : a trilogy
Published in Unknown Binding by Oxford University Press ()
Author: M. V. Hughes
Average review score:

Wise and witty memoirs of middle-class Victorian life
A refreshingly lively look at middle-class life in Victorian London. Particularly good on education and travel. Out to be reprinted!


Lord, Why Am I Still Here
Published in Paperback by C S S Publishing Company (September, 2001)
Authors: Tracy Hughes Jungkirth and Suzanne Crosby
Average review score:

Unbiased Report
Very touching and a tremendous aid to those who have suffered tragedy.


Love to Langston
Published in School & Library Binding by Lee & Low Books (February, 2002)
Authors: Tony Medina, R. Gregory Christie, and Gregory Christie
Average review score:

Introducing Langston Hughes.....
Meet James Langston Hughes in a unique and entertaining biography that brings this great poet of the Harlem Renaissance to life. Written in free verse, Tony Medina's fourteen poems follow Langston from his boyhood in Kansas marked by racism and poverty, to his trips to Africa and around the world, and finally to life in his beloved Harlem..."Harlem is the capital of my world/black and beautiful and bruised/like me..." Mr Medina's simple, yet powerful poems speak volumes, and are full of energy, rhythm, wisdom, and truth. "In Topeka, Kansas/the teacher makes me sit/in the corner/in the last row/far away from/the other kids// She rolls her eyes/and sucks her teeth/with heavy heavy sighs/and lies and lies// She tells one kid/not to eat licorice/or he'll turn black/like me// When Mama finds out/she takes me out of school/she rolls her eyes/and sucks her teeth/with heavy heavy sighs// And why why why" R. Gregory Christie's expressive, bold, and riveting illustrations complement each poem beautifully, and draw the reader into the world Langston Hughes loved and remembered. Together word and art present an engaging and evocative tribute to a remarkable and vibrant man who loved people, books, and jazz. This is much more than a creative and innovative biography, it's a labor of love. Perfect for youngsters 7 and older, Mr Medina includes notes, details, and insight to help flesh out, complete, and enrich these original poems about Langston Hughes' life, and introduce Hughes and his work to a whole new generation. This engaging biography is sure to whet the appetite of both young and old alike, and send you out looking for more. So come celebrate the life of Langston Hughes on what would have been his one hundredth birthday... "Sometimes life ain't/always a hoot/or a holler// But if you manage/to give it/a bother// Even if you miss/your mother/or don't like your father// There'll be better days/up ahead// A whole mess of/happenin' days/up ahead// You can sit and sulk/suck your teeth/and sigh// Or love and laugh/and live life/by and by"


Luke: That You May Know the Truth (Hughes, R. Kent. Preaching the Word.)
Published in Hardcover by Crossway Books (February, 1999)
Author: R. Kent Hughes
Average review score:

An exciting, practical treatment of Luke's Gospel
So many Bible commentaries are dry, dull and difficult. You may find the information you're looking for, but you have to wade through an enormous amount of theological verbiage just to find the one statement or thought that could help you to understand a verse.

This commentary (and the other volumes in this series, for that matter) is refreshingly different. R. Kent Hughes has a wonderful ability of teaching the Bible in a practical way that in no way waters down the passage, and this comes through in nearly every page of this book. Whether you're a pastor looking for sermon help, or you're a Bible study leader looking for fresh insights, or a Sunday school teaching looking for stimulating thoughts, this is the book (and series) for you. I have heard it said that R. Kent Hughes' commentaries on the books of the Bible is to the modern day church what Matthew Henry and Barclay's commentaries were to previous generations, and I agree. In fact, I think they are better.


Lung Function Tests: Physiological Principles and Clinical Applications
Published in Paperback by W B Saunders (15 August, 1999)
Authors: John M. Hughes, Neil B. Pride, and N. B. Price
Average review score:

CONCISE BOOK
EXCELLENT FORMAT, SIMPLE TO UNDERSTAND, BASICS FOR A PULMONOLOGIST WHO IS TRYING TO REFRESH LUNG PHYSIOLOGY.


Making Soft-bodied Dough Characters
Published in Paperback by Sterling Publishing (June, 2001)
Author: Patricia Hughes
Average review score:

Wonderful!
Patricia Hughes' book, Making Soft Bodied Dough Characters, presents easy to follow instructions for making wonderful little dolls out of salt dough. In no time at all, I made the mother teddy bear and she turned out beautifully! My children were delighted. The step by step directions leave nothing to chance - anyone can create these interesting, colorful characters. I can't wait to get started on the pirate, the fisherman, and the other delightful dolls so beautifully depicted in the photographs. The only materials you need to get started are flour, salt, water and some fabric scraps. The dolls would make lovely gifts for children or adults.


Related Vacation Book Subjects: Oklahoma
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