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

Mr. Glencannon Ignores the War
Published in Hardcover by Glencannon Press (September, 1901)
Authors: George Hughes and Guy Gilpatric
Average review score:

Must be read by all who appreciate "Glencannon".
This presents what has been described to me by those who have been there as an accurate portrait of the South Pacific area during WWII. Though far from politically correct (thank God something is!), the reader will still find himself cheering on the usual crew of the "Inchcliffe Castle" as they manage to do battle with the Japanese. A great book in the "Glencannon" series.


The Mtv Celebrity Deathmatch Companion
Published in Paperback by Universe Books (November, 2000)
Authors: Eric Fogle, Dave Hughes, Eric Fogel, and Stone Cold Steve Austin
Average review score:

The Ultimate Guide to this 1998-? Show!
In this book,you'll find pictures from the hit clay wrestlin show,includin dialogue,storyboards,character models,and more stuff for a clay animation fan. This also includes quotes from the the Celebrity Deathmatch episodes from the past,present,and the future. If you love animation,you'll love this book!


Mulligan's Law: The Wit and Wisdom of William Hughes Mulligan
Published in Hardcover by Fordham University Press (December, 1997)
Author: William Hughes, Jr. Mulligan
Average review score:

Wins its laurels right!
Many thanks to Bill Mulligan, Jr. for this collection of his father's speeches.

Bill Mulligan, Sr. was a great man, famous in a certain circle, and now he may be known to others through his own words, in saecula, saeculorum. The medium is humor, the message extols family, faith, and friendship, with amusing and enlightening digressions on history, the Law, the Irish, and more.

Mulligan, Jr.'s moving introduction and eulogy complete the portrait. Perhaps eloquence is hereditary.

"Mulligan's Law" is a treat for students of rhetoric and law, and and must for historians researching the history and values of Catholics and the Irish in America.


The Music of Arthur Sullivan
Published in Hardcover by Greenwood Press Reprint (December, 1973)
Author: Gervase Hughes
Average review score:

A Musicologist Analyzes Sir Arthur Sullivan
Perhaps the most detailed musicological study of all of the compositons - not just the operettas - of Sir Arthur Sullivan. This is a relatively slim book, but it is packed with musical examples, analysis and commentary. This is definately a book for those with a musical education, a music theory book and dictionary or perhaps simply a Ph.D. in Musicology, is a good companion for reading Hughes' book.

The book analyzes Arthur Sullivans style, breaking it down into chapters dealing with musical forms such as melody, harmony, word setting, orchestration, etc. Copious examples in musical notation and snippets from scores, many from very obscure non-Savoy operas. (E.g. quotes from "The Zoo" which was still officially lost at the time of the original edition).

Hughes takes a very objective style, unusual for a books on Sullivan which tend be limited to the more prosaic descriptions of his operettas. He takes Sullivan to task for some of his failings (e.g. harmon! y) and praises him where appropriate (e.g. melody and word setting).

A unique and very detailed tome!


My Guinea Pig
Published in Unknown Binding by Bt Bound (March, 2001)
Author: Sarah Hughes
Average review score:

Invites kids to learn more about their animal companions
Two fine 'Welcome Books' easy readers on pets invite kids to learn more about their animal companions. Cate Foley's My Turtle (0-516-23188-X) provides large simple print and a child's review of different types of turtles and their appropriateness as pets. Sarah Hughes' My Guinea Pig (23186-3) presents a girl's experiences caring for her guinea pig. Both are very easy introductions to pet ownership.


Naval Strategy of the World War (Classics of Sea Power)
Published in Hardcover by United States Naval Inst. (September, 1989)
Authors: John B. Hattendord, Wayne P. Hughes, Wolfgang Wegener, and Holger H. Herwig
Average review score:

Lessons on strategy
This title belongs to the "Classics of sea power" collection edited by the United States Naval Institute. It's a good indicator that the book is worth reading. And certainly it is. Wolfgang Wegener was a German officer at the Imperial Navy during World War I. He disagreed on how the naval war was being fought and expressed himself on papers sent to his superiors. One of the major ideas he had, was that Germany needed to get ports on the Norwegian or French coasts in order to avoid British blocade. The importance of his thinking is that it led to Raeder's planning before World War II. The main text is an essay published after the Great War on which Wegener critiques the way the Navy was (mis)used during the entire conflict; here is where he points out the requirements (a hold on Norway and France) in order to achive a victorious campaign in the future. This edition includes some papers written by Wegener during the First World War, which set the basis for his later work. This is a book of geopolitics and strategy, certainly a must read for all those interested on naval affairs.


The Negro Mother and Other Dramatic Recitations (The Black Heritage Library Collection)
Published in Paperback by Ayer Co Pub (April, 1993)
Author: Langston Hughes
Average review score:

Over whelming speechless
Langston Hughes "The Negro Mother" is terffic. He has out done his self on this particular display of art.Mr Hughes is a excellent writer,and a pure perfectionist.


Networks of Power: Electrification in Western Society, 1880-1930 (Softshell Books)
Published in Paperback by Johns Hopkins Univ Pr (March, 1993)
Author: Thomas P. Hughes
Average review score:

Travel Back In Time To the Heyday Of Electification
If you're a history buff, and appreciate the technology that surrounds us all, you'll love reading "Networks of Power: Electrification in Western Society, 1880-1930" by Tom Hughes. Hughes takes us back to the days of fierce rivalry between Edison and Westinghouse; the early era of electric power generation and consumption where the battle of DC vs. AC consumer power was born and decided.

Hughes doesn't stop there. Also included in this well-footnoted edition are in-depth narratives of the evolution of commercial power systems in England and Germany through 1930. A well written, readable snapshot in time.

Compelling historical reading for the non-technologist as well as the student of electrical power commercialization.


The New Penguin Dictionary of Modern Quotations
Published in Paperback by Penguin USA (Paper) (25 June, 2002)
Authors: Robert Andrews and Kate Hughes
Average review score:

Wonderful
This book replaces completeness with something better-- quality. Keyword and thematic indexes. A couple of sentences giving background for each person and, if necessary, the circumstances of the quote. This is the thing to pick up if you're interested in quotes that are a little hipper than Barlett's I've-heard-that-a-
million-times quotes. Great fun to browse, e.g.: "I think it pisses God off it you walk by the color purple in a field somewhere and don't notice it"--Alice Walker


New Selected Poems
Published in Paperback by HarperCollins (paper) (March, 1982)
Author: Ted Hughes
Average review score:

dark, beautiful, brilliant
I'm a poetry scanner. I pick up poetry books and randomly read the odd line here and there to ascertain whether or not I like the general style of the poet. If I do, I'll usually buy the book. I discovered the genius of Ted Hughes (who I expected to dislike because I'd never liked Sylvia Plath) at a market stall. His work absolutely blew me away. My other favourite poets are ee cummings, TS Eliot and John Milton - I'm not sure if that's relevant, but it might put my tastes a little more into context. Hughes has a remarkable gift for language and dark descriptive insight, disturbing and gorgeous turns of phrase and perfect timing. I keep a self-collated quote book, and excerpts from his poetry are now the most commonly occurring entries. It's always very difficult to describe what makes certain poetry great, so I'll just give some examples of lines I think are magnificent...
"The bright mirror I braved: the devil in it
Loved me like my soul, my soul.
Now that I seek myself in a serpent
My smile is fatal."
(I like it dark, sublime and metaphoric, whether it be poetry, music, art or whatever)
My favourite modern poet, and he died just one year after I discovered he existed. My timing is abysmal. But his poetry is quite the opposite. Immerse...


Related Vacation Book Subjects: Oklahoma
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