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

Small Business Management
Published in Paperback by Houghton Mifflin Company (March, 1990)
Average review score: 

The text book is narrow-minded but helpful in business plansWhen reading the book it was filled with too many facts and not enough experiences. I fill that we could learn from peoples mistakes so next time I suggest to add a summary of where the case subjects are now and what they decided to do.

Spaghetti Westerns
Published in Paperback by Trafalgar Square (01 May, 2001)
Average review score: 

A Good Source for SpaghettisSpaghetti Westerns is a good source for fans of the Italian western genre. It doesn't contain any pictures and is all text but it is still interesting and very affordable. The book deals with 31 of the most famous Spaghetti westerns including the Leone Dollars trilogy, Django, The Great Silence, and many others. With each movie there is a description of the plot and a brief overview of backgroung information on each. Not the best book about spaghetti westerns but still worthwile.

Stories for Seven Year Olds and Other Young Readers
Published in Hardcover by Faber & Faber (August, 1987)
Average review score: 

Excellent bed-time "read aloud" stories.Very good version of the Emperor's New Clothes. Lively, interesting, somewhat "old fashioned" vocabulary. Too difficult for easy-reading for our seven year olds, but they loved to hear the stories aloud.

Take Your Base
Published in Library Binding by Bt Bound (October, 1999)
Average review score: 

Practice makes PerfectThis book is about a boy named Jeremy, who plays right field. He doesn't like being walked when he is batting, so he tries to show off. He swings at bad pitches, and strikes-out alot. His coach wonders what is the matter with him, so he spends time practicing with Jeremy after the regular practice is over. Jeremy learns not to show off, and gets better. I liked this book because it is entertaining, especially if you're a baseball fan. It helps kids realize that everyone makes mistakes.

Treatment of the Masochistic Personality: An Interactional-Object Relations Approach to Psychotherapy
Published in Hardcover by Jason Aronson (April, 1995)
Average review score: 

Winning by LosingRare and insightful understanding of the brutally defeated child whose trust and will were broken and of the self-defeating and self-destructive adult whose only expression of Self left is "longsuffering" passive-aggressive defiance and spite -- and "winning by losing." See also the extraordinarily insightful and compassionate Character Styles by Stephen M. Johnson.

Understanding Ada With Abstract Data Types
Published in Paperback by John Wiley & Sons (June, 1989)
Average review score: 

Adequate introduction to the Ada languageThis would be one of at least a couple of library references for anyone doing Ada programming. As it concentrates on abstract data types, other references with a broader emphasis will still be needed for general information. Overall, his approach is slightly different than other authors, and that's what makes the book a good addition, in my view.

The Web: Fighting Back!
Published in Paperback by Bullseye Books (June, 1997)
Average review score: 

This a a perfect book to share with an 7-9 year oldThe book is fun to read. There are alot of funny sentences and references.
Overall, was very enjoyable

Where Have You Been, Billy Boy?
Published in Paperback by HarperCollins Canada (20 March, 1997)
Average review score: 

An interesting comparison of life then and now.A young boy goes into the future and struggles to get back. Along come some children from now and help him unconditionaly. As they grow older they are delived with a great surprise. Read and enjoy!

The Wicked Witch of Walnut Street
Published in Paperback by PublishAmerica (March, 2002)
Average review score: 

Comical and ExcitingIf todays children were like this in this wonderful tale of boys growing up in a neighborhood full of mystery. Parents would have less to worry about. Mischief is fun and daring and outrageously funny. Kids do, do the darnest things.

Wild to the Heart
Published in Paperback by W.W. Norton & Company (March, 1990)
Average review score: 

Another Great Book by BassI am not a Rick Bass expert. I have only read In the Loyal Mountins, The Watch, and now Wild to the Heart, but i love his writting. Wild to the Heart is no different. The book contains thirteen essays written by Bass ranging in scope from Siera Club meetings to birthday partys that involve both canoeing and clog dancing. This book is filled with all of Bass' genius, the simple but magical language, the vivid descriptions of nature, and his interacting with people and earth. I love the way that Bass can write about nature and hiking and even if you've never done these things, he brings them alive and shows the beauty of them. The thing that I liked most about this book (and all his books) is the fact that his language is clear and easy to approach. He doesn't bog the writing down by trying to show off his masterfull vocabulary, and this creates very fluid prose. Such descriptions as "niglets of rain splatter us" are so interesting, and he never seems to use cliche metaphors. This book is strong all the way through, but I would have to pick "On Camp Robbers, Rock Swifts, and Other Things Wild to the Heart," as my favorite. There is a scene in which he's describing different birds that both hade me laughing and wondering at how someone could write so well. The only reason I didn't give it five stars was that i found the story "Paying Dues" a little weak and it got a little preachy towards the end. While this book is not as good as "The Watch" (but really, how could it be) it is most definatley a great book and worth anyone's time who cares to read it.