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The chicken pox panic
The Chicken Pox Panic

A Unique Personal View of Florence
A wonderful guide for the visitor or dreamer.

A Survival Guide!
Great for writing pathophys cards

I picked up this book one day to kill some time...
Super read! A Great new mini-series!

Wyndham Lewis exposes the inferior religionsThe literary Lion here roars loudly somewhat unbecoming of English gentlemanry, which is exactly the vorticist point right in the center of this bull's eye Wyndham Lewis slays exactly all we ever thought refined and full of polite mannerisms in modern society. "tyros" accompany on canvas these stories of his, for Wyndham Lewis is one of the greatest painters of modernism as well as author, being the founder of VORTICISM, the only avant-garde movement of 20th century Britain; likewise he influenced and intellectually ruled and/or fascinated Pound, Eliot, Joyce, Stein,et.al.etc., and a slew of lesser-known (unjustifiably) Artists circa (roughly) the turn of the century to the dropping of the atom bomb. His Art like his life was lived under the persona of the enemy and his condemnation was indeed high praise in that he deemed whomever worthy of his intellectual onslaught. His graphic works brilliantly illustrate the volume and compliment the tales that smack of a science-fictive otherworldliness but are entirely realistic, to the extensive degree as to be super- realism (surrealism); especially in consideration that all the characters are mere auotmatons executing their behaviour patterns as if ordered to do so by some outside force of cosmic porportions. Not to say they are dull and predictable, not in any absolute sense; Ker-Orr is our adventuer, a "soldier of humour" in a very pataphysical sense, whose definition is the "science of imaginary solutions". Conjured up as by tricks is an entire situational reality where the narrator is faced with human mimickery and acts, deified with a strict militant stance,according to a system of beliefs prescribed by "inferior religions". Lewis rewrote/re-worked the stories twenty years plus later and tells us all he did in these pioneering myths he's still exhausting philosophically. The stories are replete with all the enthusiasm of a young artist forgeing new worlds in a time of intense innovation, and of all his myriad works, this book is my and many others favorite; I consider it one of the ten greatest books- among 50 plus boxes -I own. I would be-deck it with the constellations entire, not just five dim suns, which is not enough illuminism to shed lite on the innumerable profoundities barely contained herein.
Most overlooked book of short english fiction this century.

Deeply satisfying addition to your Walker Percy Collection
Essential Reading for Percy Enthusiasts

Hundreds of HatsThe first thing I enjoyed about this book was the way it stays open to the pages you are studying. Every instructional book should have a spiral binding!
The authors begin with the fundamentals and build on those to lead an experienced dollmaker or a novice into creating ever more delightful and unique hats for dolls (or stuffed animals, or even children's costumes, if you like).
The table of contents alone are intriguing, pulling you into the book: hats molded on innovative forms with easy to find materials, old fashioned dust caps, bonnets, soft hats, fur hats, costume hats, turbans, crowns, hats from unexpected materials, paper hats, picture hats, and on to delightfully trimmed hats and, of course, a hat stand to hold your creation.
The book is simply, but lavishly illustrated, many of the hats are easy to create and yet a great asset to your dolls wardrobe. There are some patterns to work with. The ideas are so numurous that a reader can't help but find their own imagination stimulated so that you will be dreaming up hats in your sleep.
A glossary, hatmaking resources, and a helpful index brings closure, but first the authors end this exciting book with a page full of ideas to send the reader confidently off on their own creative journey.
Not only a must have guide for dollmakers, but great fun too!
Everything you need to know...

Great First Novel...but
A Star (5, actually) is BornThe author creates a real sense of place - a term much bandied about & often not really true. This one 'puts you there'. I highly recommend it.


Kit Carson's autobiographyCarter admires his subject which is good because Kit Carson is sometimes portrayed these days as a monstrous genocidiare because of his role in defeating the Navajos and forcing them to move to a reservation on which many of them died. In reality, Carson was a relatively humane soldier who often defended the rights of the Indians and who became a good agent on their behalf. But, unlettered and overly impressed by the authority, judgments, and education of his superiors, Carson didn't possess the moral courage and confidence to challenge his orders to suppress the Navajos.
Carter's research into Carson's life is thorough. He employs the unusual technique of publishing Carson's autobiography as written and commenting on it in extensive footnotes. Some might find this irritating as your eyes must move from text to footnote constantly. Carter also publishes a large collection of photographs of Carson, examines his fame, and extolls his virtues.
To my mind, Kit Carson is the premier hero of the western expansion of the U.S. Carter's book is one of the most accurate and well-researched accounts of Carson's remarkable life.
A Combination Biography and Autobiography

Dilly Is EverygirlDilly sets off to camp with her best friend Meredith, assured she's going to have the time of her life. She comforts the already homesick Meredith, yet inwardly congratulates herself on her own independent and adventurous spirit. On arriving at camp, everything starts to go wrong; Dilly is literally roped off from the others during swimming because she fails to pass a floating test; every meal contains cheese, which she hates; everyone else gets tons of letters from home while she goes day after day with none; and she is assigned an exuberant but tiny horse that only makes her feel more self-conscious and geeky. To add insult to injury, Meredith blossoms, enchanting the other girls with her long braids and having no problem adjusting to the many other personalities in their cabin. One scene in particular brought a lump to my throat when Meredith loyally agrees to sit by Dilly on the bus but can't help playing boisterously with another nearby girl while Dilly sits dejectedly beside her.
Dilly is a great character; not the most popular or athletic girl in the bunch, she is forced to confront her own vulnerabilities and yet still comes out a winner when she learns to rely on her strengths and be herself.
Ms. Lewis: Please keep writing more Dilly books! We're waiting eagerly!
Amazingly Good!!!