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

JP Morgan: The VaultReports.com Employer Profile for Job Seekers
Published in Paperback by Vault Reports Inc (22 February, 2000)
Average review score: 

Great after taste! Delicous!!Scrumptious!!!Extra spicy!!!!!!
Jsp: Practical Guide for Java Programmers (Morgan Kaufmann Practical Guides Series)
Published in Unknown Binding by Morgan Kaufmann (September, 2003)
Average review score: 

Java for self-startersIf I could only recommend one book to an experienced programmer who wanted to learn Java it would be this one. It's only 170 pages long and it doesn't contain anything that's unnecessary. But it does cover syntax, flow control, classes and methods, inheritance, exception handling, file I/O, GUI's, collections and threads. That's genuinely Java in a nutshell.
The author can offer such a stripped-down book, of course, because he assumes that the reader already understands programmatic flow control and objects, and can follow a basic inheritance hierarchy without tedious explanation.
Java isn't a difficult language: it can merely be made to seem so by textbooks that bury simple facts under mountains of verbiage. I hope other authors will take Zbigniew Sikora's "Java: Practical Guide for Programmers" as a model for textbooks for busy people.

Judges of Light, Vol II (From the Chronicles of Fiarah)
Published in Paperback by TriQuest Publishing (17 March, 1999)
Average review score: 

Great fantasy action book!This book captured my eye because I love fantasy books but not always the blood and sex in them. This book may seem not as good to some people because there is no sex or blood but it doesn't lack in suspence and action. There is magic throughout this book that will capture your attention and hold you on for more. I even wished I was in this book at points so I could be involved with the charicters. This book ends leaving you wanting more. I can't wait tell I can find out what happens in the next one.

Julia Morgan, Architect of Dreams
Published in Library Binding by Lerner Publications Company (August, 1990)
Average review score: 

OutstandingI read this book when it first came out to review for our library collection. It has always been one of the books that has stood out in my mind as an unforgettable. It is terrific not just for the youth but also adults. It is an exemplary biography for an exemplary woman. Julia Morgan was one of our countries first women architects. It is an excellent biography for girls and the general public. An excellent comprehensive read of one of our countries finest architects. I highly recommend it for someone looking for an oustanding, informative, inspiring fun read for our youth.

Junior Seau: High Voltage Linebacker
Published in Library Binding by Lerner Publications Company (November, 1996)
Average review score: 

high voltage book!Just a little book with great, really wonderful, photos of one of the best ever! Edoardo,Italy (edobald@tin.it)

Just Joe (Silhouette Desire, No 340)
Published in Paperback by Harlequin (March, 1987)
Average review score: 

Couldn't put it downI loved this book! It was just so emotional. Joe helps Mattie get over her childhood abuse, while showing and teaching her what love and caring is about. And he does it without her realizing it. It takes a while for Joe to get through to Mattie, but he does and she realizes that she is in control, not her past.

Karankawa County: Short Stories from a Corner of Texas
Published in Paperback by Texas A&M University Press (May, 2002)
Average review score: 

Excellent, small-town Texas, football, cowboying, coaching.Eight unique stories, set on theTexas Gulf Coast, in fictitious "Karankawa County". Unforgettable characters---Maud and Mathatma, War Hoss Kelly, Rip Kelly, and more. Characters realistic enough to leap off the page at you. Unusual situations and a palatable feeling of country and sense of place. Morgan obviously knows his people and the situations that confront them.

Kouk & the Ice Bear
Published in Paperback by Atomium Books (September, 1991)
Average review score: 

Kouk and the Ice Bear By Ann-Rocard, MorganThis is a beautiful book about a little Eskimo boy named Kouk, who loves to get into mischief. He is always playing jokes and never wants to work. One day, his jokes take him too far and he ends up on Ice Bear island. He must go through ice palaces, mazes and meet magical animals until he finds his way home. This is a wonderful and fun story for all ages. The pictures are vibrant and hold the childs attention. Also, it's a great book to introduce children to other children of other cultures

Land of Cotton
Published in Spiral-bound by Wimmer Companies, Inc. (April, 1997)
Average review score: 

Excellent cookbookI have my personal copy of Land of Cotton cookbook and having found it to contain very good and easy recipes. Have never been disappointed yet. I highly recommend it. I often give it as gifts.

The Last Generation
Published in Hardcover by Krieger Publishing Company (May, 1999)
Average review score: 

The world is in our hands ... are we the last generation?There are many books around now, that talk about the kind of environmental problems that could wipe out humanity; comets, viruses, you name it, we could succumb to it! Very few books though, focus on our role in the risks that threaten us; the complicated, contradictory thing that is human nature and the unpredictable effects it has when you aggregate it up to 6.5 billion humans all living, deciding, acting and reacting on one planet. This book made me think again about how many of my decisions had unanticipated effects and about the way we could all make the decision to improve our chances of not being the last generation. There is some hope - according to James Morgan - his suggestion that eight "big hitter" nations could work together to protect the environment and our dependence on the environment, is an intriguing one. I was impressed by the suggestion and wonder what it would take for such an E8 to happen.
WHAT is going on jp. Are you reading this beside me in social studies class. Probably not because they'll have already gotten you by the time we have that class again and once they catch you, jp, they'll never let you come back. POPOPOPOPOP