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let's see who can get drunk the fastest
Extremely accurate - like I was back on the kibbutz again!
an excellent find

Best read in conjunction with Come Together
Excellent Sequel to "Come Together"The story centers around four friends whose lives end up intertwining in the lead up to their mutual friends (Amy and Jack's) wedding. And it's the intertwining of their lives which make this novel so entertaining. Every chapter is written from the perspective of one person, which not only allows you to know each character more deeply than if it had been written from just one person's perspective, but also allows you to see each situation from a different angle.
So, who are the characters? Well the person to start the story is H (Helen). H is a highly-strung career woman, who despite being highly strung, still cares deeply about her friend Amy. Next we have Stringer. He's the Adonis you never thought you'd meet, because he has no overblown ego to go with his chiseled looks. He's funny, he's down to earth and he's exactly the kind of friend everyone wants to have. Next is Susie. Susie sells hats at the marketplace, and lives life the only way she knows how. With as much alcohol, fun and sex as possible. But she's beginning to want more from men. Another of Amy's friends, she's as devoted as H is. She's more down to earth than H is, though. Finally we have Matt. Matt is Jack's best friend, and ex roommate. He suddenly feels lonely and that he's been left behind when Jack moves out, and in with his fiancée. He's so lovable and never pushes too far, and is also never 'drippy' with his feelings. He's the grown-up with the cheeky grin and the glint in his eyes, and he suddenly finds himself wanting everything his best friend has. All four characters are likable. That's how they've been written, after all. But H, Stringer, Susie and Matt are more than likable. They're real. Each one of them I could see in my own friends, and I loved it.
At times the situations which the four of them are thrown into seem farcical. But that doesn't last long, because the authors manage to bring back reality very quickly, and it's thanks to their understanding of their own characters that they're able to do this with such ease that you rarely notice. All the loose ends come together fairly neatly, but it's still left open enough to allow for another novel.
This is an amusing and entirely addictive novel, not only because the characters are so real, but because the humor is real, too. Don't think you have to read the first novel to 'get' this one. Because you don't. I didn't, anyway. Just enjoy it for what it is - fun - and you shouldn't be disappointed. Highly recommended.


A Book written By Rachel Carson
Informative as a textbook, entertainment like a novel

For Laughing Out Loud
all i can say is wow!

Grin and bear it.
An important but sloppy bookThis book was clearly not a big-budget affair. No interviews - just a lot of hard work putting together the whole story by way of newspaper sources and other archives.
Now the downer. While a lot of effort was made to tell the whole story of the Pilots, Van Lindt clearly is not a gifted writer. His writing style for the most part tends to be factual and aloof. He goes into great detail about the games, the negotiations, and the courtroom battles, but there's something missing. You don't get a full feeling for the personalities of the players or some of the quirks and nostalgic memories that make a particular team or season unique. The coverage of the season games tends to be repetitive and is tempting to skip at least in part. The real meat of the book is in the sections before and after the 1969 season.
It also seems like no one ever took the time to edit Van Lindt's manuscript. The writing at times is awkward, and even a basic word processor should have snagged the myriads of punctuation errors that plague the book from start to finish.
Overall, good story and lots of information. The somewhat terse quality of the writing shouldn't detract from the unique subject this book covers. Because of that alone, I give it four stars.


Solid rural poetry
Easy to overlook the complexity of these "simple" poems

A self important time capsule
"It's not what you mean, it's how it sounds."

AWFUL!!!Mignola fans might be happy, but all others should steer clear.
Amazingly -- an improvement on the movieTake it from someone who's seen the movie. Atlantis is very far down on my list of Disney features. But if you're wondering what exactly went wrong, I'd advise buying the graphic novelization. Obviously, the writer was working from an earlier draft of the script and elements from the movie that are completely perplexing on screen are cleared up in this re-telling -- especially in the final battle between Milo and the movie's villain. (My 8-year-old daughter actually commented on that fact after reading this adaptation.) Comparing the film and the adaptation tells a fascinating story about some of the last-minute plot meddling that may have happened to help save this doomed feature. I'd advise that any completist Disney collector should have both the movie and this adaptation on his or her shelf. I know Greg Ehrbar as the name behind some very handsome and well-told French-language Disney comic book adaptions that are available only in France. But, I'm afraid no one could have made this feature completely intelligible. Perhaps the film makers concentrated too much on capturing the style of Production Designer Mike "Hellboy" Mignola. I only wished that they had paid a little more to the one detail Disney usually does best -- story.
BRAVO!

THIS IS THE WORST BOOK IN THE WORLD
Ignore review #1
Essential Reading

"Frances wanted the world to die."And I mean it. Really!
Obviously in the wrong age group...
beautifully yet simply written