More Pages: Clay Page 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49


It didnt tell me much that I would of wanted to know.

FACTS good, authors OPINION on religion(s) unnecessary

Setting the Record Straight
At least get Butch's real name right
I disagree with a prior review

Worst of the worst!
....
Internet Polymer Clay

Nothing secret
Save Your Money
Save Your Money!

Don't bother
Waste of money

Japanese Christian Advocacy RegurgitantI was hoping this book would have a few childrens tales based on older Japanese fairy tales, something fun for a child to read about Japanese history or culture. What I found instead disgusted me: a small series of trite and simple minded stories that only vaguely reflect Japanese culture.
This book is nothing more than a vehicle for shameless Christian recruitment devices with no deeper meaning. (One story is even titled "I Want To Be A Christian".)
The illustrations are passable, even interesting in their way, but the subject matter is just plain irritating. I feel that Amazon should have made a better effort to catalog and describe this book as a Christian text rather than as a children's book. Sadly, the religious content made it quite impossible for me to give the book to the child for whom it was purchased.
Since I did not read it in a timely fashion, I was unable to return it for refund (thus, I wasted my money).
I do not recommend this book to anyone unless you want to warp your child with Christian propoganda. You might as well pick up the Chick tracts. They're about the same reading level.


Traditional Short Regency Romance

Somebody give this man a lexicon......


An encyclopedia of small-scale urban and rural geographyThe essays are of uneven quality, and often seem a bit shallow. It's not entertaining enough to succeed as a popular book, and not analytical enough to succeed as a serious treatise. There's a niche for a book that would address topics of small-scale geography in the not-quite-rural but not-city-center places in which most of us spend our lives. Such a book might explain the different ingredients of suburban sprawl -- types of shopping centers, commercial strips, and housing developments, how they develop, how they affect the surrounding area, and how they age. Sadly, this book seemed pointed in that direction but fell short.
I'm out...... Rashawnna