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to boldly go where no man has gone before

Great For Beginning Spanish

How can you go wrong with a price like this.

"Mentoring Dilemmas" explores key issues for organizations

Recommended for Wannabe Prayer Warriors

A delightful book

A frustrating and irritating read
NOTHING BUT THE TRUTH
Honest,and well deserved criticism of a hollow-man

I love Susan Crosby's other books but this is a lemon.
Great Book!!!!!!
The Groom's Revenge is a very enjoyable story.

Can big stars really change the world?
A clear-eyed view of life when idealism was acceptableThat said, I recommend this book to anyone who lived through the Sixties, no matter what your musical, political, or philosophical bent was at the time. You will understand your experiences of that time in a new and fresh way.
For those younger folks who might be tempted by the siren calls of the Far-Right, this book will help you understand what they are about. If your philosophy has not yet been fixed, this book will help you reason through the important decisions of your life. Even if you lean to the right and ultimately vote that way, you will understand the true nature of Compassion, not the insincere, sound-bite version spooned up by the Bush Administration. You will also have a better feel for the duties you owe your fellow man. Selfishness is not an inevitable part of American Life. The spirit of the Sixties is alive and well, and Crosby shows us how we can still contribute to a better nation.
Music making a difference in the worldThis book has helped inspire me not to sit back and watch the world go by. I know that I too have a voice, even if it's not a singing one, I can help make the world just a little happier. I can not stand for injustice, and people not excepting difference. I would recommend this book to anyone who truly love music, and what it is about. I would recommend it to anyone who believes, or wants to believe that there is good in every person.


How to abuse the term "happily ever after"...Sophie manages to irritate the reader throughout the novel with her foolish behaviour, which the authour tries unsuccessfully to convince us is for the sole purpose of the heroine freeing herself from the societal strictures imposed upon her. She also has a propensity for causing stupid accidents - the scene where she manages to fire the ship's cannon into the air only to land safely by going through her stacked chests of clothes stretches the limits of credulity.
Jack MacAuley's words to her early on sum up her character succinctly when he tells her "you're a spoiled rotton brat used to getting your own damned way", yet this promising sign of intelligence from him quickly fades as physical desire becomes synonymous with love in his head. However, to be fair to a hero who is not given much of an opportunity to develop in this story, his mental faculties would certainly be called into question if he came to desire her intellect, or more accurately, lack of, as well as her physical form.
If you must read this novel, do yourself a favour, borrow it from the library, and imagine a more fitting ending, one which includes a plank-walking scene, perhaps...
Happily Ever AfterWhen Sophia was made aware of her fiance's fiasco's while wasting her father's money, she decided to travel to Mexico and personally break their engagement. (What a waste of time and money - when she could have asked her father to immediately stop funding the project and send a letter - beter yet, a telegram, notifying him of the broken engagement). Sophia hired Jack MacAuley for transportation and as a guide. The rest is left up to your imagination. Sophia and Jack fell in love within one week while traveling to Mexico on his 'piece of a junk' ship.
I could not connect with either the hero or heroine and felt that both were unsuited for each other. Jack was strong and of course being a captain exhibited leadership qualities, however, he viewed Sophia about as inept as a toddler. He wasn't overbearing with Sophia but he also wasn't very protective, leaving her to natural elements of the sea after she unwittingly put a whole in the room of her room. I just could not picture these two people living happily ever after, digging up fossils in Mexico and South America. But you read it to judge yourself!
Tanya Anne Crosby writes another winner!