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Firefighting.
Very Good

Hardys in California.
The best Hardy boys book ever!

Suspensful
A great book with the famous teenage duo

Learn about BBS's in this Hardy Boys mystery!
A good Hardy Boys mystery.

Advanced reading for Franklin mystery detectives.
Good example of causes of controversy.

The Voodoo Plot
IT WAS PRETTY GOODlured into a snake infested swampthe boys pick up a crooked trail that leads to new orleans jazz club owned by peter's grandfather. in the middle of mardi gras they uncover an elaborate plot to put mr. walker out of business for good. frank and joe leap into action- and land into a deadly nest of vipers and crime!!!


Abby

Age-Appropriate Mystery Fun

A nice overview of a long-neglected Civil War subject.Overall, this book does a fine job of exploring the origins of the Army of the James, following its often discouraging path through the bold campaign leading up to the battle of Drewry's Bluff, the establishment of a foothold on Bermuda Hundred, and the long seige of Richmond and Petersburg that followed. In this respect, a number of battles and skirmishes that have usually been passed over by other historians are given much-deserved attention. Throughout, the author admirably maintains his sole focus on the Army of the James, even after it was largely absorbed into Grant's forces after mid-June 1864. He also follows the fortunes of those units that were on detached service, such as Kautz's cavalry division and two divisions of the X Corps that were sent to capture Fort Fisher in early 1865.
Longacre devotes a modest amount of attention to the somewhat unique make up of this army. It always had a strong component of African-American soldiers in its ranks, and also is notable for being led by a majority of civilian volunteer officers. This led to tensions and dissentions at the highest levels, particularly with career officers like William "Baldy" Smith vying for leadership.
Missing from the book are the finely detailed accounts of the battles fought by the Army of the James. At most, Longacre provides the reader with an overview of these battles, tracing the movement of divisions and brigades, but only providing quick summaries of combat and casualties. In this author's opinion, the book suffers at many points from a lack of decent maps to better illustrate unit movements and battles. Those seeking a more detailed understanding of battles will have to turn elsewhere. For example, Robertson's excellent study of Drewry's Bluff titled BACKDOOR TO RICHMOND.
While it is true that the Army of the James was created in the Spring of 1864, this reader would have appreciated more information about the experiences of the various units and generals that joined the Army of the James prior to this year.
In the end, the reader may have mixed feelings about Longacre's sympathetic treatment of Butler. History has not been kind to this personality, and maybe for good reason. There is little doubt, however, that one will come to better appreciate the vital contributions and many sacrifices offered by the men who served in the Army of the James in the last year and a half of the Civil War.


A Fusion of "The Last Emperor" and a gangster movieSands gives us some cogent historicism on the origins of the Koreans, Japanese and Chinese, and in general he seems to have accomplished convincing us that as an American diplomat, he can function as the same high level of urbanity and effectiveness as an Englishman.
Things get tense, and the Koreans want him to work as a kind of private advisor to the Hereditary loser-class, but Washington has other ideas, and the book ends with Sands departing this fascinating part of the world and wondering aloud what other intriguing assignment he might be able to find next.
So what was Korea before the war of North and South in the 1950s; before the Japanese overlords were blown apart by the U.S. in WW II; and before the Japanese overran the place, grabbed all the big houses, built huge industrial businesses, enslaved the locals and raped all the women before that? This book gets beneath these generalities and overstatements, and gets us part of that anterior answer.