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

The Jewish Holiday Cookbook: An International Collection of Recipes and Customs
Published in Hardcover by Random House (September, 1985)
Author: Gloria Kaufer Greene
Average review score:

Everybody loves the food!
I have to tell you that the recipes in this book are a Godsend. My favorites are the matzoh/spinach/tomato pie and the zippy cranberry potroast. They are real crowd pleasers!

favorite cookbook
This cookbook is one of my favorite cookbooks. It provides great recipes within the context of each jewish holiday. I find myself reading it before each holiday and it learning new things about the holiday itself.

One of the best sources for Jewish holiday cooking!
Ms. Greene combines inventiveness with tradition. I used this book as one of my resources for compiling a menu for a Passover Seder twelve years ago. My friend Barbara Podell was taking a closer look at her Jewish heritage (she had been raised Episcopalian, but her paternal grandparents were Russian Jews) and we became "co-caterers" for what has become THE spiritual and social event of the year for our family of friends.

Since I am not Jewish, but I wanted to be as authentic and Kosher as possible, I was happy that Gloria included historical background and symbology for the Seder plate and for traditions behind both Ashkenasic and Sephardic foods, such as the "Long Roasted Eggs," which our friends look forward to each year as a very special part of our Seder (which we call "dinner with a script"). Before reading her book, I didn't know about Sephardic Jews and the differences in the ingredients they use.

Gloria writes with a friendly tone and a light touch, which I found encouraging since I was neophyte to Jewish cooking styles.

If you have to pick only one book, this is the ONE!


Kiss Your Prince Charming (Silhouette Desire, 1245)
Published in Paperback by Silhouette (October, 1999)
Author: Jennifer Greene
Average review score:

I loved this one!
I really loved this one and can't think of a single negative thing to say about it. I loved the hero who loves the heroine from afar with no expectation of a "happily ever after". . .and I loved the heroine who exceeds his every expectation as she looks far deeper than image to realize it's the man himself who stole her heart. The story and the characters are warm, full, and nicely developed with strengths and weaknesses. All in all a well rounded and well developed romance.

An Absolutely Sweet Heart Stopper
I normally prefer my romances a little on the steamy side but this story was so sweet, I could not put it down until the very last page! Don't get me wrong - the love scenes are just as heartfelt as the story is in its entirety. I absolutely loved the hero in this romance because he was so different from the typical A-Type male in most stories. Every time Stoner told himself he was still a toad with a prince's face (after his surgury) I just wanted to hug him! Every woman who reads this will wish they had a best friend like Greg Stoner.

A wonderful story!
I love what the author has done with the characters in this story. The metamorphasis of friendship to love is so smooth and believable, it's enough to make you cry. The hero is absolutely adorable.


Loving Graham Greene
Published in Paperback by Anchor Books (16 October, 2001)
Author: Gloria Emerson
Average review score:

doing good by greene
This short book packs much more of a whallop than all the self-indulgent, over-written books all too prevalent these days. I had just finished Atwood's The Blind Assasin (a book three times longer than it needed to be--assuming it needed to be at all) when I read this. What refreshment it was! It's not too short, but perfect in its economy.

It's the story of a wealthy, earnest woman seeking to do good in this troubled world by taking as her model the life and works of Graham Greene, who she met briefly and corresponded with excessively. (The aging author must have questioned the outcome of his life's work and resulting fame by this exhausting and passionate fan.) Gloria Emerson tells her story in a way that is funny, precise, and wise. A group of well-intentioned meddlars with lofty aims muddle through Algeria, attempting to liberate a politically incorrect writer. All are presented with clear eyed irony, precise and telling characterization. It's sufficient to say that their misguided innocence makes an even greater mess of things in Algeria. Read it and find more.

Loving Graham Greene made me want to return to the novels of the master. He would have been proud.

A Lovely Interlude
I really enjoyed this well-written, brief story. The tale of Molly Benson, the spacey Graham Greene-obsessed do-gooder and her ill-advised trip to Algeria is entertaining and amusing. Gloria Emerson has a knack of drawing characters with obvious and amusing flaws, without making her narrative or characterization seem obvious, contrived or hackneyed. This is a short novel, one that you can enjoy in a few gulps, but you won't get the sense of being cheated. Molly is quite a character. She met Graham Greene, briefly, once and from that meeting believed, in her own mind that she and Greene were quite close. After his death, she believes he would have wanted her to lead an expedition to Algeria and she drags a couple of her friends there. Molly lives in a world of delusion. You'll read about her and think, "This woman is a little nuts, the world is simply not as she imagines it". Her life is both funny and sad. Funny in that her delusions lead her to do amusing things, sad in that she has the delusions at all. I think, though, that most will find slivers of themselves in her, for who doesn't act believing in something that just is not true, or won't happen, out of sheer hopefulness. Emerson has given us an amusing character study and a very well-written novel. Enjoy.

Loving "Loving Graham Greene"
In a tapestry of made-up minds, honest reporters live at risk. Gloria Emerson was such a reporter in Vietnam and in Gaza. She pays affectionate tribute to perhaps the greatest thriller writer in "Loving Graham Greene" by sending quirky heiress Molly Benson, the female protagonist Greene never attempted, to a doomed Algeria to hire bodyguards for honest journalists. Like many Greene characters, Benson is a decent person over her head amid evil, whose good works do harm. Her reporter's eye and ear won Emerson's "Winners and Losers" the National Book Award with telling details like the GI who looked in a mirror and said, "I had no idea who that was." Her writing skills turn a clever conceit into a brilliant novel. The determined Molly Benson and her companions are richly-drawn characters in a sparse world of countervailing menaces, the police state versus Islamic fundamentalism. The civil war in the shadows tightens its noose as the innocents look for ways to save the outspoken. The naïve, half-informed Pyle in Greene's "The Quiet American" was "impregnably armoured by his good intentions and his ignorance." Emerson's Benson has a capacity to understand there is a great deal she doesn't understand. She's an ironic, irritating heroine - a tall, middle-aged, ferociously liberal woman whose brother Harry was a reporter martyred in El Salvador. Molly knows every book Greene ever wrote, down to the names of the dogs, met him once by chance, pestered him with letters and undertakes her mission to carry on his spirit and Harry's after their deaths. Emerson writes with a scalpel dipped in ink, every detail as perfect as the story and characters. This funny, literate thriller is tribute to the power of the word to inspire action in the face of despair.


Nez Perce Summer, 1877 : The U.S. Army and Nee-Me-Poo Crisis
Published in Hardcover by Montana Historical Society (November, 2000)
Author: Jerome A. Greene
Average review score:

A Masterpiece of History
One word adequately describes this book-Superb! I have read other accounts of the Nez Perce conflict but none with this degree of detail. For example, other authors have skimmed over some of the smaller engagements of the campaign (such as Canyon Creek) but Greene gives this as well as other episodes the full treatment they deserve. In his introduction, Greene clearly states that he mainly relied on primary source material, using secondary sources for background only. This decision clearly paid off.

Footnotes are used extensively to bring to the fore conflicting testimony as well as useful background information. All of this is augmented by excellent maps that illustrate the action. Greene avoids wasting the reader's time with moralizing sermons. He correctly portrays the military as simply trying to do the job thrust upon them by their civilian masters.

Truly, the best parts of this work are the final chapters detailing the culminating conflict at Bear Paw Mountain. At last, I feel like I am on the way towards understanding this battle. I walked away from this book with new respect and understanding for Greene, the Nez Perce and the much-maligned frontier army.

Greene has done his homework
Over the years I've read a lot on the subject of the Indian Wars. However, it seems that many recent publications are just a re-hash of materials, from secondary sources, presented as a new thesis or from a new perspective. Nez Perce Summer is a notable exception. Greene has used a wealth of primary sources, many never used before, in order to turn up new information and call old notions into question.

This is not a history of the Nez Perce, it is a military history of the campaign against them. While many these days prefer their Indian wars history from an Indian perspective, they should not be deterred from reading this work. This is a history of the military campaign, not a support of it. Indeed, one cannot come away from this without being amazed at how the Nez Perce continually stumped the most experienced Indian fighters of the time.

The narrative is well-written, and Greene holds our attention as well as any fiction writer could. I highly recommend !this book to anyone--scholar or casual reader--interested in the study of the Indian Wars.

Vividly drawn and engaging presented storytelling
In Nez Perce Summer 1877: The U.S. Army and the Nee-Me-Poo Crisis, research historian Jerome Green provides an informative, superbly researched, and wonderfully written account of the Nez Perce conflict with the larger white culture as represented by the U.S. Army. Green is one of those rare historians able to combine meticulous scholarship with a genuine flair for vividly drawn and engaging presented storytelling. Nez Perce Summer 1877 is ardently recommended reading for students of American frontier history in general, and Native American studies in particular.


Not Just Another Moose
Published in Hardcover by Marshall Cavendish Corp/Ccb (March, 2000)
Authors: Stephanie Greene and Andrea Wallace
Average review score:

Highly recommended!
What a clever story! Even as an adult I was able to fully enjoy this book. Illustration by Andrea Wallace was spectacular. All of the charactors she created were extremely charming and helped me enjoy the book even more. This book will make a great gift as well as a precious keep sake.

Not Another Moose is Not just any other kids book!
Although I am not a child any more, but I pretend to be some days, Not Just Another Moose has a wonderful story that can be enjoyed by young and adult readers. The illustrations, both amazing and very whimsical, bring the Moose and the perils of his prized antlers to life! A great find!

What I think about "Not Just Another Moose"
I am almost 8 and I think it was very good. It was very funny. I liked Hildy because she is a pig, and I like pigs. I liked that it was in chapters. It was nice.


The Secret Seven
Published in Hardcover by Chivers North Amer (July, 1998)
Authors: Enid Blyton and Sarah Greene
Average review score:

If you have children, share Enid Blyton with them!
I recently shared my old collection of Enid Blyton books with my son, who is 7 years old. They were an instant hit! The stories are full of imagination and humor and it is a shame that finding new copies is so difficult. I would advise anyone looking for childrens books to start with this author.

Pity Americans do not read Enid Blyton
Enid Blyton is one of the best children's authors I know. As an eight-year old, I personally bought and collected Blyton's books. There are different series for different age levels, so you can actually grow through the books. Unfortunately, few of Blyton's books are available in the U.S., and if available, are usually quite high priced. I miss those books.

secret seven
Two days went by, and the secret seven were very busy with all kinds of things. Peter and Janet lime-washed the hen-houses for their father, with Scamper watching in great intrest. 'You look a bit peculiar, Scamper-splashed with white from the lime-wash drips,' sais Janet.'Why must you sit exactly under where we're working you get all the splashes!' George was busy too, with Colin, rigging a fine ship they had made together.


The Talmud of Jmmanuel: The Clear Translation in English and German
Published in Paperback by Wild Flower Pr (August, 1990)
Authors: Eduard Meier, B. L. Greene, and J. H. Ziegler
Average review score:

Don't hesitate, buy this book!
I waited a little while before I bought this book because of one of the reviewers bad review. Like many people searching for the truth, you have to make up your own mind about what is truth and what is not. It seems a lot more logical that the Scribes and Pharisees would want to kill "Jesus" because he was exposing their cult as a bunch of lies than him preaching that he was the son of God. In much the same way todays' established religions would not want this book to go public. It always seemed illogical to me that someone with the wisdom that "Jesus" had who was preaching against the false religion of his day would end up the focus of the newest cult religion. Many dogmatic people will scoff at this book because you can't teach and old dog new tricks. If you have an open mind and are looking for some answers I recommend it. Remember early Christians thought the earth was flat, God sat on a cloud above the earth, and they focused a lot more on the Devil than they did on God. Do you think it is possible that the same people that have some of the origional copies of Matthew, Mark, Luke and John also now have this manuscrpit in one of their vaults next to a pile of Gold? I guess you have to make up your own mind.

To study bible objectively from the historical point of view
If one studies bible from the matter-of-fact point of view, this book probably is the most accurate version of the new testament. All the citations and Jesus' action make sense according to the history and culture of that time. The probabilities of achieving such historical accuracy with mere two people would be impossible. It would take many people's decades of dedication of bible, cultural, history study to achieve such accuracy. General public do not have the access to the direct evidence which can prove the authenticity of this book, but indirect evidences are enough to show that how this book can be the true new testament if it ever existed.

Be Prepared to Rethink All of Your Concepts of Jesus!
One of the most powerful religious statements of the Modern Era, this book "The Talmud Jmmanuel" represents the translation of ancient texts that were hidden for nearly 2,000 years. The complete translations will never be available, because Isa Rashid was murdered before he could complete them. This translation (which resembles in many places the Book of Matthew from the Bible) will seem to you to be either the biggest piece of blasphemous garbage ever conceived, or it will represent the most thought-provoking delineation available of what might have happened, or what Jesus was really trying to say in his day. If you've ever thought that the original intent of the New Testament had been tampered with, then this book will be of tremendous interest to you. However, if your mind cannot conceive that Mary was not a Virgin (she was impregnated by the Celestial Son, Gabriel); that Jesus did not die on the cross, (he was near-death and nursed to health by Eastern Indian healers in the tomb); that he knew his life and teachings would be distorted for centuries to come; and that after the crucifixion he actually traveled to India, where he lived to be more than 100 years old, had a wife and children, and was buried near Kashmir - then leave this book alone. This book is extremely thought-provoking, but obviously not for everyone. Must reading for all spirit-seekers with an open mind!


The Woman Who Knew Too Much: Alice Stewart and the Secrets of Radiation
Published in Paperback by University of Michigan Press (July, 2001)
Authors: Gayle Greene and Helen Caldicott
Average review score:

Courage and Integrity in Science: A Precious Rarety
Courage and Integrity in Science: A Precious Rarety

The Woman Who Knew Too Much: Alice Stewart and the Secrets of Radiation by Gayle Greene. Dr. Stewart is a British physician and epidemiologist (born in 1906 into a large family of physicians) who revolutionized the concept of radiation risk. In the 1950s, while surveying childhood mortalities in the British Isles, she finds that then quite common X-ray examinations during pregnancy doubled the risk for childhood cancer. Fueled by the wrath of radiologists, her work has been viciously derided among the medical establishment for more than two decades. In the 1970s, she finds that some workers at nuclear weapons production sites, such as Hanford, WA or Oakridge, TN are dying of radiation induced cancers, showing that presumed "safe" levels of occupational exposures put these workers at a twenty times higher risk than officially admitted. With that finding she places herself on the "enemy list" of an immensely powerful nuclear weapons establishment, including its scientific elite, and at the center of an international controversy over radiation risks. Stewart's fascinating story, a collaborative memoir told by herself and Greene with verve and humor, is one of a woman scientist's ingenuity, independence, perseverance, compassion, and integrity, a fascinating tale in the checkered history of a mostly male-dominated science. Rudi H. Nussbaum, PhD, Professor Emeritus of Physics and Environmental Science.

Fascinating insight into the history of radiation & medicine
The book spans the lifetimes of Dr. Stewart and her parents. It offers a fascinating description of medicine in Britain in the late 19th century, the entry of women into the medical field, and the institutional resistance in the second half of the 20th century to the fact that low levels of radiation are dangerous. Given the recent announcements by the US Government concerning health risks in the nuclear arms industry, this is a timely and fascinating book. Well written and researched.

Have your children, your daughters must, read this book.
As Research Director of the Hanford Veterans Cancer Mortality Study I have worked closely with Dr. Alice Stewart. I have learned from her, laughed with her and admired her as the most extraordinary human being I have ever known. But, I never knew her well enough. You must read this book! It will give you a new understanding of the meaning of courage and integrity. More importantly - have your children, especially your daughters, read this book. Thank goodness Gayle Greene has written this eminently readable biography of Alice. It allows us to understand where her drive comes from and how Dr. Stewart can suffer the slings and arrows of the federal scientific pygmies who attack her work. The heart of the story, and a key to Dr. Stewart's personality, can be found in the juxtaposition of the the ending words of Chapter 13 where Professor Greene says "Alice is called in by...radiation victims, her investigations turn up cancer in excess ... the studies are handed over to official bodies...the official studies invoke the A-bomb data to discredit her finds....Time passes." 'It's a long, slow business,' she (Dr. Stewart) says." Compare this with one of Dr. Stewart's favorite quotations, "truth is the daughter of time." She has waited, we will wait; but Dr. Helen Caldicott is right "her work may (I say 'will') receive the recognition and thanks of the future." When one finishes reading this marvelous book one cannot help but think of George Sand saying "humanity is outraged in me and with me. We must not dissimulate nor try to forget this indignation; which is one of the most passionate forms of love." Thank the Good Lord for this stunning creature called Alice Stewart. And thank Gayle Greene for helping us to know her just a bit better.


13 Days Of Halloween
Published in Paperback by Troll Communications (September, 2001)
Author: Greene
Average review score:

The Thirteen Days of Halloween
This is a wonderful book especially for those of you who love holiday traditions. Kids will love the familiarity of the tune (12 Days of Christmas) to go along with all the wonderful imagery of Halloween!! My daughter loves it..it's just a lot of fun. I give it the highest rating.

Great for the Classroom!
I highly recommend this book. I am an English as a Second Language teacher, and I used this book in my classroom in the days leading up to Halloween. It was a hit with the kids! We read a page a day and the kids chimed in as I read all of the previous days' verses. They learned some interesting new vocabulary (creeping, wizards, screeching) and had fun doing it. The pictures are as imaginative as the rhymes and also helped draw my students into the story. I wish I purchased the hardback version because my copy has become dogeared.


79 Ways to Calm a Crying Baby
Published in Paperback by Pocket Books (November, 1988)
Author: Diana S. Greene
Average review score:

FANTASTIC AND A LIFE SAVER!
I must say that my husband and I would have had a much harder few years with our baby if we hadn't read this book. It gave us so many (hence the title) tricks for calming down babies. It included everything from watching the dryer to turning on the vacuum cleaner. Thank you, Diana Greene, for writing such a helpful book, and I hope Amazon.com will resupply this book for all the other moms and dads who need some advice!

This book instantly stopped my baby from crying......
We bought this book as desperate parents of a colicky newborn. We tried many of the suggestions to varied results. Once Cassie was about 7 months old and we were reading this book desperately, she reached out and grabbed the book and was content for nearly a quarter of an hour!! She is now 16 months and it is her favorite book. There is a baby on the cover and lots of drawings and diagrams inside which endlessly fascinate her. The little square shape is just perfect for her little hands. None of the pages are ripped (unlike every other paper book she owns). What a find! Worth every penny


Related Vacation Book Subjects: Virginia
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