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

Ed & Fred Flea
Published in Hardcover by Hyperion (September, 1999)
Authors: Pamela Duncan Edwards and Henry Cole
Average review score:

ed and fred flea
My 10th grade child loved this book it helped him write a 10 page research paper for english. The imagry and personal connections were plentyfull.

Danger Ahead!
My 3-year-old son really enjoys this book. Fun illustrations with simple sentances. Not too text heavy which is perfect for toddlers. His favorite part is when a tick yells Mayday! mayday...Danger ahead! A good lesson about the consequences of a selfish and bad lie.


Eleanor of Provence: Queenship in Thirteenth-Century England
Published in Hardcover by Blackwell Publishers (January, 1998)
Author: Margaret Howell
Average review score:

Sound scholarship, readable prose
I concur with the excellent synopsis given by the previous reviewer and can only add that Howell has the rare and welcome gift of being able to produce sound scholarship, meticulously documented from the primary sources, that is accessible to the general reader as well as the academic audience for whom the book is primarily intended. This book, while remaining free from tiresome jargon, nevertheless places the subject within current academic discussion very well. She provides a model that I hope will be emulated by future scholars.

New insights into medieval queenship
Son of the troubled King John, Henry III inherited his father's impoverished kingdom when he was but nine years of age. At 28, Henry married Eleanor of Provence in Canterbury Cathedral on January 14, 1236. The match with the twelve-year-old daughter of Raymond Bergengar, count of Provence was intended to forge an alliance that would protect the southern part of Henry's Angevin empire. Eleanor had never met her bridegroom nor had she ever visited England prior to her marriage.

Howell's biography of Eleanor of Provence looks at both the public and private aspects of Eleanor's life offering new insights into 13th century English history. Although it began as a dynastic match, Henry found in Eleanor a loving and supportive wife. She bore him nine children of whom four survived to adulthood. Yet in spite of the strength of their family life, Eleanor is remembered as one of the most despised of the English queens; in 1236 Londoners mobbed her barge and drove her to flee to the bishop of London's palace of St. Paul's. As she grows from child to woman we see Eleanor use the available avenues of power-patronage, arranged marriages, and ceremonial events- to benefit her family and her loyal corps of retainers who, throughout her life, formed the base of Eleanor's political strength. Indeed it was family relationships that were to be both the strength and weakness of Eleanor's queenship. Her devotion to her family and her single minded efforts to promote her foreign-born Savoyard relations put her at odds with the English nobility and eventually with her husband's family, all of whom were in competition for lands, titles, and lucrative marriages. As Howell comments, Eleanor "made intercession an art." However, throughout their marriage, Eleanor's support and connections to the French monarchy remained a key factor in Henry's ability to hold on to his throne. Howell gives a full picture of Eleanor of Provence; a woman of culture, complexity, loyalty and intelligence; but one unloved by her subjects. I would highly recommend it.


The Eleanor Roosevelt Encyclopedia
Published in Unknown Binding by Greenwood Pub Group (E) (November, 2000)
Authors: Maurine H. Beasley, Holly C. Shulman, and Henry R. Beasley
Average review score:

It's a good read!
The first thing that should be said about The Eleanor Roosevelt Encyclopedia is that it is a "good read." You can open it anywhere and read fascinating information about Eleanor Roosevelt's life, friends, family, work, and political causes. You can follow the asterisks in the text to related entries, or you can read successive entries, learning serially and serendipitously about Lucy Mercer Rutherfurd, ER's social secretary who became romantically involved with FDR; ER's friend Rose Schneiderman, a Polish immigrant who became one of the most important labor leaders of the twentieth century; the scholarly debate over ER's sexuality; and Alfred Smith, Democratic presidential nominee in 1928. Everyone who was active in the progressive movement is here, as well as political organizations, foreign leaders, and discussions of such topics as television, the anti-lynching movement, birth control, the democratic party, ER's biographers, and the United Nations. Most especially, the amazing fullness of Eleanor Roosevelt's life is here. Small wonder that Hillary Clinton wanted to talk to her when she became first lady.

The Eleanor Roosevelt Encyclopedia is a Winner
Maurine Beasley, Henry R. Beasley, and Holly C. Shulman have produced an outstanding reference work on Eleanor Roosevelt. They have enlisted an array of distinguished authors to write about every aspect of Mrs. Roosevelt's life, and the result is a fascinating collection of essays that range from her impact on the institution of the First Lady to the many social causes that she championed. Well illustrated and comprehensive in its coverage, the book is rewarding for the insights it provides into one of the most important women in American history and is simply an excellent reading experience on its own terms. This is a volume that belongs in every school and public library that wants to provide a lively, reliable, and perceptive introduction to the life and career of the First Lady of the World, as Mrs. Roosevelt was known. Anyone interested in Eleanor Roosevelt will also want to own this book.


Encyclopedia of the Dead
Published in Hardcover by Farrar Straus & Giroux (February, 1989)
Authors: Danilo Kis and Michael Henry Heim
Average review score:

BAROQUE REALISM
_The Encyclopedia of the Dead_ is one of the best short story collections of this or any century, I'm not shy to say, and it is my personal favorite of Kis' books (_A Tomb for Boris Davidovich [forthcoming from Dalkey Archive] coming in a close second). Kis' writes in a wonderful type of lyrical documentary style, mixing fact and fiction (though it is difficult to tell sometimes whether the fact is not fiction and vice-versa), reminiscent of some of the contemporary younger western writers (namely, William T. Vollmann, who himself is a big fan). In short, buy this book! (If you don't have a penny to your name and you can't buy one...you should not steal it, thought you would have it and be able to read and devour it like you need to.)

Great stories about inevitable
It took almost six months from the day I ordered this book, until it came out of print and I received it in my mail. It took me less than a week to read it...This is a book of stories about people who find their death in different ways. Kis mixes myths and legends of the Bible to: middle eastern legends, female intuition, patriotism, death anticipation due to long and difficult illness. Each story is setup in its own time, century, country and is viewed from different perspective. And all these situations and places combined, make up this wonderful book. My favorite story was "The Encyclopedia of the Dead". It sounds so personal, that anyone who knows a little bit about Danilo Kis' life, can see a lot of Kis himself - in this story. Mr. Heim did wonderful job translating this work. However, I was a bit disappointed that Mr. Haim did not make an effort to write an introduction for this book. Writer's notes at the end of the book were extrimely helpful in understanding stories more deeply and understanding what he wanted to accomplish with this work of art. Many of Danilo Kis' reders like to remember him as writer who had Borges for an idol. Please, let us not forget that Kis had admirerers himself - no one less than Joseph Brodsky, amongst others.


Engineering Graphics
Published in Hardcover by Prentice Hall (09 September, 1997)
Authors: Frederick Ernest Giesecke, Alva Mitchell, Henry Cecil Spencer, Ivan Leroy Hill, Robert Olin Loving, Jhn Thomas Dygdon, James E. Novak, Shawna Lockhart, and Ava Mitchell
Average review score:

Excellent book for college drafting course.
This is an excellent college level text.I particularly like the detailed "real world" drafting problems for the students. Also it has a very good apppendix. It is comprehensive enough that we use it in three different courses here at Vincennes University.

EXTREMELY HELPFUL
I have had this book in my drafting library for some time now. I am always using it and recommending it. The book is laid out so that you can go from beginning drafting up through advanced. It not only says what the standards are, but walks you through drafting technology so that you understand why they are like they are. I believe that anyone that is going to be doing drafting should have this in their library.


The Enigma of Loch Ness
Published in Hardcover by Univ of Illinois Pr (Trd) (August, 1988)
Author: Henry H. Bauer
Average review score:

A Good Book About Nessie; A Great Book About Science
Remember your high school science textbooks' dry-as-dust rundown of "The Scientific Method?" Well, here's the intro to scientific reasoning you *should* have gotten back then: A ferociously intelligent, smoothly written guide to thinking rationally about the natural world.

The title promises a comprehensive, clear-eyed look at the Loch Ness mystery written by an author with an open mind. The book delivers on that promise, and the result is a delight to read. Bauer walks you, surefootedly, through sixty-odd years of Nessie sightings, as well as reactions to them by the public and the scientific community. If you want a reliable, detailed, neutral study of the Loch Ness mystery--here's your book.

The icing on the intellectual cake is that Bauer is interested in more than just Loch Ness. He makes clear in his introduction that he wants to explore how science works and, once again, the book delivers. Bauer walks you, again surefootedly, through concepts like "data" "proof" "theory" and so forth, carefully leaving in the kinds of grey areas that working scientists have to deal with. Two of the best chapters in the book are titled "Bad Reasons for Believing" and "Bad Reasons for Not Believing." Together (especially in the context of the entire book) they're one of the best discussions of scientific reasoning I've ever read.

Recommended for anyone with a serious interest in science . . . even if you don't really care whether there's anything bigger than a trout in Loch Ness.

LOCH NESS MYSTERY UNRAVELLED
This book, is, without doubt, one of the best volumes to be published on the mystery of the Loch Ness Monster. Bauer speaks sensibly of the enigma and provides both positive and negative information to the reader. Bauer produces academic analytical skills as well as those gained by the physical search of Loch Ness to support his undoubted knowledge which he imparts in most readable prose. I thoroughly recommend this work to anyone interested in the case Loch Ness Monster, it provides virtually everything one would need to know.


Escaping The Nigger Mentality
Published in Paperback by Superior Home Leasing & Fantabulous Publishing (February, 2002)
Author: Hiram Henry
Average review score:

Great resource for everyone
This book took it where usually most books don't. It came close to home and then gave solutions for the problem called the nigger mentality. I won't give the book away, but if you want to improve yourself, start here.

Escaping the Nigger Mentality
Black people are still held back. I believe that when the author says that blacks must remember to not call themselves nigger, he has a good point. It is said that a rose is a rose no matter what you call it. However; we contol our reaction to what we are called. Paul in the Bible says that if one man is bothered by a specific thing and that thing doesn't bother you then don't do that thing around him. For it might cause him to stumble because of his belief. The word nigger has too many bad connotations and those connotations are too deeply entrenched in too many people. This author will help to bring people out of the terrible thing called the nigger mentality. Buy this book.


Even Steven and Odd Todd
Published in Library Binding by Bt Bound (October, 1999)
Authors: Kathryn Cristaldi, Henry B. Morehouse, and Marilyn Burns
Average review score:

Wonderful Read
My 8 year old had this book on her school reading list. She loved it and has read it many times. She thought it was really funny and loved the part about the gummy worms on the pizza. Any book that gets a child to read is all right with me.

Its Funny
I read this book in my second grade class. This is a funny book. Even Steven likes everything even. Odd Todd likes everything odd. For example, Even Steven would like 8 pancakes and Odd Todd would like 7 pancakes. Even Steven goes through hard work with Odd Todd. Then, Even Steven notices that odd and even are both good. My favorite part was when Odd Todd and Even Steven win their $50 prize.


Explosive Power and Jumping Ability for All Sports
Published in Paperback by Stadion Publishing Co (31 July, 1999)
Authors: Tadeusz Starzynski, Henryk Sozanski, Thomas Kurz, Henry K. Sozanski, Ph.D. Henryk Sozanski, and Tadeusz Starzynski
Average review score:

Valuable Training Advice -- a must for all athletes
... As a world class and Olympic level coach of Dwight Stones, James Butts, Dan Ripley and others, may I encourage you to use these wonderful concepts that Tadeusz has given. These principles will work very well with our "Aerobic Resistive Rebounding" concept found in the "Olympic Trainer" book available on Amazon.com. Give these concepts a try and you will become a champion!

Explosive energy
This book is great its easy to understand,and the best part about it is this book really works.My speed power and jumping kicks have sky rocketed due to this amazing book.Get explosive power and jumping ability for all sports and you will get results.


The Face-Lift Sourcebook
Published in Paperback by McGraw-Hill/Contemporary Books (11 October, 2000)
Authors: Kimberly A. Henry and Marie Costa
Average review score:

Very comprehensive and informative!!
Dr. Henry has written a great book for men and women! This resource answered all of my questions and gave me answers to questions I didn't even know I had! It was extremely helpful...tells the history of cosmetic facial surgery as well as gives insights into emotional and psychological reasons it is "OK" to go ahead with cosmetic procedures. It thoroughly made me aware of all of the various procedures done today as well as what to expect from each one - costs, recovery time, etc. After reading this book I felt very comfortable with the information and am now able to use it to make some decisions about myself. If you are thinking about any type of facial cosmetic surgery, this book is for you!

Provides keys to understanding the face-lift process
Face-Lift Sourcebook opens with a discussion of how the face ages, then provides keys to understanding the face-lift process which helps readers determine whether surgery is the right option. From locating the best surgeon to considering costs and recovery, this provides detailed consumer information by a doctor who is herself a plastic surgeon.


Related Vacation Book Subjects: Virginia
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