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A Beautifully crafted tale
more of the best!If you have read the Copper Crown and its counterparts you will be intrigued when you discover that the writing style is completely different from the first triology. This is writen in first rather than third person. It is rare that an author has such talent as to switch styles. The style change means that you will never tire of the Keltiad. Instead of boresdom you will find love for the lore as past history links all the books together.
Great stuff

Wonderful!
A thought-provoking slice of Maine lifePEARL is not a fast-paced action-packed read. It is a novel of setting and character, a slice-of-life story that lets the reader live in small town Maine for a while. The characters are funny and real, and Pearl is so likable that one has to keep reading and share her life. Tabitha King doesn't fool around with sex issues, either: she faces them head-on, and most of the love scenes are poetic while retaining their reality. The author has some interesting things to say about sex, love, friendship, family, and caring, but never says them in a preachy, intrusive way. PEARL is a smooth, leisurely, thought-provoking read.
Kimberly Borrowdale Under the Covers Book Reviews
Beautifully written with believable characters.

this romance novel contains no fluffy, sweet sex
A Haunting Novel
Beautiful, Tragic, Very Detailed

AwesomeREAD THIS BOOK!
The Light Goes On
Raising Up the Champion Wihtin You

military fiction at it's bestJust young cadet fascinated by all things having to do with the Army.At the time I felt that the book captured the feel and the rythms of Army life. Whether that be the peacetime Army or the wartime Army. At the time there were still many Vietnam vets in the service and I gave this book to one of the cadre members(a sergeant major) to read. He had served two tours over there and when he finished reading it he told me that the authors had done a better job of capturing the war in all it's nuances then all the other Vietnam novels he had read. No weird musings on the nature of man and no bizzare drug induced fantasies that so many other authors were turning out in the seventies and early eighties. Just a straight forward story.I've since reread this novel twice. The first time was about three years ago and then just last week. I'm older now and my attitude towards things have changed.I have found that often those things which seemed so impressive to me at the age of nineteen are diminished at the age of thirty-three. Well this novel hasn't lost anything. It's still wonderfully detailed, suspenseful, humorous and intelligent. One could do far worse this summer then reading this book. Unfortunately it's out of print, but I still see copies floating around in used book stores - both in paperback and hardcover. Good luck and, when you get a copy,enjoy.
Original, Authentic and CompleteSince reading this book I have enthusiastically read ALL of their other works, though I must say the STEN series is at the top of the "must read" list. I have read this entire series at least seven times.
Absolutely OutstandingFind it. Read it. Keep it.


How come no one ever wrote this book before?!!!
'Reclaiming Our Schools' -- A Tool for Every ParentWho can't recall the person at the low-end of a school's achievement system? Maybe it was you, or maybe it's your child. What makes someone an "average" student? "Just being average is not success in anyone's view," Dr. King reminds his readers.
Even the nation's top students are not learning all they need to know. Dr. King points out that "as long as students are ranked against each other, the achievement of the group can drift lower and ... it gives parents a false sense of pride."
Dr. King's book offers an honest inspection of why any student would be classified according to others' achievements and suggests practical answers to helping your children achieve their personal best. Whether your child is taught in a public or private school system or at home, it will take each parent's contribution to be certain that your child is receiving the teaching they deserve and the instruction they need to lay a firm foundation for life.
Written in an easy-to-read manner, Reclaiming Our Schools examines the myths that lock our children into an unsatisfactory education and offers solutions to these myths. This book is a positive step toward ensuring a successful, appropriate education for each of America's children.
At last! an easy to understand book about education!

Delicious HorrorThese are delicious stories of ordinary folk just like you and me--with a twist from a good author. These stories will keep you shivering and looking at familiar things with new aprehension.
It's also a must-have book for campfire nights!
SHORT STORIES WITH A VARIETY OF THEMES
The Old Woman's Cat is the Cat's meow in suspense

what a book!
Everything this author writes is great!There are 4 books in the series, this is the first, I highly recomed the others.
Her most recent book, 'Eye To Eye' is also excellent!!
Catherine Jinks is the finest author for this age group around.
a humorous and moving adventure set in days of yore

Bedtime story
good bed time reading!
1st Grade Class

Religous Beliefs
NEED MORE COPIES PUBLISHED
Wonderful Christian Reference Book
Now, just let me say, I LOVE THIS SERIES! I especially love the character of Taliesin. He is my favorite from all of Morrison's books and possibly from any others I have ever read. His voice is exceptionally distinctive in the telling and very consistent. He is a very unassuming character, terrified out of his wits most of the time and sure that everyone knows it, yet is completely honest about this fact. I love the style of these books too. The prose is perhaps a bit cumbersome when you first begin reading but it is defiantly an epic tale, every event fraught with dan from now 'till nevermass, and all the characters with the seeds of greatness in them, Arthur most of all. I love this particular universe because it is so imaginative, Celtic legend mixed with sciencficiton in a successful blending.
Now, the Kirkus reviewer has a point when he says that Patricia Kennealy-Morrison has a "general air of self-importance". He hits the nail right on the head. She is continually prating on the virtues of the Kelts. How they are so much more evolved than "other societies I could name" in that they have magical arts, no rape, varying marriage laws, and women are considered equals. It is an attitude hard to avoid throughout her books, but this is the only detraction I will make and, you will admit, not a very serious one.