More Pages: Grant Page 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100


Exellent guide to better understand ballet
An Essential Book for a Dancer
highly recommended for terminology

Good, but not for everyone
Outstanding Book That Heals Internal Pain
I loved the book!!!!

Four winning stories!"Mother, May I?" by Lynsay Sands is set in Medieval England. The story is about Lord Jonathan, a knight, whose mother goes to some extreme and sometimes funny antics to get him to finally wed. This was a sweet and humourous story. This is the first story I've read by this author and I liked this one so much, I will now look for more.
"The Breeding Season" by Lisa Cach is also a historical. Charles and Evelina's mothers force them to spend time together. She is very flamboyant and he is very shy...at first "Seeking Single Superhero" by Julie Kenner is set in the same world as her novel "Aprodite's Kiss" and was excellent. Jennifer works along with her mother at the Mortal-Protector Liaison Office and is NOT looking for a protector (superhero) boyfriend. Her mother has other ideas "The Day Her Heart Stood Still" by Susan Grant is also a science fiction romance and it was fabulous! Andie is a pilot and astronaut who's mother is (much to her dismay) a UFO fanatic. Imagine her surprise when her mother brings home a handsome and very sexy alien. It's a lovely and touching story and Susan's dedication before the story brought tears to my eyes. Excellent and highly recommended, as are all of Susan's stories! An all around excellent anthology.
A MOTHER'S WAY
"Seeking Single Superhero"
Jennifer Martin's mother wants her to marry a superhero. Jennifer thinks superheroes are arrogant and self-absorbed. Unfortunately, her mother will go to any lengths to find one for her daughter, including placing an ad in her name or working with one of them, Piter, to entrap Jennie.
Jennifer and her mother do know quite a bit about Protectors as they are both employed by the Mortal-Protector Liaison Office. Daphne, the mother, works with the computer system and highly classified information. Unknown to both mother and daughter, Daphne is suspected of collaborating with an enemy of the Protectors. Starbuck, the Protector assigned to investigate Daphne's activities, is undercover and has none of the bulging muscles or arrogance that normally identifies the superhero breed. He attaches himself to Jennifer to learn more about her mother, but close association leads to sparks, which leads to love.
This is the first story I've read in the Protectors series and I was surprised to find that I really liked it. I'm not a big fan of superhero-type stories, but Julie Kenner has written real people in a slightly unreal world. Both Jennifer and Starbuck are well-defined characters I wanted to know. With the search for a mole thrown in to complicate the relationship, there was enough excitement to satisfy me. I look forward to reading more of Julie's work.
"The Day Her Heart Stood Still"
Major Andie Del Sarto, an astronaut, is very close to being announced as part of the crew for the first manned flight to Mars. Her biggest fear is that the media will exploit her mother's obsession with UFOs, so she makes a rare trip back to Roswell, New Mexico, to see her parents. When a star she wishes on comes crashing to Earth, the last thing she expects is to meet the man of her dreams.
Cassie, Andie's mother, wants to investigate the crash and drags Andie along. The man they find inside the space ship is dressed in an unusual suit, but nothing indicates that he's anything but human. At first. Andie finds herself drawn to Zefer almost immediately, empathizing with his frustration and inability to communicate, and grows to believe he really did come from another world. Zefer learns quickly, with help from a wrist computer, and communicates his need to get back to his ship and get off planet. Earth isn't ready for a meeting with his people yet. Still, leaving Andie isn't something he wants to do. He wished for her, just as she wished for him, and he isn't letting her go.
Susan Grant has written a story that had me from the first page. The emotions, the characters, the final scene, all fit together like a well-tailored suit. The wackiness of Andie's parents was perfect training for Andie to accept a man from another world. Their easy acceptance of Zefer's alienness makes it easy for Andie and Zefer to contemplate a life together, somewhere. I didn't want this story to end, but the ending was perfect. This story by itself makes the anthology worth buying.
Linda Steadman, SFR Online
Perfect Mother's Gift!!Lynsay Sand's Gives a medieval tale of mother plotting to get the grandbabies she wants by telling him the girl is wrong for him. Julie Kenner gives you a futuristic tale. I loved "The Day her Heart Stood Still", a take off on "the Day the Earth Stood Still". As a child I always thought Michael Rennie and Patrica Neal created good sparks and sighed wishing for more romance. Susan Grant takes that idea and runs with it (Thank you, Susan, for finally fulfilling that childhood desire!!). And Lisa Cach sends you to 1750 England giving us another super historical romp!!! Whimsical, light reading perfect for MUM!!!
The PERFECT gift for Mother's Day (US)....with a box of ...Chocolates!!!


Wow! A Great Boook for Fans of Ulys
Loved it!That's the thing that impressed me the most. This book is a real-life love story, about two people who remained in love (and one gathers, "in lust") with one another from day one until Grant died. Julia lets the reader know very well that she loved him and he loved her. I think this is more of a woman's book than a man's book, but I give it my highest recommendation!
Mrs. Ulysses S. Grant Tells All

A Good Survey of Ancient RomeBut, as primers go, it is very thorough. Grant discusses the political, economical, and military aspects of Roman life relatively equally. His timeline encompasses the entire span of Roman history (a breathtaking era).
Furthermore, unlike many historians, Grant includes the cultural side of Roman life. He gives almost equal weight to Vergil, Horace and Ovid as to many political/military figures. This gives a more human aspect to ancient Rome, which, though like modern society in many ways, still seems so remote to us.
Grant's writing style can get a bit dull, but the book flows well
and is hard to put down. History may be more exciting than drama at times, but telling it is often more difficult. Grant can hardly be blamed for not keeping the reader at the edge of his seat all the time.
An Excellent Overview of Roman History
find a used copy and enjoy a good read

An indispensible resource!
Think YOU have a great business card? Think again!
Great book - easy to read and very informativeVery enjoyable reading! I recommend the book to all of my friends.


A Novel Centered on the Last Five Years of Grant's Life
Rembrandt with a pen
A Fine Book with a Strange Twist

Disappointing
Guy's never know what to expect
A First Dad's Essential

The ultimate Gothic novel
The best Gothic novel ever written
Melmoth - The Anti-QuixoteUnlike "The Monk," however, Maturin's novel does not rely heavily on Lewis' supernatural machinery (ghosts, demons, bleeding nuns, etc.). Instead, he offers several apparently unconnected stories that concentrate on families in desperate straits and individuals in extreme crises, pushing the limits of man's inhumanity to man. The connecting element, the wild card with the wild eyes, that pops up just when the characters most/least need him, is Melmoth the Wanderer.
"Melmoth" also draws heavily from Cervantes' "Don Quixote," which provides a great point of comparison for the main character. Where Don Quixote was a wandering knight, pledged to help the helpless, Melmoth is a wandering agent of evil, whose mission is to prey on the helpless. Melmoth has 150 years to tempt the indigent and desperate into selling their souls for wealth, power, or simple relief, and trading places with him.
Again looking backward to "Quixote" and forward to Stoker's "Dracula," "Melmoth" is also heavily concerned with it's own construction as a text. The various stories are pieced together by eyewitnesses, interviewers, and ancient manuscripts, often at several removes from their originals. There is even one gentleman in the novel who is collecting material to write a book about Melmoth the Wanderer.
This is not a book for everyone. Maturin often provides almost excessively long preludes before any action occurs in his nested narratives. The traumas he inflicts on Melmoth's targets can drive you to the point of insanity yourself. However, if you are a admirer of the psychological thriller without all the show of your standard gothic-terror text, "Melmoth the Wanderer" is sure to keep you busy for days, if not weeks.


So-So
Worth it for the Character Sketches!
Under the Covers award winner