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

Happy Birthday, Addy!: A Springtime Story (American Girls Collection (Paper))
Published in Paperback by Pleasant Company Publications (September, 1994)
Authors: Luann Roberts Smith, Bradford Brown, Dahl Taylor, and Connie Rose Porter
Average review score:

Realistic, and yet gentle
This is another in the American Girls series about Addy Walker, a ten-year-old African-American girl living in the America of 1865. In this story, Addy makes a new friend in the form of M'dear, a kindly old African-American woman whose blind eyes see more than most. Sadly, as Addy learns more about her new life of freedom, she learns more about the racial discrimination that pervades the world around her. It's up to Addy, with M'dear's insights, to see the way forward in such a dark world.

The final chapter is a look at what it growing up was like for African-American children in the America of 1864. Once again, I must praise American Girls for producing such a wonderful book. This story sets out race relations in a no-nonsense way, but without recrimination-it is a true lesson in healing. My eleven-year-old daughter loved this book, with its realistic history and gentle lessons, and I loved it too!

Wonderful addition to children's litterature
This book continues Addy Walker's adventures after successfully escaping her plantation for freedom up North.

Addy continues to be amazed by the opportunities that are so much more broader than those on the old plantation, but also realizes that even "free" states have racial segregation and discrimination. She is no longer the property of slaveowners, but still cannot travel certain places or excercise privlleges that whites in Philadephia are able to use.

With her friend Sarah's encouragement, Addy picks out a birthday. While such an action might seem mundane by today's standards, Addy (like others during slavery) never had a day that was uniquely hers. Taking her time with the big decision, Addy ultimately picks a day that has meaning for her and indeed, the entire nation.

A Lovely Story
Addy, an escaped slave, makes a friend, and worries about segregation. When is Addy's birthday? What can she do about prejudice between blacks and whites? How can she make this birthday a happy one? And can her new friend help her? Find out in this lovely tale.


Having It All
Published in Paperback by Pocket Books (September, 1985)
Author: Helen Gurley Brown
Average review score:

One of my favorite authors
"Having It All" came to me at time in my life, when I really needed some guidance on how to treat my significant other to help him know just how much he meant to me. When applied, Helen's instructions work like a charm. This book is magic and it was amazing to me when everything she wrote about worked. All three women, including myself, who applied her tactics got their man and got married. I have purchased two of "Having It All" because someone never returned my first book.

Good
This is good common sense advice that is available to almost any woman. She tells shy women how to deal with shyness. And covers most other areas of life. I'm a guy, and it helped me with MY shyness. And, as a guy, I wish every woman would read the section where she tells you how to give a man perfect oral pleasure!

Such fun to read!
I happened upon this book on a shelf in a holiday resort and got completely caught up in it - I even considered stealing it!

Her personal writing style, her common sense, her attitude to life - how I enjoy hearing that you have to make an effort if you want to achieve anything! - I enjoyed the book immensely and really got new ideas on some issues. Even my husband, who hates self help books, read a few pages about business and found them interesting and practical (phone rules). Of course, some of the stuff is dated, but in general, excellent reading and so entertaining! The little stories, the wording, the very personal tone (and still, she is never rude to her readers, even in the most intimate situations or when describing what you really should NOT do).

Absolutely lovely, I do hope she writes something for women in general again (a writer's guide is really not something I need! - though, if written by her, I might enjoy even that)


Heart of Gold
Published in Hardcover by Taylor Pub (November, 1996)
Authors: Kerri Strug, Greg Brown, and Doug Keith
Average review score:

Her Autobiography for a Younger Audience
This was a great biography of Kerri Strug, though it was meant for a younger audience and reading level, it was still very appealing. It included many great pictures, and her biography. I think all Kerri Strug fans will enjoy the book, nevertheless how old they are. Great book, awesome pictures!

INSPIRATIONAL
This was a very enjoyable book even if you are not a gymnastics fan. It tells how she rose to the top and about her injuries along the way. I think everyone should read this book!

I HOPE KERRI HAS A NEW BOOK SOON
KERRI WON AMERICA'S HEART IN '96 AND CONTINUES TO STUN MEZMERIZE AND INTRIGUE M


A Hero in Every Heart
Published in Audio Cassette by Thomas Nelson (July, 1996)
Authors: H. Jackson Brown and Robyn Freedman Spizman
Average review score:

A Hero In Every Heart-Great Book!
I thought that the book a hero in every heart was GREAT! I play alot of sports and when i was in doubt i would just open the book and read it until i felt better again. I think that everything in that book is absulotly true, i enjoyed it alot and i think that everyone athletic, or not should read this book, it is something to really get your self-eestem up if your in doubt! Overall I think this is a great book!

A great inspirational book for athletes and non-athletes.
This is a great book. It was given to me as a member of the United States delegation at the 1996 Paralympic Games in Atlanta. I stayed up the first night after receiving it and read the entire book. I have read it several times and gete something from it every time. It provides me with the inspiration I sometimes need when I don't feel like training. GREAT BOOK!!!!!

Excellent for building character. Mottos for life.
This text is excellent for young and old, athlete and non-athlete. "Don't quit" and "character" messages can be applied throughout life.


The History of Panty Hose in America
Published in Paperback by Espresso Press (11 June, 1999)
Author: B. C. Brown
Average review score:

Good, funny, thoughtful stuff
The writers really shine in the tight, entertaining vignettes that make up this collection. It took me a week to get through it because I wanted to take a little time and savor each story after I read it. And, as a special bonus -- some of the cleverest packaging I've ever seen for a fiction collection!

Hilarious and clever social commentaries
From the packaging (read the front and back cover thoroughly!) through every single short story, this collection is sometimes laugh-out-loud funny, biting and always unique. A brilliant new perspective of our panty hose society.

Hilarious social commentary at its cotton-crotched best
I bought copies of this anthology for friends--who instantly loved it as much as I did. B.C. Brown has created something that goes much deeper than "pop art" as the review claims. The packaging is so spot-on that it induces double-takes...and it is, of course, a sly nod to the fact that women have been judged by their "packaging" for a long time. The stories are gems. Indulge yourself and your good friends, by rolling on this anthology...toes first.


Holy Ground, Too : The Camp Meeting Family Tree
Published in Paperback by Holiness Archives (March, 1998)
Authors: Kenneth O. Brown and Kenneth O. Brown
Average review score:

Christian Directory for Camp Meetings
Holy Ground, Too is one of the best if not the best books on this subject. I found that it was informative and well searched. This book deserves a review on any television show. We can not forget the very important work done by the denominations in the past. Good books like this need to be noticed more. A tool for any pastor or church. To God be the glory.

Christian Directory for Campmeetings
Holy Ground, Too is one of the best if not the best books on this subject. I found that it was informative and well searched. This book deserves a review on any television show. We can not forget the very important work done by the denominations in the past. Good books like this need to be noticed more. A tool for any pastor or church. To God be the glory.

This is one of the best research tools anyone could find
I found this book to be imformative and exact on the findings of Holiness Camp sites throughout America and foreign countries. This is the best tool in reasearch for any Camp Meetings that have history in them and most do. From the Brush Arbor camps to the modern air-conditioned bulidings nothing is lost in translation and history.


The House With Green Shutters
Published in Paperback by Viking Press (August, 1990)
Authors: George Douglas Brown, Dorothy R. Parker, and Dorothy Porter
Average review score:

The Pride and the Tragedy
What is tragedy and how does it work? These are questions you will understand better after reading this book. Set sometime in the second half of the 19th century, the story concerns the fortunes of the Gourlay family in the small Scottish town of Barbie. John Gourlay, a big, domineering, but intellectualy challenged man dominates the local economy and has a monopoly of the carrying trade. He is harsh and powerful, of bull-like stature, and famous for his glower. On a brae overlooking Barbie he has built the House wIth the Green Shutters. This house is both the symbol of his dominance and an object of hatred and envy to the townsfolk.

Aristotle defined tragedy as a story depicting the downfall of a great man. At first it is hard to see this stupid, cruel, and grasping merchant as a great man, but The House With the Green Shutters will also improve your notions of what greatness is. John Gourlay is great because there is no fear or compromise in him. Although he may wish to be well thought of by the small-minded, two-faced gossips of the town, he is not prepared to go one inch out of his way for them, scorning even the banal pleasantries of small talk or phatic communication. He wants only their respect not their love, and respect him they do even though they also hate him.

With all true tragedy the tragic element comes directly from the greatness. It is his greatness that destroys John Gourlay. His stubborn pride and unflinching courage are qualities more suited to some heroic age of battles and revolutions. They do not fit into the petty, hypocritical world of 19th century Scotland. In this unheroic world his heroic qualities can only work towards his downfall. The thought constantly in one's mind as you read this novel is, 'If only he were a lesser man . . .' His inability to compromise by lowering himself to the same level as his fellow citizens, works to his disadvantage. Unable to plot, maneuver, and dissemble, his little empire is soon undermined by the arrival in town of Wilson, a glib self-seeking nobody with no real passion, but a much abler businessman in tune with the times. Affable and manipulative, false and corrupt he starts to squeeze Gourlay out of one thing after another. This is ,in effect, the triumph of style over substance that so bedevils our modern age. Although grim, proud and dour, Gourlay is an honest man, inept at chicanery, and unable to bend to suit the occasion.

The House With the Green Shutters is a tragedy in the full classical Greek sense of the word; the preordained fall of a hero who doesn't fit into an unheroic world; a great bull sacrificed to appease the Gods for human hubris. It is even more poignant from the fact that its keynote of tragedy was reflected in the life of its young author who had the misfortune to die only one year after writing such a masterpiece.

No Home for Heroes
What is tragedy and how does it work? These are questions you will understand better after reading this book. Set sometime in the second half of the 19th century, the story concerns the fortunes of the Gourlay family in the small Scottish town of Barbie. John Gourlay, a big, domineering, but intellectualy challenged man dominates the local economy and has a monopoly of the carrying trade. He is harsh and powerful, of bull-like stature, and famous for his glower. On a brae overlooking Barbie he has built the House wIth the Green Shutters. This house is both the symbol of his dominance and an object of hatred and envy to the townsfolk.

Aristotle defined tragedy as a story depicting the downfall of a great man. At first it is hard to see this stupid, cruel, and grasping merchant as a great man, but The House With the Green Shutters will also improve your notions of what greatness is. John Gourlay is great because there is no fear or compromise in him. Although he may wish to be well thought of by the small-minded, two-faced gossips of the town, he is not prepared to go one inch out of his way for them, scorning even the banal pleasantries of small talk or phatic communication. He wants only their respect not their love, and respect him they do even though they also hate him.

With all true tragedy the tragic element comes directly from the greatness. It is his greatness that destroys John Gourlay. His stubborn pride and unflinching courage are qualities more suited to some heroic age of battles and revolutions. They do not fit into the petty, hypocritical world of 19th century Scotland. In this unheroic world his heroic qualities can only work towards his downfall. The thought constantly in one's mind as you read this novel is, 'If only he were a lesser man . . .' His inability to compromise by lowering himself to the same level as his fellow citizens, works to his disadvantage. Unable to plot, maneuver, and dissemble, his little empire is soon undermined by the arrival in town of Wilson, a glib self-seeking nobody with no real passion, but a much abler businessman in tune with the times. Affable and manipulative, false and corrupt he starts to squeeze Gourlay out of one thing after another. This is ,in effect, the triumph of style over substance that so bedevils our modern age. Although grim, proud and dour, Gourlay is an honest man, inept at chicanery, and unable to bend to suit the occasion.

The House With the Green Shutters is a tragedy in the full classical Greek sense of the word; the preordained fall of a hero who doesn't fit into an unheroic world; a great bull sacrificed to appease the Gods for human hubris. It is even more poignant from the fact that its keynote of tragedy was reflected in the life of its young author who had the misfortune to die only one year after writing such a masterpiece.

Character studies of astounding realism.
In his story of the downfall of an arrogant and essentially stupid man, George Douglas Brown is relentlessly unsentimental. His portrait of life in a tiny Scottish town in the late 1800's leaves the reader with no illusions about the narrow-mindedness of the inhabitants. Bleak as their existence is, the novel is not depressing, but fascinating. While many readers will have trouble with the dialect of the speakers (the narration is standard English), the effort required to "translate" is well rewarded.


How Saved Are We?
Published in Paperback by Destiny Image (January, 1990)
Author: Michael L. Brown
Average review score:

Get Your Eyes Opened
For a small book this was one is awesome in clearly stating the current condition of the church or more specifically the Christian. Even though the book was written in 1990 it is more than applicable today. I just finished the book this morning. If you want to rise above the average Christian life and find out what we should be doing then this book is for you. If you don't want to be motivated, don't read it, if you don't want to really serve Christ don't buy the book. If you don't want to reach souls for Jesus then this book isn't for you. But the hour is late and there are so many unreached people. Buy the book you'll never be the same.

Think again
This book will make you think about the very essence of your christianity. The way you think about salvation and possibly how departmentalised you can become. It could even shake the very foundations of your beliefs.

We need to hear this!
There has been so much confusion on who a Christian should be, how we should act or what we should believe. Finally not another "make me feel good about myself" band-aid to put over a gaping cancer wound. We need the truth and not a theory of who we should be and I thank Dr. Brown for a reality check.


I Love You More Than...
Published in Hardcover by Family Connections Pub Co (15 December, 1998)
Authors: Elizabeth Hickey, James Cohen, Lynda Smart Brown, and Elizabeth Hickey/James Cohen
Average review score:

A charming book
Good for everyone who ever wanted to tell someone just how much they love them. Kind and loving, it's a sentiment that everyone should want to share with a loved one- child, sibling, parent, friend or whatever. There is no way you'll feel bad after reading this book..

This book is a treasure!
Elizabeth Hickey's nationally award winning video "Children: The Experts on Divorce" contains a scene where a little boy is asked, "So what do you think parents should say to their children when they're going through divorce?" The young man, without hesitation, replies, "They should just tell them that they love them." Armies of mental health practitioners, divorce lawyers and judges know from their experience the wisdom of that little boy's advice.

Elizabeth Hickey's new book, I Love You More Than . . ., offers a beautiful way to deliver this message of love and caring. The story is a conversation between a little girl and her father, part real and part imagined. The photographs, illustrations and text combine to create a moving and powerful message of love between a parent and child.

The book is cleverly constructed to be universally applicable since the family structure of the characters is ambiguous. While father speaks of his love for his daughter, the message is acknowledged "from Mommy, too." The story does not state whether the parents are together, separated, unmarried, married or divorced.

It was heart-warming to share this book with my eleven year old son, Mark. Here are Mark's comments:

The story I Love You More Than . . . walks you through a little girl's dream about how much her father loves her. The beautiful illustrations contribute to the story greatly by giving the reader a picture of the child's wonderful dream. I thought that the photographs were adorable. They reminded me of when I was a toddler and my parents read stories to me. I think that all children and adults will find this story inspiring and touching to the heart.

Unlike fairy tales, this story makes the child whose parents read them this book feel that their parents really love them. I am sure that all kids would enjoy having this book read to them as much as I did. This book is sure to be a classic bedtime favorite.

Mark's responses reflect those of other children and adults who have encountered this book. I Love You More Than . . . conjures warm memories of the best parts of the reader's relationship with his or her parents. These combine in such a positive and gentle way to melt the heart of all parents and help them share the warm glow of their parental love with their children. This book is a treasure. The world is a better place because it is available.

Will establish a wonderful love link between parent & child
This is a magical book that will take both parent and child on a lovely journey reminding them both of the love they have for each other. The illustrations are done in wonderful detail and will provide lots of opportunity for conversation and expectation during subsequent readings. It is sure to become a favorite with many, especially the Daddy/Daughter combination. I have sent copies to each of my young grandchildren and they all love it!


Idle Thoughts of an Idle Fellow
Published in Audio Cassette by Audio Book Contractors (January, 2001)
Authors: Jerome K. Jerome and Richard Brown
Average review score:

Old books are the best books
I found this book at a garage sale. They were only selling books, because the sellers father had passed away leaving them a huge library they didn't want. They had all sorts of books. I was scrounging around and came across a small old green book. I read a little and bought it. I've reread it a thousand times it is the most insightfully hilarious thing i have ever read. If you haven't read it your missing out.

Laughed out loud and forced my colleagues to read it.
I came across this first when it was being narrated on the BBC's Radio 4 and just *had* to find the text. Since the book's out of print, and thus difficult to find, note it's also available through Project Gutenberg, which publishes out-of-copyright books on the Internet.

Written in 1892, an up-to-date humorous look at life.
Jerome has the uncanny knack of looking at life in the l800's and unknowingly applying it to our life of today , a hundred years later. It is uproariouly funny, tearfully sad, but always true. His chapter on dogs and cats is enough to make you roll down the hall. Also not to be overlooked, his dedication in the front is to his friend, his PIPE. Oh, to be able to look forward to more of his writtings, but, alas, only three items were printed, it seems. A must in anyone's library for pure joy and insight.


Related Vacation Book Subjects: Wisconsin
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