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

Yeast Connection: A Medical Breakthrough
Published in Hardcover by Pelican Pub Co (August, 1987)
Author: William G. Crook
Average review score:

Very good reference to have
Overall easy to read and understand. Very reassuring to find information in one comprehensive source. Good companion to the nutritional recipies by the same author.

My Fatigue Explained
If you or someone you know suffers from fatigue, please buy this book. If you know of a child who is autistic or hyper or has learning problems, please buy this book for their parents. Dr. Crook's treatment program is a recommendation of a medicine from a doctor, along with watching what you eat, and other simple measures. Dr. Crook presented an excellent book, full of resources, actual patient scenarios, and changes to implement immediately. The book can be passed on to anyone's doctor easily because Dr. Crook explains that he himself is a doctor & states how he became involved treating yeast. He explains the symptoms of yeast overgrowth in the body, it's causes, and it's cures. The book gives so many cases of patients that it's easier to see how one patient's symptoms may differ from another's - but be related to your specific problem. I was diagnosed with Epstein-Barr virus and was told by my doctor that only my symptoms could be treated. Epstein-Barr is related to Chronic Fatigue Syndrome & I have strugged with tiredness for years. This book has so helped me. I bought it on a Friday & am buying it Monday to take to my doctor. I am a born-again Christian & this book is an answer to my prayer. Please buy it for anyone you know who has suffered with Chronic Fatigue.

This book changed my health.
Since buying this book I have figured out that I am not crazy. About 7 months ago I had a stomach flu and had all the symptoms of a kidney infection. Being that I am only 24 I listened to all of my peers and took some antibiotics that one of my friends had. Sadly, it was amoxicillen. Well, since my immune system was down it caused the yeast in my body to grow. This book taught me that. I went from being a healthy 24 year old to a miserable ball of nerves within two weeks. I thought the stomach flu was just lingering but, after about two months I figured it was something else. I was sick for atleast 4 hours everyday. To make a long story short, I soon found out after that, that my aunt has had Candita for eight years. She suggested I research Candita, and this was the book I stumbled apon. After reading the book I realized that the reason I was feeling so ill is because I was consuming so much citric acid. The reason for that was that the diet my doctor put m! ! e on was to bring my digestive system back up, it included apples, bananas and a slow integration into other fruits. About a week after I started the Fruit-free, Suger-free, Yeast-free diet. I felt 150% better. It has been about 6 months since I started that diet and can slowly work some foods I couldn't have before into my diet. I am not cured but, I can atleast function now. I am starting to feel like a 24 year old again.


Hannah's Vow
Published in Mass Market Paperback by Leisure Books (April, 2002)
Author: Pam Crooks
Average review score:

action-packed western romance
In 1895, hatred and vengeance are the only things keeping Quinn Landry alive after four years with a lifetime to go as a guest of the New Mexico Territorial Prison. Any time he drifts back to the betrayal that led to his current incarceration Quinn feels rage that has no outlet at this time, but his goal of a future escape and retaliation keeps him breathing.

Because of the numerous unaccounted for recent graves at the nearby prison, Father Donovan, Sister Evangeline and Novitiate Hannah Benning go there to learn what is going on. Quinn uses Hannah to escape his detention, but quickly realizes that the nun is no shrinking violet. Instead she is a brave daughter of a con artist. As Hannah saves Quinn's life, they fall in love. However, she relishes the serenity of the convent not a life on the lam while he has demons ripping at his heart. Anything permanent between this couple seems quite unlikely unless a miracle occurs.

At first glance, HANNAH'S VOW uses the trite theme of a "hardened" criminal kidnapping and falling in love with and receiving the love of a novitiate. Even Elvis used that gimmick in one of his movies. What makes Pam Crooks' tale fresh is the capable heroine rescues her abductor several times. Hannah makes the story line work with her strength and independence. Though Quinn over indulges in the angst moaning, fans will still see him as a perfect mate for Hannah who owns this
action-packed western romance.

Harriet Klausner

Captivating,western historical
Four years in a New Mexico prison, for a crime he didn't commit has left Quinn Landry a bitter man with revenge on his mind. So, when the opportunity to escape arises, he does so but takes Hannah Benning,hostage.
Hannah is a nun and no ordinary one at that.She was raised by her con artist father, and the only parental guidance she was given was on how to become a thief. When her father was hanged for his crimes, she joined a convent for a new life of serenity and safety.
Quinn is desperate to get back to Texas and clear his name, and he is taking Hannah with him. But, as they travel things began to unwind,the warden is not only chasing Quinn, he is chasing Hannah as well. To add to their problems they are kidnapped by mexican bandits.Left with little choice the two are becoming dependent on each other, and began to build a fragile relationship. Learning to trust each other has now become a necessity. They have decided to help one another, with the promise to part when Quinn's name is clear.
But as the time draws near, neither one can leave the other. Discovering that along with their truce they have fallen deeply in love.
This book is a true gem. Lots of action and adventure with two irresistible characters that you fall in love with from the first chapter. Pam Crooks is swiftly becoming a force to be reckoned with.


Nineteenth Century American Plays: Seven Plays Including the Black Crook
Published in Paperback by Applause Books (April, 2001)
Author: Myron Matlaw
Average review score:

A good approach
When I first found this book, I visited Amazon to look for reviews and recommendations. Finding none, I thought that I would offer my thoughts. I like O'Connor's approach. He does not wade through conflicting scholarly theories or get bogged down analyzing obscure English public records searching from traces of Shakespeare. He makes use of what we know from the spare records of Shakespeare's life; and he extrapolates from his own insights into the plays and his knowledge of the plays in their historical context. O'Connor also makes use of a varied and extensive bibliography.

O'Connor puts the plays and the life of Shakespeare in the context of their time, and Shakespeare emerges as an astute, talented, subtle, and versatile man in a vibrant and turbulent time. We see Shakespeare as a contemporary Elizabethan who had his finger on the pulse of society but who was smart enough to keep his fingers out of the pie. O'Connor shows how Shakespeare also used theater as an outlet to express personal struggles and discord. O'Connor's use of excerpts from the plays and sonnets illustrates this excellently.

One of the drawbacks of the book is that O'Connor's tone is of an insider not only of the theatrical world but also of Shakespeare's world. I got the sense that I am supposed to understand all of the obscure references and the oblique tongue-in-cheek quips. On a few occasions in the book when I got the reference, I could not tell if O'Connor was making a mistake or making a joke. He refers to a novelized interpretation of Shakespeare's love life by Anthony Burgess as "Brighter than the Sun," but the actual title is "Nothing Like the Sun." It was difficult to tell if O'Connor was in error or if he was poking fun at the brilliant, stylized, and occasionally pedantic writing of Burgess. O'Connor also suggests that in "King Lear," it was not Lear who confused his Fool with Cordelia at the end of the play ("And my poor fool is hanged"), but rather that the tired playwright mixed-up the two characters because they were played by the same actor.

Another drawback is the general style of writing. O'Connor's sentences are often very long and complex. I found myself rereading sentences more than twice in order to get his point. This drawback is minor and has much to do with the British style of punctuation, but it is also obvious.

O'Connor presents assumptions about Shakespeare's family relationships that I can accept, in particular the relationships with his mother, father, wife, and son. These assumptions are based on the scant historical records, commentary by writers and actors, and excerpts from the plays and sonnets. O'Connor also writes that despite the opinion that Shakespeare did not reveal his personal beliefs in his plays, we really can know Shakespeare through his writings. There are speeches and characters that exactly fit their places in the plays, and yet somehow they also transcend the context of the play and speak to us. Through these passages we know the personal musings of Shakespeare. Perhaps that is the most important thing of all, and that is a notion that definitely can be taken from O'Connor's book.

The Glories of 19th century melodrama
The late Myron Matlaw was one of the foremost historians of the American stage, with a particular predilection for those amazing, phenomenal successes which criss-crossed the country in touring productions, bringing crowds back season after season with the devotion of theatergoers who imagine that a visit to New YOrk is incomplete without Cats. The plays in this volume include many such smash hits of the 19th century: Anna Cora MOwatt's FASHION (1845), a satirical condemnation of American nouveaux riches eagerly aping continental savoir-fair; Dion Boucicoult's THE OCTOROON (1859), the tale of a forbidden love between a beautiful octoroon slave and the white man who adores her but cannot marry her; Joseph Jefferson's RIP VAN WINKLE (1865), a re-telling of the Washington Irving story which Irving would hardly have recognized, but a glorious vehicle for a character actor; the play made Jefferson famous and kept him rich, as his audiences returned year after year to see him slyly rationalize each drink he takes after he has sworn it off forever. "I won't count this one," he explains each time, unable to resist the familiar pleasure. This book is a treasure house of pleasures which were once as familiar to their audiences as Andrew Lloyd Webber is to us today.


The Raven's Bride (Southwest Life and Letters)
Published in Paperback by Southern Methodist Univ Pr (February, 1993)
Author: Elizabeth Crook
Average review score:

Good Historical Novel
This is a good novel about the relationship between Sam Houston and Eliza Allen, who Houston married in 1829. The marriage lasted only a few months, at which time Allen fled Houston to return home to her parents. Neither she nor Houston ever revealed the reason for their breakup, but it destroyed Houston's political career in Tennessee and eventually led to his going to Texas, where he became commander-in-chief of the Texas army when Texas won its independence from Mexico, first president of the Republic of Texas, and governor of Texas when it became a state.

There have been a number of theories advanced as to why Allen fled Houston, but since neither one revealed the reason and the historical record is slim, the event will be forever shrouded in mystery. Crook's novel suggests a very plausible theory, and grows out of an academic research article Crook published in the Southwestern Historical Quarterly, reprinted in its entirety as an appendix to the novel. To Crook, the reason was not a simple one, and it cannot be fully appreciated without reading her book. To anyone interested in the mystery of their relationship, or in the character of Sam Houston, this is a very good read.

A delightful, interesting view of Sam Houston.
A very good historical novel


Tracking Down Hidden Food Allergy
Published in Paperback by Professional Books (June, 1980)
Author: William G. Crook
Average review score:

Tracking Down Hidden Food Allergies
We ONLY use this book to teach the Elimination Diet for allergies to foods. It is easy to follow, with enough options so that it doesn't make meal planning boring.

The best of Dr. Crook's books
I use this book extensively when counselling my patients on
food allergies. This book is actually more useful than the more famous "Yeast connection" and has better references. practical, concise and entirely useful


Radio Drama: Theory and Practice
Published in Unknown Binding by Routledge (E) (September, 1999)
Author: Tim Crook
Average review score:

A seldom covered topic
I read some of this book online and later found it in our academic library. I have to say that it is clumsily written, and silly; at one point he says, "The explorers before me are few and far between, but no less eloquent." Well, one would have wished Mr. Crook were even somewhat eloquent. Although it is true that we who live (at least at the moment) in the West have little knowledge of Asian, African, and "MidEastern" radio drama and that African American radio drama is more familiar to city dwellers, Mr. Crook seems to have little or no knowledge of how this ignorance has persisted. Instead he goofily attributes it to "with the residual racism that Afro-Americans have had to contend with in their own history and the continued marginalisation of Asian and African literature, oral tradition and story telling culture in Western societies." One wishes he took the trouble to read Cornel West, bell hooks, and other important voices of conscience on the issue of African American culture. Mr. Crook's book suggests that priviledged white males who produce these "jargonless" studies like his own work on radio drama would do well to listen to what these other voices are saying. His book might have had some value, instead of reading like a college sophomore's light-weight bluster that suggests insincerity and bad faith.

Really Good Value New Look At Radio Drama
I found this book pretty cool because you get an angle on the academic things such as a look at media history through radio or sound plays which takes you right up into the World Wide Web world.

It is also the first book that has explained how to structure a play and juggle the writing of characters with sorting out a plot. I know there are other things around but this book explains it. Suddenly it all clicked.

There is a long section on improvisation in live radio and it kind of bravely suggests that hoaxers on the radio are live dramatists.

I found this book really good value because it does not insult the intelligence of the reader and also it is not full of that academic stuffy kind of writing which sends me to sleep.

Fully recommend it.

Best Book Published on Radio Drama
I am a PhD student and this book provides the most up to date and well written outline of studying and making radio drama that I can find anywhere in publications. Other books on radio drama are very old (about 20 years). Crook not only does an original media history on the subject which is quite the best scholarship on this subject available, he really inspires you to appreciate this wonderful form of story telling. You get an intellectual/academic theory on things like radio drama writing which is done in a clear style and then you are offered the nuts and bolts of the craft.

The text also modernises all the existing approaches to radio drama. The section on the role of improvised/live radio drama in phone-in programmes and hoaxes is brilliant and original. He also takes a well known BBC radio play 'Spoonface Steinberg' by Lee Hall which I happened to think was one of the best things I have heard in recent years. (It's also available on cassette via Amazon.com) In his writing Crook explains why artistically and from a producer/listener's point of view it was so good and merits attention. But then he subjects it to Cultural Studies analysis and raises the kind of questions which are going to enhance radio drama as an important cultural form of storytelling. This is really critical and thought-provoking.

You will not be disappointed reading this book if you are in to storytelling, radio, radio drama, writing etc.

I checked out the comments by reviewer 'Gwen- Yale University'. But none of the quotes she has in her review appear anywhere in the book.

They are taken from an on-line essay by Crook 'International Radio Drama.' Everybody's entitled to their point of view but I think it is good that mainstream scholars are now recognising African-American radio dramatists such as Richard Durham and centrally rooting their position.

In Radio Drama-Theory and Practice Crook adopts a McLuhanesque line on how audio drama has a future on the Internet and persists as a story-telling presence in commercial production on most radio formats.

There is also a very helpful bibliography which can take you to radio drama texts you may never knew existed.

I would also recommend a book on Radio Acting by Alan Beck which was published 3 years ago. In the past 'British Radio Drama' by Drakakis (Cambridge University Press 1981) is magnificent. Let's hope there are more good books on radio drama coming out.

So my conclusion is read or buy this book and you will not be disappointed.


The Crook Factory
Published in Hardcover by Avon (March, 1999)
Author: Dan Simmons
Average review score:

Great Mix of World War II Espionage and a Man Called Papa
When I found Dan Simmons' "The Crook Factory" a few months ago, I thought that the concept sounded intriguing but flawed. I never once believed that Simmons could pull off a solid historical fiction novel involving espionage and Ernest Hemingway. Not being a big reader of Hemingway I thought that getting through this 562-page novel was going to take a monumental effort. I was pleased with the style and easy Simmons used to put these two together. Simmons also shows great versatility in mixing the spy writing with delicate illustrations of the writer in 1940s Havana. I found the pages flying by as the Simmons laid out one of the most concise story I've read in sometime.

The novel starts with FBI agent Joe Lucas getting a new assignment from J. Edgar Hoover. The assignment is to go to Cuba and watch Ernest Hemingway and his thrown together group of counter-espionage "The Crook Factory". Lucas joins the group as an intelligence liaison for Hemingway and finds "The Crook Factory" is nothing but a bunch of local friends and athletes that Hemingway knows. Hemingway believes that there are German U-boats in the Caribbean and wants to destroy one of them. After some searching the factory starts receiving transmissions that indeed there are U-boats and their use is to land German spies. "The Crook Factory" and the Germans play little war games until slowly Simmons let you see all the underhand deals and double agent trickery that is truly being played out.

I really enjoyed this little jaunt into World War II espionage and the little peek into the life of Hemingway. Simmons paints a picture of Hemingway that is truly believable and convincing. By no means does he glorify the writer or embellish on his not so nice parts, which is the flaw of most historical fiction writers. The novel is a bit lengthy and the chapters that cover FBI files and history of all the characters may not be for everyone, however I find this only a minor flaw. A true gem for those who enjoy novels set in World War II.

Hemingway himself smile with pride...
[EXCEPT FOR THE FIVE STARS, IGNORE THE REVIEW AFTER THIS ONE -- THE READER WASN'T PAYING CLOSE ATTENTION!!] (From the Bloomsbury Review, Spring/Summer 1999): Dan Simmons has won critical acclaim and ardent readerships in a wide variety of genres: horror, science fiction, mainstream. He's picked up literary awards with the regularity of a champion outfielder shagging fungoes. Writing wise, there seems to be nothing he can't accomplish. So the publication of "The Crook Factory," an historical, literary thriller, is sure to win Simmons another batch of readers and award nominations. Joe Lucas, an amoral special agent in the FBI, finds himself assigned to a case that seems designed as punishment. FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover has tasked him with keeping tabs on an amateur spy network in Cuba. The network has been coined "The Crook Factory" by it's ringleader - none other than Ernest Hemingway. Completely unaware of Hemingway's stature and celebrity as a writer (he doesn't read "make believe" books), Lucas' perspective and growing awareness of Hemingway is offered through fresh, unspoiled eyes. Upon reaching Cuba, Lucas is thoroughly unprepared for what he finds. In Hemingway, he discovers a braggart who embellishes upon every life story. A writer who, despite an awareness of his own talent, constantly questions his own worth. And after joining up with Hemingway's eight-man spy network, Lucas discovers a spiderweb of machiavlleian schemes involving the intelligence agencies from three different countries that could affect the outcome of World War II. Worse, Lucas learns that Hemingway's "crook factory" has uncovered a vital piece of intelligence which puts all of them in mortal danger, and calls into question the loyalty of operatives in his own agency. Unsure of his own sources (or who might be behind American side of the conspiracy), Lucas partners with Hemingway in a perilous venture to get to the bottom of the mystery. Unlike most of his other novels (most notably, "Song of Kali," "Carrion Comfort," "Phases of Gravity," "The Hollow Man" and any of the books set in his "Hyperion/Endymion" universe), "The Crook Factory" is not filled with the usual subtexts and symbols which make reading Simmons' novels such a rich experience. But that doesn't mean this novel is empty of intellectual sustenance. On the contrary. It's full of musings upon abusive government and bureaucracy. And there are ruminations upon the act of creative writing - passages that do not seem out of place, given that Hemingway is a central figure. Here, the legend coaches Lucas on the fine points of his craft: "You can't just transcribe things from the outside in, that's photography. You have to do it the way Cezanne did, from inside yourself. That's art." The difference between this novel and most of Simmons others can be likened to Graham Greene's "serious" novels ("Brighton Rock," "The Quiet American") and his "entertainments" ("Our Man in Havana," "The Confidential Agent"). The precision of plot and writing is no less facile, with the difference lying only in the depth of the subject matter. And Simmons' attention to detail makes the WWII-era Cuba come alive for the reader. "The Crook Factory" is a remarkable blend of fact and fiction. As Simmons testifies in an afterword, ninety-five percent of the events are true, with cameos by Gary Cooper, Marlene Dietrich, Ian Fleming and a host of others. In the end, what resonates deepest are the characters: Joe Lucas, whose emotional and moral transformation is both subtle and believable; and, most especially, Ernest Hemingway. Capturing an historical persona within the confines of a novel is no easy task. But Simmons does an incredible job. Readers will come away from the tale feeling as if they actually lived alongside the great writer. "The Crook Factory" exemplifies the sort of fiction which Hemingway held in high esteem: writing which is "truer than true." Like a firehouse dog chasing a red truck, "The Crook Factory" moves at a fast clip. Part literary thriller, part homage to Papa, Simmons has written a novel that would make the Hemingway himself smile with pride. (From the Bloomsbury Review, May/June 1999).

This book is filled with crackerjack writing...
(from "The San Antonio Express-News," Feb '99) Writer sui generis Dan Simmons refuses to be pigeon-holed. His first novel ("Song of Kali," a psychological thriller) garnered a World Fantasy Award. Horror novels like "Carrion Comfort" and "Summer of Night" earned awards and admiration from peers like Stephen King and Dean Koontz. And his critically acclaimed, award winning quartet of SF ("Hyperion, "The Fall of Hyperion," "Endymion" and "The Rise of Endymion") are perennial bestsellers that have cemented his reputation in that genre. Not one to rest on his laurels, Simmons new novel, "The Crook Factory," explores an entirely different genre: literary espionage. Like those before it, this book is filled with crackerjack writing, a page-turning plot, and characters which will haunt the reader long after the book is finished. Joe Lucas, an amoral special agent in the FBI, finds himself assigned to a case that seems designed as punishment. FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover has tasked him with keeping tabs on an amateur spy network in Cuba. The network has been coined "The Crook Factory" by it's ringleader - none other than Ernest Hemingway. Completely unaware of Hemingway's stature and celebrity as a writer (he doesn't read "make believe" books), Lucas' perspective and growing awareness of Hemingway is offered through fresh, unspoiled eyes. Upon reaching Cuba, Lucas is thoroughly unprepared for what he finds. In Hemingway, he discovers a braggart who embellishes upon every life story, and a writer who, despite an awareness of his own talent, constantly questions his own worth. And after joining up with Hemingway's eight-man spy network, Lucas discovers a spiderweb of machiavlleian schemes involving the intelligence agencies from three different countries that could affect the outcome of World War II. Worse, Lucas learns that Hemingway's "crook factory" has uncovered a vital piece of intelligence which puts all of them in mortal danger, and calls into question the loyalty of operatives in his own agency. Unsure of his sources (or who might be behind the American side of the conspiracy), Lucas partners with Hemingway in a perilous venture to get to the bottom of the mystery. Gary Cooper, Marlene Dietrich, and a host of others make appearances in this story. What's more, as Simmons testifies in an afterword, ninety-five percent of the events are true. But in the end, what resonates deepest are the characters: Joe Lucas, who goes through a moral and emotional transformation; and, most especially, Ernest Hemingway. Capturing an historical persona within in the confines of a novel is no easy task. But Simmons does an incredible job. Readers will come away from this book feeling as if they actually lived alongside the great writer. Part spy novel, part history lesson, and part thriller, "The Crook Factory" is ample proof that the talents of Dan Simmons can't be constrained by any genre. (from "The San Antonio Express-News," Feb. 1999)


Yeast Connection Handbook
Published in Paperback by Professional Books (01 January, 1999)
Author: William G. Crook
Average review score:

An easy to follow handbook on treating yeast disorders
Dr. Crook's "The Yeast Connection Handbook" is an easy to read, self-help guide to understanding and treating the problem of yeast disorders. This book I found much more "user friendly" than the original version "the Yeast Connection" because of how it is layed out: content, font-type, chapters, etc.

Dr. Crook gives hundreds of references and case studies that can assist the patient when talking with their own physician. This was especially helpful for me and my husband when dealing with an HMO doctor that had little knowledge of the subject or its treatment.

This is a valuable book for ANYONE (man, woman and child) that has had various ailments or recurring infections and wants to get healthy!

Here's to understanding "the yeast connection" and a better life!

Yeast Connection Handbook
I have SEVERE Fibromyalgia and this book has given me a new life!! I have not felt this well in THIRTY YEARS!! Also one of the fabulous benefits of this way of eating is that, in the first two weeks of using this cookbook, and eating as it is suggessted .....I lost SIXTEEN pounds and am still loosing and I am never hungry, except when it is time to eat again!! I HIGHLY reccommend this book! How I wish Dr. Crook had written it thirty years ago!!!

Thank you, Dr. Crook!!!!

Cheri'

Best book for yeast overgrowth
This is the best of the approximately 6 books I have purchased on the subject. In fact, none of the others even touch this book. Crook is a man of science. He also will tell you what to do if you don't want to wade through why you should do what he says. For example, he has a comprehensive vitamin, mineral and supplement recommendation that includes over 20 items and he has the guts to say take them all and in what quantitites. He tells you what drugs to take. (Much better than the Mr. Natural approaches of other books that do'nt work.) I combined the diet, supplements, drugs, other actions and think I eradicated a lot of the problem. I also combined what Crook recommended with The Zone, by Barry Sears and lost 23 pounds pretty quickly. This book, however, is sounder and better researched than The Zone.


Too Many Crooks Spoil the Broth: A Pennsylvania Dutch Mystery With Recipes
Published in Hardcover by Doubleday (January, 1994)
Author: Tamar Myers
Average review score:

Promising debut for this series
Magdalena Yoder is the owner of the PennDutch Inn. She is a no-nonsense lady and cleverly includes in the options for the inn the Amish Lifestyle Plan where the guests clean their own rooms. This corresponds to the Amish culture and saves Magdalena a whole lot of work. Magdalena also cooks for her guests and Myers sprinkles recipes throughout her book. In her spare time, Magdalena tries to keep her more worldly sister Susannah on the straight and narrow, argues with her tempermental cook, Freni, and works on solving the murders of two of her guests. She is an interesting and amusing character and is not quite as "over the top" as Myers' heroine, Abigail Timberlake, in the Den of Antiquity series. This is an enjoyable introduction to the series with amusing characters, complicated enough plot and all the loose ends put together at the end.

Who Knew the Amish Were so Funny?
This is a wonderful book in a great series. I originally read this book when I was looking for new culinary mysteries. To my delight, I discovered that this was also a humorous mystery. I laughed aloud several times during the course of reading this book. The characters are all interesting, particularly the regulars, Magdalena, Susannah, Freni, etc. The author did a nice job describing the personalities of the guests and the ensuing friction between them. I found the homespun dialogue and descriptions to be enchanting and engaging. The storyline is fun and interesting, with a plot that allows you to figure out "whodunit" if you put some thought into it. The recipes included after each chapter is a pleasant plus. A thoroughly enjoying, cozy read that leaves you anxiously waiting for the next book in the series.

Mystery-lite
Magdalena Yoder has turned her family farmhouse into a famous Amish country inn. Booked well in advance, she has the privilege of selecting her customers. So she's a little surprised when she discovers she's booked a hunting party led by a well-known Senator and an anti-hunting, animal rights group for the same week, the opening week of hunting season. With the varying dietary requirements of the two groups, she has her hands full keeping the guests happy and fed while keeping her cook in the kitchen and her sister in line. And that's before the first body shows up!

As a mystery this book is a little slow. The first body doesn't show up for quite some time, and then it's the one guest we've forgotten about. Still, there is plenty of conflict to keep the reader going and I never felt the pace lagged. The guests are interesting characters, however the characters that are to be regulars seem like they could become annoying caricatures. Still, this is a fun, promising first novel and I plan to read more books by this author.


Off with Their Heads : Traitors, Crooks & Obstructionists in American Politics, Media & Business
Published in Hardcover by Regan Books (17 June, 2003)
Author: Dick Morris
Average review score:

I've had a hard time liking Morris...


I've had a hard time liking Dick Morris in the past, partly because he was a pal of Clinton and one of his most trusted advisors, and I view Clinton with utter contempt. How any honest man could talk himself into working with Clinton, I cannot understand. Now he is a commentator on the Fox network, which is the least partisan of all the networks.

In this book, however, Morris makes some specific points about the elite media--pointing out for example that the New York Times has been acting as a propaganda arm of the Democrat party, often to the detriment of the country in general, with superb documentation, and naming many Hollywood leftists:

"These icons of stage and screen,song and dance, are no longer content with making us tap our feet. They want us to change our minds. But they bring to their advocacy their old habits--they follow scripts. They are not intellectuals. They are actors, actresses, singers, and stars who are impersonating deep thinkers. The same skills they use to persuade us that their stage characters are really in love, or really locked in mortal combat, they now employ to try to convince us our country is going in the wrong direction. Their skills are formidable. But let's not forget the reality: These are human parrots, mouthing lines fed to them by the fashionable, social, trendy elite. Their information is as shallow as their conclusions are vacuous."

Lord, how long I've waited to hear someone express that truth out loud!

How could anyone take an airhead like Barbra Streisand or Sean Penn seriously about, say, foreign policy? But some do, simply because they play a good part on the screen which someone else has written, still another directed and yet another choreographed.

Morris takes on the media types that think it is their job to form public opinion, rather than report it, and governors who use the tobacco "settlement" for everything but its intended purpose, which is to discourage smoking (from which, incidentally, government makes more per pack than do the tobacco companies, in taxes) and the crooked corporate CEO's.

I am enjoying this book much more than I thought I would.

Joseph (Joe) Pierre, USN (Ret.)


author of Handguns and Freedom...their care and maintenance
and other books

A blistering denunciation of malfeasance
You have to hand it to Dick Morris. He's his own man - a veritable self-styled mercenary in American politics. Morris has singularly carved an unforgettable niche in the American political landscape with his uncommon wit and candor coupled with his undeniable political accumen and penchant for winning.

Always entertaining when on Hannity & Colmes, Morris candidly and expertly delineates, and subsequently roasts, the obstructionists, crooks, and traitors in politics, media, and business in Off With Their Heads. Morris astutely points out the unconscionable media bias of The Old Gray Lady in its liberally-weighted push polling, editorial, and front page articles. As Morris says, "All the news that fits, they print."

Morris spares no one from his wrath: including the Hollywood apologists, France("from great to ingrate"), Clinton, and many more. Having met Morris at a book signing for this book, I am pleased to note he is as personable in person as he is on TV. Off With Their Heads is well worth the effort to read for any true political enthusiast.

Rare insider insight
Unlike Hillary, who sees the Clinton years through rose-colored glasses thick as midnight, Morris's hindsight is a stark and clear. As a pollster himself, he debunks the way supposedly objective media giants bend the numbers to get the results they want.

After reading this book, you'll understand why the New York Times was literally in-credible long before Jayson Blair. You see how entire strings of polls were weighted in favor of the liberal agenda plus being weighted against the Republican administration. The Times taught Blair how to write fiction, for Pete's sake.

Morris stumbled his way out of the Clinton administration, falling on his face, getting up, and re-earning his reputation as an astute political observer. If you think this book is merely another conservative tirade in the vein of Ann Coulter, forget it. This guy shoots straight.

And when the smoke clears, you're going to be skeptic about anything you hear on the network news and the NYT.

This book is a grad course in how to read between the lines in the press to get at the truth.

Off with their heads, Morris. Off with their heads.

Now. When are you going to write the book that debunks Hillary?


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