9/04/2012

HAN SOLO'S RESCUE (Star Wars) Review

HAN SOLO'S RESCUE (Star Wars)
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Very cute pop up book for the little ones, perfect for the tikes to feel involved in the Star Wars excitement!

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Luke Skywalker and his friends fight to free Han Solo from the clutches of the loathsome Jabba the Hutt, as depicted in text and pop-up pictures.

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9/03/2012

Star Wars Instrumental Solos for Strings (Movies I-VI): Violin (Book & CD) (Pop Instrumental Solo Series) Review

Star Wars Instrumental Solos for Strings (Movies I-VI): Violin (Book and CD) (Pop Instrumental Solo Series)
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Excelente producto, vienen los solos de violin y viene incluido las mismas canciones con solo de violin y acompañamiento de piano, el CD solo trae la musica, nada de tutorial o lecciones.Excellent product, are violin solos and is included the same songs with solo violin and piano accompaniment, the CD only brings the music, no tutorial or lessons.

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For the first time, Star Wars(R) A Musical Journey (Music from Episodes I-VI): Instrumental Solos includes selections from all six Star Wars(R) movies arranged for Flute, Clarinet, Alto Sax, Tenor Sax, Trumpet, Horn in F, Trombone, Piano Accompaniment, Violin, Viola and Cello. The arrangements are completely compatible with each other and can be played together or as solos. Due to level considerations regarding keys and instrument ranges, the wind instrument arrangements are not compatible with the string instrument arrangements in this series. Each book contains a carefully edited part that is appropriate for the Level 2û3 player and a fully orchestrated accompaniment CD. Each song on the CD includes a demo track, which features a live instrumental performance, followed by the play-along track itself. Also included is 4-color art as well as black and white art from the movies. Titles:Episodes I û VI1.Star Wars (Main Theme) Episode I: The Phantom Menace2.Jar Jar's Introduction3.Augie's Great Municipal Band4.Qui-Gon's Funeral5.Duel of the Fates6.Anakin's Theme7.The Flag ParadeEpisode II: Attack of the Clones8.Across the Stars9.The Arena10. The Meadow PicnicEpisode III:Revenge of the Sith11. Battle of the HeroesEpisode IV: A New Hope12. Cantina Band13. The Throne RoomEpisode V: The Empire Strikes Back14. The Imperial March15. May the Force be With YouEpisode VI: Return of the Jedi16. Princess Leia's Theme

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Star Wars, Episode I What's What: A Pocket Guide to The Phantom Menance Review

Star Wars, Episode I What's What: A Pocket Guide to The Phantom Menance
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Myself and other probably liked this book Because it contains information for even the smallest things like a Shaak,Eopie,Peko Peko,or a Fambaa. With the places like the Theed Royal Palace on Naboo to Watto's Kunk Shop on Tatooine. And who can forget the two lovable Protocol and beeping Astromech Droids R2-D2 and C-3PO droid types are in here even though its a finishied one but it's still as lovable. All in all I give it a five star rating!

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In this perfect, pocket-sized companion to the new "Star Wars" movie, readers find out all they want to know about the organizations, places, vehicles, creatures, droids, and weapons featured in the film. Full-color photos.

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9/02/2012

Star Wars, Episode I Who's Who: A Pocket Guide to the Characters of The Phantom Menace Review

Star Wars, Episode I Who's Who: A Pocket Guide to the Characters of The Phantom Menace
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"STAR WARS Episode I Who's Who" is perfect as a quick guide to the characters in "The Phantom Menace" but doesn't give a lot of in-depth information on most the Key characters like, Qui-Gon Jinn or Queen Amidala. The book mostly repeats what we already can figure out by watching the movie. At least it has good clear pictures of the characters we hardly get to see like, Yaddle (the same species as Yoda).

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More than 50 characters, from Obi-Wan Kenobi to Senator Palpatine, are profiled in full-color photos.

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Star Wars: A Droid's Tale Soundstory Review

Star Wars: A Droid's Tale Soundstory
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We originally bought this book for our little boy at Toys R Us and he loved it so much that he broke the spine of the book. The soundstory feature makes this a great way to get a very young child more interested in books in general and that takes him/her one step closer to reading. My boy especially likes the page with the cantina band where he can press the buttons and make the different instruments play. If you have a toddler tearing about your house I give this my highest recomendation!

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9/01/2012

Star Wars in the Pacific Review

Star Wars in the Pacific
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Although this is a fictional account, it does capture the flavor of the bad old days of the Cold War and the relationship between the local Marshallese and the Americans who inhabit the atoll. Certain locations in Kwajalein Island (where I currently live and work) described in the book have since closed or have been torn down and replaced with more modern buildings.

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This book is a fictionalized account of Life on Kwajalein with a heroine American girl whose grandmother was still in Vladivostok and who had been enticed to spy for the Russians with the promise of a better life for her grandmother. She was an attractive girl and had a number of suitors. Most of the account centers around the time when a black box from an incoming missile which had splashed down in the lagoon went missing. Oh, the splash in had been observed and triangulated and the dive teams went out. But, a storm came in and the divers had to leave the area. After the storm passed, the divers tried to find the black box to no avail. The Navy Seals were called in and they searched and searched and found nothing too. Maybe there was truth to the belief that the Russians had sneaked in from their ship constantly patrolling around the island while the storm was on going and their divers had found and retrieved the black box. The major news crews came and tried to elicit information for news accounts but even they couldn't get the people on the island to talk. What was the truth? Read and learn more. And, don't forget about the beach used by the Marshallese couples for private sexual encounters always vigilant for the coconut crabs.Fireworks and marriage at the end. The test of one missile shooting down another in the stratosphere and the two imploding actually worked. And, the heroine married the young Lt. He had won out over the other suitors.

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The Eugenics Wars Vol I: The Rise and Fall of Khan Noonien Singh (Star Trek) Review

The Eugenics Wars Vol I:  The Rise and Fall of Khan Noonien Singh (Star Trek)
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Greg Cox's delightful 'The Eugenics Wars' explains why Earth history as detailed on Star Trek seems different from Earth history as we lived through it from the late 1960s to the end of the last millennium. It's not because the Trek writers guessed wrong, but because most of us have no idea of the influence Gary Seven and his colleagues exerted on global affairs. This hilarious rewriting of current events, which covers most of the period from Watergate to the Reagan-Gorbachev summit in Reykjavik, follows the secret agent from 'Assignment: Earth,' his associate Roberta Lincoln and his mysterious feline Isis as they try to protect humanity from its own self-destructive impulses.
In this case, the efforts of Seven, Lincoln and Isis center on a genetic engineering project called Chrysalis, which will ultimately produce Khan Noonien Singh's crew from 'Space Seed' (and later 'The Wrath of Khan'). However, one doesn't need to have seen the episode or the film to enjoy this novel -- in fact, one doesn't even really need to be a Star Trek fan, though numerous references to the series and its characters keep regular viewers entertained. There's enough mystery, intrigue and humor to make this book successful with any reader who enjoys stylized spy novel drama.
The Eugenics Wars begins with a framing story in which Kirk and his crew must negotiate with a colony that practices genetic engineering on humans. This volatile situation inspires the captain to do some research into historical records for the late 20th century, when a group of genetically engineered super-humans attempted a global coup and were secretly launched into space when their efforts failed. The real story opens with Roberta Lincoln in the shadow of the Berlin Wall, wishing she could be more like Emma Peel as she attempts to elude East German psychopaths during a Cold War raid on the Russian Embassy. Her boss, Gary Seven, has recently discovered evidence of a massive genetic engineering project that has recruited the best scientists of a generation, and although Roberta resents his extraterrestrial superiors' meddling in human affairs, she understands enough about the potential hazards to help infiltrate Project Chrysalis.
Chrysalis' attempts to improve the human genome take place in a secret complex beneath India's Great Thar Desert, under the guidance of a brilliant scientist named Sarina Kaur. Unfortunately, Kaur has a megalomaniacal streak to go along with her belief in aristocratic government; as she works to breed a better sort of human, she also tries to develop a flesh-eating streptococcus bacterium to wipe out the billions of lesser men and women cluttering the planet. By tracking the specialized equipment sought by Chrysalis, Gary Seven has developed a pretty good sense of Kaur's plans for world domination. While he follows the lab equipment to its hidden destination, Roberta and Isis infiltrate Chrysalis by posing as a progressive geneticist and her pet cat. Soon they all realize the extent of the threat posed by Chrysalis and its offspring, but Kaur's ruthless ambitions for her son "Noon" and the other selectively bred wunderkind won't easily be deterred, not even by an alien-reared human and a woman who can turn into a cat.
Against this backdrop, the better-known history of last 30 years plays out as expected. In addition to his knowledge of Romulan and Borg genetic experiments, Seven uses dividends from investments into Kodak and cell phone technology to assist his research. Roberta reads Jonathan Livingston Seagull to ward off boredom and compares the Chrysalis cover-up to Watergate. As events unfold, she does some female bonding with marine biologist Gillian Taylor before the latter vanishes into the future along with a pair of whales. Roberta also meets Kathryn Janeway's ancestor Shannon O'Donnell during the engineer's tenure at Area 51, but the circumstances aren't the best, for Roberta has come to retrieve the equipment left behind by Chekov in Alameda.
Numerous Trek characters receive mention alongside Sally Ride, Louise Brown, Michael Crichton and dozens of other familiar names from real life. Young Khan's life is shaped by familiar history as well; anti-Sikh prejudice in Delhi and the disastrous chemical spill in Bhopal have a far greater impact on him than his encounters with a human raised by extraterrestrials. Gary Seven tries to recruit the exceptional young man, but remains concerned that in addition to great strength and intellect, Sarina Kaur endowed her son with unnatural ambition and a lack of empathy for "lesser" humans. This dilemma resonates for Captain Kirk as he studies it in the future, trying to decide whether it's worth admitting to the Federation a group of genetically eningeered humans who might otherwise throw in their lot with the Klingons.
Cox writes with great wit and an obvious love of Trek lore, though his greatest accomplishment lies in the way he links together seemingly unconnected 20th century events into a complex conspiracy that makes The X-Files seem unsophisticated. The novel is full of delightful details -- Kaur referring to Gary Seven as 007, Roberta drawing comparisons between the geeks at genetics conferences and science fiction conventions, Isis interfering with a Reagan-Gorbachev photo op, Khan using a chakram to defend himself (the latter being both in character for a Sikh and a clever homage to Xena, Warrior Princess). Cox's historical notes in the afterword set the record straight, offering tidbits about secret tunnels under the Kremlin and secret missions of NASA space shuttles.
At 404 pages, 'The Eugenics Wars, Volume One' makes for a long and satisfying read, though it breaks at an awkward point in the framing story just after Khan has become an adult. I imagine that most of the criticism of this novel will focus on the fact that it costs $25 but leaves the reader hanging in anticipation of the next expensive installment. Still, it's worth it. The larger book format (think 'Pathways') contains more content than most Trek hardcovers, and this is a book worth reading more than once.

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