2/19/2013

Star Wars Jedi Apprentice Series (18 Volumes) Review

Star Wars Jedi Apprentice Series (18 Volumes)
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My Son devoured this set of 20 books 1-18 and the 2 special editions I believe from what I have read that Adults and kids will enjoy reading this series. The storyline and situations aren't too complex, but the books give us a revealing insight into the training process of Jedi Knights. The point of view switches between Qui-Gon Jinn and Obi-Wan Kenobi; these books are really about BOTH knights and the things they teach each other on their journey. The next series Is Jedi Quest I believe.

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2/18/2013

Behind the Blue-Star Banner: A Memoir from the Home Front Review

Behind the Blue-Star Banner: A Memoir from the Home Front
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This book is beautifully written and tells what military wives go through when our husbands are deployed. Michelle is brave enough to tell about the things that we never allow ourselves to say, like the way that we really feel and not what we let everyone else see. This is a great book for any military wife, a friend of a military family, or anyone who would like to take a peek into this great life that we military wives have the privilege of living. You will not regret buying this book!! Great job Michelle!!!

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Michelle Cuthrell was 23 years old, nine months out of college and 11 weeks pregnant with her first child when her husband deployed to Iraq in August 2005. With a baby in her belly and a husband in her heart, this newlywed embarked on a crazy journey that led her through a year of tests and trials, heartbreak and hard times, as she lived alone in the freezes and frosts of Fairbanks, Alaska. There, Michelle endured the pregnancy and rearing of the couple's first and only child as her husband, Matt, served with the 172nd Stryker brigade in Mosul, Iraq. But when the Department of Defense extended Matt's unit for four additional months in country, just 10 days shy of his much-anticipated homecoming after a year at war, Michelle temporarily fell apart. It was in those difficult days that she learned the real value of friendship, faith and unfailing love.

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Star Wars Episode 1: The Phantom Menace: Anakin to the Rescue (Step into Reading, Step 2) Review

Star Wars Episode 1: The Phantom Menace: Anakin to the Rescue (Step into Reading, Step 2)
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I am a teacher. I work with children who have learning disabilities. Most of the children I work with have, what the public would call, dystexia. It is very hard to find books with large print that reflect the age group I work with. Fourth and Fifth graders don't like reading books about children much younger than themselves. Most of the books with large pint have stories about seven year old children, or even younger, this discourages and bores the older child. Today, one of my nine year boys read this book with very lettle help, but most important he really liked it and laughed in all the right places. If you have a child who hates to read,( many times this can point out some sort of problem,) try them on an age appropriate large print book. This set is published by Random House and is a great place to start.

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In this colorful fully-illustrated beginner reader, Anakin is supposed to wait for Qui-Gon outside the Jedi Temple. But Anakin hates waiting! And when he and Jar Jar find a lost little boy, Anakin knows he must help him. He wants to be brave and good, just like a Jedi Knight!

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2/17/2013

Rogue Star (Warhammer 40,000) Review

Rogue Star (Warhammer 40,000)
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Andy Hoare dabbles on both sides of Games Workshop's product lines: game development for the Warhammer 40,000 (W40K) tabletop miniatures game, and in the Black Library fiction upon which it's based. He's done numerous short pieces, and this is his second novel, though clearly the first of a series. This work is more of a lengthy prolog to the series than a stand-alone book. The main characters include: Lucian Gerrit, the brash and insensitive dynastic father; Korvane, the bookish obedient son; and Brielle, the rebellious intuitive daughter.
The book abruptly, some might say inelegantly, thrusts the characters into their assigned roles. You know the personalities of the main characters before finishing the first chapter, and they don't deviate from those patterns for the rest of the work, even when there's clear evidence that to do so would be in their best interest. They form what is clearly the most dysfunctional family in the Imperium. The father blusters, issuing orders without any explanation, and even revels in the concept that his children won't understand his commands. The son, the heir apparent of the dynasty, is blindly obedient to his father and sullenly hostile towards his sister. The daughter is overtly rebellious and completely without consideration for anyone beside herself.
Action scenes provide welcome respite from the Gerrit family affairs, and both the personal- and starship-level conflicts are well written and agreeably paced. However, M. Hoare seems to have based much of his starship terminology from the age of sail, slightly at odds with previous 40K material. The helmsman turns the wheel to steer; Lucian is constantly referring to the drives as "the mains." Any reader of either Horatio Hornblower or Jack Aubrey novels will begin to wonder if they're in the 40K universe or somewhere else.
The plot flows loosely from event to event without building much of a climax, which given the book's purpose as a lengthy prolog to latter works might be forgiven. The "resolution" at the end only serves to prepare the reader for the next installment: Star of Damocles. However, if you're looking for a satisfying, stand-alone story without having to read the rest of the series when it comes out, you might want to look elsewhere.
In short: somewhat clumsy in execution, it does have redeeming features. 40K completists will want to own a copy, but others might wait to see if the rest of the series proves any better than the prolog.

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Rogue Trader Lucian Gerrit learns the true meaning of profit and loss! Andy Hoare presents an epic adventure in his debut novel for the Black Library. Lucian Gerrit is a rogue trader - a starship captain granted ancient trading rights along the Eastern Fringe of Imperial space. But his family's fortunes have been steadily declining for many generations and his inheritance amounts to little more than a pile of debt and misery. In a final desperate gamble to restore his family's former glory, Gerrit strikes a deal on a forgotten Imperial world to aid its commander in a long-standing war with his rival. As Gerrit commits his family's assets to the escalating conflict, he may lose more than his livelihood!

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Star Wars The Saga 2011 Oversized Wall Calendar Review

Star Wars The Saga 2011 Oversized Wall Calendar
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What more can you ask for?
Star Wars theatrical posters on a 16 month calendar.
What's not to like except maybe the size?
If you wanted the larger 14" x 18" size from the 2006 series, inflation has cut down the size to a modest 11" x 17" - which is perfect for me since I am out of wall space.

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Spiral-bound 16-month oversized calendars feature 13 exclusive posters. Perforated edges make them easy to remove. Boost your collection of Star Wars memorabilia with this oversized calendar, featuring artful posters from all six films. The posters are perforated, so it s easy to remove them and show off your favorite episode.

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2/16/2013

Star Wars Purge #1 One Shot (Star Wars Purge: Last Stand of the Jedi) Review

Star Wars Purge #1 One Shot (Star Wars Purge: Last Stand of the Jedi)
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I highly recommend this book for ANY fan of Star Wars... it fills in some details about the 'hunting down' of the survivors of Order 66 that was hinted at by Obi Wan Kenobi as he spoke to Luke in A New Hope. Also, it reveals how the legend of Vader grew during the 'dark times' of the Empire between Episodes III & IV.

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Quest For A Star: Letters Diaries Colonel Francis T. Sherman (Voices of the Civil War Series,) Review

Quest For A Star: Letters Diaries Colonel Francis T. Sherman (Voices of the Civil War Series,)
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Quest For A Star is a collection of the Civil War letters and diary entries of Colonel Francis T. Sherman of the 88th Illinois, ably edited and with commentary by Knight Aldrich, Sherman's great-grandson. Thanks to his father's political influence, Sherman won an officers commission and commanded a brigade for much of his early service. He saw action at Perryville, Stones River, Missionary Ridge, and other battlefields. He was captured near Atlanta and endured three months in a Confederate prison before being released in a prisoner exchange. During the last months of the war, he served with General Philip Sheridan in the Appomattox campaign. His letters to his father and his diary entries reveal vivid descriptions of wartime experiences, insights into the volatile politics of the times, criticism of the incompetence of superior officers (especially General Don Carlos Buell), and more. Aldrich's commentaries give Sherman's observations an historical perspective, and draws upon his years as a professor of psychiatry and family medicine to offer fascinating speculation about inner conflicts that may have served to fuel Sherman's ambitions and political beliefs. Quest For A Star is an invaluable and much appreciated contribution to the growing body of Civil War era biographical literature.

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