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Book reviews for "Gerard-Libois,_Jules_C." sorted by average review score:

Cooking with Herb, the Vegetarian Dragon: A Cookbook for Kids
Published in Paperback by Barefoot Books (24 October, 1999)
Authors: Jules Bass and Debbie Harter
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an entertaining book
Herb, the Vegetarian Dragon, has published a book of recipes for children! Cooking With Herb the Vegetarian Dragon: A Cookbook for Kids is an entertaining book containing 22 recipes that
children can make – with the help or supervision of grown-ups. This book is a nice companion to Herb, The Vegetarian Dragon.

In this book Herb serves up various, nutritious dishes including "Grand-Ma-Ma-Flora's Spaghetti Sandwich," "Herb's Chili Con 'No' Carne," "Herb's 'Those Amazing Potatoes,'" "The King's Favorite Veggie-Burger," "Herb's Radical Dragon-Salsa," "Chocolate Banana Walnut Bread" and "Herb's Simple Strawberry Slush."

Each recipe contains easy-to-follow directions and tips as well as a fun introduction about the recipe. Some safety rules are also included at the beginning of the book. While the recipes contained in this book are for vegetarians, several of the recipes contain no ingredients from animals and many other recipes could be easily modified for a vegan diet. –Reviewed by Glenn Perrett
(...)

A Wonderful book series!
Jules Bass and Debbie Harter have executed a wonderful couple of books on HERB, THE VEGETARIAN DRAGON. Let's hope these are the first of many. Have always enjoyed and admired the work of Jules Bass and am enjoying the art of Ms. Harter. My hats off to both of you! GREAT book to give for the holidays!

Cooking With Herb: The Vegetarian Dragon
My daughter (who was 5 at the time) and I saw Herb on TV Food Network about a year or so ago and she loved him. She insisted on me getting the cookbook for her (a 5 year old wanting to cook - how cool is that?). The cookbook is fun, colorful, educational, and best of all easy to understand for kids and the recipes are fantastic! She insists on cooking the recipes with me all the time - the only way I can get her to eat anything! And when it comes from Herb's cookbook, it's a guaranteed hit with her!


The Adventures of Jules & Gertie
Published in School & Library Binding by Harcourt (1999)
Author: Esther Pearl Watson
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a truly wonderful book that'll have you hootin!
One of the best childrens books ever!. original and so much fun to read out loud. makes me want to learn to yodel, square dance and drink saspirilla.

my coco loves this book!!!!
this book is a pleasure to read out loud...the art work is beautiful. Finally, a cleverly written adventure with a girl leading the action.

I love reading this story to my children!
Ms. Watson's story set in the old west with dashing heroine is sure to delight the little ones in your household. Reading this story to my children reminds me of the Saturday afternoon TV westerns of my childhood. I find this story most amusing when read with the inflection of the late, great Slim Pickens. This is a FUN book!


A Barrel of Laughs, A Vale of Tears
Published in Paperback by Harpercollins Juvenile Books (1998)
Author: Jules Feiffer
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A Fabulous and Quirky (Is that a word?) Quest
I can't tell you how many times I've read this book. When I first started reading it, I was disapointed because it seemed like a total toddler's book. But the more I read, the more absorbed I became. So many things happen so quickly that you want to keep reading just to find out what's coming next. Jules Feiffer doesn't write like other writers; he plays around with his work, and you can tell he was having a good time writing this book. And although the book is very fun and light reading, I think there are also some hidden meanings and life lessons to be learned from it. I plan to read this book many times more. I also think this book would appeal to the "Phantom Tollbooth" audience, and vice versa.

The Funniest Book I Have Ever Read!
A Barrel of Laughs, A Vale of Tears is a story about a prince named Roger who is makes everybody laugh no matter what he does. He is sent on a magical quest in which he goes through The Forever Forest, The Dastardly Divide, The Sea of Screams, and The Mountain of Malice. In the end, he ends up with a beautiful maiden. This book is not meant to be serious. It is meant to be comical and it succeeds. Jules Feiffer has written a comedy masterpiece. I recommend it to anyone ages 10 or up who is looking for a humorous book.

hilarious, yet poignant
My son and I read this book together and couldn't help laughing at poor Roger and his "quest"! We loved this book and the illustrations!


Code Pink, a Sentinel Event
Published in Paperback by Denlinger's Publishers, Ltd. (01 July, 2001)
Author: Jules M. Seletz
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Code Pink
Code Pink held my interest from the first page. The character Jacob Stein was very believable and a great hero. The exciting sequence of events that transpires makes for a gripping plot that made it very hard to put the book down! I also found it educational in that the book included much information regarding the inner workings of an acute care facility and what happens during an investigation. The relationship that developed between Jake and the boy was very endearing and added greatly to this excellent book!

Review of Code Pink
I enjoyed the book alot. I especially loved the rapport that Dr. Jake Stein was able to develop with the boy, Charlie Williams. Author Seletz shows a great insight into adolescent behavior.
This was an action packed mystery-a medical thriller. It was interesting to find out who was in charge of all the "nasties".
This was the second book I've read in the Sentinal Event series. Jake is becoming an old friend. And his wife Rhoda gets involved in this one as well. I liked this one even more than the first.

Another Winner!
Jake Stein returns in another fine book by Jules Seletz. The author continues to develop recurring characters, and has included some very interesting and unexpected twists. It was interesting to see his development of the teenaged hero. This one was "wicked awesome"... keep 'em coming! ***Recommended***


Some Things Are Scary
Published in Hardcover by Random House Value Publishing (2000)
Authors: Florence Parry Heide and Jules Feiffer
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A good way to talk about it!
All kinds of scariness - some make you silly with relief & some will linger through your life like that scar on your chin when you fell down that day.

Seeing your parents angry, being scolded can be scary! People laughing at you & you don't know why - ah, I've known that one!

A good book to raise the subject of scary things, probably not one to read just before bed, however! Perhaps after a particularly trying day at school. Or just before Halloween! Or when something scary happens in your family's life.

Scary is Beautiful
Florence Parry Heide is one of the great children's authors. And teamed with Jules Feiffer, she's even better. This book is heartwarming and funny at once, and full of familiar surprises. For adults, it will bring back childhood memories of scary moments that are now just tender memories. Children will relate to their current childhood fears and will learn something in the process. For all, it's a sharing in the human condition of being a kid and the explorations of a kid's new world.

Some Things Bring Back Great Memories
Aaagh, this is not a new book. I read this when I was 6 years old! It was one of my absolute favorites. I've been keeping an eye out for it for my children. One "scary" thing that I remember most from this book is holding an adult's hand on the escalator, only to realize it is a stranger. That illustration has set in my mind for 30 years. What is especially funny, now, is that little children do that. They will hold my hand or grab my shirt, thinking I am their parent, only to look up at me with terror when they realize I'm the wrong "mommy". Gotta get it for yourself as well as the children.


5 Novels: Alan Mendelsohn the Boy from Mars, Slaves of Spiegel, the Snarkout Boys and the Avocado of Death, the Last Guru, Young Adult Novel
Published in Paperback by Farrar Straus & Giroux (Juv) (1997)
Authors: Daniel Manus Pinkwater and Jules Feiffer
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Unique
I was going to write that Pinkwater is not your normal young adult author and then I got to thinking--what is your normal young adult author? Lewis Carroll had his thing for photographing young girls, C.S. Lewis was a bit of a hermit, Roald Dahl played with perversity (if you think his children fiction are dark, try some of his adult stuff, which I couldn't finish). The women might be sane, for I've never heard a nasty story about Madeline L'Engle, Diana Wynne Jones, or E. Nesbit (well, she was a bit of a socialist radical). It does not matter. Pinkwater is akin to all of these in that no one else could quite copy the things that he writes.

This is a collection of Pinkwater novels that have been out of print for years (the original copyrights on these range from 1978 to 1982), but not out of mind. Alan Mendelsohn, in particular, seems to be well-loved and is often mentioned as a favorite of the younger set. I'm glad to finally have this opportunity to read it, for it is indeed a fun book, full of exceedingly strange twists and turns. You aren't sure if Alan is from Mars, or if he's just playing, and then you are sure, and then you aren't. It's Philip K. Dick lite, but it's fun.

Slaves of Spiegel and The Last Guru are much more simple (I would even think that they are meant for less mature readers than for the other three in this book), but like the best children's literature, they have something for everyone. I chuckled through Slaves of Spiegel, finding the contest quite amusing, especially the description of some of the delicacies concocted in the name of food, and I thought the satire, while obvious, in The Last Guru quite effective.

The Snarkout Boys resembles Alan Mendelsohn in its convoluted plot, but it seems much more grounded in reality, if a particularly eccentric reality, at least until the last quarter of the book. Its depiction of high school is stiletto sharp, but nothing as cutting as in Young Adult Novel. All the books have a jaundiced view of school, noting the common problems of cliques, moribund teachers, and the energy of youth (yes, that last is a problem--hey, you didn't think, as a teacher, that I would side totally for the kids, did you?). All of these novels were fun, and I would recommend them to your local dissident youth.

The warped genius of kids' fiction
Whenever I go to a bookstore with a new friend, I check out the Daniel Pinkwater section. The ones who turn out to be the best friends inevitably remember _some_ Pinkwater book from their childhood--Lizard Music or Fat Men From Space or The Magic Moscow--but the best and most resonant are Alan Mendelsohn, The Boy From Mars and The Snarkout Boys And The Avocado Of Death, and they're both included here. The former is about the best teenage-friendship book ever written, the latter drives a stake through the heart of the teenage-detective genre, and this anthology also includes the ridiculously brilliant Young Adult Novel. I want my kids to have this book. More to the point, I want my kids to think they're not supposed to be reading this book, but to read it anyway.

Ingenious, Quirky, brilliant and overall EXTREMELY HUMOROUS
This book was "very grand indeed." That quote was a review of another book that alot of other people liked but I didn't. Anyway, I should be focusing on the content of this book. I thought it very nice of Mr. Pinkwater to put 5 novels in one book. It made it so much easier. I never finished Alan Mendalson or the Last Guru, but I read all the other ones. I can't decide if I like "Slaves of Spiegal" or "Young Adult Novel" the best. I thought his ideas in all of those stories extremly and startilingly original. I went on a car trip with my parents and I discussed "Slaves of Spiegal" with them. I recall all of us laughing so hard we cried. I'd have to say that "Young Adult Novel" was my personal favorite. I was sort of suprised in the first chapter when it had all that smaltzy stuff about "Kevin Shipirio, Boy Orphan, but I was extremly confused when I read the beggining of the second chapter and it said "This is Charles the Cat speaking." I soon worked out the cofusin , though, and I fell in love with this unforgettable novel. MY favorite parts include when the Dada Ducks put a toilet in the display case at school, when they first see Kevin Shipario and swoon over him,all the grapenuts stuff, and at the end when President of Mexico says "It is a Dada Story, it has no Moral."


The Mysterious Island
Published in Paperback by Troll Assoc (1997)
Author: Jules Verne
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A Textbook on How to Start A Civilization from Scratch!
A very difficult yet satisfying book to read, this build slowly from utter bleakness to an enthralling sense of wonder. Having seen the 1961 movie, I was astonished at how LITTLE of the book actually made it to the screen-- and there were NO monsters here! Ironically, the trained orangutan-butler that would have been at home in a Disney film was one of the things left out of the film version. Having been surprised that the book 20,000 LEAGUES actually left Captain Nemo's background a total mystery right to the end, Verne finally reveals his true identity here-- and one can tell nobody in Hollywood's been reading this book. While it basically stands on its own, Verne's MYSTERIOUS ISLAND is actually a sequel to 2 previous books: 20,000 LEAGUES UNDER THE SEA, and the more obscure CAPTAIN GRANT'S CHILDREN, the latter of which I believe served as the inspiration for the Disney film IN SEARCH OF THE CASTAWAYS! With Verne's interest in minute detail, I came away feeling this book could serve as not only a rousing adventure story, but as a wonderful manual for anyone wanting to start a new civilization completely from scratch.

Remember MacGyver?
How he used to make an engine run with duct tape and a shoe string, or make a bomb from bleach and a rusty nail?

He kept coming to mind as I was reading this incredible book, as the characters, stranded on an island with absolutely nothing, accomplished such amazing feats as draining a lake, making a home, building a ship, making an elevator, and a great many other things. There is excitement, suspense (what IS going on on this mysterious island??), and wonderful, likeable characters. Not a real well-known Verne book, but fortunately still in print, and one of his best and most entertaining.

(Incidentally, if you want a children's version of the same story, try to find "A Long Vacation" by Jules Verne, which is extremely similar in plot, but with younger characters and for a younger audience - very charming!)

By the way, please do read 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea first, if you have not already done so. Evidently, Verne assumed that everyone had when he wrote this novel.

Great reading!

Adventure Unlimited

Mention Jules Verne, and books that spring to mind are 20,000 Leagues, Around the World in 80 days, and Journey to the Center of the Earth. The Mysterious Island is one of his lesser known works, which is something of a mystery itself.

The book surpasses one's imagination and never fails to surprise. From the initial pages when Capt. Cyrus Harding and his friends decide to escape from a prison camp, the story seizes the complete attention of the reader, and unfolds at a pace and in a direction excelling Jules Verne's characteristic stories. The spirit and ingenuity of man is demonstrated in almost every page, as Cyrus and Co. find themselves marooned on a deserted island, and armed with only their wits, transform their desperate situation into a wonder world of science and technology. The reader is drawn into the adventure and finds himself trying to find solutions to the problems and obstacles that lie in plenty for the castaways, as Cyrus and his indomitable friends surmount myriad problems in their fight for survival. They are aided in their ventures by an uncanny and eerie source that remains a mystery until the very end.

This book cannot fail to fascinate and inspire awe in the mind of any reader. One begins to grasp the marvels and inventive genius behind the simple daily conveniences and devices that are normally taken for granted. The line between reality and fantasy is incredibly thin, and for sheer reading pleasure and boundless adventure, this book will never cease to please.

PS: The book has been adapted into a movie, which is one of the worst adaptations of any novel that I have ever had the misfortune of viewing. It is criminal to even mention the movie and the original work in the same breath.


Bark George
Published in Library Binding by HarperCollins Children's Books (1999)
Author: Jules Feiffer
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A funny story your kids will love!
So there's a misuse of words in the story...big deal. I don't feel that my daughter is going to use poor English just because one (very cute) book does. It's actually a good opportunity to teach her the correct way to use the words! The illustrations are adorable and I just love the expressions on George's mom's face when he can't spit out a proper "Arf." When she takes him to the vet to find out the problem, my daughter cracks up every time he pulls a different animal out of George's tummy. There's even a twist at the end that I didn't expect. If you like to read fun books to your kids and don't take them all too seriously, then you should love this book!

One of our favorites!
This book is chosen by both our 4 yr old and our almost-2 yr old *all the time* for reading (and we have 4 shelves of kids books). The 4 yr old laughs with the "No, no -- dogs don't say 'quack'" and the 2 yr old loves any book with animal sounds -- whether they are the correct ones for the animal or not. Fun reading and the twists still make us laugh each time we read it.

Silly Dog!
I got this book for my son, who is 2 years old. He requests it eagerly, and enjoys saying "silly DOG" each time George belts out the wrong sound. This is the type of kids book that will have your child repeating with you, and adding things on his own interactively. It is a fun book with cute illustrations and punchline. As a mom who loves to read fun books, I recommend it for all parents with young kids.


The Phantom Tollbooth
Published in Library Binding by Bt Bound (1999)
Authors: Norton Juster and Jules Feiffer
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My Favorite Book for Many Years
I read the Phantom Tollbooth as a child and loved it. I loved the story of Milo, a kid who is bored and dislikes life who receives a gift completely out of the blue (what kid wouldn't like that). I liked the fact that the gift was a gateway to an adventure in another world. I liked the dog he meets who is gruff at first but becomes Milo's best friend. I also loved the strange characters Milo met on his adventures, and I was scared of the monsters he met near the end of the book.

As I grew older, I started to learn all of the puns and double meanings strewn throughout the book. I still loved the adventure story, but now I began realizing that the book was very funny as well.

During some move or other, I lost the book, but now I look forward to buying it when I have kids and rediscovering the world Norton Juster painted in the Phantom Tollbooth with them.

Awesome Book!
Phantom Tollbooth Written By Norton Juster Reviewed by Adam

Milo is a kid with no opinion about anything. He never likes what he is doing, but sees no point in doing anything else. As he says, "It seems to me that almost everything is a waste of time. There's nothing for me to do, nowhere I'd care to go, and hardly anything worth seeing." One day he receives a strange package containing one genuine tollbooth, one set of instructions, and one road map. Expecting this to be just a dumb activity, Milo puts the tollbooth together and drives through it in a small electric car. He travels through a strange land to a city called Dictionopolis, on the way picking up the Watch dog Tock, who has a watch for a body. Once in Dictionopolis, Milo, Tock, and their newfound friend the watchdog and the Humbug are caught up in a quest to save the princesses Rhyme and Reason and restore order to the world. On the way he meets strange people like the Whether Man ("for after all it's more important to know whether there will be weather than what the weather will be") and Alec Bings who sees the other side of things and is born in the air and grows down to the ground. Milo and his newfound friends Tock the watchdog and the Humbug are caught up in a quest to save the princesses Rhyme and Reason and restore order to the world.

Norton Juster does a great job making The Phantom Tollbooth enjoyable and humorous. He combines clever puns and real pieces of literature and math to make an extremely interesting story.

" I read [The Phantom Tollbooth] first when I was 10. I still have the book report I wrote, which began 'This is the best book ever.'" --Anna Quindlen, The New York Times

"A classic... Humorous, full of warmth and real invention." --The New Yorker

I rate this book 10/10 stars.

A Classic!
First of all, this is one of the most wonderful books I have ever read! It is about a boy named Milo who is bored and doesn't see the meaning of things. One day, he comes and finds a toll booth went to him in his room. He takes his car and pays the toll and begins his remarkable journey. He journeys through Expectations where he meets the Whether Man. He dozes off and comes to the Doldrum and meets the Lethargians and a watchdog named Tock that goes Tick. Tock sets off with him for Dictionopolis, the city of words, where he meets the troubled King Azaz the Unabridged and Fainly Macabre. He decides to save the Princesses Rhyme and Reason, because without them, there is none. The lovable Humbug, Tock, and Milo set off. The come to the Forest of Sight and see the orchestra play the colors. They travel through the barren Valley of Sound and meet the Soundkeeper. They get to Digitopolis, the city of numbers, and meet the Mathematician. This is where the real difficult part of their journey begins as they venture into the Mountains of Ignorance to rescue the princesses from the Castle in the Air. This book shows you the meaning of knowledge and reminds you to never rush and see and hear the bueaties of the world.


Sentinel Event
Published in Paperback by Denlinger's Publishers, Ltd. (01 March, 2001)
Author: Jules M. Seletz
Amazon base price: $17.95
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WHAT A PAGE TURNER
As a mother of two young children, I don't read as much as I'd like, and when I do, it normally takes a while to finish the book. Not so with Sentinel Event. From the very start, I was hooked. That book went with me to school runs, to the gym, wherever. I loved the suspense of it, and found it exciting and unpredictable. It was a really fun read that I strongly recommend.

Review of Sentinel Event
This is a great mystery thriller! I took this book along on a recent business trip. I began reading Sentinel Event on the airplane and the book quickly pulled me into the action. I couldn't put the book down until I finished it that night in my hotel room. This is a fun read, a real page turner. I heartily recommend it.

Sentinel Event -- The Proverbial Page-Turning Thriller!
I read this whole book on a cross-country airplane ride -- I could not put it down! Sentinel event pulls you in to the action and thrills right from the prologue. Seletz's writing is rich with vivid detail, dialogue, and medical intrigue. I was pulled into the plot working vicariously with Dr. Jake Stein to solve a string of murders and cover-ups in rural North Carolina. A "must-read" fictional thriller for anyone working in the hospital environment or in the medical field. I look forward to the opportunity to read the other books in the Sentinel Event series, as well as the Pass in Review quartet.


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