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Book reviews for "Moore-Hart,_Margaret_A." sorted by average review score:

Dragonlance Legends: Time of the Twins, War of the Twins, Test of the Twins
Published in Hardcover by TSR Hobbies (1988)
Authors: Margaret Weis and Tracy Hickman
Amazon base price: $16.95
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Average review score:

NO WORDS TO DESCRIBE IT!
If you are reading this and thinking about buying, STOP READING THIS AND DO IT. I really can't think of any better book to read (other than the Chronicles) to get you started on fantasy. These books are easier to read and understand than most Tolkien novels. Caramon and Raistlin show the true struggle between Good, Evil, Love and Hate. Tasslehoff Burrfoot, our friendly Kender, also plays a MAJOR role, which I am glad to say. Just one more word......AWESOME!

Everything good fantasy should be
It is almost impossible to describe how wonderful this book is. There is nothing about it that is not absolutly perfect. It is absolutly incredible what Margaret Weis and Tracy HIckman have written. I wish I could sit here and type out the whole plot, but unfortunatly, I can't. But I will say this. The characters are beyond belife. Anybody who didn't worship Raistlin before will now. He is most definatly the greatest fantasy character ever written. Crysania is good too, especially in Test of the Twins. Dalamar Nightson, Raistlin's apprentice, is one of the better characters, and is part of why this trilogy is so incredible. No one has ever written anythig close to this. Everyone should read this book, it is so wonderful. Personnaly, I've read it so many time I can almost recite it, and it never gets worse. Please, for the love of Raistlin, BUY THIS BOOK.

It's caaaaaatttchy!
Be warned! This is one of those great books that you just can't put down, AND it's a DragonLance book. There, that's 2 good reasons to buy it already, and it's only been 3 sentences. Even if you don't like fantasy or sci-fi, this book will get you hooked for life. Trust me. Whoa, there's a 3rd reason! And there's more, too. It's incredibly well written, not to mention by none other than Weiss and Hickman. There, thats 4 reasons. Still need a fifth? Well, READ IT and you'll find a hundred more!

(note... if you read this and you haven't read any other DL books, I'd suggest also reading the Chronicles)


Golden Egg Book
Published in Hardcover by Goldencraft (1975)
Author: Margaret Wise Brown
Amazon base price: $12.60
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Collectible price: $4.50
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A touching, delicious early lesson in empathy
First of all, I must confess, the 1962 edition of this book was one of my own childhood favorites. The friendship between the bunny and the duck still makes my eyes tear up by the last page. . . and heck, I'm 35! The sweetness and warmth of this story is just classic.

This is a perfect choice for a preschool reader. The adventures repeat; so a kid gets to read similar phrases twice. The beautiful animal drawings will easily charm any child, and the adorable ending will put a little kid happily to sleep, if you use "The Egg Book" as a bedtime story.

I just fervently hope that NO CHILD will EVER have to grow up without the "Egg Book"!

What this book means to me...
As a child I used to check this book out of the libarary EVERYTIME I went. I remember crying one week because the only copy available was the one I was returning and they hadn't put it back on the shelf and I couldn't take it home. My best friend and I would read and re-read this book. We just loved the bunny kicking, rolling, and jumping on the egg and then the same happening to him when he fell asleep and the egg hatched. The bunny and duck became best friends, I met my best friend through reading this book in 1965 and we are still best friends today. I cried when my mom gave me and my friend copies of this book a couple of years ago as a gift.

Fond Memories
This is a wonderful book! As a young immigrant child some 30 years ago this was one of the first books I ever read and thoroughly digested. Simple and touching, this should be a required book in every child's repertoire. The sooner the better!


GONE WITH THE WIND
Published in Paperback by Fireside (1989)
Authors: Herb Bridges and Terryl Boodman
Amazon base price: $12.60
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Terrific!
This is an excellent book that chronicles the making of the legendary screen classic "Gone With the Wind". The book moves in chronological order from it's start as a novel all the way through the pre-production, production and post-production stages of what was to be one of the greatest films of all time, if not the greatest. The book is filled with numerous photos, some of them in color, many of them rare and all of them crisp and clear. There are close-ups of all of its stars (Vivien Leigh, Clark Gable, Olivia DeHavilland, Leslie Howard), the crew at work, movie posters and it's world premiere. This is a great book that will make an excellent addition to any library!

A wonderfully beautiful book about the best movie ever made!
GWTW is the best movie in the world! And this book captures some of its majestic splendour, but you can't do that much on paper, but this book is wonderful! It had some pictures (stills) that you couldn't really catch the people's expressions in the movie, but this book really did. Melanie (Olivia DeHavilland) the star, really, looked so beautifully sweet in every picture, her love for Ashley made her glow. This book is the best one I have seen of a GWTW picture book. Obviously, a lot of research went into making this book.

A Must Have Book for Gone With the Wind Fans
This book is packed with information and great photographs, both in color and black and white. The majority of the book deals with the filming an abundance of behind-the-scenes shots.

Also of particular interest is the post-production section dealing with the public's reaction to the movie and the section on the Premiere. This is a great book to add to your personal library.


Leaves from the Inn of the Last Home: The Complete Krynn Source Book
Published in Paperback by TSR Hobbies (1993)
Authors: Margaret Weis, Tracy Hickman, and Larry Elmore
Amazon base price: $13.27
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A great Dragonlance companion..
Being a fan of Dragonlance for many years, but also being unlucky to not get this book the first time it was published, I was very happy to see that the publishers decided to put this book up for sale again. "Leaves from the Inn of the Last Home", is great if you want to know more history on the Dragonlance. It has a lot of info on the Gods of Krynn. There is deeply detailed information about the past of Krynn. Including wars, gods, dragons, and anything else you could possibly want to know.

There are also songs, poems, and recipes. Many of the songs and poems were published in the original Chronicles or Legends. But it is nice to have them in one place in easy reach. The recipes range from Gully Dwarf Stew to Otik's spicy potatoes. This book is definatley an entertaining companion to the Dragonlance world. People looked for it everywhere when it out out-of-print. So what better time to get it than now when they are publishing it again.

Don't miss it!
I first saw this book on a visit to the States in Feburary 1997. Since then I have been kicking myself for not buying it, seeing as it cannot be found anywhere! It is the complete sourcebook of Krynn, a must for all Role Players or Gamers, and even fanatical Krynn Collectors. It contains background information on the Heroes of the Lance and even Kenderish maps. There are songs, recipes, and the book itself is embodied with the true spirit of Dragonlance Adventuring. Being a small-time collector and currently owning 48 D.L. books, take my advice- this is not an oppertunity to be missed!

Johanna bachfrom@netvigator.com

The Best Source Book for Dragonlance
This books has lots of information like the legends, songs, recipes, and lots more this book is one of the best source book i ever had i have most of the books.. from the world of krynn., and got lucky to have the copy .. so.. wish they gonna reprint it.. thanks..


Knight of the Rose
-Est Sularus Oth Mithas-


Slow Dollar
Published in Mass Market Paperback by Warner Books (2003)
Author: Margaret Maron
Amazon base price: $6.99
Average review score:

A welcome return to greatness in the Knott series
I thought the last several books in the Deborah Knott series were pretty poor. Mechanical plots, dull characters, uninteresting and implausible mystery solutions. In one of them, I intuited the murdered from the beginning because s/he was given too much "air time" when s/he was introduced - a common giveaway for untalented mystery writers. I feared that Maron had run out of ideas and was just churning out books for the money.

Happily, "Slow Dollar" more than restores my faith. As is typical with Maron, the point is less the mystery than the characters. As others have indicated, the new characters in "Slow Dollar" are delightfully drawn and wonderfully real. They add more depth to the incredibly complex relationships within Deborah's family.

And I absolutely, positively LOVED the new relationship with Dwight. Yes, I consider myself to be on a first-name basis with these people; they are that real to me.

Thank you, Margaret Maron, from this grateful reader. You're back on track.

clever regional mystery
Judge Deborah Knott of Colleton County, North Carolina first meets Tally Ames in the courtroom when the carnival owner presses charges against three local men who damaged one of her rides. The judge finds in favor of Tally and orders the men to make restitution. The next time the two women meet is at the harvest festival carnival where Deborah is taking in the sights with friends and family.

The evening ends abruptly when Tally's son is found murdered, his face stomped on and his mouth stuffed with quarters. As the police investigate the carny workers, the judge learns that Tally is her long lost niece, even though Deborah's brother refuses to acknowledge her as his own. When another carnival worker is killed, the carny people close ranks against outsiders but none of that fastened tight community ever dealt with the likes of an obstinate individual like the judge.

The latest installment in the Deborah Knott's here comes the judge amateur sleuth investigation mystery series is a well written novel starring a secondary cast that is colorfully eccentric. The judge agrees to marry a local man who has loved her secretly for a very long time and it will be interesting to see if she, in future books, chickens out before she gets to the altar. SLOW DOLLAR is as much a family saga as it is a clever regional mystery.

Harriet Klausner

Possibly the best of the series
I have loved Margaret Maron's books for years, and have loved Deborah Knott and her huge family since "Bootlegger's Daughter.""Slow Dollar" has it all- the vivid, lovable, characters, rich local colour, a challenging mystery.Set in a carnival, Maron gives us a glimpse into a life many of us never know, and may never know.As others have said, there is an unexpected branch of the Knott family tree.While Cyl DeGraffenried is sorely missed, there is a delightful turn for the better in Deborah's private life.I found "Uncommon Clay" to be less compelling than "Storm Track," but "Slow Dollar" certainly makes up for it.


The Fourth Steven
Published in Paperback by Prime Crime (1998)
Author: Margaret Moseley
Amazon base price: $5.99
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The Fourth Steven will make a mystery fan of anyone!
Never having been particularly interested in mysteries, I began "The Fourth Steven" with few expectations. But Ms. Moseley's unique style and sense of humor soon had me enthralled. Her intricate and finely drawn characterization of Honey Huckleberry has given the mystery world a humorous and touching heroine. Her story is told in a compelling and unusual voice that instantly drew me in and kept me turning pages far into the night. Like peeling an onion, the author gives us ever deeper layers of Honey, leading us gently but inexorably to the heart of this fascinating character. I don't normally enjoy mystery series, but having met the characters in this venture, I must read the succesive books and revisit my new favorite heroine. I highly recommend this wonderful book to anyone, mystery fan or not.

Margaret Moseley has a WINNER
In this book, Margarte Moseley introduces a new sleuth, Honey Huckleberry (wasn't I worth a real name?). Our story starts when Honey gets a phone call from Steven with a quote from a favorite poem. Not being sure which Steven it is, she just responds with "Oh, Steven" and the caller rushes on to tell her that "the man is dead". Now she is sure it's no friend. Shocked, she says "This is Lydia, stop playing around" and hangs up. She makes a police report about the call and continues on with her life. She is a book publishers rep and is getting ready for her spring selling trip. Her first stop is at Pages, a mostly mystery bookshop, where she tells owner and friend, Janie, about her phone call. Janie gets caught up in her story and wants to investigate, to which Honey says OK,; she does so while Honey continues on her trip. 2 weeks later, en route home, Honey gets a call from "Steven", using her real name and when she realizes he knows her name and her itinerary, she realizes he is in her home. Frantically, she rushes out of the hotel and toward home. When she gets there, she finds a friend on the floor of her living room dying. It is one of her Stevens. The other two are in danger. Honey turns reluctant sleuth. Either very wierd or endearingly eccentric, this is a hard role for Honey to take on. She has lived by herself since the death of her parents, one day apart, 10 years ago. Since she still lives in their house, she just kept "living by their rules". She has few friends, and nobody is allowed into her house. She si very structured, having her itinerary fixed on a daily basis, even the clothes for her trips are prepackaged and labeled and waiting for her to pick up from the closet for each trip. It is fun watching her bloom, develope friendships and even find a touch of romance. The characters are real--and you find yourself caring about them after the story has ended. wanting to know them more. Though written in off-beat humor, there is a mystery to be solved.( Yours truely missed the clues.) Hurry, Miss Moseley, MORE HONEY, please.

HONEY OF A BOOK
This is one fun book to read. Moseley's knack for off the wall dialogue and wry, sharp humor is evident in this mystery. Honey Huckleberry becomes a reluctant sleuth after a phone call from one of the three Stevens she knows is really a 4th Steven she doesn't know. From thereon out, Honey finds her rigidly organized life as a book seller representative in a tizzy. And now she has about four men in her life---her secret lover; a handsome if dense cop; a smoothly exotic gardener, and an old friend from school who is now a movie director. In the first half of the book, I can't count the times I laughed aloud at Honey's escapades, especially her paranoia and fear about the pantry in her parents' home. I hope I can find some more of Moseley's Huckleberry adventures; I just loved this book!

HIGHLY RECOMMENDED.


The Book of Disquiet (Extraordinary Classics)
Published in Paperback by Serpent's Tail (1992)
Authors: Fernando Pessoa, Margaret Jull Costa, Maria Jose De Lancastre, and Maria J. De Lancastre
Amazon base price: $16.99
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Average review score:

Thinking is absurd
"If i think, it all seems absurd to me; if i feel, it all seems strange; if i desire, he who desires is something inside of me."
Sums up the book perfectly. Pessoa explores one of his many personalities. "The Book of Disquiet" explains, in complete depth and faith, the beauty of a lonely, existential, moment by moment life. He explains the beauty that people forget. He explains the world, his perception, as if every moment were the last.
"The book of disquiet" is one of the most insightful books a person can read, but only if one has imagination and an ability to let go. Bernardo Soars, Pessoa's personality who wrote the book, is extreme and eccentric. It isn't easy reading, and it won't affect you if you can't overlook the fact that life doesn't go on like Soars'; that there is more in thinking, dreaming, and desiring than Soars admits. What makes the book so special is how Soars can forget everything but the thought and the moment, and how he can analyze and critique and put into words something that most of us forget to remember. "The book of disquiet" reminds me, at least, of how to appreciate my own mind. It is the only philosophy-like book that i enjoy (as yet) because it is the real thing and encompasses a forgotten part of real life.

A beautifully fine and unique book
Pessoa was a true acrobat of the imagination. The Book of Disquiet is a collection of epiphanic journal or diary prose kept by Pessoa and found decades after his death. The prose is truly some of the most gorgeous musings about everyday life and existence that any reader could ever find. The poet's world is laid out exquisitly and paradoxically for the entire benefit of those who read.I can't say I've ever found such beauty in the pages of a book before. If you like literature albeit simple or complex this book is something that you will immediately cherish for a very long time.

Encontro Breve com Pessoa-Brief Encounter with Pessoa
What, in all sincerity, can be said of Fernando Pessoa's Book of Disquiet? The book presents us, as with any superb literary work, with a problem of translation. That is, of translating into value (good, bad, average) an expressive incoherence (the aphoristic style) that is manifested in the heteronyms that Pessoa was, in the dispersed identities, and in the fragmentary incursions into the absurd(real) that pervade the book and brings forth the 'disquiet-ness'. 'Conventional' writers need a 'plot'(could be a subject-person, an event etc) as an anchor in which to secure coherence and from which meaning is derived. Pessoa's genius (like Kafka, Beckett, Lawrence, Blanchot) lies in his deliberate abandonment of (monotonous)anchors and his intrepid embrace of diversity(in the most general sense imaginable) and immanence(one feels 'floating' within life). This author will, I am certain, be recognised as one of the greatest European literary genius.


Infinite Darkness Infinite Light
Published in Paperback by Vivisphere Publishing (15 March, 2001)
Author: Margaret Doner
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Absolutely fabulous
It's the best book I ever read. I felt like the author had been looking over my shoulder at some of the events that have happend in my own life - I really related to the main character, Victoria. I believe it should stimulate others to think about their own past lives. I think everyone should take this journey.

Enchanting
I was totally absorbed! I couldnt put this book down. Doner time travels and interweaves lives seamlessly. The details were very visual for me...I can see each room, the college campus....It is refreshing story-telling which goes beyond just this life.. I want to read more, is there a sequel?

Review of Ms. Doner's book
I found this book fascinating. It suggests we all have a lot to learn from past lives/experiences. The author was able to tell the story clearly without being too vague about what we feel/believe can have validation in the now. The story unfolds using realistic characters who simply demonstrate how complex lives become when the past has been unbalanced.
I highly recommend this book in particular for those considering past life therapy to clear the unexplained phenonmenon of the present.


Shadow of the Moon
Published in Hardcover by St. Martin's Press (1979)
Author: Mary Margaret Kaye
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India through a romantic lens
This is an acceptable story if you can take it on its own merits. It doesn't stand up well to my other favorite about the Indian Mutiny, Zemindar. That is history for grownups. This is romance novel fantasy. However, if exotic escapism is what you are after, this does provide.

The plot is full of incredible romantic conceits, from Winter, the European heroine, having a background that will allow her to pass flawlessly as Indian (convenient during a mutiny); Winter's parents, beautiful, highborn, perfect lovers who die young, leaving her with a Spanish title and lots of money; the series of coincidences that lead to her voluntarily marrying a real "rotter" (although given the total innocence in which Victorial girls were kept, not totally unbelievable).

Then there is Alex, superior to Winter's husband in every way. He has a way of being present at historic moments, or running across historic figures, and like Winter can blend at will into the Indian landscape. He is the perfect English soldier-gentleman. His conflict over protecting Winter vs the greater good, though, is a believable one with which the reader can sympthize.

My worst criticism of the love story is that, even though Winter is pregnant before it's all over, there are no good love scenes. From a strictly romantic POV, that leaves the story lacking.

For the rest, there are the usual stock characters: Young Englishwoman, Innocent Victim; Loose Woman with a Heart of Gold; Native Mistress with a Heart of Stone; Villain Motivated By Lust, etc. To give her credit, they are real enough while you are reading. It's good, historical-romance escapism for the right mood.

In the shadow of "The Far Pavilions"
If you liked M.M. Kaye's "Far Pavilions" of TV miniseries fame, you may find this earlier work by the author even more enjoyable. A romance novel to be sure, but non-fans of the genre (I am usually amongst their number) will find it a very pleasant surprise, especially if you can get a copy of the early editions, which were considerably shorter than those that came out after the success of the "Far Pavilions". Ms. Kaye's outstanding attention to Indian historical and cultural detail surrounding the Great Sepoy Mutiny supplements the central love story wonderfully. Actually, the reader soon becomes aware that "Shadow of the Moon" is a tale of two love stories - one between Alex and Winter and one between Ms. Kaye and the people, culture and land of India. If you like a good love story, lots of action, many interesting secondary characters, and a generous dose of education about a fascinating and pivotal time in Indian and British history, this book is a must read.

One of my favorites
I first discovered this book (the earlier 1956 edition) when I was a young teenager. I grew up in a house filled with books and was always an avid reader. One rainy day I was browsing through my parents' bookshelves looking for something to read, and found Shadow of the Moon. The title caught my eye, so I took it out, and after the first page I was hooked. I could not put the book down until I had finished! I read it many times over my teenage years, and my young 20's.

Then, after the success of Kaye's The far Pavillions, they reissued this book in an expanded version. I had to buy my own copy and loved it even more than the original. I've never been a fan of "romance" as a genre, preferring mysteries and SciFi, and historical fiction, but I do enjoy a touch of romance in my novels, as long as that is not the total purpose of the book. And this one just fits the bill. An interesting romance but set against the background of the Indian Sepoy Rebellion of 1857. The history really takes center stage, and I loved that part of it.

This book was that one that triggered a lifetime fascination with India, and also led me to read many other books on the subject, as well as all the other books by author M.M. Kaye. I've enjoyed all of them, but this one remains my favorite.


Angels Turn Their Backs
Published in Hardcover by Kids Can Press (1998)
Author: Margaret Buffie
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Angels Turn Their Backs
I liked this story because it explains what it would be like if your parents were divorced. And what would happen if Angels really turned thier backs. I think this wuold be a good book for some one to read, is because I think people will learn what it is like to have a family and than all of a sudden they split up. That is why I would recomend this book for 6th, 7th, and 8th graders.

It's a totally great read!
This book takes a look at what it is like to have emotions that a young person simply can't deal with. I felt as if I was reading about a really good friend in trouble. You follow Addy through all her fears until she feels she can face the future. There are funny parts, too. Victor, the parrot made me laugh out loud. I read it in one day. It was wonderful!

Great Book!
A Review by Carol
This story is about a 15-year-old girl named Addy Jarrick. Her parents split up and her mom and her moved to Winnipeg. She moves into an apartment building. Addy hears voices of the old lady who used to live there. She hears these voices through a parrot named Victor who makes the story humorous. I think that this story is so great because of all of the different emotions in it. I never wanted to put the book down. You have to use your imagination to really enjoy this book. Some things that happen aren't very real but the whole situation and conflict is very good and interesting. I would recommend this book to teenagers. The feelings change throughout the book. It is sad because Addy has agoraphobia, a fear of going outside. It is also scary because she hears voices but that's what makes the book so interesting. The book was pretty easy to follow, easy to understand and very efficient. I could read this book over and over again!


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