Book reviews for "Motchenbacher,_Curt_D." sorted by average review score:
Frankenstein Meets Wolfman: Adapted from the Screenplay "Frankenstein Meets the Wolfman" by Curt Siodman (Monsters Series)
Published in Paperback by Crestwood House (1982)
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I really liked this book.
This book is about Frankenstein and Wolfman. When they met, they became friends. During the time they were friends, they began to fight. I really liked this book. this book had a lot of action in it.
Free Help from Uncle Sam to Start Your Own Business (Or Expand the One You Have) (Free Help from Uncle Sam to Start Your Own Business, Ed 4)
Published in Paperback by Puma Pub Co (1997)
Amazon base price: $15.95
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This is a must read for anyone staring a new business!
The book was very informative, precise and easy to follow and understand. It gives you a very clear understanding of what's available to you and what resources to check. It has helped me after one whole year of trying to figure out how to start my business, do just that. Everyone should read this, even if you already have a business of you own, it can help in many ways - Who doesn't need money and advice?
Hawaii: The Spirit of America (Art of the State)
Published in Hardcover by Harry N Abrams (1999)
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Astute Authors
Having lived in Hawai'i for 11 years, I am deeply impressed by the books content, which is complete, accurate, and includes a very perceptive view of Hawai'i for the reader. In this un presumptious book there exsists a quality which few other books on the subject can match.
Healing Hurts That Sabotage the Soul
Published in Paperback by Chariot Victor Books (1995)
Amazon base price: $9.99
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Life changes begin here
This book was written in simple terms, making it useful to people of all walks. I found the explanations to commonly asked questions (at the end of each chapter) very useful. The questions that followed enabled me to search my heart even further. This is a wonderful book to use with a small group or support group.
Henry Halleck's War: A Fresh Look at Lincoln's Controversial General-In-Chief
Published in Hardcover by Guild Press of Indiana (2002)
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Some Books are Easier to Write than to Review
When I sent copies of this book to members of my family and some friends, their reactions were all the same: "It sure is big!" That's true. Henry Halleck's War is more than 700 pages long; it uses roughly 250,000 words; its 20 chapters contain close to 1,800 source citations -- what we used to call footnotes; and it weighs three pounds, six and a half ounces. Why is it so big? A great many pages are devoted to messages, letters, and reports General Halleck wrote during the war. They show that his contributions to the Union's successful war effort were both numerous and valuable -- and that critics such as Gideon Welles were wrong. It was Welles who said, "Halleck originates nothing, anticipates nothing, takes no responsibility, plans nothing, suggests nothing, is good for nothing." Hardly anyone ever said anything good about Halleck during his lifetime. His friend Cump Sherman urged him to defend himself, to fight back. General Halleck refused. He was willing to be judged by what was in the records. In them, he told Cump, some future historian would find the truth about him and what he did. But during the past hundred years, too few scholars have bothered to go through the 128 thick volumes of the Official Records, flip through crumbling pages until they found the documents that involved General Halleck, and study them. As a result, just about everyone has agreed with Welles that Henry Halleck was a disaster. However, recently Guild Press of Indiana put the entire wall of books called the Official Records on a single wafer-thin CD-ROM. That made it possible for me to do what General Halleck trusted someone would do -- study his record. But I've gone beyond that. The messages, letters, and reports included in this book enable readers to judge Halleck for themselves -- which, I think, is what he hoped would happen. In the course of selecting all these materials and providing enough narrative to place them in historical context, several things surprised me. First, the requirements of the job of general-in-chief were very different from what Halleck's critics assumed. No one knew what a general-in-chief was supposed to do. No valid precedent or standards for judging his performance existed. Even so, ignorance didn't stop anyone from declaring General-in-Chief Halleck a failure. Second, his relationship to Abraham Lincoln had a special aspect that has been completely overlooked. Both men were lawyers: Lincoln in central Illinois, Old Brains out in San Francisco -- indeed, he was the respected senior partner of California's leading law firm. Accordingly, Halleck's performance ought to be judged as that of a special counsel retained to help Lincoln prosecute Union versus Confederacy -- a case that was being tried on battlefields from eastern Virginia to New Mexico. In everything General Halleck wrote you will find precision of thought and expression reflecting his expertise both in military art and in the ability to reduce complex questions to basic principles -- and then to apply them. These were skills that Lincoln needed desperately. Some observers have hailed him as a military genius -- but if you read closely some of the documents he signed, you will see how dependent he actually was on special counsel Halleck. Third, this book also contains messages and letters to Halleck from Don Carlos Buell, George McClellan, William Rosecrans, Cump Sherman, Ulysses Grant, and many other generals. I was surprised by how much they revealed about themselves in what they wrote Halleck. I had never known enough about General Buell, for example, to have an opinion about him. But from the messages he sent Old Brains, I learned why he was such a disappointment. Same regarding McClellan -- the "Young Napoleon." If you doubt that he was a spoiled brat, just read his messages to his wife and to General Halleck. My fourth surprise was that I could compress the quarter of a million words in this book into a single simple sentence: General Halleck didn't win the war, but clearly he kept Abraham Lincoln from losing it. Lincoln was completely unprepared to be Commander- in-Chief, and initially he made some dreadful mistakes. That stopped in mid-1862 when he sent a peremptory order to Halleck to come to Washington. Halleck saved the Union capital by moving McClellan's Army of the Potomac northward to help John Pope. He saved Grant when Lincoln secretly gave command of the Vicksburg operation to a political general already notorious for incompetence. But Halleck couldn't always save Lincoln from blundering. Behind Halleck's back, Lincoln gave command of the Army of the Potomac to "Fighting Joe" Hooker -- with General Lee's brilliant victory at Chancellorsville as a humiliating result. Ordinarily, however, Old Brains and the President reached a meeting of the minds. Both men, being lawyers, placed great weight on principles. Halleck was driven by a high sense of duty and of honor and of love of country. But he was also an expert on the principles of military art, and he enforced them. He told Lincoln and later Grant, You cannot, you dare not try to control a battle from a desk hundreds or thousands of miles from the killing site. "I hold," Old Brains declared, "that a general in command of an army in the field is the best judge of existing conditions."
That was the Halleck Doctrine. It was turned on its head recently during military operations in the Balkans directed from the White House. Reputations, Professor Walter McDougall has written, are the only things over which historians have control. Historians destroyed Henry Halleck's reputation. It's time to give some of his good name back to him.
Honda Atc 70, 90, 110, 185 and 200 Manual
Published in Paperback by Haynes Publishing (1980)
Amazon base price: $23.95
Average review score:
very helpfull
I needed this book to help me with my ATV and it really helped
Hotel Boy
Published in School & Library Binding by Atheneum (1987)
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a great book!
I first read this book when I was in Kindergarten. My teacher then was Gita Kaufman and the main character in the book was one of her students. It is a great story for a young child to read about the misfortunes of a fellow child and how that child still find love and happiness in his life. I would recommend this book three times over!
How to Do Everything with Your BlackBerry
Published in Paperback by McGraw-Hill Osborne Media (21 September, 2001)
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A must have for all BlackBerry users
I was wondering when a BlackBerry book would finally hit the shelves, and I was not disappointed. How To Do Everything with your BlackBerry explores all that your BlackBerry can do and how to make the most of it. I learned a number of tricks I did not know, even though I have been using the BlackBerry for some time now. This book is easy to read and full of step-by-step examples. BlackBerry users - get it!
How to Prepare for the AP U.S. Government and Politics
Published in Paperback by Barrons Educational Series (30 March, 2002)
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Very helpful studyguide
I've checked out other study guides, but this one was the most comprehensive. The author makes history seem very simple and easy to understand. I've done really well on the sample tests. My little sister even used it to study for her high school history exam. I highly suggest it to anyone taking the AP exam.
Insiders Guide to America Online
Published in Paperback by O'Reilly & Associates (1997)
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Very Nice!
The Insider's Guide to AOL is more than just a beginners guide. Among other things it shows you how to create your own Web site. Covers AOL 4.0 and is a guide to everything that is useful in AOL.
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