Related Subjects: Author Index Reviews Page 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25
Book reviews for "Ragan-Reid,_Gale" sorted by average review score:

Armistead Maupin (Outlines (Bath, England).)
Published in Paperback by Stewart, Tabori & Chang (1999)
Author: Patrick Gale
Amazon base price: $10.36
List price: $12.95 (that's 20% off!)
Used price: $4.99
Buy one from zShops for: $10.34
Average review score:

A Good Book about a Great Author
THis book seems to be an ode from one of Maupin's serious fans. It was great insight on Maupins, his life, and who he is. I suggest reading Maupins novels before looking into this.

Excellent book !
I highly recommend this book. Enjoyed reading it. The book was funny. Touching. Very real. Gives great insights to the books that Armisted Maupin has written; makes your appreciate them more. Very well written book. I strongly agree with the points of views expressed.

Eagerly awaiting the next Armisted Maupin book coming out soon.

You hate to finish this, as you do any of Armistead's work
If you are a Tales of The City fan, an Armistead Maupin fan, you will love this book. I couldn't put the book down. It gives more detail than "Armistead Maupin Is A Man I Made Up" (movie), but in a similar fashion, with much input from Armistead himself.

It is a little fix while waiting for the Night Listener to be published (which I am, anxiously)


Back to the Future Part II: A Novel
Published in Mass Market Paperback by (1989)
Authors: Craig Shaw Gardner, Bob Gale, and Robert Zemeckis
Amazon base price: $
Used price: $0.92
Collectible price: $8.95
Average review score:

Gread Read
What a great read. It captures the mood and humor of the movie characters well. It has also been "cleaned-up" from the movie version so it is suitable for all the young readers out there.

One of the greatest movies , even in book format!
Any fan of the Back to the Future triology who wants to be able to take the movie with them should think of picking up this book. One of my favorite movies of all time, Back to the Future Part II goes just as well in book format.

The second part of the famous trilogy , starts off right where the first one ended. Doc Brown shows up in his time traveling Time Machine to take Marty and his girlfriend Jennifer to the future to fix a problem with their future kids. Little do they know that their troubles are far from over after they arrive there. Biff steals the time machine from the future and hands himself a sports almanac giving all the scores for the next half centruy. The time line is totaly changed and its up to Marty and the Doc to fix things before its to late by going back to 1955 where the trouble starts.

The great thing about the book is that it gives more detail then the movie. It goes into what the characters are thinking that we can't see during the movie and gives details that were cut out of the movie as well. Theres a part where Marty meets his brother Dave in an alternate 1985 and his brother is drunk and a bum to say the least. Another moment where the old farmer Peabody from the first movie shows up trying to still get at the DeLorean that busted up one of his pines is pretty intersting as well. Theres also a lot of description of the moments we find ourselves in, so we can pretty much see the movie without having to actualy see it. Its very true to the movie and I think captures the great sequal quite well in book form.

The only true problems I have with it is that they did edit out the curses and even not so bad words making them even nicer then they were. I do feel it took a little away from the book as there aren't that many curses in the movie as it is and it was noticible. Also some of the scenes seemed rushed through towards the end. A lot of the stuff at the end of the 1955 climax of the movie just didn't come off as exciting as it did in the movie. While I know its hard to do a non stop action scene like the tunnel chase where Marty has to get the almanac off of Biff's car in a book, it still came off as half as exciting as it truly was.

Its great to be able to take with you though whereever you are. you can't always bring a VCR or DVD player with you, but this book can always be in hand and it is defiitely a worth while buy as its as much fun as the movie and the movie is one of the greatest sequals of all time.

It is the best book and movie in the world!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
This was an excellent book. It had lots of action and it was flawless. I liked the way it described the characters. It never got boring. I would recommend this book to anyone.


Bamboo Style
Published in Hardcover by Gibbs Smith Publisher (2002)
Authors: Gale Beth Goldberg and Linda Garland
Amazon base price: $31.96
List price: $39.95 (that's 20% off!)
Used price: $23.97
Collectible price: $30.71
Buy one from zShops for: $24.95
Average review score:

The future is bamboo
It's true, bamboo is the future. With all the many ways bamboo can be used it will continure to grow in popularity. This book does a great job educating the reader about this unique plant. The photographs of the many ways bamboo is utilized in the home and garden are beautiful. This book makes a great gift for the plant lover.

Bamboo is hot!
Everywhere you look, you see bamboo -- advertising, catalogue goods, book lists. If you have noticed and are intrigued, if you have EVER considered bamboo, then you want Bamboo Style on your bookshelf and in your hands. The author is a well-traveled architect and her skills and experience are reflected in her offering. The publisher is well-known for beautiful "style" books, among others, but it is the author who determined the scope of this publication: Why Choose Bamboo, The Ways of Bamboo, Bamboo Inside, Bamboo Outside, On Your Own, and Afterword: Bamboo and Beyond. There are many ways to read this book and benefit -- hit only the photos and captions, read the chapter you already know you'll love, try the "how-to" projects or use the resource lists at the end. Any single approach would be sufficient to warrant the purchase of this book, but do yourself a favor, and go through the entire book! There is a wealth of information here. Enjoy every bit of it and welcome to BAMBOO.

Offering simple projects that anyone can create
Bamboo Style by architect Gale Beth Goldberg is an amazing and superbly presented guide to crafting works of beauty and wonder from bamboo for the purpose of adding either a functional or an elegant touch to home decoration and interior design. Enhanced with lavish color photographs throughout, Bamboo Style offers an informed and informative history of bamboo uses the world over, as well as offering simple projects that anyone can create, this unique reference and truly beautiful book is enthusiastically recommended for the professional as well as do-it-yourself interior decorator wanting to try something fresh and vibrant.


Cottage Holidaying in Britain: Holiday Rentals from Cottages to Castles
Published in Paperback by Classic Media Pubns (1995)
Author: Gale Armstrong
Amazon base price: $16.95
Used price: $3.50
Average review score:

Takes the Anxiety Out of Holidaying
This book was very helpful in planning my trip to Great Britain. With it as a guide, I was able to rent a flat next door to the Abbey Road Studios, used by the Beatles to produce so many wonderful albums. It was a terrific experience for my son, who is a rabid Beatles fan. We just happened to arrive on the 30th anniversary of the Abbey Road album.

Further on into our trip, we stayed at a wonderful little cottage in Banchory, Scotland. I recommend this book. It was a terrific experience, and the people who are listed in the book are very helpful. I was able to pay for the entire trip before I left Utah, thus eliminating major money worries. The only fault I found was that the tariffs were about 20% higher than listed in the book. Ouch!

I will be using this book again for my trip to Scotland next year.

Imformative and truthful
I recently stayed at Duck Barn in Telscombe, Sussex. The cottage was as described and delightful. I recently wrote to Gale Armstrong to see if there was a more up-to-date edition of the book but the letter-addressed to a box number-was returned. Help, publishers,whats available now?

Excellent source for interesting lodgings.
We used this book to find a cottage. The author had described the cottage we rented well and we were very pleased to have found a place that was both comfortable and interesting.


Ghost Ships, Gales and Forgotten Tales: True Adventures on the Great Lakes
Published in Paperback by Avery Color Studios (1996)
Author: Wes Oleszewski
Amazon base price: $10.47
List price: $14.95 (that's 30% off!)
Used price: $5.95
Buy one from zShops for: $6.25
Average review score:

Lesser-known tales of the Great Lakes
I believe this book was written partly to counter-act the romantic story-telling of Great Lakes authors like Dwight Boyer ("True Tales of the Great Lakes," "Ghost Ships of the Great Lakes," etc.) and William Ratigan ("Great Lakes Shipwrecks & Survivals").

"Ghost Ships, Gales & Forgotten Tales" is a very well-researched, workman-like book that casts new light on (among other things) the invention and demise of Whalebacks, the Lake Michigan Storm of October, 1880 (also known as the "Alpena Storm" because of the sinking of the big passenger sidewheeler, 'Alpena'), and the chaos caused by the smash-up of the Poe Lock by the 'Isaac L. Ellwood' in November, 1909.

My favorite story concerns the " Alpena Storm" and the loss of the 'Trader.' The author really did his research on the little steamer 'Trader,' which actually foundered a couple of days before the great storm of 1880. Her eleven crewmen were rescued by the schooner 'Guide' and the 'Trader' itself was towed to Grand Haven. Two days later, the "Alpena Storm" thundered down onto Lake Michigan and "full many a midnight ship with all its shrieking crew" sank beneath its suddenly murderous waves---including the 'Trader,' which somehow broke away from her mooring in Grand Haven. However at the time of her sinking she had no crew, even though the 'loss' of her eleven men was reported in all of the newspapers:

"To Captain Brown [the 'Trader's master], the whole matter of the 'Trader' was probably an on-going source of aggravation for months to come. He found himself having to explain to his peers, each time that they met, how it was that he had not perished on Lake Michigan. Yet acquaintances that he had not seen in years greeted the good captain as if just returned from the great beyond."

The author has included photographs and drawings of many of the ships featured in his stories, and also maps of where some of them disappeared below the waves.

For the most part, Oleszewski stays away from the oft-told tales like the tragedy of the 'Eastland,' or the sinking of the 'Lady Elgin.' When he does touch upon a well-known event, he focuses on one of the 'little guys'---an old barge, tugboat, or schooner on the Lake long past its retirement date---that got caught in the same storm as the big freighters.

According to its back cover, "Ghost Ships, Gales & Forgotten Tales" casts new light on some of the obscure Lake events that "have been under-reported, or forgotten altogether."

Great book!
Wes has become probably the best writer the Lakes region has ever seen. His books are well researched, with no hyperbole, manufactured conversations or guess-work. Very meticulous in detail. Any of his books are a must-have for any serious Great Lakes reader.

ghost ships,gales & forgotten tales
Wes Oleszewski brings us right no the deck of the ships & to the lakes we love. The information is profound dates/names/places. The diligent effort to bring the history to life makes enjoyable reading.


Isaac Newton and the Scientific Revolution: And the Scientific Revolution (Oxford Portraits in Science)
Published in Paperback by Oxford University Press (1998)
Author: Gale E. Christianson
Amazon base price: $11.95
Used price: $8.00
Buy one from zShops for: $11.88
Average review score:

Great book for a get to know feeling with issac newton
The book, Isaac Newton and the Scientific Revoultion, was a good book beacause it went futher than the inventions and into Isaac Newton, the man. The book showed his public and private fueds with rival scientists. The books also shows his emotions; lots of resenment and hate, love of the unknown, and joy of experinicng life to the fullest. The only bad part of the book was it was to fast; it didn't show enough of the discoverery, it raced along to show what happened to Newton after the discovery like his fame and how it destroyed his rivals. But in the end you feel like you knew Newton and lived in the Scientiic revolution.

Tells the story of true genius
This is not just a great biography'it's one of the best-written science books around for young people. Christianson has sifted through the historical documents and accounts of Newton to paint a convincing and intelligent picture of the complex and at times irascible genius. Even more remarkable, the biographical portrait he presents is a compelling story. It begins with a beheading'that of Charles I'and ends with the poetic image of visitors to Newton's gravesite pausing "in silent tribute to the sacred permanence of the dead." The author demonstrates a remarkable sense of Newton and his times. For example, while many other biographers struggle to explain his experiments in alchemy, Christianson puts them in context of the great scientist trying to unravel the mysteries of the atomic world with the best tools available to him. The narrative also shows how Newton changed as he grew older: from a young, intense, reclusive academic to a living legend justifiably vain about his reputation. Reproductions of documents, Newton's sketches, and paintings of well-known figures illustrate this fine book

Great!
I have never read a biography quite as good as this. This book has some of the best descriptions of Newton that I've ever heard: "Like Leonardo da Vinci and Benjamin Franklin, Isaac Newton was not just an aimless childhood tinkerer, but a tinkerer playing with ideas and mechanisms." It has so many interesting details about his life, such as the jumping contest at school, or the many different clocks that he made. This book made me realize that Newton wasn't just a great scientist, but a political figure as well, with a seat in Parliment, head of the Royal Society, and Director of the Mint. If it is possible, Cristianson would be my nominee for the Pulitzer Prize.


On the Nature and Existence of God
Published in Paperback by Cambridge Univ Pr (Pap Txt) (1993)
Author: Richard M. Gale
Amazon base price: $
Used price: $65.00
Average review score:

Good, but perhaps unnecessarily confusing and technical
A fair-minded look at the problems of various proofs of God from an atheistic perspective. Some of the arguments Gale presents, I think, are unnecessarily confusing and technical. Moreover, I think Gale misses capitalizing on some points he incidentally makes and over-emphasizes the problematicism of certain issues, but only infrequently so. In any case, the book is very considerate and Gale consistently displays a good sense of humour throughout it. Readers without fairly-advanced knowledge of formal logic and recent debate on metaphysics may find this book forbidding. In any case, it makes a good addition to one's library.

Intro to Atheology 101
I came across this one at a local book store in my neighborhood, and it was a very good find. I had never heard of this book, nor do I recall any other Atheist sites that list it, yet I rate it with Martin's Atheism: A Philosophical Justification as one of the better books on the subject. The author does not cover the basics anywhere near as thorough as Smith does, but the book is a nice introduction to Atheological arguments. Attempts are made to discredit the existence of God, and the very concept of some of His attributes (such as omnipotence, omniscience, et cetera). Most entertaining of all, Gale touches on the question of things God can and cannot create (such as four-sided triangles, et cetera). While these are questions that many theists have tried to wave off as absurd or even sophomoric, Gale does a great job of giving them a more sound quality

Best available treatment of crucial issues
Some reviewer have had some problems with the more technical aspects of this book, but they are there precisely because Prof. Gale is dealing with the most subtle and sophisticated problems in the most subtle and sophisticated way. It is helpful, but not at all necessary, to have some familiarity with modal logic. Readers without the technical background will still be able to follow most of Prof. Gale's arguments.
The virtues of this book are numerous. When it comes to the issues of whether "God" is a self-consistent concept, whether the universe requires an explanation, whether the argument from evil is defeated by appeal to free will, and whether religious experience provides a rational basis for religious belief, there are simply no comparable treatments available. Gale's treatments are far and away the most comprehensive and sophisticated available. Gale also has an unfailing sense of humor and has no particular axe to grind.


Austin City Blue
Published in Hardcover by Five Star Pub (2001)
Authors: Jan Grape and Gale Group
Amazon base price: $23.95
Used price: $20.74
Collectible price: $31.76
Average review score:

Zoe rhymes with Joe
Jan Grape is best known for writing short stories and editing mystery anthologies. AUSTIN CITY BLUE is her first novel and hopefully, the beginning of a promising new series.

Zoe Barrow is a member of the Austin Police Department currently assigned to working desk duty at her local precinct. A few days ago she was attending a sports event at a local arena when she heard the call requesting police backup. Officer Barrow went to the scene and found two officers wounded at the hand of a single perpetrator. When the suspect starts to make a move she shoots him even though she is not aware of his identity. A few moments later she learns that he was Jesse Garcia the man responsible of putting her husband in a coma.

Zoe does not trust her feelings. She is not sure if she shot Garcia out of doing her duty or just plain revenge. It does not help that she is confined to office work and the people at Internal Affairs are getting on her case. She manages to get distracted from all that when Avery Peppard, a friend of her husband, comes to her asking for help. He believes his wife is having an affair with a cop and that they are plotting to kill him. She does not know what she can do for him so she helps him find Jason Foxx, a private detective, to help him. It is not until an informant with a connection to Peppard is found murdered in a motel room that Zoe decides to get involved.

Ms. Grape writes a good novel that is heavy in character development. Zoe is a conflicted woman who is torn between what she knows and what she believes. She loves he husband very much but he has been in a coma for a long time. She is attracted to Foxx but does not want to betray her husband. The story is fairly good with several red herrings placed throughout the novel. The author leaves the door open for another book and it will nice to learn more about the life of Zoe.

Very well written and compelling. Enjoyable.
When female police officer Zoe Barrow shoots a man to rescue another officer, she is merely doing her job. When she learns that he is the criminal whose earlier shot turned her husband into a vegetable, she feels a sense of closure rather than regret. But the shooting is only the beginning of a strange and violent events in Zoe's life. One of her snitches is killed, a friend of her husband's claims that his wife is trying to kill him, and Zoe starts feeling a strange attraction toward a private detective. When the possibility of police corruption comes up, Zoe doesn't know who her friends are and who might be her enemies.

Talented author Jan Grape explores the continuing prejudice against female cops, the emotional implications of a justified shooting, and writes a bang-up action story as well. As readers, we're dragged along with Zoe, thrust deep into the mystery, and thrown clues so fast that it's hard to sort out what's important and what isn't. Bits of the history of Austin, Texas's police force add some texture to the story and put Zoe's current job into its historical perspective.

I would have enjoyed a little more focus. Some of the events appeared to be either unconnected or connected by coincidence that stretch beyond normal reader credibility. Thanks to Grape's superior story-telling, these flaws don't detract much from novel's enjoyment, except to hint that Grape's next novel may be even better.

Great Book!
I really enjoyed this book. The heroine is admirable and really likeable. I came to worry about her and cheer her on.

Also, this is a murder mystery, with the emphasis on whodunit and not on the grisly details of death. I especially enjoyed all the many suspects, and how we figure out the mystery along with the heroine.

Finally, really enjoyed having this mystery take place in my adopted home. All in all a great, exciting and fun read.


Edwin Hubble: Mariner of the Nebulae
Published in Paperback by University of Chicago Press (Trd) (1996)
Author: Gale E. Christianson
Amazon base price: $13.30
List price: $19.00 (that's 30% off!)
Used price: $5.95
Collectible price: $6.31
Buy one from zShops for: $11.97
Average review score:

A compelling, engaging book that you won't put down.
If you ever wondered why the Hubble Telescope is called the Hubble Telescope, I have a book that has the answer for you. In an age where all you have to do to have a highway or bridge or named after you is get elected to some minor office (the "Eric Winkler Parkway" ???) and where all you have to do to be referred to as a "genius" is guide an NFL team to a winning record ("Tampa sure has turned around since Smith arrived to handle the coaching chores haven't they Dandy? Yes Frank, they sure have, Coach Smith is a genius"), it is sobering to meet true genius -- warts and all.

When I was in high school, I studied nothing but sciences - with a particular emphasis on Physics and Astronomy - As a child I dreamed of being an astronomer - I built my own telescope. But then fate intervened and I ended up studying English literature and becoming a music lawyer. But later in life, in my early forties, I returned to my first love via a series of general interest science books. One of those books was "Edwin Hubble, Mariner of the Nebulae".

This compelling, lovely book was written by Gale Christianson, the author of an equally engaging portrait of Isaac Newton. Christianson is a Professor of History and writes with a down to earth, straightforward style. He writes for the general reader and does not presume that you are grounded in science or astronomy. So do not fear - dragons be not here.

Hubble is easily one of the most important figures to have graced the 20th century - or for that matter all of history. If you think that is an overstatement, then factor this into your thinking. This one man is responsible, virtually single-handedly, for several of the most important discoveries of all time. It was with reference to a discovery of Hubble's that the famous Harlow Shapley remarked, "here is the [discovery] that has destroyed my universe".

1. It was Hubble who confirmed the existence of other nebulae, what are now called galaxies, outside of the "Milky Way". This seems trite now, but it was not at ALL obvious at the time. Having discovered a Cepheid variable in Andromeda he was able to measure the distance to that body of stars -- the results of his calculation (using the period/luminosity relationship (discovered by Henrietta Leavitt in 1912) that makes Cepheids the standard candles of the universe) proved beyond a doubt that Andromeda was much farther away athan any star in the Milky Way.

2. It was Hubble who proved that the universe was expanding (and worked out the famous "Hubble Constant")- an insight of incalculable significance that laid the cornerstone for the Big Bang theory.

3. It was Hubble who developed the system of classification for galaxies that is used to this day.

4. It was Hubble who brought forward evidence that the universe is homogenous - i.e., the same in all directions.

Incredibly, he never won the Nobel Prize - he died before they got around to recognising him.

But this is only part of the story. For Hubble was probably one of the most unlikeable men of all time. He was arrogant, unkind, a publicity hound, revoltingly condescending and patronising, and at times even dishonest. A considerable portion of the book is devoted to exploring his extraordinary "reinvention of himself". A polite way of saying that he made up stories about his past life to enhance his reputation - for example he claimed to have practised law.

Shinning out of the pages of this book, like one of his Cepheid Variables, is the story of his truly extraordinary wife Grace who put up with everything and was constant and faithful to a fault.

I guarantee that you will not be able to put this book down. You will be by turns elated, repulsed, amazed, disappointed, astounded and saddened. I very nearly wept during the achingly touching Epilogue. It is one of those special books that you will return to more than once.

Good, readable and intersting biography of Edwin Hubble
I believe the biography presents a complete and balanced account of the life of Edwin Hubble. The account covers his early years, family, education, military service, and his notable scientific career. The account of his education was interesting, especially his time at Oxford, England. Hubble's brief military career was covered, and his use of the image of "Major Hubble" afterwards tells much of his character. His scientific career, his work and professional controversies were covered in detail. If I were to be critical, I feel Hubble's early life received too much attention, I would prefer to have seen his scientic career covered in more detail. I brief, an interesting book, it almost makes me feel that I've met the man.

A worthy biography of a complex subject...
One of the most remarkable astronomers of all time, and the one who generally gets the credit for the biggest revolution since Copernicus: Hubble was the one who recognized that the universe is expanding, and who first articulated the principle that bears his name, that of the expansion constant, the "Hubble" constant.

This outstanding work does a good job of tracing his early years, a task made difficult by the fact that his wife destroyed many of his personal papers after his death. Hubble was enigmatic, aloof, and possibly disingenuous. He shed his Missouri roots and donned the polished exterior of a Brit. He was a shameless anglophile to the end of his life.

He had a knack for asking the right questions at the right time, and being a talented enough observer to get the data needed to address those questions. (...)

Christianson's work is an honest treatment of a difficult and complex subject. She doesn't gloss over the rough spots or try to sugar coat his scientific accomplishments. This is thoroughly researched and well written work.


The Great Ghost Rescue (Thorndike Large Print Juvenile Series)
Published in Hardcover by Thorndike Pr (Largeprint) (2002)
Authors: Eva Ibbotson, Kevin Hawkes, and Gale Group
Amazon base price: $22.95
Used price: $16.90
Average review score:

Funny and Creepy
Being close to halloween I chose this book to read for enjoyment as well as a way to fulfill an assignment for a class I am taking. The book jacket told of a young English boy's journey as he tries to help some creepy and strange spirits find a new home after being evicted from their castle where they have spent the last 500 years. Along the way other ghosts, vampire bats and spooks help the young man on his way to Parliament to plead with the government to help the homeless spirits. The unusual array of characters really adds to the story.
I think the story has enough humor and "grossness" to keep young readers entertained. Humphrey the Horrible and his ghost family are an interesting bunch. His father, the Gliding Kilt, his mother,the Hag, his sister, Weeping Winifred, and his brother George, the Screaming Skull together make up the leaders of a band of residence challenged ghouls.
Besides being entertaining the story also has some serious yet subtle messages in it. Most of the ghosts are being misplaced because their old homes and haunts are being destroyed by progress. Old castles are being turned into hotels, haunted houses are being torn down to make subdivisions, and old barns are even being turned into bowling alleys. "Hard to haunt with all those bright lights and bowling balls making all that rachet!" says one ghost. This one underlying plot may make readers think about and form opinions about how progress affects our world.
I would recommend this book for young readers. While not being very scary at all it is entertaining and there may even be a few lessons to be learned.

Fun and intelligent!
This is the first book of Ibbotson's that I've read and I enjoyed it. It makes you laugh, makes you think, and makes you care. I think it's a great book for children mainly because it makes them think while having fun. There's enough 'gross'ness to say 'ughhhh!' and laugh, giggle and shows how we can DO something about the world around us if we really cared and tried to contribute positively to it.

It's a well-written book.

This is a great book!
This book is one of the last Ibbotson's I read, but i loved it just the same. Parts of it may not be as wonderful as Which Witch? or Not Just A Witch, but it is a great book I would highly recommend it for relaxing fantasy literature. I also find it better in different ways than the other books. The characters seem more


Related Subjects: Author Index Reviews Page 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25

Reviews are from readers at Amazon.com. To add a review, follow the Amazon buy link above.