Average customer rating:
- Not Free SF Reader
- Really entertaining
- This book is psychoactive to read.
- THINKING PERSON'S GUIDE TO THE UNIVERSE
- A Novel of High Weirdness
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The Illuminatus! Trilogy: The Eye in the Pyramid, The Golden Apple, Leviathan
Robert Shea , and
Robert Anton Wilson
Manufacturer: Dell
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Binding: Paperback
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Cosmic Trigger I : Final Secret of the Illuminati (Cosmic Trigger)
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The Book of the SubGenius : The Sacred Teachings of J.R. 'Bob' Dobbs
ASIN: 0440539811
Release Date: 1983-12-01 |
Book Description
Filled with sex and violence--in and out of time and space--the three books of The Illuminatus are only partly works of the imagination. They tackle all the coverups of our time--from who really shot the Kennedys to why there's a pyramid on a one-dollar bill.
Customer Reviews:
Not Free SF Reader.......2007-09-03
The Illuminatus! Trilogy is an omnibus edition of the bizarre craziness and streams of whatever the hell could be thrown into the mix that comprises:
The Eye in the Pyramid
The Golden Apple
Leviathan
So, a good way to get all of this at once, if you can handle the weird that appears throughout this sort of thing.
Really entertaining.......2007-08-29
This book is 800+ pages of a practical joke. It is very entertaining and well worth reading. It kept my attention throughout the story and I found myself laughing at the absurdities as well as the 'wink winks'. Beyond that I would hope that people are intelligent and patient enough with the book to realize that it is a work of fiction, and that while there may be an iota of truth in every fifty pages, it is just a maybe. Be sure to read after the story is completed, and you won't be disappointed. However if you're looking for a convenient linear storyline you definitely will be. One last note, this book has made me research more historical archives than any history class, any thing in life which makes you think is a great thing to experience.
This book is psychoactive to read. .......2007-07-09
I first read this book (or the three paperbacks) when I was 14, and have re-read it a number of times throughout the intervening years. Every time, I come out the other side a changed man. I think a fully open mind ("gullible in the right way") could do worse than start the process toward "illumiantion" by reading this book.
Folks who really love this should check out Cosmic Trigger: The Final Secret of the Illuminati, which is Wilson's non-fiction account of what happened after the book. It's a trip.
THINKING PERSON'S GUIDE TO THE UNIVERSE.......2007-06-25
I've read and reread this book many times. RAW wrote this on so many levels that you have to peel away the layers of the onion to get to the core.
For another fictional novel that tackles conspiracies and the occult
try Solomon's Key: the CODIS Project by R. Douglas Weber.
SOLOMON'S KEY THE CODIS PROJECT: A CONSPIRACY THRILLER
The widow's sons and the OTO plot a dark agenda against the world. It relies heavily on RAW's the Cosmic Trigger to encorporate the true secret of the Illuminati and all secret societes. And it spells it out in plain English without the symbolic allegory that RAW gave into.
It tells the history of L. Ron Hubbard's Scientology...The BABALON BUNCH: The Magickian, the Rocket Man and Frater H...Hubbard. Sex Magick... the Moonchilde--Crowley and Parsons.
A Novel of High Weirdness.......2007-06-04
Do you feel strange?
Do you feel strange often?
Do you like feeling strange?
In that case, I can recommend no better book than this.
Enjoy.
Average customer rating:
- A Book for Wanderers
- Short Story collection mascarading as a novel
- Beautiful, Subtle, Resonating Stories
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The Golden Apples
Eudora Welty
Manufacturer: Harvest Books
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
Contemporary
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The Collected Stories of Eudora Welty
ASIN: 015636090X |
Book Description
Welty is on home ground in the state of Mississippi in this collection of seven stories. She portrays the MacLains, the Starks, the Moodys, and other families of the fictitious town of Morgana. “I doubt that a better book about ‘the South’-one that more completely gets the feel of the particular texture of Southern life and its special tone and pattern-has ever been written” (New Yorker).
Customer Reviews:
A Book for Wanderers.......2004-12-22
In The Golden Apples, Welty offers a cycle of subtle, complex and often hilarious stories/myths from the fictional town of Morgana, Mississippi. Told from a variety of perspectives and voices, the cycle uses southern imagery, greek mythology (sometimes via the poetry of Yeats) and musings on art and music to narrate the history of a cast of characters either absorbed by or isolated from Morgana and the surrounding world. The reader, in assembling meaning from the flood of rich narrative becomes more than a casual observer, but a participant in the ongoing mythology of Morgana.
Like Winesberg or Yoknapatawpha or even Middle Earth, Welty creates a world so complete and convincing that we can't help but immerse ourselves. And what lies in the gaps between the stories and known chronology becomes just as captivating as the story we're given.
Golden Apples, in its complexity, can be a lot of work. But the payoff is huge.
Short Story collection mascarading as a novel.......2004-07-17
Golden Apples is a novel by Eudora Welty that reads like a series of bizarre short stories with the same recurring characters set in a fictional town in Mississippi. Some readers may find it difficult because of its use of language (...). Others may find it difficult just for it's odd prose. The chapters are not linear nor are obvious segues ever used to cue the reader in that a jump in time has taken place. There are also lots of characters with similar names making it easy to lose track of who has done what, when. If I were more drawn into the book I'd want to reread it to get the pieces I missed or misunderstood but frankly I'm just not captivated enough to want to do that right now.
Beautiful, Subtle, Resonating Stories.......1999-04-22
"The Golden Apples" is one of the five best short story collections I've read. Welty's description of character, and its transformation throughout life (it's almost like an episodic novel) is subtle, humorous, and moving. Her style is poetic yet lucid, perfect for the emotionally complex situations she describes. The citizens of Morgana, Mississippi, with all their virtues, flaws and perversities, reminded me of Anderson's "Winesberg, Ohio." But Welty's eye seems defter, deeper, less given to easy pay-off and caricature. Similarly, she is superior to Flannary O'Connor because her tales deal with the nuances of everyday events rather than thunder-and-lightning epiphanies.
Dive into this swirling, invigorating pool and have your views of people and the world changed, as were mine.
Average customer rating:
- The Highlights are the True Science-Fiction Tales
- Strong Collection, but Not Extraordinary
- Another Bradbury Treat
- great book!!!
- Not up to Bradbury's high standards
|
Golden Apples of the Sun, The
Ray Bradbury
Manufacturer: Harper Perennial
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
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A Medicine for Melancholy and Other Stories
ASIN: 0380730391 |
Book Description
Ray Bradbury is a modern cultural treasure. His disarming simplicity of style underlies a towering body of work unmatched in metaphorical power by any other American storyteller. And here, presented in a new trade edition, are thirty-two of his most famous tales--prime examples of the poignant and mysterious poetry which Bradbury uniquely uncovers in the depths of the human soul, the otherwordly portraits of outrÉ fascination which spring from the canvas of one of the century's great men of imagination. From a lonely coastal lighthouse to a sixty-million-year-old safary, from the pouring rain of Venus to the ominous silence of a murder scene, Ray Bradbury is our sure-handed guide not only to surprising and outrageous manifestations of the future, but also to the wonders of the present that we could never have imagined on our own.Ray Bradbury is a modern cultural treasure. His disarming simplicity of style underlies a towering body of work unmatched in metaphorical power by any other American storyteller. And here, presented in a new trade edition, are thirty-two of his most famous tales--prime examples of the poignant and mysterious poetry which Bradbury uniquely uncovers in the depths of the human soul, the otherwordly portraits of outre fascination which spring from the canvas of one of the centurys great men of imagination. From a lonely coastal lighthouse to a sixty-million-year-old safari, from the pouring rain of Venus to the ominous silence of a murder scene, Ray Bradbury is our sure-handed guide not only to surprising and outrageous manifestations of the future, but also to the wonders of the present that we could never have imagined on our own.
Customer Reviews:
The Highlights are the True Science-Fiction Tales.......2007-03-16
Ray Bradbury's skill as a storyteller permits him to paint beautiful pictures of the otherwise mundane. A lot of his tales sound rather ordinary by their descriptions, and rarely like science-fiction; his gift is to enchant you anyway, whether by offering a fresh perspective or just using his beautiful command of language as his artist's palette.
Golden Apples isn't the best example of this, though. With a few exceptions, the best stories in this collection are those which could never happen, and which truly are science-fiction (or at least fantasy), and the forgettable ones have the least going on. In addition to perhaps the greatest known Bradbury short ever ("A Sound of Thunder," about time-traveling big game hunters who alter the future), the best tales depict an ageless boy wandering the earth in search of new parents; a dinosaur emerging from the ocean's depths to heed the call of a fog horn it mistakes as kin; a ghost inhabiting a real girl's body to experience falling in love; and, in Tell-Tale Heart-like fashion, a man goes insane while covering his post-murder tracks.
Of the non-science-fiction stories, the predominant themes are nuclear apocalypse, media and technology's intrusion in our lives, and ethnic pride and race relations. Some work ("The Big Black and White Game," "The Murderer"), and some don't ("Sun and Shadow," "Embroidery"). It struck me that those tales offering the most social commentary entertained the least.
Strong Collection, but Not Extraordinary.......2004-04-18
I've read mostly all of Bradbury's lengthier fiction repretoire, and have only begun dipping into his collections of short stories. As a writer during the "Golden Age" of science fiction, Bradbury is unsurpassed: All at once, he manages to show the reader a future of hope, of surprise and of brightness. His writing style is simple and terse, and it takes some time to get used to the cadance with which he writes.
One of the aspects I've always appreciated about Bradbury's writing is that his stories extend beyond the "science fiction" genre. Encapsulated within the SF exterior, Bradbury manages to capture portraits of humanity - throughout all of his stories, it is apparent that he prescribes to the idea that the more things change, the more they stay the same. Thus, while he writes about space travel and other fantastical subjects, he retains a sense of humanity which transcends the differences in environment.
Without a doubt, my favorite story in this anthology is "R is for Rocket." This story alone is worth buying the book for...I am enraptured with the way Bradbury tells of the carefree summers the boys enjoy, and then juxtapose it to the pressure of a career in space exploration.
Generally, I find Bradbury's fantasy to be somewhat boring (though this can also be attributed to my lack of enthusiasm for fantasy as a whole). Don't let this faze you - this is a very strong collection, and excellent introduction, to Bradbury's short story abilities. About 90% of the stories in this book are really excellent..But the other 10% almost seem like simple writing exercises and are no way indicative of Bradbury's true talants as a writer.
Another Bradbury Treat.......2004-01-15
I'll admit I haven't finished this book but what I've read has taken my breath away. The writing is classic Bradbury, poetic and enticing. The stories themselves surprised me a little since I don't think I'd yet read a Bradbury story that wasn't science fiction or fantasy. "The Fruit at the bottom of the bowel" is one of these and is fantastic. Of course, it seems to me that Bradbury's preoccupation has always been with people rather than magic or technology. Thus it makes sense that his "realistic" fiction would be just as effective as his other. In any case, Bradbury is a masterful storyteller and anyone would deprive themselves if they didn't read his work, including this collection.
great book!!!.......2003-05-07
i read this book so many times by now and i still fall in love with it every time i read a story in it!!!
he is really one of the best writers, and this is one of his best books!!
buy it and see for youself.
Not up to Bradbury's high standards.......2002-08-20
Short story master Ray Bradbury presents 22 offerings variously set in ancient times, in out-of-the-way rustic hills, and in modern cities of Europe and the Americas, but never really seems to hit his stride. While best known for such science fiction classics as The Martian Chronicles and the short novel Fahrenheit 451, a significant portion of Bradbury's output is not very sci-fi, and sometimes scarcely even qualifies as fantasy. First and last, Bradbury's stories are about human emotion, and the setting (be it Mars, Hollywood, or ancient China) merely facilitates the drama for the disturbingly familiar players.
The few science fiction stories in this collection are not very notable. "The Pedestrian" is probably the best, with its strong statement about the rights of the individual. "Embroidery" shows three elderly women trying to create beauty in a world that is crashing around them and so demonstrates Bradbury's penchant for female characters as well as mature ones. Women's inner strength is also the subject of "The Wilderness" which would fit nicely into the Martian Chronicles collection except that it isn't quite powerful enough. "A Sound of Thunder" is a very conventional time travel tale that reads like Bradbury imitating Asimov, while "The Golden Apples of the Sun" is the re-telling of an ancient fable in the style of Arthur C. Clarke. The few fantasies are an odd mixture, but only the lonesome sea monster of "The Foghorn" makes any real impression.
Combined, the sci-fi and fantasy pieces make up only about half of this volume's 22 stories; the other half consists of Bradbury's brief glimpses of the real world. The most memorable is probably "The Fruit at the Bottom of the Bowl" in which a murderer tries to clean up the stain of his crime, but most of the others are all-too forgettable. Readers will page through tales of bureaucratic indifference, racial bigotry, the tragedy of illiteracy, but always the main theme is loneliness, loneliness, loneliness. Bradbury's hushed narrative voice is perfect for these kinds of stories, but readers of sci-fi and fantasy may come away less than delighted. This book feels like a grab bag of stories that didn't make it into any other collections, and really isn't quite up to the author's usually high standard. Devoted fans will surely enjoy these stories, but few will be impressed by the strength of this collection alone. Those anxious to discover this fine writer's work would do better to look into the above-mentioned novels, or else the wonderful Machineries of Joy, which shows the author's skill with short stories to much better advantage.
Average customer rating:
- Perfect Blend of Words and Pictures
- 4½ A Delicous Version of How the West was Won
- Being the review of a gal who likes her tall tales spunky
- Delicious!
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Apples to Oregon: Being the (Slightly) True Narrative of How a Brave Pioneer Father Brought Apples, Peaches, Pears, Plums, Grapes, and Cherries (and Children) ... the Plains (Golden Kite Awards (Awards))
Deborah Hopkinson
Manufacturer: Atheneum/Anne Schwartz Books
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Hardcover
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ASIN: 0689847696 |
Book Description
Apples, ho!
When Papa decides to pull up roots and move from Iowa to Oregon, he can't bear to leave his precious apple trees behind. Or his peaches, plums, grapes, cherries, and pears. Oh, and he takes his family along too. But the trail is cruel -- first there's a river to cross that's wider than Texas...and then there are hailstones as big as plums...and there's even a drought, sure to crisp the cherries. Those poor pippins! Luckily Delicious (the nonedible apple of Daddy's eye) is strong -- as young 'uns raised on apples are -- and won't let anything stop her father's darling saps from tasting the sweet Oregon soil.
Here's a hilarious tall tale -- from the team that brought you Fannie in the Kitchen -- that's loosely based on the life of a real fruiting pioneer.
Apple Facts
More than 7,500 varieties of apples are grown throughout the world.
About 2,500 varieties grow in the United States.
The apple variety
Delicious is the most widely grown in the United States.
Apples are part of the
rose family.
The science of fruit growing is called pomology.
Fresh apples
float. That's because
25 percent of their volume is air.
Cut an apple in half, across the core, and you'll see a
star shape.
It takes apple trees
four to five years to produce their first fruit.
It takes about
thirty-six apples to make
one gallon of apple cider.
Customer Reviews:
Perfect Blend of Words and Pictures.......2006-04-02
This story has so much going for it: delightful phrasing, conflict, humor, and a satisfying ending.
I love that the story is told from a child's perspective. "Delicious" truly saves the day. Isn't that the dream of every child? ;-)
The illustrations are the cherry on this story sundae. They're colorful, fun and engaging. Yum!
4½ A Delicous Version of How the West was Won.......2005-08-29
This is the vegan version of "Oregon Trail," an ancient computer game that was once -played on the Apple IIe, and featured "blam-blam" cheesy sounds as you gunned down moose, dear, and bear. Here, there's no fishing or hunting, but you follow the same trail past Chimney and Courthouse Rock, ford a river, climb the Rockies, and raft down the Columbia River to Oregon. Although I wondered the book violated any copyright laws, all resemblance to the "Oregon Trail" ends there.
Unlike the game, there's no dysentery, crooked traders, stampeding animals, or cranky settlers. Instead, a plucky family travels from Iowa to Oregon with a gigantic wagon holding a holding a whole orchard of fruit trees: Apples, plums, cherries, pears, and peaches. The book is more enjoyable than I expected, given its resemblance to the game, mostly because of the colorful girl, "Delicious," who narrates the story, and the sometimes silly obsession of her fruit-minded father. When "Delicious" (at least her father didn't name her "Gravenstein") alerts us "Daddy was ready for the most daring adventure in the history of fruit," you know you're in for a clever and exciting tall tale.
On the way to Oregon, the family encounters nasty skeptical fellow travelers, weather changes, and natural obstacles. They build a raft and start paddling the Platte River, the "muddy drink started to pull us down":
"'The peaches are plummeting!' my sisters shouted."
"'The plums are plunging,' boomed my brother."
"'Don't let my babies go belly-up!" howled Daddy.
Apparently, Daddy's has unbounded concern for the apples of his eye...and he also loves his kids. Delicious, who knows that children raised on apples are "mighty strong" (there's lots of "Western" dialect festooning these pages), gets her sibs to kick off their shoes and kick their feet against the Platte. Later, a windstorm strikes, half-denuding the family (sure to get some laughs from the younger set), and eliciting another cry from Daddy (always in big, bold font):
"Guard the grapes! Protect the peaches!"
The persistent, albeit slightly goofy Daddy, is shown on a great two-page spread resembling the Disneyland diorama of the Grand Canyon. The family is hauling the wagon up about a 50 degree incline, an impossible task, of course, while the unvanquished Daddy announces, "just a hundred miles to go." In one of many colorful illustrations, Delicious-looking more and more like a young pioneer woman, fights a wispy Jack Frost with a bonfire and a blanket. Very soon, "that low-down scoundrel was hightailing it out of there, heading straight for Walla, Washington. Delicious stands tall and proud. The illustrations slightly recall those of Patricia Polacco with their emphasis on people's faces and long exaggerated lines, although they're not quite as loopy and personal as Polacco's.
The books concludes with a successful orchard planting in Oregon, just as in the true story of the parents and their eight children who brought the first apple trees from Iowa to Oregon in 1847. Delicious, easily the most appealing and emotionally satisfying character in the book is last seen high up in an apple tree, munching away and pondering the Gold Rush that that began shortly after their trip. All those fruit trees, she says "made us richer than any prospector. We were happier, too. After all, apples taste a whole lot better than gold."
Being the review of a gal who likes her tall tales spunky.......2005-03-29
So I was doing my usual Thursday storytime (as is my librarianly duty) to a group of open-mouthed red-cheeked youngsters when I happened to ask if any of them knew what a tall tale was. You could have heard a pin drop. Now there were roughly ten or so children ranging in age from nine to toddlerhood and amongst these not a single child (that would admit it) knew that great family friendly and thoroughly American art of over exaggeration. I was sorely aggrieved but read from Anne Isaac's marvelous, "Swamp Angel" and felt much better in the end. Since that time, I have come to the conclusion that it is the duty of every good honest citizen of our fair Etas Unis that writes for children to make at least one tall taleish picture book in their lifetime. So far, there are plenty of writer/illustrators out there shirking their duties, but Deborah Hopkinson and Nancy Carpenter are not among them. Between the two of them they've concocted a rip-roaring, snorting, fit to be tied narrative based on true events and spun into utter silliness and fantasy. The result is the fun freewheeling, "Apples To Oregon", and after reading it your tots may well want to make the trip themselves.
Delicious and her daddy are two of a kind. They both love their beautiful Iowan fruit orchard. And they'd give everything they have to preserve and protect those awesomely tasty trees. So when Delicious's daddy decides that the family should pull up stakes and head for Oregon, it's only natural that the trees should come along with. Trouble is, it's hard enough to get a family the size of Delicious's across the plains (there are eight or so children), let alone finicky fruit bearers. But her daddy's determined, so off go Delicious, her mother, father, and seven siblings to make it to Oregon. Along the way they ford a mighty river using only their feet, battle a mighty windstorm, are saved of thirst by finding water filled boots, and finally engage in combat with the sneaky low down Jack Frost himself. By the end, Oregon has its trees and Delicious has a new home to settle in.
Hopkinson writes in an easygoing drawl that doesn't try too hard or rely on an abundance of silly cliches. And the various adventures visited upon the clan are silly but never too frightening or woeful. The fact that Delicious's father seems to care more for his trees than his children is a bit off-putting. And I can definitely see various children reading this story and getting ticked at his callousness. But if you take it for what it's worth, the rest of the reading is easy going. Hopkinson even includes in her Author's Note some information on the man this tale was loosely based on. It may certain interest adults to know that as a result of 1847's Henderson Luelling, Oregon remains one of the finest fruit producers in the continental United States.
As for illustrator Nancy Carpenter, she's given the pictures here a nice feel. You jump in sympathy as you see the poor kids leap through the sand without their boots (and you can't help but curse their lazy father who is not only booted but riding a horse... some Pop he is!). You cringe as Jack Frost's hand reaches to get past clever Delicious, ever watchful at her post. The pictures here are a sweet compliment to a nice story.
I don't know if I can say that this is the best tall tale book out there. But it is nice to see how the hero in this particular case is an entire family and not just one single striking individual. As I've noted, I've some problems with Delicious's father's misplaced loyalties, but otherwise this is a nice enough book and should make a fun storytime of its own. For anyone who's ever wanted to interest their very young offspring in the Oregon Trail, this might be a great way to spark interest at an early age.
Delicious!.......2004-08-21
I'm a second grade teacher and I love to use picture books in the classroom. What a find this is! With hilarious illustrations, it also covers all the bases -- apples, the Oregon trail, and a great story based (loosely) on real events, besides. I love the Apple Facts on the back cover. A great book!
Average customer rating:
- A Master Storyteller at Work
- I love this book!
- Genius
- Unbelievable
- Great stuff
|
Bradbury Classic Stories 1: From the Golden Apples of the Sun and R Is for Rocket (Grand Master Editions)
Ray Bradbury
Manufacturer: Spectra
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Mass Market Paperback
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A Sound of Thunder and Other Stories
ASIN: 0553286374
Release Date: 1990-04-01 |
Book Description
A spaceship captain determined to gather a cupful of the sun. . .a nubile young witch who yearns to taste human love. . .an expedition that hunts dinosaurs across the fragile and dangerous chasm of time. . . These strange and wonderful tales of beauty and terror will transport you from the begininng of time to the outermost limits of the future. Selected from his best-selling collections The Golden Apples Of The Sun and R Is For Rocket, here are thirty-two superb stories from one of the master fantastics of our age--the inimitable Ray Bradbury.
Customer Reviews:
A Master Storyteller at Work.......2006-04-15
This book showcases some of Ray Bradbury's greatest short stories. His talent is to create a story that the reader is immediately able to sink into no mater how unbelievable the plot, the setting or the characters, and from time machines, to interplanetary adventures, this book is truly filled with the improbable which Bradbury makes seem imminently possible. This is truly is an enjoyable read.
I love this book!.......2000-12-14
I highly recommend this book to any fan of Ray Bradbury's work, or to anyone who wishes to introduce his classic works into their library. He is a passionate visionary that writes not only about sci-fi, but his colorful writing style encapsulates the sometimes ineffable feelings that each and every one of us have had about every possible situation in life, and dare I say, in death. I always feel like a kid again when I read his books, I am taken away to warm, sunny Saturdays when I was still in awe of the newness of life. I can hardly force myself to read the works of others as I am convinced that no one can do with words the magic that Ray Bradbury has done.
Genius.......2000-11-10
Ray Bradbury is a genius-pure and simple. He is a great. Proof is his power to affect the heart while engaging the intellect.
Unbelievable.......1999-05-23
These stories are the most piognant I have ever read except in The Martian Chronicles. These stories are mind blowing. Bradbury is the greatest short story writer of our time and maybe all time.
Great stuff.......1999-04-02
If anything this collection only reasserts what a treasure Bradbury is, probably the most American of our short story writers and one who can still speak to everyone with his stories. His tone is as calm as Arthur Clarke but you never really realize that you're reading something fantastic and outerworldly, he can make every event seem commonplace. This set is a collection of many of his best and most of the have become part of our consciousness, where we can barely envision a world where these stories had never existed. "The Foghorn" is probably one of his best known but there are others equally worthy. "R is for Rocket" is his best story by my counts, though "Frost and Fire" isn't too behind. The wealth of classic material in here is almost criminal, one person shouldn't be this creative. The only complaint is that a bunch of the stories in the R is for Rocket section were repeated in the Illustrated Man but that's a minor complaint really. They're just as good the second time. Go read this if you have any doubts about Bradbury's genius and you shall doubt no longer.
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Mom'N'Pop's Apple Pie 1950s Cookbook: Over 300 Great Recipes from the Golden Age of American Home Cooking
Barbara Stuart Peterson
Manufacturer: Smithmark Publishers
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Hardcover
Pies
| Baking
| Cooking, Food & Wine
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Cooking, Food & Wine
| Subjects
| Books
General
| U.S. Regional
| Regional & International
| Cooking, Food & Wine
| Subjects
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Popular Culture
| Social Sciences
| Nonfiction
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ASIN: 0765194996 |
Average customer rating:
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TWICE TWENTY-TWO - THE GOLDEN APPLES OF THE SUN - A MEDICINE FOR MELANCHOLY.
Manufacturer: Doubleday
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Hardcover
ASIN: B000HHEKVQ |
Average customer rating:
- 9 Lessons to Turn Your Career & Life Around
- As Powerful as Malcolm Gladwell's "Blink"
- Finding Value in a Lumpy Vegetable!
- These strategies work
- A fast and easy, inspiring read
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The Golden Apple: How to Grow Opportunity and Harvest Success
Kathy Aaronson
Manufacturer: Wiley
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Hardcover
Guides
| Job Hunting & Careers
| Business & Investing
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General
| Business & Investing
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Motivational
| Management & Leadership
| Business & Investing
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General
| Sales & Selling
| Marketing & Sales
| Business & Investing
| Subjects
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General
| Small Business & Entrepreneurship
| Business & Investing
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Success
| Self-Help
| Health, Mind & Body
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All Amazon Upgrade
| Amazon Upgrade
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Business & Investing
| Amazon Upgrade
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Health, Mind & Body
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ASIN: 047177782X |
Book Description
When Kathy Aaronson was eight years old, she set up a small roadside stand next to her family’s farm and began selling vegetables that weren’t up to supermarket standards (too small or too misshaped). Her entrepreneurial drive was sparked by a need to connect with people, and in the process of learning to sell successfully she learned about how to find and provide value to any type of customer. In The Golden Apple, Aaronson uses the lessons learned at her produce stand and applied later in executive sales to illustrate nine lessons that can help readers turn their careers and lives around. Using humor and practical, step-by-step guidance, this book will teach readers how to: get the attention of busy, distracted client prospects; how to do business confidently and well with anybody – even rude, crude client prospects; how to use stories to successfully sell products, services or ideas, and how to develop business relationships that will protect their careers in any economy. With the Golden Apple as their guide, readers will be confident they have the tools to make success easier than failure, in business and in life.
Kathy Aaronson, originally from New Hampshire, is the founder and CEO of the executive recruitment and sales training firm, The Sales Athlete, Inc., with offices in Los Angeles and New York City. A nationally recognized expert on executive sales, Kathy helps companies increase revenue and market share, and, for 30 years, assisting individuals in finding career happiness and wealth.
Customer Reviews:
9 Lessons to Turn Your Career & Life Around.......2007-01-08
I discovered this book from a review in the Orlando Sentinel, which pointed out that it "provides valuable insight into dealing with rejection and building positive business relationships." I like that it gives lots of examples, includes case studies and checklists so you not only understand this, but also can put it into action.
Here's what it includes:
Part One: Bringing Out the Value Within.
1. Finding Worth, Providing Value.
Checklist: What Is Value?
Nothing Happens Until You Sell Yourself.
2. Slowing Down the Traffic.
Creating Prospects.
The Five-Touch Technique.
3. Why We Buy, and How.
The Four Universal Types of Customers.
Building Loyalty with Every Sale.
Part Two: Turning Cold Calls into Warm Relationships.
4. Communicating with All the People, All the Time.
Six Possible Responses to Your Approach.
5. The Well-Polished Presenter.
The 24-Hour Professional.
Packaging Counts.
6. Storytelling Selling.
New Ideas: How to Show, Tell, and Sell.
A Seven-Point Presentation Structure for Selling Anything.
Rules for Storytelling Selling.
Part Three: Giving Something Extra.
7. An Apple for the Road.
Ten "Something Extra" Ideas.
Replenish--So You'll Have Something Extra to Give.
8. An Apple for the Teacher.
How to Find a Mentor.
How to Keep a Mentor.
9. It's All about the People.
How to Choose a Career You'll Love.
Career Security through Thick and Thin.
Epilogue: The Most Important People.
Appendix: The Golden Apple Action Plan.
As Powerful as Malcolm Gladwell's "Blink".......2006-11-09
Think fast, be creative, and know how to come up with your own speed bumps in life that get people to stop and pay attention. Kathy Aaronson reminds us of that "kid courage" that got us what we wanted as children. Are you applying it to your life today?
Finding Value in a Lumpy Vegetable!.......2006-05-17
While many of the strategies that Aaronson describes in her book are targeted to the sales/marketing professional, anyone who is truly serious about attaining career satisfaction will benefit from her wisdom and insight.
This book is a fast, enjoyable read, and definitely delivers on its promise to make "success easier than failure."
These strategies work.......2006-05-15
Kathy Aaronson's strategies for breaking through and building receptivity with all types of people changed the way I do marketing. This book is a fun read, filled with good tips for anyone with an idea to convey and services to sell.
A fast and easy, inspiring read.......2006-05-10
Check this book out. It works on many levels: an inspiratonal story, a sales primer and a humorous slice of how business works. Highly recommended
Average customer rating:
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Once upon a Golden Apple (Picture Puffins)
Jean Little , and
Maggie De Vries
Manufacturer: Puffin
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
Picture Books
| Ages 4-8
| Children's Books
| Subjects
| Books
Little, Jean
| ( L )
| Authors & Illustrators, A-Z
| Children's Books
| Subjects
| Books
Gilman, Phoebe
| ( G )
| Authors & Illustrators, A-Z
| Children's Books
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Baby-3
| Children's Books
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Literature
| Children's Books
| Subjects
| Books
ASIN: 0140541640 |
Customer Reviews:
Once Upon A Golden Apple.......2007-01-22
This is a delightful imagination book for preschoolers and early grades. Great for read-aloud to groups as well as one on one. Kids can help tell the story along with the reader. I have used it with approximately 85 classes a year for the last 7 years. We have lots of fun with it.
Average customer rating:
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The Race of the Golden Apples
Claire Martin
Manufacturer: Dial
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Hardcover
General
| Religions
| Children's Books
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Ages 4-8
| Children's Books
| Subjects
| Books
General
| Literature
| Children's Books
| Subjects
| Books
ASIN: 0803702485 |
Books:
- The Last Week: What the Gospels Really Teach About Jesus's Final Days in Jerusalem
- The Layguide: How to Seduce Women More Beautiful Than You Ever Dreamed Possible No Matter What You Look Like or How Much You Make
- The Little Book of Quitting
- The Looming Tower: Al-Qaeda and the Road to 9/11
- The Lord God Made Them All (All Creatures Great & Small)
- The Lost Boy: A Foster Child's Search for the Love of a Family
- The Mermaids Singing (A Dr. Tony Hill & Carol Jordan Mystery)
- The Midnight Choir
- The Mother-in-Law Dance: Can Two Women Love the Same Man and Still Get Along?
- The Naming of the Dead (An Inspector Rebus)
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