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61. ALMOST OVER YOU RECORDED BY SHEENA
 
62. BEAUTY AND THE BEAST
 
63. A PATRIOT'S HISTORY OF THE UNITED
 
64. No Enemy But Time
65. The Iron Dragon's Daughter
 
66. Michigan Gambler
 
$13.00
67. North American Quartet
 
68. Visions of Interplanetary Probes
 
$156.00
69. The Road To Woodstock - 1st Edition/1st
 
70. The Statue of Liberty
$10.65
71. Education and progress
 
72. The Sparkling Story of Coca-Cola:
 
73. Insects of Europe
 
74. The Wildfowl Art of David Maass.
 
75. PURGATORY (Signed)
 
76. Ben-Gurion: A Biography
 
77. ROGER TORY PETERSON FIELD GUIDES
 
$211.34
78. Ultimate Beer
 
$26.64
79. The War Lords: Military Commanders
 
80. STATIONS OF THE TIDE...

61. ALMOST OVER YOU RECORDED BY SHEENA EASTON (EMI-AMERICA)
by JENNIFER / CINDY RICHARDSON (WORDS AND MUSIC BY) KIMBALL
 Paperback: Pages (1983)

Asin: B003YEZ1RQ
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62. BEAUTY AND THE BEAST
by Apy illustrated by Michael Hague Deborah
 Hardcover: Pages (1983-01-01)

Asin: B002ACB37K
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63. A PATRIOT'S HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES FROM COLUMBUS'S GREAT DISCOVERY TO THE WAR ON TERROR
by Larry and Michael Allen Schweikart
 Hardcover: Pages (2005)

Asin: B001G0KCXI
Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars
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Customer Reviews (274)

5-0 out of 5 stars America's TRUE complete history
This book is acurate, factual and very thorough.It gives the researcher and those seeking the heart and soul of The United States of America the truth ---unabridged and without political influence! Great for the high school, homeschooler and college reasearcher.

1-0 out of 5 stars Jaundiced and Partisan
One should read Schweikart's 48 Liberal Lies about American History to get a sense of one of the authors' perspectives.In Liberal Lies, he sets up several "strawman" arguments against positions only the most radical and discredited actually believe.For example, that FDR had advance knowledge of the attack on Pearl Harbor.Even quintessentially liberal historian Howard Zinn rejects this nonsense.Schweikart debates with 9/11 "truthers" as though, they represent the general consensus.I did not know that "liberals" broadly espoused conspiracy theories about government involvement in 9/11.As another example, he targets the "liberal lie" that JFK was killed by LBJ in an attempt to prevent him from getting us out of Vietnam.Again, he is addressing conspiracy theories as if they represent the view of the academy.It is thus easy for him to appear the hero, striking down imaginary villains. He is tilting at windmills.Such victories are easy, if Pyrrhic.This is his vantage as he embarks on a Patriot's History of the United States.Truth, be damned!

He is a vehement partisan, and Fox News contributor.I do not mean that he is an expert to which Fox News looks for deeper analysis.I mean he goes on shows such as Beck's and tickles the ears of the audience with "validation" of what they thought all along.His treatment is neither fair, nor balanced. David Horowitz is listed as one of his manuscript reviewers.This book is for partisan consumption.Unfortunately, the uninitiated will uncritically gobble up this "history" with unwitting zeal.It is for right-wingers what Zinn's history was for left-wingers.

All but those least familiar with history, rabidly partisan, and blinded with poisoning bias will see through this transparent attempt to enslave history to ideology. This is historical revision at its worst.By the way, authors such as Howard Zinn have written equally tendentious texts from a liberal slant.The issue is NOT a partisan one; it is a matter of professional integrity and intellectual honesty. Still, I suspect many will read this as such in order to dismiss the cogent points. Such is the contamination of intellectual dishonesty.

The "dishonesty" resides not so much in blatantly inaccurate statements; rather, the error lies in massive omissions designed to advance a certain narrow agenda-driven vision of the American experience.Perhaps this is reflective of the authors' attempt to "correct" liberal bias.I am however not so sure that making grave errors in the opposite direction is an effective corrective to perceived bias in a given direction.I smell a tu quoque fallacy.More importantly, it only exacerbates polarization, discourages dialogue, and sells books.... Oh, I see...

There is value in Patriot's History.If taken with a degree of sophisticated skepticism, it can reveal insights into history as imagined, indeed longed for by a large segment of the American population.It does challenge more intellectually honest historians to address the issues more clearly.I would recommend it for the history educator, or informed reader who would recognize the jaundiced perspective.Others will simply leave their reading of this book with a degree of certitude and confidence in their historical knowledge wholly incommensurate with reality. Schweikart's voice deserves a hearing.

1-0 out of 5 stars Revisionist History
An utterly unreliable and disingenuous history of the US. Its tortured conclusions and blatant disregard for widely available information that disagrees with the authors' biases make this the most slanted and disingenuous history of America available.

5-0 out of 5 stars A Patriot's History of the U.S.
A Must read bock for anyone who wants to find out the TRUTH about the America we Live in today with out the Re-write of the Far left and Progressives that want to change history for there own ends.
Set down with your kid's and read togethter and side step the nut job so called teachers in the indocterating school system.

4-0 out of 5 stars A Patriot's History of the US by Larry Schweikart
Liked book, recommended to others.However, when told the price jumped from 9.99 to 18.99 on Kindle, I realized you should go to the library.

Am turning off my Kindle, and telling anyone who will listen. ... Read more


64. No Enemy But Time
by Michael Bishop
 Leather Bound: Pages (1991-01-01)

Asin: B000O7OYN8
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65. The Iron Dragon's Daughter
by Michael Swanwick
Leather Bound: Pages (1994)

Asin: B0032UJEBQ
Average Customer Review: 3.5 out of 5 stars
Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan
Editorial Review

Product Description
Easton Press, 1994. Signed by the author. full leather stamped in gold, raised bands, silk e.pages, aeg, ribbon marker as new hardcover leatherbound 82178 ... Read more

Customer Reviews (54)

5-0 out of 5 stars ". . . that strange, spacey feeling you get about an hour after dropping acid, just before the rush hits."
The Iron Dragon's Daughter is one of those rare gems: a phenomenal novel packaged as genre fiction.Like many great novels it deals with coming of age and personal growth, and Swanwick's Bildungsroman follows the changeling Jane through four distinct phases of her life: her childhood slaving in a dragon factory, her short stint at a seemingly parochial faerie high school, her psychedelic experiences as an alchemy major at university and finally her descent into adulthood.Shadowing her movements and subtly influencing her life decisions is the inscrutable and hate-personified Melanchthon, the titular Iron Dragon.

Without spoiling anything else, I should say that IDD challenges the reader in a refreshingly playful manner.Its difficulty cannot be compared to many of the great "difficult" novels and poems of our time, but Swanwick does leave many questions for the reader to puzzle out on his or her own--which I think is a blast.Several reviewers have complained about this aspect of the novel with questions such as "What happened?Why did this happen?Why did it end the way it did?" etc.I would encourage those reviewers to read the book again, as the characters drop hints and clues throughout the story as to the nature of the universe they populate and eventually the "why" of IDD.Pay special attention to the parables and ask yourself one question: what kind of troll will you be?

Along this same vein, IDD treats its readers like discerning adults with complex palates and the ability to think critically.We need not make our discoveries as Jane makes hers; oftentimes Jane will reveal something the reader has already understood for many pages (such as the mixture of Chomskian deep structure, mobius/klein formulae, and Buddhist samsara that informs Swanwick's system of reincarnation).At other times Jane remains remarkably obtuse to what is unfolding around her, especially as she floats through the haze of her college years and beyond.At this point the reader cannot necessarily rely on Jane and must depend upon his or her own memory of past events to piece together the puzzle.The pale man, the witch, the child-catcher, the Lamia, the dragon.Pay attention to their stories and you will know what this universe is about and the end will make sense.

In the defense of frustrated readers, I first read this novel when I was fourteen, and like these reviewers I can safely say that I did not "get it."I knew I liked it but I wasn't sure why and I was too distracted by the scenes of sex and drug abuse to give a crap.Now I can look back and say that IDD is one of my most cherished novels.Is Swanwick a masterful stylist like Melville or McCarthy or Joyce or whoever?Nope.He often commits stylistic faults that cause one to cringe (redundant adjectives, needless adverbs, sometimes silly descriptions of characters and at one point an utterly ridiculous description of masturbation).Does he tell a rippingly good story with a pacing that is all his own and a denouement (if you manage to follow him through the numerous twists of the Mobius strip) that will leave you a bit breathless and thinking long after you've put the book away?Yes, yes and yes.Sometimes I had to set the book down because the pace suddenly exploded and left me dazed at the end of a chapter. And sometimes the pace was relaxed and flowed and I simply took part in and enjoyed some of Jane's more nostalgic experiences.And sometimes I was just pleasantly distracted by the occasional reference (meaningful or not) to Heidegger or Chaucer, or Swanwick's use of Scottish dialect.My advice?Enjoy the rush.Enjoy the spaciness.Run with the apes of hell.

5-0 out of 5 stars When wyverns carpet bomb your funny candy castle
Michael Swanwick and I appear to be on the same page, which is kind of nice.

Not that the notion is a concern to him either way, but at least I find it mildly comforting.I've read a number of fantasy novels over the years and while many of them are entertaining, a fair number seem to be content to plow the same field that Tolkein first planted seeds in years ago, without really changing too many of the tenets that we tend to take for granted, letting them become stereotypes or cliches.Whether it's because the authors feel that the audiences only want a certain kind of fantasy (not impossible, when people like something, they tend to want more of the same of it) or because they can't be bothered to break their own ground and thus have to play with the standard pieces in the standard way, it all boiled down to one thing . . . fantasy had become safe and mundane, not so much magical as an excuse to trot out the elves and the magic swords so the secret farmboy-king could go and save the world once again.Yawn.

"Iron Dragon's Daughter" blows that out of the water.This is not safe fantasy.This is fantasy so far from safe that it has you walking alone in the most run down urban section of the most crime-ridden city of the country, with all the streetlights broken, footsteps all around you and growing closer and your cell phone out of service.There's nowhere to run and no one to run to.Everything you thought you once knew has been left behind, and redefined.

Swanwick has written a scorching steampunk fever dream of a story, giving us a world that operates by its own rules and if those rules are not in your favor then you are totally and royally screwed.We encounter Jane when she's working in a horrible dirty factory with other children, all of them putting together parts for giant metal dragons, winged lords of destruction, like the Ships from Iain Banks Culture series, only hideously cruel and wantonly bestial.The tone is set right from the start, the prose is grimy, the setting is grim, loyalities are always suspect and Jane begins her habit of constantly making the wrong decision wherever she goes.

She's a changling, you see, a mortal child stolen from her own world and dumped here, in a fairyland that has nothing to do with the magical and gauzy stillness of a Lord Dunsany novel.There's real harm here and it never abates, not even when Jane escapes with a rusted old dragon who wants her for its own schemes.It takes off seething with hate and puts her in a school.But the price is that she has to remain a virgin and when that vow is broken, it dumps her without a second thought to fend for herself in a world that seems actively designed to crush her spirit.Things, as it were, do not get better.

Swanwick has designed a world unlike anything we've ever seen in fantasy, retaining just enough real world elements that we can see the decadence and unfairness, the glimmers of beauty that have been perverted and twisted.He has systematically taken every facet of what we knew about fantasy, broken it and put it back together.He has created a world made entirely of razors and makes us watch as it cuts Jane to pieces, as she willingly walks into the halls of knives because she has no other choice.She takes the easy way out constantly, shoplifting and using people and suffers greatly for it.But she falls in love and suffers for that too, repeating the same pattern over and over.Stumbling and floundering, trying to get back to the world that she supposedly belongs to, even as the dragon has made it quite clear it wants everything dead, that the universe is so stacked against them that the only way to solve it is to trash it all and start all over again.He hates it so much he doesn't even want to be around to dance in the ashes.

For fantasy lovers, this is an extreme book.Sexually explicit and thus not for the faint of heart, its grimy carnal heart beats in places that we recognize.Its main character often does despicable things in the name of getting what she wants, while elves and fauns and dwarves all cross her path, all out to use her before someone else gets a chance.He has inverted almost everything we might like about fantasy, including that abiding sense of hope and left us with this searing view, where hope lies fallow and flat, and a better life is just the story you tell people when you want to distract them from the fact that the world is standing right behind you ready to bring a hammer down on your skull.

No, it's not perfect.It's bleak vision, bordering on nihilism, may leave some readers cold.The plot leaps around and sometimes it feels that things aren't explained properly (the Tiand anyone?).Sometimes things are meant not to be explained, leaving you to puzzle out the gaps.Some of its changes eventually became cliches in themselves (elves even in steampunk are typically haughty suit wearing aristocrats).But the ending works as the best endings do, underscoring the point you didn't even realize was there while seeming like a natural place to finally stop.People looking for a typical trip into epic world saving splendor are going to flee screaming from this, because this novel strips away all the cozy aspects we've known and only leaves us with this, the spiky and tarnished edge that always existed just below the surface, that we cushioned ourselves against in sunny vistas and black and white morals, the edge that we've left behind for pleasant familiarity.

But Swanwick, thank goodness, didn't forget.And the genre, and us, are all the better for it.

5-0 out of 5 stars Highly enjoyable sci-fi and fantasy mix
The Iron Dragon's Daughter grabbed my attention from the very first pages. The world that the book takes place in is a crazy mix up of fantasy and sci-fi, full of all kinds of mythical creatures and beasts. The heroine is a young human girl Jane who was kidnapped from the Lower World (world dominated by technology like ours) and forced to work 12 hours a day in an iron dragon factory together with a lot of other non-human children, and the only thing waiting for her in the future is becoming a breeder for human-elf hybrids to pilot the dragons. She struggles to survive and to find her own place in this macabre world, but it seems everyone has their own plans for her - including a rogue dragon who dreams of destroying the world.

It was definitely one of the most unique fantasy books I've read in a while and I'd recommend it to any fantasy fan who doesn't mind trying something different.

5-0 out of 5 stars More powerful (but less fun) than THE DRAGONS OF BABEL
If you're like me, you recently encountered and read Michael Swanwick's THE DRAGONS OF BABEL and, having enjoyed it, now want to read THE IRON DRAGON'S DAUGHTER, a book that takes place in the same universe and was published fifteen years ago. The two books do not form a traditional series: they tell different stories, they share no characters in common, and the earlier book's obsessions are deeper and darker than those of the later.

THE IRON DRAGON'S DAUGHTER is still raw, edgy, surprising and powerful fifteen years after it was first published. Jane, the book's protagonist, is one of the more vivid characters in contemporary fantasy literature. A human girl stolen from her mother by faeries to serve as a slave worker and brood mare, Jane refuses to become a victim. She ultimately decides that no tool is too contemptible or degrading -- a semi-cooperative iron dragon, shoplifting, blackmail, sex, fame -- if it allows her to survive, be free, pursue love, and seek knowledge. She finds moments of joy, yet she remains imprisoned in a hell she can't escape; being a human girl in a faery world, a fugitive from lifelong servitude, and a rogue dragon's accomplice, Jane is always haunted by -- and rendered vulnerable to blackmail by -- those who seek to drag her back to the factory or the breeding camp where she "belongs".

Swanwick's tale can be read at multiple levels; in fact, he insists that it be read at multiple levels, never leaving the reader certain, not even at the end, which one is "right". To portray the scuzzy boss as an ogre, the anorexic supermodel as be a haughty high elf, or the violent street punk as a goblin is not much of a stretch. But what does it mean that Jane can cross worlds and visit her mother at a Starbucks, or visit her own, real body in a mental hospital? What does it mean that Jane keeps encountering the same people -- in different bodies -- over and over? What does it mean when the dragon enlists Jane in a quest to destroy the world? Is any of this real? (And what does all this mean for THE DRAGONS OF BABEL, in which none of this cross-world traffic is even mentioned?)

Some readers will feel that Swanwick is rubbing their noses in depravity for its own sake. Some will feel that this book is relentlessly downbeat for no reason. I think Swanick is courageously doing what the best writers always do; cutting deep, skewering hypocrisy, pushing it to the edge. It's not comfortable, but it is impressive and it is not -- despite what others say -- without a great deal of wry wit, compassion for Jane and (at least some of) her peers, and, at least a very little bit of optimism.

2-0 out of 5 stars Probably better if you're on acid
Some people don't like to admit that they didn't "get" a book, but I'm secure enough with myself to say that I didn't get this one.

The Iron Dragon's Daughter started off well. Jane is a human changeling who works in a faerie factory that makes flying iron dragons for weapons. Jane and the other child slave laborers (who are a mix of strange creatures) are entertaining and bring to mind Lord of the Flies and that scene in Sid's room from Pixar's Toy Story. Michael Swanwick's writing style is fluid and faultless. There were a few flashes of Valente-esque creativity: a timeclock with a temper, a meryon (whatever that is) civilization similar to that in A Bug's Life, a conniving jar-bound homunculus, gryphons who dive for thrown beer cans. I truly enjoyed these parts of the book.

But, after Jane escapes from the dragon factory, the whole thing plummets like a lead dragon and it never returns to its former glory. The writing style is still lovely, but the plot is -- I don't think I've ever used this word in a review before -- awful. I hated it.

Jane was never a sympathetic heroine, but after her escape she turns into a remorseless foul-mouthed thief, drug-user, slut, and murderer. I didn't like her or any of her acquaintances. The plot had no order, the world had no rules, everything that happened seemed random, chaotic, and senseless.

Knowing that other people have praised this novel and that it's sequel (The Dragons of Babel) was nominated for a Locus award, I pressed on. About two-thirds of the way through, I figured out that there was a method to the madness, but the chaotic nihilism was so disturbing that even though I realized it contributed to the entire philosophy of the novel, I still hated it. I think perhaps if I'd dropped some acid, the plot would have arranged itself better in my mind, but alas, I had none to hand.

For me, The Iron Dragon's Daughter was weird, disjointed, obtuse, and inaccessibly bizarre. ... Read more


66. Michigan Gambler
by Michael Sutherland, State of Michigan
 Paperback: 174 Pages (1998-03)
list price: US$9.95
Isbn: 1890394122
Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan

67. North American Quartet
by Michael Saxby
 Paperback: Pages (2008)
-- used & new: US$13.00
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: B0043MFZOM
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Editorial Review

Product Description
Published posthumously ... Read more


68. Visions of Interplanetary Probes
by Michael Benson
 Leather Bound: Pages (2004)

Asin: B001VSRII2
Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan

69. The Road To Woodstock - 1st Edition/1st Printing
by Michael Lang
 Leather Bound: Pages (2009-01-01)
-- used & new: US$156.00
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: B002OT1TRS
Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan

70. The Statue of Liberty
by Michael George
 Unknown Binding: Pages (1986)

Isbn: 0810953617
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71. Education and progress
by John Michael Krebs 1804-1867. [from old catalog]
Paperback: 62 Pages (1847-12-31)
list price: US$10.65 -- used & new: US$10.65
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: B003TXT7FY
Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan
Editorial Review

Product Description
This reproduction was printed from a digital file created at the Library of Congress as part of an extensive scanning effort started with a generous donation from the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation.The Library is pleased to offer much of its public domain holdings free of charge online and at a modest price in this printed format.Seeing these older volumes from our collections rediscovered by new generations of readers renews our own passion for books and scholarship. ... Read more


72. The Sparkling Story of Coca-Cola: an Entertaining History Including Collectibles, Coke Lore, and Calendar Girls
by Michael Karl; Young-Witzel, Gyvel Witzel
 Hardcover: Pages (2002)

Asin: B001LR3ZYY
Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan

73. Insects of Europe
by Michael Chinery
 Hardcover: Pages (1989-01-01)

Asin: B0021VSDNC
Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan

74. The Wildfowl Art of David Maass.
by David & Michael McIntosh Maass
 Hardcover: Pages (1996)

Asin: B003IIYXFY
Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan

75. PURGATORY (Signed)
by Michael Resnick
 Hardcover: Pages (1993)

Asin: B0032ZSPB6
Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan

76. Ben-Gurion: A Biography
by Michael; translated by Peretz Kidron Bar-Zohar
 Hardcover: Pages (1994-01-01)

Asin: B001MBNAHQ
Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan
Editorial Review

Product Description
Black leatherbound. Gilt decoratins to covers. spine. watered silk endpapers. 334 pp. ... Read more


77. ROGER TORY PETERSON FIELD GUIDES OF THE WORLD : INSECTS OF TH EUROPE
by Michael Chinery
 Leather Bound: Pages (1989)

Asin: B000GU6D0A
Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan

78. Ultimate Beer
by Michael Jackson
 Paperback: 192 Pages (1998)
-- used & new: US$211.34
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: B000CL1Y3Y
Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan
Editorial Review

Product Description
LEATHER BOUND book accented in 22kt gold! ! ... Read more


79. The War Lords: Military Commanders of the Twentieth Century
by Sir Michael Carver
 Hardcover: Pages (1993)
-- used & new: US$26.64
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: B001PB9MRK
Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan

80. STATIONS OF THE TIDE...
by Michael. Swanwick
 Hardcover: Pages (1991-01-01)

Asin: B002K9S2RM
Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan

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