Take It to Your Seat Math Centers, Grades K-1 Review

Take It to Your Seat Math Centers, Grades K-1
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The take it to your seat books have all been great & the kids seem to especially enjoy this one. I needed something hands-on for my 6 year old but my 4.5 year old just loves the activities as well. There are 14 different activities inside, quite easy to just tear out & prepare. I used brown paper bage to glue each cover to, the instructions I glued on the back of the bag and placed the cut out material for the activity inside. I put the whole lot in a free choice box for them to choose from and I find them regularly pulling out several of the bags to do - they really enjoy them and it reinforces the maths concept in a concrete way. The illustrations are attractive and a good size. My eldest really likes the self-check answer gauges on the back of each game & it frees me up to do other things if needed. I prepared the whole book of activities in one afternoon. Well worth the money and have bought more from the series.

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The District of Columbia : the seat of government (Time-Life library of America) Review

The District of Columbia : the seat of government (Time-Life library of America)
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In 1973, I made a trip to Washington, D.C. This book was great research material. Not only did it tell me about places to visit, but the maps and pictures of the buildings made me very familiar with the city, and what was where. I was able to name the buildings when I was in the city. People stopped and asked me for directions. Now, I have a friend who is going to D.C., and I am buying this book for her, and I hope it is as valuable to to prepare herfor her trip as it was to me.

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Behind the Copilot Seat: An Enlisted Mans Perspective on Flying with Student Pilots-USAF Review

Behind the Copilot Seat: An Enlisted Mans Perspective on Flying with Student Pilots-USAF
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A very fine, consise decription of the duties, responsibilities and experiences of a flight engineer assigned to a TB-25 aircraft. Since I had such an assignment while serving in the USAF during 1948-1952 this book brought back many memories of those wonderful days and experiences very similar to those of the author. As a matter of fact this book reestablished a friendship between the author and myself. We knew each other during the early days of our Air Force careers.

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The book is about the experiences of a Flight Engineer flying with Aviation Cadet/Student Pilots during their training in the United States Air Force.Aviation Cadets/ Student pilots in the USAF go through a stringent training program to become rated pilots. In the 1940s and 1950s two of the aircraft used for their training were the T-6 for single engine primary training and the B-25 for multiple engine training. Vance AFB, Enid, Oklahoma was one of the bases for B-25 Training.The crew of the B-25 during the training phases consisted of one Instructor pilot, two students and one enlisted man, the flight engineer. Or two Students flying solo, and one Flight Engineer. The flight engineer flew daily four hour missions with the students, with or without the Instructor and was present throughout all phases of their training. It was required by regulations that the engineers go on the training missions to evaluate any mechanical problem that may arise and to either advise or correct the problem in the air or on the ground. Flight Engineers prevented many aborted missions due to mechanical problems. He also sometimes acted as observer during some missionsThe Engineer sat behind the copilot seat in the cockpit and observed all activities in the cockpit. He saw the actions of the students, their abilities and sometimes their mistakes, and the instructions given by the Instructor to help the student through some procedure that the student was having trouble with. He knew that most of the students he flew with would graduate, and also knew that some of them would wash out of the program.

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Removing Satan's Seat Review

Removing Satan's Seat
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This book has caused a monumental increase in our bible class attendance and it has revoluntionizwd the spiritual life of many.

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Removing Satan's Seat volume onewas written to empower you to overcome every personal growth trap, and, more specifically, how to uncover character traits that 'appeal' to specialized demons sent against you. These demons have been sent to stop you from growing and they want to take you out of the fighting zone, and even worse, use you as an agent of evil in the house of the living God.

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Development Poverty and Politics: Putting Communities in the Driver's Seat (Routledge Studies in Development and Society) Review

Development Poverty and Politics: Putting Communities in the Driver's Seat (Routledge Studies in Development and Society)
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Development economics can rarely have been rendered more readable, comprehensible and illuminating than in this valuable book. Both authors combine significant academic weight with a large dose of commonsense humanity to produce a book that offers hope where so many outsiders see nothing but gloom. The `townships' and `informal settlements' that blight the developing world today are anything but new; the slums of Victorian London had exactly the same characteristics. This book charts the means by which the same transformation that took place in the capital of the United Kingdom can also be made to happen Africa, south Asia and elsewhere.

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Top down . . . bottom up . . . what works? This book explores development from theperspective of the poor. Who are they? What lives do they live? What matters tothem? And most importantly, what can they do about it?Martin and Mathema debate how people can be given legitimate control of theirown environment, and how governments can work with them. How do communitiesand conditions drive behavior? What interventions are appropriate and how can weapproach development imaginatively?This is not about usurping governance - but revisiting structures that the developedworld has come to accept, and placing the power of decision in the hands of thepeople it affects.Nor it is about money . . . it's about people, and about how we can make our worldwork for everyone.

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A Grandstand Seat: The American Balloon Service in World War I Review

A Grandstand Seat: The American Balloon Service in World War I
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A good story, with excellent details. As with most events of this era, there is a lot more that is not written, and is only available from personal accounts, which she did so well, from the sources that were available.

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The little-known American Balloon Service worked in combat to help direct artillery fire more accurately and provide essential intelligence on enemy troop movements during World War I. German use of observation balloons to direct artillery fire in August of 1914 forced the Allies to develop a similar force. With the U.S. entry into the war in 1917, the balloon service, starting from scratch, evolved into an effective, disciplined fighting unit, whose achievements are unfortunately overshadowed by those of the flying aces. Reminiscences from balloon veterans form the basis of this book, the first to picture life as a gasbagger in the three major American engagements of the war.



Amazingly, life as an observer suspended in a wicker basket under an elephantine hydrogen balloon proved less deadly than piloting an airplane. From his grandstand seat, the observer kept tabs on the war below him and telephoned vital information to headquarters command. These reports were often the only accurate intelligence available. Balloonists remember the war as a great adventure, one which many of them lived to tell about.


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In The Driver's Seat: The New Car Buyer's Negotiating Bible Review

In The Driver's Seat: The New Car Buyer's Negotiating Bible
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If you're thinking of buying or leasing a new (or used) car, this book can literally save you hundreds if not thousands of dollars. Do not go unprepared into a such an important transaction. Car prices really are negotiable, and doing your homework beforehand can pay off big time.
Mr. Bragg is an insider from the auto sales industry who will show you how to anticipate and counteract all the shenanigans you'll face when you walk into a showroom. It worked for me -- saving me on time, money and aggravation.

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The ultimate how-to manual for car and truck buyers--guerrilla tactics for today's tough automotive market. This savvy guide provides insider how-to's for real negotiating leverage, tells how to determine the true wholesale value of a vehicle before talking trade-in, and more.

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Now They All Have Window Seats: A Reynolds Unwrapped Tribute to Fatherhood Review

Now They All Have Window Seats: A Reynolds Unwrapped Tribute to Fatherhood
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Cartoonist Dan Reynolds' work, Reynolds Unwrapped is pure genius. "How does this guy come up with this stuff?" Who cares as long as he keeps it coming. I loved this book and can't wait to get whatever else he has coming. I've also seen his cartoons on greeting cards all over. Trust me - you HAVE to buy this book. Thanks, Dan!

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Reynolds Unwrapped will not help you preserve and protect leftover food. However, the humor of Dan Reynolds's single-panel cartoon will help you preserve and protect your sanity with its colorful and quirky humor. Millions of people across the country enjoy Reynolds Unwrapped, with its appearances in Reader's Digest and Esquire magazine-as well as being featured on greeting cards and in its own nationally published books. The strip's latest collection of panel cartoons, Now They All Have Window Seats!, enables readers to see the skewed view of the world of fatherhood through the wacky eyes of Reynolds. In this, Reynolds's fourth collection of Reynolds Unwrapped, he takes a special look at dads as only his cartoons can. Now They All Have Window Seats! offers an offbeat but strangely loving view of fatherhood that will make dads everywhere chuckle knowingly.

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Flew by the Seat of My Pants Review

Flew by the Seat of My Pants
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This was a wonderful life's story from a most creative storyteller. From a humble beginning, this little Jewish kid did it all, overcoming prejudice, and a Father's low expectations, to reach the pinnacle of education...and then starring in Hollywood movies. In between, he built a sailboat, and sailed to Hawaii and back. A wonderful story, indeed, of a warm, loving family man looking back on a most interesting life. Exhilarating, indeed...a great read. Thank you, Art Frankel!

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From raising a family and teaching school to co-starring in movies with Albert Brooks and Jack Lemmon, Art Frankel has led an amazing life-and come through it all with humor, wisdom, and more than a few lessons learned. He built and sailed his own boat to Hawaii, and he survived a raging wildfire that reduced his home to cinders. He lived through the Great Depression and World War II. He has been a soldier, a student, a teacher, a salesman, an actor, and a traveler. A self-help book in the form of a poignant and amusing memoir, Flew by the Seat of My Pants: A Few Crashes, No Casualties is the inspirational, motivational story of a regular guy who, with determination, persistence, the support of his beloved wife, Shirley, and a healthy dose of dumb luck, accomplished things that most people only dream of.His story is funny, moving, and packed with keen insights and practical words of wisdom that anyone can use to turn their own dreams into reality.

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Tina in the Back Seat: Stories Review

Tina in the Back Seat: Stories
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This collection of 13 short stories was published posthumously, following Raweley's death from AIDS in 1998. Six of the stories were previously published in various journals (Story, Harper's, etc.). All are set in California, and a number of them feature gay characters and touch upon AIDS (however, in nine of the stories, the protagonists are women). "The Bible of Insects" tells of middle-aged Inez, who marries elderly rich men and provides them with comfort and love until they die, leaving her their fortunes. It's an interesting portrait, showing both her sensitivity and harsh realism, but it's not clear why she would keep on the golddigger track so long. "Baby Liz" is an odd snippet about a midget Liz Taylor impersonator and her new next door neighbour friend. "The Tiger's Tooth" takes us into the addictive world of high-stakes Pai-Go, via Gloria Wong, who risks everything for her weekly thrill. It's not a particularly remarkable story except that one rarely reads of women gamblers, or of Pai-Go.
"The Closest Thing to God" is a touching story of Iris, a middle-aged butch lesbian hoping to find love in her local bar. It's a gentle reminder that in every realm of society, there exist unobtainable beauties. "Mother of Pearl" is somewhat less interesting, detailing a tryst between a middle-aged white homosexual and a young stud Chicano boxer. "Saigon" is another enigmatic story, this time about the friendship between a young homosexual and a gruff Vietnam veteran. "Vaudeville" and "Iguana Boy" are somewhat weak stories of mostly interior monologue, one by a woman lawyer, the other an elderly woman. "At the Four Seasons" seems slightly out of place, consisting of an overheard conversation between two hit men at a hotel bar. "Tim" is told from the perspective of the ghost of a little boy observing his own funeral and his mother's mourning. "The Spells of an Ordinary Twilight" is another story about mourning and grief, this time from a mother's perspective. The final two stories are about women seeking to live life to the utmost. "A Rumour of Prayer" is about a woman who picks up teenage boys on the beach for one night stands so she can live on in their memories, and "Tina in the Back Seat" is about a young woman who lives from day to day, trading sex for shelter. In the end, while the writing is generally top-notch, there is a sense of time running out that pervades the collection. One gets the feeling many of the stories were written knowing death approached.

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A View from the Cheap Seats: Advice and Opinions on Life's Little Issues...from a Kid Review

A View from the Cheap Seats: Advice and Opinions on Life's Little Issues...from a Kid
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Reviewed by Regan Windsor for Reader Views (3/07)Ryan Latimer has been through a lot in his life: serious childhood depression, eating disorders, surgical procedures, and his search for religion -- all in his short 23-year life. "A View from the Cheap Seats" is not about Ryan Latimer's life however. It is about his views on life - everything from weight loss to religion to politics. What can a 23-year old really know about all of that "grown up" stuff - you'll be surprised, if not amazed, at what this book has to offer.
Written in a conversational manner, Latimer provides a very educated and well-researched view of the many issues facing North Americans today. While the subjects are often controversial, his views do not come across preachy or closed-minded. He offers some facts amongst his viewpoints, thereby providing the reader an opportunity to assess their own views against the facts provided.
His largest chapter deals with Sex, Drugs and...Sex, The Fall of American "Entertainment," in which he reviews and discusses how far the world of movies, music, and video games has fallen. Or is it society that demands more and more shock value in order to be entertained? Either way this chapter exposes the harsh and often sad reality of where our "entertainment" continues to take us.
While the book contains some grammatical errors they are not enough to detract you from the wealth of knowledge this short book provides. It is refreshing to read such clarity from such a young voice. We can only hope Ryan Latimer continues to express his views and share his wealth of knowledge.
"A View from the Cheap Seats" leaves the reader with a very important message - things aren't always what they seem -- so we need to wake up and start paying attention to what's happening, not only with us but also in the world around us. His no excuses message comes across loud and clear. "Do NOT make excuses."
Received book free of charge

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A View from the Cheap Seats is an unlikely book from an unlikely author. By the unwritten laws of life, it shouldn't exist. Kids don't give advice on anything, and few care about their opinions. Kids don't know anything, especially when it involves the hard lessons of life, political matters, religion, the culture war or the nation's current struggles with mental and physical health.

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Murder Flies Left Seat (Avalon Mystery) Review

Murder Flies Left Seat (Avalon Mystery)
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This book is a real treat. It is well written, it keeps you on the edge of your seat trying to figure out who done it, and just when you think you have a clue, the plot banks sharply to the left. Albert Beckman is a Denver doctor who owns a plane, although his wife Grace is not keen about flying. When the plane is stolen and then crashes having been sabotaged, the question is, was someone out to get them? The plot thickens when the pilot is identified as the wife of the co-owner. Could it be a marital spat? The result of dirty dealings in the bio-technology industry? Or was it just ordinary skulduggery related to drug smuggling. I really liked the characters, the airplane stuff was very realistic, and the twists in the plot kept me reading on. A book for both men and women, and you won't be embarrassed to have your kids read it as well.

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Murder Flies Left Seat is Jackie's first book for Avalon, and is the first installment in a series.

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Red Means Go: Secrets to Achieving a Happy, Effective and Successful Life with You in the Driver's Seat Review

Red Means Go: Secrets to Achieving a Happy, Effective and Successful Life with You in the Driver's Seat
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Self Help books come and go with great regularity, many of them falling on to the 'to be completed' shelf of the library after a few pages because the message is always the same. Enter Carl Taylor, a supersonic passionate enthusiast whose writing style could not fail to capture even the most critical of judges. What he offers in this terse but poignant book is a sense of actually caring about us as the reader: this is one of the most sincere guides to improving life as we live it out there on the choices of books to read while searching for meaning.
Based on the Japanese word 'Kaizen' which is translated as 'continuous improvement' and has been a philosophical torch for thousands of years in Japanese culture, Taylor pushes that concept a little further and instead defines Kaizen as continuous self-improvement. He hastens to remind us that 'continuous self-improvement' is "actually unachievable because you will never get to a point where you say 'I've achieved continuous self-improvement', because at that point, it would no longer be continuous." He stays with this lighthearted conversational approach throughout his book, using the example of our lives as cars! 'Look Under the Hood' delves into an examination of how the brain works, or, how we learn. 'Learning the Controls' studies how we think: 'The one great thing to also realize is that there is only one thing in the world that you have 100% complete unequivocal control over. And that, my friend, is the way you THINK.'
In 'What Mechanics Know' Taylor very wisely offers a brief synopsis of the sciences of learning - neuro-linguistic programming, hypnosis, and cognitive behavioral therapy - 'CBT, in a nutshell, is about making sensible assessments of your situation and making the most constructive choices that you can to improve or cope with that situation.' In 'Driver's Handbook' he offers how to create the life you want and deserve by revealing how to turn dreams into reality followed by the chapter on 'Set the GPS Navigation' to ensure you reach your ultimate destination - a very wise system of filtering out the inconsequential matter that blows in our path and concentrate on goal-seeking and finding. And finally in 'Don't Stop at Traffic Lights' he discusses FEAR and provides ways to not only dissect that word to make it understandable but also how to overcome the barriers that would hold us back -'Fear is nothing more than your mind finding False Expectations that Appear Real and then Finding Excuses And Reasons to avoid the situation.' And this cheerleader/coach finishes his accessible lessons with 'Floor it' - Life is Yours!
It may not seem on reading a review of such a book that there is anything you can't do on your own, but that is precisely the reason to buy this book. For it is with the electrifying and warmly caring presence of Carl Taylor so obvious on every page that provides the reassurance and the jumpstart to really get out there and start living the life that you want to live. Bravo! Grady Harp, May 11

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Have you ever felt you could do MORE with your life... but just don't know how? Have you ever looked at someone with everything going right for him, and thought, "Why can't I be half as lucky as this guy?" Carl Taylor says, "Most people know the cars they drive better than they know themselves. No wonder we fail to achieve our goals... We have not been taught how to operate outselves effectively!" By the age of 24, Carl had started and run profitable businesses in five different industries, spoken to a full house audience of business owners (many twice or thrice his age) numerous times, and served as the Chapter President of his local Business Networking Group. In Red Means Go, Carl shares the strategies that have taken him from being a shy and average student to a successful young entrepreneur. You will discover: - How to use the Japanese principle of Kaizen to break through ay fear, limiting believe, or self-doubt - How you can triple your learning effectiveness by quickly picking up the skills needed to run a profitable business - The fice-step method successful people use to live their life the way they want (instead of waiting for opportunities to be handed out to them) - The Truth about the Law of Attraction and why it does not seem to work for so many people - What Wealth really is and why this definition can free you from the endless rat race - The only two reasons behind our ever single decision or action and how you can use this eliminate any bad habit from your life or get yourself to do something. "This book is more than a mere summary of what I have spent over $100,000 to learn, it is a tried and tested manual that I actually have used to go from being a shy, average boy at school to finding my life's passion and doing many of the things people in my generation have not even tried" says Carl.

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Rumble Seat Review

Rumble Seat
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Amazing, descriptive poetry. Mr. Hecker uses such vividness with his words that I felt like I had been immersed in the pages, and was standing on the edge of a picture watching the action play out. I usually do not read more than a few poems at a time-I like to break them down and process them, and don't want too many verses in my head at once...Not with Rumble Seat. I couldn't put it down, and definitely found myself laughing numerous times! I wish Mr Hecker much success, it was a fantastic ride!

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Rumble Seat is-- as the title suggest-- a wild ride. Jeff Hecker is a smart but daring driver, someone a reader learns to trust and fear. You can't help but admire his amazing vision, his ability to both build a road and steer at the same time. I read poetry to be knocked out of my daily stupor. I read poetry for the chance to have an intimate meeting with someone who's figured out a way to wrestle this life to sweaty stand-off. Rumble Seat offers both. --Tim Seibles, author of Buffalo Head Solos

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The Best Seats In The House And Other Stories (Western Literature Series) Review

The Best Seats In The House And Other Stories (Western Literature Series)
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Read this book! One of the best short story collections published in a decade.
There is not a single weak link in THE BEST SEATS IN THE HOUSE. It is rare to accomplish in one story what Morris achieves in every story here. There is resounding psychological depth in his depictions of characters who have held off their deepest feelings for too long and are, at last, overtaken by them.
Each passage is surprisingly, quietly moving, whether the story is about lost love ("Losing Julia Finch"), or about the disappearance of a life plan and the appearance of another ("Objects Past the Shoreline" and "The Children of Dead State Troopers"), or about the raptures and unbearable pressures of family ("The Best Seats in the House"
and "Astronauts").

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Ten short stories by a powerful new voice in fiction.The men who inhabit the stories in this compelling collection live in precarious normalcy, mostly in northern Idaho, balancing dashed dreams with an uncertain progress into maturity, small-town realities with their largely unfulfilled hopes for lives that are somehow vaster than what they have. It is due to Keith Lee Morris's superb gift of giving such eloquent voices to his characters that we cherish their unique humanity and believe completely in the bewildering complexities that lie just beneath the placid surface of their yearning workaday lives.In "The Best Seats in the House," a failed high-school athlete watches as his more gifted son falls under the spell of his charismatic father, a retired coach who "could make people hope . . . that something would be made from nothing." The conflict between the narrator's own lost ambitions and his fear that his son is being set up to fail reveal in unforgettable fashion the painful tensions of parental love.In "Objects Past the Shoreline," a young man in the process of losing his sight struggles to accept the irrevocability of blindness while clinging to what independence remains. He spends his days reading poetry and exploring the world around him: "I went up close to see—Indian paintbrush, the thick buds scarlet and dusty. I closed my eyes and searched for the flowers' imprint, for the red scar the buds would cut across the blackness." Gradually, the world darkens around him, leading the story to a conclusion of wrenching poignancy.Morris is a writer of remarkable skill, and these stories of small-town men groping for a perspective on themselves and the lives they've come to live are among the most powerful in contemporary fiction. This is the work of a major talent coming into his prime.

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Detectives Don't Wear Seat Belts: True Adventures of a Female P.I. Review

Detectives Don't Wear Seat Belts: True Adventures of a Female P.I.
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Cici McNair weaves her memoir through the deep south of Mississippi and the streets of New York City. After traveling the world and trying her hand at a variety of careers, Cici decides to become a private investigator. Cici soon learns that becoming a P.I., especially a female one, is not as easy as she first thought. When the charismatic Vinny Pardo in New York City finally gives her a chance, for six dollars an hour, Cici is officially on her way. Discovering that this industry is primarily made up of retired homicide detectives and men, Cici learns the ropes and rules when being put into action almost immediately. Trailing adulteresses and breaking up counterfeit designer purse rings in New York's Chinatown, Cici begins to thrive in her new role and gains respect in the industry and on the streets.
When she returns to her small hometown deep in Mississippi to be with her mother, she realizes that being a P.I. down South is massively different then working in the big city. While uncovering cases, Cici begins to uncover her past. Her career continues to flourish and with every new case and position, Cici peels away at her own exterior. In doing so, she lets her past all flow out little by little as her guard comes down. The reader is let into Cici's private life and a new viewpoint of the narrator is revealed. McNair feeds tidbits and anecdotes about herself while sitting in cars at stakeouts and her secrets and character come out in a slow and steady pace that McNair seems to feel comfortable with. Prior to this, little is known about Cici, the revelations make it easier to determine what is going on in her head as she speaks. By opening up as the book unfolds, a face and personal story forms for the before faceless, unseen P.I.
McNair is a great storyteller. The memoir is full of humor, action, suspense, and emotional moments, particularly when she describes her overbearing and unlovable father. McNair's cast of characters throughout the memoir and her life are a motley crew and McNair details their quirks and personalities with precision. Her conversational style puts the reader right in the action, on the stakeouts, in the office, and into Cici's life.


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Growing up in Mississippi, Cici McNair was always more the tomboy her mother supported than the Southern belle her father demanded. She escaped her suffocating upbringing the first chance she had to travel the world. Whether working at the Vatican in Rome or consorting with a gunrunner in Haiti, she lived a life of international adventure. When Cici finds herself in New York, divorced, broke, and fashionably starving to death in a Madison Avenue apartment, she impulsively decides to become a private detective.But, as Cici soon learns, the world of P.I.s is tight-knit and made up almost exclusively of former law enforcement officers. By nature, they are a highly suspicious group and are especially wary of a newcomer with an untraceable past. Diligently working her way through the Yellow Pages, doggedly pursuing the slightest lead, Cici is finally hired by a private investigator willing to take a chance. The next day she's working side by side with a pair of seasoned detectives and a skip tracer who is scary to meet but like silk on the phone. She quickly realizes she'll need all her energy and wits to succeed in this new world.Being a private investigator is as exciting and liberating as Cici ever dreamed, from creating a false identity on the spot on her first case in the field to surviving adrenaline-rushing car chases. Working with law enforcement, she goes undercover, dealing with the ruthless Born to Kill gang in Chinatown and the Middle Eastern counterfeiters west of Broadway. A detailed account of the hidden world and real-life cases of a P.I., this action-packed memoir is as entertaining as any detective novel you've ever read. (2009)

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The Lucky Bastard Club: Letters to My Bride from the Left Seat Review

The Lucky Bastard Club: Letters to My Bride from the Left Seat
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It is not often one runs into a story like this: real, full of Love, Courage, and unusual faithfulness.
Lucky Bastard Club is a rare look into the heart and mind of a young man torn from his bride as he is sent to Europe as a bomber pilot in WWII. In his daily letters to his wife you will experience Roy's struggles and triumphs as he shares his life with Joyce. You'll glimpse valuable snatches of what the war was really like from A young bomber pilot's vantage point.
Roy's devotion to his wife despite his youth, despite their long separation, despite his odds of survival is remarkable. And the fact that they are still together today sixty years later and still holding hands is one of God's quiet miracles.

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War is fought by young men - often interrupting the prime of their lives. The Lucky Bastard Club is a vivid image of such a man. His tools were not only his airplane and training, but also his faith, his character, his sense of humor, and - most of all - his deep and abiding love for a cute little, blue-eyed brunette - his wife, Joyce. The combination of combat experiences, love and romance, and poignant autobiography reveal a tale of commitment, patriotism and faith. Join Jack in this powerful first-hand account of World War II, seen through almost daily letters to his bride at home. Meet the authors, browse through newly-discovered, original photographs of the Mission Belle and her crew, and read what others have said about the book at http://www.luckybastardclub.com

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