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Boys Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

Boys
One Boy's Struggle: A Memoir: Surviving Life with Undiagnosed ADD
Published in Paperback by Infinity Publishing (2008-01-11)
Author: Bryan L. Hutchinson
List price: $16.95
New price: $10.91
Used price: $11.53

Average review score:

An Absolute Must Read Book!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-27
As an adult diagnosed with adhd a year ago, I've been doing a lot of reading and searching to learn more about it. Out of a huge stack of books I've read, only a handful give genuine insight into the mind of an adder. Most of what I've found is either too clinical to keep my attention, or too trite to be taken seriously.

Well ... thank God! Bryan is neither a psychiatrist, nor a professional copywriter. He's just some dude with adhd.

His is an amazing, yet disturbing story. What makes it amazing is how similar his story is to mine. At times I felt I was reading a story about myself, just with different scenery. What makes it so disturbing ... well ... is how similar his story is to mine.

The most helpful thing the diagnosis has done for me, is provide a new window from which I can review my past. Some of the mistakes I've agonized over for so long, were nothing but the symptoms of adhd. Communication issues, scheduling issues, work issues ... the list goes on and on ...

Reading about Bryan going through the same things in life I have, has helped me realize I'm not alone. There ARE actually people out there who DO know what I'm talking about!

I can't possibly recommend this book more. Put it at the very top of your list! Buy it now! It's that important.

Just one more thing ... after I was done reading the book, and took a few days to absorb it all, something hit me ... it's why I'm here recommending the book to you right now, and it's gonna hit you the same way too ...

I can't help but feel that I know Bryan, like he's a personal friend of mine.

That's the style of book he wrote, it's that personal. And that should tell you just how genuine "One Boy's Struggle" truly is.

Thanks Bryan!

Are you still reading this? Stop. Go buy the book! :-)



a "must read" for any professional working with children & teens
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-10
This book should be mandatory reading for anyone entering the field of teaching or who is already teaching, counselors, resource teachers, juvenile workers. ADD is often undiagnosed (unlike ADHD where hyper is apparent) and the child struggles and never knows why. I wonder how many sit in prison today wondering why they never fit in with society or runaways who could never conform to their families rules. I am recommending this book to everyone I know so hopefully they could recognize ADD in a child (or adult) and make a positive difference in their life.
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A young boy's story that needed to be told
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-15
I knew relativly nothing about ADD and how it can affect your life and all those involved. This is a wonderfuly written story of a young struggling boy who knew that he was not bad, but had to wait for years to find out the truth of whý his childhood had been the way it was.
'One Boy's Struggle' is a must read for anyone, not just for someone wanting to find out more information regarding ADHD. This is a poignant story that moved and deeply touched me and made me care for this young man. Thank you, Bryan for the wonderful story that is yours, and that you share you struggle with us.

Truly a Real Life View of Living in the Adder World
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-29
I am truly grateful for Bryan writing this book and for me to have found it. For many years I lived with undiagnosed ADD, never understanding why, but always knowing that I was different, and did things differently than other people all my life.

When I was finally diagnosed with ADD it was a tremendous relief to know there really was a reason. I had learned the basics through talking to professionals as well as reading the various books available on the subject. This book is very different from all the basic texts that are available. You can only learn so much at school from reading textbooks. It is not until you finish school and go out into the real world when you realized how it all applies.

Bryan's book is the real world. The ADDer World so to speak. The other books show you the cause but Bryan's shows you the effect.

I highly recommend this book to be read by all people living with ADD/ADHD. It will help you understand the impact that this disorder has actually had on you through your life. I really had no clue myself before reading this book. It is also really nice to know that we are not alone with our struggles. If you did not have it before, you will finish this book realizing that there is definitely hope for an incredibly productive enjoyable future for you.

Even more so however, I recommend this to parents and teachers dealing with children with ADD/ADHD. No one can ever truly understand what it is like to go through life having ADD/ADHD unless they have it themselves. This book shows you the truth dead on, and most likely will be the closest you will ever get to really understand what your kids are dealing with on a daily basis, in both their minds, as well in the world around them.

I also highly recommend checking out Bryan's website: ADDerWorld.com. It is a safe harbor to connect with, and understand others dealing with ADD/ADHD. From my personal experience I can pretty much guarantee that he will personally answer any question you may have if you contact him.

Valuable read
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-26
Not a fabulously well written book, but it provides invaluable insight into the heart and mind of a child/young man suffering from ADD. If I were president for a day I'd make it mandatory reading for all elementary teachers and parents of boys with or without ADD. The author clearly has extensive knowledge of ADD as well as first person experience -- a powerful combination that really helps the reader understand some of the many nuances of ADD. This book opened up very enlightening dialogue between my spouse and I and then my immediate family. We were able to confirm what we have long suspected; that in my family most of us have varying degrees of ADD but as adults have learned to compensate in interesting ways. We are productive and happy adults, but felt validated at the similarities we found with the author. Thank you so much for being so generous with your life experiences!

Boys
Backstreet Boys: The Unofficial Book
Published in Paperback by Billboard Books (1998-03)
Author:
List price: $10.95
New price: $1.46
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $27.88

Average review score:

IT WAS BAD; IF YOU HATE BSB YOU'LL HATE THIS !
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2000-07-04
Horrible book, because it deals with a horrible "band" which is fooling millions of people around the globe...

BACK, from Ecuador
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2002-02-08
IT IS AN INTERESTING BOOK, AN IT IS VERY CHEAP.
I COULD READ ALL THE BIOGRAPHY ABOUT MY FAVORITE GROUP AND I THINK THAT I FALL IN LOVE WITH THEM.
THE BEST PHOTOGRAPH IS WHERE THEY ARE TOGETHER IN A CONCERT.
THEY ARE VERY GOOD-LOOKING

i love this book!!!!!!!!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2000-07-10
i love the pic's in this book, when i read this book it told me some thing i didn't know, but some parts iretate me cause i know they are wrong,but i think i was well written it made me laugh many times,i love most the pic's on nick, as i have all the books on bsb i find this one of the best i have!!!!!!!!! it's a must!!!!!!!!!!

THIS BOOK IS SO GOOD AND I LIKE AJ MCLEAN PICTURES.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 1999-06-11
I LIKE THIS BOOK CAUSE THE PICTURES INSIDE IT LOOK SO GOOD ESPECIALLY AJ MCLEAN AND HOWIE D AND THOSE ARE MY FAVORITES IN THE GROUP AND I ALSO LIKE BRIANL.BECAUSE HE IS SO FINE AND THE BOYS GOT IT GOING ON ALL THE TIME.

It was great, if you love BSB you'll love this.
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 1999-07-10
It was great! I love the Backstreet Boys (especially Brian) and I loved this book. It had great info on each of the guys, good stuff about how they got together, and really hot pictures. If you love the Backstreet Boys, get this book!

Boys
Barrow's Boys
Published in Paperback by Granta Books (1999)
Author: Fergus Fleming
List price:
Used price: $0.40
Collectible price: $27.50

Average review score:

Survival of the fittest
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2001-11-03
For 41 years John Barrow manipulated the Royal Navy and the British Government to pursue his own fixed ideas on geography.
His mistaken belief that there was an open, ice-free sea at the North Pole, a permanently clear North-West Passage and that the Niger emptied into either the Nile or the Congo, caused the deaths of unknown numbers of men, the loss of ships, the expenditure of a king's ransom and the physical and mental breakdown of many of Britain's elite officers.

This is the story of that prolonged tragedy; the irony of it is that it fathered the most amazing feats of endurance and privation, that they are regarded today as the pinnacle of human endeavour - only the similarly ill-equipped expeditions of Scott come close.

Barrow's 'Boys' are his hand-picked officers (strangely, they were usually totally ill-suited to the tasks he set them) who are either ambitious, incompetent, zealots or plain insane (or any combination!) and Barrow goes out of his way to ignore all the best advice from those with the real experience, to either under- or over-equip the expeditions, seemingly never hitting the right balance.
The internecine rivalry of the officers, the badly-picked crews, the obstructions of companies and kings, all combine to produce farce after explorational farce. On top of this, each failed expedition only fires his zeal, perversely convincing him that he is right, so off goes another doomed expedition.

If anything tells us that inhabitants of ivory towers have no idea of the real world, it is this book ... Get it and enjoy!

Too much time in England, not enought in the Arctic
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2000-09-05
Good book, but it spent too much time in England peering behind the political scenes and not enough time in the Arctic. It is very interesting to learn of the behind the scenes "politicing" required to carry off such pointless acts of courage, but most of the officers come off looking like political hacks instead of the incredibly courageous explorers that they were. These men sailed in the face of fear and came home heroes, but a self-serving bureauocrat makes it to the title of the book. While Barrow deserves much of the credit for getting the machinery in place behind these men, sometimes he did not even do that. I may be trasferring some of my deep personal distaste for the man (Barrow) to the book, but I did enjoy the book very much. I just wish it spent more time on the expeditions and a little less on the politics.

Survival of the fittest
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2001-11-03
For 41 years John Barrow manipulated the Royal Navy and the British Government to pursue his own fixed ideas on geography.
His mistaken belief that there was an open, ice-free sea at the North Pole, a permanently clear North-West Passage and that the Niger emptied into either the Nile or the Congo, caused the deaths of unknown numbers of men, the loss of ships, the expenditure of a king's ransom and the physical and mental breakdown of many of Britain's elite officers.

This is the story of that prolonged tragedy; the irony of it is that it fathered the most amazing feats of endurance and privation, that they are regarded today as the pinnacle of human endeavour - only the similarly ill-equipped expeditions of Scott come close.

Barrow's 'Boys' are his hand-picked officers (strangely, they were usually totally ill-suited to the tasks he set them) who are either ambitious, incompetent, zealots or plain insane (or any combination!) and Barrow goes out of his way to ignore all the best advice from those with the real experience, to either under- or over-equip the expeditions, seemingly never hitting the right balance.
The internecine rivalry of the officers, the badly-picked crews, the obstructions of companies and kings, all combine to produce farce after explorational farce. On top of this, each failed expedition only fires his zeal, perversely convincing him that he is right, so off goes another doomed expedition.

If anything tells us that inhabitants of ivory towers have no idea of the real world, it is this book ... Get it and enjoy!

RIDE THE GLOBE!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2000-12-24
This was a well written book on the many Polar and African interior explorations that were sponsored by the British in the first half of the 19th centry. From trying to find the North-West Passage above North America to searching for the legendary "city of gold" called Timbucto in Africa this book kept me interested throughout. Never before or for that matter since has such a group of explorers been assembled. The man responsible for these quests was John Barrow, a man who had a dream of mapping uncharted areas of the world. He set into motion the largest and most expensive series of explorations in the history of mankind. This is a story of courage and determination like no other that I have read before. This book recounts the stories of men who spent years stuck in the freezing cold in their dreams of being the first to find a passage across North America. The book also details the adventures that other men had in their quest to map the interior of Africa. Other stories of different areas in the world that were explored are also included. John Barrow might not have been as successful as he would have liked but his dream inspired later explorers and set a benchmark that carried on into the 20th century.

From Biblio To Bio
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2001-08-28
The Author explains that this book originated as the name of John
Barrow is to be found in the Bibliographies on English Expeditions of
Discovery, for a good portion of the first half of the 19th
Century. Those that lead or were notable participants in these
ventures have books written by them, and about them, many times
over. Evidently this is the first time the man who was a driving force
behind these events has been profiled alongside the voyages. Just some
of these events include the search for The Northwest Passage, the trek
for The North Pole, documenting the North and South Magnetic Poles,
and exploring Antarctica. And when you have frozen through these epic
travels, the writer takes you to Australia, and the overland marches
in search of Timbuktu, the beginning and end of The Niger River, and
many other historical firsts.



Along with the details of the trips and
the men that participated, the Author also explains the construction
of the ships, how these wooden vessels were able to break through ice
instead of their being broken. There are remarkable details noted,
such as there was a black member of the group that first crossed the
Northwest passage from West to East, and also a man of color when the
North Pole was attacked. The tales range from remarkable folly when
officers were to wear dress uniforms when crossing the desserts of
Africa to maintain the pride of Britain, to other men who adopted not
only the dress of The Muslims, but also learned to speak their
language!



In his position at The Admiralty and other distinguished
posts, Barrow not only could direct what expeditions took place, but
also those that were to lead them. With this power he made or
destroyed the reputations of many brave men whose only failure was
that they did not succeed according to Barrow. Most of his beliefs
about The Northwest Passage, The North Pole, and the rivers and cities
of Africa were wrong. Despite this, his persistence and those that
shouldered these journeys filled in the voids on the worlds map that
had until then been blank. But while alive he was a bitter taskmaster
who would brutally discredit the same men he had sent to destinations
never before seen by a European, if he did not gain the information
and confirmation of the beliefs he held to be true.



Different readers
will select those actions they find to be the most remarkable, for me
it was those trips that in futility sought The Northwest Passage by
ship. These ships and crew would at times be gone for 2, 3, or even 4
years depending on the whims of the ice. During one such voyage after
surviving another brutal winter a vessel again made its way toward
home. When once again locked in the ice for yet another winter the
ship had traveled a distance that a man could easily walk in 2 hours!



These winters, which occupied most of the calendar, were filled with
activities to literally keep all members healthy and sane. Seamen who
could not read or write came home literate, and the majority of the
time scurvy was kept at bay by Captains that truly seemed to care for
their men. There were of course Captains whose sanity could be
questioned, and at least one who was certifiably a mental
misfit. However these were the exception and not the rule. The Author
also shares the first human encounter that an isolated group of
Eskimos had experienced in 400 years. The story will contradict every
evil cliché that has been too easily attached to those who set out on
these voyages.

The book is a remarkable piece of work, and pays
tribute and passes judgment when appropriate. A wonderful piece of
scholarly work that is a privilege to read.

Boys
Extreme Pursuit: Winning the Race for the Heart of Your Son
Published in Paperback by NavPress Publishing Group (2007-08-27)
Author: John E. Davis
List price: $13.99
New price: $7.97
Used price: $0.25

Average review score:

Highly recommended for all parents
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-22
This book is excellent guidance on how to communcate effectively with your son, yet also applicable to other family members. John's brillantly grounded approach works. He provides tools to break the cycle of frustrating circular arguments and reoccuring confrontations, which quite frankly, works with anyone. I've circulated the book amongst friends here in England, France and the States and the feedback has been the same, "can I keep this copy for future reference?".

Easy to Read, Practical Help
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-29
I was hooked right away reading John's descriptions of boys who were so similar to our son. I was so encouraged that someone could see our problems and provide a reasonable plan to help us reconnect.

John identifies 6 ways that we parents repel our sons - Reacting, Micromanaging, Lecturing, Moralizing, Reiterating and Threatening - and then outlines what to do instead.

He provides a couple of invaluable tools: 1. Speaking to your son in a 90 second window, and 2. Using shoulder-to-shoulder communication. Both of these tools maintain connection and avoid your son's withdrawal.

John says at the end of every chapter, "And then the chase is on." It's chokes me up each time I read it and realize that all of the time, effort and resources spent are all worth it for the sake of my son.

John Davis knows the heart and mind of boys like no one else.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-30
Miraculously John Davis came into our lives during our son's and our family's power struggles in high school.
We learned and grew because of John's strength, wisdom and love. We are forever grateful and recommend ANYONE who knows a teenage boy to read this book and follow it.
There you will find your heart and your son can be the man he strives to be...noble, tender, worthy.
Mandy Vogel
Baltimore, MD.

A Book that EMPOWERS parents of boys
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-21
As a single mother of a teenage boy, I was deeply moved by the empowerment of this incredible book. Author John Davis reveals the struggles and adversity his young clients have faced and the victory each of them have worked so hard to achieve! His vision and dedication to working with young men is inspiring. This book provides essential tools for every parent dedicated to developing the character of their sons (even daughters!) as well as guiding you through the process of overcoming the "very real" challenges our sons face in today's society (drugs, alcohol, sex, anger, peer pressure). John Davis is an authentic writer ~ his book is poignant, emotional, uplifting, raw, and very direct in teaching parents what to look for when there is a breakdown, either physically, emotionally or in communicating with your son. After reading this book, I have a clearer understanding in knowing how to "reach" the heart of my son and the best way to respond when challenges arise! John Davis has given all of us an incredible resource!! I have no doubt "Extreme Pursuit: Winning the Race for the Heart of Your Son" will be the marker in which all other parenting / relational books will be compared!

The important message of Extreme Pursuit
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-16
I'm a 23 year old student at Seattle Pacific University, I'm healthy, active, emotionally intelligent, and I have a wonderful relationship with my parents. I'm not bragging, I promise, it's just that I didn't always have these skills. This is a sincere thanks to John Davis for being a key player in my life when I was at vulnerable ages and places. You see, I'm a graduate of John's 2Xtreme counseling program. What this means is that much of who I am and many of the skills I've acquired, came directly from my relationship with John Davis. When I was struggling with finding healthy ways to connect with my family as a teenager, John and I were hammering out concrete ways for me to talk with my mom and dad. When I started making bad decisions in high school, John and I went to work on those issues. I was blessed with a friend who walked through the pain with me, and mentored me back to a place where I could start making positive changes in my life. This is the most concise testimony I can make about John's work. There's so much more that is needed to do the man justice, so here's my email address: aldrin@spu.edu I feel so strongly about furthering the message of John's work that I will gladly return questions from parents.
While reading Extreme Pursuit I was taken back to the office where we used to do our sessions. I was taken back to the literal cliffs that we rappelled from together. I was taken back to the Andes that John and I actually climbed together in the summer of 2003. I was taken back to the times when John and I had nothing else to say, so we just cried instead. And I'm not ashamed to say it. I'm also not ashamed to say that when I saw my name in John's book, I was giddy like a school girl. I'm seriously passionate about this message because it's a manual full of tools and advice that literally changed my life, and in no small measure. Know that this book is not a quick fix for you and your son. It never is with kids like us. This is an opportunity for you parents to crawl down into the adventurous and sometimes painful adolescent years that are so poignant in a boy's life. Trust me, your son wants to be your friend. He wants to make you proud of the young man he's becoming. The wealth of knowledge I find in Extreme Pursuit can help foster the relationships that are most important to you, and to your son.

Boys
Golden Boy: Memories of a Hong Kong Childhood
Published in Paperback by Picador (2006-11-14)
Author: Martin Booth
List price: $14.00
New price: $4.79
Used price: $2.75

Average review score:

Amazing Golden Boy
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-31
GOLDEN BOY, Memories of a Hong Kong Childhood
By Martin Booth
Picador Press |(St. Martins) 2004
ISBN 978-0-312-42626-2 (pbk)

What gave a seven-year-old British boy courage to explore the Hong Kong of 1952 in places where no foreign child belonged? Martin Booth felt safe among unusual friends during his adventures, because Chinese people believed rubbing his golden hair brought them luck.
Booth's superb prose pictures brothels, opium dens, Chinese drug-lord friends, forbidden temples and also the wild life and flora in both Kowloon and Hong Kong. Often lonely, Martin's independence was encouraged by correspondence and gifts from his grandfather in England. He never told his parents the extent of his explorations into forbidden and dangerous areas.
The boy also endured the hostilities between his bigoted, bureaucrat father, a man who never quite succeeded, and his out-going mother who was fascinated by Chinese culture.
The author calls himself a "curious, somewhat devious, adventurous and street-wise child whose heart never left Hong Kong" after his father's job sent them back to England four years later.
Anyone who likes biography, history, adventure, Chinese culture and beautifully written literature will enjoy this book.

Wonderful, didn't want the adventures to end
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-01
Martin Booth had an amazing memory for the details of post-WWII Hong Kong and the times he had there as a seven to ten year-old boy. His civilian father gets transferred by the British to the far-flung colonial outpost. While his father is more of a spoilsport, his mother tries live life to the utmost--wherever that life may be--and she allows Martin the freedom to do the same. He takes her fully up on that offer, befriending hotel staff, local storekeepers and more and tasting practically every Chinese dish and joining in every local festival with eyes wide open. However, there are actually very few stories of his escapades with fellow children, mostly stories with the adults that surround him and the nature and culture of Hong Kong.
Hong Kong is ruthless with its built history, so a book like this is the only way to get to know the Hong Kong that existed only fifty years ago. It includes one of the few descriptions of a westerner in the `Kowloon walled city.' And from an eight year-old boy too!
I am grateful that Mr. Booth was able to finish this book before he died. I wish he had lived a few more years for selfish reasons--so that he could have finished a book on his second time around in Hong Kong. I am sure he had just as many adventures as a teen as he did as a young boy.
Richard Mason's `World of Suzie Wong' takes place at approximately the same time and is a great and recommended look at a decidedly different part of Hong Kong. So it was neat when Booth's world and Wong's world intersected (innocently) in a few of Golden Boy's pages. Mason actually spent very little time in Hong Kong prior to writing the fictional Suzie Wong, so Golden Boy is a more knowing portrait of Hong.

A "Golden" book for sure!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-02
This book was recommended to me by a friend who said she was sad when it ended. Well, I am recommending it, and also sad when it ended. It is a delightful memoir of a blond 9 year old boy living in Hong Kong in the 1940ties. Blond means "luck" to the Chinese and everyone wanted to pat his head. He learned Chinese and was allowed into areas that no other "white" person could go.

Fabulous memoir ! This is a book everyone should read.
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-19

I am deeply sad that the author Martin Booth is no longer with us. However, he left behind a treasure in this amazing memoir. This book is also published under the name "Gweilo." I hated coming to the end of this enchanting book and recommend it to everyone.

Golden Throughout
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-14
I read this book because I love Hong Kong and its history. I was totally unprepared for Booth's parents and adored Joyce. How cannot you not like someone so lively, loving, accepting (except of Ken) and adventuresome?

While the family (Ken, Joyce and Martin) are exploring Algiers, Joyce buys some dates from a market stall, and Ken pitches a fit because they are probably unsanitary. He asks, 'How can you tell where they've been?' Joyce replies that they've been up a date tree. 'And they picked themselves I suppose?' 'No,' Joyce rplies, 'I expect they were plucked by a scrofulous urchin and thrown down to his tubercular aunt who wrapped them in her phlegm-stiffened handerchief.' I had a large mouthful of iced tea when I read that and spat the tea I didn't snort up my nose all over the page. I couldn't stop laughing. This was, I learned, pure Joyce.

'Golden Boy' is delightful, insightful and something more - a word or phrase that escapes these old brain cells. This is the first book by Booth I've read, and I'm eager to read more.

Boys
The Hoopster
Published in Library Binding by (2008-11-11)
Author: Alan Lawrence Sitomer
List price: $14.99
New price: $14.99

Average review score:

Flat out awesome
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-02
This book has got to be the best book I've ever read, I couldn't stop I read it in 6 hours continously! This is amazing for me because I'm usually the guy who never reads anything. I'm sure this book is a best buy and I can't wait for the second book to come out!!! For all you kids like me, pick up Hoopster today!

Rosco Magosco's Book Review
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-22
The book i read was 'The Hoopster" by Alan Lawrence Sitomer. My book was about a young African Amercin man named Andre. Andre is really good at basketball, maybe even good enough to play proffesional ball. His nickname is the Hoopster. His long life dream is to become a magazine writer. He is a vary talented writer but no one knew it yet. He worked at a magazine editorial, but he was just an errand boy for the writers. Until one day someone had seen an artical that he wrote just for fun and thought he could be good enough to write an article for them, so they offered him an oppertunity to write about racism. The article was spectacular. but not everyone liked it. A man kept herassing Andre, telling him to stop writing or else they would hurt him. Andre didn't listen so one day after work he was walking to his car and a van pulled up next to him. A group of white men came out and beat him, they also kept crushing his hand in a car door. i liked this book because it was about basketball, it also showed that racism is bad and still around. And you shouldn't let people bring you down.

THE BEST!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-05-29
THIS IS THE GREATEST BOOK EVER. i couldn't but it down til i finish it. i love how Alan kept us on the edge of our seat when Andre was getting beat up. i can't wait til the next book comes out.

Must Own.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-05-17
This is the type of book one can never let go. It is an excellent book and I am 99.9% sure that teens will like it. Well, yeah good job Alan Sitomer. Buy. Read. Re-read. Enjoy. Don't bother me.... I'm reading.

The Hoopster
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-02
The Hoopster


The Hoopster, by Alan Sitomer, is a compelling book that allows you to see arguably the toughest year of Andre's life. Things look good at first; he has a hot new girlfriend, Gwen, just received a promotion in his job working for a magazine, and is his usual dominant self on the basketball court. Andre's new assignment is to write each month an article about race. Since he is a very bright African-American, his input on the topic becomes meaningful to nearly all the subscribers. One group, however, does not think so highly of his writings. One night when Andre is leaving work, his life forever changes...
The Hoopster is the book for you if you enjoy fast-paced, action-packed, sports thrillers with many unexpected twists. This book is not for a sensitive reader and I would not recommend it to anyone below the middle school level, because the content is not always G or PG. Overall, I think anyone over 12 would truly enjoy this book, and it would open up anyone's eyes about and make the reader think twice before stereotyping another African American.

Boys
It's Not the Stork!: A Book About Girls, Boys, Babies, Bodies, Families and Friends (The Family Library)
Published in Hardcover by Candlewick (2006-07-25)
Author: Robie H. Harris
List price: $16.99
New price: $7.99
Used price: $10.63

Average review score:

Led to an Easy and Relaxed Conversation
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-12-03
I gave this book to my 6-year-old to read. She is an excellent reader, so it was an easy read for her. She loved it! She found the whole thing very interesting, the book was fun to read, and she went through it cover to cover. She didn't read every word, but she definitely collected a lot more information than I would have guessed that she could absorb in that first reading.

I sat next to her as she read so that I could answer any questions and correct her pronounciation of new words, and the book allowed us to approach the topic of how babies are made in a very relaxed way. She found nothing intimidating or even particularly surprising. She was not at all troubled by the page on "okay touches" and "not okay touches" and I was glad to have it in there so that we had a neutral way of discussing the matter and I could reinforce with her the things I have already told her about her safety.

Fantastic Resource
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-22
This book is perfect for our seven-year-old daughter. I highly recommend it as a resource for any family. It is detailed, but not too graphic. Entertaining, but straight-forward.

I have lent it to many coworkers and friends!

Great introduction
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-21
My not-quite-four (but very verbal) daughter got this book for Christmas, and it immediately became one of her favorites. I am pregnant again now, so she is very interested in all the discussion of pregnancy and birth, and it opened up discussions about what her birth was like and what it will be like when I have this baby. The first few times we read it she just listened wide-eyed and didn't talk much, but now we chat while we read it, and she will periodically come up to me and inform me that the food I am eating will go to the baby through the umbilical cord. I recommend this one highly for any preschooler who is curious and likes to understand how things work.

too much information...
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2008-11-06
I liked this book when I began reading it, even though it had a little more info than I expected. But then I got to the end and it goes on to explain good touches and bad touches. I was disappointed to find out that the author expects us to teach our 4 year olds that touching themselves is a "good touch." That is not something I want to teach my young kids, if they figure it out on their own, so be it, but I don't want to introduce that concept to my 4 year old. Also, it goes on to say that some kids have 2 moms and some kids have 2 dads. How are we supposed to explain that one to our young kids after just explaining to them that it takes a mom and a dad to make a baby?

I did give the book 3 stars because I was impressed at first about the way the subject was introduced. There were just a few subjects that I thought were inappropriate. I will be returning this and the search is still on for a good one.

surprised me
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-02
with detail. But it has fascinated my kids from 5-9, yes I've bought the older books as well - the oldest one I think is still a bit much for my 9yo, but she likes the middle one . . . but they all enjoy this one - it seems to hit just the right notes for interesting information without too much yuck factor for them - and the cute illustrations confirm their ideas that some of this is just a little bit weird when you hear it!!

Boys
Snarkout Boys & the Avocado of Death
Published in Audio Cassette by Audio Literature (1995-03)
Author: Daniel Manus Pinkwater
List price: $12.95
New price: $52.98
Used price: $6.24

Average review score:

A look at what's really going on
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-03
I would wager that more than a few adults who favor science fiction or fantasy were set on that path as youngsters by the works of Daniel Pinkwater. Speaking for myself, Pinkwater instilled in me an interest in fiction that was reflective of more than just the ordinary world me (or, more than likely, awakened an existing, but dormant, interest in such literature). In the case of Avocado of Death, we are presented with aliens posing as realtors, a supercomputer fashioned out of a single avocado, and an international criminal mastermind who employs orangutans to do his dirty work, just for starters. And Pinkwater's books are without a doubt offbeat, zany, absurd, and certainly whichever other such adjectives the critics proffer. But their zaniness is beside the point, or at least it is subordinate to a larger point.

Though Pinkwater's books have a wide appeal, I can say from experience precisely who they're aimed at, and to whom they appeal the most: the kid who's bored with school, who looks in vain for something new or unusual to engage his interest; the kid who knows how much he doesn't know, who knows that there are things that his parents and teachers aren't telling him and is almost certain that there's a great deal that adults don't know either. Pinkwater's protagonists slog through the mundane world of the everyday, until some circumstance allows them to catch a glimpse of what's behind the curtain and have some idea, for the first time, of What's Really Going On. Generally it involves conspiracies, outlandish coincidences, and general wackiness, and generally none of it makes any less sense than what we normally think of reality. In fact, it occurs to me that a reader of Pinkwater's could graduate to Douglas Adams without too much trouble.

I'm not sure that Avocado of Death is Pinkwater's best work; if I were to make a recommendation, I would start a kid off with Lizard Music. But whichever you begin with, I have to recommend giving a kid who enjoys reading a Pinkwater novel; there's no telling what kind of imagination you might unlock.

Love this book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-11
I first saw this book in my school library . I was in middle school and was not into reading very much. We were required to check out a book so this one caught my attention with the colorful jacket. The first page pulled me in and I was able to see the characters in my head. I have been an avid reader for 24 years since this book. My kids are "lovin' it", too.

That would explain the ultra soundproof room
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-02-17
I did not discover this book until I listened to it this week at the ripe old age of 23. As such, I did not feel the book was long enough.
Pinkwater is engaging beyond my understanding how he does it, although the absurd characters and their stranger actions are a sure start. Take Uncle Flipping Hades Terwilliger who has not missed a late night movie in 17 years despite being kidnapped numerous times, or Walter's mother who is paranoid of communists beyond all rationality, or the fellow with the painted on sideburns. A few of Walter's exploits were things I did as a kid. Others were opportunities I wish I'd had. Except for the orangutan wrestling. I frown upon that. The silly care-free writing, and the flawless speaking performance by Pinkwater had me wishing my commute were longer.

I've been meaning to sign up for bookcrossing and this is a prime first candidate. Or maybe I'll send it to my silliest friend.

fond memories
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2003-04-12
My "hippie" aunt and uncle, in New York City, sent me this book, and Fat Men From Space, when I was about eight. I loved it!
I am now almost thirty; yet I remember these books with great affection. Mind you, what you remember and what was true are two different things; but a book that can make you smile more than ten years later is worth the investment.

Wonderfully unique
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2003-11-10
I remember reading (and rereading) this zany, gripping, urban adventure when I was in third or fourth grade (and its worthy sequel, The Snarkout Boys & the Baconburg Horror). On a whim, some twenty years later and with a law degree to my name, I tracked down a copy at the public library and ... wow! I enjoyed it every bit as much. Daniel Pinkwater deserves major kudos for such a book--someone buy that man a Napoleon or twelve.

The fast-paced story is told from the viewpoint of Walter Galt. Walter is a teenager on the verge of dying from boredom at Ghengis Khan High School, until he meets Winston Bongo, another suffering student and the self-proclaimed inventor of 'snarking out'. The boys' late-night snarkouts eventually bring them into contact with a smorgasbord of oddball characters (such as Ms. Bentley Saunders Harrison Matthews, aka Rat) and places, from Blueberry Park to Lower North Aufzoo Street to Beanbender's Beer Garden and beyond. Ultimately, with the help of the world's greatest living detective, Walter, Winston and Rat must locate the world's largest avocado and save the world (or at least the nations' realtors)--but watch out for stuffed Indian fruit bats!

Pinkwater is a true original and writes this surreal, comic yarn simply, cleanly, and hilariously. Highly recommended for kids, parents, avocado lovers ... and even lawyers who used to be kids. Five stars!

Boys
Stolen Boy
Published in Paperback by iUniverse, Inc. (2007-06-19)
Author: Michael Mehas
List price: $19.95
New price: $13.95
Used price: $13.95

Average review score:

Fantastic Book !!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-23
"Stolen Boy" is indeed a page turner. I couldn't put it down. If I know that a movie is based upon a book, I read the book first. Most books go into more detail than the movie and in this case, Mehas does not disappoint. The movie "Alpha Dog" is based upon Mehas's "Stolen Boy", which is a fascinating story of what can happen when today's youth let's things get out of control. Michael Mehas has written a beautiful and touching book, that will leave you either in tears or shaking your head in sympathy after reading it. Stolen Boy is much more that a story about a drug deal gone bad. In writing his book, Mehas has captured the pulse of today's youth perfectly in his character development. As you follow the dialogue in this book, you can't help but feel like an unwritten character that's now involved in this fast moving story. Readers will find themselves not only feeling sorry for Stolen Boy, but for everyone else involved in this story as they all interact with one another, which makes for an excellent read. I highly recommend this book as you will not be disappointed! I look forward to Michael Mehas next book. He is a top notch writer.

Engrossing, to say the LEAST!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-13
To imagine the lives of written characters, is one thing. But to actually channel someone's soul, and see through their eyes is something that will forever change you as a reader and a human being. Michael Mehas' unyielding curiosity is infectious, to say the least, and this story, or collection of stories, goes deeper than just presenting facts and painting pretty pictures. You find yourself trapped in the minds of people running from themselves, adopting their demons and seeing through the eyes of something so heartless and cold, the human condition is simply incapable of imagining nor is it prepared to experience. Reader be warned- this is a story you need to be willing to take on and feel.

Outstanding!!!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-12
Absolutely terrific book. Very interesting voice. Excellent analysis of how these ordinary, (if a little screwed up) kids could do such a terrible crime. Such in-depth backgound on the characters, you really begin to understand it all.

A must read for anyone interested in the Jessie James Hollywood saga, and true crime in general!!!!

The Way I See Stolen Boy and the Author
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-04
Stolen Boy
by
Michael Mehas


As an author myself, I know only too well what Michael Mehas went through while writing Stolen Boy. Such writing causes an author to sweat, shiver, eat a lot of antacids, and lose sleep. Yet, such books must be written and should be read by every living soul worldwide just because we have yet to learn how to prevent the horrific crimes tarnishing the freedom we should be enjoying at this time of plenty. We hear and read about crime everyday, and we think it's a shame. Still we go on with our daily schedules, striving to succeed and spend some time with our loved-ones, but that leaves us no time to protest the crimes which sooner or later will touch us all.

Michael's writing is so crisp and vivid that one can feel and smell the total disregard the criminal characters in this story have for life itself. The degrading language used in Stolen Boy is a style of communication that has been fed to us gradually by the entertainment industry. Shame on us for accepting the "F" and "S" words into the beautiful English vocabulary I worked so hard to learn. It is a low-class language used in todays movies to impress the viewers - it's meant to be creativity, but I see it as stupidity. The author did not fabricate that language, because the story is based on a real tragedy that really took place in an ordinary neighborhood. While the law-abiding citizens went about their own routines, a young boy got sucked into the whirling nightmare that eventually ended his life.

Michael's ability to describe and share this story step-by-step with his readers is to be commended. And the torture he went through writing it will be rewarding if his readers realize that unless we all work together in an effort to bring back moral standards and respect for human life, crime in our beautiful country will continue to grow and eventually touch us all. Who will be the next victim?

I give Michael Mehas five stars for making this story available to us, and I urge readers everywhere to buy Stolen Boy, and read it with an open mind - questioning, why is there so much crime taking place in our country today? What are we teaching our children?


Jacqueline Jorgensen - author of "Beyond Mud and Vines"


Insightful story of teen violence
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-28
I first saw the movie "Alpha Dog", which was very disturbing. I then read the book to gain more insight as to what would make these teens commit such a senseless crime. The book did not disappoint. It was a tragic story of how drugs, money, and broken homes take their toll on kids, eventually brainwashing them into a murder. This was a heartbreaking story and one I won't soon forget.

Boys
Alabama Moon
Published in Library Binding by (2008-10-15)
Author: Watt Key
List price: $15.99
New price: $15.99

Average review score:

Well Told Tale that Reads Like a Dream - Perfect for Middle School
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2009-01-07
A ten-year-old boy knows only his father and the most rudimentary elements of survival in the Alabama forest until the day he has to bury his own father whose dying words instruct him to make his way to Alaska where he will be able to find and live with others who also hate the government and who can survive in the wilderness. So begins the boy's discovery of his own mind and his own heart. Though Moon Blake has only known the extremist ideology of his father, he has known love. This knowledge is his north star as he negotiates an entirely new world and begins to shape his own ideas.

This is an extremely well-told tale that reads like a dream. Filled with survival lore, the story unfolds from the first person perspective of Moon, a welcome and richly-drawn new hero to the field of literature. The plot includes a suitably grotesque villain, an impossible task, true friendship, and ultimate redemption.

Entirely appropriate for middle school readers, this book will appeal mostly to boys, but it is such a great story I am recommending it for girls who like tales of survival and adventure, children younger than middle school who are already comfortable with reading, younger high school students, and parents who like the opportunity to enjoy reading a book their children are reading. I for one had not been as moved by the noble and endearing spirit of a young protagonist for more decades than I like to acknowledge. - Gaby Chapman

Moon Rising
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-11-30
Having just started (and put down) a deeply crappy book meant for 9- to 12-year-old boys by a well-known author whose name I will refrain from mentioning, it was an absolute shock to my system to read its polar opposite, the brilliant Alabama Moon. THANK you, Watt Key!

Utterly competent living in the forest, Moon Blake experiences the height of culture shock when his survivalist father dies and he runs smack into the outside world. Moon is unfamiliar with things like fatty food (or enough food), television, and clothes made out of things other than animals skins, let alone the wrongheadedness and lies of certain supposed representatives of the law. Trying to fulfill his father's last instructions to go to Alaska and live with other people who hate the government, Moon soon escapes from the locked boys' home where he's been dumped, taking two other boys with him. (Well, more at first, actually--that part's very funny!)

But Moon is starting to change, realizing that, unlike his father, he's not happy being alone. When things go wrong out in the forest, Moon begins making new kinds of decisions. Of course, it doesn't help that the wacked-out small-town constable whose pride Moon has wounded is after him, and not exactly with lawful intent.

Moon is the most real, intriguing protagonist I've read about since Maniac Magee. I had to catch my breath when I finished this book, it was that good. I then ran to my computer to tell you: please read this book. It's one of the best things to hit children's literature in years!

An Intersting Young Man
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-11-12
Alabama Moon is a very interesting and enterpising young man. Raised in the woods by his surviorists father, he is very self relient, yet when circumstances bring him into civilization, he quickly adapts to his new enviroment.
I highly recommend this book to sixth and seventh graders espicailly the boys.

Excellent!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-24
Alabama moon is a very adventurous tale with lots of facts about the woods. And its so good I got up in the morning and read it until it was bedtime. I rate it 5 stars, my favorite book yet (even better then the golden compass and man was that gooooood.)

Can't Wait For the Sequel
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-19
This book begs for a sequel and soon, too. We--we readers--have to know what happened to Moon and to Hal...What happens to them as they grow, mature, and face their young adult high school and college days? And when they grow up, get married and have families of their own...As they approach old age...Will they, can they, escape (overcome) the events described here in the formative days of their youth. Rarely has a book cried out for a sequel more than this one.

In fact, Mr. Key may have his own cottage industry here, a book on their continuing relationship (Moon and Hal) and/or single books on each boy.
Mark Twain did it and did it well with Huck Finn and Tom Sawyer. Mr. Key has the same oportunity here. Here's hoping he's up to the opportunity--not the "task," but the "opportunity."

Orginally written as a book for teens and a little older, Alabama Moon has touched all and stirred the slumbering chords of all generations as it deals with youth, growing, up, family, love and lack thereof.

Outstanding. Don't miss it.


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