Book Description
Get official exam preparation for the all-new Wireless# Exam PWO-050
Authorized by the exam developers at the CWNP program, this study guide thoroughly covers all the topics on the entry-level Wireless# certification exam. Work at your own pace through a system of lessons, scenarios, and review questions to learn the material quickly and easily.
Wireless# Certification Official Study Guide will help you prepare for the exam as well as learn the basics of many wireless technologies. You'll learn, step-by-step, how to implement, troubleshoot and maintain small and medium-sized wireless networks. Get the only official study guide authorized by the creators of the Wireless# exam and get started in a career in wireless IT.
Maximize your performance on the exam by learning:
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Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, WiMAX, ZigBee, Infrared, RFID, and VoWLAN
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Wireless hardware, software, and installation
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Wireless security, applications, and support
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Wireless organizations, standards, and protocols
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Radio frequency (RF) technologies
Complete Exam Coverage
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Comprehensive details on all Wireless# exam objectives
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Review questions modeled after the real exam
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Helpful chapter summaries and key term lists
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Vendor-neutral coverage of wireless technologies and equipment
Customer Reviews:
Very Concise and Clear.......2007-06-25
I am currently still reading this book, and I am planning on getting my certification. The book is written in a very concise, clear and easy to understand manner. Everything is explained with clear examples: every concept explained is easily grasped, and the details fall nicely into place. This is by far the best written manual/study guide I have seen on the subject.
Wireless# Certification Official Study Guide.......2006-10-04
This is a good book. The book provides an excellent overview of all of the technologies on the Wireless# exam it also serves as an excellent reference guide. I passed the Wireless# exam using this book and I have frequently returned to this text follow reference material during the course of my work.
Wireless#.......2006-09-22
This is a well written book, it held my interest though the whole book I never had to force myself to read like some tech books. It not only helped me pass my wireless# exam but I believe that it helped me pass my Network+ exam also.
Fantastic introduction to Wireless.......2006-08-24
I took the Wireless# exam today and passed after using this excellent book. The book is extremely well written and easy to follow. Even if you already know Wi-Fi pretty well, chances are you might not know a lot about all the other wireless standards out there. As a previous reviewer said, this book gives you a nice broad introduction to all the major wireless technologies currently in use. The information is highly current as the book just came out this year. I recommend taking the exam, as preparing for that will ensure that you have a good grasp of the contents of this book. Even if you are already a CWNA, it's still worth reading this book. Be warned though that the exam expects you to have thorough knowledge of all the standards described in the book including relevant frequencies, ranges, etc. I recommend the practice tests on the CWNP site if you intend to take the exam. In short I highly recommend this book for anyone trying to get a grasp of all things wireless.
GREAT place to start in the wireless field.......2006-08-03
I just passed the Wireless# test today with a really good score. Before taking the test, I read every page of this book. It also has very good questions (with answers explained) at the end of each chapter. If you have a desire to work in the wireless field, but have no real experience yet, the chapters on wireless security, installation, troubleshooting and optimization really give you a head start towards that experience!
Sure you can find a study guide that will just barely give you enough information to pass the test. If you would rather have more information behind the meat, this book is for you. Some of this material was new to me, so I wanted to really know the subjects before taking the test. Besides, this book is the official study guide for the Wireless# test by the CWNP program.
This book (and certification) really is a mile wide and a couple of inches deep. Great place to start in the wireless field. After that, you're really set to start with your CWNA study and test. Now you're getting into a subject that is only a half mile wide, and many more feet deep. CWSP is even smaller but much deeper.
Good luck and have fun!
Book Description
In the Beginning . . .
Given life by gods, the Ogres were the most intelligent and beautful of the early races on Krynn, and they reigned supreme in their perfect kingdom . . .
Until that fabled race was weakened by clan rivalries and evil ambition, their downfall orchestrated by the hand of the Dark Queen, Takhisis . . .
Until the once-proud Ogres were cursed by their own mistakes and transformed into one of Krynn's most ugly, despised, and villainous species . . .
All except a small group, the Irda, who learned to accept goodness, fight for their freedom, and escape to build a utopian civilization of their own on a paradise island in the Dragon Isles.
The Irda
The Lost Histories Series probes the historical roots and epic struggles of the heretofore little-known peoples of Krynn. Author Linda P. Baker sheds light on thelegendary origins of this mysterious race, The Irda.
Customer Reviews:
A very original work.......2006-02-18
Not the best book from the Dragonlance world, but a pleasurable read none the less. The truly intriguing thing about this book, is that I could not tell which characters were the antagonists and which ones would ultimately become the heores. Every chapter was a guessing game, following Khallayne's selfish desires, then Lyrralt's, then Jyrbian's, never really being told who the champion of the Irda was going to be. It could have been all of them or none of them at all, and that is was makes this such a solid read. Fantasy books sadly, can become quite predictable and this book was anything but that. Another point I enjoyed about this book was the setting. Imagine having a wonderful gift that could significantly alter your life for the better, but the pratice of it was illegal. Not only that, imagine living in a society where any teaching contrary to the status quo brands you as a heretic and worhty of death. The conflict and plot is thick and other than a few glossed over character transitions or spans of time this novel is a pleasant change from the mainstream yet still true to the Dragonlance saga. Probably the best thing about this book is no other Dragonlance novels need to be read before opening this one. This story is not entertwined into others and proudly stands alone.
Definitely not the best Dragonlance book........2005-01-06
Don't waste your time or money on this waste of paper.
This is one of the most boring Dragonlance books period.
Just read the first 2 chapters and the last 2 chapters of the book, and you got the essential storyline of the whole book.
It is that pathetic of a book.
Hardly anything intresting happens in this book at all.
I don't want to read 300 pages of how Ogres enslave humans and elves, and mistreat them through-out the entire book, and the only excitement in the whole book happens at the end, when some good Ogres break away and make their own civilization.
This is not essential reading for Dragonlance at all. You can skip this book completely and still not miss any crucial storyline or timeline elements of the whole Dragonlance Saga.
Starts slow and ends too quickly.......2003-12-16
This book follows a group of characters, mostly Ogres, in the months that lead up to the downfall of Ogres from the favored of the gods to the brutal beasts that most people know them as. It also explains how the Irda separated from the Ogres, and how they ended up on the Dragon Isles.
I think this book could only appeal to fans of the Dragonlance world and would be confusing to those who've never read Dragonlance. Overall it is a decent novel, but it starts very slowly and ends too quickly. Instead of a sweeping history of the Irda, it is a snapshot of the downfall of the Ogres. Instead of relating the history of the Irda through the War of the Lance or even the Chaos War, it ends with their arrival at the Dragon Isles. I think this topic could probably have been handled in a short story, rather than a novel.
Due to the extremely slow start, it is very hard to become attached to any of the characters. Even after one begins to relate to some of the characters, they do things that seem inconsistant with their character quite often.
True fans of the Dragonlance series should read this, as it does give some insight into the fall of the Ogres. Anyone who wants to start reading the Dragonlance series should stay away from this one until you're hooked- else it might scare you away!
Great Story...though leaves questions..........2002-09-27
This was an outstanding book. The plot was very well developed, the writer had a very good grasp of the overall "DL" saga, and she new her races of krynn. Now for the problems:
(1) This was the biggest and most frequent problem I had with this book. The Events would jump for one thing to the next, without filling you in on how it happened. Example: The characters would be in one town in one paragraph, and a whole new one in the next, and the author doesn't tell you how that character did it.
This book was full of that. There was very little or no transitional material at all. That can be very annoying. In one part of this book, one character was sitting in a hotel bar, and the story leaves him, when it coems back to him, he is locked in a castle dungeon, and you left asking huh? Because there is no explination on how he got there other than that he was captured.
Those Jumps are my only problem with this book. If you can deal with that, then by all means this is an outstanding book. If that would annoy you, you might want to skip this one.
My advice for Mrs. Baker: "Its called Transitional Material, look into it, because those jumps are annoying." -Jon
A bit disappointing.......2001-09-24
I read this book after reading the book "Dragons of a Summer Flame" and after reading the short story "Raistlin's Daughter". I was hpoing this book would be about the Irda after they left the ogres. I thought maybe this would be a closer look at their society. It's not. If anyone else wanted to hear more about their pact with the gods of good, this book only mentions it once. It was ok, although at points the story seemed to be a little much. It is about why and how the Irda left the ogres. That's it. The story makes no mention to how the Irda began their new life on the Dragon Isles or anything of that nature. It just is about how they got away. If you want a good Irda story, read "Raistlin's Daughter". Maybe read the first few chapters of "Dragons of a Summer Flame". This is alright, but it doesn't satisfy any cravings.
Book Description
Standards from the Infrared Data Association today permit tens of millions of users to easily beam items between handheld devices. Professionals beam business cards from PDA to cell phone. School children wirelessly exchange games at recess. Shoppers make purchases at grocery stores by pointing a handheld device at point of sale terminal. The "point and shoot" ease of IrDA technology has made the small dark plastic window an ubiquitous feature on devices of all kinds, including laptops, cell phones, PDAs, printers, wristwatches and digital cameras.
IrDA Principles and Protocols is the first definitive book on the standards of the Infrared Data Association, providing an accessible overview of the technology for novices, while delivering the most relevant technical details for experts. Specific topics include:
The motivation and usage models that underlie the IrDA standards
A history of the Infrared Data Association
A discussion of the most recent efforts currently underway in IrDA
A description of the core IrDA protocol layers including:
The infrared physical layer
Controllers, drivers and framers
IrLAP: The IrDA Link Access Protocol
IrLMP: The IrDA Link Management Protocol
TinyTP: The IrDA Tiny Transport Protocol
IAS: The IrDA Information Access Service
IrDA Lite strategies
A description of important session layer protocols including:
IrCOMM and IrLPT: Legacy support for serial and parallel communications
IrOBEX: IrDA Object Exchange
IrFM: Infrared Financial Message exchange
Whether you're...
a manager looking for a convenient executive overview of the IrDA technology,
an engineer getting ready to implement an IrDA protocol stack,
an integrator who wants to put infrared technology in a product,
a software developer who wants to write IrDA-enabled applications, or
a user who wants to understand how to get IrDA to work better on your device,
This volume has the answers you're looking for.
Customer Reviews:
Too little too late..........2005-03-12
If you expect to have the knowlege you need to program an IrDA stack for your device after reading this book, you are sadly out of luck. Having had many years of difficult experiences with IrDA I was eagerly anticipating this book, but was seriously disappointed. IrDA is a great, inexpensive, relatively secure protocol that should be in many more devices than it is - but sadly this book will do little to change that.
This, the first book on this subject, is more of a lightweight overview than the down and dirty technical treatise that is needed to assist developers who are trying to implement an IrDA stack. IrDA implementation has always been problematic because of the poorly written specifications and idiosyncratic implementations, and while a good book has been needed for a long time, this isn't the book. It just doesn't cover the subject in sufficient detail.
Some background - one should be amazed that for a technology that has been around for almost ten years this is the first book written about it - that is until you realize the people who make money off it have an interest in keeping the technology somewhat inaccessible. Sadly, this approach has hurt the acceptance of IrDA. If you look around you will see that other popular communication/connectivity protocols have an abundance of books written about them - Serial, Parallel, USB, Ethernet, just to name a few; and within these books you have the tools to complete an implementation, including CD's with sample code. You won't find that here; it just doesn't exist for IrDA.
So unfortunately for developers new to IrDA the secrets of implementing IrDA protocols are still safe with the software foundries that comprise the IrDA association. At under 200 pages this book is a true lightweight for this genre. This book needs to bulk up to about twice the page count for it to contain the necessary information to make it truly useful to a working engineer.
Why was I not surprised that the back page of the book advertises the training and consulting services of the author?
Elaborates IrDA specs but weak on stack details.......2005-01-25
I bought this as a S/W engineer implementing an IrDA stack
Not much content is allocated to the inner workings of a IrDA stack.
Excessive content is spent on the IrDA physical layer which, to a large extent, is dictated by commercial IrDA compliant LEDs.
What is missing are message sequence charts and explanations for the typical establishment of a IrLMP/IrTTY connection.
Also, what would be useful is a real stack dump with notes of which fields are changed as the connection is established.
Fine to begin with but after analysing a real stack dump you are quickly taken past what is offered.
Great overview of IrDA.......2004-10-19
It seems that every year a new short range wireless technology is invented that will mark an end to the "lowly" IrDA transceiver that allows people to "beam" business cards, games, and calendar events between PDAs. Today's gadgets come equipped with Wi-Fi, 3G, and Bluetooth for "high speed" data transfer, and yet IrDA is still standard on all laptops and PDAs, because it continues to do what it does better than any other wireless technology on the market.
In "IrDA Principles and Protocols" Charles Knutson explores the history and goals of IrDA, followed by a clear and concise overview of the IrDA protocol layers. Knutson explains why IrDA is so good at what it does without getting bogged down in the gory details. This book is a must-read for anyone who thinks that Bluetooth and Wi-Fi will "kill" IrDA.
Make or Buy :Adding IrDA to your product line.......2004-10-01
"IrDA Principles and Protocols" by Charles Knutson is the ultimate guide to A) Understanding the background of IRDA B)The architecture of IrDA C)The methodology necssary in building an IrDA stack D) Helps determine if the effort and resources involved, would result in a better ROI by internally developing IrDA, or licensing an IrDA stack.
This easily read text, should be a starting point for anyone who is investigating implementing short range wireless IrDA into a product. The comprehensive nature of the material is well structured and not just an academic exercise. It is written for developers who are investigating real design parameters and decisions. This quick read gives practical guidance and a solid foundation to making development decisions.
Improve your understanding of what you thought you knew.......2004-09-16
This book is an excellent introduction to what IrDA is, and how it works. Instead of wading through the specification documents, learn about the powerful capability of IrDA and how it is structured.
This book is an excellent refresh for anyone who has been around IrDA and would like to stay current or brush up on the topic. I have been around IrDA specifications and use models from the beginning, and found this book to be a great resource for explaining the topic to others. Plus, I learned a few things that perhaps I thought I already knew.
Straightforward and easy to read, this book is very accessible to a wide variety of readers.
Any engineer or manager with an IrDA port in their product should have a copy of this book on their bookshelf.
Now I am waiting to add Volume 2 to my Library.
Average customer rating:
- Wild elves flesh out further history of Krynn
- Great book, but only half of it is outstanding.
- Well Done
- Interesting history of origins of the Wild Elves
- a great read.
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THE LOST HISTORIES: Book (1) One: The Kagonesti; Book (2) Two: The Irda; Book (3) Three: The Dargonesti; Book (4) Four: Land of the Minortaurs; Book (5) Five: The Gully Dwarves; Book (6) Six: The Dragons
Douglas; Baker, Linda P.; Thompson, Paul B.; Cook, Tonya; Knaak, Richard A.; Parkinson, Dan Niles
Manufacturer: TSR Dragonlance
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
Fantasy
| Science Fiction & Fantasy
| Subjects
| Books
| Alternate History
| Anthologies
| Arthurian
| Contemporary
| Epic
| General
| Historical
| History & Criticism
| Magic & Wizards
| Series
Similar Items:
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The Dargonesti (Dragonlance Lost Histories, Vol. 3)
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The Irda (Dragonlance Lost Histories, Vol. 2)
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The Dragons (Dragonlance Lost Histories, Vol. 6)
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Land of the Minotaurs (Dragonlance Lost Histories, Vol. 4)
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The Gully Dwarves (Dragonlance Lost Histories, Vol. 5)
ASIN: 0099540010 |
Customer Reviews:
Wild elves flesh out further history of Krynn.......2007-02-19
A solid and pleasurable read for those experienced in the Dragonlance world. This novel is divided into three parts, each telling a climatic event within the history of the Elderwild elves.
The first story touches upon events in the life of Kagonos, the first Pathfinder of the "wild" elves. Through his pact with a dragon, to his timely defeat of an orge horde, to his final separation from the "house" elves, Kagonos remains a fairly wooden character and extremely difficult to like. While there are some brief flashes of reverance and grief, this "founder" of the Kagonesti tribes only potrays stoicism and a bordering on rage-like anger. Through out his tale, Kagonos never encounters fear or doubt, he is never asked to change or develop. He is presented as an unfeeling machine and continues that feel to the end.
The second story arc is the best tale of the three and focuses on a young brave named Ashtaway, the nephew of the tribes current Pathfinder. What Ashtaway accomplishes in the history of Krynn is not as profound as what Kagonos did, but what he changed within himself and the mindset of his tribe is the better story. Battling through worry and revenge, Ashtaway confronts his own people to protect the life of a human. He has the opportunity to mend mistakes and couragously defend what is correct rather than what is easy. Compounded on the growth of the main character is the appeal of the foreigners that Ashtaway meets. Sir Kamford, Highbulp Toofer and Hammana have a life of there own, there own fear, doubts and goals. Add onto that a very well written battle sequence and this story trumps its counterparts.
The third story is a chronicle of survival, then revenge and then right back into survival. Here the story tells of our young protagonist, a Kagonesti elf named Iydahoe and his bouts with the empire of Istar. These events range from fourteen years before to the day of the Cataclysm. While our main character has some epiphanies about life and the right path to take, this story is actually driven by the events that are taking place around him. While the world is falling down about his shoulders, Iydahoe goes nearly insane and loses all hope. While this is a good place for drastic character development, Iydahoe is spared that inconvenience by an apparition that leads them to safety. With that considered this third tale had the ability to be just as powerful as the second but the transitions were rushed and the true weight of what the character was dealing with was only realized in a few aspects of his journey. The most intriguing aspect of Iydahoe's story in found in what actually took place during the infamous Cataclysm and the nightmarish days preceeding it.
All in all this is a fun supplemental book to the Dragonlance realm. The history of the Kagonesti separating from the Silvanesti elves, the role a single elf played in the war during the time of Huma and how the Kagonesti fought back from the brink of extinction during the time of the Cataclysm gives more life to the living, breathing world of Krynn.
Great book, but only half of it is outstanding........2005-01-06
I wished this book was not broken up in 3 different sections.
I wish it just dealt only with the start and the beginning of the wild elves and just left it with that, instead of jumping in time in Parts 2 and 3 over to Huma and the Land of Istar.
The introduction and the first Part is awesome reading. I loved every second of it. The first wild elf meets palandine (who is called by a different name in this book)/the good dragon god in the mountains where the ancient Ogres inhabit.
The Introduction and Part 1 of the book happens many thousands of years before The Land of Istar is torn down/The Cataclyism. This book is one of the first events of the entire Dragonlance storyline/timeline/Saga.
The 2nd and 3rd Parts of the book was pointless, and a total waste of time to read.
The 2nd Part of the book talks about some backstory to Huma and the 3rd Part of the book talks about some knights of Istar, which really has nothing to do with anything, and is not important at all to the overall storyline/timeline/saga.
Just read this book for the Introduction and Part 1, and forget about Parts 2 and 3.
So actually, this book is only about 100 or 150 pages long if you take out and completely ignore Parts 2 and 3.
Well Done.......2004-07-30
Niles has completed a huge story in a few pages with this novel. The time covered is amazing in itself, but the great thing about it is that it is like getting three short novels in one book. A very fun read! The only thing I would like to have seen is three books instead of one. The individual "Pathfinder" stories were good but a longer more in depth story would have been even better. Still, a great, easy, read.
Interesting history of origins of the Wild Elves.......2003-12-12
This is a very well-written book that gives the history of the Kagonesti, or Wild Elves, by following the story of three separate characters who lived in three different ages. This book should be of interest to Dragonlance fans, but might seem a little esoteric to people with little or no knowledge of the world of Krynn and its inhabitants.
This book does a great job of giving the story of the origins of the Kagonesti and how they broke off from the other elves on Krynn. This first part was the best in the book.
The second and third parts, while still interesting, are not quite as good. They tell of the first positive interaction with humans and the days leading up to the Cataclysm. I would really have liked to see another part that leads closer to the War of the Lance and shows how the Kagonesti came to be servants among the other elven nations. This book leaves that question unanswered.
All that being said, Niles is a wonderful author and writes a good book.
a great read........2003-03-20
along with DL's CHRONICLES this ranks among the best DL books i've read. with lots of action, magic and even drama, this book's collection of stories about the wild elves always holds your attention and you never get to skip pages out of boredom. an essential DL book. trust me i have about 30 of them.
Average customer rating:
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Se Acabo, En Mi Irda Mando Yo
Manufacturer: Random House Espanol
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
Libros en español
| Formats
| Books
| Al Aire Libre y La Naturaleza
| Arte, arquitectura y fotografía
| Audiolibro en Casete
| Biografías y memorias
| Ciencia
| Ciencia ficción y fantasía
| Cocina
| Computación e internet
| Deportes
| Entretenimiento
| Gay y Lesbiana
| Historia
| Hogar y jardinería
| Infantil y juvenil
| Leyes
| Literatura y ficción
| Medicina
| Misterio
| Negocios e inversiones
| No-Ficción
| Padres y familia
| Profesional y Técnico
| Referencia
| Religión y espiritualidad
| Revistas Cómicas y Novelas Gráficas
| Romance
| Salud, mente y cuerpo
| Viajes y turismo
ASIN: 8484412059 |
Book Description
The Scorching Saga of the Braggs Continues . . .
Heiress to the magnificent Bragg empire, lovely, headstrong socialite Lucy Bragg lives a life that flies in the face of convention. Dark and rugged half-breed Shozkay Savage lives an outlaw's life on the edge. These two people inhabit different worlds--hers, opulent and privileged; his, dangerous and wild. But on the vast and sweeping plains of Texas, their worlds collide . . .
Abducted and held for ransom, Lucy despises Shoz for his arrogance . . . yet is drawn to the strapping fugitive by a bold, unquenchable desire. Sworn to escape him but betrayed by her own reckless passion, she will follow Shoz from the unforgiving wastland of Death Valley to the tropical heat of revolution-swept Cuba--braving scandal and heartbreak, risking life itself for an untamed and blistering love as perilous as it is forbidden.
Customer Reviews:
My favorite Bragg story . . ........2004-09-28
This is an exciting and erotic story. I think Shoz Savage will continue to be my all-time favorite hero for some time to come.
I've read several books in the Bragg series and, although I usually don't care for "westerns", I love this family.
Put this one on your reading list--you'll either love Shoz or you'll hate him, but you can't be indifferent about him.
Passionate and absorbing!.......2003-05-07
This is one of the best BJ novels I have read, probably my favourite after The Conqueror and The Game.
The chemistry between the H&H was awesome, the storyline was good and the ending was very sweet. I only wish BJ's steamy scenes were a bit longer, though I am not complaining. She can create such a marvellous chemistry between the H&H that half a page of a steamy scene makes you hot and bothered!
Too Hot To Put Down!.......2003-01-18
This was the first Brenda Joyce book that I ever read and I LOVED IT!! Ever since then I have read all her books. I must say that I have yet to find any of them lacking!! This book is so good that I have read it more than once. A truly great read!!
The hero is a jerk.......2002-11-18
I usually LOVE bad-boy heroes. However, this hero goes beyond even that. He doesn't really seem to care about Lucy. She doesn't seem to have any pride where he's concerned (I hate heroines with NO pride). I think Joyce initiates the sex between them to fast (she just meets him, he's rude to her, and on that same night, they have sex--get real, this is the 19th century). I also didn't like the fact that he was actually willing to let her marry someone else without putting up too much of a fight (yes, he comes to her room the night before the wedding and has sex with her, but then he leaves her ostensibly forever).
Yes, it's a steamy, ultra-sexy book, but not a very romantic novel.
The Fires of Paradise.......2002-05-31
Loved it as I have all of Brenda Joyce's books. However, (and I've never had this happen before!) there is a historical error! On the last page of chapter 28, reference is made to "The Pentagon." Since the setting of the book is in the late 1800s, The Pentagon did not exist. Construction began on The Pentagon in 1941 and it was completed on January 15, 1943. Other than that, the book was a great read. Actually, I even enjoyed discovering the error and was glad to find out that even authors and book editors make an occasional error.
Average customer rating:
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The Fires of Paradise
Manufacturer: Avon
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Hardcover
ASIN: B000G1LWW8 |
Product Description
Hardback with dust jacket edition.
Average customer rating:
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Fire in Paradise
Betty Henrichs
Manufacturer: Dell Publishing Company
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
Contemporary | General | Literature & Fiction | Subjects | Books
ASIN: 0440125197 |
Product Description
Approx. 4 3/4" x 5", padded cover board book with velcro closure.
Product Description
multiple books ship as one item. save on shipping/handling charges.
Average customer rating:
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Echo in the Chimney (Paradise House)
H. McKay
Manufacturer: Hodder & Stoughton
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
Action & Adventure | Literature | Children's Books | Subjects | Books
General | Literature | Children's Books | Subjects | Books
General | Ages 4-8 | Children's Books | Subjects | Books
General | Ages 4-8 | Children's Books | 4-for-3 Books Store | Stores | Books
Action & Adventure | Literature | Children's Books | 4-for-3 Books Store | Stores | Books
General | Literature | Children's Books | 4-for-3 Books Store | Stores | Books
All 4-for-3 Deals | 4-for-3 Books Store | Stores | Books
ASIN: 0340722886 |
Product Description
Bucky stone goes to Hawaii on spring break and faces alot of issues that will challenge his faith.
Average customer rating:
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Fire in Paradise: The Yellowstone Fires and the Politics of Environmentalism
Micah Morrison
Manufacturer: Harpercollins
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Hardcover
Social Services & Welfare | Poverty | Current Events | Nonfiction | Subjects | Books
General | Politics | Nonfiction | Subjects | Books
Federal Government | Levels of Government | Political Science | Social Sciences | Nonfiction | Subjects | Books
Law Enforcement | Criminal Law | Law | Subjects | Books
Forests & Forestry | Natural Resources | Nature & Ecology | Science | Subjects | Books
Law Enforcement | Criminal Law | Law | Professional & Technical | Subjects | Books
Fires | Forestry | Agricultural Sciences | Professional Science | Professional & Technical | Subjects | Books
Reference | Outdoors & Nature | Subjects | Books
ASIN: 0060163038 |
Books:
- Women Without Men: A Novel of Modern Iran
- Yage Letters
- You Can't Keep a Good Woman Down
- You Remind Me of Me: A Novel
- A Cab at the Door & Midnight Oil
- A Factory of Cunning
- Adventures in Yiddishland: Postvernacular Language and Culture (S. Mark Taper Foundation Imprint in Jewish Studies)
- After Many a Summer Dies the Swan: A Novel
- And Quiet Flows the Don
- Artemisia: A Novel
Books Index
Books Home
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