Book Description
This book is a perfect example of how today's liberals have completely rewritten history to cover up their own role on the wrong side of the Cold War.
Customer Reviews:
Refreshing: But Not Surprising........2007-07-16
The author writes crisply without the vitriol of Ann Coulter. The avowed purpose of the book is to serve as an eternal reminder of the malignant gullibility of the American left{as in the blame the USA first crowd}, in dealing with world communism. It is worth the price just for all the verifiable quotes from a huge array of kooks. From Chris Dodd stating that Reagan was going against the tide of history, to the inane Ted Turner fawning over Gorbachev, to William Coffin's claiming that having nuclear weapons is innately sinful. The author also refutes the left's claim that they helped win the "cold war." She shows in detail that they opposed most tactics & strategies used by the free west to win. The only flaws in the book are that it should have come out earlier, & could have been twice as long.
Idiots Then Idiots Now.......2007-06-23
Lenin is generally credited with saying that world communism has been aided by well-meaning but gullible useful idiots, most of whom he saw as western leftists who even back in the 1920s saw a kinship with communism. Not much has changed since then and in USEFUL IDIOTS, Mona Charen takes the entire liberal left to task for its decades long adherence to a philosophy that has brought ruin and genocide to millions but still exists in our universities even when it no longer does so in the Soviet state that spawned it. Despite the book's sales blurbs that suggest that leading Hollywood celebrities like Harry Belafonte and Susan Sarandon and MoveOn.Org politicians like Hillary Clinton and Al Gore are directly responsible for the all-pervasive tsunami of secular progressivism, these and others of a similar ilk get remarkably little ink. They emerge more as symbols of rather than originators of the useful idiots syndrome. Most of Charen's animus is directed toward the full spectrum of a liberalism that emerged from the 60s and the fallout from the Vietnam war that galvanized the left into seeing the United States not only as the source of imperialistic excesses but also of all the world's assorted ills. Her most telling chapters detail how "America's role in Vietnam set the tone for every Cold War debate that would follow for the next thirty-five years." (Page 28) Charen notes that while leftist fascination with America as intrinsically evil had existed even early enough for Lenin to offer his (sorry for the pun) left-handed compliment of useful idiots, "in the mid-1960s, leftist anti-Americanism went mainstream." (Page 29)
The bulk of Charen's book deals with liberalism in the aggregate. She notes how post 60s liberals saw Communism through the lens of a half-hearted sympathetic patina that somehow managed to excuse every Communist bloodbath while failing to excuse what it saw as a genocidal equivalent from the United States, even when it was clear that this equivalent existed more in the minds of the left than in the minds of the victims. The deaths of millions due to Stalin's forced collectivization is not only portrayed by the liberals as either non-existent or grossly exaggerated but even if it did happen, the United States was somehow at fault. This then is the core thesis of the left. Evil exists in this world, but where it has been identified, it originates in the capitalistic excesses of America. Mona Charen in USEFUL IDIOTS tells in compelling detail that idiots go through life with self-imposed blinders, the result of which is destructive to those who even now look to the left for help and guidance.
Freudian Title.......2006-12-25
The title of this book inadvertently refers to the author herself. This book is "useful" to the extent that it serves the persistent neo-con tactic of preventing any honest criticism of US foreign policy by hauling out vacuous phrases like "blame America first" or "conspiracy theory" or "moral equivalence" or like nonsense from the Reagan/Kirkpatrick crowd. Skip this book. Notice the 100 or so used copies on sale starting at 1 cent? It's pap.
useful misdirection.......2006-11-19
Ms.Charen bandies about misdirecting terms like "Statist", "Atheist", and "Believers" to frame the conflict between the United States and the Soviet Union in terms that do not exist.
The United States is no less a State than the Soviet Union was. We owe our victory over the Soviet Union to our performance as a state. We owe it the industrial strength and prosperity we built up under geographic and economic (relative)isolation. We owe it to the high Progressive Income taxes of FDR, Harry Truman, Ike Eisenhower, Kennedy, and even Richard Nixon.
Not even the Reagan Tax cuts for the rich, raising of social security taxes for the poor and lower middle class, embracing of globalism, and general mindlessness could stop the United States from outlasting the Soviet Union in the global endurance race.
Our European allies in the cold war, Canada, and nearly every other developed nation comparable in prosperity is certainly a State that conservatives would consider socialistic.
America under Globalism, unrestricted free trade, and Reaganomic/Greenspanomics can look forward to more of the same: massive deficits, resource wars, debt, and expanding rotting urban cores.
We've outdone every other developed nation in turning most of our cities into expanding rotting urban cores. In exchange we get the addiction to oil. I can't imagine a corporation engaging in the warfare and nationbuilding necessary to keep the oil imports coming. Nope, it requires a massive state undertaking. Especially that thanks to Globalism, India and China technically have far more to trade for that oil than we do. Basically, we can trade wheat for oil. How many farmers do you know make decent incomes?
Useful Idiots is a great book for those who trying to Misdirect, lie, or are just plain stupid.
Think about this.......2006-11-12
Please. Please give liberals all your arrogant "pity" and contempt. We just swept the House and Senate and made your simpering chimp president a lame duck. We don't hate America or blame it first. We blame cynical republican profiteers, who devise simplistic useless policy and foist it onto an electorate without the awareness to know they're being manipulated. And you'll continue to lose as long as your a bunch of hypocritical moralists, who text-message teen boys from the Senate, rip off Indian tribes over casinos, beat thir wives, pay off their mistresses, offer to save your soul while smoking crystal meth, and stuff deerheads into peoples mailboxes etc. Good Luck coming back from the abyss, losers. Screeds like this aren't going to help. America has wised up to your lame tricks.
Book Description
A critical biography of the iconic communist revolutionary, and an expose of the liberals who lionize him.
Nearly four decades after his death, it's impossible to avoid the image of Ernesto Che Guevara everywhere from T-shirts to cartoons. Liberals consider Che a revolutionary martyr who gave his life to help the poor of Latin America. Time named him one of the one hundred most influential people of the last century. And a major Hollywood movie is about to lionize him to a new generation.
The reality, as we learn from Cuban exile Humberto Fontova, is that Che wasn't really a gentle soul and a selfless hero. He was a violent Communist who thought nothing of firing a gun into the stomach of a woman six months pregnant whose only crime was that her family opposed him. And he was a hypocrite who lusted after material luxuries while cultivating his image as a man of the people.
Fontova reveals that Che openly talked about his desire to use nuclear weapons against New York City. Such was Che's bloodthirsty hatred that Fontova considers him the godfather of modern terrorism.
Exposing the Real Che Guevara is based on scores of interviews with survivors of Che's atrocities as well as the American CIA agent who interrogated Che just hours before the Bolivian government executed him.
Customer Reviews:
Humberto hits a home run - a smack on the "legend" of Che.......2007-10-08
Humberto has done it again.
A passionate, well researched biography of Che Guevara and the despicable acts he committed upon Cubans in his lustful zeal to bring Marxism to that island country.
If you or your kids are wearing Che Guevara t-shirts this book should convince you to turn that shirt into a lining for your cat's litter box.
Bit by bit Fontova carefully chips away at the edifice the Left built to Che and leaves a pile of stinking rubble that he then shovels all over the modern day Che lovers like Santana, Robert Redford, Ed Asner, et al...
Of the many sins the Hollywood Left have perpertrated on America their glorification of Che is probably the lowest.
I think a lot of people must just adopt a myth they like and keep it through thick and thin.
Somehow this despicable person Che became the image that these teary eyed Hollywood peaceniks want to worship, like some sort of false god that the witch doctor uses to control the weak minded in the tribe.
They must think they are "sticking it to the Man" by wearing Che t-shirts not realizing Che is one of the worst representatives of "the Man" to ever live, who presided over a worst mass murder, per capita, than Stalin, Hitler, Pol Pot and Mao.
Fontova's carefully connected dots lead the reader to conclude that Fidel has a collection of sex tapes of the Hollywood crowd whose release would result in jail time for the stars of those movies produced by Castro's secret police and prevention of that release motivates those stars to cheerlead Castro and Che as heros.
If there was any doubt that Che was a vengeful, vain,boostful, hateful, oppresser of poor Cuban farmers this carefully foot-noted work will enlighten you.
If you think Cuba was client state of the US with Batista an elite white ruler bought and paid for by US dollars, well, think again.
Batista was a mulatto, Cuba had, in the late 50's, an economy better than Spain and France, and most of Cuba's Sugar Plantations were locally owned by Cubans.
If you have any illusions that Che was a brillant Marxist Guerrilla who collected the scalps of many enemies in fair fights - Humberto has news for you...
The "Heroic" Che was a stinking coward (he never bathed) who sent thousands of poor farmers to death by firing squad cause of their refusal to accept Castro's Soviet-Marxist government.
He bungled ever military engagement he was in.
He accidentially shot himself in the head with his own pistol... so incompetant he was.
He became such a burden to Casto that , in another of Fontova's footnoted passages, we learn that Castro sent Che to Boliva so that, Che being Che, would get himself killed.
And, in the end, Che surrenders to the Bolivian Special Forces and a US CIA agent, wildly shouting "I'm Che - I'm worth more alive than dead" while surrending with a fully loaded, unfired pistol - this during a firefight in which all his loyal comrades were being mowed down.
The CIA agent, Felix Rodrigues, does try to save him but the Bolivian high command over rules Rodrigues in the end, Che is shot, and the Looney Left has their T-shirt boy for the ages....
Talk radio... except they expect you to pay for it.......2007-10-08
This book is worthless drivel, just talk-radio in printed form, screed. It is neither history nor biography. It's not even non-fiction.
The author equates Che with Castro and the Castro regime. All crimes and depredations of the latter are attributed to the former, even those which took place years after Che died. Moreover, Fontova depicts Che as totally inept as a military leader, a coward, a philanderer, a bigamist, not really a doctor, ad nauseam. It is just a straw man argument.
But more importantly to the entire purpose of the book, Fontova misses the point entirely about why people admire Che, perhaps out of intellectual dishonestly or maybe genuine befuddlement.
Che is a symbol of rebellion, of revolution, of fighting against injustice. Whether or not Che became a tyrant in his own right is frankly irrelevant. In the 60s Che was regarded by the US government as enemy number 1, pretty much the same as bin Laden today. Remember this was the US government that was spying on its own citizens, denying basic rights to a large segment of its population, and ramping up for a war in Vietnam that the younger generation rather strongly opposed. These young Americans came to fight against what they perceived as an unjust system. They chose Che as their symbol because he too fought against injustice and he too was targeted by the US government.
Nowadays, to wear Che's likeness doesn't mean people are communists, or agree with everything (anything) Che did once he was part of the government of Cuba. It doesn't mean they support Castro. It means fight injustice, change the system, protest. Also, sometimes it means nothing -- just a fashion statement.
Cuban Americans of course have good reason to hate Castro, and therefore Che for his role in the Cuban revolution. I don't think they will ever forgive the US government for failing to support the Bay of Pigs invasion or for keeping its promise to the USSR to leave Castro alone. The author has a big ax to grind.
Fontova's total lack of objectivity, over the top claims, pointless references to pop culture and People magazine celebs, repeatedly using the same quotes or examples -- they all add up to a book that cannot be taken seriously.
I'll never make the mistake of reading anything else by this author. Thank goodness I got it from the library.
Need discussion overshadowed by political bias.......2007-10-04
The author Fontova rightfully has a chip on his shoulder when discussing the Cuban Revolution and its major actors, but unfortunately it limits his objectivity in discussing the historical events. After reading the introduction I nearly discarded the book as a poorly written work of slander without a trace of credibility. Just in the introduction and throughout the book, Fontova's childish name-calling makes it difficult to see any historical accuracy he may be offering. Also constant is the author's obvious political positionality by referring to the "leftist controlled media" as idiotic and the CIA as "good guys". Ironically Fontova reflects and employs much of the same "brain-washing propaganda" that he accuses Fidel and the Cuban government of using when he references favorable organizations.
It is also obviously clear that Fontova is trying to cheaply exploit the emotional heart strings of the US American public by constantly comparing the Cuban government to Hitler and Stalinistic regimes. In one section, he even attempts to connect the long deceased Che to the contemporary tragedies of September 11, and paint Cuban revolutionaries as the culprits, yet conveniently fails to mention that the "good guy" CIA created and funded the Taliban, the most widely believed culprits of 9/11. While some similarities may exist between the totalitarian regimes Fontova cites and the Cuban government, it is important to remember those types of relationships and similarities can exists between any nations if researched enough, including his beloved US. It would have been better had Fontova just left out the painfully far stretches to connect Che to every evil in the world, when one could easily make more concrete connections to the CIA and US government.
Despite all of Fontova's setbacks, the reason in which I did not toss the book upon reading the introduction is because I am equally interested to understand the cult following of Che Guevara. Fontova does unearth many disturbing facts about Che that many pseudo-revolutionaries would otherwise choose to ignore. What I also do agree with is the foolish irony in the hoards of college activists and "revolutionary" media stars blindly following the romanticized story of Guevara, when in reality, Che more than likely would have despised them. Fontova raises crucial contradictions in the "Culture of Che" and ultimately brings a much-needed discussion regarding popular culture. Unfortunately those points almost become overshadowed and would have been much more effective had he not let his politics and personal vendetta against Fidel and Che seep through into his work.
Truth, for a change..........2007-09-30
I am thrilled that finally someone has written a book to expose the "Cabaña's butcher" Ernesto Che Guevara. I watch people wearing T-shirts and souvenirs with Che's image and I think of the ignorance surrounding Che's real life.
Che was not the motorcycle adventurer or the idealist defender of the poor that the Hollywood movie portrays him to be. Che was far from being a hero; instead he was a cold-blooded murderer who sentenced to death thousands innocent Cubans and even executed a sixteen-year-old child for stealing food from the rebels at Sierra Maestra. Anyone who loves freedom and justice should read this book to get informed and to educate others about who this monster really was.
This is the real Ernesto Guevara .......2007-09-25
This book is about the real Che Guevara not the Hollywood version nor what Anderson or CastaÑeda have written about him(Che ).These last two writers have depended on information from Guevara's wife who lives in Cuba and Castro's archives full of Communist propaganda. This book is not about Bush and Irag nor about the "savage" of Capitalism. This book is about a criminal who took advantage of the Cuban diaspora during the Batista inept, corrupt regime. Fulgencio Batista was not overthrown by Castro nor Che it was the Cuban people seeking a democratic Cuba. What Guevara wanted and failed in Guatemala was to eradicated the opposition something that he and Castro accomplished in Cuba by extermination and exile. I recommend this book to those who have doubts about Che legacy and want something written by a Cuban.
Product Description
On-the-go Instrction Because your time is valuable... All Audio All on the go! Beginning level instruction is presented in an all-audio format on 4 digitally-recorded CDs. You have the opportunity to learn on the go, taking advantage of time normally wasted. Study in your car, while exercising, doing yard work anywhere you can safely listen to a CD player. No accompanying books are needed to help you complete the lesson activities. Why can t learning be fun? It can! Linguaphone has chosen to present the allTalk series in an entertaining, soap-opera format. No dry old teacher with a monotone voice putting you to sleep, you follow the adventures of a visitor to a Spanish-speaking country as she interacts with individuals in a variety of interesting situations, learning the language and beginning to understand the culture. Actually learn the language Tired of spending money on language courses that don t work? Did you ever think the problem could be with the course and not you? With Linguaphone s unique learning sequence: Listen, Understand, Speak, you will find yourself actually using the language in no time at all! You are presented with a unit of the language, it is then broken down and explained to you, then you put it back together with greater understanding than just repeating what you may not have understood in the first place. . . . and learn it well! The all Talk methodology not only teaches well, but will have you speaking and understanding basic spoken Spanish in no time at all. Other popular all-audio courses require four times the cds, four times the money and four times the time to do what Linguaphone s allTalk Basic does with 4-one hour CDs.
Amazon.com
Imagine the United Kingdom in the year 2255, flooded due to global warming and renamed the Rhine Delta Islands (RDI), an outpost of the United States of Europe. In this new federalist society, recorded history has largely been erased and humans are genetically modified to be homogeneous--ageless, disease-free, and generally flawless. Except of course for the twenty thousand Aboriginals living in outlying marshes who cling to old human ways and the "Inglish" culture. In Jan Mark's Useful Idiots, these two societies collide when archaeologists, including a young graduate student named Merrick Korda, discover an undated skeleton on Aboriginal land, the remains of a man who was shot while robbing graves for mysterious pearls. Korda's work on the case becomes politically and personally dangerous--archaeology has been deemed a lost science that can only stir up trouble in a post-Anarchy world without race or nation. Readers will be captivated as Merrick dodges invisible enemies, scours the marshes for clues, explores his own humanity, and engages in a gruesome experiment on his own body that he hopes will illuminate secrets of the past. Mark raises questions about identity, ethnicity, education, technology, the notion of "useful idiots," and much more in this haunting, dark, suspenseful novel. --Karin Snelson
Book Description
Set in the not-so-distant future, where the lowlands of Britain are flooded, this beautifully written novel explores a world where archaeology is banned for fear of the social unrest it might cause. One bleak morning, a storm across the North Sea stirs up a human skull, which starts a chain of events that forever changes the lives of those involved. It is the Inglish, a remnant tribe on the edge of Europe, that will be affected the most.
This is a compelling vision of England as it might be in the hand of award-winning author Jan Mark.
Customer Reviews:
23rd Century Archaeology?.......2005-03-01
This science-fictional outing by Jan Mark was obviously inspired partially by politically-correct insanity within the US in the late 1990s, triggered by the discovery of "Kennewick Man," and including deranged legal attempts to prevent archaeologists from examining the fossil! It is "juvenile fiction" only in the sense that the main character, Merrick Korda, is a graduate student at a university. The themes and settings are otherwise entirely adult. In Mark's mid-23rd Century world, archaeology is largely forbidden, barely tolerated, because it concentrates on "origins" in a culture that is attempting to become completely homogeneous. The subtle key to the novel's incidents is that in this culture, also, people almost invariably live alone. Thus the main character, Merrick, and his major professor Turcat, fail to understand until far, far too late that no one can be trusted, no matter how sympathetic they appear, or how cooperative they are, given that the researches of Merrick and Turcat have uncovered the long-buried secret of an impossibly valuable item.
Mark must be congratulated for one of the kinkiest sex scenes ever included in a "young adult" novel, although it is tastefully confined to a few sentences. The ending will leave most readers dissatisfied, to say the least, since Merrick never really figures out what is going on and the story is told from his viewpoint. We never find out precisely who has been working behind the scenes to cause all the trouble, much less what their precise motives and goals might be.
As usual in Mark's short stories and novels, all the characters are complex and have "deep revolving" matters going on beneath their placid, civilized surfaces, but because of the narrow focus on Merrick most of them do not make much impression. Unlike in most science fiction, where there is a continual emphasis on razzle-dazzle advances in technology, Mark's story fills in the background of this distant future world slowly and indirectly. As another reviewer remarks, the result is "sophisticated," and demands quite a bit from the reader. Marketed as a "young adult" novel in the US, it will never reach the audience that could appreciate it.
Book Description
This digital document is an article from St. Louis Journalism Review, published by Thomson Gale on November 1, 2005. The length of the article is 1322 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.
Citation Details
Title: Judith Miller, journalism's useful idiot.
Author: Daniel Hellinger
Publication:
St. Louis Journalism Review (Magazine/Journal)
Date: November 1, 2005
Publisher: Thomson Gale
Volume: 35
Issue: 281
Page: 22(2)
Distributed by Thomson Gale
Book Description
This digital document is an article from New Hampshire Business Review, published by Thomson Gale on October 27, 2006. The length of the article is 669 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.
Citation Details
Title: 'Useful idiots' dance to court's Claremont tune.(educational funding)
Author: Ed Mosca
Publication:
New Hampshire Business Review (Magazine/Journal)
Date: October 27, 2006
Publisher: Thomson Gale
Volume: 28
Issue: 23
Page: 31(1)
Distributed by Thomson Gale
Book Description
After forty years of creating sweet memories, the Easy-Bake Oven has gone gourmet! For the first time, twenty-six world-class chefs bring their years of training to the table as they create impressive new culinary masterpieces, all prepared using the Easy-Bake Oven. Even the most accomplished cook will get a kick out of these sophisticated recipes for making delectable baked treats and surprising savory appetizers! Do you long for the simple childhood days of playing with your Easy-Bake Oven? Adding water to the packaged mix...using the pan-pusher to carefully guide the tiny baking pan into the amazing, enclosed baking chamber...impatiently taking the gooey cakes and cookies out early, never quite able to let the batter finish cooking? Or were your youthful fantasies--like those of several well-known cooking personalities--thwarted because your mom refused to believe the oven could really bake tasty treats safely? This celebration of the classic working toy oven is guaranteed to conjure up fond memories and to leave you thinking, "My Easy-Bake Oven could make that?"
Featuring:
--Thirty-two spectacular, kitchen-tested recipes created by top chefs especially for the Easy-Bake Oven. Includes Rick Bayless's Chilaquiles with Roasted Tomato Salsa, Mollie Katzen's Carrot Kugel, Emily Luchetti's Pear Streusel Coffee Cake, Tom Douglas's Palace Olive Poppers, and Flo Braker's Almond-Raspberry Cake with White Chocolate and Cream Cheese Frosting.
--Rare Easy-Bake Oven memorabilia, an illustrated timeline of the toy's first forty years, plus never-before-seen anecdotes and personal photos from the recipe contributors!
--Six removable recipe cards with fabulous, full-color photos of delicious dishes such as Queso Fundido with Roasted Poblano Vinaigrette, Warm Kumquat and Date Sticky Toffee Pudding, and Roasted Quail Breast with Wild Mushrooms and Pomme Anna.
Includes recipes from: Rick Bayless, Mark Bittman, Erik Blauberg, Flo Braker, Clare Crespo, Tom Douglas, Rob Feenie, Bobby Flay, Gale Gand, Eleni Gianopolous, Martin Howard, Mollie Katzen, David Lebovitz, Emily Luchetti, Alice Medrich, Mary Sue Milliken, Cindy Pawlcyn, Caprial Pence, Guillermo Pernot, Colette Peters, Anne Quatrano, Amy Scherber, Rob Seideman, Art Smith, Walter Staib, Sherry Yard
Customer Reviews:
The Easy Bake Oven GOURMET.......2007-01-23
To all of you who got this book for your kids and were so dissapointed with it: The last word in the title of the book is "gourmet". Nothing about the word gourmet ever involves kids. Don't buy this book for kids. Buy it for adults, like I did. I got for someone who is a major "foodie" and loves the food network and never had an Easy Bake oven as a kid. Of course "Cooking with Mommy" is a great book for kids. But not a good book for my friend, he doesn't want to cook with mommy.
score will depend on why you bought this book.......2006-12-07
if you want a book to show you how to make your own easy bake mixes for the fraction on the cost, this is NOT the book for you. buy the Baking with Mommy Cookbook: Recipes for Kid-size oven. (highly recommended)
this is a great book if you want to see the history of the oven and other really cool facts. the recipes are great for OLDER teens and adults. what kid really wants something with lobster in it? i got it for my kids when they get older. i thought it might be a neat thing to look through.
ok...i also wanted to hit the $25 mark for the free shipping.
Very Clever - and Very Fun! - Book........2005-06-19
I recently saw the author interviewed on "Unwrapped", and knew I had to have this book. Yep, I was one of those who always wanted - but never got - an Easy-Bake Oven! The book is a blast. The trivia and facts are interesting, and I especially loved reading the chefs recollections of their first experiences cooking with one. Some of the recipes are quite complex (I'm not sure I'd even be capable of trying them in a regular oven!) but that's all part of the fun. Would love to see a show like this on TV, where chefs compete to create gourmet dishes using a not so gourmet (but hugely popular) item. Anyone at Food Network listening?!?
Eat a cute peeping quail yes! for children no..........2005-03-05
Well I will have a blast with this book but my daughter asked me mommy whats a quail? I knew we were a bit out of our range with this book with the first recipe in being roasted hot mexican peppers. I was dissapointed that there was no recipe for pretzels, I remember making those as a kid? They needed more kid friendly feasts. We loved the old school photos in the book, history and the photo essay of changes through the ages with the oven.
But...
Then I saw the the Warm Kumquat-and-date Sticky Toffee Pudding? bleeech!
Better for adults than for kids.......2004-09-12
Having fond memories of my sister's Easy-Bake oven and being a fan of cooking shows, I enjoyed thumbing through the Easy-Bake Oven Gourmet. Being rather practical, I was glad that "Warm Memories" recipes from past Easy-Bake oven cookbooks were included; my kids and I are more likely to try those than the more complicated recipes created by the well-known chefs. I'd agree with an earlier reviewer that Kristen Joyal's Baking with Mommy Cookbook is a better choice for families who want delicious kid-sized oven recipes that are kid-friendly in terms of ease and taste.
Books:
- Verbal Judo: The Gentle Art of Persuasion
- War in the Air: The World War Two Aviation Paintings of Mark Poslethwaite GAvA
- Warren Ellis' Stranger Kisses
- What to Expect the First Year, Second Ed
- Who Goes Home?
- Without Conscience: The Disturbing World of the Psychopaths Among Us
- Women Who Run with the Wolves
- 8051 Microcontroller, The (4th Edition)
- A Different Light
- A New Way of Eating from the Fit for Life Kitchen
Books Index
Books Home
Recommended Books
- Visions of Politics
- The Four Things That Matter Most: A Book About Living
- Philip Roth: Novels 1973-1977, The Great American Novel, My Life as a Man, The Professor of Desire
- Nature Walks In and Around New York City: Discover Great Parks and Preserves throughout the Tri-Stat
- Open My Eyes, Lord: A Practical Guide to Angelic Visitations and Heavenly Experiences
- Quantum Computation and Quantum Information
- Prophets Without Honour: Freud, Kafka, Einstein, and Their World
- The Ecology of Eden: An Inquiry into the Dream of Paradise and a New Vision of Our Role in Nature
- Lord James: The Biography of James William Bayless
- Korea North Investment And Business Guide