Lost in NashVegas Review

Lost in NashVegas
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Charming, well-drawn characters, a story chock full of adventures and misadventures and giving us the treat of seeing the backdrop of country music. The situations our heroine finds herself in push the line a bit on respectability and therefore makes the book more authentic than some Christian novels. I loved Robin's dilemnas right from the start. A bit of mystery, a bit of courage needed, a break to get in the door, and finding out a trusted friend has betrayed her. And that's just a bit of what the country gal faced in the big city.
Another plus is the first person/present tense which reminds me of standard chick-lit that has become popular recently. Not all chick-lit rises above standard. This one does with a mighty leap!

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Last week, I stocked groceries in Freedom, Alabama.This week, I live in Nashville, Tennessee, about to take the stage at the famous Bluebird Cafe.

Sounds fantastic, doesn't it?Only one problem, I 've got stage fright.

But after years of being ruled by fear and hiding from my dream, I confronted my limited reality and left home.Forget the hometown hunk who wants to make me queen of his doublewide.Forget Momma's doubt-inspiring tirade.I can make it in Music City...can't I?

So I took a leap of faith, gathered my old guitar, my notebook full of songs, and packed up my '69 Chevy pickup.Look out NashVegas!

With the help of some new friends, especially handsome Lee Rivers, my dream is about to find the light of day.But as I face my first night at the Bluebird Cafe, I realize...I might just do what comes naturally.Look for the nearest exit, and run!


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Obituary Cocktail: The Great Saloons of New Orleans (2nd Edition, Expanded) Review

Obituary Cocktail: The Great Saloons of New Orleans (2nd Edition, Expanded)
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Growing up in New Orleans is a rare experience. Living away often makes one nostalgic and wistful.. Reading "Obituary Cocktail" brings the sights, sounds, smells and tastes roaring back. This is a beautiful book. The photos are warm, romantic and evocative. The commentary is pure magic and the recipes are fabulous. Whether you live there now, once were there or have never visited - this book captures the charm, the quirkiness and the mystery of New Orleans and her great watering holes.

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Two years after its original release, the new "Obituary Cocktai" has more bars, photographs, drink recipes, and quotes. Six added spreads include the bar in the kitchen at Commander's Palace, The Circle Bar and its Herradura tequila shot with tonic - the Harry Tonic Jr - and Butler's fantastically seedy interior.

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Cafe Kichijouji De Volume 2 (v. 2) Review

Cafe Kichijouji De Volume 2 (v. 2)
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I've heard of this manga before and when I finally saw it in the bookstore, it peaked my interest. I read the 1st vol of Cafe Kichijouji at Borders and it caught my heart. Imagine my happiness when I saw vol 2 at the shelves, its a pity I didnt have enough to get vol 3.
Anyway, back to the plot.
I was skeptical of this manga at 1st because of the plot.
Generally, there pretty much is no plot. Its just about a group of men running a Cafe.
Thats it.
Unconvinced?
The comedic element thrown in can turn from just a smile to giggles, depending on your sense of humour. I usually find most(albeit some terrible ones) manga comedy entertaining and Cafe Kichijouji is on the top 5 of my list of freaky, lovely, morbid, crazily-comedic manga.
Some people might find the countless impossible situation off-putting, but heck, its a light-hearted manga for fun. It is very nice to sit back from other mangas like Death Note and Saiyuki Reload for a while and digest this lovely manga.
The paper quality is top notch. Very thick. The artwork clean and just right. I am always a fool for clean, sweet artwork. The uncluttered boxes make reading a whole lot better. It is, afterall, not an action manga, so there are no lines and smokes here and there.
A word of warning though, (also a reason why I took off a star)if you like mangas with deep meaning and jokes that need some thoughts to it, lay this one off.(Think girls who look like guys, pet hamsters as ration food and food that screams when stirred)If not, go ahead and enjoy this adorable manga. Did I mention they have short TINY chibi stories after every chapter?


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The young staff at the Cafe Kichijouji is a colorful bunch. They're the source of continual headache for the poor cafe master who oversees them all. In this volume, however, the cafe staff is beset by troublesome children - from the lost little girl Reina to the gang of bratty thugs who seem to have a grudge against Maki and Toku, the guys have their hands full. Even when they're just planning an outing to view cherry blossoms, the wackiness at the Cafe Kichijouji never ends.

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NVI Biblia arqueologica, cuero europeo, vino/cafe (Spanish Edition) Review

NVI Biblia arqueologica, cuero europeo, vino/cafe (Spanish Edition)
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Really I love this bible, the color, material, the information we can find inside is so preety and usefull. I make excellent buy..

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Noire Comme Le Cafe: Blanc Domme LA Lune (French Edition) Review

Noire Comme Le Cafe: Blanc Domme LA Lune (French Edition)
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Noire Comme Le Cafe: Blanc Comme La Lune is a wonderful book about a biracial family. Warm, sweet, and to the point. Many thanks to Pili Mandelbaum for sharing it with us.

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Saturday Nights at the God Cafe Review

Saturday Nights at the God Cafe
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I read this book about a year ago and was shocked by the depth in which the young author reaches. It was a book I could not put down. I was wondering if anyone knows about the sequel that was supposed to be released. Post a review if you know anything.

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Have you ever made a decision you regretted? Maybe your choices need a second opinion. Julia Davis is a troubled girl in search of something real after the death of her alcoholic mother. Julia turns to all the wrong sources to find this reality, including promiscuity and friends who don't have her best interests at heart. Her father offers no help as grief and a guilty secret push him farther away from his daughter. Then, one day, Julia makes a quick stop at a beachfront cyber café and notices a Web site on one of the computers-The God Café. With just enough openness in her heart for God, she posts a question on the Web site's message board. When she returns to the café, Julia is surprised to find her question answered, but she is not at all pleased with the response. Thus begins Julia's journey to find God while discovering herself along the way.

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The Devotion Cafe': a taste of the word (Volume 1) Review

The Devotion Cafe': a taste of the word (Volume 1)
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The biggest challenge that a person face as a Christian is learning how to apply God's word to our daily lives. Far to many times we hear a word but aren't sure how to live accordingly to the word. In our daily activities we strive to make right decisions but often times we aren't sure what God says about it. This can make the child of God frustrated because we know in our hearts we want to do the right thing..but at times we error because we make our decisions based upon what we think and not what God says. For everything that you and I come face to face with God has a word concerning it. We just have to search the scriptures to find out what He says about it. When you read The Devotion Cafe' you will see many examples of the things we find ourselves being challenged with as well with scriptures as to what the Lord says about it.

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Often in life we read and hear the word but aren't sure how or what a particular scripture means. Here in my book I have shared examples as to how it relates to you and I.The Devotion Cafe' is for that busy mom and dad who are so busy that they find it abit hard at times to have their daily devotions. Now you can have yourdevotion while you are at the table having breakfast along with your coffee.WOW! How great is that?Now your mornings can be just a little easier for you as you start the day off with food in your belly and the word in your heart.When was the last time you had a refreshing glass of reviving yourself? Did you know that we need it more then ever? How does one or where does one go to get that refreshing glass? We refresh ourselves by reading the word.That is what you will find while reading my book,The Devotion Cafe' a taste of the word.

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Hurricane Gumbo: Montgomery's UU Poetry Cafe (Volume 1) Review

Hurricane Gumbo: Montgomery's UU Poetry Cafe (Volume 1)
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Once a month the Montgomery Poetry Cafe has shared its diverse voices
in an open mic forum. Willie James King, Irene Lantham, Cheryl Lynn Moyer,
Charles Suhor, Georgia Ann-Banks and many others have been blown in these
doors. Their words create a spicy literary feast, not unlike authentic southern
gumbo! That recipe is posted on the back cover!


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Twilight Cafe and Flag Woman: Two Plays Review

Twilight Cafe and Flag Woman: Two Plays
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Twilight Café [The Last Breakfast]:
"At last! A play about Caribbean men and women as we are NOW! Blood bursting through history, primal fears, contemporary gender wars, the unexamined cliches of masculinity lagging far behind the new feminine, the collapse of the performative in gender roles and formations now rendered obsolete - Tony Hall's Twilight Cafe is a brilliant and harrowing sexual embrace. The secularism of the post-post-modern, Orisha worship, soucouyants, hidden duennes and blue Carnival devils merge in a dance of no-death that cuts to the heart of the vast chasm of incomprehension between men and women."

Ramabai Espinet
Toronto
August 9th, 2005


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Twilight Caf [The Last Breakfast]: "At last! A play about Caribbean men and women as we are NOW! Blood bursting through history, primal fears, contemporary gender wars, the unexamined cliches of masculinity lagging far behind the new feminine, the collapse of the performative in gender roles and formations now rendered obsolete - Tony Hall's Twilight Cafe is a brilliant and harrowing sexual embrace. The secularism of the post-post-modern, Orisha worship, soucouyants, hidden duennes and blue Carnival devils merge in a dance of no-death that cuts to the heart of the vast chasm of incomprehension between men and women." Ramabai Espinet Toronto August 9th, 2005 What Hall seems to be attempting here is a relief map of the Trinidadian psycho-social landscape . . . . The disconnectedness of the scenes and the almost tabula rasa quality each tableau presents the actors with could yield very interesting results . . ." Raymond RamcharitarTrinidad Express Wednesday June 26th, 2002 Flag Woman: It is the night before the carnival starts and Blind Miss B, an aging flag woman, is forced to confront, with reluctance, the life-long demons trapped in her head.

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THE Cafe: A Place of Good Repute Review

THE Cafe: A Place of Good Repute
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This book was written by Ross Wright who passed away Aug of 2009, He was Captain of a Naval ship I served on USS VANCE DER 387. I wanted the book to remember him by.

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Blue Moon Cafe Review

Blue Moon Cafe
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I've read the entire book and was enchanted by it. So full of truth and reality, yet with a mysterious aspect that keeps the pages turning.

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This woman's poetry is a stroll through the gardens oflove, work, art, disappointment, and triumph. Reading these sixty-onepoems, dating from the early '70s to the present, one gets an intimatepeek into this literary woman's heart and life.

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The Soul Cafe Review

The Soul Cafe
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The Soul Café is a book for NOW.
It's a novel, job manual, and self-help book all in one. Drawing from the collective wisdom of Mohandas Gandhi, Margaret Fishback Powers, Jesus of Nazareth, William Shakespeare, Henry Ford, and others, author David McLean presents a colorful and enjoyable story that is easy to read but offers up a timely and decidedly compelling message.

This book traces the story of a materially successful Chicago business executive, Ian Archer, who finds himself in an increasingly precarious position within his workplace, a position which encourages him to compromise his integrity and all that believes in. Competing impulses tear at Ian, on the one hand insisting he play it safe and tow the company line, and on the other urging him to blow the whistle on the corruption and decay he has uncovered in an internal investigation but risk losing his job and the affluent lifestyle to which he, his wife and twelve-year-old son have become accustomed.
Unhappy, empty and confused, Ian desperately searches for answers, which begins oddly enough in a small unassuming soulful coffee house where he comes across a peculiar but intriguing stranger who asks him: What is your pain? At first unsettled by this question, the protagonist tries to ignore it, but eventually finds it will niggle away at him until he chooses to tackle it head on. By connecting more strongly with nature, with the values and beliefs with which he was raised, and with a number of vividly-drawn personal mentors, Ian eventually finds reconnection with his father, wife, son, and, most importantly, with his own soul. It is only once he has done this that he is able to grapple with the dilemmas at work and understand that some risks are ultimately worth taking. After all, "What will it profit us if we gain the whole world but lose our souls?"
In a world rife with competition, deadlines, and layoffs, companies and individuals today often find disconnection, apathy, and malaise rampant in the workplace. Any business in the 21st century-large or small-would be wise to heed the message in McLean's "The Soul Café," a message advocating the importance of recognizing and celebrating the individual talents and abilities of all employees and of instilling a sense of soulfulness in the workplace.
This is not just a book for business, however. Anyone-in any walk of life-who wants a lucid, entertaining, and thought-provoking good read will find that "The Soul Café" offers it up-"one cup at a time."

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How many of us have raced through life--meeting to meeting, bumper to bumper, dinner to dinner, skating to swimming--chasing after goals that always seem just beyond our reach?Then, one day, the monotony is somehow shattered and a profound reality of our life is revealed: We are filled with an aching sense of emptiness.We start asking ourselves the really big and scary life questions.What is my purpose?Why can't I find joy in my relationships any longer?Why does my employer care only about the money I generate and not about me?What has happened to my soul?Ian Archer was just such a person, and this is a fictional account of his struggle from emptiness through understanding to wholeness.With the gentle prodding of a few colourfully-drawn secondary characters and the unexpected sanctuary he finds in a small, unassuming suburban coffee house, this likeable though dispirited business executive's personal and workplace quandaries are gradually unravelled, acknowledged and confronted.In searching for a prescription for freedom from the false promises of life, however, Ian discovers that he must be prepared to lose much but that the risks are ultimately worth it.If you, like Ian, are looking for a place where the seeds of creativity, peace and personal growth are planted and the answers to life's fundamental questions are offered up one cup at a time, why don't you sit back, relax, and join him on a journey to The Soul Cafe.

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Café Alibi Review

Café Alibi
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No less breathtaking than the most intimate gaze of Roland Barthes, Swift's new collection of poems dares to go beyond Language by leaving us to dwell, if just for a moment, in a bantam world where we graze upon nostalgia, bend with desire, feed upon the barbiturate that can only be named longing--all the while being soothed by the lifeline of the lyric. Reading Cafe Alibi, we are privileged to visit an autarkic world where the aethetics of desire establish their own sense of time and order. A chilling and stunning read!

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Swift's Budavox: poems 1990-1999 explored sex, violence, art, and memory, to critical acclaim. His new collection, Café Alibi, written while the author lived abroad in Budapest and Paris, extends these concerns with popular culture, history, desire, nostalgia, and the often competing claims of travel and home. Swift's crisp, elegant, deceptively calm language questions images of 'the child, the adult and the outside world' in ways both witty and disturbing. Café Alibi maps a stylish itinerary through exotic terrain, offering at once hostility and ultimate peace, poetry that puts love to the test and disarms our darkest fears.

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Take Charge Cafe Review

Take Charge Cafe
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I found Take Charge Cafe very interesting, didn't want to put it down. Just when I thought I had it figured out,a new twist made me change my mind. I related with the some of the plights the disabled characters faced in the story. Looking forward to reading more from this author.

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When a renowned physician is murdered by poison shortly after announcing he was leaving his wife for his paramour, everyone presumed it was an act of revenge by one of his many conquests. When another person is murdered in a similar fashion, the town thought there was a serial killer on the loose. A suspect is arrested in an attempted murder in the same manner, yet he maintains his innocence. The police are convinced he is lying, but Sequester Sawyer could not help wondering, what if he was telling the truth?

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THE Dating Cafe: Attracting the Right Person into Your Life Review

THE Dating Cafe: Attracting the Right Person into Your Life
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This book is AWESOME, and I highly recommend it!! It takes a close look at the real truths about dating & relationships and gives you a chance to really think about & write down what you want. Then it goes a step further by providing guiding principles & practical advice to help find what you're looking for and, most importantly, have fun along the way!

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Mary Berney, founder of THE Dating Cafe, answers these questions with clear explanation, real-life stories and thought-provoking action steps that are downright fun! Her simple yet revolutionary dating and relationship Principles and Practices are designed to help single men and women of all ages go from dating fizzle to romance sizzle.

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Café De'Afrique Review

Café De'Afrique
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'Cafe d'Afrique' attracted pleasing reviews after its launch in 2009.
"Perth based author Tineke Van der Eecken was born in Belgium, where she studied Criminology. During the 1990s she lived and worked in Zambia where, in addition to working for various government and non-government organizations, she helped run a restaurant offering authentic Zambian cuisine, music and dance. Van der Eecken writes with generosity, frankness and insight; consequently her own character and the others she depicts, such as the wonderful culinary genius Mrs Banda, are revealed in all their flawed beauty against a shifting backdrop of social, political and cultural perceptions and realities. Part-memoir, part-travelogue, part-coming-of-age story, Cafe d'Afrique is a book about making friends, not just with people but with a country."
William Yeoman for The West Australian
"Cafe d'Afrique by Tineke Van der Eecken is a traditional bildungsroman; a structural and stylistic choice that represents both a strength and a weakness. We get to know the author so well we become engrossed in the minutiae of her life, but such a detailed approach definitely risks becoming monotonous. There is no other voice, no outside perspective into her world. While this book may have a tendency to 'tell' rather than 'show', what it does tell is a fascinating story of one woman's sojourn in Africa, and her foray into small business. One of its pleasures is the way it seems to reveal more about the author than she may have intended -- in fact, this is probably one of the best things about it. The way you end up liking Tineke, sympathising with her, and really wishing her -- and her future ventures -- well.
I found myself wanting to know so much more than appears on these pages: more about her mother and, indeed, the rest of her family; more about relationships with men, and friends. What is doing now, and what has been the effect of reflecting on her time in Africa and who she was then? How does she feel about what she didd and who she was? (I'd also love to know how she's found Australia so far, indigenous platitudes aside.)
The attempt to maintain an objective voice, as thought the truth is inevitably told through the marshalling of chronological facts, detracts from the passion and possible insight at the heart of this story. It's about the trials and tribulations Tineke undergoes as she sets up a unique 'cultural restaurant' where locals and tourists alike can sample authentic Zambian cuisine, music and dance -- while still working at her official job. I found myself longing for more interiority. Then again, this book doesn't claim to be a comprehensive autobiography, more a slice of life -- or perhaps I should say a slice out of a life.
While other readers may side with me in wanting more psychological revelations or philosophical reflections, they would be out of character for this author/narrator, which is as good an example as any, of the kind of unconscious disclosure this book seems to offer about Tineke's true character. But, after all, it doesn't claim to be about Tineke, but about Africa (as seen through the story of Cafe d'Afrique). And as such it is an absolute education. It's an honest, informative account of both a particular country and the more general experience of living overseas. The heat and the smells of the continent seem almost to rise from the pages. It is, in the end, perhaps recognised as a mud map; a rough sketch drawn by one traveller for another, an outline of the terrain by someone sho has been there for someone who may go."
Rose Michael for Indigo 5, Journal of West Australian Writing
"Tineke Van der Eecken is a lively writer willing to share her lost idealism, longing, frustrations and achievements, balancing the benefits of her education with what she hopes to share with and learn from Africa. It tastes delicious, spiced with a spread of condiments served on a thousand edible green leaves, that take you to the heart of the expatriate encounter with the Other. Reading this work gives you a window into a world shuttered away. There are people like us, only different, and Tineke helps us get to know our common humanity while sharing her own. A book you will enjoy reading, remembering and sharing."
Adrian Glamorgan, freelance journalist
"One can't help but connect with the author as she shares her experience of living in Africa. The beauty about this book is that as you are led through her time in Africa, you are not left feeling as though Tineke was a mere observer to all that was happening around her, instead she became part of what was and is.
Not a single story, but a well balanced book about the beauties of Africa, its challenges and the different possibilities that still present themselves even today.
A black wall came at me...The bike moved towards the frozen truck in the middle of the road. I heard it crash. This is it, I thought. I am next." At this point in the book for me, Tineke had become part of Africa - she had given until it hurt. I could relate even more, and any doubts about her sincerity, love and compassion for Africa were wiped away. I now hoped for a happy ending."
George Mutale, Atihow
"In Cafe d'Afrique, young, naive and somewhat idealistic Tineke, living in Zambia, is creating opportunities to give more exposure to African culture. It proves to be a hard ride. She comes across swindlers, gets cheated, has to cope with corruption and tackle bureaucracy. A dream threatens to become a nightmare. At the end Cafe d'Afrique has to close its doors but Tineke has grown into a mature, grown up young woman. "The fruit bearing tree I had nurtured was not the Café, it had always and only ever been myself". A very honest book explaining why people fall in love with Africa against all odds."
Guy Poppe, journalist and Africa-analyst

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The Forgotten Trolley: The Trolley Car Cafe Review

The Forgotten Trolley: The Trolley Car Cafe
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This is such a wonderful story!!! My 2 year old LOVES it. We just got it and he loves it sooo much that even my active little boy sits and listens to the entire story!!!
Highly recommended!!!!

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