Books

  1. Haunted
    Haunted

  2. Prey
    Prey

  3. The Midnight Tour (The Beast House Chronicles)
    The Midnight Tour (The Beast House Chronicles)

  4. Taltos: Lives of the Mayfair Witches
    Taltos: Lives of the Mayfair Witches

  5. The Phantom of the Subway (Geronimo Stilton (Paperback))
    The Phantom of the Subway (Geronimo Stilton (Paperback))

  6. "A Bottomless Grave" and Other Victorian Tales of Terror
    "A Bottomless Grave" and Other Victorian Tales of Terror

  7. The Devil's Apocrypha: There Are Two Sides to Every Story
    The Devil's Apocrypha: There Are Two Sides to Every Story

  8. In a Glass Darkly (Wordsworth Classics)
    In a Glass Darkly (Wordsworth Classics)

  9. The Stand
    The Stand

  10. Strangers
    Strangers

  11. Watchers
    Watchers

  12. The Vampire Lestat
    The Vampire Lestat

  13. The Vampire Prince (Saga of Darren Shan S.)
    The Vampire Prince (Saga of Darren Shan S.)

  14. Imajica II: The Reconciliation
    Imajica II: The Reconciliation

  15. The Field Guide (Spiderwick Chronicle)
    The Field Guide (Spiderwick Chronicle)

  16. The Keep
    The Keep

  17. Jason X
    Jason X

  18. The Cuckoo Clock of Doom (Goosebumps (Paperback))
    The Cuckoo Clock of Doom (Goosebumps (Paperback))

  19. The Long Walk
    The Long Walk

  20. Wicked Willow III: Broken Sunrise (Buffy the Vampire Slayer (Simon Spotlight))
    Wicked Willow III: Broken Sunrise (Buffy the Vampire Slayer (Simon Spotlight))

  21. Shooting Stars Omnibus: Cinnamon, Ice, Rose and Honey (Shooting Stars)
    Shooting Stars Omnibus: Cinnamon, Ice, Rose and Honey (Shooting Stars)

  22. Creed
    Creed

  23. Got Fangs?
    Got Fangs?

  24. The World of Darkness
    The World of Darkness

  25. Jason X: The Experiment (Jason X S.)
    Jason X: The Experiment (Jason X S.)

Haunted Castle on Hallow's Eve (Magic Tree House, 30)
Average customer rating: 5 out of 5 stars
  • Another great book
  • haunted magic
  • Haunted Castle on Halllows Eve
  • READ THIS BOOK PLEASE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
  • Great series.
Haunted Castle on Hallow's Eve (Magic Tree House, 30)
Mary Pope Osborne
Manufacturer: Random House Books for Young Readers
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Hardcover

Action & AdventureAction & Adventure | Literature | Children's Books | Subjects | Books
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Similar Items:
  1. Christmas in Camelot (Magic Tree House #29)
  2. Summer of the Sea Serpent (Magic Tree House #31)
  3. Winter of the Ice Wizard (Magic Tree House 32)
  4. Carnival at Candlelight (Magic Tree House #33)
  5. Season of the Sandstorms (A Stepping Stone Book(TM))

ASIN: 0375825215
Release Date: 2003-08-26

Amazon.com

In the second of the "Merlin Missions"--hardback additions to Mary Pope Osborne's Magic Tree House series--plucky heroes Jack and Annie must once again must travel back in time to rescue Camelot from looming danger.

One wonders why Merlin can't handle this sort of thing himself, but then of course we wouldn't get a chance to see Jack and Annie have another seat-of-the-pants adventure, getting mixed up with shape-shifting magic, armies of birds, a puzzling gem of power, and all sorts of other trouble. With the help of their old pal Teddy (Morgan le Fay's apprentice, last seen in dog form in four earlier Tree House stories), the two "Master Librarians and Magicians of Everyday Magic" must solve the mystery behind a castle full of ghosts and a menacing army of ravens. Not surprisingly, half the trouble comes in unraveling Merlin's riddles and helping Teddy use his rhyming magic correctly.

Osborne doesn't challenge readers overmuch (including the constant restatement of plot elements, perhaps worried that kids might otherwise forget or lose interest) and many parts of the story barely convince (like Teddy's "period" dialogue, e.g., "'Tis cool indeed"), but fans of the Magic Tree House will no doubt love another installment. (Ages 6 to 9) --Paul Hughes

Book Description

The intrepid Jack and Annie are summoned once again to the fantasy realm of Camelot. There, Merlin the Magician tells them that the Stone of Destiny has been stolen. The answer to its disappearance lies within a haunted castle. With a young magician named Teddy, Jack and Annie take on the challenge in an adventure that takes them to new heights and places they couldn’t even imagine!
a Stepping Stone Book™

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Another great book.......2007-02-09

Mary Pope Osborne has done it again with this book. A great book for children.

4 out of 5 stars haunted magic.......2007-01-22

I love the magic tree house series!!! I greatly enjoy reading these with my daughter!!!! Keep bringing them on.............mommytess

4 out of 5 stars Haunted Castle on Halllows Eve.......2007-01-16

Book review of
Haunted Castle on Hallows Eve


If you like magical places this is the book for you. The ages are 7-11. Jack, and Annie, and teddy have to finish a mission. That they were assigned by sorcer. They have to restore a castles order.
Jack, Annie, and Teddy have to restore a castle to normal. Jack is the leader. Annie helps and takes to animals. Teddy is a young sorcer. Teddy has rims to make the magic work.
Jack, Annie, and Teddy have to work together to save the castle. Teddy comes up with a plan to get the diamond. Jack found the diamond right away and flew to the castle. They help each other to protect the diamond. These three have to work together to over come obstacle.
The story takes place in a castle, tree house, and a nest. The castle is hunted. The tree house is failed with books. It can also transport you almost any ware. The nest is failed with jewelry and rare items.
Jack and Annie have to get back. Sometimes supped up on the ledge. It was the raven king. He had Teddy in a bird cage. You will have to read it to find the rest out.

5 out of 5 stars READ THIS BOOK PLEASE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!.......2006-11-07

If you like adventure books, than read this book. This book is about three kids who go to a castle and try to help a family, while trying not to be too scared. This is a really good book for anyone to curl up and read. It also has easy text for young readers to read and understand. Maybe you will like this book if you read it too.

5 out of 5 stars Great series. .......2006-11-04

My son absolutely adores this series. He just turned 7. I still am reading the stories to him, but he can pick up some words and phrases as I read to him. We read the series in order and now are beginnning to reread them.

This story can be read individually, but I recommend reading the earlier ones to get to know the characters. Jack and Annie are very likeable. They try to achieve their goal with the assistance of clues given to them by the magician Merlin. It is good for problem solving and also has alot of educational tidbits.
The Demon-Haunted World: Science as a Candle in the Dark
Average customer rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars
  • Both Challenges and Incorporates "New Age" Thinking
  • to bad--Your Lost---This book is clueless
  • an essential work
  • What an idiot!
  • Excellent!
The Demon-Haunted World: Science as a Candle in the Dark
Carl Sagan , and Ann Druyan
Manufacturer: Ballantine Books
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback

Controversial KnowledgeControversial Knowledge | Religious Studies | Religion & Spirituality | Subjects | Books
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Similar Items:
  1. The Dragons of Eden: Speculations on the Evolution of Human Intelligence
  2. Why People Believe Weird Things: Pseudoscience, Superstition, and Other Confusions of Our Time
  3. The Varieties of Scientific Experience: A Personal View of the Search for God
  4. The God Delusion
  5. Shadows of Forgotten Ancestors

ASIN: 0345409469
Release Date: 1997-02-25

Amazon.com

Carl Sagan muses on the current state of scientific thought, which offers him marvelous opportunities to entertain us with his own childhood experiences, the newspaper morgues, UFO stories, and the assorted flotsam and jetsam of pseudoscience. Along the way he debunks alien abduction, faith-healing, and channeling; refutes the arguments that science destroys spirituality, and provides a "baloney detection kit" for thinking through political, social, religious, and other issues.

Book Description

"A glorious book . . . A spirited defense of science . . . From the first page to the last, this book is a manifesto for clear thought."

*Los Angeles Times



"POWERFUL . . . A stirring defense of informed rationality. . . Rich in surprising information and beautiful writing."

*The Washington Post Book World



How can we make intelligent decisions about our increasingly technology-driven lives if we don't understand the difference between the myths of pseudoscience and the testable hypotheses of science? Pulitzer Prize-winning author and distinguished astronomer Carl Sagan argues that scientific thinking is critical not only to the pursuit of truth but to the very well-being of our democratic institutions.



Casting a wide net through history and culture, Sagan examines and authoritatively debunks such celebrated fallacies of the past as witchcraft, faith healing, demons, and UFOs. And yet, disturbingly, in today's so-called information age, pseudoscience is burgeoning with stories of alien abduction, channeling past lives, and communal hallucinations commanding growing attention and respect. As Sagan demonstrates with lucid eloquence, the siren song of unreason is not just a cultural wrong turn but a dangerous plunge into darkness that threatens our most basic freedoms.



"COMPELLING."

*USA Today



"A clear vision of what good science means and why it makes a difference. . . . A testimonial to the power of science and a warning of the dangers of unrestrained credulity."

*The Sciences



"PASSIONATE."

*San Francisco Examiner-Chronicle

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Both Challenges and Incorporates "New Age" Thinking.......2007-06-15

World-renowned astronomer Carl Sagan-- who died of cancer several years ago-- has written a book which is both challenging and inspiring to anyone who has ever questioned "New Age" methods and findings, and perhaps especially to those who haven't. Yet his book is likely to be one which many in the New Age community would overlook, to their own peril. Sagan is relentlessly scientific, and simultaneously embraces with warmth the concept of spirituality. I find it both impressive and intriguing that his "defense" of science is both intensely inspiring and even lyrical. Sagan makes it clear that, far from intending to invalidate spiritual viewpoints, he sees science and spirituality as not only complimentary, but mutually reinforcing. Sagan himself notes that he has often been misunderstood. His disappointment that he can find no evidence to support the idea of extraterrestrial existence and other paranormal phenomena is palpable. He sincerely wants to believe that he could, say, communicate with his dead parents, whom he dearly misses. It's simply that he finds no evidence for this. On matters of the paranormal, Sagan might best be described as AGNOSTIC. He passionately advocates development of our openness as well as our skepticism, while always maintaining a sense of reverence and wonder. Part of Sagan's purpose is to debunk pseudoscience-- of which he includes much of New Age thinking --even as he deepens our appreciation of science. So why would anyone in the New Age community wish to read it, let alone deem it valuable, let alone crucial for the expansion of the New Age Movement? Because Sagan injects clear-headed thinking and a critical eye to many New Age claims. He enlightens us as to where New Age thinking corresponds to verifiable "external reality," and where it falls short. Perhaps even more importantly, he show us how the Scientific Method can be used to weigh the evidence, so that we are free to draw our own conclusions based on verifiable criteria. This can only strengthen our self-trust, our commitment, and our resolve to pursue our ideals along certain lines. It seems to me that the more New Age ideas can be validated in our own eyes as well as the eyes of the rest of the community, the more acceptance these ideas will gain. The New Age Movement comprises a broad spectrum, and advocates ideas promoting inner and outer peace; more humane social, political, and economic institutions; mental, emotional, physical, and spiritual health and well-being; personal growth and wisdom; and of course more loving and fulfilling relationships. But New Age Believers, take heart! For an interesting contrast, try checking out Michael Talbot's The Holographic Universe, which purports to scientifically explain the paranormal. The latter is another wonderful book and excellent counterpoint to Sagan's. Sagan's book is fascinating, informative, enlightening and thought-provoking. His book adds a valuable and possibly crucial contribution to our understanding and ability to evaluate certain Human Potential endeavors. This book can only be a boon to New Age Consciousness AND science. It will greatly benefit any thinking or skeptical person.

1 out of 5 stars to bad--Your Lost---This book is clueless.......2007-06-02

What can I say,
The Devil is preety good at covering stuff up. He uses even the best Scientist and astronomers to crush anything spiritual.

Of coarse this book is garbage and I suggest that everyone who likes this book to please take yourself and your scientific thinking out of the box.

In the next coming years people you are gonna see some serious evil spirtual activity and because you have polluted yourselves with closing your mind of to it, you won't know or be ready for the things that are going to occur.

5 out of 5 stars an essential work.......2007-06-01

I'm surprised by some of the negative reviews of this excellent and enjoyable book. It seems to boil down to religious people who are offended by his agnosticism and perhaps paranormal true-believers who don't appreciate someone trying to debunk their favorite theory. While everyone is entitled to their opinion, it's just inconceivable to me that someone wouldn't like this book. Carl Sagan was a brilliant and humane man who was deeply concerned about the credulity of his fellow humans in an age when nuclear weapons, pollution,disease and overpopulation have the potential to destroy us if we don't make wise and well-reasoned decisions.

Carl Sagan was not hostile to religion except where it made claims about the physical world that were/are manifestly false, or where he saw people making cruel or unwise decisions on the basis of that religion. He was an astronomer and spent much of his adult life peering into the void of space and exploring other worlds. He knew how vast and intricate and elegant our universe truly is and was humbled before it. His worry that he expressed in nearly everything he wrote, and especially in this book, was that too many people seem to be out of touch with physical reality and thus prone to every charlatan and crook and crack-pot theory that comes along. He wanted people to understand how science and logic worked, and why scientific theories were different than say conspiracy theories.

If you read nothing else from this book, at least read over the 'Baloney Detection Kit' chapter. It's a simple and straight forward guide to the scientific method and logical fallacies. They constitute an essential set of mental tools that everyone should be taught in elementary school. You don't have to turn your back on your faith to be skeptical. There may well be some basis to stories of UFOs or ESP or something along those lines, but as with religion there are definitely swindlers and con-men out there too. This book attempts to debunk a great many of these beliefs, but more importantly it seeks to show you how to avoid being taken in by the con.

I would highly recommend this book to anyone who wants to learn more about the clash between reality and pseudo-reality.

1 out of 5 stars What an idiot!.......2007-04-26

Wow... just wow, this dude has no F-ing clue what he's talking about. Was he even trying? If this is the best skeptics can do to promote their ignorant, hypocritical view of what they consider science vs. pseudoscience, then that is all the more reason to believe in the paranormal!

This book is so pathetically devoid of information, the arguments within are so hypocritical when not illogical and baseless, I feel sorry for him if he is actually as stupid as he sounds in this book.

If I had met him I'd be glum just like the driver guy he describes in the beginning of the book, whose belief in ancient civilization like Atlantis and Lemuria he glibly dismisses due to lack of scientific evidence. That degree of brainlessness -he can't even grasp the difference between history and science!!- is depressing. I wouldn't know what to say; "No words... they should have sent... a poet..."

If you want to be an informed person, if you want a real candle in the dark, read works by Laura Knight-Jadczyk and David Icke.

5 out of 5 stars Excellent!.......2007-04-23

Carl Sagan rules!

He's a deep sensitive being that doens't throw out the heart in the name of the head!

He's a tremendous model in my mind - and heart - for critical scientic thinking. WOW!

Saying all that, there is still room for the mystery and the beauty and power of the unknown and the miracles that do transpire in what we call Life.

ENJOY!!

.:.
Mommy?
Average customer rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars
  • Great pop-up
  • MOmmy
  • Very Cool!
  • Fun but Fragile
  • Way too fragile
Mommy?
Maurice Sendak , Arthur Yorinks , and Matthew Reinhart
Manufacturer: Michael di Capua Books / Scholastic
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Hardcover

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Similar Items:
  1. Flotsam (Caldecott Medal Book)
  2. Encyclopedia Prehistorica: Sharks and Other Sea Monsters
  3. Castle: Medieval Days and Knights (A Sabuda & Reinhart Pop-up Book)
  4. Adele & Simon
  5. Christmas Pop-up

ASIN: 0439880505
Release Date: 2006-09-26

Book Description

They're all here! Everybody's favorite monsters are just going about their business when a plucky little boy wanders into their cuckoo house. And what does he want? He wants Mommy!
No matter how scary these monsters are, there's no besting a little boy who's looking for his mommy. In one hilarious pop-up extravaganza after another, this kid shows them a thing or two.

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Great pop-up.......2007-03-29

This book is amazing and It has great illustrations. You'll have to look at the book over and over just to see everything in it. I wouldn't recommend it for small children unless you are doing the handling.

5 out of 5 stars MOmmy.......2007-02-19

Enchanting. So lovely I ordered more as gifts for teachers I work with.

5 out of 5 stars Very Cool!.......2007-02-08

We're Maurice Sendak fans, and could not resist ordering this pop-up book. It is detailed, colorful and funny, and definitely unique. We only take it out to read with our 3-year-old since it's intricate enough to damage quite easily, I suspect.

4 out of 5 stars Fun but Fragile.......2007-02-05

My grandson loves Maurice Sendak's "Where the Wild Things Are", & so I bought him this book for Christmas. It is very cleverly done--I had to look twice to see that you could lift the flap on the right hand side of each page for an additional drawing of what the little guy did to each monster. There are lots of fun details to each drawing & the spinning mummy is awesome. The only reservation I have is that all those pop-outs, etc. are very fragile & might not last long in the hands of a small child. This is a good book for Mom to read with her child until he is a little older!

3 out of 5 stars Way too fragile.......2007-01-25

Beautiful illustrations, but way too fragile for my four year old...this is the kind of book you have to keep hiding in a safe place. Impractical
The Haunted Self: Structural Dissociation and the Treatment of Chronic Traumatization (Norton Series on Interpersonal Neurobiology)
Average customer rating: 5 out of 5 stars
  • A Major Advancement in Understanding Trauma and Dissociation
  • Three leading researchers and clinicians share their lessons from treating such individuals
  • A Great Exposition of Understanding for Human Suffering
  • A Brilliant Contribution Toward Understand and Healing
  • Putting the pieces of the puzzle together
The Haunted Self: Structural Dissociation and the Treatment of Chronic Traumatization (Norton Series on Interpersonal Neurobiology)
Onno van der Hart , Ellert R. S. Nijenhuis , and Kathy Steele
Manufacturer: W. W. Norton
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Hardcover

NeuropsychologyNeuropsychology | Psychology & Counseling | Health, Mind & Body | Subjects | Books
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Similar Items:
  1. Trauma and the Body: A Sensorimotor Approach to Psychotherapy
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  4. Feeling Unreal: Depersonalization Disorder and the Loss of the Self
  5. Help for the Helper: The Psychophysiology of Compassion Fatigue and Vicarious Trauma

ASIN: 0393704017

Book Description

A new way of dealing with chronic trauma from leaders in the field.

Life is an ongoing struggle for those who have been severely traumatized. Here, leading trauma experts present a theory and practice for dealing with chronic trauma. Recognizing the structural dissociation (splitting away of part of the self) that often results from trauma and proposing a plan for action that a survivor must implement in order to put his or her haunted past to rest, this book will be of interest to researchers as well as clinicians.

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars A Major Advancement in Understanding Trauma and Dissociation.......2007-05-11

In THE HAUNTED SELF the authors, Onno van der Hart, Ellert Nijenhuis and Kathy Steele present a theory of structural dissociation that builds upon the work of Pierre Janet and ties together the recent developments in the areas of trauma and dissociation. They build their theory methodically and concisely, tackling the difficult subject of dissociation and its effects on survivors of trauma. Their writing is compassionate and understanding, illuminating their therapeutic skills while at the same time delving into one of the most misunderstood and confounding areas of psychology with clarity and thoughtfulness.

The book is a challenging read, not because of the language, but because of the thoroughness and detail devoted to the construction of the authors' somewhat complex theory. Divided into two sections, the first constructs the theory of structural dissociation itself, with the second section presenting the phase oriented treatment, including examples illustrating the therapeutic processes involved.

The theory the authors present is consistent with recent advances in neuroscience and has the potential to impact the treatment of those suffering from a range of psychological disorders. The authors fully acknowledge and solicit feedback for those parts of their theory that are in need of further research. They also use the work of many others who have extended our knowledge of trauma and dissociation and its treatment over the past century.

Rather than approaching dissociative disorders by only examining the modern theories and developments, they begin with the work of Janet and thus are able to define the sequential breakdown of the personality in the face of traumatic incidences. Their theory respects the varied nature of individual responses making their approach most accessible for those who work directly with any dissociative system, from the simplest ranging to the most complex or polyfragmented.

This book is great advanced reading for those DID'ers who have already read everything else out there and are looking for more. Although it is dense, if you can make your way through it, you will find yourselves, as I did, commenting on how `on the mark' it feels.

THE HAUNTED SELF should be required reading for all psychology and neurobiology students as well as for all private practitioners and those currently working with the mentally ill in institutions, programs and educational settings. It is also excellent material for those seeking to understand more about the functions of the brain.

5 out of 5 stars Three leading researchers and clinicians share their lessons from treating such individuals.......2007-05-08

Those who have been chronically traumatized have a range of symptoms which make for difficult assessment and treatment by therapists: THE HAUNTED SELF: STRUCTURAL DISSOCIATION AND THE TREATMENT OF CHRONIC TRAUMATIZATION is thus for college-level mental health holdings and practicing therapists who would identify and treat these issues, from daily living challenges to the recurrence of memories about a painful past. Three leading researchers and clinicians share their lessons from treating such individuals - over sixty years of collective experience - and provide a powerful set of insights for clinicians, students of clinical psychology and psychiatry, and any involved in mental health issues.

5 out of 5 stars A Great Exposition of Understanding for Human Suffering.......2007-04-26

I must express extreme praise and admiration for the work and eventual understanding the authors of The Haunted Self have so relatively displayed in researching trauma related disorders and maladaptive behaviors. But the amazing thing is they were able to explain it in terms a sufferer can understand. This is not something that happens in research very often. I have been involved in research of some sort all my adult life and know that research produces facts and figures from which decisions and theories can be constructed with a reasonable amount of certainty. The one thing research cannot do is produce empathy and compassion. Being a post-modern theologian as well as an engineer, I know these two expressions can only come from a calling to help humanity. I am a fifty-one year old male who has suffered the agonizing pain of the effects of trauma in many different ways and forms all my life. After reading well over one-hundred and twenty thousand pages of research on my symptoms and problems and theorizing and journaling thoughts, I finally found not only an explanation but compassion and empathy within the pages of this book. I believe this is vital in any therapeutic relationship. Without a shadow of a doubt, the reader can make a therapeutic relationship with this book that can be externalized and extended into their patient therapist relationship. This book is to trauma and mental health as Einstein's theory of relativity is to physics or what the personal computer is to how we view information or, more importantly, what parole is to a prisoner.

I have been treated for many anxiety related symptoms but another symptom would just take its place after treatment. Then the original symptom would reoccur. This cycle has lasted all my life with devastating personal effects. But like most people with psychological disorders or underdeveloped functionality, it was hard to talk about what was really going on inside of me. I could neither express nor have the courage to face my inward demons. I was stuck in a living example of structural disassociation. My emotional self (EP) was stuck in the state of both somatic (empty) and exaggerated memories of accumulative trauma (or of personal perceptions of life events) while my normal every day self (ANP) was in a defensive war keeping me from dealing with the pain, relived trauma and torture of those memories. This actually caused a somatic type of discomfort. Of course this psychosomatic physical suffering just kept the cycle of mental distress going in a spiral of disassociation. Actually I was fighting for the gift of life as found in wholeness.

I have been inducted into the lifer's panic attack hall of fame. If that were not enough I have fought phobias, struggled with intrusive misplaced thoughts bordering OCD, mimicked heart attacks getting intimate with the EKG machine. I endured the embarrassment of publicly displaying tics and jerks and leg movements during stressful situations that I was ill equipped to handle. I would have to find some excuse for losing my current thought process during emotional and trying times. The list could go on but at this point I think you have the idea. I felt like a loser with no hope. Make no mistake. All of those labeled disorders were real. That is; they were symptomatically real due to trauma related structural disorder which affected and distorted my understanding of the gift of life. Treatment was nothing more than an aspirin for the pain. Healing started, however, through understanding the complex make up of my person.

The Haunted Self provided that understanding. I introduced the book to my therapist, whom is very good and someone I trust very much. She embraced the detailed theory as it applied to me much to my surprise. By the way, did I say she was good? Something amazing happened with this embrace. I know that what I am about to say will sound patronizing but healing is something one must share. Within five weeks of therapy using a facilitated understanding of this book by my therapist, symptoms began to weaken (of course I had already completed my homework and I desperately wanted change). Wholeness began happening in my life. Doors began to open to things I never understood. Changes began to happen to my thought process bleeding over into my actions (synaptic psychotherapy). I was actually creating opportunities for myself. I was able to accept past trauma perceptions and started believing and knowing that the defense used by my everyday self (ANP) only made things worse. I feel a life time of treatment, attempted understanding and suffering came to a head with nothing more than simple insight made clear to a somewhat neurotic person. Actually this understanding was presented as a detailed expression of the conflicting forces that wreck havoc on the lives of so many people that make up our world (makes one question the concept of spontaneous panic attacks).

This review is way too long so I will end here with a challenge. I challenge anyone who has been beleaguered with anxiety related disorders to look at themselves and their disorders from a different point of reference like the changing colors of light through a prism as presented in The Haunted Self. I also challenge all mental health professionals to at least look over this book and allow it to provoke your thoughts (it should be required reading for all doctoral students in psychology if only because of the post-modern interpretation of prior research). I believe this book is a holistic expression for a broad range of disorders that are now being treated separately and in this sufferer's opinion sometimes ineffectively. I do not pretend to be an expert in psychology as some of you who are will notice, while chuckling at my review, but I am a seasoned professional at suffering due to trauma or perceptions of trauma and the extreme bizarre anxiety and actions it produces.

5 out of 5 stars A Brilliant Contribution Toward Understand and Healing.......2007-04-21

The Haunted Self is an illuminating and welcome contribution to our understanding of the effects of trauma on the human organism. The author's theoretical work, an extension of the work of Pierre Janet, offers a unifying theory by which one may more fully apprehend Dissociation. The theory and its practical clinical application are presented in a manner that helps to bridge the often disparate and confusing perspectives about this disorder and its treatment.

Complex concepts are clearly organized and articulated as the reader is guided to understand both the processes by which trauma fractures the self and the reparative therapeutic processes necessary to heal such fractures. The author(s) explain the physical and emotional mechanism(s) that contribute to the formation and maintenance of the pathology of Structural Dissociation. They describe the intricate neurophysiology that likely underpins the disorder and how the patient's and therapist's neurobiology (as expressed in a broad array of attachment, affect, sensorimotor, cognitive & behavioral manifestations) is considered and integrated into a collaborative phasing of the treatment plan.

This is an often dense but thoroughly satisfying read. Onno van der Hart, Ellert R. S. Nijenhuis and Kathy Steele know their subject and have meticulously explained and structured it in a way that makes sense.

5 out of 5 stars Putting the pieces of the puzzle together.......2007-04-02

Prior to reading this book, not only did I feel fragmented myself, but the different theories about what had happened to me that were put forward also seemed fragmented and disconnected, like slices at different angles to the truth. As well as advocating an method of integration in the patient, the theory of structural dissociation presented in this book also seems integrative in itself, in showing how different, seemingly unrelated diagnoses can be seen to be derived from the same underlying trauma related processes. As a patient this is not just theoretically interesting but it can help take away alot of the anxiety, confusion, and scepticism that comes from being sliced and diced in different ways by different mental health professionals. I think that the more patients and professionals that are exposed to these ideas, the better.

I thought this was a brilliant, original and beautifully written book, that expresses some very sophisticated ideas in a clear and systematic way. As well as the theoretical insights conveyed, this book also provides a integrative treatment plan, which brings together tools and ideas from across a broad spectrum of psychological paradigms. After only a few pages into the book, I got an "aha" moment and this deepened into a sense that finally someone seemed to be speaking a language that made sense to me. The book is written in a structured, iterative way. The first few chapters give you a broad understanding of what structural dissociation involves, and how it plays a core role in creating the symptoms experienced by both "classic" dissociative individuals, and those who may appear to have another mental illness (anxiety, depression etc), but whose symptoms are in fact a manifestation of underlying structural dissociation. The rest of the book goes into further theoretical detail, and then explains the phased treatment programme, with a comprehensive array of information and guidance for mental health professionals on how to effectively treat patients. Depending on their current level of mental stamina and capability, patients may find that they only need to read the first few chapters to understand the basics of the ideas, but those with more energy and interest will get great value out of the rest of the book also.

While not all mental illness is caused by structural dissociation, those who have experienced problems with getting a diagnosis or effective therapy may gain value from the insights contained in this book. I strongly feel that this is the best book by far that i have found on trauma related dissociative disorders, and i recommend it highly to anyone suffering from DID, BPD, PTSD, conversion/somatisation disorders etc.
The Haunted Wood: Soviet Espionage in America - -The Stalin Era
Average customer rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars
  • The Soviet Penetration of the Roosevelt Administration
  • partially an advertisement for two Soviet Agent's talent
  • Second thoughts
  • A Critical View of "The Haunted Wood"
  • Very informative. One of the best. But it is a boring read
The Haunted Wood: Soviet Espionage in America - -The Stalin Era
Alexander Vassiliev , and Allen Weinstein
Manufacturer: Random House
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Hardcover

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  5. Whittaker Chambers: A Biography (Modern Library Paperbacks)

ASIN: 0679457240
Release Date: 1998-12-22

Amazon.com

The Haunted Wood fills in a valuable part of cold war history: the Soviet Union's attempts to spy on the United States from the time of FDR's New Deal, through the Second World War, and into the 1950s. Allen Weinstein (author of a highly regarded history of the Hiss-Chambers case, Perjury) and Alexander Vassiliev (a KGB agent turned journalist) show that among the Americans caught in the Soviet orbit were many top government officials, including a Congressman from New York and a close advisor to President Roosevelt, as well as an American ambassador's daughter. Most of these early spies were leftists driven by ideology--as opposed to money, which seems to have motivated many of the later cold war traitors, such as Aldrich Ames. (The Congressman, interestingly, is an exception--he demanded so much compensation that the Soviets gave him the code name "Crook.") The greatest windfall for the U.S.S.R. during this period was the acquisition of atomic secrets, with contributions from agents like Ted Hall, Klaus Fuchs, and Julius and Ethel Rosenberg (the authors do not believe, however, that the scientist Robert Oppenheimer was a Soviet spook). Yet there were also notable failures, many brought on by Stalin's insatiable appetite for purges; defections by Chambers and Elizabeth Bentley also dealt several mortal blows. By the end of the 1940s, the Soviet spy ring in the United States was in serious breakdown. Weinstein and Vassiliev make use of both American sources and Soviet archives to deliver what will surely be an authoritative account for many years--or at least until more top-secret archives on both sides of the Atlantic become declassified. And don't expect that to happen anytime soon. --John J. Miller

Book Description

Based upon previously secret KGB records, The Haunted Wood reveals for the first time the riveting story of Soviet espionage's "golden age" in the United States throughout the 1930s, World War II, and the early Cold War. Historian Allen Weinstein, author of Perjury: The Hiss-Chambers Case, and Alexander Vassiliev, a former KGB agent-turned-journalist, were provided unique access to thousands of classified Soviet intelligence dispatches that documented the KGB's success in acquiring America's most valuable atomic, military, and diplomatic secrets. The Haunted Wood narrates the triumphs and failures of Soviet operatives and their American agents during the 1930s and 1940s, describing as well the compelling human dramas involved.
        
Reconstructed from Moscow's messages to its operatives and reports from Soviet recruits in America, The Haunted Wood describes many previously unknown personal tales: struggles for control among contending Soviet operatives and American agents, love affairs, business ventures, defections, and plotted or actual murders. The authors also detail the remarkable range of classified government documents and information stolen for Soviet intelligence during the 1930s and the war years.
        
Complementing its use of the KGB archives, The Haunted Wood incorporates, also for the first time, a number of the previously classified VENONA cables released in 1995-96 by the CIA and NSA. Among these thousands of translated intercepts sent by Soviet agents in the United States to the USSR during World War II were dozens that matched those found in the Moscow records.
        
The highly placed Americans who assisted Soviet intelligence operatives during this period included:

  the passionate daughter of the U.S. Ambassador to Nazi Germany
  an influential member of the U.S. Congress
  one of President Roosevelt's personal assistants
  key officials of the OSS, America's wartime spy agency
  a flamboyant Hollywood producer-director
  the head of the American Communist Party

Several chapters provide major new accounts from Moscow's own record of its relations with Alger Hiss and atomic spies Klaus Fuchs, Harry Gold, David Greenglass, Theodore Hall, and Julius Rosenberg, among others, along with fresh information on Soviet espionage in the United States by British agents for the Kremlin--Guy Burgess, Donald Maclean, and Harold "Kim" Philby.

The Haunted Wood's pages are filled with extraordinary and previously untold stories, including those of one war-time American spy ring whose head lived in a domestic ménage à trois with other agents, of Soviet involvement in a Hollywood music publishing company and possible major film investments, and of a station chief who proposed (with Moscow's agreement) funding U.S. journalists and congressional political campaigns.
        
The authors show how defection at war's end by a single emotionally depressed agent, despondent since the death of her Soviet station-chief lover, provoked the swift and virtually complete shutdown of Moscow's intelligence operations in the United States--ironically, years before the FBI and congressional investigations began their decade-long pursuit of "Soviet agents," who, by then, had either returned to Moscow or left the U.S. government!
        
With its new and uniquely documented information, The Haunted Wood offers the first fresh, realistic, and non-judgmental understanding of Soviet espionage in the United States during the Stalin era.

Customer Reviews:

4 out of 5 stars The Soviet Penetration of the Roosevelt Administration.......2006-11-27

Authors Weinstein and Vassiliev were in the relatively unique position, in writing "The Haunted Wood", of having access to the Soviet as well as the American side of the story. They took advantage of a brief period of access to Soviet espionage achives after the breakup of the Soviet Union. What emerges is an exhaustive study of the penetration by Soviet spies of the U.S. government in the 1930's and 1940's.

The Soviets were materially aided in their espionage efforts by an admiration of Soviet communism shared by some Americans. This admiration looks badly misguided in retrospect, but apparently seemed very rational in the context of the 1929 Stock Market Crash and the subsequent Great Depression and rise of Fascism. This admiration produced a generation of American (and British) traitors who gave away information on American foreign policy, military and industrial secrets.

Some of the names are familiar: Alger Hiss and the Rosenbergs, among others. Less familiar may be the names and operating methods of their Soviet handlers, who worked not just against American counterintelligence but also against the increasing paranoia of the Soviet Government they served. Despite the continuing delivery of invaluable information, Josef Stalin repeatedly purged Soviet intelligence. The disruption caused by the purges almost certainly kept the Soviets from acquiring even more information than they did.

"The Haunted Wood" is written primarily for an audience already fascinated by the topic of espionage. The average reader may find long stretches of dry and sometimes repetitive reading. This book is highly recommended for those studying the history of espionage.

3 out of 5 stars partially an advertisement for two Soviet Agent's talent.......2005-01-02

This book was written with the help of several present and former Soviet Intelligence officers. Be aware that that colored the book with favorable views of these people's talent level and Soviet Intelligence in general. The book does contain valuable information along with important omission and advertising style hot air. I would suggest that you consider Venona by John Earl Haynes or The Venona Secrets: Exposing Soviet Espionage and America's Traitors by Herbert Romerstein. The former is an academic description of the 450+ Soviet agents disclosed by the US breaking Soviet codes used during the war. The latter is an inside story by two US espionage agents and experts. One of the gems it reveals is that President FDR was gullible and had several advisors who were Soviet agents. Stalin was afraid of a two front war in Europe and with Japan in the Pacific. He composed an insulting message for his agents to present to FDR who sent as is it to the Japanese government. This provoked the war in the Pacific. Had this not been done, The Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor would have been done much later or not at all.

4 out of 5 stars Second thoughts.......2002-06-27

I reviewed this book in 1999, and gave it three stars. Over time, I've decided it was better than I first thought, and came back here to up it to four...

1 out of 5 stars A Critical View of "The Haunted Wood".......2002-06-04

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
A Critical View of "The Haunted Wood"

The thesis of this book is that KGB documents prove many New Deal and other US government officials were spies for the Soviet Union. The documentation in the book, however, does not support the thesis, in my opinion.

The co-authors state that one of them, a former KGB agent named Alexander Vassiliev, saw the KGB documents in Moscow on an exclusive basis, in exchange for payments by the publisher, Random House, to an association of former KGB agents. There is no way to verify the authenticity of the KGB documents; no way to check the accuracy of the excerpts and paraphrases printed in the book; no way to study their context, such as the rest of the file from which a particular document came, which every historian and student knows can be crucial to a correct reading and interpretation. We do not even know whether the documents Vassiliev saw are in the Russian language and, if they are, who translated them and how accurately.

The book contains 1099 numbered footnotes, of which 1049 are citations to those off-limits KGB documents. Readers may well ask why those footnotes are there at all. Another frustrating puzzle for readers is the way the co-authors purport to quote KGB documents that contain code names (which the Soviet intelligence agencies routinely assigned to spies and occasionally to non-spies such as Roosevelt, Truman, Churchill, and lesser figures): the co-authors delete the code names and replace them with real names in square brackets -- but often without disclosing what code names they have deleted, and without citing any KGB document or otherwise explaining how or where they got the real names. Compounding the confusion, they state that the Soviets sometimes assigned the same code name to more than one person and sometimes assigned two or three code names to the same person. For instance, the co-authors assert that the American diplomat Alger Hiss had two code names, "Ales" and "Lawyer", while the US Treasury official Harry Dexter White had three code names, "Lawyer", "Richard", and "Reed".

In The Haunted Wood, the co-authors do not explain why they cite no authority or source for ascribing "Lawyer" as a code name for Hiss. For their assertion that "Ales" was another code name for Hiss, they do not cite any KGB documentary source, but they reproduce (and misquote) a so-called "Venona" document, released in 1996 by the US National Security Agency and said to bear a translation of a partially decrypted 1945 KGB cablegram about "Ales". In 1950, an FBI agent tentatively identified Ales as Hiss and said the FBI would attempt to verify the identification; but it never did so, nor could it have done so.

The Venona-KGB cablegram itself, reproduced with the photographs in the book, shows that Ales could not have been Hiss. Ales was a military intelligence (GRU) agent who obtained only military information. Hiss, however, was charged with obtaining only non-military State Department materials; the papers that were used to convict him were copies of State Department documents. Ales was the leader of a group of GRU agents, whereas Hiss was accused of acting alone (except for his wife and his accuser, Whittaker Chambers). Ales conducted espionage throughout the eleven years 1935-45, whereas Hiss was accused of having conducted espionage not later than 1938, etc. etc. But The Haunted Wood does not mention, let alone attempt to explain away, any of those discrepancies that preclude Ales as having been Hiss.

Furthermore, there is an earlier Venona document that tends to exonerate Hiss, but I can not find any mention of it in the book. It contains a fragment of a GRU message that, in the original, included the name "Hiss" spelled out in the Latin alphabet, rather than the Cyrillic. For the GRU to use the Latin alphabet just for the name strongly suggests that the GRU had never before heard of Hiss and wanted to be sure to get the name right. (No first name is given, so we can not tell whether "Hiss" was Alger or his brother Donald, who was also in the State Department.) Moreover, for the GRU to use Hiss's real name suggests that he had no code name and was not an espionage agent, because Soviet intelligence agencies, for reasons of security, normally assigned code names to their agents and referred to them only by their code names. Given the many pages that The Haunted Wood devotes to Hiss, Ales, the GRU, and Venona, it is a serious lapse, in my view, for the co-authors not to tell their readers about this GRU message and not to discuss its implications.

The lack of verifiable documentation in The Haunted Wood, its plethora of errors, and its strategic omissions leave it demonstrably untrustworthy. In my opinion, the book falls too far below minimal standards of scholarly or journalistic rigor for any serious consideration.

3 out of 5 stars Very informative. One of the best. But it is a boring read.......2000-11-25

I have read many books on the issue of intelligence. The insight provided by this book is excellent. In particular, the nature and history of America's volunteer ideological spies is the very best I have ever read. But I have found it a hard read. It is possible to be too through. Honest, it is. I had an easier time with Mitrokhin.
Haunted: A Novel
Average customer rating: 3 out of 5 stars
  • It Shoots Itself In The Foot
  • Parts do not equal a whole...
  • Yuck for Chuck
  • Engrossing, page turner
  • This is not "A Novel"
Haunted: A Novel
Chuck Palahniuk
Manufacturer: Anchor
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback

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ASIN: 1400032822
Release Date: 2006-04-11

Book Description

Haunted is a novel made up of twenty-three horrifying, hilarious, and stomach-churning stories. They’re told by people who have answered an ad for a writer’s retreat and unwittingly joined a “Survivor”-like scenario where the host withholds heat, power, and food. As the storytellers grow more desperate, their tales become more extreme, and they ruthlessly plot to make themselves the hero of the reality show that will surely be made from their plight. This is one of the most disturbing and outrageous books you’ll ever read, one that could only come from the mind of Chuck Palahniuk.

Customer Reviews:

3 out of 5 stars It Shoots Itself In The Foot.......2007-06-26

I like this book. I want to love it. But I can't. It is entirely way too long. This book could have been cut in half and become an amazing story, instead it lingers on and on and on and on and on for over 400 pages. 24 stories. Too many characters. By the end of the book it felt like a chore. This book had so much potential. Starting off with Guts made it seem unstoppable. Oh but it did. After about 200 pages of which I remember nothing great about, I started thinking about cutting off my own fingers. I did NOT want to turn another page. But I did. Finished it today, and I no longer want to read any more of his novels.

As of now I've tackled 4 of his novels. Fight Club and Survivor were amazing. Choke left me wanting, and Haunted left me dissapointed.

3 out of 5 stars Parts do not equal a whole..........2007-06-16

Haunted struck me as a gimmick: A collection of short stories and (poorly written) poetry, strung together by a thin main plot. Throw in a glow in the dark cover, and you have a marketing package fit for an R.L. Stine book.

The stories themselves are miss and hit. I enjoyed many of them immensely, such as Gut, the most famous of the collection, which, supposedly, caused 22 people to faint during Palahniuk's readings of the story, which is about the sexual experiments of three boys which all end in disaster, Obsolete, a Sci-Fi story about a world that has found heaven on Venus, and devises a plan to force 'immigration' on the world's population, Foot Work, about practitioners of alternative medicine turned prostitutes and assassins, and Dog Years, about...well, this one is best read fresh. Palahniuk has a talent for concocting strange and humorous situations, and creating interesting characters. Note that interesting does not mean well developed. Many of his characters are simply a collection of eccentricities.

Some of the other stories, such as Dissertation and Green Room, left me puzzled, and not in a good way. I simply didn't get them. But perhaps that's my fault.

I intended to write a summary of each story, but in reading the list of them, I've forgotten what many of them were about. Take from that what you will.

Given Palahniuk's talent for memorable characters, it's strange that the main characters of the main plot, the glue that holds this collection together, or holds it down, depending on perspective, seemed like the same person. The flat characters may have been Palahniuk's intent, given the heavy-handed symbolism of the novel. But instead of leaving me enlightened, it left me yawning.


The plot also left me incredulous. That so many people would mutilate themselves for their fifteen minutes is unlikely, and that none of them died from infection or blood loss is unlikely.

Yes, we get it. Reality TV is bad. A message doesn't make a good book, especially a message widely accepted.

Is this book worth reading? Yes, if you've read Palahniuk and know what to expect. I enjoyed the gross-out, which often bordered on gratuitous, because I'm used to it. But others may only be disgusted, instead of delighted AND disgusted. If you do decide to give this one a go, get it from the library or the second-hand book store, and skip the main plot and the poems. Pretend this is a book of short stories, and not a novel of them.

1 out of 5 stars Yuck for Chuck.......2007-06-01

I love Chuck Palahniuk's work - I've read everything. This one seemed desparate, though. Palahniuk has always been creatively sick, and frankly, that's what I've loved. And although, this book was sick, and I'll even give it creative, the two didn't blend well together. The premise was terrific, and I had high hopes. The execution, however, was just plain hard to stomach. I don't want to read chapter after chapter of people starving to death, detailed descriptions of their body fluids, and a blow by blow of the disintegration of civility. That was done much better in Lord of the Flies. The book also has one of the worst endings I've ever read. Love Chuck - hate this book

4 out of 5 stars Engrossing, page turner.......2007-05-13

I liked this book. Chuck has his own style and he keeps it alive and kicking in this book. Once you get started in this book it moves along very well, the stories keep you glued,some shocking others thought provoking either way it's a good fun read. I didn't give it 5 stars because I didn't care for the Ending but if your a fan of Chuck like I am this is a must read.

2 out of 5 stars This is not "A Novel".......2007-05-10

This is what's happened here, folks, if you're curious. Short story collections are very hard to sell - many bestselling authors will merely do okay with their short story collections, with a few exceptions. So what this author has done is collected a bunch of stories over the years and tried to milk the collection for the same kind of sales he'd get for a novel. The result is: some quite good shock-value short stories tied together very tenuously indeed, to a thin convoluted plot concerning not characters but a bunch of odd names. Characters? What characters? Each is identical, aside a few details we're told about, as opposed to shown. Each has identical motivation, speech, and defects. They all react identically to each situation. In reality you'd be flat out finding one person so demented he'd be willing to cannibalize others just for fame and money, yet I'm supposed to accept there are more than a dozen of them here. The book is a cynical fake, in its intent and its tone.

The passages between short stories took all my determination to keep reading. Such flat, ineffectual, insincere padding I don't think I've ever encountered before. The poems? Thankfully they were short. The short stories? They weren't all bad, although why anyone would accuse the author of possessing literary merit I don't know - it's shock value, gross-out humour. Nothing wrong with that, but there's something wrong with falsely advertising this book as a novel.

Haunted (Women of the Otherworld, Book 5)
Average customer rating: 4 out of 5 stars
  • Loved It!
  • Seriously creative
  • Wonderful
  • A wee bit different, but truly stunning anyway
  • Haunted exceeded my expectations.
Haunted (Women of the Otherworld, Book 5)
Kelley Armstrong
Manufacturer: Spectra
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Mass Market Paperback

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  5. Bitten (Women of the Otherworld, Book 1)

ASIN: 0553587080
Release Date: 2005-05-31

Book Description

THE CONTINUING ADVENTURES OF THE SMART, SEXY — SUPERNATURAL — WOMEN OF THE OTHERWORLD

Eve Levine — half-demon, black witch and devoted mother — has been dead for three years. She has a great house, an interesting love life and can’t be killed again — which comes in handy when you’ve made as many enemies as Eve. Yes, the afterlife isn’t too bad — all she needs to do is find a way to communicate with her daughter, Savannah, and she’ll be happy.

But fate — or more exactly, the Fates — have other plans. Eve owes them a favor, and they’ve just called it in. An evil spirit called the Nix has escaped from hell. She feeds on chaos and death, and is very good at persuading people to kill for her. The Fates want Eve to hunt her down before she does any more damage, but the Nix is a dangerous enemy — previous hunters have been driven insane in the process. As if that’s not problem enough, the only way to stop her is with an angel’s sword. And Eve is no angel. . . .

Download Description

“Armstrong has created a persuasive, finely detailed other-worldly cosmology — featuring sorcery, astral projection, spells, telepathy and teleportation.”
—Toronto Star


From the Paperback edition.

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Loved It!.......2007-04-01

I am new to this author and this series. However, I have blown through five books in about a month (which is AMAZING as I have a 1-year-old at home) which means I gave valuable SLEEP TIME up to read them. The book was a great easy read with characters that you can't help but root for and villians you can't wait to see fail. Although I have a few more to read, I am already missing all the characters when I am done...

5 out of 5 stars Seriously creative.......2007-03-29

After "Bitten" I think "Haunted" is may favorite of the Women of the Otherworld series. I'm not really sure I could tell you why exactly. Maybe it's because the setting is so different-it's the real world with a hidden layer, it's literally the underworld, or multiple underworlds. And it's just so well built.

The afterlife world of Kelley Armstrong draws a lot from Greek mythology. First there are the three fates, who determine the outcome of mortal lives, but they basically run the ghost lives as well and act as a sort of supernatural enforcing agency for pesky ghost-such as our new narrator, Eve the half demon witch ghost who makes a real pest of herself. Then there are different levels of the underworld, hell dimensions of varying badness, places for the angels (yup there are angels) a whole world for the supernatural departed, maybe more than one, and even some opportunities for reincarnation-if you deserve it. It's a little bit like Hades, only more modern.

Now, as you may recall from "Industrial Magic" Eve owes the Fates a major favor for getting them to send a misplaced Paige and a very dead Lucas back to earth, now they've decided to collect, which interrupts her bust schedule of Savanna watching. Kristof, Savanna's father (from "Dime Store Magic" and yes, he's dead too, remember?) is not too pleased Eve can't let go of mortal life and join him in happy dead love (apparently they really did love each other) and thinks this will be a great distraction. Except it turns out Eve's favor is to hunt down a demi-demon serial killer called the Nix who gives people who want to kill that extra will power.

This turns into a fabulous action packed story with Jamie Vegas, our favorite celebrity necro, a demon in a castle, an angle who reads entertainment weekly and the freakiest and most imaginative hell ANYONE has ever come up with. Serious props to Kelley Armstrong for this book, her imagination was working way overtime.

And you gotta love the ending. I mean not only is just plain fall down laughing ironic, but its pretty damm sweet. Another five star novel.

5 out of 5 stars Wonderful.......2007-01-12

Basically this story is Eve's story and it is about her being trapped in her afterlife that is not quite hell and not quite heaven. When the Fates call her in to repay a favor she accepts.

But the Nix that she is sent to bring back in is causing massive chaos and then it starts to affect Eve's life, by going after Savannah and her guardians, Paige and Lucas. Eve, with the help of Kristof, her ex-lover, must do all it takes to bring down this Nix.

5 out of 5 stars A wee bit different, but truly stunning anyway.......2006-11-10

The main character in this part of the series underwent trials and tribulations that required a great deal of imagination and research, but she pulled it off and you can't help being along for the ride, as Kelley always manages to take us. Hurrah for the tale that kept me wondering til the end!

5 out of 5 stars Haunted exceeded my expectations........2006-09-02

I waited until I was done with all of the other books in this series to read this one because I really didn't expect much of it (based on some of the reviews on here. To my pleasant surprise though, Haunted was every bit as good as the other books in the series. Eve is a very compelling character, and the plot of the book doesn't slow down at all from the moment it begins. Typically I enjoy Ms. Armstrongs' werewolf books in this series more than her witch based books, but this one defiantly ranks at the top of the series.
Haunted : A Novel of Stories
Average customer rating: 3 out of 5 stars
  • Chuck's entertaining and exploratory adventure into horror
  • you must have not actually read the book
  • Not what one would expect....
  • An excellent read!
  • Not his best but...
Haunted : A Novel of Stories
Chuck Palahniuk
Manufacturer: Doubleday
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Hardcover

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ASIN: 0385509480
Release Date: 2005-05-03

Book Description

Haunted by Chuck Palahniuk is a novel made up of stories: Twenty-three of them, to be precise. Twenty-three of the most horrifying, hilarious, mind-blowing, stomach-churning tales you’ll ever encounter—sometimes all at once. They are told by people who have answered an ad headlined “Writers’ Retreat: Abandon Your Life for Three Months,” and who are led to believe that here they will leave behind all the distractions of “real life” that are keeping them from creating the masterpiece that is in them. But “here” turns out to be a cavernous and ornate old theater where they are utterly isolated from the outside world—and where heat and power and, most important, food are in increasingly short supply. And the more desperate the circumstances become, the more extreme the stories they tell—and the more devious their machinations become to make themselves the hero of the inevitable play/movie/nonfiction blockbuster that will surely be made from their plight.

Haunted is on one level a satire of reality television—The Real World meets Alive. It draws from a great literary tradition—The Canterbury Tales, The Decameron, the English storytellers in the Villa Diodati who produced, among other works, Frankenstein—to tell an utterly contemporary tale of people desperate that their story be told at any cost. Appallingly entertaining, Haunted is Chuck Palahniuk at his finest—which means his most extreme and his most provocative.

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Chuck's entertaining and exploratory adventure into horror.......2007-05-24

Overall, Palahniuk did a marvelous job of cobbling disparate stories into the framework of a writer's retreat.

The story 'Guts' is nearly the most awful thing you'll read, personally I thought the worse thing i read was the story of the police rape doll story. It changed my life: yet I cannot say for the better. I cannot eat southern biscuits and that white gravy anymore, for example.

Some have compared Haunted to Stephen King, and I disagree. SK is-in my view- not so clever, he's like mass production horror. I read it, i get it. Haunted is more Kurt Vonnegut, and less twilight zone, more shock-value. Gross-out in bite-size chunks. IF you like this, the book is for you. Otherwise, leave it alone.

Some say the book's cannabalism theme is a metaphor in that 'all artists are thieves'. Powerful! So from a metawriting perspective, who is Chuck intimating he stole these stories from? Could be from all the fascinating weirdies in Portland. Since after all, Portland is quite weird. After reading stranger than fiction, the lines between the two are pretty well blurred by his colorful and envious experience touched up here and there.

5 out of 5 stars you must have not actually read the book.......2007-04-11

i was actually quite upset to read some reviews on this book. It seemed like people either didn't understand it or skipped through pages. First of all, of course the story may seem unbelievable.. ITS FICTION!!!! it doesn't have to take place in a reality scenario. Second, if you actually paid attention to the story, people weren't chopping off their fingers because they were hungry; they wanted to look tortured. Sure, the idea may have been far fetched but thats what made it so interesting. and whose to complain about this story if you've read "lullaby". in my opinion, "lullaby" was more 'unbelievable'.

Overall, i believe this was one of Chucks best novels. I couldn't put the book down because all of the characters storys were so incredibly interesting. I even found the overall story (the writers being in the old movie theater) mind grabbing.

I would also recommend "Choke"

5 out of 5 stars Not what one would expect...........2007-03-15

Unless you've read something other than Fight Club by Chuck. This book is amazing. My personal favorite of his books. The first couple of stories make you want to burn the book, but you will find yourself telling the stories to your friends later that night and telling them to read the book. I couldn't put this one down. I would also highly recommend Lullaby and Choke.

4 out of 5 stars An excellent read!.......2007-01-23

The basic plot of Haunted is that a group of aspiring writers has agreed to join a retreat for 3 months. In this time, they will be shut off from the outside world completely and not be allowed to leave. Palahniuk sets this scene and then tells the story of what happens when the writers are locked up through both standard prose detailing the events and a series of short stories and poems that are written by the characters. I found this to be a very effective and satisfying experience - in that it was more than just a tome of short stories. Each of the stories lives as its own entity but can also be considered as part of the whole.

The short stories start out with the almost infamous "Guts", which had been published previously. Many have been shocked by this story (there were reports of people passing out at readings of this during Palahniuk's press tour) and rightfully so but given that it is the first short work presented, I actually found the end of the book, as the center really starts to fall apart, much more over the top.

And there is that aspect to contend with - is a story being told here or is the reader just being pushed along by a wink and a suggestion that it can't get any more brutal or depraved [and then does]? That line in Palahniuk's work has always been there but I see the question arising most in this book and in [u]Invisible Monsters[/u]. There are points where it seems like the story is really just about pushing hard and farther - not advancing the plot or making a comment. But it's only up for debate - not a definite problem.

Leaving that, the plot follows that the writers almost immediately begin to plot how their 3 months of captivity can someday be turned into a movie detailing the trauma they've gone through; a very topical point in today's society of book deals before the bodies are cold and moving onto the next, worse news item of the day before the blood has even been cleaned up. This atmosphere at the retreat feeds on itself and the writers all begin to disfigure themselves - to better sell the story of torture; watching the other writers and hoping for their deaths so that the profits can be split a few less ways.

I give the book 4 stars; it's not Palahniuk's best work - some of the short stories miss by a wide margin, or are shocking for the sake of being shocking, but in the overall arc of a story - it comes together and works as a whole unit. Excellent and enjoyable read!

4 out of 5 stars Not his best but..........2007-01-13

This is a strange book. It's a fun read as long as you are in the mood for Palahniuk.
House of Spirits and Whispers: The True Story of a Haunted House
Average customer rating: 4 out of 5 stars
  • Great reading!
  • Love it!
  • readers will be hooked
  • One of the best of it's kind.
  • Not believable
House of Spirits and Whispers: The True Story of a Haunted House
Annie Wilder
Manufacturer: Llewellyn Publications
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback

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ASIN: 0738707775

Book Description

Annie Wilder suspected the funky 100-year-old house was haunted when she saw it for the first time. But nothing could have prepared her for the mischievous and downright scary antics that take place once she, her two children, and her cats move into the rundown Victorian home. Disembodied conversation, pounding walls, glowing orbs, and mysterious whispers soon escalate into full-fledged ghostly visits-provoking sheer terror that, over time, transforms into curiosity. Determined to make peace with her spirit guests, she invites renowned clairvoyant Echo Bodine over and learns fascinating details about each of the entities residing there.

Wilder's gripping tale provides a compelling glimpse into the otherworldly nature of the lonely spirits, protective forces, phantom pets, and departed loved ones that occupy her remarkable home.

Annie Wilder (Minnesota) is a mother and writer. She continues to bravely live in her spooky old house with three cats and numerous ghosts. This is her first book.

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Great reading!.......2007-06-22

I had heard about this book so I decided to give it a try. I was NOT disappointed. Annie Wilder is a talented and BRAVE lady. I would love to meet her one day just to hear more about her encounters. Read this book and you won't be able to put it down.

5 out of 5 stars Love it!.......2007-05-15

This book was fascinating from the beginning. I read it in two sittings. I've had experiences with ghosts since I was a child. In fact, the house my parents lived in when I was born was haunted by the couple who lived there before them. This mystery of a book not only intrigued me, but brought back memories as well. A fine book worth anyone's shelf.

5 out of 5 stars readers will be hooked.......2007-05-05

Some houses call to us and we just know it will become our home; some houses have spirits that do the calling. Can a haunted house be home? Of course it can, and probably more so than some others if you can get along with the previous residents. After all, the spirits don't want to leave their home so it must be the perfect place! Annie Wilder finds out just how haunted her new home is, and shares her experiences with readers in her book "House of Spirits and Whispers."

Leon was the previous owner of the house and he wasn't ready to move out when he passed on. It seems Leon was quite picky about who was to move in because out of all the people who were shown the house, Annie was the chosen one. She respected Leon's presence right from the beginning and in the end was grateful for his being there. A good number of spirits frequented Annie's house. Some were former residents of the 100-year-old home, and others were just passersby, perhaps visiting from the funeral home across the way. Annie gives testament to the numerous goings on that she and her children, and her friends and family experienced.

From knocks on the wall in the middle of the night, to whispers coming through the radiators (even in the summer), from a timely touch on the shoulder to appearances at parties, spiritual happenings were frequent. Through the years Annie developed her own abilities and even astral traveled in the house only to meet up with two sister spirits who apparently disapproved of her practice. If you realize that you live among spirits you become more attuned to them, and Annie certainly did.

The story is quite interesting. Who doesn't wish to discover the secrets of their home? The author openly shares what she finds and right from the beginning readers will be hooked. A fascinating tale, well told.

5 out of 5 stars One of the best of it's kind........2007-04-10

I have read and collect several books on the paranormal and haunting. I must say that to date this is my favorite. It isn't told by a so called professional, nor is it blabbering on about someone elses experience. It was very believable and I felt the author was also very real and relatable. The occurances that happened in this home were from my own personal knowledge very much a typical haunting without all of the extra dramatization in so many books of this kind. I absolutely loved the description of the house as well. I only wish there could have been some pictures of that beautiful old house included.

2 out of 5 stars Not believable.......2007-04-06

I've read many books of this genre, and this is so far the one I dislike the most. I'm not saying the author is a bad writer, she is very good at telling stories and sounds like a nice person. However, this book has very few accounts of real haunts. She considers dreams as real accounts or out-of-body experiences, which in my opinion are still just dreams. From the beginning it felt like she was expecting to find ghosts from day one and most of her perception seem like she truly wants to see something happen, like she's trying too hard. Also, she just assumes, also from day one, that the house is haunted by the last owner who just died. It seems like wishful thinking to me, I mean, it's an old house, it's bound be have many deaths in its history, and one can get really imaginative living in it.

I believe and like to read about the supernatural, but this book didn't convince me one bit.
Killed by Clutter (Dell Mystery)
Average customer rating: 3 out of 5 stars
  • Really Reaching
  • charming cozy
Killed by Clutter (Dell Mystery)
Leslie Caine
Manufacturer: Dell
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Mass Market Paperback

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ASIN: 0440335981
Release Date: 2007-02-27

Book Description

At first glance, decorator Erin Gilbert fell in love with the charming little bungalow on a quiet street in Crestview, Colorado. Until she stepped inside. There, eccentric widow Helen Walker has created a maze of bric-a-brac, papers, and just plain junk that she won’t throw out. Even worse: two bizarre deaths have convinced Helen she is being stalked by a serial killer–and that any one of her nosy friends and neighbors might be to blame.

Erin has been hired to bring the home back to life–and she’s not going to back down, even when her insufferable, irresistible competitor, Steve Sullivan, barges in. But it doesn’t take long for Erin to realize that there is a method to her client’s madness. A murderer does haunt this makeover. And somewhere in the clutter is at least one thing to die for.

Customer Reviews:

2 out of 5 stars Really Reaching.......2007-04-14

The problem with so many cozies these days is that authors try to be innovative in the jobs they give their main characters, and they end up giving us characters whose involvement in murder makes no sense.

The book is best summed up by a line from the character of Steve, talking to the main character, Erin: "You were acting like a member of the family instead of their designer."

Erin is hired to declutter a house. In less than 12 hours, she's the homeowner's confidante, rushing to her aid at all hours, sticking her nose into family business that has nothing to do with her. She puts her livelihood on the line, as well as Steve's, without a second thought, and then defends herself when there really is no defense. The fact that Steve would even want to partner up with someone who has no concern for him and his business was completely unbelievable.

Also, the Gilbert and Sullivan thing has already been done by Selma Eichler -- that made it doubly annoying to me.

4 out of 5 stars charming cozy .......2007-03-04

Colorado Interior decorator Erin Gilbert enjoys walking through a house that she is seeing for the first time and redesigning each room in her head. So when she first observes the outside home of Helen Walker, Erin is euphoric as the Crestview bungalow is a designer's delight. Euphoric as this seems, it is also a nice easy job though she knows she must show proper respect to the grieving owner. Then she steps inside; to her horror she concludes the cluttered home needs weapons of mass destruction as Helen and her recently deceased sister kept anything and everything. The surviving sibling refuses to toss out what is classic junk clutter.

Still Helen tries to organize, mess and pitch what is obviously worthless in terms of money or sentiment. The problem is Helen insists everything has sentimental value. Helen's neighbor Rachel and Erin's two friends Teddy and Kay support the surviving sister' frustrating Erin who may dump her so-called pals if they don't mind their business. However, these intrusions are irritants; the fourth invader causes colossal issues as that unknown visitor leaves behind murdered bodies amidst the clutter.

The fourth Domestic Bliss mystery (see DEATH BY INFERIOR DESIGN and MANOR OF DEATH) is a charming cozy especially when Erin is cleaning the house or furthering her relationaship rivalry with competitor Steve Sullivan. However, that is also the weakness of the story line as the homicides come across as just additional clutter to clean up when the heroine gets around to it. Still Leslie Caine provides a fun domestic tale starring a harassed heroine struggling with saving a house on the verge of being KILLED BY CLUTTER, something this reviewer can relate to.

Harriet Klausner

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  1. Undead and Unemployed (Berkley Sensation)
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  3. Come Out Tonight
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  6. The Cemetery: WITH Freeze Tag AND The Fever (Point Horror Collections)
  7. The Brewing Storm (Charmed S.)
  8. Psychosphere
  9. Unexpected Magic: Collected Stories
  10. Tremors: Headmasters Ghost

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