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Robert V. (rvriesman) - Reviews

1 to 8 of 8
The Monkey's Raincoat (Elvis Cole and Joe Pike, Bk 1)
The Monkey's Raincoat (Elvis Cole and Joe Pike, Bk 1)
Author: Robert Crais
Book Type: Paperback
  • Currently 3.8/5 Stars.
 221
Review Date: 1/19/2007
Helpful Score: 1


The first in the Elvis Cole series. Robert Crais is an LA author writing about LA Private Eye Elvis Cole. You will love his sidekick Joe Pike. Once I read this one...I had to read all the rest of the Cole series. Loved 'em all.


A Place To Come To
A Place To Come To
Author: Robert Penn Warren
Book Type: Hardcover
  • Currently 5/5 Stars.
 1
Review Date: 7/26/2009
Helpful Score: 1


This is without a doubt the most powerful novel that I have ever read. The story line is intricate, with the author providing deep insight into his characters. I have loaned this book to many people over the years since 1977 and not one managed to read the book without considerable tears. People are much more familiar with Warren's All the King's Men, but this is one novel that demands to be read again and again.


Santiago and the Drinking Party
Santiago and the Drinking Party
Author: Clay Morgan
Book Type: Hardcover
  • Currently 5/5 Stars.
 1
Review Date: 1/4/2007


I really liked this book. There is a poingnant and tragic ending. The author surprises you with a change of feeling. I wish this author had written more.


Stones for Ibarra
Stones for Ibarra
Author: Harriet Doerr
Book Type: Hardcover
  • Currently 4.5/5 Stars.
 2
Review Date: 7/19/2006


Wonderful little book.


Superwomen
Superwomen
Author: Jodi Buren
Book Type: Unknown Binding
  • Currently 4.5/5 Stars.
 1
Review Date: 7/20/2016


A great book to give to your daughter. Includes excellent photographs and biographies of incredible women.


Tropical Night Falling
Tropical Night Falling
Author: Manuel Puig
Book Type: Hardcover
  • Currently 5/5 Stars.
 1
Review Date: 7/19/2006


Same author as Kiss of the Spider Woman.


Vicar of Christ
Vicar of Christ
Author: Walter F. Murphy
Book Type: Hardcover
  • Currently 4.5/5 Stars.
 2
Review Date: 12/23/2008


What makes The Vicar of Christ extraordinary is that it porves itself by paradox-reconciling and weaving together strong, seemingly incompatible elements into a cohesive, memorable work quite unlike any other in recent fiction.

Ambitious in length and scope, the stage is nothing less than the contemporary world, its recent history and prophecy; while the focus, fromseveral points of view, is clearly upon a single man-an American-who rises to become Bishop of Rome.

As a narrative, The Vicar of Christ both reclaims and extends a tradition as old as the novel itself, But it is nto only its epic design, its profundity as a psychological study, and the riddle it poses of tame and fortune and their place in politics that distinguish this story. There is, too, the mosaic of shardlike details, each meticulously exact, that makes the whole the unique sum of its parts.

The sweep of the novel carries Declan Walsh out of two wars and thrusts him into the bright center of the civilized world: the Supreme Court of the United States and later, the Curia of the Vatican-whose rival political factions, with their craft, false promises, and betrayels, are, in many ways, far more treacherous battlefields that the windswept hills of Korea.

Central to the implacable logic of the plot is the evolution of Walsh's character. Decorated in war and honored in peace, Walsh apears the brightest of stars until a personal tragedy unleashes the dark, turbulent forces of his divided self. Haunted by remorse and the ghosts of sacrificed loved ones-men and women-Walsh retires from the Court to a Trappist monastery: and act as absolute as it is sudden. Time passes. Restored, Walsh reemerges to become Francesco 1, destined to lead the Church and the world it serves with a willfulness and fierce determination that, from the beginning, has marked others of similar stature. As Francesco's shadow lengthens, The Vicar of Christ becomes a compelling account of the exercise of power and its awesome effects within the social contract.

Finally, while illuminating the fiber of contemporary life-and particularly its institutions-The Vicar of Christ simultaneously reaches far back into the past-not only to paint the ancient mysteries of the Vatican in chiaroscuro, but to touch the essence of the prototypical tragic hero. Mr. Murphy has produced a novel that, to use Van Wyck Brooks' touchstone, combines "breadth, depth, and elevation."


Where There's a Will : Thoughts on the Good Life
Where There's a Will : Thoughts on the Good Life
Author: John Mortimer
Book Type: Hardcover
  • Currently 4.5/5 Stars.
 1
Review Date: 6/8/2009
Helpful Score: 1


A kind of a last book before dying by the author of lovable old Rumple of the Bailey. Moritmer abounds in old-fashioned common sense. The tolerance, humor, and shrewdness on display here are sorely needed in an increasingly illiberal age. Both entertaining and up to date. A first rate read into the mind of the creator of Rumpole.


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