Book Description
Book 3 in the Wonderland series Professor Annie Travis is an academic force to be reckoned with. No one sees the true Annie, the shy, inexperienced southern lady taught to hide her every need and desire. No one except the King of Diamonds. Karn draws Annie into his magical world, intent on teaching the teacher the true meaning of passion by dominating her and making her his submissive queen. But even as he teaches Annie how to free herself, Karn's dark past imprisons his heart and soul, keeping him from giving his love to any woman. Will Annie be able to turn the tables on Karn and teach him how to love again?
Customer Reviews:
Wonderland Series.......2007-09-14
Loved this book! I also purchased the 3 other books in the series,King of Hearts, King of Spades and King of Clubs. Would highly recommend them to everybody. I would read anything written by Cheyenne McCray.
The best yet..........2005-09-24
If you have followed the series, I think you will agree this is the best one yet. I don't think reviews should be a synopsis, of what is happening inside the cover of the book.So suffice it to say without giving anything away, great characters, the sex was as hot as Ms. McCray has ever written. Great story,
Hot and Steamy.......2005-09-04
This was great book. Annie who had never been in love and was still a virgin living a simple life. The King of Diamonds who brought Annie there to be his Queen. Not to love her but teach her to please him. They both have trust issues. Then when Annie was in danger he realized that he could love her but is it to late? Were they a perfect match for each other? The love scenes and hot and heavy. It's just makes you want the two of them to fall in love. This you must read.
not as good as the other 2.......2005-08-29
i read the hearts and spade portions of this group of books and found the diamonds segment a little too "cookie cutter". i did not get a "feel" for the characters and after a while, i did not care. i don't think i'll waste my money on the clubs edition.
Book 3: King of Diamonds.......2005-08-09
Back cover:
Professor Annie Travis is an academic force to be reckoned with. No one sees the true Annie, the shy, inexperienced southern lady taught to hide her every need and desire.
No one except the King of Diamonds. Karn draws Annie into his magical world, intent on teaching the teacher the true meaning of passion by dominating her and making her his submissive queen.
But even as he teaches Annie how to free herself, Karn's dark past imprisons his heart and soul, keeping him from giving his love to any woman. Will Annie be able to turn the tables on Karn and teach him how to love again?
Comments:
McCray did a good job picking up from where she left off in Book 2 of the Wonderland series. Annie, who does painting for a hobby, is feeling sad and blue because it's the anniversary of when her cousins disappeared. First Alice and then Alexi. Annie has a talent with painting and uses it as a place to find peace and solace. Anyways, Annie ends up doing an eerie painting that she has no recollection of doing and eventually finds herself being pulled in by no other than the King of Diamonds. Not to ruin the entire story, Annie is portrayed as having a gentle nature but yet having the courage to stand up to Karn when she feels he is asking too much of her. With her love and touch, Karn soon finds himself fighting not to fall under Annie's spell and opening his heart up to her. Though a bondage book, the sex is still steamy as ever. Annie is the perfect mate for Karn, but will he realize it before it is too late?
Average customer rating:
- Super Reader
- Cat Club Review: www.freewebs.com/hlgstrider
- An All-Time Adventure
- Good adventure yarn
- Great story, but skip this edition
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King Solomon's Mines (Modern Library Classics)
H. Rider Haggard
Manufacturer: Modern Library
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
19th Century | British | World Literature | Literature & Fiction | Subjects | Books
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ASIN: 0812966295
Release Date: 2002-12-10 |
Book Description
Touted by its 1885 publisher as “the most amazing story ever written,” King Solomon’s Mines was one of the bestselling novels of the nineteenth century. H. Rider Haggard’s thrilling saga of elephant hunter Allan Quatermain and his search for fabled treasure is more than just an adventure story, though: As Alexandra Fuller explains in her Introduction, in its vivid portrayal of the alliances and battles of white colonials and African tribesmen, King Solomon’s Mines “brings us the world of extremes, of the absurdly tall tales and of the illogical loyalty between disparate people that still informs this part of the world.”
Customer Reviews:
Super Reader.......2007-08-26
King Solomon's Mines is a story of a man's search for his brother, and told from the point of view the famous hero and hunter, Allan Quatermain.
He is the man they turn to for help, and become is solid and steadfast companions. The search for the Mines, the battles, the evil witch woman and the African setting are all excellent.
Cat Club Review: www.freewebs.com/hlgstrider.......2007-07-13
King Solomon's Mines is a straight forward adventure story. Two friends enlist the services of a crusty guide and a strong minded native to tramp across Africa in search for a missing brother, a brother who in turn was lost while searching for one of the greatest treasures known to legend (see title). To do so they must cross the desert, climb the mountains, confront an evil witch, and fight an epic battle.
It's a quick read and a pleasant one. Only one bit goes down sour, a bit of racism residual from the time period. While one of the lead characters, Umbopa, is a strong, intelligent African man, an interracial love story is cut short by death, followed by the observation that white and black cannot marry anymore than day and night. Not exactly the most enlightened point of view.
I love the writing and the story. If you could cut out that paragraph all would be well and this at least a four star book . . . but I suppose that would be revising history and literature, and so the book stands, or falls, as it is.
An All-Time Adventure.......2007-06-14
I got lost in this wonderful African adventure as I followed Allan Quatermain on a quest to find the lost mines of King Solomon.
At age twenty-nine, Haggard made a whimsical bet with his brother that he could write a story as good as Robert Louis Stevenson's "Treasure Island" (1883). Six weeks later, Haggard completed King Solomon's Mines (1885).
This is proof that given the right time, circumstances, and motivation a novel can come forth quickly. See my review of "Singer in the Shadows," by Irving Litvag and my comments on Joseph Smith composing the Book of Mormon. Click here, then scroll down to my review of Litvag's book. SINGER IN THE SHADOWS the Strange Story of Patience Worth
Also highly recommended as an African adventure is "Cry Wolf," by Wilbur Smith. Cry Wolf
Good adventure yarn.......2007-02-27
Although fiction is not my normal fodder, I found this book to be refreshing. It narrates the harrowing quest of a few men for diamonds, for a missing brother, and for home. The villians were truly vile, the heroes were larger than life, and it was fun to be with them on their journey. No major theses were given, no important life questions were answered, but it made a few of my evenings a little more enjoyable.
Great story, but skip this edition.......2006-07-09
This review covers only the Gateway Movie Classics edition, softcover, 1999.
What a thrill to revisit this gripping story that I enjoyed in childhood so much. Good writing, excellent story-telling, if you're not too squeamish to tolerate late 19th century colonialist literature.
But skip this edition. Mainly because of the numerous typos scattered inanely through the book...periods dropped into the middle of sentences, rogue exclamation points, and words inaccurately transcribed as though an original text had been OCR scanned without any professional quality checking. Inexusable in a professional publication. And, frankly, I don't think the movie is all that great, so the cover photo of a film version Quatermain doesn't do much for me.
Get another edition!
Product Description
For more than 70 years, the unique characteristics and lore of colored diamonds have been highlighted in Gems & Gemology, the quarterly journal of the Gemological Institute of America. Now it's all available in one complete reference volume, titled Gems & Gemology in Review: Colored Diamonds. Edited by John M. King, the book contains more than 100 notable articles originally published in G&G. This superbly illustrated volume comes with a 20-page booklet of color grading charts that demonstrates GIA's color grading system for fancies. Both are enclosed in a durable, attractive slipcase.
Customer Reviews:
colorful accurate review.......2007-03-30
Colored Diamonds is a beautiful book, beautifully presented, beautiful photographs, and interesting useful information. In one splash, GIA and G&G are again in front of everyone else. I enjoyed this book so much that I sent a note to the Editor-in-Chief asking her to let everyone who collaborated on it know how much I thought of this book and their effort in putting it together. I have been in this field for over 50 years, yet this work makes me realize that there is still so much that I do not know or only partially know. Information on historical colored diamonds is scattered among many publications and it is very useful to have it all together in one book. I would highly recommend it for anyone working in this field.
Book Description
Power, pageantry, and pride
Queen Victoria ruled the most powerful empire the world has ever seen, covering one fourth of the earth's land surface, reigning over subjects on every continent, and exercising undisputed mastery of the oceans in between. She was the "Grandmother of Europe," with descendants occupying the thrones of half a dozen nations, and more to come. The very era in which she lived already bore her name. In June 1897, her proud and prosperous nation marked her sixtieth year on the throne of England with the most lavish display of pomp, circumstance, wealth, and affection in its history.
Twilight of Splendor presents a breathtaking portrait of a sovereign and her empire at the height of their global power. Focusing on the spectacle of Queen Victoria's Diamond Jubilee, it combines a thrilling account of that massive celebration with an intimate exploration of Victoria's world—her splendid palaces and possessions, the grand banquets and balls she hosted, her immense wealth, the politicians and courtiers who did her bidding, her confidence and assertiveness as a ruler, her surprising personal humility, and her perpetual state of mourning for her beloved husband, Prince Albert.
Based on hundreds of published and unpublished sources from the period, including Queen Victoria's private correspondence and personal journals, Twilight of Splendor is must reading for Anglophiles, Victorian-history buffs, and anyone interested in the golden age of monarchy.
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The first book to portray the queen and her court in the last years of her reign
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Contrasts the queen's private and public images in her efforts to solidify the monarchy
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Exposes the queen's difficult relations with her children
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Explores the queen's relationship with her extended European royal relatives
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Draws together for the first time hundreds of disparate sources
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Includes a number of rare photographs complementing the text
Customer Reviews:
Measured days and grand celebrations of the Widow of Windsor.......2007-09-15
One of my favorite authors on the subject of royalty continues to be Greg King. He has focused most of his work on Tsarist Russia, but now with Twilight of Splendor he has taken a look at one of the most pivotal years of Great Britain's Queen Victoria -- a monarch who set her mark on an entire century, and whose presence still lingers today.
King takes one year in the Queen's life, and explores her daily life, starting first with an outline of her childhood, and marriage to Prince Albert of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha, and then to some of the momentous events of the years 1896-1897, when she became Britain's longest reigning monarch, and the festivities surrounding her Diamond Jubilee year to celebrate sixty years on the throne. By this time Victoria was not just a queen, but also Empress of India, and the British Empire was indeed a land where the sun never set. Colonies and possessions sent emissaries and gifts, all building towards a grand festival in London to mark the occansion.
But King goes beyond a mere listing of Queen Victoria's children and grandchildren -- he explores the rather tempetuous relationships that she had with them, especially her daughters. Neither were her sons spared the maternal disapproval either -- her eldest son Bertie, the Prince of Wales, she blamed for his father's death and his social life brought further displeasure. He in turn, took out his frustrations at not having any sort of decision-making in political roles in hard living, mostly involving smoking, chasing women and sport. Nor was Bertie the only fast living Royal -- daughter Louise was notorious for her acid tongue and mischief making, and Helena developed a near crippling addiction to opium.
The most interesting section was an exploration of the various courtiers that surrounded the Queen. There was an enormous army of servants, from those who laboured in the royal kitchens, footmen who carried messages and opened doors, housemaids who swept and scrubbed and tidied, all the way up to the aristocratic men that oversaw their work. While these men would never be confidants or friends, they would form close bonds of trust with the Queen, working with her for years, until ill-health or death remove them from the office. Much more shadowy were the servants that worked more closely with the Queen, most notorious being a Scotsman by the name of John Brown, of whom it was said that the queen had actually married him, and after his death, two Indian servants who were arrogant scoundrels.
The Queen's court of servants, family and attendants moved in a predictible round of seasons and holidays. Springtime and most of summer were spent at the castle complex at Windsor, autumn in the Scottish highlands at Balmoral, and winter at Osborne House on the Isle of Wight. Buckingham Palace was a place that the Queen loathed to stay in, and it was only during the most formal of events that the queen would stay at the Palace for even a night. In addition, the Queen and her household would holiday on the French Riviera every two months in springtime, an activity that continued from 1890 to nearly the very end of her long life. Pilgrimages would be made to her beloved husband's tomb every year on the anniversary of his death.
And sometimes, relatives would visit from the far reaches of the world to visit. One of the more momentous occansions was when one of Victoria's favorite granddaughters visited during the autumn of 1897. Alix and her siblings had been raised mostly by the Queen after the death of their mother, Alice, and Alix had been wooed and won by Nicholas II, Tsar of Russia. Now Alix was Empress, and with her husband and child went to visit as the new couple toured Europe after their coronation. Another momentous occansion that is covered is the grand costumed affair at the height of the London season at Devonshire House. Royalty and aristocracy mingled, as much to show off their wealth, and to be seen and see. Several ladies managed to arrive as the same characters from history, accompanied by much glaring. Other little snippets included the rituals of garden parties and presentations, Christmas celebrations, and finally the Diamond Jubilee itself.
I have to say that this was a real eyeopener of a book. All too often authors skip over the people who kept the various castles and palaces running and livable. King also adds in plenty of gossipy details, little touches that help to make these stiff figures from formal portraits come alive as well. While King's narrative does get repetitous what with the same descriptive passages being used over and over, the story does move along crisply, with quite a bit of detail being given. There are several inserts of black and white photos and etchings as well. Along with the bibliography and footnotes, there is an appendix that list the various members of the Queen's hosuehold during the final years of her life.
For anyone interested in the details of how royals lived in the nineteenth century, this is a splendid read. I discovered that the royalty of the time were imprisoned as much as they ruled from a golden, rather spendid, cage. Days were carefully measured and plotted out, and oridinary people and the journalists were just as curious about them as they are now in the twenty-first century. While the reading does get a bit dull in spots, it's still enjoyable, and there's quite a bit of humor here and there to liven things up.
Recommended.
A Glimpse Of A Vanished World.......2007-07-19
This is the story of Queen Victoria and the Court of St. James during her Diamond Jubilee Year, 1897. Victoria was a unique individual. Queen since the age of 18, she held vast power and oversaw enormous change. Her emotions were always raw and her opinions of others, especially of her own children and relations, usually set in stone. She was at once free thinking and hidebound, extremely old fashioned in some ways yet very modern in others. No one else was quite like her, as people acknowledged even during her own lifetime.
Greg King has chosen an interesting year as his focus for this portrait of the Queen and her court. The Diamond Jubilee is often considered the apogee of the British Empire. Even while the Jubilee was going on, some prescient Englishmen (Rudyard Kipling for one with his poem "Recessional") were aware that troubles lay ahead. The Queen herself was past her prime in 1897, blind, arthritic, and more querulous than ever. King has traced Queen Victoria's life through the Jubilee Year, following her from Windsor to Balmoral to Osborne to Buckingham Palace to Cimiez and back again. He describes each of her palaces in great detail, and traces the daily life of the Queen in each of them. He also traces the lives of the courtiers who lived with and supported her. I enjoyed reading about these ever patient and considerate men and women, who spent their days catering to the Queen's whims. Henry and Frederick Ponsonby, Sir James Reid, Lady Jane Churchill, and the others in the court must have been in a continuous state of aggravation and exhaustion, to say nothing of the poor maids who were expected to dance attendance on the Queen at any and every hour of the day and night.
King writes well but sometimes bogs down in his descriptions, particularly when he goes into needless detail about the position of the furniture or the details of those elaborate Victorian gowns and uniforms. Sometimes it seems as if he is quoting verbatim from newspaper accounts, with little first hand information from letters or diaries of some of the participants or from the Queen herself. Nevertheless I enjoyed this book because it let me see the Court pretty much as the Queen herself saw it in her last years. I also found the last pages, which describe the last days and death of the Queen, very sad but extremely moving.
Customer Reviews:
excellent!.......1999-05-04
This is actually the only one of the Jewel Kingdom books that I have not read (my daughter gets them first) but all of the others have been wonderful. The only reason that I am not giving it five stars as I would have two years ago is that the books are just a little easy now for my nine year old where they were perfect for 7. I personally really enjoy the high moral tone. The books teach good manners and good conduct with out ever preaching either. Having a child who reads these books is to have a more tractable, better behaved and happier child. A reminder to "act like a Princess" will help make difficult decisions easier.
Book Description
When first published, in 1885, King Solomon's Mines was an enormous popular success. The narrative follows the explorations of Allan Quatermain, a fortune hunter who travels to Africa in search of ancient treasures and a lost fellow explorer. Written as an adventure story, the novel is also a late-Victorian imperial romance that illuminates the politics of British imperialist capitalism in 1870s and 1880s South Africa.
This edition includes a provocative critical introduction that discusses the novel's relations to Victorian anthropological thought. The appendices include contemporary reviews, other writings by Haggard on Africa and romance, and documents focusing on imperialism and diamond mining in South Africa in the 1870s and 1880s.
Customer Reviews:
King Solomon's Mines from a kid`s perspective.......2007-02-11
As a kid I loved this book. The story was an amazing story with wonderful characters. In a way the story was suspenful because of the standoffs between different characters.
African Adventure!.......2006-03-05
This is a Victorian era novel of adventure in unexplored Africa. The plot centers on the search for a lost diamond mine, but contains daring treks through the wilderness, a civil war among African natives, and colorful descriptions of the landscape and people of Africa. This book represents the definition of the romantic image of the Age of Exploration during the Victorian era: intrepid explorers heading off into the wilds in search of fame and fortune. Several movies have been based on this book (and subsequent Haggard stories about Alain Quatermain), and the character Indiana Jones was based largely on Haggard's Quatermain. None of these films have manged to the capture flavor of Haggard's book on the big screen. If you liked the movie King Solomon's Mines with Stewart Granger and Deborah Kerr (undoubtedly the best of all the films), you will probably like this book even more. The main drawback of this book (at least for 21st century readers) is Haggard's subtle and not-so-subtle racism. The native Africans are at best noble savages, and often Haggard considers them to be much less. I've read elsewhere that Haggard wrote this after having read Treasure Island. He supposedly felt that he could write a better adventure story. This is the first of his twenty or so novels written at the end of the 19th and beginning of the 20th century. If true, he succeeded. This is a highly entertaining escapist read and I strongly recommend it.
Awesome Adventure.......2005-07-28
This is a great story! It's like Indiana Jones in 1895. I suspect that George Lucas based Indy on Allan Quatermain to an extent. Quatermain is a hunter in Africa, and has obtained an old map - drawn in blood no less - that gives directions to the fabled diamond mines of the biblical King Solomon. Accompanied by two other English men in search of treasure and a long lost brother, and a Zulu warrior who is not what he seems, they begin their arduous trek. Blazing deserts with no water, freezing mountains, an insane leader of a lost tribe and an evil witch all present challenges to the companions.
Both humour and adventure are commonplace in this tale, and anyone who dreams of treasure should pick up this gem.
Relic113
If you are thinking Debra Kerr you will be shocked........2004-09-09
I grew up on the movie so it was quit a shocker to read the book. As stated in the beginning there are no petticoated women in this book. It is a men's adventure written by a man for men. You can not miss the hand of H. Rider Haggard as he has a unique sense of humor that pops up at the strangest times. He may be a little verbose but every word has a use. And as with written stories this one is much more intricate than the movie adaptations. You will find many assumptions of the time such as any complex construction must have been built by white people and natives on their own may turn savage.
The story is told first person by Allan Quartermain. Nevil is off to make his fortune by finding King Solomon's lost diamond mines. Allan sends him a map to help. This is the last anyone heard from Nevil. Turns out that Nevil is really the estranged brother of Henry Curtis. Sir Henry Curtis now wants to make amends and he with his friend Captain John Good, bribe Allan Quartermain to take them across an endless desert and trough impassible mountains to an adventure that will hold you to the very end. Along with them is their self imposed helper Umbopa who carries a secret of his own.
If you get a chance to also hear the recording, an added plus is narration by John Richmond; He brings the characters to life and adds to the mystique that this story has been passed down.
Average customer rating:
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ABDUCTION, THE (The Double Diamond Triangle Saga , No 1)
J. Robert King
Manufacturer: Wizards of the Coast
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Mass Market Paperback
General | Puzzles & Games | Entertainment | Subjects | Books
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CONSPIRACY (Double Diamond Triangle Saga , No 6)
ASIN: 0786908645
Release Date: 1998-02-10 |
Customer Reviews:
So-so.......1998-04-17
On the eve of Lord Piergeiron's wedding to Lady Eidola of Neverwinter, nothing goes right. Lizardman, doppelgangers, and an assasination attempt are but the least of problems. This story sets the way for the introduction of the Utter East and bloodforges. The Realms date is sometime after the time of troubles.
Average customer rating:
- Good series, a bit of a let down towards the end.
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DIAMOND (Double Diamond Triangle Saga , No 9)
J. Robert King
Manufacturer: Wizards of the Coast
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Mass Market Paperback
General | Puzzles & Games | Entertainment | Subjects | Books
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MERCENARIES, THE (The Double Diamond Triangle Saga , No 3)
ASIN: 0786908726
Release Date: 1998-07-13 |
Customer Reviews:
Good series, a bit of a let down towards the end........1998-07-31
This was a good series. Good story, and good writing. However, I was a little let down at the end, not because of the writing, because of the story. It was confusing due to being rushed. Other than that, I liked it.
Customer Reviews:
Good book.......2002-11-07
Demetra trades a lock of her hair for a magic ball from a fourtune teller. Then trouble is melting white winterland!
Very good book for young and old!!!.......1999-05-09
This good book shows what can happen if you don't think about what you're doing first. Over all, I think everyone should read this book!
Both my daughters loved this book.......1999-05-02
My 8 year old reads this series to her 6 year old sister and they both love it. The Princesses are strong role models for little girls and help them to learn to deal with problems in a positive light. Although some form of magic is involved, the Princesses show good leadership and strong values. They learn to face problems without fear. How nice for little girls!
Interesting, fantasy-type reading for a 7 yr old girl........1998-11-01
My 7 yr old daughter has gotten attached to this series of books. The characters are her age, and all have a special power and an animal friend. She can read it by herself, which builds her confidence. Each story has a good moral.
Average customer rating:
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CONSPIRACY (Double Diamond Triangle Saga , No 6)
J. Robert King
Manufacturer: Wizards of the Coast
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Mass Market Paperback
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ASIN: 0786908696
Release Date: 1998-04-07 |
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