Core2Duoノートレビュー 's review (Knocked me out!) 『I first heard Bliss McCain in Springdale Arkansas at a benefit concert for the Arts Center for the Ozarks. They came on right before my band and they just knocked me out. Their energy, enthusiasm and humour were just incredible. They had the house rockin' for sure. I imediately bought their Grandview CD and took it home for a listen. I was not disapointed. Not in the least. All of that onstage energy comes through in the recording. Their lyrics are super - very interesting, thoughtful and wry. I am recommending this one to all my friends.』 タイトル『 Struttin' My Stuff >
『CASSETTE SINGLE - SOLITUDE』 タイトル『 Charlie Rose with Brent Scowcroft, John McCain, Bob Graham, Kweisi Mfumi&Raymond Joseph; Jimmy Breslin (September 19, 1994) >
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price:$24.95
Charlie Rose
Usually ships in 24 hours 『First, a panel discusses the events unfolding in Haiti: the successful trip by the President's special envoys-- President Carter, General Powell, and Senator Nunn. Members of the discussion: General Brent Scowcroft, National Security Advisor during the Bush Administration; Republican Senator John McCain from Arizona; Democratic Senator Bob Graham from Florida; head of the Congressional Black Caucus, Kweisi Mfumi; and Raymond Joseph, the co-editor of the Haiti Observateur who was put into exile during the Duvalier regime, and now edits the paper here in New York. Finally, writer Jimmy Breslin talks about his Esquire article concerning people murdered out of jealousy and its connection to the O.J. Simpson case.
This product is manufactured on demand using DVD-R recordable media. Amazon.com's standard return policy will apply.』
タイトル『 Charlie Rose with Henry Paulson, Jr.; John J, Mack; John McCain (September 17, 2001) >
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price:$24.95
Charlie Rose, Inc.
Usually ships in 24 hours 『In honor of the re-opening of the stock market after the September 11th attacks, Charlie Rose talks with Henry Paulson Jr., Chairman and CEO of Goldman Sachs, and John J. Mack, CEO of Credit Suisse First Boston. They discuss financial recovery after the acts of terrorism. Next, Sen. John McCain talks about the preparations for war after the attacks.
This product is manufactured on demand using DVD-R recordable media. Amazon.com's standard return policy will apply.』
price:$7.99
Trinity Home Ent
Usually ships in 24 hours 『Studio: Peace Arch Home Entertain Release Date: 10/12/2006』 タイトル『 SUPERMAN FOR PRESIDENT Superhero Adult White T-shirt Tee Shirt >
『100% preshrunk cotton with design printed on the front, 5.6 oz with shoulder-to-shoulder tape with a seamless collar, and double needle construction throughout.』 タイトル『 We'll Do It Live!! Kids T Shirt 2T thru Youth XL >
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price:
『Great looking 100% cotton shirt. Please refer to our sizing chart for measurements.This design also available as a men's or women's tee shirt, and a men's hoodie and sweat shirt in our other amazon.com listings.』 タイトル『 Just Say No To McCain - 2008 Election Stickers (Small 5 x 1.4 in.) >
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price:$2.29
BumperSnickerz.com
『Size: Small 5 x 1.4 inches. This sticker is great for cycle helmets, bicycles, notebooks, etc』 タイトル『 McCain Bumper Sticker >
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price:$0.49
BumperTalk
『11" x 2.5" vinyl bumper sticker.』 タイトル『 Just Say No To McCain - Refrigerator Magnets 7x2 in >
price:$7.25
Company
Usually ships in 24 hours Core2Duoノートレビュー 's review (Almost Happy) 『 I was under the impression that the book would be new, however it appeared to be used. It was in good shape, but used.
So I was a little disappointed.』
(Must read Glory Denied) 『Tom Philpott is an outstanding author. His format and organization provide a perfect setting for the telling of the powerful, tragic story of Jim Thompson. This book is a must read.』
(An incredible read) 『The story of Col Thompson is truly remarkable. The thing that grabbed me the most was his constant struggle to regain the life he knew before he was captured. It made me think what would life be like if I spent 9 years away from everything I currently know. Think about it take the last 9 years out of your life and everything that was created, or music changes, clothing changes. Truly and incredible read. If you want to read a great book pick this one up.』
(GLORY DENIED) 『Of all the books I have read in my lifetime, none has moved me more then the story of Captain Floyd James Thompson!! He is without doubt one of America's greatest and most loyal and dedicated American's I have ever read about. As a Viet Nam Veteran I would venture to say that even the most Hardend Combat Veteran would be humbled by the story of Capt Floyd James Thompson!! An incredible story of an individual's will to not only survive in the most inhumane conditions but to maintaine the constant will to stay loyal and committed to his Flag and Country! After reading this book you will find that every day problems no matter how grave they may seem will seem miniescule! "Glory Denied" is a befitting title for the story of Captain Floyd James Thompson and his Family as he and they deserved so much more from our Country then was given! He will be surely missed, but never forgotten!
C L Chamberlin』
(The Families Suffer Too) 『
"Glory Denied" is the tale of Green Beret Captain Jim Thompson. It is unique in that GD does not unfold in linear, year by year fashion. GD is reconstructed entirely by interviews with Thompson and his friends / families. Captain Thompson became a POW in March of 1964 when his observation plane was downed near Khe Sanh in the remote northwest corner of South Vietnam. As GD's cover aptly notes, Captain Thompson was a prisoner of the Viet Cong while many Americans had barely heard of either the VC or the country itself. Thompson suffered mightily in the squalid and remote jungle camps before his 1968 transfer to the better known prisons that surrounded Hanoi. There, in places like the Rockpile, Thompson lingered until the general prisoner release in the Spring of 1973. He and Navy Lt. (j.g.) Everett Alvarez were the longest detained POWs. There is an aura of competition between the 2 throughout GD. The poignant story of prison life is sharply detailed in GD, but many other books have done likewise. The "in country" tale is the lesser portion of GD. What sets Thompson's story apart is the recounting of his life after his repatriation. He came home to an America VASTLY different than the buttoned up, pre Beatles nation he had left in 1963. (This reviewer thought things had changed after only one year in country!). We should all dwell on how much happened in those crazy years and imagine the reaction of a conservative guy who wanted only to return to the hearth and home he knew. His wife had, to put it mildly, been "stepping out" during his absence. The marriage might never have been ideal but any POW must have remembered and fanaticized about only the good parts of his relationship. The remainder of GD deals with Thompson's repeated attempts to achieve normalcy in his personal life while he rebuilds his Army career. The former is an abject failure, though it certainly qualifies as interesting, if tragic reading. As to the latter, this reviewer was impressed how the Army stood by Thompson, promoting him all the way to Lt. Colonel and helping him with his alcohol abuse. Granted, he was a special case but the DA cut him a lot of slack. It was painfully obvious the Army didn't know what to do with the guy. One wonders how many returned prisoners actually reconstructed their careers -and how many were dumped by the wayside. More poignantly, one wonders how many POW families got back together. How many wives remained faithful? How many guys remarried? How many families fell apart? I hope I was mistaken when I read of the behind closed doors "beatings at family reception centers". Rating GD is a hard call. It is not a straight POW tale in the "Why Didn't You Get Me Out" or "When Hell Was In Session" tradition. The second part of GD would qualify as soap opera if not so depressing. The resolution is purposely not revealed here. Out of respect for Colonel Thompson (his retirement rank), all the other POWs and their collective suffering and service to their country, GD is given 4 stars. Credit author Philpott with a unique story compilation- one that was 16 years (!) in the making. How he got the Thompson family to cooperate, only he and the Man Upstairs can guess. A final and sobering thought: GD makes it painfully evident that it wasn't only the POWs' in country suffering that is significant: Many troubles began in earnest after repatriation and the travails of spouses and children may take a lifetime to heal. Those of us that came back to the world intact and unscarred should count our blessings daily. 』 『Army officer Jim Thompson's horrific experience in a series of North Vietnamese prisons was nasty and brutish--but definitely not short. He was held as a prisoner of war for nearly nine years, longer than any other American POW. His treatment was torturous: "I was put into a horizontal cage maybe two feet wide, two feet high, and five feet long. There I was kept for four months, chained hand and feet." And sometimes he was just plain tortured: "I sat there with a pen in hand as they shouted at me to write," he recalls of a time his captors tried to make him issue a statement condemning the American war effort. "Periodically they hit me with bamboo. Not hard enough to knock me unconscious or to break the skin. Just enough to hurt. They kept at it for eight, ten, twelve hours a day." (He eventually gave in, and signed a statement.)
The irony is that Thompson's life improved little upon his return to the United States. His wife had taken up with another man, his family fell apart, he drank to excess, and his son was convicted of murder. Readers will be at once tempted and reluctant to call Thompson a hero--tempted because of how much he suffered for serving his country and for his numerous escape attempts, but reluctant because Thompson was himself responsible for much of the pain he brought on himself and his family following his return.
Military journalist Tom Philpott has produced an oddly fascinating book about Thompson's ordeal.Glory Deniedis not a piece of narrative nonfiction, but an oral history. It tells Thompson's story through the words of Thompson and those who knew him. Readers who want a more uplifting POW story may want to tryFaith of Our Fathersby Senator John McCain (who contributes a foreword toGlory Denied), yet Philpott's book may come closer to capturing the agony so many Americans continue to associate with Vietnam.--John J. Miller』
『One of the most powerful books to emerge about Vietnamthe unforgettable story of America's longest-held prisoner-of-war, his family, and a country at war with itself.
He had dreamed of being a military man as a youngster during World War II. Marrying shortly after high school, he was drafted by the Army in 1956 and sent to a faraway land called Vietnam in 1963 at a time when America still seemed innocent. In fact, Floyd "Jim" Thompson might have led a perfectly ordinary life had he not been captured on March 26, 1964, just three months after arriving in Vietnam, becoming one of the first Americans taken prisoner, and ultimately, the longest-held prisoner-of-war in American history.
Now, for the first time, Thompson's epic story, and that of his family who also paid dearly for his sacrifice, is brought to life inGlory Denied, a searing reconstruction of one man's tortuous journey through war and its aftermath. Weaving together scores of interviews with Thompson and his family, comments from friends, fellow soldiers, former prisoners-of-war, and excerpts from service records, medical reports, and intelligence briefings, Philpott delivers an exceptionally nuanced and moving portrait of a man, a family, and a nation.
The first half of the saga follows Thompson from his youth through his marriage and early days in the Army, to his harrowing survival in Vietnamnine years in jungle cages and dank prison cells, surviving torture, disease, and starvation. We see how, by happenstance, a painful childhood honed a soldier's survival skills amid unspeakable horrors. And most vividly we see Thompson's family struggling with the consequences of his absence. Indeed, particularly arresting is Philpott's ability to juxtapose Thompson's capture, torture, and multiple escape attempts with the trials of his young wife Alyce, pregnant with their fourth child and devastated when her husband was declared missing in action. The once dependent wife, unaware of her husband's survival and feeling trapped, would make choices that forever would tie her own fate to the war she despised. And the Army's compliance with those decisions turned the spotlight off Thompson and allowed another prisoner of war to be remembered in his place.
The final half ofGlory Deniedchronicles the journey of the Thompsons in the decades following America's longest war. While wounds from the war, both physical and social, healed for most Americans, the nightmare of Vietnam only shifted into another stage for the family. What became so apparent was that Alyce had changed. The children had changed. The nation's values had changed. But Thompson's valuesand dreamshad not. He had missed an unprecedented social revolutiona revolution that now mocked his sacrificeand he had missed nine critical years of an Army career.
The final chapters ofGlory Deniedread like a classic tragedy, filled with stories of reconciliation, abandonment, and addiction. It is a tale as absorbing as any Arthur Miller play, a relentlessly heartrending story that tells us as much about our nation's history as it does about a family named Thompson. Glory Denied, which combines the historical detail of Neil Sheehan'sA Bright Shining Liewith the pathos of a James Jones novel, is a masterly work of oral history, a project that has consumed its author for more than a decade. Neither the book nor its subject, Jim Thompson, will soon be forgotten.
price:$14.99
Image Comics
Usually ships in 2 to 4 weeks Core2Duoノートレビュー 's review (Dead Killer is Dead Cool) 『I guess it is something inside of me. I have always loved zombie movies and more recently zombie books and graphic novels. I have read the adoring reviews of professional critics who sought out the deeply thoughful meanings behind Romeros various works: how we are supposed to root for the zombies because the humans are typically wretched, weak, greedy, and willing to cut each other's throats just to survive for a few moments longer. Despite my appreciation for all of that I guess I have always had a soft spot for humanity. Certainly, with some of the tales that have been written, it is far easier to wish that they would be ripped to pieces rather than survive, because there is little about them that gives them much appeal, but every once in a while it is nice to find a human being that still realizes that we are the superior race and that we are far more dangerous and lethal than a zombie ever could be. Dead World: Dead Killer, explores this with the Dead Killer, who forces himself to be the perfect zombie killing machine. He goes so far as to focus all of his efforts on killing the King Zombie, one of a handful of intelligent zombies that rule all the others. He considers it a challenge and will not rest until the King is destroyed. This, along wtih Dead World: Requiem for the World, are two titles that are fun and fascinating. I was interested in the humans as well as the zombies, unlike some of the other graphic novels out there. These works belong up there with The Walking Dead for the quality of the content. Drawn in stark black and white, it almost seems like rough sketches in some places rather than finely detailed artistry, but that works for both the subject matter and story line. Beyond zombies I have never been a huge comic book fan, but works like this certainly make the foray into this realm well worth it.』
(THE ORIGINAL ZOMBIE COMIC RETURNS!) 『Deadworld has been one of my favorite independent comics ever since it first appeared some 20 years ago for several reasons. First, while zombies are all over the place to day in films, comics, books, etc, it wasn't the case 20 years ago when superhero comics truly dominated the scene. The second thing is that the comic was produced right here in Michigan by Arrow comics. In fact, the original artist, Vince Locke, lived in the same city as I did and when I published by first fanzine he was kind enough to be interviewed and even produced an original zombie illustration that I used as the first issue's cover. The stories in this collection are written by another fellow Michigander Gary Reed whom I've also known for 20 years.
This volume collects Deadworld Vol. 1 #19 - 21, Deadworld: To Kill a King # 1 - 3, Deadworld Vol. 2 #8. The collection focuses on the character of the Dead Killer, a mysterious angel of vengeance who hunts down zombies. Now the unique thing about Deadworld was that while most of the zombies were your typical mindless shamblers, there were a few rare ones that were intelligent, could speak and control the other zombies, in particular the punk-looking zombie known as King Zombie.
The Dead Killer has set his sights on killing all of the intelligent zombies but King Zombie in particular. An initial run in with the King and his pet, multi-armed monster almost proves disastrous for the Dead Killer as a bit to his hand means cutting off his own limb before the zombie plague kills him as well. He tracks the King and his underlings to an abandoned side show where the former freaks are now being kept as slaves for the amusement of King Zombie. The Dead Killer thinks he's found an ally with a human named Bowker but soon learns his only loyalty is his own self-preservation, even if that means betraying other humans. The Dead Killer will also discover a startling secret about the intelligent zombies that will make his task even more difficult.
"Dead Killer" works because Gary Reed is not just a writer but a storyteller, and storytelling is almost a lost art in comics today. While comic art is far better overall than it was 30 or even 20 years ago, the writing has only gotten worse outside of a handful of very talented writers. Deadworld never was strictly a gore-fest. It was always about the characters and their physical and emotional struggles to survive as it was about the horror all around them and Reed keeps up this tradition in his stories. My only minor disappointment would be with the art. While Ron McCain's art is solid it's simply not on a par with Vince Locke's. Locke had an incredible eye for detail and his zombies literally spilled their guts right off the page. Locke did, however, provide the lettering for the book.
I am truly thankful that Image Comics is not only re-printing this great Deadworld material, but recently started a new, regular Deadworld series, also written by Reed.
Reviewed by Tim Janson
』 『A mysterious man rose from the ashes of a Deadworld. He was a killer, a hunter... and his prey is the undead's leader, the intelligent zombie known as King Zombie. Only one will survive.』
タイトル『 2008 Topps American Heritage Baseball Cards # 137 John McCain SP ( 2008 Election Collection - Short Print )( Presidential Canidate ) Trading Card in Protective Screw Down Display >
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price:$7.95
Topps
『2008 Topps American Heritage Baseball Cards # 137 John McCain SP ( 2008 Election Collection - Short Print )( Presidential Canidate ) Trading Card in Protective Screw Down Display』 タイトル『 Mike DeCelle Marcus McCain Tampa Bay Rays 1997 Topps Autographed Card >
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price:$7.99
Biggsports
『This autographed Card Comes with a top loader plastic, and a certificate of Authenticity from Biggsports』 タイトル『 2008 Upper Deck Presidential Predictors #PP-14A Hillary Clinton&John McCain - "Healthcare" - Presidential Candidate Baseball Cards - MLB Baseball Trading Card in a Protective Screw Down Display Case! >