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WHAT READERS & REVIEWERS SAY Table of Contents |
"a fresh approach to mixing stamps, history and lore...collectors will enjoy The Mystery Box but the book also will have great crossover appeal and would make a great gift for a spouse or friend who doesn't collect" Peter Martin, Editor,
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Joseph E. Foley, Editor Philatelic Communicator | |
| Read L.N. Williams' introduction in The Cinderella Philatelist. to the excerpted story "The Fallen Vicar" from The Mystery Box. |
Peter Rexford | |
Shelley Golodowski |
George Griffenhagen, Editor | |
Jim Cox, Editor, |
"The book conveys such a feeling of delight, verve,...the author's
delight - his 'serious pleasure'...Here is a book, one feels, which the author really enjoyed writing and the enjoyment is
contagious"
Edward Clark | |
"My favorite stories are "Devil at the Door", like others, so neatly connecting politics past and present, but this one with a riveting focus on Bosnia. ... and "Case of the Missing Mogul, done with such special high spirits, with one of the best lines in the book - "But what, I asked, driving down the highway of diamonds about her neck..."
(The reader is referring to a comment by Nick Diamond, Private Eye, who also coined the phrase "Whoever knocks stamp collecting is a chump") "I see now why serious people collect stamps. I feel a twinge of regret that I didn't go on collecting after a year or two in the Edison School Stamp Club at age 11. .... Now if I had a young child, I would encourage him/her to collect stamps (and would point out initially their visual interest, including - sorry - the chicken stamp! - I like it! ""You bring the reader into your world of stamps with a nicely charged atmosphere of discovery from the start"
(The reader refers to the 1940's US "chicken" stamp featured in "The Philatelic Hall of Shame")Besides the collecting-excitement, you show how worlds of various kinds open up to the 'inquiring mind'."
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