"After getting hooked on 24 the last couple of years, I'm now going back and catching up on seasons that I missed. Season 2 is my favorite so far. It's tense and just about every episode is exciting. Lots of great action and Sutherland is at his best.
Highly recommended if you are a fan of the genre."
"I didn't get into 24 until this past year and decided to buy Season 1. I watched the entire thing in one weekend! It's like one looooooooooong movie but I didn't have the urge to get up and do dishes or anything.. I rushed through making me a quick something-to-eat so I could get back to Kiefer and what was going on next. So I bought season 2, but took that one a bit more slowly. I love that there is love, hate, terror, death...all in one package, and it all fits so well together! I've ordered 3 and 4 and can't wait! I wish I could give these 20 stars!"
"When Sonny comes home after going to prison in the place of two guilty friends, he hopes these friends will keep their promise and pay him the money he's owed. Those hopes are dashed after it becomes clear his old partners plan to kill him instead. While Sonny is planning his revenge, he's getting intimate with an old love he left behind. This young love grown into a woman is now married to Sonny's best friend, who happens to be the town sheriff. Though I liked the story, I felt the ending fell short. The writer(s) could've gone a bit further with the conclusion to make it feel more complete.
Chrissy K. McVay - Author"
"Having been an avid afiocionado of Gustav Klimt and femme fatale Alma Mahler, I bought 'Bride of The Wind' with a great deal expectation. Script was shoddily written and character development turned out to be very weak, not to mention a complete lack of credibility/chemistry between Wynter & Perez in their portrayal of Alma Mahler's & Oscar Kokoschka's tumultuous whirlwind affair.
You'd be better off spending your money on books on the Austrian art scene instead. My top recommendations - (1) Wiener Werkstatte: Design in Vienna 1903-1932 by Christian Branstatter (Abrams) and (2) Kokschka and Alma Mahler by Alfred Weidinger (Prestel)."