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Following Sound into Silence: Chanting Your Way Beyond Ego into Bliss
Published in Audio Download by audible.com ()
Author: Kailash Bruder
List price: $15.00
New price: $7.88

Average review score:

Love this book and CD
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-10-05
Following Sound into Silence by Kailash

Kailash demonstrates the power of sound and mantra in this book, "Following Sound into Silence". He presents the spiritual practice of chanting as a means to achieving inner peace, living in harmony and realizing higher states of consciousness. Chanting is an experience that cannot be known intellectually. It is a spiritual experience that abandons the false ego, opening the heart to the wonder of love.

A CD of very powerful mantras is included with this beautiful book, along with translations. Highly recommended!

Chandi Devi
[...]

Simple yet profound...
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-07
I have been a practitioner of devotional chanting for about 3 years, and Kailash's book is one of the few books on the topic that I find myself reading over and over. It is incredibly rich with information, intelligently written, and very accessible for people new to chanting and also for those more experienced. He has provided the chanting community (and the world) with a gift, gathering a wealth of knowledge on this subject and presenting it eloquently. He discusses the history of chanting, explains what mantras are, the importance of our emotions on this path, and many other topics without it ever becoming overwhelming. Somehow it all flows together as one very engaging narrative.

I also appreciated the way Kailash explained some very esoteric concepts in a practical, grounded way. Since reading this book, I am so much more conscious of the words that I speak, even just in normal everyday conversation. It helped me to realise how our spoken words guide our consciousness, in effect creating our experience.

Following Sound Into Silence makes you feel like going out in the world and experiencing the benefits of chanting mantras immediately!

Wonderful book!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-07
I had the privilege of taking a class with Kailash and I have to say it was wonderful. I had never chanted before and jumped at the chance to buy the book. I have to say I was impressed. It's wonderful and the CD that accompanies is great! I was so happy that I had that as a tool to guide me. You will not be disapponted. Find your bliss!!

Beautiful and Entrancing CD and Book, Jai Ma!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-11
Kailash has taken the time to share with us devotional chanting and a way to shed ourselves of our ego and become closer to the divine. The CD itself is worth the price, but to also recieve an informative and inspirational book is priceless. One would do themselves a tremendous service by reading this information and chanting along with the enclosed CD. I have just begun my journey into this ancient tradition and already have felt its benefits. Goddess Bless Kailash and anyone else who recieves and absorbs this timeless information. Jai Ma!

Transformative!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-21
This is such a beautiful book...inspirational and informative! I have taught Yoga for eight years now and I am always looking for thoughtful resources to inspire class themes to deepen and enrich my students' experiences and this book is definitely one of my favorites. Each page is so rich in history and insite. In addition, Kailash has made chanting so understandable and accessible with this book and CD. My children (5 and 7 years of age) love to listen to his CD every time we're in the car! They say it "just makes them happy!" This is a "must have" for any person who wants to deepen their life experience.

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Full Moon - Bloody Moon: Chase Dagger (Unabridged)
Published in Audio Download by audible.com ()
Author: Lee Driver
List price: $23.99
New price: $12.59

Average review score:

Great Book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-30
Great book! Full of suspense and humor. If you like Laurell Hamilton or Kim Harrison, you will like this book.

A tautly written, reader-gripping, mystery thriller
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2001-02-14
Private detective Chase Dagger finds an Indianapolis cop and auniversity professor on his doorstep revealing their theory behind arecent series of homicides. The professor beliefs there is an evilthat has been passed down from generation to generation and is at itsworst during a full moon on Friday the 13th. Dagger feels theprofessor knows far to much about the murders and the killer. FullMoon-Bloody Moon is an X-Files style mystery that brings back ChaseDagger for another tautly written, reader-gripping, mysterythriller. Also highly recommended is Lee Driver's debut novelintroducing Chase Dagger and an unusual blend of horror and mystery inThe Good Die Twice (5-3,...). END

A series to watch
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2001-07-04
FULL MOON-BLOODY MOON is the second in the Chase Dagger series. This one combines mystery and horror in a story about a little known phenomena -- the combination of a full moon and a Friday the 13th. Dagger is confronted by an Indianapolis cop and a university professor who have a theory behind a series of murders. They believe a man has inherited an evil passed on through generations that is at its worst during a full moon on a Friday the 13th. This book pits an evil shapeshifter against Sara, Dagger's shapeshifting partner. As in THE GOOD DIE TWICE, Sara's shapeshifting is the catalyst in this series. And the existence of this evil shapeshifter becomes real when it starts communicating telepathically with Sara. This is a tightly written thriller that will have you looking at a full moon quite differently. To show you how rare the combination is, October 13, 2000, was only the thirteenth time since 1800 that it has occurred.

Even better than its predecessor
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2004-05-12
Author Lee Driver returns with the second in her series starring mysterious private investigstor Chase Dagger and his Native American shapeshifter associate Sara Morningsky and scarlet macaw Einstein--Full Moon Bloody Moon. This entry finds them with a more gruesome case as the bodies keep piling up, but no logical suspect can be found.

Lisa was a really good cop, a quick and accurate shooter. So, it was a real surprise when she was found dead along her regular jogging path with her gun still holstered and with the safety still on. The other surprise was that she was found twenty feet up, stuck in the V of a tree branch. Of great import to this case is the rarity of the combined occurrence of a full moon on a Friday the 13th. The story takes place during the five days leading up to Friday, October 13, 2000, when it is believed that the killer will attain his greatest level of power during the upcoming full moon.

Meanwhile, Chase and Skizzy are also working on a case involving weapons thefts from a local police station. Skizzy's invention of the "Mick," a mechanical spider-shaped surveillance camera, provides much of the intrigue in this subplot, which otherwise feels much like another day on the job.

Things really take a turn in Full Moon Bloody Moon when it is discovered that the killer can communicate with Sara through the telepathy that, until then, the reader had thought that only she and Chase could share. Is the killer a shapeshifter, too? Chase's ability to overhear their conversations causes his pragmatic worldview to begin to crumble. Able to accept Sara as a shapeshifter, because that was how he discovered her, the idea that there are more is almost too much for him. And the closer he comes to a solution, the more it seems that the killer is something that Chase is not entirely prepared to deal with.

The sexual tension between Sara and Chase continues building, with their friends invariably making comments to Chase about questionable situations. These are still some of the most intriguing characters in fiction, and any male reader is undoubtedly going to want to be Chase and want to be with Sara. Their relationship is an engaging combination of sibling and romance that succeeds because of not engendering any untoward feelings whatsoever. I'm becoming as comfortable with these people in just two books as I did Ed McBain's 87th Precinct crowd. I can only hope that Lee Driver exhibits McBain's longevity. Add to that her skill at writing epilogues that make me want to begin the next book immediately (in this case, The Unseen), and what we have is a terrific fantasy mystery series that deserves bestseller status.

YOU WILL LOVE THIS ONE
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2001-03-04
FULL MOON BLOODY MOON is the second Chase Dagger mystery; the first was THE GOOD DIE TWICE.

Chase Dagger is back, but this time he will need more than luck to catch a killer that has been around for more than 200 years.... Knowing that Oct. 13th a Friday was not even here yet, the worse was yet to happen.

FULL MOON BLOODY MOON has the same unconventional and fetching characters as THE GOOD DIE TWICE. Einstein the bright red macaw that has a big mouth, Chase's right hand woman, Sara, Simon the mailman who knows everybody's business. Padre and Skizzy are also back as well as some new characters. FULL MOON BLOODY MOON is a ferocious horror-filled ride that will stick with you well after you have finished reading the book. Mixed with sex, violence and plenty of fast paced action. I hung onto every word.

Lee Driver (aka S.D. Tooley ) you have done it again, keep up the good work.

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Gallant Lady: A Biography of the USS Archerfish (Unabridged)
Published in Audio Download by audible.com ()
Author: Henry, Don, Ken Keith
List price: $32.95
New price: $17.30

Average review score:

Gripping!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-24
History that reads like a novel. The other reviewers said just about everything else.

Archerfish's varied history
Helpful Votes: 16 out of 16 total.
Review Date: 2005-05-06
This book follows the exploits of the Balao class submarine USS Archerfish (SS-311). Launched in May, 1943, Archerfish's first year of service in the Pacific was lackluster, with two skippers and only 2 sinkings to her credit. Her next skipper had earlier lost his confidence when in command of USS Dace after missing the Japanese carrier Shokaku, and had asked to be relieved of command. Archerfish was Joseph Enright's second chance. Initially Archerfish draws "lifeguard duty" for B-29 raids south of Tokyo Bay. After being released from this duty, the submarine was patrolling near Tokyo when it picked up an uncharted island on radar. Shortly it was determined that the "island" was moving. Closing in for a look, Enright ran the submarine parallel to the large, indistinct target. They determined that it was an aircraft carrier, and slowly outrunning Archerfish. Just as they were losing the race, the target turned to the west, heading directly for Archerfish. Enright submerged the boat, and continued periscope observations, plotting course and speed. Although he could not identify the type of aircraft carrier, he did draw a sketch on paper of the target. As shooting time was near, one of the escort destroyers passed directly over Archerfish, and as soon as she passed, Enright came to periscope depth and fired six torpedoes. The crew heard them strike the target, and believed they heard breaking up of the target. Initially Archerfish was given credit for sinking a 28,000 ton Hayataka class carrier. After the war, it was found to be the 72,000 ton Japanese supercarrier Shinano, built in secret on a battleship hull, and as big as a postwar Forrestal class supercarrier. It remains to this day the single largest warship sunk by a submarine.

One of the authors (Henry) served on board the Archerfish in the early 1950's, and he describes the postwar exploits. After the war the submarine was inactivated in 1946, and with the Korean War and the Cold War was reactivated in 1952. The submarine was not modernized to Guppy configuration, but rather retained her original fleet boat look. She participated in a number of operations, including making movies (Operation Petticoat), testing early SubRoc, and acting as a diving bell target in rescue simulations. The most unusual operation commenced in 1960, in which an "all-bachelor" crew was selected for an around the world cruise, termed "Sea Scan". The story was that she would make a complete hydrological and meteorological survey during the cruise, and she was loaded with impressive racks of equipment. In fact, her true mission was to submerge every 60 miles to provide a stable platform for extremely sophisticated gravimetric measurements under the oceans. Early missile launches were straying from their tracks due to fluctuations in the Earth's gravitational field. These sensitive measurements, which mapped small variations in the Earth's gravitational field, were essential for accurate ICBM targeting. To prepare Archerfish for the cruise, she was sent to the Philadelphia Navy Yard. Because of the cover story and the very limited number of "need to know" personnel, the Navy Yard assigned little priority to outfitting the submarine for the hydrographic science mission. In order to prepare their ship, the crew engages in "creative requisitioning" that is reminiscent of the better episodes of "McHale's Navy" and "MASH". We the get to follow the crew on a series of adventures and mishaps as they make their way around the globe, disguised as an aging submarine with a randy bachelor crew and a mission that no one would want. Eventually, Sea Scan takes until 1967 to complete all phases, and shortly after that, at the end of 1968, USS Snook (SSN-592) sinks Archerfish in a torpedo exercise off of San Diego. Many books focus on the exciting SSN operations during the Cold War. This book is a look at the DBF part of the Cold War, when even second line fleet submarines had their role to play. I highly recommend!

A truly fun read
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2004-06-14
I picked this book up figuring it would be another WW11 account of a submarines' exploits then on seeing the jacket I had to find out what this sub did.......I laughed and felt fear, I felt sorrow at the parts where members of the crew left.....I can only imagine what it was like from the fires to the storms to the beauty that was there both in nature and in the closeness that was her crew...few are that fortunate to actually belong to a group of men that are all like brothers....and feel that their "boat" was in fact a living being...it must've been some ride.........

Bit Player
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2004-07-23
Gallant Lady traces the history of a remarkable "boat" from its WWII pinnacle with the sinking of Japanese super-carrier Shinano to the final Cold War mission.

This latter segment of the story is told from the 'rag hat' perspective and gives insights that are informative, entertaining and funny as hell.

Gallant Lady
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2004-08-05
"Rollicking" is probably the term Hollywood would use, and probably such a movie from the latter part of this book would be a hit. There is little question of the drama of ARCHERFISH wartime patrols and her singular distinction in stalking and sinking the world's largest enemy ship on its maiden voyage. Like many other accounts of submarine warfare, GALLANT LADY vividly describes the stuffy quarters, grimy tension, and grim excitement of WWII submarine life. Where the book becomes unusual is in the story of ARCHERFISH's third commission as auxiliary to a modernized fleet in which she has become an anachronism. Not intimidated by her diminishing status, she forges her own direction for the next ten years, embracing with gusto a series of routinejobs and a unique assignment that no other ship can be spared for. In the process her maverick (and envied) crew lives an experience of exploration, adventure, and hi-jinks worthy of the sea sagas of earlier centuries. No other commissioned ship of the Navy has enjoyed such a voyage, and no others are likely to. This is a fascinating tale of camaraderie and initiative in service to our country that belongs in every seafarer's locker. Frank S. Virden, Captain, USN (Ret.)

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Gambit (Unabridged)
Published in Audio Download by audible.com ()
Author: Rex Stout
List price: $40.00
New price: $21.00

Average review score:

Wolfe wins the chess match
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-27
A man is poisoned during a chess match, and Wolfe gets called by the daughter of the arrested suspect to clear her dad and find the real killer. Naturally, Wolfe must do this while staying firmly ensconsed in his Manhatten brownstone, while Archie Goodwin does his legwork. The story quickly develops a natural suspect after an initial series of interviews of all the people surrounding the death. But it also takes an interesting twist when another dead body is found. I enjoyed that just enough clues were left in the story to allow me to figure out who the killer was just before Wolfe announced it. Here's a hint ... the method of murder was a little different than you may originally think it is. Enjoy!

Available on Audio CD
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-12-15
For some reason the Amazon listings don't include the audio CD version of this outstanding book.

Michael Prichard's reading style is ideally suited to this great story about chess players and the "perfect murder." The variations in personalities at the Gambit Club prefigure the chess stars of the 70s.

From a view of character study, this one is really, really good (and great to listen to also).

A fine, satisfying read
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-16
My 5th Nero Wolfe book, and I loved it. I caution new readers that the Nero Wolfe books are an acquired taste. For women the Wolfe character is edgy. But, this puzzle of who poisoned what, etc. really grabbed my attention, and I dreamed about it for days (a good sign for me). I can tell that I'm finally getting into these books because I envy Wolfe's life. He's a recluse, and that's my big goal in life -- a recluse with lots of help to do my chores. It'll never happen, and that's why reading these books is satisfying a longing in me.

A fun little mystery (4.5 stars)
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-07
For anyone unfamiliar with Rex Stout's Nero Wolfe mysteries I'd highly recommend this novel. While it is not my favorite of Stout's Nero Wolfe stories, it is a nice introduction to to Nero Wolfe and his confidential assistant Archie Goodwin. Wolfe is a 285 pound orchid collecting genius of a detective who almost never leaves his office for work. he can be cranky and avoids work whenever possible. Archie is a sarcastic ladies-man who's job is to do the leg work for Wolfe as well as keep him focused.

The opening sections of the book illustrate the quirks of the main characters and as I said make a good introduction for new readers.

The mystery itself is interesting and full of the twists and turns that I have come to expect from a Nero Wolfe novel. It is written in Stout's signiature sytle and kept me guessing for much of the book. In the end, Stout does a good job of tying everything up and showing the logic behind the solution and how Wolfe and Archie got from point A to Point B to the solution.

Death by Cocoa
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2003-11-10
A Review by Alex

Jerin is playing the usual twelve players with messengers running in a room with Jerin alone telling the layouts of each board. A man had come in with some hot chocolate for Jerin. The man's name was Blount. Later that night, Jerin dies and Blount is thrown in jail because they all think he did it. Nero Wolfe and Archie Goodwin have to solve the mystery and see to it that Blount is innocent. The only way they can solve it is the use of his daughter, Sally.

I really love and enjoy the fact that this book makes me think and makes it so I use my brain a little. It is a mystery, so therefore I have to be smarter than Archie. I was always trying to figure out if it is someone or not and when I read to find out it's not one person I try to guess who it could be. This book also gave me suspense, I got so excited when they were about to do questioning with someone like Sally or the mother. I always find out something new and clues of the killer. This book was also a perfect read when it came to pages, only 137 pages and the text was a bit on the small side but still made it a perfect size. Not too quick and not too long. This book always gave me a surprise.

This is a great mystery for those who love to use their brain figuring things out. Gambit is a really exciting book to discover new suspects and an unexpected murderer. You will dive into the book and not want to put in down caused by the eagerness to read about who did it and why.

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Georgie (Unabridged)
Published in Audio Download by audible.com ()
Author: Robert Bright
List price: $1.41
New price: $0.74

Average review score:

Georgie
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-13
Georgie by Robert Bright was sent in a very timely manner and is in very good condition for a used book. I am very pleased with the service.

Georgie is Endearing
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-10-23
I have been a first grade public school teacher for 38 years. I discovered the Georgie books in the 70's and started reading them to my first grade classes. When I realized how much the children, the parents, the school librarian, the other elementary teachers, and I all prized them, I started reading them to my daughter and son who also adored them, beginning with Georgie. He is a sweet faced, kind little ghost who looks after Mr.and Mrs. Whittaker. He is also very funny and gets himself in and out of many predicaments. I haven't seen these books for years and I was so afraid they were gone forever until I found them on Amazon com! Now I am ordering them for my three grandsons as I know they will love them as much as their mother did.

A CHILDHOOD CLASSIC
Helpful Votes: 15 out of 17 total.
Review Date: 2000-09-16
I RECENTLY VISITED MY OLD ELEMENTARY SCHOOL AND AS IT WAS A SUNDAY, I COULD ONLY VIEW IT FROM THE OUTSIDE. AS I PEERED INTO THE LIBRARY'S WINDOWS, I RECALLED SEVERAL BOOKS THAT I HAD CHECKED OUT OVER THE YEARS. ONE OF THESE WAS GEORGIE (ACTUALLY A FEW BUT I DOUBT THEY HAD ALL OF THEM). I RETURNED HOME LATER THAT EVENING AND CHECKED MY SHELVES. I ALSO HAD A FEW ROBERT BRIGHT BOOKS THAT I HAD PICKED UP SECONDHAND TO READ TO MY BOYS WHEN THEY WERE YOUNGER. IT'S AMAZING TO ME HOW SUCH SIMPLE YET ENDEARING CHARACTER SUCH AS GEORGIE HAS STAYED WITH ME ALL THESE YEARS. I INTEND TO FIND THE REMAINING GEORGIE BOOKS AND ADD THEM TO MY PERSONAL LIBRARY. I CAN ALWAYS CLAIM THAT I GOT THEM TO READ TO ANY VISITING CHILDREN BUT WE BOTH KNOW THEY'RE REALLY FOR ME.

An old time favorite.
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 1999-10-14
I had this sent to my granddaughter who is two years old. She loves it! Her father has to read it to her every night. He said that he remembers it as one of his favorites.

Brings back great memories!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2000-11-28
I loved this book as a child, and I came across it quite accidentally a couple of years ago. My youngest daughter, now 6, counts this as one of her favorite books. Now we read it to each other, almost every night, although I always secretly hope that she will let me read it to her. I love reading it to make it come even more alive (the big door GROANED so...). Her favorite part is when Georgie goes looking for a new home and a ghost at another house turns him away.

It's such a fun book!

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Give Me Back My Credit: One Woman's True Story of Surviving Credit Errors
Published in Audio Download by audible.com ()
Author: Denise Richardson
List price: $24.95
New price: $13.10

Average review score:

Want to keep your credit report accurate? Then READ THIS BOOK!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-23
I have been in the finance and credit field since 1993. In this time, I have reviewed over 4,000 credit reports, and have seen hundreds of credit reports with major errors on them. Trust me, major errors on credit reports are a very common occurrence.

Denise Richardson's story is an absolute nightmare. You can read the summary of what happened elsewhere here, so I need not recap it. But her story is absolutely compelling, and frightening, and you will get angry at the following when reading the book: large bank practices; collections agencies; the three major credit bureaus, the attorneys for huge multi-billion dollar corporations; our judicial system; and our Congress and regulators who are supposed to be protecting us, but instead are protecting the large corporations who are funding their campaigns and often actually writing the consumer laws and the federal regulations.

You won't be pleased about how the credit system works in this country after reading this book, but that in my view is a good thing. With knowledge comes truth, and with truth, comes power. Once you have a much better understanding how this system works (or doesn't work) by reading Denise's story, you will know how to protect yourself from a similar fate. The nightmare of incorrect and damaging errors showing up and staying on credit reports doesn't just happen to a few individuals like Denise...it happens to tens of millions of Americans.

Denise has a number of tips on how to protect yourself from credit errors. Two important ones are: Monitor your monthly payments to all major accounts, especially your mortgage, and monitor your own credit reports on a regular basis to make sure that errors are not being reported. (A personal note - after reading this book, I contacted my mortgage bank, and will now start monitoring my mortgage payments online. We have never received a monthly mortgage payment statement either.)

I mostly read this book looking at it from a credit standpoint, because that is the field I am in. However, this is a well told and inspiring story that moved me on a human level; of one woman who took on the giants of industry, and won. The toll it took on her life was immense, but she did not give up. I have a lot of respect for her. She fought a lot of battles in this book, and did not win them all. But in the end, she won the war.

Again, I highly recommend this book. You will be moved by Denise's story, and you will also learn steps you can take to protect your own good credit.

This book is a must for anyone who uses credit, which is everyone.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-30
Denise's story requires a strong stomach; I had to put it down at times just to let myself settle down after reading the nightmare she went through. This book gives you the tools to monitor your credit health and to be aware of the steps to take to maintain it. Highly recommended.

She's a fighter!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-25
Denise's story is shaking up the credit industry. In clear, concise and honest language she tells her painfully true story of what can and does happen to honest and innocent people. I am buying copies of GIVE ME BACK MY CREDIT for all my friends...especially students being offered unsolicited credit. An excellent, compelling read.

THE IWO JIMA AGAINST CORPORATE GIANTS
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-22
Author Denise Richardson and I decided to exchange our literary works. I sent her my novel "The Kids on the Block," and Denise sent me hers; "Give Me Back My Credit." Even though "The Kids on the Block has some sad parts, for the most part it is humorous and hilariously funny. Denise's true story is, on the other hand, tragic, nightmarish and bloodcurdling to say the least. I do not expect Denise to have much humor left after what she went through in fighting an arrogant, error-plagued, contemptuous Mortgage Bank and the three national credit bureaus.

Denise is the Iwo Jima against corporate giant's who, not only ruined her credit, but made her life worse than a living hell.

If you are like me and feel safe and confident since your credit score is above the 700's do not be too complacent and seat on your recliner thinking all is good and well. I jumped out of my seat after reading the first two chapters!

In author Denise Richardson's book "Give Me Back My Credit" she tells how her nightmare and living hell began. She, too, thought and felt safe and confident that everything about her mortgage on the home she owned was better than best. She made it a point to make extra payments to the principal of the mortgage loan, and of course, her credit rating was excellent as well.

Years later Denise decided to refinance her home. Much to her astounding surprise, she finds out the Mortgage lender had made many dreadful, inexcusable accounting errors on her mortgage loan. The lender never credited the extra mortgage payment to the principal of the mortgage loan.

The mortgage lender had not only been misapplying those extra payments, but was using her money to their benefit. After she found out the inexcusable mistake the lender had been making for years, the mortgage lender refused to correct their accounting errors. Denise's nightmare and living hell began.

From face-to-face battles against the corporate giants to inefficient attorneys and courtroom dramas the fight to regain, restore and have the errors corrected by the Mortgage lender only compounded into a bigger nightmare. From there it spread like a cancerous disease to the three national credit bureaus of Experian, Trans Union and Equifax.
This is a story the reader will not forget. The reader will learn from it and, sadly to say, from Denise's nightmare.

I didn't think I needed to read "Give Me Back My Credit;" I was wrong! I hope the book finds its way to the halls of high school and college administrators and make the book required reading for all students.

If you feel you don't need to read her book, you, too, will be wrong.

This book can help you get out of credit problems (or avoid them in the first place)
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-09
Denise's first-person account is moving and her story is full of useful information and lists of important resources. It's unfortunate that she had to go through all of this, but she's written it down so we can learn from her experience. This book will help you understand the landscape of red tape and motivate you to cut through it.

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The Greengage Summer (Unabridged)
Published in Audio Download by audible.com ()
Author: Rumer Godden
List price: $38.84
New price: $20.39

Average review score:

a childhood favorite
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-23
In "The Greengage Summer" five English youths have their vacation trip to the battlefields of France derailed when their mother develops a disabling illness due to an insect bite. While she is in hospital, they stay at a hotel run by two sour proprietors and peopled by an eccentric cast of characters. Each of the youths pursues his or her interests (painting, photography, etc.) while exploring the hotel and the grounds nearby. They befriend the handyman Paul, a young man with a perplexing past, and bond with their temporary guardian, Eliot, whose background, they eventually discover, is even more disturbing. In their summer stay, the children also stumble upon a mystery. As they collide with a foreign adult world, they receive an education, but not quite the one their mother originally intended.

Thrilling tale of love and crime in France
Helpful Votes: 13 out of 13 total.
Review Date: 2004-06-10
The Grey children are taken to France by their mother to visit the battlefields of WW1 in the hope that it will make them less selfish. However, she is taken ill as soon as they arrive at their destination, the hotel Les Oeillets, and the children find themselves bewildered and frightened in a strange land with a barely conscious mother. They are befriended by Eliot, a charming and enigmatic Englishman staying at Les Oeillets, who sorts everything out. With their mother in hospital, the children are free to explore this strange and exotic new world, so different from the dull suburban English town they have come from. They get to know all the people at the hotel, Mamzelle Zizzi, the beautiful but slightly haggard proprietor, who is clearly besotted with Eliot, Madame Corbet, grim and unsmiling, who equally clearly detests him, and all the rest of the staff. They make friends with Paul, an orphan who is an overworked drudge in the kitchen, but dreams of some day owning his own lorry. The story is narrated by Cecil, thirteen years old, who observes everything, especially the growing attraction between Joss, her exquisitely lovely elder sister, and Eliot. As Eliot spends more and more time with the children, Mamzelle Zizzi's jealousy grown, until it finally explodes one night in a scene that terrifies and bewilders the Grey family. The children try to retreat from the scary grownupworld to their safe childhood idyll, but it is too late, the happy atmosphere is poisoned. As Eliot's behaviour grows more mysterious,and Mamzelle Zizzi continues to simmer with jealousy the story heads inevitably towards disaster. All the characters in this book are fascinating, from secretive, sexy Eliot to the drudge Paul, and you feel totally involved in their lives. The atmosphere of a French summer is so vividly described, you can taste the greengages the children stuff themselves with, and smell the eccentric French plumbing. A gripping and poignant story of lost innocence, this book is based on actual events in Rumer Godden's youth, and is quite unforgettable.

An undying picture of change, love & loss
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-04-05
When the dog bites, when you're feeling blue, simply get a copy of The Greengage Summer to gorge on its luscious and heady prose. Godden is a timeless writer and I'm fairly sure this started life as 'adult' rather than 'children's' fiction - for all the worth of those meaningless categories. I guess the teen reads didn't exist then and this seething, hormonal coming-of-age novel captures the very essence of that moment when knowing youth casts its spell without being able to foresee the consequences, for it to appeal to younger readers, but I wonder if the hindsight of growing-up add another layer or three. The prose is limpid, laden with resonance and the characters are wondeful. I can smell and see the summer and its dangerous allure. Nicely tragic too (in that noone actually dies, but the consequences of playing with adult-hood are suitably dire!). It is a book I turn to time-and-again and recommend unstintingly to anyone who'll hear me out.

Oh, six or seven stars, please!
Helpful Votes: 39 out of 39 total.
Review Date: 2003-05-07
This is one of those books I've bought again and again. It's a beautiful coming-of-age story set in the French countryside. I first read it back when the earth was cooling, and I have no idea what became of that original copy. I bought it again as an adult, loaned it to a friend and never saw it again. I recently bought it yet a third time, a used copy on Amazon, and this one I'm not loaning out.
Greengage Summer is a delicious melange of mystery, romance, travel writing, and character study. I'm surprised it's no longer in print, because I truly think it's a classic. It started me reading everything Rumer Godden's written. I like her writing tremendously, but Greengage Summer is her best.
When Mum is confined to bed in a small French village, her children are left on their own in the pensione. It's mainly the story of the oldest daughter's blossoming toward maturity, but it's more, much more, than what appears on the surface.
Read it, and loan it to a friend - but be sure you get it back!

Growing Up Elsewhere
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2003-07-08
A former "diplobrat" who grew up abroad, I identified with Godden's description of a child's first encounter with France. The effect of their foreign adventure on each family member develops along with an excellent plot (not usually Godden's strong point). Even better than the character descriptions is the evocation of French country life at its most seductive -- "next best to being there."

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Group Genius: The Creative Power of Collaboration (Unabridged)
Published in Audio Download by audible.com ()
Author: Keith Sawyer
List price: $29.98
New price: $15.74

Average review score:

Results
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-31
After reading Keith Sawyer's interesting work for years, I added Group Genius as a required text in an Organization Design MBA class I teach. Students are evening students, middle managers to above. They represent all domains, IT, Finance, Engineering, Law, Accounting, Real Estate/Construction and other sciences as well. Following the addition of Group Genius, students began to turn in truly innovative work, creative and original, beyond anything I've seen in years of teaching. They recognized that this was no ordinary text but one they could apply instantly to their own group and team work. They wrote about using it immediately in the workplace, with extraordinary results. That's what I found too, in the classroom, among working people, extraordinary results.

Effective Argument Against the Myth of the Romantic Author
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-11
R. Keith Sawyer's Group Genius is a fun read -- with great stories about Morse, Darwin, YouTube, Whole Foods, and Google, among others. Sawyer makes a compelling argument about how creativity and innovation come to pass. He writes about sparks and how they lead to great ideas. The book itself provokes sparks as you read along. It's hard not to be inspired by what he has to say, and to re-examine how you work with others or how you run an institution. The book rang particularly true from the perspective of someone who works in the information business, though I expect reading this book is time well-spent for almost anyone who cares about changing the world in virtually any way.

Collaborating multiplies your creativity
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-07
As befits its subject matter, this is a lively and innovative book, which uses many examples drawn from the worlds of jazz and improvisational theater, as well as from creative writing, cycling, banking and computer technology. Keith Sawyer doesn't stop at telling stories, though; he also supports his ideas with solid evidence. In well-organized chapters, complete with summaries and checklists, he debunks common beliefs about the nature of creativity - primarily, the myth that you need to be an isolated genius to succeed. Instead, he argues that innovation is most often the result of collaboration. Sawyer overreaches in some instances: He does not fully explain why some individuals are so much more creative than others in the same "collaborative web," or why some individuals can produce revolutionary ideas in relative isolation. However, that's a quibble, since Sawyer tackles a complex and slippery topic and comes up with some genuinely new insights. We recommend this book to managers and members of workplace teams, and executives who wish to encourage creative thinking.

Major Contribution-Nearest Billionaire, Endow a Center for This Guy!
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-24
CHRISTMAS TIP: For the CEO who has too much money, too little time, myopic solicitous subordinates, and some anxiety about the future, this book, together with Howard Gardner's Five Minds for the Future comprise the perfect Christmas gift. Print copies of my review of each and insert those inside each book's cover before wrapping.

I have been interested in collective intelligence ever since Howard Rheingold and John Perry Barlow kicked my secret intelligence colleagues in the head back in 1992, when I first started to reform the secret world by introducing them to Open Source Intelligence (OSINT). Today, OSINT is converging with Collective Intelligence, Peace Intelligence, and Commercial Intelligence, which is an order of magnitude superior to the standard Business Intelligence (internal data mining and dashboards) and Competitive Intelligence (narrow focus on competition, not on customers or externalities including Wild Cards).

This book, in my view is a Nobel-level contribution. If this author is not promoted to full Professor, he should move. This one book is a capstone book, a pioneering book, a summative work of extraordinary value to every leader, but especially for the asset managers, the hedge fund and pension fund managers, and the CEO's in the banking, communications, computing, education, entertainment, and publishing businesses, whose lunch is about to be eaten by Google unless they band together and force Google to the table.

The author is gifted at combining serious education with solid examples and inspiring suggestion. I actually got goose-bumps on pages 25-28 as he described the USS Palau entering a complicated harbor without rudders or electricity or gyro-compasses. The humans instantly created a group mind and devised a shared solution for what used to be a complex and time consuming process. The goose-bumps are returning, just visualizing this (I am retired naval officer, among other things).

The author begins with his appreciation for jazz and comedy improvisation to lay out a case against brainstorming per se, and in favor of innovation as a process that follows an extended conversation. He teaches us that creativity occurs in context, each individuals being sparked by others. He says that group genius can be nurtured and harvested, but not in the established ways. FUN is a required foundation.

His early work focused on interaction analysis, but I would hasten to add that this must be from the age of Kindergarten up. As Howard Bloom notes in Global Brain: The Evolution of Mass Mind from the Big Bang to the 21st Century, we will never solve the eternal conflicts until we are willing to intervene for a full generation--by the time kids are five they have a group bias, by the time they are 25 they are "locked in" to the cultural biases (e.g. Jews and Palestinians as monkeys or non-humans, BOTH sides have this culturally ingrained bias by t he age of 10).

Although there is not yet a satisfactory work on how our existing pyramidal organizations are incapable of reform or renaissance, Jean Francois Noubel, on the web at The Transitioner, will have a chapter in my next edited work, and I hope his book comes out soon--I share with my libertarian and moderate Republican colleagues the view that both Congress and the Executive have become dysfunctional, as have most of our major corporations such as Exxon, and the time is right for a massive non-violent upheaval across the board.

On this note see, for example:
Vice: Dick Cheney and the Hijacking of the American Presidency
Running on Empty: How the Democratic and Republican Parties Are Bankrupting Our Future and What Americans Can Do About It
The Global Class War: How America's Bipartisan Elite Lost Our Future - and What It Will Take to Win It Back

I am totally inspired by the author's discussion of how innovation cannot be planned (although planning helps), it must be nurtured and inspired, or more pointedly, ALLOWED TO HAPPEN. As the author of Orbiting the Giant Hairball: A Corporate Fool's Guide to Surviving with Grace documents so well, we beat the creativity out of our kids by the fifth grades, and most organizations consist of cattle, not free-running mustangs.

I am impressed that the author properly and without excess recognizes his mentor, Mahaly Csikzentmihali with the concept of flow, defined at the time as consisting of four elements:

01 Skills equal the challenge (too good is boring, not enough is frustrating)
02 Goal is clear
03 Feedback is frequent
04 Free to concentrate fully

The author has expanded this to ten conditions:

01 Goal is clear
02 Close listening by all
03 Complete concentration
04 In control
05 Blending egos
06 Equal participation
07 Familiarity
08 Communication
09 Moving it forward
10 Potential for failure

The third section focusing on companies and on organizing for innovation is a "must do" task for CEOs and it cannot be delegated. This is one book each boss has to read for themselves, and not on a train--in isolation, totally concentrating on the words and ideas.

"Bureacracy prevents innovation." This is so true. I gave up on the US Intelligence Community this year, after realizing that Buckminster Fuller had it right--instead of trying to help them as I have for fifteen years, I have to displace them with the Earth Intellligence Network.

In part because of the author's wisdom, I have real doubts about the IBM Cognos deal. Certainly IBM can afford to expand into that marketspace by buying Cognos, but the question on my mind is this: Cognos is in Quadrant I (Knowledge Management) while all the innovation in happening in Quadrants II (Social Networking), III (External Information), and IV (Organizational Intelligence). I am pretty certain that for $100 million I could I could acquire or integrate the 100 key companies and build the EarthGame/World Brain within 5 years. So the question begs to be asked by those who own big blocks of IBM stock: can we get Cognos for $4B and spend the other $1B on first to market, in partnership with CISCO AON, with a totally integrated offering that makes every person on the planet a collector, producer, and consumer of commercial intelligence?

This book is essential reading for acquisition, asset, and fund managers.

The author's advice for CEOs (there is NO SUBSTITUTE) for reading the book:

01 Keep many irons in the fire
02 Create a Department of Surprise
03 Build spaces for creative conversation
04 Allow time for ideas to emerge
05 Manage the risks of improvisation (including too many too much too fast)
06 Improvise on the edge of chaos
07 Manage knowledge for (toward) innovation
08 Build dense networks (with hubs)
09 Ditch the organizational charts
10 Measure the right things

I have a note in the fly-leaf: "This is one of the best thought-out, ably-presented, most useful (i.e. profitable) books it has ever been my pleasure to read." This is not over the top, given the number of books I have read, a quarter of which I have reviewed on Amazon, because I am focused on saving the planet with shared information and open, legal, ethical sense-making. From that perspective, along with "Five Minds," this book is the tip of the spear.

The section on collaboration web work:

01 Build on history
02 Combine many small sparks
03 Frequent interaction across boundaries
04 Multiple discovery is common
05 No one company can own web (Google hasn't realized this yet, for those who want to know more, find and buy "Google 2.0: The Calculating Predator" as offered online by Infonortics UK).

Creating a collaborative society:

01 Reduce copyright terms
02 Reward small sparks
03 Legalize modding (modifications)
04 Free the employees
05 Mandatory licensing (no icing of knowledge)
06 Pool patents
7. Encourage indcustry-wide standards

Coincident with receiving my latest batch of books, which jumped to the front of my 40-book "awaiting review" pile, I received from Babette Bensoussan in Australia, co-author of Strategic and Competitive Analysis: Methods and Techniques for Analyzing Business Competition the following Old and New Rules (adapted from Betsy Morris in Fortune Magazine, 7 August 2006) that every CEO should print out and memorize:

Old: Big dogs own the street
New: Agile is best; being big can bite

Old: Be #12 or #2 in your market
New: Find a niche, create something new

Old: Shareholders rule
New: The customer is king

Old: Be lean and mean
New: Look out, not in

Old: Rank employees, go with the A's
New: Hire passionate people

Old: Hire a charismatic CEO
New: Hire a courageous CEO

Old: Admire my might
New: Admire my soul

See my list on Collective and Commercial Intelligence for about 30 other recommendations. In relation to this specific book I recommend:

The Tao of Democracy: Using Co-Intelligence to Create a World That Works for All
The World Cafe: Shaping Our Futures Through Conversations That Matter
One from Many: VISA and the Rise of Chaordic Organization

See also my many lists and my own books. On balance, although Amazon does not let us organize our reviews yet (I read in 85 topical areas), if you select me as an interesting person (sorry), and THEN use the lists, my reviews pop to the top.

I would love to get Keith Sawyer, Howard Gardner, Lawrence Lessig, and Cass Sunstein into a room together. If any of you can make that happen, let me know, I'll come at my own expense to moderate what could be the world's hottest new improvisational documentary.

Leveraging the Genius of the Group
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-19
The path to becoming more innovative often requires debunking a number of myths or commonly held beliefs. For instance, the idea that a lone genius is often responsible for an invention or innovation. In fact, most innovations or inventions spring from the combination of the work of many people. Edison did not create the lightbulb alone, nor did Al Gore invent the internet by himself.

In his book, Group Genius, Keith Sawyer looks at the power of Group Genius, the impact of collaboration on creativity and innovation. Rather than rely on a single genius, we should be harnessing the power and knowledge of many people in our organizations. Through a number of interesting examples, Sawyer demonstrates how the power of collaboration increases the capability of the firm to generate more ideas and better ideas, and enhances the culture of innovation.

Sawyer starts off the book with a few characteristics of creative teams:

1. Innovation emerges over time
2. Successful collaborative teams practice deep listening
3. Team members build on their collaborators' ideas
4. The meaning of an idea becomes clear over time
5. Reframing the problem or solving a different problem
6. Recognizing that innovation is inefficient
7. Innovation emerges from the bottom up

Although he presents these ideas early on, they don't receive enough exposition throughout the book. These concepts alone, however, are enough to chew on for quite some time.

Sawyer divides the book into three sections, looking at how teams collaborate and how corporations collaborate. Yes, I know that's two sections. The third section is a little less defined and really looks at how we as individuals think and the mental models we use which provide frameworks which can limit our thinking and creativity.

In the first section, on team collaboration, Sawyer demonstrates the power of improvisation as a method to improve problem solving and innovation. His argument is that too many rules and too much planning tend to choke out creativity and innovative problem solving. He provides several examples where groups were faced with significant challenges and had to improvise solutions on the spot. While improvisation is often inefficient, it can lead to better ideas and better results in some cases. Sawyer also describes "flow" - a concept that originates from research by Csikszentmihalyi. Flow is a heightened state of consciousness that occurs when:

* People are working on tasks that match their skills
* There's a clear goal
* There's constant feedback as to progress and attainment of the goal
* The person is free to fully engage in the task

Research shows that "flow" is essential to creativity. Sawyer moves on to describe a number of conditions that need to exist for a team to achieve flow, using examples from sports teams to improv to major corporations.

In the second section, the Collaborative Mind, Sawyer looks at successful innovators and people who were highly creative and seeks to determine how they got that way, and how "regular" people like you and me can become more creative. In this section there are a number of exercises to help you start reframing problems and step away from your usual perspectives and context.

In the third section of the book, Sawyer looks at using the concepts of collaboration and group genius within an organization - how to organize for improved collaboration and innovation, how to build collaborative webs and how to collaborate with customers. In this section he offers some very useful ideas and approaches to use within any team or organization.

Group Genius is an excellent book, because it combines theory with practice and practical guidelines. Too often, books about innovation and creativity are written from a purely academic viewpoint, with a lot of research and theory described, but not much information on how to put the information into practice, or from a very tactical perspective, suggesting a few tips or techniques or offering up some simple exercises. Sawyer does a good job of demonstrating the thinking behind his suggestions, but also presenting a number of actions that a team or corporation can take to become more innovative by tapping the collaborative genius of a team or the company. He uses a lot of examples, from improv actors to large corporations, but always within context. The section on the Collaborative Mind is interesting but really more focused on the individual and his or her creative capability, while the sections on team and organizational collaboration are focused on how your teams, groups and business units can harness the power of collaboration to achieve more creativity, better problem solving and generate better ideas.

Some books about creativity are read once and filed on the shelf for occasional reference. Group Genius is a book that will be so dog-eared and so heavily used you may need more than one copy for your own use, and a number of copies for your co-workers as well. This is a book that can be used by an individual, a team or a business unit, with relevance for all of them. This book is my first introduction to Keith Sawyer's work, and I look forward to reading his other books after reading this one. I highly recommend it to anyone who is searching for ways to improve the collaboration, creativity or innovative capability of a team or company.

Reposted from an original review on the Innovate on Purpose Blog.

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A Heart Like His: Intimate Reflections on the Life of David
Published in Audio Download by audible.com ()
Author: Beth Moore
List price: $19.99
New price: $10.49

Average review score:

Excellent Read!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-11
My mom used this book along with her women's Bible study. Everyone really enjoyed it! The book provided plenty of opportunities for interesting discussion and offered wonderful insight into who David was and who God is. Beth Moore is a talented writer and this book is no exception!

Awsome book!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-09
Reading this book is like eating Thanksgiving dinner. You read until you are stuffed with so much information. Then you have to stop and ingest it. You have to pray over what you have learned; soaking in all of the extra insight and knowledge. Then after the feeling of fullness begins to subside, you go back for more...and more...and more! This book is not only a glimpse at the life of David. It also explores other people who were important in making David the man that God intended for him to be. While exploring David's life, you will begin to explore your own life...your own ministry. None of us are worthy or perfect by any means. This book explores David's weaknesses in a way that you can compare your own short comings and know that you can be a person after Gods own heart.

A moving, humorous, tearful journey through David's life
Helpful Votes: 15 out of 15 total.
Review Date: 2000-07-26
Beth's book is a wonderfully written journey through the life of a man who sought God's own heart. She fluctuates between humorous observations on the actions of the Biblical characters I thought I knew so well, and touching parallels to the life of the ultimate "Son of Man". This book held me captivated from the introduction to the final period. I look forward to more books like this from Beth.

Superb Treatment of David's Life!
Helpful Votes: 30 out of 30 total.
Review Date: 2002-10-30
A few years ago the women's Bible study in my church went through the video version of "A Heart Like His." I heard glowing reviews from one lady after another, speaking of how pertinent and powerful the material was. Unfortunately, it was then geared exclusively to women, so I never watched the videos myself.

With the memory of those glowing reviews still fresh in mind, I decided to purchase the book version and see for myself if Beth Moore's teaching lived up to its reputation. I was certainly NOT disappointed. This book is an outstanding treatment of the triumphs and the tragedies of Israel's most famous king.

Moore takes practically every significant incident from David's life and applies the spiritual principles to life today. Through her exposition here, the reader gets to know David much better, and learns why he has been called "a man after God's own heart." The author's treatment is chronological, starting from the events surrounding David's emergence on the Biblical scene as a young boy to the transfer of his throne as an old man to his son Solomon.

I recommend this book very highly to anyone wanting to gain a better understanding of the life of King David. The book is very easy reading, yet is profound in its insights. Men and women, clergy and laity alike will benefit from Moore's painstakingly thorough work.

A Focused Study
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2005-08-26
Beth Moore chose to delve into the life and times of David, a mere shepherd boy who was chosen to be the leader of Israel. In A HEART LIKE HIS, Moore poses the practical questions as to how a person can be forgiven and restored after sin? How a person can continue to be faithful when nothing seems to be going his way? How can a person find God when feeling lonely? How important is God's influence on our family?

Moore begins the journey into David's life in the book of 1 Samuel. She uses several Biblical references and provides background into the trials and tribulations David faced. With God's assistance, David rose from basic obscurity into a position of amazing power. When he operates outside of God's will, he makes an unwise decision that will prove to unravel his long reign and have dire consequences on his family. In his earlier times, Moore depicts David who continually seeking God's guidance and is quick to offer praise to God. Yet, David was a man with a weakness for beautiful women. Although he was married, David enjoyed the attention his power garnered him from the fairer sex. Moore enhances the reader's understanding of how David's adulterous conduct with Bathsheba and the murder of her husband cast David out of God's will. On this subject, Moore states that David had a "far away heart." It was not until David was "bankrupt in spirit" over the death of his illegitimate son that he repented for his sins. Moore reminds the reader that although God will forgive us of our sins, He will pass judgement on us.

In A HEART LIKE HIS, Moore does a very good job of setting the scene. She takes us back to the beginning even before David had knowledge of the greater things in store for him. The book's lessons are based mainly on 1 Samuel and 2 Samuel. A HEART LIKE HIS would be a great tool for individual or group study. Each chapter is laden with cross-references to other Biblical references. At times, it was confusing because the complete Biblical citation was not used in the text. However, this was not distracting enough to detract from the great presentation of King David's reign.

Reviewed by Nedine
of The RAWSISTAZ™ Reviewers

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Hitler and the Holocaust (Unabridged) [Modern Library Chronicles]
Published in Audio Download by audible.com ()
Author: Robert S. Wistrich
List price: $37.95
New price: $20.21

Average review score:

There was no one to help
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-24
In the introduction, Wistrich provides an overview asking the big Why. He disagrees with Daniel Goldhagen, pointing out that prior to 1933 antisemitism had been worse in countries like Russia, Romania, Poland and Austria and that the rule of law applied in Germany until that year. The Holocaust was a pan-European event in which millions of people participated. The times were evil; even Britain and the USA experienced a rising tide of antisemitism. Unimaginable horror results when a society does not distinguish between good & evil. The lessons of this abyss are that evil must be resisted in its early stage and that individuals are responsible for their actions.

The first chapter briefly reviews Jewish history from the Hasmoneans to the Roman yoke in which era a new religion was born. Its foundational documents contain calumnies and demonizations of the Jewish People. The "Church Fathers" perpetuated this hostility in their writings; the victory of Constantine Christianity ensured ever increasing oppression. Martin Luther amplified the hatred in his writings. This chapter also covers Europe in the 1930s as night was coming on. Wistrich also considers various atrocities and genocides like that of the Armenians, the Gulags of Stalinist Russia and the suffering of the Roma.

Disillusionment in Europe after the First World War was profound. The pointless death & destruction spurred the growth of revolutionary movements like fascism and communism. The history of Austria and Germany in the 1920s & 1930s, Mein Kampf, the political parties & the reaction to Jewish refugees arriving from Eastern Europe are discussed. The depression hit Germany in 1930; that year the Nazi vote increased dramatically. In 1933 Hitler took power and German Jews started leaving.

The destruction of Crystal Night followed, the most violent attack on Jews since the crusades; 100 people were murdered. The international conference held at Evian in France encouraged Hitler since he noticed it was all talk; no country was prepared to welcome Jewish refugees. The discriminatory racial laws did not encounter resistance from any sector of German society. The German annexation of half of Poland in 1939 and the later invasion of Russia placed millions more Jews under Nazi rule. Terrible massacres occurred on the front.

Hitler's apocalypticism was a blend of Christian and anti-Christian Judeophobia, a secular salvationist ideology. He referred to New Testament passages during his speeches in Catholic Bavaria, saw himself as a messianic figure and claimed that Christ had pioneered the struggle against the Jews. Thus in the early years the Nazis mined the ancient vein of Christian Antisemitism. Only the Confessional Church openly defied the Nazis and in the 1937 Encyclical "Mit Brennende Sorge" Pope Pius XI objected to Nazi supremacism and paganism. Nazism co-existed with the Roman Catholic and Protestant churches but its bestial heart harbored contempt for Judeo-Christian values and ethics. Leading Nazis were fanatically anti-Christian. As the evidence of atrocities accumulated, including reports from Croatia & Slovakia, the Vatican's reaction was muted. It still viewed Jews as representing its modernist enemies like liberalism, freemasonry, secularism, etc.

Chapter 6 was almost unbearable, were it not for the exceptions where the Angel of the Lord must have drawn his sword or the Spirit moved the hearts of the people. Collaboration - particularly cruel in countries like Ukraine, Romania and Slovakia - occurred throughout Europe. Jews were safe in Hungary until March 1944 when the Germans invaded. Despite the efforts of especially Calvinists, more than 80% of Holland's Jews were deported to Poland. Belgium fared better - people deliberately undermined the German efforts but 44% was lost. In the areas controlled by the collaborationist Vichy Regime, French Jews were protected to an extent but not recent arrivals. In 1942 the Germans occupied all of France. I'm not sure if Wistrich mentions it, but General Franco of Spain accepted refugees.

In this demonic darkness of indifference, hostility & complicity with the Nazis, there were three areas where the divine light was not extinguished. Protection was provided in the north, east & south of Europe. Bulgaria was a German ally but the people, never antisemitic, stood firm: King, government, civil society and church! Orthodox Metropolitan Stephan of Sofia declared that men had no right to persecute Jews, whilst the King supplied many reasons why its citizens could not leave. Denmark saved almost its entire Jewish community by ferrying them across to Sweden. Of course the proximity & willingness of Sweden made it possible. In their absence, Danes tended their homes & gardens and cared for their pets. Finland flatly refused German demands. Italians openly sabotaged the Holocaust; the Italian army shielded and protected Jews in places like France, Croatia, Albania and Greece. Later when the Germans invaded, Italians hid and protected Jews to a degree unseen anywhere else but in the aforementioned countries.

One recognizes the sacrifice of Britain & Americans whose soldiers fought and died, but these countries do not have clean hands. First, they instituted restrictive immigration policies. At that time, the American Jewish community was weak, divided and afraid of antagonizing its fellow citizens. The worst action of Roosevelt was turning away the ocean liner St Louis with its Jewish refugees. Back in Germany they were all murdered. Perhaps even worse from the quantity angle, the UK established quotas for Jewish immigration to the Levant. Not only that, but the British navy intercepted refugee ships en route to the homeland, and that under Churchill! It is incomprehensible. Moron me who thought the Prime Minister had more authority than the State Department. So in the Atlantic Anglo-Saxon sphere political hypocrisy and heartless bureaucracy triumphed over mercy.

Sensitive people beware! The final chapter, on modernity and genocide, evaluates various theories and provides examples of sadism and torture in the death camps. One can skip it, just reading the last two pages which are safe. Wistrich concludes that the Holocaust was inspired by a millenarian apocalyptic ideology of annihilation that cannot be separated from the dominant religious tradition of Western Europe. But unlike Christianity, Nazism was a death cult that saw human sacrifice as the road to redemption. The book contains maps, notes arranged by chapter, 3 timeline charts covering 1933 - 1945, and an index.

Great book
Helpful Votes: 18 out of 24 total.
Review Date: 2002-07-07
Wistrich does a wonderful job of condensing information about a huge topic into a very useful small volume. It doesn't go into a huge amount of detail about every aspect of the Holocaust or the anti-semitism leading up to it, but it is a great book for beginners, particularly high school or college undergraduates looking for an introduction to this horrible subject.
As the previous reviewer said, Wistrich does do a wonderful job of documenting his sources and I too got a lot of further reading and research ideas from this book.

Illuminating and Useful Discussion Of The Holocaust!
Helpful Votes: 20 out of 25 total.
Review Date: 2002-10-02
This interesting book by Robert Wistrich is an attempt to concentrate on the question as to why the Nazis placed so much emphasis on the extermination of the European Jews, often when doing so meant endangering the other goals they were surging toward during the conduct of the war. The author, of course, understands that the whole of the national Socialist movement sprang from the discontent and absurd racism of the Volkist history of the Reich, much of it dating back centuries. From the time Germany was forged out of the crucible of Prussia and its environs, the collection of Germanic peoples looked for those unifying themes that would untie them as distinct peop