John Garfield Books


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 John Garfield
Magic: The Gathering : The Pocket Players' Guidefor Magic : The Gathering (Magic the Gathering)
Published in Paperback by Harpercollins (Mm) (1995-08)
Authors: Rich Redman, Eric Doohan, Richard Garfield, John Tynes, Beth Moursund, Tom Wylie, Paul Person, Mark Rosewater, Dave Pettey, Jim Lin, Charlie Catino, Joel Mick, Steve Conard, Allen Varney, and Duelists' Convocation
List price: $7.95
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Average review score:

magic the gathering volume 2
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2001-08-16
though i dont have this book my friends say its an excellent book and I've seen it for my self and it is definatly a must buy

This Book is so Good, It makes magic much funner
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 1999-06-06
It so good it has tempted me to buy alot of Magic cards

One from the master himself
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2000-06-25
Richard Garfield is the creator of Magic The Gathering card game. This book gives the reader an in-depth look into the game and shows the beautiful illustration that each card contains. This is a must have for all players and collectors of the card game.

I Love this book!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 1999-06-07
I collect the cards and I don't know how I would have known if they were rare or common cards if I hadn't found this book. It's the best!

Not as good as the first one but still good!
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2000-06-13
If you are a mtg collector, you definitely need this book. Although it is much "thinner" than Volume 1 but it's still a must for any serious mtg collector

 John Garfield
Man's Religions
Published in Hardcover by Macmillan USA (1984-03)
Author: John B. Noss
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Must-read for beginners in comparative religion
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-08-22
I found this book while getting my masters in religious education. Twenty-four years later, I still go back to it. I bought an extra copy a few years ago at Strand's in New York. I wish I had enough copies to hand out to persons that I meet who are curious about other religions. A new hard-cover publication, with new bindings, would be wonderful.

New Edition available
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2003-04-29
There is a new edition for this title which is A History of the World's Religion by David S. Noss.

See my review under John Noss
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2000-01-25
I am hoping that a new edition may be forthcoming

Sorry to see this book out of print!
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2000-01-25
I have used the 8th edition of this book (with David Noss) as the basis for my lectures on world religion since 1989. It is an excellent overview of the great religions placing them in three categories based on three possible reponses to the natural world. I use these grouping in my classes: religions of India, religions of east Asia, and religions of the Middle East. I particularly like the balance between history and belief systems.

I have often recommended this book to others and now I realize that I'll have to let them know that it is out of print. Our local library had copies of various editions but they have been stolen!

Sorry to hear that a book I thought of as a friend is gone.

 John Garfield
Handbook of Psychotherapy and Behavior Change
Published in Paperback by John Wiley & Sons (1994-03)
Authors: Allen E. Bergin and Sol L. Garfield
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THE reference for psychotherapy research
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2001-08-27
At first read, I was overwhelmed by the sheer amount of information in this book. However, as I have used it more, I have come to appreciate the clarity of the writing, the quality of the research, and the experience of the writers. Every clinician should read this book. It has inspired me to view research as a necessary component of good practice.

A Classic in the Field
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 1999-11-29
This book is a classic and definitive reference book for every clinical psychologist and psychotherapists in other professions. It would also be informative to the educated non-practitioner who wants to learn more about the field of psychotherapy.

 John Garfield
John Diamond
Published in Hardcover by Farrar, Straus and Giroux (BYR) (2001-04-16)
Author: Leon Garfield
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John Diamond is 100% carrot
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2000-03-21
This is a exciting tail of a young boy named Willium hows father had told him a deep and dark secrate on his death bed. Willium runs away from home to set his fathers wrongs write. Once again a griping tail by Leon Garfeild. You will not be abel to put it down.

 John Garfield
The Lost Voyage of John Cabot
Published in Board book by Thorndike Press (2004-12-09)
Author: Henry Garfield
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The realistic possibilities of John Cabot's voyage and crew
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2004-09-10
The early explorers faced oceans of unknown terrors when they set sail to look for a shorter route to the Asian mainland. In 1492 Christopher Columbus thought he might have discovered Asia. But his rival and friend, John Cabot, felt that Columbus had not found a southern route to Asia. Based upon study, calculations and his own explorations, Cabot set out in 1497 to possibly prove his old rival wrong and to find this route himself.

When Cabot leaves Bristol, England, he takes his two sons, Ludovico and Sancio. He leaves 15-year-old Sebastian behind to care for the explorer's patient wife, Mattea. While Sebastian resents being left behind, he finds comfort in the letters he begins to receive from Sancio. The letters are filled with the long days of boredom and also some of the excitement as they embark into less explored areas. However, the letters stop abruptly and everyone is left to wonder what has happened. The only information they get comes through rumor and gossip as sailors come and go in the busy port. History sheds no light on this last voyage of John Cabot, but through the skillful storytelling skills of Henry Garfield, we catch a glimpse of what might have happened to this group of daring and brave explorers.

The letters to Sebastian from Sancio continue to be written but are not mailed, and it is this clever twist that allows readers to follow an intriguing path of the sailors' fates. Sancio, who is skilled in languages, writes to his brother that there is unrest among the men. This unrest possibly comes from two things: they feel that they have reached an Asian coastline, so it is time to return, and they are lonely for female company. "I think the sight of the native women has reminded some of the men of the loneliness of sea travel. There were two fights today." Sancio continues to assure his brother that he feels his father has discovered an important land mass from England.

"When we return to England, Sebastian, we will bring with us the certainty that a great mass of land, reachable by ship from the shores of Europe, does indeed lie in the Western Ocean. It is Father's discovery, and he will become famous for it. I daresay the world as we know it will never be the same."

The political maneuverings, the intrigues and deceptions are all captured in the rush of adventures that flow throughout this book. Henry Garfield presents a realistic picture of the possible horrors and heartbreaks that might have been experienced by Cabot's crew. Clipper ship tales are quite popular these days, and this exciting story of John Cabot's last voyage is sure to be enjoyed for its insights and wonderful historical pictures.

--- Reviewed by Sally M. Tibbetts (stibbetts@maine207west.k12.il.us)

 John Garfield
New Teacher's Handbook
Published in Paperback by Good Year Books (2000)
Authors: Gary M. Garfield and Gary Garfield
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wonderful resource for new teachers
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-08-04
This is a terrific handbook for new and veteran teachers. Gary Garfield gives insightful and practical guidance in many areas such as classroom management, field trips, lesson plans, parent conferences, etc. This book is a must have for all teachers. I highly recommend it for all who are entering the teaching profession!

 John Garfield
Releasing Kings for Ministry in the Marketplace
Published in Paperback by Worldcast Publishing (2004-06)
Authors: John S. Garfield and Harold R. Eberle
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Revelation!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-13
This book was a true revelation to me. I am beginning to move from the Priesthood anointing into the Kingly anointing and didn't even understand it until I read this book. It brought to me understanding, wisdom, and revelation in my spirit to what I already knew in my heart. It is clear as a bell to me now!

 John Garfield
Fire on the Mountain
Published in Audio Cassette by Audioworks (1999-10-01)
Author:
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Fire on the Mountain
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-29
I found the book compelling and I believe factual. I am sorry that this sacrefice did not stop another incident, the Thirty Mile Fire, where more were sacreficed. I was a fireman for a number of years and felt the power of an inferno that blistered my hands through my gloves but never faced anything like this. These are heros and special people who would trust and risk their lives to protect life and property of others. Circumstances through management decisions such as first not attempting to put the fire out when it was still not serious. I have climbed all over those mountains and it could have been done. Bad leadership decisions have taken thousands and thousands and continue to take more and more of our finest and brightest. When will they ever learn?

Great Book!!! Great Writing!!! Very Easy To Read!!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-11
I found this book like so many others hard to put down. The author is very descriptive but very easy to read. I like this book because it is written so anyone can easily follow the events and description. I like books that are straight and to the point without all the fluff. This book has no fluff, just a good investigation into a difficult series of events.

Gripping
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-13
Norman Maclean's son does an okay job of telling the tragic story. Many of the events described are fragmented making the story jagged in places, but overall he gets the point across. Dedicated, hard working folks making the ultimate sacrifice. There are so many names tossed in and out of this book that you'll find yourself flipping back and forth trying to piece it together. John could have done a better job transitioning between events and making a stronger connection to the people in the book.

You'd like to think that this should never happen to firefighters, but the sad reality is that it does because it is dangerous work. As a firefighter, I found that John painted a very vivid picture of the events: 'The blood pounding in your head as you race up the hill', the lack of sleep the jumpers endure from their overnight 'coyote' the first night, etc. draws the reader's senses into the story for a gripping journey.

It's unfortunate to learn in Maclean's book that the crosses on Mann Gulch were nearly replaced with obelisks. Looking at the recent pictures of the Mann Gulch crosses in other sources - they appear at least to me that they are still in good shape. Today, the obelisks stand right beside the Mann Gulch crosses. Obelisks? What does that even signify? The crosses placed on Mann Gulch were how the 13 jumpers were first honored - let the original memorials stay! If this is about religion and separation of church and state, then I am totally disheartened to learn that smokejumping, one of the last decent traditions in our American work history, has gone PC. I hope that's not the case.

Anyway, this book should be read by all firefighters and those considering the job, especially the overhead.

Blowout!
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2005-02-03
It started with dry lightning storm starting 40 new fires in the Grand Junction District with 5000 lightning strikes on Storm King Mountain before the fire and a total of 9,000 strikes total.

The BLM case is that other fires threatening homes required resource immediately and the South Canyon fire was not number one on the priority list; furthermore, BLM relied on County Helicopter support and availability from Western Slope Fire Coordination Center. The author tells about a tactic used by Blume where Blume would travel to Western Slope Fire Coordination Center identified which helicopters were on the pad, return to office, and place a call for the resource; the resource could not be denyed; games people play. What was needed to prevent such games was a join network of State and Fed with a central command hierarchy that could give stronger coordination during a crisis.

Therefore, it is logically that criticism would surface directing its anger at unclear procedures between state and federal agencies delayed deployment and usage of firefighting resources like failure to by the state too put out the fire because it had not cross its zone. Furthermore, criticism centers on these delays causing the small Storm King fire to expand from 30 acres to 50 acres to a crisis. When the smoke jumpers arrived at the fire scene they were startled at the size of the fire, however their "can do" attitude may have contributed to this underestimation of the problem. Brains are critical to fire survival and not just brawn. Smoke jumper could not be expected to back down from their jobs. Therefore, management must be held accountable for the disaster and their failure to recognized a crisis emerging and don't point the finger at the smoke jumpers. The reviewing commission says, "Twelve of the 18 Watch Out Situations were not recognized, or proper action was not taken" indicating that the firefighting crew was careless.

The smoke jumpers, BLM/Forrest service misjudgment could have been avoided by putting out the fire sooner. Immediate plane drops of retardant and helicopter support could have contributed significantly. Red mud retard was delivered by plane too late. The difficult wind currents made flyovers difficult caused by sudden drops in air pressure threatening to put the plane wing into the mountain.

Lack of immediate support delayed blue hat crews from arriving at the fire sight. Good black areas were too far from the fighting crews and super human efforts by the blue hats was not enough; the second group were able to power out to I-70 into safety.

"On July of 1994 had been a drought year and a time of low humidity. The fuels were extremely dry and susceptible to rapid and explosive spread. None of the groups recognized the dense oak spread as a potential for a blowup. A blow up is the perfect combination of fuel, high winds, and specific terrain topology. Cucou was monitoring the weather conditions on July 6: he predicted a cold front with winds of 45 mph passing through the fire zone around 3:30-4:00 pm. The weather information came in advance but did not trigger and evacuation. "A major blowup did occur on July 6 beginning at 4:00 p.m. Maximum rates of spread of 18 mph and flames as high as 200 to 300 feet made escape by firefighters extremely difficult."

On the west side the fire crossed the original fireline so BLM/Forest service started a second fireline further downhill on the east side of the ridge.

"At 3:20 p.m. a dry cold front moved into the fire area. As winds and fire activity increased, the fire made several rapid runs with 100-flame lengths within the existing burn. At 4:00 p.m. the fire crossed the bottom of the west drainage and spread up the drainage on the west side. It soon spotted back across the drainage to the east side beneath the firefighters and moved onto steep slopes and into dense, highly flammable Gambel oak. Within seconds a wall of flame raced up the hill toward the firefighters on the west flank fireline. Failing to outrun the flames, 12 firefighters perished. Two helitack crew-members on top of the ridge also died when they tried to outrun the fire to the northwest. The remaining 35 firefighters survived by escaping out the east drainage or seeking a safety area and deploying their fire shelters."

The smoke jumper elite were burned, a forbidden taboo; their story shows their incredible determination to survive; they lived their on the edge and lives with each other represented a close family bonds; the Storm King blowup was similar to the Mann Gulch blowup and no correlation translated to warn against a repeat occurrence; McKay was a hero; the escape routes were too long and steep with the worst part of the path achieving a 55 degree incline as the blue hat pace dropped to 1 per hour as the fire increased its velocity to 5 miles per hour; "the Prineville Interagency Hotshot Crew (out-of state-blue hats) was not briefed on local conditions, fuels, or fire weather forecasts before being sent to the South Canyon fire."; carry tools and equipment on the escape route reduced the pace and every second made the difference between reaching the ridge and death.

The book is captivating.

Still Learning
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2004-07-31
Great reporting, decent literature although granted, few of us will ever match his father.
I know/knew many of the principals on this stage and what struck me was how well he captured them. Over and over, I'd read of another friend and easily picture them saying or doing what was in print, but now became very real.
I'm amazed by how much I missed after the official report and talking with some of those that were there. Mr. MacLean's book has rounded my education well. My oldest started fire fighting four years ago and I required reading of the report and this book so that he would understand the multiple levels that mistakes are made at.
To those that complain about faultfinding; how much fault has been found with "Fire on the Mountain"? Have there been any lawsuits, settlements or retractions? If none, then please list flaws so we can judge the validity of disputed items.
The only major flaw I saw in this book was failure to deal aggressively with the two jumpers who were not carrying fire shelters. Should have been at least a few pages devoted to that.
There is a huge reason for this book. The failing of management to report on and effectively deal with management's errors. This book fills part of that void.
Mr. MacLean, would you please do a book on Los Alamos and the Cerro Grande Fire? I was there for a couple weeks. The mistakes of the prescribed burn that got away would only be an appetizer to leads us to the corruption/incompetence of the Lab. That Lab is a far more important issue than wildland fire safety.
Whatever else, thank you for this book.

 John Garfield
Body and Soul: The Story of John Garfield
Published in Hardcover by Morrow (1975)
Author: Larry Swindell
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"They made me a movie star!"
Helpful Votes: 13 out of 13 total.
Review Date: 2004-10-22
This great biography is one of the few books ever written about the underated John Garfield, and although it's nearly 30 years old it's still the best I've read about Garfield. From his troubled youth to his stardom in Hollywood to his tragic death at the age of 39, it's all covered in depth. There are also 24 pages of photos & thankfully, a complete filmography at the end. Sadly, John Garfield made only 31 films & of these only 15 have been released on vhs &/or dvd. One of his very best movies, "Pride of the Marines", has been unjustly neglected over the years & I can only hope it'll finally be released on dvd someday. For those who want to learn more about this amazing actor this book is highly recommended.

Interesting and engrossing
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2005-02-07
"Body and Soul" is an interesting and engrossing bio of one of my favorite actors who,sadly, is underrated or even forgotten by most. This is much better than the more recent bio, "He Ran All the Way." Swindle paints a complete portrait of the actor unlike the 2004 book which reduces Garfield to a bit of a cartoon. Swindle provides insightful stories of Garfield's life including his colleagues and family. Especially moving are the last few chapters dealing with HUAC, detailing not only Garfield's struggles but also of his friends including Elia Kazan and Clifford Odets. The book also provides large excerpts from Garfield's HUAC testimony. The book is very fair in assessing Garfield's career and personal life. Seek this bio out rather than Robert Nott's Garfield book. It benefits from having been written in 1975 when many of Garfield's peers were still alive and blacklisting was still painfully fresh in Hollywood's history. Frankly, this is just a better written and more complete biography.

 John Garfield
The Fallen: A Photographic Journey Through the War Cemeteries and Memorials of the Great War, 1914-18
Published in Hardcover by The History Press (2008-05-01)
Author: John Garfield
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Poignant photography
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2002-01-19
This book consists primarily of photographs taken by an English doctor from 1975 to 1990 at and near war cemeteries and memorials related to World War One. There is a good text, which gives the background for the events which led to the cemeteries and memorials depicted. The photos are sobering, and if you are a student of photography would be of great interest. I sometimes thought the photos were designed more to show off the photographer's skill than to depict what was to be seen--which I confess is what I was looking for in the book, since I have never seen on the ground the awesome sights related to the First World War, and I suppose I never will. I did not appreciate this book as much as I did a book by Rose E. B. Coombs: Before Endeavours Fade: A Guide to Battlefields of the First World War, which I read on 4 May 1991 and which I thought was almost as worthwhile as going to France to see the sites discussed for myself. Garfield's book has many poignant quotes, but unfortunately does not have a bibliography of any kind.


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