J Books
Related Subjects: Johnson, Amy Jo Jolie, Angelina Judd, Ashley Jones, Jennifer Johansson, Scarlett Jackson, John M. Jones, James Earl Jackson, Samuel L. Jones, Tommy Lee Johansson, Paul Jones, Shirley Jbara, Gregory Jurasik, Peter Jane, Thomas Johnson, Kenny Jameson, Jenna Jodorowsky, Alejandro Jones, Jeffrey Joseph, Kimberly Jackman, Hugh James, Jesse Jeter, Michael Jackson, LaToya Jones, Gareth Jared, Petra Johnson, Ashley Judge, Christopher Johnson, Russell Johnson, Don Jacobi, Derek Janssen, Famke Jensen, Mark Jackson, Jonathan Jewison, Norman Jackson, Joshua Jones, Tamala Jeffrey, Myles Jones, Terry Janney, Allison Jovovich, Milla Jacob, Irène Janus, Samantha Jones, Ashley Johnson, Geordie Jones, Renée Jenkins, Rebecca Jones, Vinnie Jackson, Kate Johnson, Eric Johnson, Celia James, Brion
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Probably the Book to Rehabilitate the Mystery in ReligiosityReview Date: 2008-01-25
Kant's fourth critique?Review Date: 2007-06-20
I'll admit I was a little surprised at the heavy Christian turn at the end, only because Christianity seems to tame the wildness of the "tremendum" and the "mysterium." All in all, a fascinating and useful read.
Divine SurrealityReview Date: 2007-09-24
A classic and vital work for the philosophy of religionReview Date: 2006-11-15
Otto, a Protestant theologian, offered a concept he called the 'holy.' Also often called the numinious, this was a sense of something being sacred. Holiness gave Being a special set of qualities which set it apart from the universe and its furniture as we 'ordinarily' experience it. This experience is often one of terror and fear in the prophets of monotheistic religions (Jeremiah, Ezekiel, Moses, Abraham, Jesus and Mohammed) while in native and Eastern religions, it can be a sense of power or awe. In this work Otto applies the idea of the Holy to Christianity and other religions, and would later form a critical tool in the phenomenology of religion and religious experience.
This book is essential reading for any scholar of religion or philosopher interested in religion and questions relating to religion and religious experience.
An Interesting Idea to PonderReview Date: 2006-07-25

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Should Be Used As A TextbookReview Date: 2008-05-16
IndispensableReview Date: 2008-05-06
Great ResourceReview Date: 2008-03-02
jeffbrownlegal@gmail.com
Lawyers not producersReview Date: 2007-11-16
Excellent book - idiotic titleReview Date: 2007-10-22

Used price: $4.50

My Number One Choice on the SujectReview Date: 2004-08-03
Great Book Easy to ReadReview Date: 2003-11-18
Helpful and FunReview Date: 2003-03-20
Dr. Pellegrino deserves a better editor - several typographical errors mar what is otherwise a wonderful book.
an absolute must have for fibro patientsReview Date: 2003-01-28
While about a third of the information in Inside Fibromyalgia is generic and found in many other books, the other two thirds of the book contains his suggestions about how to modify activities of daily living, specific exercises to relieve pain in specific parts of the body and HUMOR make this an absolute must read and re-read. (you know how quickly we forget!!)
Great BookReview Date: 2003-04-27

Silly funReview Date: 2008-01-14
Grandmas Love ItReview Date: 2006-07-06
Gwynne makes me Grin!Review Date: 2003-07-23
Another kid classicReview Date: 2006-06-30
The King Who RainedReview Date: 2005-11-03

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YUMMMM!Review Date: 2005-10-27
Fantastic Cookbook!Review Date: 2005-05-18
Bachelor turned Chef in 4 pages.Review Date: 2005-02-15
Has also put me at ease with a few practiced recipes that I am confident serving to dates.
Jen's approach makes it just as easy and fast to whip up a healthy personally crafted meal as it would have been to warm up some Stouffer's. A MUST OWN for anyone who needs a cook book.
Wonderful and PracticalReview Date: 2004-10-21
Jennifer's cookbook brings the fun back to the kitchen. Review Date: 2004-12-03
We now have banana pancakes with honey-butter for breakfast instead of the usual high fat, high sugar, low nutrient breakfast cereals. They enjoy sandwiches other than pb&j for lunch (and yes, they are no-trade lunches as the title of the chapter says!) with veggies and a little dipping sauce. Our dinners are not as stressful for me because Jennifer teaches you how to stalk your pantry so you can get home and answer that age-old question "What's for dinner?" in a matter of minutes by surveying your supplies. Jennifer's cookbook brings the fun back to the kitchen. Thank you!

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Theodore Roosevelt as a father.Review Date: 2007-12-07
The author also gives us a glimpse into TR's father, Theodore Roosevelt, Sr., who was a very generous man with his time and money. After reading about him, I understood why TR valued public service.
Because the author focuses on the president, the reader will see how TR influenced his children to value public service. For example, all of his sons served in the military. Indeed, Quentin Roosevelt died as a pilot in a dogfight in World War I. The elder son, Theodore Roosevelt II, led the first wave on Utah Beach in Normandy on D-Day during World War II. He died of a heart attack some weeks later. Archie was declared 100% disabled in both World War I and World War II. Kermit also served well in both wars, but suffered from alcoholism and depression (TR's brother, who was Eleanor Roosevelt's father, also suffered from the same). Also, TR's youngest daughter, Ethel, served as a nurse in France in World War I.
This book is definitely worth reading to get a view of Theodore Roosevelt as a family man. I wish we had more elected officials like him today.
A Truly Unique and Fascinating American FamilyReview Date: 2007-01-29
Excellent distillation of Roosevelt's last yearsReview Date: 2006-12-06
Nuggets include the mention of Harvard in that time as a conservative and pro-military bastion (compared to today's institution fighting military recruitment in court), Woodrow Wilson viewed as an appeaser, a coward, and an appointer of bigots in his administration (in contrast to a reputation as being a visionary negotiator), observation by Gen. George Patton that Theodore's eldest son, Brig. Gen. Theodore Roosevelt III, was a courageous commander- but no soldier (both father and son won the Medal of Honor...a feat perhaps not matched by any other American family), and the contrast highlighted between Kaiser Wilhelm's non-combat patronage of his sons (during WWI) and the former president Roosevelt's sons participating in front line combat. Another interesting fact: three of Roosevelt's four sons died in military service--one killed in action, one dead of a heart attack a month after D-Day and one day before he was to be promoted to major general, and one a suicide). The fourth suffered from the long term effects of severe war wounds.
Roosevelt is also revealed as a founding father of the original progressive movement...born out of the Republican party, no less. "Progressive" used to mean advocating sensible capitalism through the restraint of unlimited power of large corporations (through the Sherman Act) and the promotion of sound environmental policy and conservation. It also demanded the U.S. government uphold its main role--that of national defense. This is in stark contrast to today's "progressive" thinking--complete rejection of market economics and corporations, radical environmentalism, and pacifism. Roosevelt must spin in his grave.
All in all a great primer of the former president. Makes you want to immediately run out and read more.
Love TRReview Date: 2006-04-12
InspiringReview Date: 2005-07-27

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Looker....A tale of love amongst USReview Date: 2008-05-08
Thank you for "Looker." The characters were as real as the pages and
paper on which they were written. Your knowing and seeing of Black gay Men's lives made the book a page turner. The tapestry of lust, love, pain, joy, anger, betrayal, safe hatred, sardonic sex, rage, crime, and bliss wove a tale reminiscent of what "real" Black gay men know to be our truths. Never before have had I read such a description of Black gay men living on the periphery of our community; while we exist in its midst.
Bran was a man undamaged by the gay experience, simply reluctant to love.
Most importantly you aptly connected the lives of varying generations
of "WE".
Love unrequited and finally realized and revealed. A love based on friendship. Wow!
Do it again,
Borris Powell
New York
Enjoyable NovelReview Date: 2008-04-04
Eloquent Novel!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!Review Date: 2008-02-08
A page turnerReview Date: 2008-01-12
SBC DOES IT AGAIN...OUR OWN MASTER AMONG US!Review Date: 2007-12-22

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Collectible price: $16.00

Insight GainedReview Date: 2008-03-13
Exceptional and elaborate; delicious and intricate novelReview Date: 2007-11-25
Balzac choses Lucien as a romantic, good-looking dreamy poet. We are first thrust into his provincial life, with details about his ordinary life and extraordinary ambitions that he has no means of realizing. Except patronage by an older woman! She leads him to Paris, only to abandon him to fight his way into the high society. How Lucien rises and falls in the glamorous, amorous, corrupt and vicious life as a journalist in Paris is picturized through a narrative that is bathed in realism, and yet proceeds through both suspense and wit, in the spirit of the pace at which Balzac could conjure up such novels.
In the provinces, Lucien has a friend, David, who likewise is somewhat lacking in social and economic acumen, and is a hard working inventor. David own father ruins him by extracting an unreasonable price for the printing press that he leaves or sells to his own son. Crafty competitors take advantage of David's credulous character. David endures both provincial small mindedness and economic setbacks suffered to keep Lucien afloat. Balzac displays his knowledge of these disparate characters with remarkable attention to detail. He weaves an undercurrent, of what could have passes as a dissertation, on the art and science of paper making.
Balzac creates in his one book, a saga that unravels friendship, love, jealousy, lust, ambition, vanity, greed and absurdity that lurk in our beings and in our relationships. By using two main pillars, Lucien and David, Balzac erects a bridge into the two worlds of poetry and science. He shuns hint of any romance of either worlds, and shows how much character, how many hardships and set-backs, how much devotion and labor are required for a man to become a known poet or a scientist.
I am quoting an example from this translation (carried out by Katharine Prescott Wormeley):
"No one can be a great man cheaply," said d'Arthez in his gentle voice. "Genius waters her work with tears.Talent is a moral being which, like all other beings, is subject to the maladies of childhood. Society rejects undeveloped talent just as nature removes her feeble or deformed creations. Whoever wishes to rise above his fellows must be prepared to struggle, and not recoil at difficulty. A great writer is a martyr who does not die - that's the whole of it!"
Besides the two pillars, the book has an interesting array of characters. Actresses, society women, editors and publishers, lawyers, struggling writers, dandies - all appear with their human failings and foibles as part of a drama that unfolds with an enrapturing narrative. Be it history, economics, alchemy, or psychology, or any topic under the sun, Balzac ushers in his great knowledge, suspending and supporting the story with able and apt pointers, tresses and metaphors.
Balzac's Lost Illusions is undoubtedly a classic everyone can enjoy and must read at some point in their lives. Highly recommended.
A "Regular People" ReviewReview Date: 2006-12-06
Swimming among sharksReview Date: 2006-09-21
David Sechard is a young man who inherits, at great cost, his cold and greedy father's printing business. Lucien Chardon (later "de Rubempre", after taking his impoversihed mother's more aristocratic last name) is his best friend. Both of them share a love for poetry, but it is Lucien who comes to shine as the young genius of province, the promise for whom it is worth it to sacrifice it all. Lucien gets the love of one Louise de Bargeton, the "queen of Angouleme", the most cultivated and refined woman in town. Louise promises to take Lucien to Paris, introduce him into the great society, and make him triumph as a poet. His family gives him all they can to get him started, and off he goes to Paris. But he happens to be arrogant, proud, and insecure, and soon he suffers the despise and insolence of aristocrats and other rich people. After what he believes to be an offense from Louise, he rejects her, earning her eternal hatred.
In the meantime, Lucien has been spending time with two very different circles of friends. The first is composed of a group of young intellectuals, hardworking guys sacrificing money and fun for the sake of science, art, and knowledge. They are there for him in times of need, and encourage him to keep up with his writing. The second group is a bunch of journalists, easy going but corrupt people who convince him to achieve quick fame and money. Lucien gets more and more trapped by this seemingly easy life, and after he conquers the love of the prettiest actress in Paris, his fate is decided. He achieves fame and fortune overnight, and so he jumps completely into the world of parties, frivolity and silly competition for status. At this point in the novel, Balzac introduces us to the sordid, decadent, and disgusting world of journalism understood as an unmerciful network of extortion and constant blackmailing. Lucien slides down that road, getting recognition and fame, oblivious to the growing net of envy that closes in around him every day.
What follows is the sad story of an unlikable character. Lucien has very little redeeming qualities about him, as opposed to some of his early friends, his young lover and his family. He is blind as blind can be, since his extreme selfishness builds a cloud in which he lives. He cares for nobody, except perhaps for the little Coralie, and he goes on leaving too many wounded bodies by the side of the road. Nevertheless, this character is the vehicle that allows Balzac to show us the real world out there. This writer never ever gives up to the temptation of sweetening things for the reader, he's brave and persists on his plan. Balzac is never a moralizing preacher, he is just a skillful painter of life as it is.
Here, as in the rest of his work, you will find characters who also appear in other novels, an ingenious device intended to give us a feeling of reality. This book is never boring and builds up tension rapidly, even for its length. It is an encompassing ride through all the fancies of youth gone wrong, as well as an unrelenting depiction of all the falseness and emptiness of high society. Much recommended.
Balzac at his bestReview Date: 2006-02-15

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If you want only 1 book about goal setting: buy this bookReview Date: 2006-03-05
Things I learned from it:
- the 11 steps to define your goal; I especially like step #7 (Begin your goals with "I choose...") and step #8 (Make it emotional)
- the 7 steps to create an action plan
- to focus on one or maximum two goals at a time
- to schedule a weekly progress report to manage the progress of your goals
- the 30-day plan to create a new habit
- the preference question (e.g. What is more important to me right now? Eat that chocolate cake or loose weight?)
- the FAQ-section at the back of the book
- how to finish what you start
The style of this book is also very different from the success boys like Robbins, Tracy, etc. who promise that you'll double your income, be more successful, blah, blah by setting goals.
If you want only 1 book about goal setting: buy this book. However, I think it is good to compare it with a more traditional goal setting book to appreciate "The Magic Lamp" even more. (e.g. buy also Brian Tracy's book or audio book "Eat That Frog")
Not much newReview Date: 2002-11-13
There's not much new here that you won't find in other goal-setting books. Mostly he changes the word 'goals' to 'wishes', but its a fine distinction. And there is a lot more inspirational, 'you can do it' talk. But if you have read other goal setting books, this is about the same.
It's not bad, as goal setting books go, but it's nothing new.
Excellent guide to getting more out of lifeReview Date: 2006-03-26
'The Magic Lamp,' however, is an excellent read for anyone who wants to get more out of life. It's a wonderful combination of fresh insights and time-tested wisdom and common sense.
And true to the book's promise, Mr. Ellis does help the reader foster a perspective from which setting goals is not a chore, but rather a pleasure.
'The Magic Lamp' also contains a lengthy, priceless appendix that lists other recommended books. Highly recommended.
This book is a jewelReview Date: 2005-04-16
This book is different. This book was written by a man that didn't know how to fullfill his goals. He spent years avoiding them,not even thinking about them, but he taught himself ways that he could achieve them. Some people don't even know what there goals are, but he gives you techniques on how to find them. He shows you really effective ways to find more time. He points out the importance of not trying to work on too many goals at once. And the most beneficial thing I got out of the book was the wake up call that goals take TIME. Sometimes a long time. I have always been a procrastinator, and I realized it was because if I couldn't see a difference with little steps I took , I gave up. He makes you see that it is the long term picture when you see results. It may take months, years a lifetime, but the baby steps count. I see that now! I loved this book and I hope you will too!
Unique, but loses steamReview Date: 2003-05-08
I say it is "unique" because the writer is not one of those people who always knew what he wanted to do and did it. I could relate to him, unlike many of the authors of these type of books. Plus, the book was not anecdote after anecdote, which I really liked. If you take one thing away from this book, it should be not to worry about how you didn't accomplish what you wanted previous to reading the book....realize that it's never too late.

Book reviewReview Date: 2008-02-27
An accurate history of Baptist martyrsReview Date: 2008-02-14
Martyr's MirrorReview Date: 2008-02-08
I highly recommend it as an addition to every Christian's library, and to anyone studying the subject of martyrdom.
An Inspiring Work of Spiritual Devotion!Review Date: 2007-07-28
The legacy of the Anabaptists lives on in the Amish and Mennonites. In fact, an article about Amish forgiveness in the aftermath of the recent tragic school shooting was one of the things that brought this book to my attention. Personally, I feel Christians of any denomination could take something useful from this book.
Overall, "Martyr's Mirror" is an extremely powerful and moving book.
Wow!Review Date: 2007-06-08
Related Subjects: Johnson, Amy Jo Jolie, Angelina Judd, Ashley Jones, Jennifer Johansson, Scarlett Jackson, John M. Jones, James Earl Jackson, Samuel L. Jones, Tommy Lee Johansson, Paul Jones, Shirley Jbara, Gregory Jurasik, Peter Jane, Thomas Johnson, Kenny Jameson, Jenna Jodorowsky, Alejandro Jones, Jeffrey Joseph, Kimberly Jackman, Hugh James, Jesse Jeter, Michael Jackson, LaToya Jones, Gareth Jared, Petra Johnson, Ashley Judge, Christopher Johnson, Russell Johnson, Don Jacobi, Derek Janssen, Famke Jensen, Mark Jackson, Jonathan Jewison, Norman Jackson, Joshua Jones, Tamala Jeffrey, Myles Jones, Terry Janney, Allison Jovovich, Milla Jacob, Irène Janus, Samantha Jones, Ashley Johnson, Geordie Jones, Renée Jenkins, Rebecca Jones, Vinnie Jackson, Kate Johnson, Eric Johnson, Celia James, Brion
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In very short, the numen (from which the word "numinous" is based) is the mysterious, overpowering, and terrifying aspect of the Deity. It is "non-rational" in the sense that it is not to be grasped by concept and ideas, but something to be felt in one's flesh and soul, like actual fear, awe, and majesty.
Otto focuses on that aspect too often neglected by some religious people themselves: the mysterious and unknowable. Fanatics have a tendency to consider only that, to the expense of the rational side of the Deity. But both similarly denature It.
While this book is a classic, and a worthy reading for anyone interested in the subject of God and the studies of religions, I will say that, personally, I seem to have missed out on some of the things mentioned in the book. Maybe I badly read certain parts, or maybe the book is complicated and dense enough that a second reading is required to clearly understand it all. Or both.
In a way, Rudolf Otto gives mysticism the kind of analysis it deserves, and re-establishes those more obscure areas of religiosity as something worthy of our consideration, and undeserving of our scorn.