G Books


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G Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

G
Low End
Published in Paperback by Bedside Books (2003-11)
Author: Harry G. Pellegrin
List price: $22.00
New price: $7.50
Used price: $19.00

Average review score:

good read
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2004-04-07
Low End is a very enjoyable read. It holds you captive until the end.

A great murder mystery
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2004-08-05
Harry Pellegrin has written a wonderfully entertaining first novel. Once I started reading it I couldn't put it down. "Low End" has enough twists and turns to keep you captivated right till the end. Not only does this book have government conspiracies, rock 'n' roll, fast cars and beautiful women but also a very likeable amateur detective named Gary Morrissey. I hope there are many more Gary Morrissey novels yet to come.

Drugs and Rock n' Roll -- Done before? Not like this!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2004-06-26
Here's an interesting little artifact of the 1980's. Low End at first seems to be just another preposterous government conspiracy theory. Given a chance, Pellegrin stretches his legs and the reader's imagination. You see, his conspiracy theory is really a glimpse into the paranoid dillusions of a bunch of low-life musicians whose brains have been scrambled by substance abuse. Once the reader gets this revelation, the story is plausible, believable, and damn real! The setting is Yonkers, New York, a down-on-its-luck has-been of a City just north of the Bronx border. It was once grand, but is now the realm of immigrants, artists, minorities and bikers. Crooked cops fill out the census. Gary Morrissey, the lead character and protaganist, is a guitar player who had once held onto the dreams of a career in classical music and a decent marriage, but has not seen either fulfilled. He is hurt, bleeding, and locked into his meager existence. He meets a nice girl, but not until a fellow musician is murdered, plunging Morrissey into a world of dope dealers, government agents, outlaw bikers, and onto the radar of the police. I won't give it away, but no one seems to be what they seem to be! This is a clever little tale of warped minds and tawdry lives told as only an insider could tell it. Good job, Mr. Pellegrin. How about a sequel?

Love New York City
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2004-04-06
I love NYC. Here is a great look behind the scenes. This book give you a look at everything: Music, love, guns, drugs, cops,and good guys, all without four letter words. I don't know how Harry did it, but I didn't even miss them. Is there any more on the way? I hope so. Great read! I even shared this book with my teenager (she also like it)

A witty contribution to the musician murder mystery
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2004-07-02
Harry G. Pellegrin is a Bronx native. Being a child of the Sixties, Harry naturally majored in music, to obtain what he wryly refers to as a degree in "museum music." Music began for him at age five, and literature was not far behind. His third passion is motorcycles, and he has written pieces for music and chopper magazines. He presently lives in upstate New York.

Gary Morrissey is a studio/performing musician who is recovering from a bad marriage to an unsympathetic wife. When his best friend Marty asks him to do a little nosing around after a fellow musician is apparently shot point-blank by a couple of cops, Gary incorporates sleuthing into his music and beer schedule. He uncovers a nefarious plot that begins with a crazy cop named O'Brien, involves Mr. Unimportant, who happens to live on a high-priced yacht, and comes back to roost with Gary himself:

"I leaned against the doorframe and put on my best condescending face. 'I read the newspapers, too, you know. The way things have been going for my circle of acquaintances, I deduced that it must be her. It's reported that she's missing. Then the New Rochelle PD finds some bones. You couldn't have figured this out by your powers of deduction, so I assume your supervisors read the papers too.'

I thought I'd pushed him too hard that time. He turned red and stood on the welcome mat clenching his fists.

'You are going to go too far one day, and so help me, when that happens, I am going to take you down hard.'"

Low End is an original, as Harry Pellegrin combines elements of his own life to fabricate a darn good mystery. The plot is a sinuous, slithering thing that takes the reader into the bowels of NYC for a thrill ride involving cops, musicians, bikers, mysterious women, and the feds. Being a baby boomer, Pellegrin subscribes to the feds against the boomers theory, and his logic is unassailable. His characters are either sweet and honest, or bad to the bone. The action is nonstop, and in the end, the end justifies the means in a huge way. Low End is a witty contribution to the musician murder mystery. Well done!

Shelley Glodowski
Reviewer

G
Mayo Clinic on Healthy Weight (Mayo Clinic on Health)
Published in Library Binding by Mason Crest Publishers (2002-02)
Author: Sheldon G. Sheps
List price: $34.95
New price: $34.95
Used price: $5.51

Average review score:

A Healthy Lifestyle Really Is Delicious and Satisfying!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-11
This might be considered a diet if you've been eating unhealthy and unaware of the basic tenets of good nutrition, however to us, it was a re-configuaration of much of what we already knew and were doing, but in a way that has helped us to drop excess weight and feel like our old bright and bouncy selves!

There are companion books you can get from the Mayo Library of Books. I suggest getting a few if you love cooking and want kitchen excitement. However, this book is much more than excitement. It is a simple and common sense approach for PEOPLE.

People like us. We love NFL games! We support our local high school's and our local university's various sporting and arts events. We like big bright holiday celebrations, we love to grill and entertain. We are not athletic, but enjoy fun exercising. We might not walk our neighborhood, but we will walk in botanic gardens or bigger city parks with lots of things to interest us.

This is a motivational book as much as anything. It really is geared to just plain ol' people! It isn't written for the froo froo people of the world, or the natural wanderers of the mountains and national parks, or the bean sprout organic types, it is for ALL of us. From the most picky irritating people who are so fussy you wonder if they can smile unless it is alternative organic and natural, to the most coach potato cheese curl eating beer guzzling take a bath once a week types, to EVERYONE else in-between! (Psst.. I lived in WV for about 8 years, I have seen the later description as common place, and I lived in Boulder, CO for 22 years, and have seen the former description all the time too! Give me a balance please! LOL)

Enjoy making your life being just that.. enjoyable. You will find a new self confidence and cheerfulness deep within your own spirit. It comes with my highest praise and recommendation!

healthy eating
Helpful Votes: 12 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-16
I have found this book helpful for reworking my eating plans and just improving health. It is fairly comprehensive and I think it is probably the kind of material you would get if you went to a nutritionist. If you want to lose weight sensibly I would recommend it.

This book saved my life
Helpful Votes: 16 out of 16 total.
Review Date: 2006-06-11
I can't say enough good things about this book. I had tried everything. I was fairly successful on the Body for Life program, but it took too much time. All I did on that program was eat and workout. I have a life. I need time for my family, work, continuing education and other activities. When I saw my life suffering at the expense of my body, I had to compromise the Body for Life program. I then ballooned back up to being obese. My doctor tried to talk me into a gastric bypass because my weight was getting so bad. This book from the Mayo Clinic gave me a diet that was very easy and had a lot of great food. I haven't even been tempted to wander from this program at all. The variety of food has filled my food addiction while also taking the weight off of me. I have been continually losing weight and my doctor is not worried about me at all now. She even just filled out a physical report stating that I am in very good health.

If you want good food, good health and time for a real life, this is the only book for you.

Takes some dedication
Helpful Votes: 21 out of 21 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-08
I've fought my weight my whole life. I've always been afraid of "fad" diets or diets that exclude one particular food. I think they are not a healthy way to lose weight. Everyone kept telling me to "eat a balanced diet" but no one explained what that meant. People talk about saturated fats, trans fats, etc and I felt like they were speaking a foreign language. My friends would count calories or carbs and would become frustrated. I didn't want to do any of that.

I bought the "Mayo Clinic Healthy Weight for Everybody" when we moved and I had plenty of time for a "project". It is a 12 week program designed to get you into the habit of eating healthy. The first three weeks were a lot of work and took a lot of dedication. I had to weigh and measure everything. After the first three weeks, my eyes adjusted and were able to do the measurments without the scale and cups. Some of the recipes are a lot of prep and there is a lot of cutting of vegi's and fruits. My husband and my 2 teenage kids didn't mind the changes (except brown rice) so after the first 3 weeks "learning curve", it all worked out well. I lost 25 lbs in 12 weeks and I never even got into the exercise part. After the 12 weeks, I stopped tracking my number of servings for 3 months. I still ate the same foods and made sure I didn't eat "A LOT" or high calorie foods. I stopped losing weight but I didn't gain it all back either. I have started tracking my servings again and have started working on the exercise. I have set my goal to lose another 25 lbs in the next 12 weeks.

I agree with everyone else here that the information is presented in a way that is easy to understand and explains it all. The book gets indepth but it is presented in a way that if you don't care what "trans fat" is, you can skip that part. I've even gien this book as presents to friends and family. I bought the cookbook too but I don't like that one.

Excellent Plan for Everybody
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-29
Whether or not you need to lose weight, this book is an excellent guide to healthy eating for life. The recipes are so easy that we're able to incorporate them into our everyday menus easily. We're all getting out 5-a-day, and then some! For weight maintenance, all you need to do is add a few more portions of some food groups. Even without reading the book, you can open up to the menu pages and start right away. You can also follow this plan on a tight budget since there aren't any hard to find or expensive ingredients. Between the eating plan and very helpful exercise goals, this has got to be the easiest way to get or stay healthy I've ever seen.

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Moonraker's bride
Published in Unknown Binding by G. K. Hall (1974)
Author: Madeleine Brent
List price:
Used price: $17.50

Average review score:

WONDERFUL WRITER
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-08
This book is fabulous! I could almost read the entire book all the way through. The writing flows so well and the writer keeps you so intrigued with what will happen next that you cannot put the book down.

An English Orphan in the Chinese countryside.
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-10-13
Excellent adventure with an English girl trapped in China. Loveable and brave heroine who makes it back to her strange homeland of England. This book is full of adventure and great writing and characters. You reorient your point of view to that of the heroine's, feeling like an ugly foreigner in China. Then confused by sudden culture shock in England and by being surrounded by lots of interesting characters with complex histories and agendas. Who is her friend and who is her enemy? This was the first Brent book I read and I LOVED it. Can't recommend it highly enough.

Moonraker's Bride
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-09-24
This has been one of my favorite books since I first read the condensed version in a magazine. It's one of those delightful easy-to-read books that you like to visit ever few years...like an old friend. I've read it many times and would recommend it.

When you need an escape to a faraway exotic locale...
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-05-06
... with mystery and intrigue, an absorbing plot, intelligent description, fascinating setting and history, richly written characters, and, above all, a humble, kind-hearted and utterly charming heroine to root for, then read this book. Did I oversell it? I hope not. I read this everytime I need an escape. Goes down as easy as the creamiest ice cream, and just as satisfying.

From China to the English Countryside
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2004-01-16
Madeleine Brent (Peter O'Donnell of Modesty Blaise fame) wrote some really good historical adventure stories pitched toward women. Why does he succeed in making his books interesting even on repeated reading, where a lot of other authors in the same genre fail? He has great respect for the intelligence and good sense of his heroines.

Plucky and intelligent, Lucy struggles against great odds to support and protect her benefactor and the orphans they had taken in and cared for in a hostile turn of the century China. Meanwhile, events are conspiring to send her on an adventure to take her half way around the world.

This book is a delightful read.

G
Mouse Soup
Published in Paperback by HarperTrophy (1983-09-07)
Author:
List price: $3.99
New price: $1.19
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $10.00

Average review score:

Just what I expected!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-24
this is a great book and i received it just like i expectd to receive it.

We love Mouse Soup
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-09
We have read this book repeatedly, and my first-grader enjoys it every time. Now he enjoys reading it to me. Great for beginning readers.

FUN AND EXCITING
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-20
WHAT A JOY THIS BOOK IS. THE STORY IS FUN AND SO CUTE. ONE OF MY ALL TIME FAVORITES TO READ TO THE CHILDREN.

WELL THOUGHTOUT AND WELL ILLUSTRATED BOOK
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2006-12-14
This is one of those that is an absolute delight to read to and with kids. A mouse, minding his own business is caught by a weasel who of coure plans to whip up a batch of Mouse Soup. Our fast talking little mouse simply talks his way out of the dinner by telling the weasel four delightful stories, thereby distracting the weasle and at the same time, teaching the weasle a good lesson. The illustrations are great the the story telling is of the highest quality. Cute is a word that is over used, but in this case I have to use it because it fits so well. This work is almost along the same lines as the famous Uncle Remus tales, but in many ways is more appealing. I liked this one and do highly recommend it. The art work alone is worth the price of the book.

Kid Tested and Approved - a review of "Mouse Soup"
Helpful Votes: 13 out of 13 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-26
I have to bow to a superior opinion in rating this book. After reading it to my 5 y.o. son, I had come to the conclusion that the subset of stories were pretty lame and uninteresting. I mean one of them is about two rocks that get lied to by a bird (or so the rocks think). And another is about a rose bush growing out of a comfy chair.

But my 5 y.o. informs me that I don't know what I am talking about. This book is great, he told me. And he convinced me that this was true by doing something his active little self seldom does: he went and got the book off his shelf and dragged his father over to the couch so that dad could listen to him read the stories. [Could have knocked me over with bookmark.]

The AR Reading level for this book is 2.4 which means that the Accelerated Reading committee, and it's software, suggests this book for Second Graders in their fourth month of school.

[The AR designation is a general "guide" that rates books on a relative scale of difficulty. Children can certainly read at levels above or below their group range, so that this number should only be used as a aid to help choose books that are appropriate and not frustrating.]

Four Stars. This book has a mouse cum Scheherazade premise: A weasel captures a poor little mouse and the mouse plots to get out of being eaten by telling stories. The stories the mouse tells didn't appeal to me, but my five y.o. son sure liked them. The AR reading level indicates the book is suitable for Second Graders.

G
The New Kid on the Block: Poems
Published in Paperback by Not Avail (1989-01)
Author: Jack Prelutsky
List price: $3.95
New price: $2.99
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $10.00

Average review score:

Homework, oh homework
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-21
Have you ever considered the advantages to having your nose on your face? Or what life is like for a boneless chicken? Or lamented a night of homework? Then this book is for you! Jack Prelutsky's collection 107 poems are silly, catchy, and classic. Readers bounce from poem to poem, carried along by James Stevenson's squiggly illustrations. Though this is a fast read, Prelutsky's odd characters, like the Underwater Wibblies and Drumpp the Grump, will keep you giggling.

These quirky poems will entertain readers both young and old. Prelutsky's poems are made for reading aloud, and audiences will enjoy listening to the made-up names and punchlines. Stevenson's artwork, which can also be found in The New Yorker, fits perfectly with the singsong style of the poems. The black and white drawings wobble and flutter around the text, interacting with it. Prelutsky's work, combined with Shel Silverstein's, makes for an excellent introduction into the world of poetry for young readers.

4th/5th Grade Class at Adams Elementary, Seattle
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-26
This is a great book to share with friends and families because it is funny and a lot of the poems seem true to what kids are thinking and feeling. Some of our favorites were, "An Alleycat with One Life Left," "Homework! Oh, Homework!," "The Nothing-Doings," and "I Wonder Why Dad is so Thoroughly Mad." This is a great book for everyone!

Excellent and my daughter loves it!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-09
My child came home from her gifted/talented school requesting the book. She loved it in her classroom and has already read most of it.

Poems kids love!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-05-13
This book introduced my son to poetry at age eight and he became an avid fan. He became so enthralled with poetry that he began to write poetry himself. He even wrote a very insightful poem as one of his college entrance essays. Prelutsky retains his inner child and writes from a child's point of view--hard for children to resist. A must have for your home library.

Poetry can be fun!
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2005-10-19
I think that this a great way to introduce poetry to kids that may believe it to be boring or stuffy. My son would ask me to read these to him over and over. We did a lot of giggling over some of them.

G
Paper Moon
Published in Unknown Binding by G. K. Hall (1971)
Author: Joe David Brown
List price:
Used price: $0.78

Average review score:

Classic American novel
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-26
Worldly-wise yet innocent 11-year-old girl works with her con-artist "father" during the Depression. This is a classic in the long tradition of American fiction. The author masterfully creates an authentic voice that bowls the reader over. The story verges on the sappy at times, and the "con man with a heart of gold" conceit is rubbed a bit thin by the end of the book. The author also trucks out certain phrases a few too many times. But overall it's a great story filled with vividly memorable characters.

A real gem of a satiric American novel.

Addie Pray, One of the Great Young Ladies of Literature
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-02-23
If you've only seen the bittersweet comedy film Paper Moon, you're in for a treat. The novel, formerly known as Addie Pray (the "moon incident," incidentally, which gives the film its name, is NOT in the book), is about a streetwise eleven-year-old Southern girl who travels around with Moses "Long Boy" Pray, a con artist who may be her father (her "mama being fast and all"). It is Depression-era Alabama, and the two make their living selling embossed Bibles and dropping wallets and running other cons to make their living. Only once are they distracted, by a sweet-talking hoochie-coochie dancer who has Long Boy on his toes until Addie "takes care of her man." Their written adventures continue past the movie as they go into partnership with a larcenous Colonel and plan to bamboozle a rich old lady out of her fortune (with the help of the woman's mercenary nephew). But as in the rest of the book, there's a twist to this, too. Paper Moon contains rich characters and settings, and memorable events. Highly recommended.

Paper Moon
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-11-08
Paper Moon is a comical, enticing, interesting, and beautifully written novel about a young girl, Addie Pray, and her father, Long Boy. That's not really his name of course, but that's what everybody calls him. Addie's mother had died when she was six and so Long Boy takes her with him to do business deals. Doing business just suits the pair, Addie gets so excited, she gets the chills. At first they have a simple strategy of selling bibles to people who have just lost some one. They go around from town to town selling bibles and pictures from or of loved ones. Their rouitine always started with Addie acting way more pathetic and younger than she really was. Long Boy's infallible ways make Addie adore and look up to him. As she gets older, she teaches tricks to Long Boy that just barely save their lives a few times. When the team decides to pick up a business deal with a millionaire, Addie has to change identities in a tedious plot to keep a crabby woman's financial amounts from her fortune-hungry nephew. Throughout the book, Addie's character transcends to a much higher level and her clever mind pulls you in. This book is written by Joe David Brown and is written in first person. I like books that are written in first person just because I feel like I can put myself in the person's shoes and really get a hold of what is happening.
I loved this book because it was intriguing and the author created such great characters that even though they are cheating people of their money, your heart travels to their side. I also picked up this book because they made a movie of it awhile back and I like to compare books to their movies. I always read the books first thought. This story is like a roller coaster with a fast pass, you don't have to wait in line for the ride. You get hooked on the first page, which I know is a feature for people who get bored easily. The dialogue that is used is old fashioned and not contemporary, more slang. It is kind of hard to follow but you get used to it, it is actually a big part of the characters overall because it determines the amount of education that person had. I also love this book because there aren't a lot of books written about this exact storyline and subject. It makes it fun to read because its an unknown story and you don't really have andything to compare it to.

Splendid!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-12-08
This is one of the best books I've had the pleasure to read in a while. I was already familiar with the basic story, having seen the movie "Paper Moon" (which I recommend highly!). When I started reading this, I was uncertain whether I'd be able to adjust to the change in location and dialect from the movie; the movie was set in the Midwest, the book in the Southeast. My doubts were quickly put to rest just pages into the book, when I became completely engrossed in the story and Brown's easy-going writing style. I plowed through the book in a couple days and enjoyed it thoroughly!

The book follows Addie Pray, a young orphan, as she travels around Alabama, Tennessee, and Louisiana with Long Boy, a con artist who may or may not be her father. During their travels, the two are always devising schemes to weasel money ouf of those who can afford to lose it. First it's the famous Bible-selling trick, but it quickly becomes so much more. There are plenty of deliciously eccentric characters, exciting chases, "heartwarming" moments, and a healthy dose of laughs.

If you liked the movie, don't miss reading the book. The movie plot is drawn only from the first 90-100 pages of the book; the remaining 200 pages present Addie and Mose (a.k.a. Long Boy) in entirely "new" situations. The book is a delight from beginning to end. Highly recommended!

Excellent and complementary
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2004-09-04
Written in the style (and context) of Steinbeck, this book is excellent.

The remarkable thing about the book, though, is that it is one of the few instances where you should read and see both the book and movie. If you liked the movie, the book provides more stories and adventures; if you liked the book, the movie brings the characters, setting, and geography to life.

The book is very readable; in fact, I read all 300 pages in a day! I highly recommend this book; the movie only makes a very good story better.

G
Principled Profit: Marketing That Puts People First
Published in Paperback by Accurate Writing & More (2003-06)
Author: Shel Horowitz
List price: $17.50
New price: $3.99
Used price: $1.96

Average review score:

Opinionated, Personal, and Valuable
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-18

I not only like what Shel has to write, but also how he writes as well, and can recommend this book wholeheartedly. Judging from the testimonials - including many well known people, everyone likes this book. As Shel writes, "This is an opinionated and personal book," but it's backed by Shel's over 25 years of experience and extensive 3rd party research.

Unlike "Grassroots Marketing: Getting Noticed in a Noisy World" which I'd describe as an easy to read yet comprehensive marketing textbook (note to self: stick on nightstand for review when I get home), this is a fairly quick read. The basic premise is that you can not only succeed, but flourish, by being nice. Nice guys don't finish last, they finish well in the pack, and do so much more happily than cut throat scumbags. Of course Shel doesn't use the term scumbags -- he's probably too nice to, but I'm not!

The one thing I'd add, is that with the wide spread of blogging and other "Web 2.0" technologies, if you're a scumbag, word gets out quickly - and that won't help your bottom line.

This is more than a "be nice" or "feel good" book, although it did make me feel good about being nice. It contains practical business advice. Since I read it in a somewhat disjointed fashion while traveling internationally with children, it's on my list to look at again SOON ,- I underlined advice I can put to use in my business soon.

The only part some people may find odd is the last chapter, as Shel notes. It's on a sustainable future, and to Shel it's the most important chapter.

Here is a quick recap of some of the principles and messages of the book:

* Ethical marketing works better
* Cooperation is an effective business strategy
* Gaining "market share" is usually a silly strategy

Shel has also started a campaign called the Business Ethics Pledge to actually change business culture to be aligned with the ethical, cooperative orientation to success. He's hoping to create a "tipping point" that would make business ethics scandals as unthinkable as slavery is today.

Great Advice for Individual Entrepreneurs
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-23
Most business books are written by "experts" with MBAs or experience as big bucks consultants to Fortune 500 companies, and their advice seems to vary with the latest ideas emanating from the ivy league Business Schools. So it is refreshing to find a book that talks to microbusinesses, and that understands that some entrepreneurs have priorites besides getting rich. Shel Horowitz draws on his own experience as a consultant and book author/marketer to provide real world examples for those of us who see self-employment as a way to a more staisfying life.

Many theories of business concentrate on driving out competition. Usually these books are full of war metaphors: "beating" the competition, "winning" market share, "dominating" a market, and even "crushing" their competitors. Shel turns the tables on this and writes about cooperating with other businesses and cultivating an "abundance consciousness" that is not about merely making money, but rather an appreciation for the good things in your life. It is also an awareness that there is enough work for everyone and no need to think that your competitors' success is at your expense. He states that "you don't need to feel threatened by your competitors. Because there is enough for all of you, you may even find that you want to cooperate." Besides putting aside your fear of competiton, Shel wants you to engage in ethical behavior in every aspect of your business. He says that operating in an ethical manner will win you respect with potential customers and clients.

Ethical behavior, involvement in the community, and working together with others are good business principles, according to Shel. I like his thinking. While I believe these principles are especially important for microbusinesses, the book provides examples of how even large companies have created more value by partnering with other companies, even with their competitors.

In his last chapter, Shel talks about "Abundance and Sustainability in Business and Society." He suggests that marketing pricniples can be used to make the world better, that you can earn a good living and do good as well. This is a great message, and anyone trying to build a business should consider these powerful ideas.


Win/Win Marketing Does Work, Really
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2004-02-22
True win/win marketing is the ideal everyone in business should strive for. Shel Horowitz's Principled Profit, Marketing That Puts People First is the definitive book on the art and practice of win/win marketing. He shows you how to create marketing that not only helps your own business, but by helping another business simply passes around success that enhances every business or situation it touches.

Horowitz not only practices what he preaches, he lives it. With true examples, he shows how the system works for just about every business situation imaginable. He shows that even helping your competition can help you help your own business.

Perhaps "principled profit" should be made the new mantra of business. Practicing Principled Profit bodes well for business, as well as in our personal lives. What a wonderful world this could be!

Well recommended for anyone, not just business people, looking to make a positive mark in this world.

Kitty Werner, author, The Savvy Woman's Guide to Owning a Home; How to Care For, Maintain and Improve Your Home, published by RSBPress.

Feel Good About the Marketing You Do!
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2004-02-02
This is the sales and marketing book for the folks that don't want to feel sleazy about the whole process. Shel Horowitz shows how to sell more while doing good for the world and feeling good about yourself and your efforts. He gives specific, practical examples of people and organizations that are doing the things he advocates, and talks about ways to adapt the techniques to a variety of situations.

I purchased this book because I had seen samples of Shel's advice on the publishing community lists to which I subscribe. (That participation is, in fact, a perfect example of the kind of conduct advocated in this book.) I wanted to learn more about how to market my own consulting company. I did, and it works.

Practical, refreshing, and deceptively simple
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2004-02-02
As an advertising major in college turned off from the profession's focus on selling of products people don't really need, as a consumer all too often exposed to screaming car dealership commercials and bait-and-switch tactics, and as a new business owner... I was definitely interested in what Shel Horowitz had to say in this book!

The very first sentence, on the very first page, was sheer delight. As it happened, that page (and the five pages following it) contained endorsements and blurbs by the very well-known in the marketing field... and here's how the author introduced them: "Many of these blurbs are shortened for space reasons... The complete versions are posted at ." My goodness! How many times have I, as a movie and book consumer, been deceived by three words taken completely out of context of a review? Not this time! This first sentence promised an entirely new approach.

The book includes practical advice ("Run your business in alignment with your core values; don't try to be something you're not") as well as practical statistics (i.e. "Gay and lesbian purchasing power is about $400 billion"), both of which a business owner can certainly use. While the practical advice may sometimes seem simple, in reality it is not. Using the example above, how many times, purely in a social setting in which literally nothing is at stake, are people tempted to try to be something they're not? How much more so when one's livelihood is on the line? The author's reminder is both apt and profound, and something to be taped to the top of one's computer monitor.

The author's marketing strategy is also both strong and logical. "I create marketing that has the prospect calling me!" is a typical example. Again, on first approach it seems simple---but few marketers take the time to really create the draw or pull that will create action in a consumer who really does need the product or service. Instead, we have announcers shouting to us over the radio that they will not be undersold! What difference does a car dealership's competitive ambition not to be undersold make to me as a consumer? Nada. On the other hand, last year while I was half-mindedly watching mortgage rates dive even lower, I received a simple, thoughtful letter from a mortgage broker giving me concrete information on how much I could expect to save at a certain interest rate compared to my current interest rate, how I could pay for the refinancing closing costs, and the steps to take to contact him to do it. I did refinance with that mortgage representative.

Some of the advice given in the book is fairly standard, but many other suggestions are both practical and new. And it's refreshing to see an author writing about turning down a sale when it's not right for him---and not necessarily for the reasons one might think.

CONS (1) Initially, I wished for less examples from the author's career and more from other companies. I did get that wish later on in the book (he cites some very interesting examples, in fact, such as Rosenbluth International, which "will go so far as to open a new branch office, just to serve a new account"); it just can take patience to get there. (2) The author extols two techniques which just did not ring right: flattering a prospect/playing into that person's ego, and putting time pressure on a person when it might not be the right time for the person to buy the product. These stood out all the more because the rest of the book is not like that. (3) One begins to wish the author would stop mentioning his other book, as one begins to feel that one is a sitting duck for a repetitive sales pitch. Enough already!

PROS (1) This book led me to question things I never thought to question, but should have; for example, the sentence "We need to gain market share" (read: we need to take some market share from a competitor). (2) The book serves as a great reminder where to put one's priorities. Beyond integrity and personal satisfaction (which is, after all, why we live life), for instance, the author quotes the CEO of Southwest Airlines, who reminds us, "Market share has nothing to do with profitability. Market share says we just want to be big; we don't care if we make money doing it. To get an additional 5 percent of the market, some companies increased their costs by 25 percent." (3) A balanced approach to many issues; I respect an author who gives both sides of the story or both pros and cons to an approach. (4) The book uses examples with which everyday consumers and readers will be familiar; for instance, a grocery store chain that pioneered the reservation of parking spaces for pregnant customers, and the office supply chain which rearranged its stores to steer its customers to the right technology for what they needed (I believe that's Office Depot).

(A note on the rating: The lack of half-stars on the rating scale didn't give me a good option for an accurate rating. At the time of this review I have only given 5 stars to one book, and not many four-star reviews, either. This book is above average. If I could have given a rating on a scale from one to ten, I would have given it a 7.)

The author makes a bold statement in Chapter 3: "Does the last chapter mean there's no place for salespeople anymore? Not at all---but it does mean that some businesses don't need a sales force if their marketing is properly effective." Bravo!

G
Ride the river
Published in Paperback by G.K. Hall (1984)
Author: Louis L'Amour
List price:
Used price: $2.95

Average review score:

A L'Mour Classic
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-22
I have read all of the Sackett novels and most everything else that L'Amour has written. I would easily list this book as one of my top 3 favorites by the author. It's a different path for L'Amour, writing 1st person as a 16 year old girl. That being said, he was truly a gifted storyteller and this is one good book. I would highly recommend it, not only for young girls to read, but for anyone else who's looking for for a good story on the American West.

On a side note, I think this would be a great opportunity for a made for TV movie.

Review of unabridged book on cassette
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-09-11
Very well done. We enjoyed listening to it. The narrator did an excellent job of making the story come alive.

Not trying to diss a woman hero...but
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2002-11-10
This one is, in my opinion, probably the weakest Sackett story so far. I admitt I am new to Louis Lamour (relatively). I have read 9 of his books so far and I enjoy them very much and continue to read more. The Sackett series are a special lot but I was not overly excited about this particular one. It is worth reading, I guess, like any other Louis Lamour, but I would put this one off because there are many more exciting ones than this.
Still a Lamour fan

Just plain fun
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2005-02-16
Louis L'Amour writes like a girl, and when he's telling the story of 16-year-old Echo Sackett, that's an excellent thing to do. Echo leaves her mountain home in 1840 to claim an unexpected inheritance in the City of Philadelphia, and the story is principally about her efforts to outwit and outfight the criminals who want to make sure she doesn't get back to the mountains with what is rightfully hers.

Echo, every inch the lady, has spunk and smarts enough to go with the knife she calls her "Arkansas Toothpick." Being a Sackett, she also has a lively sense of her family history. As in most L'Amour books, the Sackett ethos -- help your kin at any cost -- is on full display here. I also enjoyed the book because it includes a free black man and a gallant city boy, not to mention serious villains. Their adventures, and reactions to them, are true to the time and place of which they're part.

It's also worth noting that the moral code that suffuses this book -- the idea that doing good deeds is like scattering bread on the water -- is L'Amour's version of what author Catherine Ryan Hyde would famously call "Pay it Forward" many years later.

In short, on the river or off of it, Echo Sackett is good company, and not just another pretty face. She reminds me of a family friend who ignored the unspoken navy blue dress code to interview for an elementary school teaching job wearing a lime-green skirt and matching Eisenhower jacket. You'll enjoy this story even if you haven't had the good fortune of knowing a young woman of such character.

Fifth of the series. Strong female character
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2002-12-20
Echo Sackett is one of the few women mentioned of the family. She is young, but she is a better shot than her brothers. Echo is also a strong female character who still aspires to be ladylike and not masculized.

But she still knows to "expect Higginses" when she finds she is due an inheritance and travels alone to retrieve it. Fortunately, being a woman is an advantage in a world of men who will underestimate her abilities.

I admire L'Amour for writing such a strong, young female character. Girls may become interested in reading westerns after their introduction to Echo Sackett.

G
The Salamander Room (Dragonfly Paperbacks)
Published in Paperback by Dragonfly Books (1994-03-01)
Author: Anne Mazer
List price: $6.99
New price: $2.95
Used price: $0.15
Collectible price: $10.95

Average review score:

If only I could do that in my room
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-19
I have bought this book at least three times, either as a gift or because I had lost it. I use it in teaching Creative Movement as a relaxing, imaginative ending. I love how the child continues to imagine and the mother allows his imagination to soar free.

A Boy's Dream
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-29
An imaginative story about a little boy who finds a salamander in the forest, takes it home to keep in his room, and then gradually transforms his room into a forest (every little boy's dream). Well done!

Satisfied customer
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2005-09-15
Book arrived in near new condition. I was glad I chose to invest in a hard copy of this wonderful story. I am a PhD student, pursuring my degree in Children's Literature and am happy to add this to my personal collection. CMM

Life Full Of Imagination
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-12-01
The Salamander Room has a great expression of the creativeness of a child's mind. This book is an amazing story for children. In this story a young boy, Brian finds a salamander while exploring the forest and takes it home. Like most mothers, his is worried how he will care for his new friend. Brian's mother asks him many questions concerning the care for this unusual house guest. For every question Brian has an answer. With every answer Brian finds that it's better to bring Nature in to make his friend comfortable and feel right at home. As a mother I appreciated the author's expression of how creative a child's mind can be. This book also demonstrates how amazing children really are. My children and I enjoyed this book and I would highly recommend it in every child's library.

I need to buy a hardcover edition ...
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2003-04-07
... because I've worn out the paperback reading it to my kids. It is a favorite with my son (now 7). Wonderfully illustrated. Wonderfully imaginative. Get lost in "The Salamander Room" today.

G
The sermon on the Mount according to Vedanta
Published in Unknown Binding by G. Allen & Unwin (1967)
Author: Prabhavananda
List price:

Average review score:

A Jewel of a Book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-08
This book is a jewel to be treasured by all who have a heart after God, and/or all who love the message of Jesus the Christ. The Swami wrote this book with such passion, love, sincerity, and honor for Jesus' life and message. This man of the yoga traditions of Hindu understood Jesus more than the vast majority of people who profess that very name. I do not typically use such blanket statements, but I feel confident to do so in this case.

In this little treasure of a book, Christ's message is brought to light in a way that will melt your heart, and alight a love for Christ within you, or will rekindle that fire if it was there and had been lost. This work also offers a beautiful introduction into the teachings of the Hindu faith, albeit an elementary introduction.

To help you appreciate this review, I will tell you somewhat of my background. I was brought up in an non-denominational pentecostal movement. Never once in my many years of hearing numerous preachers did I hear Christ taught so lovingly and peacefully. This book resonated with me much more than anything else I had ever heard of the Christ before.

I strongly recommend you add this little book to your library. You will want to read it time and again.

New insight
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-23
I'm a United Methodist. This book offers a new refreshing view of the material. I do recommend it.

BEAUTIFUL
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-18
I've read The Sermon on The Mount by Swami Prabhavananda twice and will read it over again throughout my life. I found much clarity in many of Jesus' teachings here that I didn't understand previously. Such as in The Lord's Prayer, "Give us this day our daily bread." My thought when I was a child went to giving thanks for food, and I carried that into adult life. Please don't laugh, I just never gave it deeper thought. But Jesus' teachings were always meant to point us towards God-realization and the Swami tells us here that these words mean we are praying that "divine grace be reaveled to us now". (Which of course makes more sense.) I had also previously read "The Bhagavad Gita" according to Gandhi which helped me to understand the other enlightened souls mentioned in the Swami's book.

Very well done
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-12-14
It's always interesting to see the outsider's view of something you have come to understand in one certain way; to see it through fresh eyes can make it new again. This book is a superb example of exactly that. It is probably impossible to come away from this book without a whole series of new insights, no matter how many times you may have read the Sermon on the Mount or how well you think you understand everything in it.

This book also serves to make the point that some of these Eastern swamis and gurus are scholars and thinkers of the first order. It really is a shame that our view of them often has been tainted by the antics of the charlatans and hustlers that came west beginning in the 1960s to exploit their own religious traditions for personal gain. If that has been your prejudice, Prabhavananda's book will be something of a revelation. Not to be missed.

Supplemental Material for Christians
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2005-01-16
It's hard for me to believe Jesus delivered the Sermon on the Mount as presented in Matthew. However, Swami Prabhavananda attempts to reach Christians in writing this book. Essentially he confirms Jesus was a God realized human being. Jesus spoke about the kingdom of heaven, which is within us. If we allow our Real self to emerge, and be led by it, we too can achieve Self realization. The Sermon on the Mount is beyond the grasp of most Christians, as is most of what Jesus tried to convey. This book is worth reading.


Books-Under-Review-->Arts-->Comics-->Creators-->G-->33
Related Subjects: Groening, Matt Goldberg, Rube
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