Digital Books
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Used price: $256.90

Well worth it despite the obscene priceReview Date: 2007-05-12
a perfect book !how can I get it?Review Date: 2003-08-25
for me ,a chinese student,one hundred dollar is too much!
Well organized, solid materialReview Date: 2002-02-28
However, what I like most about this book is (1) its organization where you can directly jump to the chapter of interest with minimum overlap between chapters and (2) its coverage which is very fundamental, deductive and solid, staying away from ad hoc arguments.
Valuable resource of synchronization in digital comm.Review Date: 1997-12-30


My Hero.Review Date: 2007-07-28
Great storyline, Ms Gordon.
Her Knight In Body ArmorReview Date: 2007-08-21
I won't reveal details because Erin does the better job of that... and makes those details serve the story throughout. Suffice it to say in the tense moments that follow, the two would-be lovers [which is what I hoped back at the store], continue to make their relationship grow with various forms of non-verbal communication. This to me illustrates the masterful quality of Ms. Gordon's writing...the way she accomplishes one theme [the growth of the boy-girl relationship] in the middle of quite another. Yet at no time would either of the two consider that this was what they were doing. The reader picks it up...through details.
I won't reveal the ending, but I will say that this charming story continues to beguile at several different levels all the way to the end. Definitely a Five Star Romance!!! John W. Cassell
IT'S WINE.........IT'S MAGIC..Review Date: 2007-07-28
What I wouldnt have bargained for, is the drama outside the store after Alexa had won round one inside the Supermarket.
The action played out nicely and I cant divulge too much as it is a quick read.
I was left wondering about what Alexa would eventually cook for Dylan in the sweet thereafter.
Thanks Erin..:)
Two's Company, Three Usually Involves a HostageReview Date: 2007-07-26
When they leave the store, separately, the plot ticks up several notches and the sexual tension morphs into a different kind of tension - one based on fear and a life-threatening scenario.
Table for Two is a quick read, certainly worth the price of admission. There are a couple typos, but Ms. Gordon is aware of them and states so on her profile page. They shouldn't detract - and they don't - from the thrust of the story. The one suggestion I might make for Ms. Gordon is that she seek to develop the story a bit more, so the reader can really develop a relationship with the main characters, inasmuch as is possible in the short story format.
Get Table for Two and read a police story written by someone with the experience to pull it off in a believable fashion.

Used price: $0.46

Humorous CommonSense Computers For EveryoneReview Date: 2000-04-22
wrong button. Afraid of breaking your computer? Losing your data? Getting a virus? Bremer goes over these details with refreshing clarity and simplicity. And he is reassuring in his assessment of computer "damage," unlike the doomsday press notices we see each day about computer failures. Truly a worthwhile book for those with computer anxiety. - The Science Spiders Newsletter
An excellent gift ideaReview Date: 2000-03-29
"Must" reading for the computer phobic!Review Date: 2000-03-04
My Kingdom For a Neighborhood NerdReview Date: 2000-10-09


Alessandra T.Review Date: 2008-01-08
Great examplesReview Date: 2007-11-30
Interesting InsightsReview Date: 2007-11-29
Great ADvice for targeting womenReview Date: 2007-11-27


An excellent readReview Date: 2008-01-22
a great startReview Date: 2008-01-20
...i'm not a fan of how people said things in novels, especially if it comes up too much, he said knowingly.
but i love the start and dying to see what bronson is planning, the sister/brother relationship and the son/mother relationship.
you've opened the door wide for lots of potential with this book, i look forward to reading the whole manuscript one day if i can.
i also hope martha's vineyard plays a role in the story as you've given the setting a character of itself.
The kind of story you get inside ofReview Date: 2008-01-18
Fantastic!Review Date: 2008-01-17

Time Series for Hydrologic EngineersReview Date: 1996-12-03
Mathematical, Theoretical, Practical.Review Date: 1999-07-21
recent update of classic textReview Date: 2000-06-21
Gwilym Jenkins died many years prior to this edition and Box's colleague Greogory Reinsel took on the task of helping to revise and update it.
It retains its original flavor. It is an applied book with many practical and illustrative examples. It concentrates on the three stages of time series analysis: modeling building, selection, estimation and diagnostic checking and how to iterate the process toward a good solution. The ARIMA time series models are what are considered. The theory of stationary and nonstationary time series is introduced to motivate interpretation of autocorrelation and partial autocorrelation in the model identification phase. Operator notation is introduced and used throughout the book to simplify equations. For me it helped simplify things and illuminate some concepts. But many readers found it difficult and confusing. the book is very systematic and practical. Many of the examples are real examples from Box's work in the chemical industry and his consulting during his career at the University of Wisconsin and also the consulting experience of Gwilym Jenkins in England.
The publishers and some amazon reviewers say that this edition is a major revision. The second edition published in 1976 was criticized for being essentially a reprint of the first. Although there is a new chapter 12 on intervention analysis and outlier detection it mainly is an expansion of ideas already discussed in the first edition. Theoretical results are kept aside in appendices as in previous editions.
This is not an up-to-date text on the theory of time series. It deals strictly with the time domain approach and does not include recent advances including nonlinear and bilinear models, models with non-Gaussian innovations and bootstrap or other resampling methods.
To get a balanced approach that includes the theory for frequency and time domain approaches the book by Shumway, the latest edition of the Brockwell and Davis text and the latest edition of Fuller's text are appropriate. For a graduate course I taught at UC Santa Barbara in 1981 I used the first edition of Fuller's book. Anderson provides a thorough account of the time domain theory. Excellent texts that specialize in the frequency domain approach are Bloomfield's second edition and the two volume book by Priestley. Brillinger's text is also worthwhile for those interested in spectral theory (frequency domain statistics).
Although there are many things that is text does not cover, it remains the classical text on a rich class of time domain methods that are still very practical. This is a text I bought for reference even though I still have the first edition.
revision of a classic on time series modelingReview Date: 2008-02-08
Gwilym Jenkins died many years prior to this edition and Box's colleague Greogory Reinsel took on the task of helping to revise and update it.
It retains its original flavor. It is an applied book with many practical and illustrative examples. It concentrates on the three stages of time series analysis: modeling building, selection, estimation and diagnostic checking and how to iterate the process toward a good solution. The ARIMA time series models are what are considered. The theory of stationary and nonstationary time series is introduced to motivate interpretation of autocorrelation and partial autocorrelation in the model identification phase. Operator notation is introduced and used throughout the book to simplify equations. For me it helped simplify things and illuminate some concepts. But many readers found it difficult and confusing. the book is very systematic and practical. Many of the examples are real examples from Box's work in the chemical industry and his consulting during his career at the University of Wisconsin and also the consulting experience of Gwilym Jenkins in England.
The publishers and some amazon reviewers say that this edition is a major revision. The second edition published in 1976 was criticized for being essentially a reprint of the first. Although there is a new chapter 12 on intervention analysis and outlier detection it mainly is an expansion of ideas already discussed in the first edition. Theoretical results are kept aside in appendices as in previous editions.
This is not an up-to-date text on the theory of time series. It deals strictly with the time domain approach and does not include recent advances including nonlinear and bilinear models, models with non-Gaussian innovations and bootstrap or other resampling methods.
To get a balanced approach that includes the theory for frequency and time domain approaches the book by Shumway, the latest edition of the Brockwell and Davis text and the latest edition of Fuller's text are appropriate. For a graduate course I taught at UC Santa Barbara in 1981 I used the first edition of Fuller's book. Anderson provides a thorough account of the time domain theory. Excellent texts that specialize in the frequency domain approach are Bloomfield's second edition and the two volume book by Priestley. Brillinger's text is also worthwhile for those interested in spectral theory (frequency domain statistics).
Although there are many things that is text does not cover, it remains the classical text on a rich class of time domain methods that are still very practical. This is a text I bought for reference even though I still have the first edition.
Used price: $399.98

The True Story of Andersonville PrisonReview Date: 2000-01-19
The True Story of Andersonville PrisonReview Date: 2001-04-11
A Union Officer's Heroic Defense of a Confederate MajorReview Date: 2001-09-01
Page tells how many Northern myths about Andersonville simply aren't true, e.g., that the Confederate guards would get a 30 day furlough as a reward for shooting a prisoner, or that the reason the prisoner exchange between North and South was stopped was because of the North's protest against the South's refusal to exchange black Union POWs -- the truth was that blacks were a miniscule number of Union POWs and the exchange was stopped before there were any black POWs.
Page describes the trial and the accusations against Wirz, and refutes them convincingly. The trial, as described by Page who was there, was a sham. The prosecution could call any witnesses it wanted, but the defense could only call witnesses approved in advance by the prosecution! The prosecution's key witness was a perjurer who claimed to be former Union POW "Felix de la Baume," but was actually a deserter from the 7th NY infantry named Felix Oeser who was paid off for his false testimony with a job in the Dept of the Interior. Oeser had never even been to Andersonville.
James Madison Page's book closely jives with Confederate sources, like the memoir of Confederate guards and officers, who say the same things. Page ends his narrative with "I am just as committed to the preservation of the Union today as I was in 1861, but after forty years we can at least afford to tell the truth." This book wasn't popular in 1908 nor will it be popular in 2001 with those who don't want to hear it.
What really happen?Review Date: 2005-09-24

Used price: $0.04
Collectible price: $14.99

Trigun Is BackReview Date: 2005-10-12
Trigun Maximum takes place after the Angel Arm incident on Jeneora Rock. A few years have past, and we witness the return of Wolfwood, The Gung-Ho Guns, Knives, Legato, and most improtantly Vash The Stampede.
This book was so great I bought Volumes 2 and 3 right away. The action is easier to understand in the Maximum series. Keep up the good work Nightow!
Taking the wild west wackiness TO THE MAX...-IMUMReview Date: 2004-06-18
[1-VOL REVIEW]
Trigun Maximum isn't so much a new series, as it is a continuation of an already popular manga in the US. Yep, America loves it, and Japan wants to forget it(hey, facts are facts). From this point on, the things you knew from the anime series is completely different with this one; it parallels itself from that counterpart. I mean, come on, look at the black sides from Vash's hair in the book cover; IT'S DIFFERENT! With its new physique, expect some additions and differences onto this new adventure: new companions, new enemies, and from this manga ongoing, Nicholas D. Wolfwood doesn't die...hopefully.
The parallel thing doesn't start, yet. The first volume pretty much covers episodes 18-20 of the anime series, which is Vash leading a new life with a new identity as he lives with a young girl named Lina and her granny, but after being forced to bark like a dog in the nude by those sasafrassin' baddies and later got into a bullet blitz with Nick Wolf on his side, he realized he can't avoid what he is, so Vash the Stampede was reborn and left the caring ones behind to avoid harm. Enter the two stoogettes, Meryl and Millie, plus the conflict on the kidnapping and family vengence, and it's the whole celebro hoo-ha. There's only some key differences between this and the anime, i.e. Vash getting his new outfit during the feud chapter instead of the flying ship episode from the anime and this manga actually took place two years after the Fifth Moon instead of the five years in the anime, but other than those, I can only assume the true parallel act can happen in the second volume.
This is actually my first Trigun manga ever bought. I would like to buy the first two 300-page volumes, but I've seen the whole anime as it is, so why read the chapters originated for the ones I've already seen? That, and plus I don't want to pay five extra dollars more than the average TOKYOPOP manga for each volume(yea, I'm a cheapskate). Thankfully, Dark Horse made the TM series more accesible by making it cheaper, while keeping the same format and quality as the last two. In other words, the sound effects remains untranslated, and strangely, the honorifics are there as well. Not to be biased with the honorifics, if its there, it means that Digital Manga is doing great with the translations, but I don't recall ever seeing or reading a western medium where someone called the superior "sempai." It's just weird, that's all.
Some guy isn't kidding when he warn me about the art style of the manga, and I should've heed his words, cause that's the manga's biggest flaw. Trigun Maximum is VERY SKETCHY. I've read manga with sketchy designs before, but this is the creme de la crop. Characters are angled and not that detailed and polished, even some of their clothes are just scribbled in. And the panels within are so messy, even if they're big, I can't determined what's happening; like in one panel for example, and I was thinking, "What the-? Is someone playing paintball or are those gunshot wounds? WH-WHAT'S GOING ON?!!" That's the reaction I have with this design, and it made me lose track from fluently guiding through the whole story. Although the design does provide a positive message to future comic book artists: "Kids, you can draw as crappy as this, and you can still make a lot of money on your work."
Trigun Maximum is a great way to continue what's already a funny and stylized action series, and make it a little different by its looks. The messy art style alone prevents me from giving it a perfect grade, but it doesn't destroy what's good about this series, either. If you bought the other Trigun books, you probably have one in your hands right now, but if you haven't read the first two volumes, and have seen the entire anime series, Trigun Maximum is a perfect start to continue along this seemingly fun westerner. I Reckon'men'd this here book.
Hurry up, Dark HorseReview Date: 2004-09-22
Dark Horse is doing an excellent job on their translations for Trigun. All honorifics are left in.
About the actual content- This volume's mostly filler, following the fifth moon incident. Wolfwood's huge cross is revealed to be a machine gun, and Vash is still a god with his revolver. The art is pretty sketchy, but I still love Nightow-san's syle.
Also, there's been some talk about Vash's 'new' look. Most Americans have seen the anime, in which he keeps his original look the entire time, before reading the original manga, in which Vash's look abruptly changes in Maximum. Vash's new coat is a little crazy looking, but/so it fits Vash's personality a bit more. What's more, does it really matter what Vash looks like? He's still Vash.
9.5/10
Vash is Back!Review Date: 2004-06-30


More of the same.Review Date: 2006-05-03
Stil SmilingReview Date: 2006-04-30
Yard Saling with BaroneReview Date: 2006-04-25
He may call it going to Flea Markets, but I would always tell my kids to tell their friends that we went saling over the weekend...yard saling.
This story is great fun and should be expanded into a book. Paperback books at yard sales are only a quarter, cheaper than buying the short story on-line.
Shotgun...Review Date: 2006-04-24
Hilarious...
the fastest-read short story in the world..., uhm... of short stories...
yard sales are boring to me...
reading about yard sales, it is not...
reading something by Don Barone, it is never...
a 10-page-long trip around literature, marriage, technology, close encounters with law enforcers...
easy money's never been so... un-easy...
frustrating...
painful...
and yet funny...
no, better, hilarious...
Leo would have been proud...
no, wait...
i'm pretty sure he is...


great readReview Date: 2007-11-18
thanks for such a great story
FantasticReview Date: 2007-11-11
STAKE, ANYONE?Review Date: 2007-07-16
A twisted sense of humour, a stake and a wordsmith, ought not to be in the same place with a tired Vampire.
Great short storyReview Date: 2007-07-15
A huge bargain that should not be missed.
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