Educators Books


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

Educators
Inside Secrets of Finding a Teaching Job: The Most Effective Search Methods for Both New and Experienced Educators (Inside Secrets of Finding a Teaching Job)
Published in Paperback by JIST Works (2003-03)
Authors: Jack Warner, Clyde Bryan, and Diane Warner
List price: $12.95
New price: $1.99
Used price: $0.01

Average review score:

WONDERFUL teacher-to-be resource
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-29
As other reviews have said, I too was a soon-to-be teacher sending out my resume's and going out on interviews. To be fully prepared, I decided to purchase this book just before my first major round of interviews. It was not only VERY helpful and informative, but the methods and recommendations within it gave me a HUGE heads up in the interview room. I ended up landing a job within 24 hours of an interview. Thank you to these authors. A VERY useful book with extra website information to refer to both before and after you get a job.

A MUST FOR TEACHERS!!!!!!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-13
Unbelievably useful advice and a true stress relieving guide to getting the job you want!

Within a week of finishing this book, had two interviews and offered a position!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-19
I have gone on a few interviews and wasn't being offered any positions, which had been quite frustrating. I thought I have to be missing something and going into the interview not fully knowing what to expect. I decided to go see what would be available to help me secure a teaching job. This book has it ALL. It is an easy read with explanations and presentations of numerous topics in everyday language. This book helps you discover your strengths and weaknesses, presents cover letter and resume tips with examples, suggests role-playing an interview, recommends becoming familiar with the school district through their website prior to the interview, offers the top 21 questions most schools will ask with tips of what they are really asking and tips for answering plus 70 other frequently asked questions, conduct during the interview (dress/body language) including questions to avoid, questions to ask the principal or superintendent at the end of your interview, and your follow-up thank you letter. In addition, the appendix provides 20 pages of educational resources. This book gives you everything you need to get yourself ready for those all important interviews. After you read this book, you will feel confident, calm and best of all, well prepared. The perfect book for anyone who is becoming a new teacher, returning to teaching or pursuing the teacher profession through a nontraditional path. Good Luck!!

Terrible if you're returning to the profession
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-15
I am returning to the profession after an absence. My letters are outdated as are my work samples. I never created a portfolio (that's a new thing) so I don't have one. There are gaps in my resume. This book didn't get me any advice about how to deal with these problems because it's totally geared to the new teacher. I was pretty disappointed with this book.

Good and Practical Advice for Would-Be Teachers
Helpful Votes: 50 out of 52 total.
Review Date: 2000-05-27
Like some other reviewers, I am currently looking for a teaching position. I ordered this book and found it had very good information on where to find jobs, how to write a resume, and how to answer possible interview questions. I would say the resume part was the most useful so far, as few resume books have examples of teacher resumes. From the examples provided I was able to construct a more condensed resume from the three-page one I previously had.

However, the jury is out in so far as whether I will be able to obtain employment in the field even with this advice. The reason I did not give this book five stars is that there was not a whole lot of information for those people who are changing careers in mid-life. Most of the emphasis seemed directed at those traditional college age graduates with little or no employment experience.

Educators
The Long Haul: An Autobiography
Published in Paperback by Anchor Books (1991-03-01)
Authors: Miles Horton, Judith Kohl, and Herbert Kohl
List price: $11.95
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Average review score:

Great!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-09
Great book. Insightfully and eloquently written. Interesting viewpoints. Great for a new look at politics.

Change Your Thinking
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-13
Miles Horton's The Long Haul an Autobiography was a book I could not put down. This book inspired me to take a look at my own life and where I am going and to really evaluate the expectations I have for myself. The book details Miles Horton's struggles to achieve his life long goal to develop a form of education that will result in a change in society. The path he takes to fulfill his dream is not an easy one but seeing his determination to open the Highlander School was an inspiration to me. Throughout the book, Mr. Horton gives insight to his practical way of thinking about problems and people. I have had my eyes opened to what really motivates people to do what they do and why they do it. Although I try to stay away from politics as I have never been interested, this book gave me a desire to learn more about the political system as I read how Mr. Horton, often humorously, viewed and dealt with the political issues that seemed to follow him throughout his life. After reading that Martin Luther King and other strong leaders were influenced by Mr. Horton, it is no surprise that I too have been changed by reading his book. I highly recommend this book to anyone who wants to see a change in society and is willing to look inside to begin the transformation.

A fairy tale
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 24 total.
Review Date: 2006-01-30
This is more propoganda. Checkout the FBI's research first.

Vandalism, threats, strikes, and lies. That is the Highlander Story.

http://foia.fbi.gov/hfschool

If you are interested in Leadership, Inspiration and Transformation READ THIS BOOK
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-07-28
This book gave me a sense of clarity regarding my own values and beliefs when it comes to creating and sustaining learning relationships with others. It also lit a fire in my heart for the work...the work of developing learning and instruction in ways that are truly empowering of others. It was a jolt of energy in my own life journey. I'm humbled and grateful to have been introduced to the ideas and life of Mr. Horton - as well as the story of the Highlander learning community. Social change will always be a natural outcome of true learning and instruction in a world that confirms its being alive through the ever-changing, interdependent evolution of its cultural soceity. Change is good.

Changed my thinking
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2006-12-20
I was first introduced to THE LONG HAUL as a consequence of teaching a community organization course for which I had not been assigned for over 20 years. I felt I was out of my element. In seeking to prep myself for this course, I consulted key people in the US and my local community. I was prodded to read THE LONG HAUL. I must admit I was not enthusiastic. BIG MISTAKE!

After 30 years of reading social science research monographs, research proposals, dissertations, MSW theses, and textbooks, I would say that THE LONG HAUL is one of the most (and perhaps the most) profoundly important piece of literature I have read addressing the social service arena. Although it is an autobiography, it offers critical insight into the failure of social service delivery. Prior to reading THE LONG HAUL, I believed that the major failure of sociology and social work was the inability to construct a meaningful theory of cultural diversity. Social work's failure to shepherd recipients off of TANF is associated with a lack of cultural understanding. Clearly, what we need is a theory for guidance.

In his autobiography, Myles Horton takes us to the threshold of theory construction. Much of what "works" is counterintuitive. For example, if the police are monitoring Horton's actions because the authorities fear he will instigate a communist upraising, Horton will seek out the police. He would thank them for escorting him to his destination and explain to them his plans. The police move into a state of utter confusion. They are put in a position where they must walk with him rather then concealing themselves. Clearly, he knows what he is doing, but is unable to explain his actions that would enable readers to generalize these actions. The capacity of generalize and to use this generalization for an alternative environment is the heart of sociological theory. We learn how society functions by identifying patterns and see if they exist (or work) in other arenas.

Perhaps theory construction is not possible. Perhaps cultural influences are so uniquely situated that a generalization from one arena to another is not possible. What is the common theme found in all of Horton's successes? I think the answer is LISTENING. However, Horton's form of listening is not the type of listening I was taught nor the kind of listening I read in cutting edge research and respected textbooks. It is, in fact, NOT the empathic listening. I do not believe that words exists which capture the essence of this type of Horton's listening, but I believe the concept of "blind" listening comes close. In addition, sociological frameworks such as Interactionalism and Phenomenology employ terms like "bracketing." Bracketing comes close, but does not hit the bull's eye. Social workers must spend more time understanding Horton's methodology of listening, analyzing what he heard, and acting upon his analysis.

I do not recall reading any book that had such a profound effect on my thinking. This autobiography is not merely the story of Myles Horton's life but rather a roadmap for improved social service delivery and empowerment. Every social worker should read this book -- even clinicians. In fact, I would say that any social work student who does not thoroughly enjoy this book, needs to change majors.

Educators
Riding with Rilke: Reflections on Motorcycles and Books
Published in Hardcover by Penguin Books Canada (2005-09)
Author: Ted Bishop
List price: $34.00
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Average review score:

Riding to Archives
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-24
Disclaimer: I have been a librarian for 35 years, and a motorcycle rider for 46 years, so I can hardly claim to be a typical or neutral reviewer of this book. If Amazon permitted 6 stars, I would award them. It is a rare event indeed to find a work that so lovingly deals with both motorcycle riding and books.

Ted Bishop captures vividly the essence of long distance motorcycle riding, including writing in one's head while riding, and the distraction to a writer to riding in one's head while attempting to write (a considerably less dangerous activity). His words took me back to an 11,000-mile ride that I made two years ago, along many of the same roads.

Equally vivid are his characterizations of librarians and archivists who work in special collections, and of the process by which a scholar mines the books and papers in such collections for insights and publications.

Bishop has a keen eye for irony, and I found myself laughing so hard while reading Riding with Rilke on a plane flight that I fear I was creating a disturbance for my fellow passengers.

Riders who aren't especially interested in books may find too little motorcycle content in this book. Scholars and librarians with little interest in motorcycles may find too little about books and literature (and very little, indeed, about Rilke). For those few who are passionate about both motorcycles and books, Riding with Rilke is a rare treat.

Left a little flat.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-05
When reading RIDING WITH RILKE it is easy to see that Ted Bishop, a good writer, loves books and Ducati motorcycles but for me this book felt a little flat. There are too many pages about minor characters and minor events that add nothing to the story. The book would be helped if the 261 pages were cut back by a quarter. I too love books and ride a motorcycle, a Harley Road Glide, so it gives me no joy not to rave about the book but still, I would recommend it even if you feel like skipping a few pages.

for the dual addicted: literature and motorcycles
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-08
Not a mere travelogue or another bike adventure...Bishop escorts the reader through the very essense of riding in the most spiritual, thoughtful and surprisingly, visceral treat of a book...yes, this little book travels well: I took a ride to New Mexico and there it sat patiently on my nightstands in all the different hotels, motels and inns along the way...then, upon opening the book's pages, it (the book) merrily displayed its well-crafted prose to bring together this joy of riding a motorcycle and the sheer bliss at reading the power and majesty of word after word, woven together into images and concepts of both of these Life-sustaining activities...OK, so it is not for everyone, it is for me and that's what we're talking about here...if you Love either, read it, if you Love both, devour it...if you Love neither, God help you, 'cause you are missing out on Life at its finest and the "Now," the moments...love of riding, love of words, love of Life...another tapestry to bring form and content to our Loves...live on that edge and slip back to write about it...darn, I'm going for a ride now: "four wheel move the body, two wheels move the soul" and I feel the call of the wind...

Not as good as I had hoped
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-01
Although there were portions of this book that were good, many of them seemed uninteresting to me. I had hoped it would be a story that provided interesting details of both a bike journey and book collecting. In the end I feel like a got less than I hoped for either. He seems to gloss over many of his actual riding journey but spends a lot of time on details that added nothing to the story for me. Perhaps I am spoiled by Peter Egan.

Enjoyable Ride and Read All At Once
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-19
As a reader and rider, I enjoyed this book as a motorcycle travelogue with all its arcane bits of literary data strewn throughout.
If I have a small complaint it is that Bishop spends too much time in Austin and not exploring more of the places he is terrific at writing about. When we were traveling with him, he made some of those stops come alive and gave the book some fun and substance. When he halted (as he had to in order to do the archive research), so did the cycle action.
However, with that being said, some of the book's best and most poignant passages are his ruminations on reading and riding - his description on p. 112 about the "readiness of books" has been accurate in my reading life. And the couple of pages (p. 124-6) about silence and listening were memorable.
So is the line: "I wrote on the bike and I rode in the reading room. I'm sure it's the same in offices everywhere." He's right, of course, as I work while I ride and ride while I work in the form of a quick daydream. Nice to know others have the same feelings.

Educators
1 Sure Way to Relax: Mike Cohen's Journey to Tranquility
Published in Spiral-bound by Audio Educators (1999-09-01)
Author: Michael Cohen
List price: $16.98
New price: $16.98
Used price: $13.58

Average review score:

NOT MUCH USE
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-08-16
I saw this workshop and bought the book to see if there were more useful items within it because the author's presentation was not something I was inspired by. I would recommend reading Andrew Weil, not Cohen's book.

A great tool for relaxation
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2000-09-21
This book is impressive in the tools it gives you for achieving real relaxation. It is well written and very useful.

Wayne D. Ford, Ph.D., author of "Stress Management for Over-Achievers" docwifford@msn.com

Quick, Easy and Very Effective!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2000-01-18
This is a wonderful program. Mr. Cohen has created a program that is experiential, easy to use, practical, enjoyable and very effective. If you're feeling stressed, this program will definitely help you to relax! The accompanying spiral bound book also provides alot of valuable information for further study. A definite winner!

A Godsend!
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 1999-12-16
Truly amazing, Journey To Tranquility presents the most effective, time-efficient, practical and sensible methods to relax, relieve stress, and generate more energy. For the stressed-out, worriers, and nocturnals, this product might be the best answer yet to improving quality of life. Simple instructions, no complicated steps, free from any scientific mumbo-jumbo, Mr Cohen presents his methods in its basic, purest form which any individual can comprehend and exercise.

Relaxation just got easy!
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 1999-11-15
Journey to Tranquility has taught me how to relax first thing in the morning, in the middle of a stressful day at work, or before trying to fall asleep at night. Mike's voice is so very soothing to the listener. He gives subtle suggestions that teach the listener to relax both mind and body. In comparison to other relazation techniques, Journey to Tranquility teaches the listener in a very small amount of time. It is amazing how we can all learn to decrease stress and be more productive in our lives.

Educators
Don't Throw Away Your Stick Till You Cross the River
Published in Paperback by Five Star Publications, Inc. Chandler, AZ (2007-02-01)
Authors: Vincent Collin Beach and Anni Beach
List price: $14.95
New price: $6.99
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Average review score:

Very Compelling, Pulls the Reader Along: (Don't Throw Away Your Stick Till You Cross the River)
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-29
A Very compelling read, pulls the reader along. A wonderful spirit. A deeply felt and lived life. Inspiring and intriguing. Flows very well, emotionally connecting and involving the reader, pulling along. With emotional integrity, spirit, dedication, honesty, sharing, avoids the usual problem of memoirs: that of being too self-laudatory or defensive, and/or cutting out the 'less comfortable' parts. Here there's a well roundedness, an all-around emotional and telling honesty; helps greatly in connecting and sharing. From Vincent's experiences in Jamaica, such as a poignant scene being shipped out from home on a troop ship to England in WWII... To the joys and difficulties of exploring- creating a musical career in England and America as a Jamaican in the 1950's.. To trying to raise a family and have a marriage in the so-often moving (several ways)life of an Air Force bandsman. Including the loss of two sons to Lupus. To deeply lived experiences working and living on the Navajo Reservation in the later 1970's and 1980's... To beautifully lived and loved experiences from the 1980's on with Anni... To living and adjusting to...many things and opportunities created... to stuff...like recent Parkinson's... As my mom noted, who has had a chance to start reading the book and very much looks forward to reading more, how "Different Vincent's experiences are or some can be, yet very intriguing... I'm involved.. from the beginning on."
I have known Vincent and Anni since 1984, when we worked together on the Navajo Reservation for a school called Kinlichee, 1984-1986; myself through 1987. A very special time, place, spirit. Shared very well in the book. And we've been friends communicating since, including some visiting 1989, 1999. Vincent and Anni's spirit then and now carries well. Get to better know a new or old friend. I am so glad Vincent, with Anni, has been able to write this wonderful book, to share.

From Ordinary to Extraordinary - A wonderful book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-27
Vincent Beach is an ordinary man who has led an extraordinary life. It is the story of one man's dream and how he achieved it. The story of a poor boy from Jamaica who loved music, worked hard and found a way to fulfill his dream. It is a story of perserverance, loss, acceptance and love. A great read.

A Book to Share
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-03
I just read the last of this book this morning and my heart has been full, thinking of Vincent Beach and his wife, Anni, all day. It is truly a heart-warming, thought-provoking, human tale, and I feel privileged that I had the opportunity to read it. It was precious to me to get this in-depth look at the details of an extraordinary, not an ordinary, life. It is an absorbing tale, and difficult to put down. We very seldom get to read a personal story of a life that's spanned 80+ years; that in itself makes this book special. I truly admire this couple for seeing this project to it's conclusion--readers will learn of some of the difficulties that were encountered in finishing the book. (I ordered 4 copies of this book, so that I could share it with family and friends!)

An Extraordinary man.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-27
I began this book yesterday morning and finished it before sunset yesterday evening. Mr.Beach tells his story with unflinching honesty and refreshing clarity. For a man who left his home with a little more than a sixth-grade education and a desire to follow his passion...music, his journey has been anything but ordinary. Bearing his pain and disappointments with courage, Vincent's life serves as a lesson in perseverance, humility, acceptance and love without ever descending into preachiness or self-pity.

I've purchased several copies of this book for our Library, and highly recommend it to reading groups.

Anita Noad
Palm Coast, FL

A very interesting read
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-09
Vincent Beach's life has been anything but ordinary. I loved reading this story which is full of interesting turns. It immediately grasps the reader, bringing much light to the subjects of racism, the daily struggles of those who emigrate to the US, and what it's like to lose not one but two children. The author relates very well to the reader, telling his story in a way that makes you laugh in connection with the story, at other times drawing tears of empathy. I really enjoyed this book and would recommend it to anyone who can relate to the trials and tribulations of life.

Educators
Earth and Water: Encounters in Viet Nam
Published in Paperback by University of Massachusetts Press (1998-03)
Author: Edith Shillue
List price: $24.95
New price: $17.00
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Average review score:

Excellent update
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-05-26
As a child of the Vietnam era, I've long been curious to find out what became of the people that populated the Time magazine of my youth. Shillue brings up to date with a personal look at the lives and times of the Vietnamese. It is reassuring to hear about the resiliency of the Cambodian people and I was glad to see that Shillue's first-hand accounts bring us right into the lives of those we left behind. I particularly liked when she compared contemporary Americans to their counterparts in Asia.

Alright...
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2001-10-27
This book was alright, a good description of Vietnam for those that have never been and want to know what is about over there. I studied in Hanoi for four months during college and it was a real trip back for me while reading this, especially when the author speaks of her visit to Hanoi. I stayed in Bach Khoa while I was there and lived in that very neighborhood for four months and it made me very nostaligic. However, the author tended to irritate me at times with what I saw as an attitude towards the culture and traditionalism of the northern region. Frankly, I didn't like this book as much as I thought I would...but then again I'm very biased when it comes to Vietnam since the country means a lot to me...

At last we see Vietnam as a place and not a war
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2000-04-17
Excellent Read! In the early 1990s I was an American businessman living in Vietnam and this well written book takes me back to the country and a time which I still miss every day.

It reminds Americans that Vietnam is a place and not a war.

If anyone wishes to see and feel Vietnam and Cambodia as they are today this is THE book to read. I look forward to Ms Shillue's next book.

Compelling, but needs a good copy edit
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2000-02-12
I am enjoying this book, but the numerous grammatical errors (ex.: the use of "it's" to indicate the possessive, as opposed to "its") are beginning to prove distracting. In this day and age, there is no excuse for such inattention to detail on the part of the publisher.

Wonderful sense of Vietnam today
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 1998-08-29
This book is unusual, for it offers readers a sense of the sights, feelings and sounds of Vietnam in the late 1990s. Shillue is an honest reporter, who travels to Vietnam without war baggage. She writes like a dream and the only criticism I have of the book is that I wanted more. Read it.

Educators
The Family Silver: A Memoir of Depression and Inheritance
Published in Hardcover by University Of Chicago Press (2004-06-15)
Author: Sharon O'Brien
List price: $27.50
New price: $7.97
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Average review score:

Outstanding memoir
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2005-08-18
This is a fascinating account of growing up as an Irish American in the mid 20th century told with dark Irish humor but always with love. It is one of the best accounts of the true impact of depression on the family as well as the individual. One of the best books I have read in the past year.

A mirror into my own life
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 13 total.
Review Date: 2004-11-17
I LOVED this book. Once I started reading, I couldn't put it down.

I grew up in the same Boston suburb as the author, in a family spiraling in similar downward economic mobility, and I'm about the same age as the author, so many of her experiences mirrored my own. Her mirror brought me surprising clarity and compassion with regard to my parents' struggles and the impact their struggles had on my own growing up.

I'm a psychologist now. When I look at this book from my professional viewpoint, as someone who treats and writes about depression, I also feel that it's a terrific resource. I will be recommending it to adults I treat for recurrent depressive episodes.

The author's depressions started when she was an adolescent, and continued intermittently through much of her adult life. Watching her gain understanding and mastery over this depressive tendency gave me a deeper understanding of how I can help the depressed individuals with whom I work.

BRAVO to the author, and thanks!

Must Read!!!!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2005-03-01
I just couldn't put this book down. This helped me understand so much about myself and my family...and how we've all been shaped by the past. O'brien's humor and warmth stay with you long after you've read the book. A must read for anyone who comes from a family.

Just a little disappointed
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2005-10-25
I read this book for the reasons I think most people would read a book with this subtitle - to see if I could identify with the author and perhaps gain some new insight from her experience. As I progressed through it, I was amazed by the congruence of our experiences, but felt a rising call to let the author know her conclusions left me wondering how she could have missed the bigger picture, the common denominations that make it possible for her to connect with people who do not have her specific family history. Ms. O'Brien traces her depression to Irish history, specifically to simply being Irish and a descendant of the town the famine hit hardest. But my own family history has not a drop of Irish in it and I turned down page after page of parallels in her experience and mine. I wanted to tell her, "forget the Irish, already, and focus on the feelings, the reactions to loss and shame that make us all human." Another thread in her story is her almost worshipful attachment to her father. My relationship to my own was similar and I also never married. Yet, when a therapist gives her some insight into how it has affected her, she rejects completely the opportunity to learn something from it and trashes the therapist. So... I am glad I read her book, to find there are others who have lived a life very much in many ways like my own, but I don't feel I was hearing wisdom from the writer and that disappointed me.

Beautifully written and full of insight
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2004-11-26
O'Brien has written a "Memoir of Depression and Inheritance" and she succeeds brilliantly in all of these intentions. This book works beautifully as a memoir, evoking in three dimensions, in colour and almost with smells and sounds, the world of upper-middle class expectations and genteel failure and the anxieties of her parents, and the alternative world of Elmira, which to me has the ring of a magic land. The people - mother, father, siblings, aunts - are whole and understandable and believable and sympathetic. The whole world within which the author strives to grow up is real and immediate on the page.

More than a memoir, O'Brien has the ambition of understanding inheritance. Her book links behaviour and consequence and puts forward explanations and theories of action and traces the interconnecting threads that link relative with relative and past with outcome. This does not obtrude in the narrative: her skill in writing presents these insights as natural extensionds to the momentum of the absorbing story.

The inheritance that is at the centre of O'Brien's understanding is the inheritance of depression. She addresses this with subtlety - she understands, and manages to present the complexity of inheritance and upbringing, accident and fate, biochemistry and environment, individual and social history. She is also alert to the accidents of everyday life that contribute to, and often trigger depression. I love her " `occasions of depression' which the vulnerable among us need to avoid or manage carefully." (p. 159) on the analogy of the "occasions of sin" that beset the unwary Roman Catholic.

The framework for a real humane psychology should be biography, and the complex threads through which a biography is realized. O'Brien's beautiful book is a contribution to this true science of psychology. The fact that it is contained in this insightful memoir and is presented in superb language probably means that it will never feature in psychology reading lists, but it should (though the first reviewer here gives us hope!).

Educators
Following Mateo
Published in Paperback by Trafford Publishing (2006-07-06)
Author: Tom Molanphy
List price: $21.00
New price: $18.90
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Average review score:

Learning about Belize with a laugh...
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2003-03-30
I really enjoyed this book. Without even noticing, I learned about the country of Belize and the Mayan culture as the author creatively wove historical details into a humorous, touching account of his own journey. I found myself both sympathizing and laughing with him as he tries to learn, and keep up, with the ins and outs of an unfamiliar culture. I became quickly invested in the main character and eager for him to come out on top!

"A Hunt for the Self in the Jungles of Southern Belize"
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2004-02-02
Tom Molanphy has a good story to tell about a search for self in a country of different cultures, languages, races,etc. While reading "Following Mateo" I was transported back from the hazzles of everyday life and never-ending city activity to Southern Belize where, through Tom's creative descriptions, I found myself engulfed by nature. Peppered with humor Tom lets us experience father nature in a unique fashion. He tells of how it demands respect,of how we have to adjust to accommodate it and of how rough it can be and yet how soothing her gentle embrace. The book took me through trails under the towering canopies and over mountains that lead to discoveries of people living from the land. People who have learned to coexist and respect the land.
The book was and excellent read. It thought me about the journey of life and the little journeys within. It also thought me to, every now and then, "stop and smell the flowers, but to be careful not to get stung by a bee that may have beat me to those flowers".

Joyful Journey
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2003-03-30
Following Mateo is a personal memoir of Tom Molanphy's two year stint as a volunteer educator in Belize. Mateo is a Mayan Indian whom the author becomes very close to in the course of his internship. Following Mateo, the title, refers to the author's attempts to get Mateo to take him to the bush country of Belize. The author has successfully integrated history, anthropology, cross cultural studies and religion into this highly readable memoir.
I am a college professor teaching English l02 - a writing course using argument from social science topics and also literature, particulary memoir. My students - all l05 of them - absolutely loved the book. They liked the author's descriptive writing style which made them feel they were right there in Belize.They liked the many lively characters that the author presents. They liked the way the author integrated his personal journey with the daily events. They liked reading about a young man on an adventure who had questions about life, about religion, about risktaking. They liked the crosscultural atmosphere of the book and the way the author showed these differences. They liked the light hearted and humorous aspects of the book. They liked the various insights the author gained during his journey, especially about friendship. In writing their essays they were able to center on diverse messages and were often able to interract with the memoir from their own experiences. One student said she liked the book because the author opened himself up and was not "preachy". I thoroughly enjoyed the book and the essays my students were able to write due to the many insights the author offered. It was indeed a journey of joy. I recommend this book to college professors of freshman writing and senior high school teachers as well as volunteer coordinators in various non-profit groups.

About "Following Mateo"
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2004-02-20
An odyssey: into the jungles and wetlands of Belize, into the hearts and lives of a few native Belizians, and into the process of self knowledge and maturity, best describes, for me, Tom Molanphy's well crafted adventure/pilgrimage book: Following Mateo! Tom writes with grace and great self deprecating humor and enthusiasm about his journey to Belize as a volunteer teacher, his evolving friendship with an older tribal wise man and leader, Mateo, and their adventures.

Through an invitation to personally tutor Mateo's young daughter, Tom experiences the hospitality of Mateo's family and a growing knowledge of their way of life. Tom's desire to get Mateo to take him "into the bush," i.e., the deep jungle territory where (in his perception) ancient ritual hunting and gathering rites of the Ke'kechi take place. His subsequent hiking adventures to "prove" his capabilities to Mateo provide hilarious incidents of gradual self awareness for this young American "gringo," Tom.

As a veteran Jr. High/High School humanities teacher, I feel that this is a book that would appeal to this age range of student. It is a very "good read" for the adult reader as well.

Jumanji - Hitting it!
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2003-05-02
Following Mateo is definitely a down to earth book. My friend Tom definitely put it right about life in the southern villages of Toledo and also as a missionary. I've known Tom for the two years that he spent here in Belize. I loved the book and will definitely read it again.

Educators
The Forbidden Schoolhouse: The True and Dramatic Story of Prudence Crandall and Her Students (Bccb Blue Ribbon Nonfiction Book Award (Awards))
Published in Hardcover by Houghton Mifflin (2005-10-24)
Author: Suzanne Jurmain
List price: $19.00
New price: $11.33
Used price: $8.99

Average review score:

The Forbidden Schoolhouse
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-01
This is a book I will use for a beginning writing class at the university level. It's a quick read for that purpose and relates a piece of black and white history previously unknown. Because of the size and large print, it has the feel of a children's book, but it reads like adult nonfiction.

A Great Read
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-28
This book is about a woman named Prudence Crandal who risked her life to teach african american students. This book is filled with pictures that make the book more fun to read. I definitally reccomed this book!

What a story of courage!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-13
This story is about a white woman who taught African American girls. They were tormented, the house was set on fire. Pictures are artifacts.

Crandall's Creativity
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-28
This was beyond a doubt the best non-fiction book I have ever read. The author describes things so vividly it is almost as if you are with Prudence Crandall from the time she opened her school until after it was closed in 1835. Suzanne Jurmain photocopied actual newspaper articles about the schoolhouse and the events surrounding the schoolhouse in the book, so we readers could see them, and not just have the quotes. I recommend this book because I loved every minute of reading it. Every chapter ended with a cliffhanger. For instance, at the end of chapter three: "Things were even better than Prudence might have expected. The pieces were falling into place. The building was ready. The students were waiting. All Prudence had to do now was open her new school."
I like historical non-fiction (from the 1800's) because I like knowing how life was during the time period. How did people dress? How did they act? I like to be able to answer my own questions like that, and this book explains it well. It was really like being there with Prudence Crandall.

Hey Me. By Desw
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2006-12-12
In this book, The Forbidden School House, by Suzanne Jurmain, the author uses great detail to describe the lives of the young students, and the teacher Ms. Prudence Crandall, who was a major women's and equal rights advocate. "Although many nineteenth-century people thought educating women was a waste Prudence didn't agree. She expected her girls to learn." p. 2. This quote from the book really expresses the way that

Prudence felt about educating women, and the classes that she taught are also a strong example that she loved teaching and wanted her students to get the most out of it. Prudence was already way ahead of her time opening this incredible private girls academy, but when she began letting young black girls in the school I knew I had hit the climax of the book and found how really implausible Ms. Crandall really was. Though she went through many hardships in her teaching and lost many students when a black girl was enrolled, she kept pursuing her goal, which was to help the young black girls of America get a good education. Ms. Prudence Crandall really strived to reach her goal, and although she may not have changed the governments mind about the feelings towards black people she helped begin it. And to finish something or to reach a goal one must begin.
This was an amazing book, I was incredibly moved by the story of Ms. Prudence Crandall and will never forget it. I really agreed and was inspired by her remarkable actions, giving myself the self-esteem to pursue a risky goal. To me Prudence was a remarkable women and this book really gave me a great insight into what she and her students had to go through to make a difference that would change black and white women's education forever. Although Prudence was forced to shut her school down she never gave up her dream to fight against slavery. She knew that what she had done by opening the school to African-American girls in the country was a huge step up to where we are today, where the color of skin does not matter and women are encouraged to peruse an education.

Educators
The Man on Whom Nothing Was Lost: The Grand Strategy of Charles Hill
Published in Paperback by Mariner Books (2007-08-16)
Author: Molly Worthen
List price: $14.95
New price: $3.79
Used price: $0.01

Average review score:

A great read!
Helpful Votes: 12 out of 16 total.
Review Date: 2006-01-17
This is a fascinating book. Worthen was still an undergraduate at Yale when she began it, and she brings both the idealism of youth and a mature writing style to the page. Besides being a fly on the wall at some of the most important foreign policy events of the 20th century, the reader also gets an inside view of one of Yale University's most elite communities -- the Grand Strategy program, which trains future leaders in the art of statecraft. Followers of contemporary political events will be particularly interested, since two of the Grand Strategy professors -- John Lewis Gaddis and Charles Hill -- have close contacts with, and regularly advise the Bush Administration. This is no tawdry expose of secret societies (a la Secrets of the Tomb), but an insightful look into how an experienced diplomat mentors some of the most accomplished students in our country. It also is a moving coming of age story, as Worthen learns that her mentor is as flawed and human as the famous leaders he counseled.

Nothing Lost, Nothing Gained
Helpful Votes: 20 out of 44 total.
Review Date: 2006-02-21
I'm sorry but I've read this book twice now and I don't know when I've had a more amateur read. I'm with Publishers Weekly on this one, this author is smart and clever and in love with her own voice but she's not a natural writer, and her apparent infatuation with Professor Hill gets tiresome after only twenty-five pages. I can imagine that students who went to Yale and took courses with Hill might enjoy reading about him. Will anyone else? His family, perhaps. To the rest of us, even after Worthen's comprehensive look at his career, he seems like a nobody who somehow wound up at the top echelons of a corrupt government and now runs pretentious power courses from a cushy academic post. Worthen gives us a charming picture of campus life at New Haven, and how a lottery system insures everyone an equal shot at studying with Professor Hill.

I got the impression also that Hill was flirting with Worthen continuously, but that his passion for Norma was making him "walk the line" as Johnny Cash used to say. Hill certainly seems unabashed by Worthen's curiosity about his romantic and sex life, even urging her on to ask him some unseemly questions even Bill Clinton might have balked at, though I didn't catch if he wears boxers or briefs.

The revelations about Iran/Contra are minor ones, and debatable. I hate to break it to you, Molly Worthen, but your emperor has no clothes.

The Grand Strategy course he teaches, she notes breathlessly, culminates in a "Crisis Simulation" day in which students are thrown into an imaginary crisis like an outbreak of Ebola or Muslim terrorists occupying the Senate chambers. It's like a Universal Studios tour ride putting you, the tourist, into Jack Bauer's shoes on "24." And out of such theme parks our foreign policy is born.

Thank you Molly
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-17
For a wonderful read about a man I know, but thank you even more for articulating the hugh problem at the heart of academia today -- political correctness that has left a whole generation of students with a disfunctional inner compass. Thank God Charlie Hill decided to teach at Yale after he left the Foreign Service!
Francie Bremer

Hitting the nail
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2006-02-24
This biography is the first I've read of a man I've had the privilege to know. It's also the first review on Amazon I've felt compelled to write. I applaud Worthen's ability to peg Charlie Hill. Her characterizations are 100% in my experience of man who has lived a compelling life. I recommend this book to all students of foreign policy.

Yes, you can marvel at the fact that a professor buys coffee at Starbucks. I feel sorry for those who've forgotten that.

A new kind of biography by a promising new star
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2006-02-28
Charles Hill is the consumate man behind the curtain - Worthen writes a bio worthy of close examination - her writing is just lovely and shows her wisdom. - Great job.


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