Literature in Art Books


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Literature in Art Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

Literature in Art
Oprah Winfrey: "I Don't Believe In Failure" (African-American Biography Library)
Published in Library Binding by Enslow Publishers (2005-07)
Author: Robin Westen
List price: $31.93
New price: $28.74
Used price: $29.97

Average review score:

Mini bio of Oprah
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-11
Pictures were great, easy reading, but not quit what was expected for price paid. Not store's problem. Their processing was great & quick.

Inspiring Oprah
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-12-01
Oprah Winfrey's inspiring life is detailed in this volume from the African-American Biography Library by Enslow. This book contains information many biographies written for young people about Oprah do not. Many photos and quotes accompany. Includes Chronology, Chapter Notes, and Internet Addresses.

This is the BEST book on Oprah ever
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-18
I am a big Oprah fan. I started watching her with my mother when I was just a child. So when my teacher said I could read this book for school I did it right away. It's so good. I learned so much about Oprah and now I love her even more. Every kid and grown up should read this book if they are interested in Oprah Winfrey. There were so many great pictires I never saw before also. Read this book and you will get all the REAL information you want to know about Oprah. I want to thank the author for writing this book. It is one of the best I've ever read.

You want this book
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-05-15
I had to write a book reveiw about a famous African American and Im really glad my teacher let me write it about Oprah becausee she is one of the greatest women in the world. This book was very helpful and very interesting also. I learned all about Oprah's childhood all the way up to the latest news. It has great pictures and the writing is easy to understand but very interesting. If you love Oprah it doesn't matter how old you are. This book is really great.

This is One of The Best!
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-26
I've read a lot of books about Oprah, but this one stands out. It has new material that I'd never read before despite the plethora of biographic stuff I own on this amazing woman. Many of the photographs are new to me. I'm putting Westen's book at the head of my collection. It will be a while before any others come out that can compete. I recommend it highly. Before it goes out of print -- grab it.

Literature in Art
Savage Art: A Biography of Jim Thompson
Published in Hardcover by Knopf (1995-10-24)
Author: Robert Polito
List price: $30.00
New price: $31.48
Used price: $4.53
Collectible price: $30.00

Average review score:

Interesting, illuminating, meticulously researched.
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2004-11-17
Savage Art is a truly remarkable work of scholarship. In it, Robert Polito meticulously separates out fact from the considerable amount of mythology that surrounds Jim Thompson's life.
Since so much of what Thompson wrote is autobiographical in origin, a knowledge of Thompson's very unusual life history helps the reader better appreciate his work. So it is not at all hard to argue that this is not only a well written and fascinating biography, it is an important one as well.
Polito explains, in exacting detail, how Thompson's life and consequently his writing was influenced by the interpersonal and societal forces he encountered as he matured.
To put it another way. Jim Thompson's worldview was shaped, nurtured and, some would say, warped by his life experiences.
He then took this unique worldview and used it to interpret the self same experiences which formed it. The result is Thompson's very significant contribution to 20th century American fiction. Dark, disturbing books inhabited by sad, desperate characters trapped in hideous circumstances. These are novels that boldly explore areas that would otherwise be unexplorable.
Savage Art is very much a monumental achievement. Essential reading for Jim Thompson fans.

Tedious but Complete
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2003-12-03
I suppose when an author pens a biography of another author, the reader should not expect the biography to provide the same level of reader delight as the author whom the biography covers. Don't get me wrong, Polito does a good job, and he certainly is not a hack writer. His analysis is steady without flights of fancy about Thompson's motives, but it's not too interesting either. Yes, Thompson lived a tought life in Texas and Oklahoma as his flitty father bounced from one dream deal to another, and his time spent in the Texas oil rig jungle is informative not only about Thompson but about the times and condiitons where he lived. Bringing in excerpts from Thompson's writings to explain (or perhaps just to connect the dots) events in his life with parallels in his writings doesn't always work. Yes, the reader can see his father in life and in the person of a corrupt official in one of Thompson's novels, but one can never see the genius--the why.

This award-winning book certainly deserves any awards based on the good scholarship Polito brings to the effort. The details, though, sometimes bog the reader down in minutiae that seem to detract from who Thompson was. One of the more interestings periods of Thompson's life was while working with the WPA as a writer working on the Oklahoma Guide. The connections with the writers and the communist and socialist, including Thompson, even Thompson's activitist role in the WWW is rendered in such detail that the reader wonders why Polito brings in all the detail -- which seems almost like the minutes of a party meeting -- that he does. However, whether intentionally or not, Polito puts the lie to the contention that mystery writers are right-wing apologists for capitalism. Thompson (and perhaps even more so Lous L'Amour who was part of Thompson's group of writers who were involved in Oklahoma's communist party) were not just hacks churning out pulp fiction for the he-man magazines but were men of conscience who were well aware of the plight of the working man during this era in this time and place. The fact that Thompson gave up the party doesn't detract (or indict) from his deep feelings for injustices he experienced in his life and saw in others.

All in all, Polito's work represents excellent scholarship, and in reading this book, you will come away with a close rendering of Jim Thompson's life. However, while well documented and certainly with a pedestrian scholarship, I never felt that Polito found the source of Thomson's real genius.

Thorough and well written
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-03
I highly recommend this 1995 National Book Award winner. Thorough and utterly engrossing, Savage Art will satisfy both longtime Thompson fans and neophytes, providing stunning insight into the man as well as the autobiographical aspects of his ofttimes sordid fictional output. Definitely a must read for those who appreciate noir.

The Definitive Bio on Thompson
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2001-05-28
If there was ever an American original, it's Jim Thompson. His dark and deranged world-view, expressed in a series of cheap paperbacks in the fifties and sixties, revels in the that part of the American psyche that we ignore and are afraid to look at. Polito's detailed bio explains where Thompson came from, and the events that molded him into the premier writer of American noir. Even if you aren't interested in Thompson and his work, this is an exquisite biography.

Amazing Detail and Research
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2000-06-29
I didn't think it was possible to write a full-scale biography of Thompson because of his scattered, secret life. But Polito has pulled off the seemingly impossible. He gathers together unexpected facts from obscure sources in places all over the country. He combines this with excellent, insightful analysis of this tortured writer's work. When I first read Thompson's novels back in the mid-'80's, it felt like my brain was being turned inside out. I was so astonished I went out and bought every one. Now thanks to Polito we can begin to understand the sources of the horror and the humanity of his novels.

Literature in Art
Searching for Mary Magdalene: A Journey Through Art and Literature
Published in Hardcover by Welcome Books (2006-04-18)
Author:
List price: $39.95
New price: $14.55
Used price: $3.84

Average review score:

Excellent resource
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-08
Lahr's book is a real treat. Not only are there dozens of full page reproductions of some of the most famous art works containing images of Mary Magdalene, the text itself is well written and, for the most part, historically correct. Then there are the occasional gems - an 11th century mosaic portraying Mary and the angel more like aliens. Moreover, Lahr offers large selections of text from just about every major document dealing with Mary Magdalene, from the 1st century through the 20th century.

One criticism of this extremely valuable book is that a lot of the artistic analysis seems to be based on Lahr's own impressions, rather than giving us the painter's perspective. While Lahr's opinion is obviously of interest, I'd also like to know what the artists' intentions were.

Another shortcoming is that there are many paintings of Magdalene that are not covered (I'm thinking, for example, of Rosetti's 1877 stunning portrait of the curly haired woman, or Da Vinci's sketches, or his very sexual Mary with breasts exposed). Instead, she has many paintings that do not include Mary, but focus instead on Jesus or the disciples. While this makes for a well rounded book, the title suggests that we'll focus on Mary.

Another problem is that Lahr sometimes gives us a painting with no explanation, and often it's difficult to understand what's going on and to distinguish Mary Magdalene from the other characters. This problem happens, for example, in Ruben's "Resurrection of Lazarus."

None of these minor criticisms should stop any serious student of Mary Magdalene from buying this book. It is a one-of-a-kind and very well done.

The Magdalene rules!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-20
Mary Magdalene rules! I had no idea she is told in so many different stories-not only in the canonical gospels, the apocrypha, but also in poetry, stories, and songs. You don't need to look to the traditional bible to find her-she is everywhere. And these writers and poets knew this; all these years, all these centuries, they all knew. Her story is told everywhere. The church tried to suppress her and keep her hidden-in your dreams, jerks! The Magdalene was never quiet, nor will she ever keep quiet. Long may the Magdalene reign!

R.S.V.P.
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-07-31
In accepting Jane Lahr's invitation to time travel through centuries of artists and writers whose attention to Mary Magdalene illuminates profound truths, this is a transforming read, a moment in which to reflect on beauty and truth and really what it is that we do need to know in life. Exquisitely rendered by Lahr's finely tuned sensibility and scholarship, this book is a blessing and a great gift.

A concise and intricate descriptive analysis of Magdalene based upon the many known resources
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-06-08
A beautifully illustrated work of original scholarship, Searching For Mary Magdalene: A Journey Through Art And Literature by author and editor Jane Lahr is an in-depth and comprehensive detailing of the modern and historical history of the enigmatic Mary Magdalene as reflected through the literature and art of the last two millennia. Introducing readers to a collective survey study drawn from historical writers, philosophers, artists, and scholars, Searching For Mary Magdalene accessibly presents a concise and intricate descriptive analysis of Magdalene based upon the many known resources. Searching For Mary Magdalene is very highly recommended to non-specialist general readers with an interest in a life and history of Mary Magdalene.

A concise and intricate descriptive analysis of Magdalene based upon the many known resources
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2006-06-08
A beautifully illustrated work of original scholarship, Searching For Mary Magdalene: A Journey Through Art And Literature by author and editor Jane Lahr is an in-depth and comprehensive detailing of the modern and historical history of the enigmatic Mary Magdalene as reflected through the literature and art of the last two millennia. Introducing readers to a collective survey study drawn from historical writers, philosophers, artists, and scholars, Searching For Mary Magdalene accessibly presents a concise and intricate descriptive analysis of Magdalene based upon the many known resources. Searching For Mary Magdalene is very highly recommended to non-specialist general readers with an interest in a life and history of Mary Magdalene.

Literature in Art
Carousel Animal Carving: Patterns & Techniques
Published in Paperback by Sterling (1998-06-30)
Authors: Bud Ellis and Rhonda Hoeckley
List price: $21.95
New price: $14.00
Used price: $9.60

Average review score:

Simply stunning
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-19
I've wanted to know how to carve these beautiful animals since I was a teenager. This is the book. The techniques and "how tos" are very useful: from making patterns, to proper technique and tools, this is one of THE TWO books on the topic that will get you started.

Also, the author runs a "school" for carving. Horsin' Around. I think it runs for two weeks and is in the 1K plus range, but if you're serious about carving one of these magical creatures, then Bud Ellis is the man to see.

Makes me wish I could carve wood
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-02
This book is a real insiders look at a contemporary top of the line carving school. Worth the price for the photographs alone, it's a nice plus that the information inspires dreams. I can not speak to its usefulness as a carving project guide as I bought it primarily because it is about carousels and I collect carousel books. Carousel Animal Carving is an excellent new edition to a carousel book library.

Carousel Animal Carving: Patterns & Techniques
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-24
This is the best book to date on the subject of carving carousel animals. I recommend the purchase of this book even if you have Bud's first great book on the subject, as I do. This new book contains additional valuable tips and detailed instructions.

The Ultimate Textbook for Carousel Carvers.
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2003-02-28
This book guided me through one of the greatest challenges in my woodcarving experience. After a couple of readings to become familiar with the process and sequence of operations, I began a project which has brought me more pride, and sense of accomplishment than anything I've ever undertaken. From the design stage through materials and tool selection, technique of workmanship, to the final painting and displaying of the project, instructions are clear and include many tips and tricks of the trade. Professional results are assured. For the first time carver, no clearer and concise guide is now available in my opinion. My interest in Carousel Carving encouraged me to gather many books on the subject. After reading them all, I return to this book for its store of relevant information and instructions on carving an Animal. My daughter is the proud owner of an authentic hand-carved Carousel Horse thanks to Bud Ellis and Rhonda Hoeckley's efforts in creating this fine instruction manual. An excellent companion to this book is the "Atlas of Animal Anatomy" by W. Ellenberger et al.

This book is amazing!!
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2002-01-09
If you cannot get to the Horsin' Around Carousel Carving School yourself, this is the next best thing! Bud is a retired art teacher with a gift for helping you understand what needs to be done! The book has every element and every step needed to complete a carousel animal from start to finish. Lots of pictures. A must for the aspiring carver and excellent for the experienced carver as well. There are traditional patterns included, and information to customize your own animal. Whether you want to carve a horse, goat, zebra, rabbit, or something of your own design, this book is a great resource!

Literature in Art
Draw Horses With Sam Savitt
Published in Hardcover by Half Halt Press (1991-06-01)
Author: Sam Savitt
List price: $25.95
New price: $12.99
Used price: $12.66
Collectible price: $64.94

Average review score:

Draw Horses with Sam Savitt
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-08
My granddaughter is 12 years old and is becoming an accomplished drawer of horses thanks to this book. It has been her favorite for three years. We have been regularly checking it out from our local library and finally I decided it would be easier to just buy it for her. She loved it and continues spending hours practicing the Savitt techniques to improve her artistic abilities.

Draw Horses review
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-05
I haven't actually used the book yet but it looks like it will be good for me. There seem to be many horses I would like to draw and they are detailed enough that I think they will be helpful in teaching me the finer details I need to draw horses well.

Amazing!
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2004-05-29
This book is so amazing, The first day that I had it I was drawing horses better than I ever thought I could! If you are interested in horses, conformation, breeds, and drawing, this is the perfect book! It gives you page by page instructions and examples, plus sketching from photographs. If you have any doubts about this book, don't worry, it's great!

This book is Great!
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 2003-02-08
My daughter loves to draw and loves horses. She has never been able to get them right. The first day the book came in she drew the body of the horse unbelievably well. Just by following the guidelines in two of the pages. Of course the legs need some work but there's lots of help within the book for that. A real keeper!

Wonderful drawing book!
Helpful Votes: 12 out of 13 total.
Review Date: 2002-06-26
This book is a perfect guide for learning to draw horses. Sam Savitt's artwork is excellent, and he captures horses in a amazing way. Great book for anyone who loves drawing!

Literature in Art
Green Cultural Studies: Nature in Film, Novel, and Theory
Published in Hardcover by University of Idaho Press (1998-11)
Author: Jhan Hochman
List price: $35.00
New price: $21.00
Used price: $24.15

Average review score:

Choice Award
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2000-04-13
Green Cultural Studies was selected as a Choice magazine Outstanding Academic Title of 1999.

From Book News:
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 1999-07-08
From Booknews: A work of cultural criticism arguing that destroying the boundaries between animal and human, between nature and technology, as mainstream green critics propose, would promote culture over and against the needs of nature. Offers instead a new way of thinking about difference. Also contends that the differences between culture and nature impact the treatment not only of nature, but also of human groups currently coded as race, class, gender, and sexuality. No index. Annotation c. by Book News, Inc., Portland, Or.

Perhaps predictably...
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2004-10-23
cultural studies managed to ignore it and stay just the same, after all.

Review from CHOICE May, 99
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 1999-06-11
"Because it is one of the first sustained studies to use the analytical tools of cultural studies and to focus entirely on the environment, this volume is an important contribution to the literature. Hochman engages the greening of cultural studies, and in so doing strenuously foregrounds nature. In these highly adroit analyses, nature stops being backdrop and becomes primary subject. The author looks at many texts, including primary works such as Women in Love, Deliverance (the film), Beloved, and Silence of the Lambs and such scholarly discussions as Jacques Derrida's Of Grammatology (Ch, Jul '77) and Donna Haraway's Simians, Cyborgs, and Women (1991), the latter (along with Alexander Wilson's The Culture of Nature, Ch, Dec'92) a theoretical antagonist that informs Hochman's study. Ultimately, Hochman rails against the theorization of nature, insisting that the natural world is more worthy by far than to be commodified and diminished. Though Hochman at times indulges in overly sophisticated and ingenious readings and portmanteaus ("worldnature," "culturescape") and provides no clear rationale for separating the bibliography into two parts, this groundbreaking book is highly recommended for all upper division undergraduate and graduate programs in literature and environmental studies. It should greatly widen the appeal of ecocriticism.-B. Adler

Perhaps readers will be interested in the table of contents:
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 1999-05-28
Introduction

PART I: Theriomorphs and Anthropomorphs

1. A Theriomorphic Bestiary: The Silence of the Lambs

2. Human Parsites in Animal Hosts: Women in Love

PART II: The Forest and the Trees

3. The Forest Primarily Evil: Deliverance

4. A Peculiar Arborary: Beloved

PART III: For Land's (Not Property's) Sake

5. The Deed and Its Undoing: The Conservationist

6. Owning Up to Belonging: Daughters of the Dust

PART IV: Nature, In Theory

7. An Environmental Impact Report: Of Grammatology

8. Beyond a Creeping Metonymy: Simians, Cyborgs, and Women

Epilogue

Notes

Bibliography/Filmography I

Bibliography II

Literature in Art
In Other Words: Artists Talk About Life and Work
Published in Paperback by Hal Leonard (2006-09-01)
Author: Anthony DeCurtis
List price: $18.95
New price: $5.98
Used price: $1.11

Average review score:

Interviews executed with tact and prfessionalism
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-01-22
Anthony's book shows us, the reader, how interviews can be handled in a professional, smart way to engage the subject, triggering that person to open up and reveal the business of music and the creativity of his/her soul. My favorite interview is where Keith Richards talks about his daughters sneaking into bed with him while he is asleep and waking up to find them next to him.

This book is simply superb, especially for Eight Legged Baboons
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 15 total.
Review Date: 2005-11-10
Octaroons (people over 100 and baboons with eight legs) will find this book absolutely wonderful. I found out about this fine book from my good friends, Andy Breckman and Friedman, International Comedic Envoy for the UN. However, this show is pathetic, but just as hilarious as the Wikipedia one. Everyone should buy this book. Seven Second Delay Rocks.

Zen of Rock
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2005-10-15
I had the distinct pleasure of listening to Mr. DeCurtis speak to my History of Rock and Roll (taught by the best teacher ever) class at Indiana University in the Spring of 2004. This was definitely one of the highlights of my collegiate acamdemic career. Anthony's knowledge and experience in the music world is astonishing and his way with words in the recollection of his stories give his listeners a feeling that he not just a writer, but a true music fanatic. In fact, I was so enthralled by Mr. DeCurtis' stories, I attended every section of the classes he was scheduled to address that day. Although I have not read this particular book, I have read his others and would highly suggest them. Based on my readings of his other books, and seeing Anthony speak, I plan to buy this book as soon as I can, and I would bet that I will love it, and most other music lovers will as well.

Great source of rock n' roll wit and wisdom
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2005-11-10
Written by one of the most esoteric giants of rock n' roll writers, "In other words" is simply funny and fascinating. Anthony DeCurtis sure got around the music scene and it's all here. 7SD rocks!

Insightful and Fascinating Interviews
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2005-09-29
Anthony DeCurtis is one of the best rock critics writing today and this book is full of fascinating interviews that show you a side of many stars you've never seen before. The dueling interviews with Paul McCartney and George Harrison and Keith Richards on Mick Jagger are worth the price of the book alone. The book also includes an interview with Martin Scorsese and a rare interview with Don Delillo that show that DeCurtis is just as knowledgable about film and literature.

Literature in Art
Lord, Only You Can Change Me: A Devotional Study on Growing in Character from the Beatitudes
Published in Paperback by WaterBrook Press (2000-12)
Author: Kay Arthur
List price: $13.99
New price: $4.99
Used price: $2.80

Average review score:

amazing, wonderful, everyone should do this study.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-07
I am doing this study for the third time. This study has changed my walk with the Lord. Kay Authur is an amazing teacher. This study is easy fast and deep. Don't miss it if you are a Christian.

Lord only You can change me
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-11
Our Bible study group began this book in late fall 2007. We were looking for something that would encourage our spiritual growth, and one that would allow for sharing our insights as we studied together. This has probably been the best study we've done together - it's created an excitement in meeting, and there has been real growth - spiritually and numerically as well. It opens Scripture in a unique and thoughtful way, causing the members to really think about it.

A very must to go with your bible, moving, motivating.
Helpful Votes: 20 out of 21 total.
Review Date: 1999-07-08
I am a new christian and find this book speaks to me through the writer's words. I am finding myself anxious each day for the time to draw near to God through this author's words. I have never read any of her other books. I find this book makes me look at my life like I have never looked at it before. It makes me look at God as I have never dreamed possible. I am ordering 15 copies of this book and we are going to have a 9 week devotional on character at my church on Tuesday nights. I have showed it to other members of my church (only 98)and all interested will be taking the class with me. Whether you are now a christian or just became a christian I think most all would feel the same way after reading only the first chapture. You can not get enough of it.

Tough stuff! Do you want to grow in Christ? I do!
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2005-05-22
I knew when I ordered this study I would be facing a great spiritual challenge and I am. As a christian I know of the Sermon of the Mount and it's great blessing but this study digs very deep and very deep into my walk with Jesus. It was a painful journey at first and very humbling, even unto tears, but there is great joy in these beatitudes that I had been missing. If you want the "truth" about God and your heart, then prepare yourself for a great study!

An Amazing Author
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2002-02-15
Kay Arthur is an amazing author that is truely blessed by God. Having grown up in a home that didn't have God and was completely in the ways of the world, I discovered I need to do a lot of changing once I became a Christian and this book has totally helped me to not only discover the changes I need to make, but the scriptures I need to read to help me make the changes. I have since bought several more or her Bible Studies and cannot wait to get into them.

Literature in Art
Mark Kistler's Imagination Station: Learn How To Draw In 3-d With Public Television's Favorite Drawing Teacher
Published in School & Library Binding by Topeka Bindery (1994-12)
Author: Mark Kistler
List price: $28.55
New price: $28.55

Average review score:

Page after page of drawing fun!
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2000-04-10
Mark Kistler's books are wonderful, entertaining books that canteach anyone (of any age) how to draw! I bought his books for my sons,and I quickly became a devoted fan and an avid drawing maniac myself! The book is packed with pages of fun drawings, as well as 'story starters' in which kids are asked to complete the story. Mark's enthusiasm for drawing and story-telling just bubbles up out of the pages of this book. As a mom, I appreciate his encouragement for kids to watch less tv, say NO to violent video games and drugs, and to expand their brain power by getting involved in art. This book is a 'must have' for all teachers and parents who would like to see their kids motivated to express their creativity and feel good about their drawing ability.

A great beginning for any age
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-07-20
While aimed at kids, this is a great place to start at any age. If you have been looking at other drawing books, and the books you have seen before only make it harder, your search is over. Mark makes it easy for anyone at any age to get basic drawing skills, the building blocks you need to get started. He teaches the skills that other books make seem complex, without the stress or making it go over your head. His way of teaching is simply the easiest method a person can have to start drawing. And if the books are good, his old show on PBS and his videos are even better. Mark makes drawing so fun kids beg to use the book again and again. He does not start by intimidating you with the completed project, in fact you don't always know what you are drawing until you are done. He takes you one line, circle, or square at a time and before you know it you have a fun drawing. I also reccommend you try the books from Ed Emberly, or check my lists on Amazon for kids that want to learn to draw, or be a cartoonist or animator.

After working with this book, even you can draw!
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2000-02-12
If you think you stink at drawing, think again! Mark Kistler shows you how, step by step, to draw pictures that really look like something and tell a story besides!

Excellent drawing tutorial for kids and for kids-at-heart
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2002-12-20
I bought this book to relearn how to draw properly. While the book is directed at a young audience, adults-at-heart like me will benefit from the drawing principles such as foreshortening, placement, size, overlapping, shading and shadowing, contour and horizon (plus 1 and 2 point perspectives). My disappointments were that a few later lessons repeat previous lessons and that it uses blank pages after each lesson for you to practice on. I suggest you use a separate sheet of paper to do this so you can pass this book to your kids and their kids and so on and so forth. Despite these, I still rate it 5 stars.

I can now draw simple everyday objects both as cartoons and as realistically as I can. They're not professional quality yet, the book recommends daily practice until they are and that's exactly what I'm doing.

This isn't the only book you should buy though if you want to draw artistically. In my case, I'd like to draw comics-style characters and objects so I can move on to animating them later. I got Tom Alvarez's "How to Create Action, Fantasy and Adventure Comics" (separately reviewed) which is also an excellent how-to book.

Want to learn to draw .....start here
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2000-11-15
Mark Kistler's books are EXCELLENT for anyone who want to learn to draw. The layout of the book is fun easy to follow. Although it is geared toward children it is appropriate for a beginner adult. It starts with simple concepts and gradually builds on what you've already learned. Anyone at any age will be impressed by what you will be drawing in a short amount of time. I bought this book for my children and was so impressed , I started drawing myself. My children love this book and so do I.

Literature in Art
The Mobius Strip: Dr. August Mobius's Marvelous Band in Mathematics, Games, Literature, Art, Technology, and Cosmology
Published in Paperback by Basic Books (2007-01-08)
Authors: Clifford A. Pickover and Clifford Pickover
List price: $15.95
New price: $1.99
Used price: $0.44

Average review score:

A Magical Trip with "The Mobius Strip"
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2006-06-12
Permit me to rave about "The Mobius Strip." Then buy it, read it, and enjoy its many flavors. Math buffs will find it as mouth-watering as a bowl of Ben and Jerry's ice cream. The aesthetically inclined will be delighted by its initial simplicity and the helpful illustrations that enable them (and me) to grasp the book's mathematical profundities.

Always the entertainer, Cliff Pickover takes the stage with "Mobius Limericks to Get You in the Mood." Soon after we see a photo (by Paul Mobius) of his father's skull with Beethoven's skull grinning in the foreground. Shades of P.T. Barnum! And this is only the introduction!

Although the ideas in the book are presented with exceptional clarity and treated with utmost respect by the author, he does reveal his dry sense of humor upon occasion. Here is one of my favorite nuggets on page 11:

"One of the most mystifying Mobius arrangements is the sandwich Mobius strip, created with just two strips of paper. I have known people to ponder this for hours while listening to Pink Floyd without ever fully appreciating what they have beheld."

This gives you some idea of what's in store for the perceptive reader. The book swiftly advances beyond parlor tricks, toys, patented inventions, sailor's knots, the Book of Kells, and other amazing items until we find ourselves soaring into the realm of transcendental reality. One gets the feeling that the Mobius strip is the skeleton key to infinity. But then, so is the Klein bottle. So is Alexander's horned sphere. So is the Penrose triangle. So is M.C. Escher's art! The book is filled with these enigmatic jewels of understanding.

As the complexity of the kaleidoscope intensifies, Cliff Pickover suddenly becomes a fractal Will Rogers, dazzling us with topographical rope tricks. Strange loops are explained as he twirls them before our very eyes! Your mind is turned into a pretzel as your train of thought is twisted into a trefoil knot made of interlocking, multi-colored puzzle pieces. Notice the cover!

You may have to listen to the Moody Blues, Tangerine Dream, Enya, and Pink Floyd to fully grok the cosmological essence of all he has to say in this sweet little book. But it is well worth the effort. In the final chapters he connects all this to games, mazes, art, music, architecture, even literature and movies. Your powers of observation will only increase as you plunge deeper into Pickover's topographical ocean.



It's more than a concept: it offers up new methods of thinking and discussions here include related shapes and ideas as well.
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-07
The mobius strip - a continuous loop with only one side and one edge - was popularized by the illustrations of M.C. Escher, yet few know of its history and the evolution of its concept. Drive Clifford Pickover here provides a lively survey of the strip from the mid-1800s when Drive Mobius described it, to its influence in the fields of math, science, engineering, and the arts. It's more than a concept: it offers up new methods of thinking and discussions here include related shapes and ideas as well.

Diane C. Donovan
California Bookwatch

A portal to new universes of imagination
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-06-03

In 1633, Galileo Galilei said, "The universe cannot be read until we have learnt the language and become familiar with the characters in which it is written. It is written in mathematical language... without which it is humanly impossible to comprehend a single word." And so begins Dr. Pickover's amazing roller-coaster ride through a breathtaking array of topics in science and art.

Some of the book deals with topology and "glistening shapes that span dimensions." Other portions concern the Mýbius strip in countless settings, from molecules and metal sculptures to postage stamps, literature, architectural structures and models of our entire universe. The strip is featured in countless technology patents, which decorate the frontispieces of each chapter.

In some of the most impressive chapters, Pickover deals with endless loops in literature and mythology. He also coaxes readers to question the way they see the world and think about reality. For example, readers will become more conscious about what it means to visualize a one-sided object or what it means to have orientation-reversing paths in space.

Pickover also has a penchant for knots, and he notes that knots have been crucial to the development of civilization, where they have been used to tie clothing, to secure weapons to the body, to create shelters, and to permit the sailing of ships and world exploration. He also suggests that knot patterns have been found on burial stones engraved by Neolithic peoples. Today, knot theory has infiltrated biology, chemistry and physics. Pickover writes, "In a few millennia, humans have transformed knots from ornamental engravings on rocks to models of the very fabric of reality." I enjoyed this book immensely and recommend it to all readers interested in the science of imagination.

John - A Twisted Space Enthusiast
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2006-06-29
WoW! Another great book by Clifford Pickover. Math buffs and recreationists alike will love this book. This is a readable, non-technical tour de force of the Mobius band and its ubiquitous presence. Don't be fooled by my "non-technical". The concepts covered here will stretch the mind of most anyone not already thoroughly immersed in rubber geometry. The strip wends its one-sided way through knots, magic tricks, toys and games, hyperspace, art, architecture and even literature.

My only plea would be to have some of the illustrations in colour.

Highly recommended!

"The book of nature is written in mathematics." Galileo
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-09
If the book of nature is written in mathematics, then the works of Clifford Pickover can safely be said to be a great Cliff's Notes version!

In all his work, Pickover has a genuine gift for making the abstract accessible and meaningful like here where he discusses perhaps the most famous creation of August Mobius: the Mobius strip.

To make one is very easy: 1) cut out a piece of paper in the shape of a ruler, 2) take one edge of the paper, turn it 180 degrees and 3) join it with the other end of the paper.

As a result of this operation, you will have created a circular looking object with a kink in the middle. That kink does something fascinating: it makes it so that if you trace your finger along the surface of the object, you will find that it only has one side!

As paradigm defying as this may seem, it litterally opens the door to interesting discussions about the various topologies (or surface formations) an object can assume. It begins a discussion of different dimensions and the exotic mathematics that describe them.

Filled with easy to follow discussion and lots of pictures, Pickover takes great pains to make sure he never leaves any readers behind.

This book is great and those who really enjoyed would be well advised to also read Pickover's Surfing Through Hyperspace and also his Time: A traveler's guide.


Books-Under-Review-->Arts-->Humanities-->Literature in Art-->6
Related Subjects: Dante Chaucer Shakespeare Arthurian Legend American Classics Robin Hood Mythology Fables and Fairy Tales English Classics
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