Works Books
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Collectible price: $10.00

The only astrology book most people will needReview Date: 2008-10-10
Wonderful!Review Date: 2008-10-06
May be the best astrology book, everReview Date: 2008-09-19
The author provides light, humorous descriptions of different signs and houses, and the influence of planets in them.
In addition, the chapter explaining a five-minute chart analysis is invaluable. Seriously, it's the best I've seen in years of analyzing charts for others.
The red-light, green-light day-by-day guide is also innovative and useful for anyone who wants to use every possibly planetary influence to his or her benefit.
I love this book, and recommend it for anyone with an interest in astrology. It's not too technical, but also not a one-size-fits-all guide.
Truth+Knowledge+Understanding+Acceptance=LifeReview Date: 2007-06-23
Best primer for astrology basicsReview Date: 2007-05-13
If you're interested in learning the real basics of astrology, past the basics about sun signs, this is the book to pick up. The book includes ephemerical data so that you can look up the signs the moon and other planets were in when you were born, as well as what that means. But the best thing about the book is Smith's writing--it's fun and practical without even a hint of newageyness.


How its really done! Nothing like this book.Review Date: 2008-03-04
After reading this book, my main concern was "can I do this". After reading, I'm not only excited, but truly convinced that almost anyone with a brain can do what the book reveals.
Thank you Amazon and thank you Ray West.
JC
You Could Not Pay Me 10 Times to Give it BackReview Date: 2005-09-09
BEST BOOK ON THE PORN BUSINESS SO FAR!Review Date: 2005-07-31
Good book to read I would recommend it to everyone interested in this business.Review Date: 2006-03-04
To film makers, adult traffic is crazy for my videoReview Date: 2005-06-06

Lighthearted FantasyReview Date: 2008-09-16
Childhood relivedReview Date: 2008-05-18
Often, boys fantasize about cool things they could build, and Andrew Henry does that in spades. The beautiful ink drawings show the kinds of a details a child or adult would want to see in order to trigger the imagination but not replace it. Wonderful book.
perfect for first gradeReview Date: 2008-03-30
A place for children.Review Date: 2008-02-23
at last!Review Date: 2008-01-20
When I was older, all I could remember was that it had Meadow in the title and it was about a bunch of kids who ran away to build creative forts.
I can't wait to get my copy and share it with my family and students.

Perfect Train Book for PreschoolersReview Date: 2008-11-20
Bold artwork and simple text combine to offer an outstanding introduction to trains for young children. There are only a few words on each page, making it a quick read-aloud that will hold the attention of even very young toddlers. The text describes the different types of cars in a freight train, then follows the train through tunnels, past cities, in daylight and darkness. Satisfying and highly recommended.
The Freight Train Board BookReview Date: 2008-09-19
Wonderful early childhood book.Review Date: 2008-09-03
Freight Train/ Tren cargaReview Date: 2008-07-04
Love itReview Date: 2008-06-16

Used price: $5.38
Collectible price: $24.95

Good ReferenceReview Date: 2008-11-11
Kooler's book is my only crochet book (till now at least) and I really like it. Lots and lots of tips and new stitches to try out and also lots of nice projects from giant ones to little ones to try out.
She also includes 2 sets of diagrams, one for left-handers and one for right-handers. Very nicely done. The stitches in the diagrams are also very clear. A nice glossary to refer to and the book helped to train me to learn to read patterns and "adjust my brain" to learning to read symbols and abbreviations at a glance. If you are a beginning or intermediate crocheter, I would recommend this book!
More than Wonderful!Review Date: 2008-10-23
second copyReview Date: 2008-08-28
A must have resourceReview Date: 2008-06-24
Ahhh! The Philosopher's coat!Review Date: 2008-04-13

Used price: $3.00
Collectible price: $15.00

My Grandfather's Blessings, Dr. Rachel Naomi RemenReview Date: 2008-08-05
Rachel tells her stories openly, with compassion and great warmth.
I have given this book to friends and family and carry its lessons in my own life. A lovely read, not at all preachy. Each chapter is worth savoring.
A True BlessingReview Date: 2008-05-31
I LOVE this book!Review Date: 2008-04-08
My Grandfather's BlessingsReview Date: 2008-04-03
Embracing Life As It IsReview Date: 2008-02-10

Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $17.95

classic story bookReview Date: 2008-11-22
I can't recommend this book at all.Review Date: 2008-10-17
From what I could find about the author on his own website, he is referred to as one connected with nature. Yet while he acknowledges God in his books, I haven't seen anything that refers to any kind of biblical background in his own personal life. To me that is a red flag. If someone is going to explain God to my daughter, I want that person to know the Lord and have a close personal walk with Him. If this author does, I would like to know more about that concerning him.
niceReview Date: 2008-06-04
beautifulReview Date: 2008-06-03
I want to love it - but it just seems to miss the target groupReview Date: 2008-06-24
The story clearly has a moral tale to convey. I tend to like that, and I love the message on diversity. Unfortunately, as far as plot/story, it falls short. It fails to go beyond just a morality lesson. And for this, it failed to captivate either of my children.
If the target audience are children: For lessons on friendship with story intact, try pumpkin soup. For a story about diversity and acceptance, try The Woman Who Outshone the Sun. For general moral tales - Zen Shorts.

Used price: $5.00

You Can't Take This Book From Me.Review Date: 2008-10-08
Shiny - NaturallyReview Date: 2008-01-30
Really good movie companion!Review Date: 2007-12-03
Serenity - FIREFLY lives on!Review Date: 2007-09-20
I can't get enough FIREFLY stuff. Very well done book covering everything you might have missed the ten times you watched SERENITY, the movie! God, how I miss watching new FIREFLY episodes! Sure wish someone would come to their senses and realize that FIREFLY was - and still is - WAY ahead of MOST new series that keep popping up on TV. BEST TV I have ever watched. BRING THEM BACK!
And
Don't take the sky from me!
js
Finding SerenityReview Date: 2007-09-26
Beautiful drawings, photos, and plenty of behind the scenes information on the characters and settings made this a treasure.
Every Browncoat needs one!


Learn From the MastersReview Date: 2008-10-05
Besides just the introduction of, let us say, the gross aspects of parasites, there are also quite a few benefits to many types parasites in the animal kingdom. As such and from my perspective, the highlight of this fine effort was in the last 1/3 of the book with Chapters 6 (Evolution From Within), Chapters 7 (The Two-Legged Host), and Chapters 8 (How To Live In A Parasitic World). Here we learn about some of those parasitic benefits. While reading, I wished that the chapters went on further and gave me more anecdotes. Nevertheless, it would appear that the right balance of either the small or large ecosystem can benefit with less pesticides if we indeed learn from the parasites.
4.5 Stars for Raising Questions I Felt Better Once Having Remained Ignorant About, But Am Glad That ChangedReview Date: 2008-07-30
Parasites outnumber other forms of life 4:1, are much more ubiquitous than commonly thought, have been essential for evolution and have directly influenced human DNA. (Not even considering mitochondria getting integrated in most forms of life.) Parasites make it necessary to revise the tree of life into a bush of many merging branches. Human cells within the average human are outnumbered by a factor of ten by non-human cells. Getting knowledgable about parasites is much more important a topic than the obvious peculiar yuk effect. Though I promise you that this book will fulfill the latter to the fullest as well.
I thought I knew a bit about parasites. For example those wasps which lay eggs in other invertebrates. To begin with, I didn't know that there were some 200,000 parasitic wasp species out there. I had also no idea, how EXACTLY some of them work. Like the species, whose two eggs, one female, one male, subdivide in the host, to produce ever more eggs, with the females developing into different classes of maggots, such as the soldier maggots whose only job it is to kill other parasitic wasps' maggots in the host - and all but one of the male siblings. Or that the social parasite, the cuckoo baby is able to mimic the sound of a CHOIR of eight singing host bird babies and the sign stimulus of as many youngsters in the nest to the parents' eyes. (Though the book doesn't mention that some birds cannot be fooled anyway and depose of the cuckoo (egg) and also doesn't mention that the near-by cuckoo parents may retaliate by killing all the hosts' surviving kids...) Or that there is something like plant bacteria, not as in bacteria of plants, but as in green bacteria. Being an essential part (originally parasite) of the parasite named "bad-air" aka malaria.
The book answers even the nagging question, wether there are homosexual parasites. (I wondered that ever since I read Biological Exuberance: Animal Homosexuality and Natural Diversity (Stonewall Inn Editions) about mammals and birds.) The flukes mentioned here are the first parasites I encountered (as in READING about them), which act homosexual in a benign way. To each other that is. (Other parasites - not mentioned in this book - may act homosexual in very twisted ways to procreate to the detriment of same-sex competitors.) Thinking about it: Shouldn't homosexual parasites of the former kind be our favorite parasites, if there is such a thing, because presumably they do NOT procreate, as in: in us? The book sure doesn't answer the question wether there are homosexual solidarity activists like there are for maltreated homosexual zoo animals.
Talking about questions I never knew existed: The book is full of them. Sticking with the homosexual topic, there's a fungus, which TURNS flies into necrophiliac homosexuals. As much as another parasite doesn't only fool crabs into believing that their attached parasite babies are crab babies to care for, but fooling male crabs to believe they themselves are females all of the sudden in order to (be able to) do that to begin with. If you ever sought a flabbergasting book, this will be it. Some animals have a bodyguard class against parasites (ants), others employ blind snakes as maids to free the nest of parasites (owls). And how much DNA itself can get parasitic in various ways sure wasn't on my radar of existing topics.
The book talks about allergies caused by the modern lack of parasites, complete fusions of life, the parasitic origin of sexuality, and that humans may be considered as parasites in the gaia concept. As stupid parasites that is, which are those defined who kill their host. Some readers may be a little lost with this spirituality capping ending of the book. As a Rasta, personally, I am not. As such, I was surprised to find welcome information on the spread of parasites through colonialism. Not only via the conquerors' imported bugs and slavery's transmission, but via relocating cattle within Africa. And via forcing the indiginous populations to live and work in areas unsuited for humans and/or their cattle. All of that having caused most severe and lethal epidemics. The Western apologetic lore has it that their colonial doctors brought healing power to their conquered new lands. (The book doesn't mention that some vaccines were necessary, because the diseases had been imported in the first place and that some FORCED cattle vaccinations occasionally caused more deaths in livestock than the diseases themselves, sometimes intended, sometimes not.) In today's shifted colonial world, the book warns (indirectly) against huge dams, which dramatically expand standing water, which in turn dramatically expands the habitat of dangerous to human parasite carrying snails. In case you are wondering how dams are colonial, please read Confessions of an Economic Hit Man. I find it also interesting to read that Konrad Lorenz didn't change his views of parasitism in the Nazi sort of way at all - even not a few days before his death in 1989. As celebrated as he gets in Western school books, it is usually not known (and not elaborated in this book) that he fully embraced the Nazi party and became an eager member immediately after Hitler marched into Austria. On a more enlightening subject around parasites, I didn't consider before I read this book that human (pre-)history can be reconstructed via tapeworms.
I have a little bit of criticism. Some things are sketchily mentioned only. There is a parasite which eats the flesh of the human face. Ok, horrid. But if I think about it after the initial impulse to turn the page immediately: How exactly do I have to imagine that? What consequences does this have? How is that livable? No answers in this book. The captions of the FEW black and white pictures on 16 pages in the middle of the book are sometimes not that precise. With that parasite, which replaces a fish's tongue, the caption is all we will ever read in this book about that parasite. How does it eat the tongue, i.e. getting into the mouth? How does the parasite help the fish grabbing food? How does the parasite mate? Does it cause infected fish to french kiss or what? If I want to research that, I would have appreciated the parasite's name. Or the name of the host. The caption only says a crustacean in a fish. Wow, that's precise! I don't even know, where on this planet I should look into a fish's mouth before eating it. Well, I was able to find some answers elsewhere nevertheless: The parasite is called Cymothoa exigua, lives in California and only in the mouths of Lutjanus guttatus aka spotted rose snapper. The parasite crawls under the tongue and severes its blood supply in a vampiric manner, causing the tongue to wither away to be replaced by the growing tongue with eyes. I still don't know how it procreates, so anybody who does know, please leave a comment with source. Five years after the book had been written, the first fish with second tongue was found in EU waters (in the UK). The book may not be that incredibly up to date, with some issues still pending when written. For example on the eradication of some parasites. As of 2008 some more countries could be added to the list of eradicated guinea worms, but with other countries still lacking behind.
The Hamilton-Zuk theory got its own book by Marlene Zuk herself: Riddled with Life: Friendly Worms, Ladybug Sex, and the Parasites That Make Us Who We Are, itself a great book about parasites, with little overlap. And if, it goes more in-depth, like with the fungus which attacks insects. If you like a coffee table book of the nasty treat, in which you can also read, which (utterly unexpected!) places in your household are the most yukky ones, "enjoy" the Canadian Human Wildlife: The Life That Lives on Us. If you are interested in more symbiotic body roomies, largely restricted to bacteria and in a systematic text book presentation, read the rather dry Microbial Inhabitants of Humans: Their Ecology and Role in Health and Disease. Much more grippingly written is Good Germs, Bad Germs: Health and Survival in a Bacterial World by a science journalist. Which is also about the history if antibiotic treatments and their failure due to mounting resistance. About former parasites, today our energy source and DNA family tree provider, mitochondria, read Power, Sex, Suicide: Mitochondria and the Meaning of Life. A more general biological approach of symbiosis is Liaisons of Life: From Hornworts to Hippos--How the Unassuming Microbe has Driven Evolution. A theoretic re-thinking, including reconstructing taxonomy and theories about gaia, read Symbiotic Planet: A New Look At Evolution.
Great science writing, but fewer case histories would sufficeReview Date: 2008-07-09
I was very surprised to learn of the strong environmental component to such autoimmune diseases as Crohn's: while once thought to be characteristic of a few ethnic groups, e.g. Jewish, it has become much more common in other groups as sanitation has improved, and the immune system has fewer parasites to fight off. Zimmer suggests parasites play a critical role in ecological balance, and points to some compelling case histories. Parasites are often able to control behavior of their hosts, and thus are a potentially important source of new behavioral drugs.
I love this bookReview Date: 2008-06-09
Awesome book changes your outlookReview Date: 2008-05-23
... that is sometimes really disgusting.
Still, an outstanding book, one that give parasitology a much-improved face. Written in Zimmer's usual clear, very readable style.

Used price: $15.76

Inspiring, Beautiful, Soulful - Amazing Book!Review Date: 2008-11-14
Note: And to note, I just couldn't resist saying something about the 1 negative comment about the book so far, basically is to ignore it and not even waste the time reading it cause it made absolutely no sense at all and I just have to wonder what this person is on. A monkey could follow the step by step instructions given, they are easy to follow and understand. Okay, off my soap box now!
A truly gifted artist!!Review Date: 2008-11-07
taking flightReview Date: 2008-11-10
Flights of Fancy, Fun and Fabulous Creativity!Review Date: 2008-11-03
A book for housewifes not for serious artistsReview Date: 2008-11-11
For me it was a really waste of money because I couldn't read more than ten pages.If I give it 2 stars is because some step by step are O.K.
I already know I am an artist and I can do anything if I work hard and I find the right information
This opinion is just to help other people looking for other kind of help.
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As a psychic who uses astrology, I've read dozens -- perhaps hundreds -- of astrology books.
This is the only one I recommend for every level, beginner through advanced, and this book is always on my desk or next to it, for frequent reference.
The writing style is witty and light. Chapter titles include, "Fire Signs, Air Signs, Jell-o and Dirt Signs," and "Venus - Sleazy Sex and Eternal Love."
However, the information in this book is accurate and easy to understand, no matter what your background.
In addition, the author has put together one of the most valuable chapters, ever, "How to Read a Chart in Less than Five Minutes." That's an innovative approach... and it works!
With over 500 fascinating pages of facts, charts, and insights, this is one astrology book you'll read from cover to cover, and refer to often.