Works Books


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

Works
Letters to Young Black Men: Advice and Encouragement for a Difficult Journey
Published in Paperback by Torch Legacy Publications (2005-08-01)
Author: Daniel Whyte III
List price: $11.99
New price: $6.92
Used price: $15.76

Average review score:

Proudpapa
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-29
I purchased this for my son who is a junior in H.S. After reading it, I gladly handed over to him for his use. Money well spent!

It is a great and inspirational book for youth
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-04
My son read this and seem to be impressed and attentive to the writer views since he is of African ethnicity and can relate to what young black males go through. I really considered the fact that for a person to take the time and write a book concerning the need to relate and instill his value system in teenagers that he sees himself through, his heart has to be passionate for males that are walking in the path he has traveled. I applaud him to want to reach back to the community. I think his book should have been publicized and promoted more for the mainstream crowd more and it was not. Perhaps that should have even been a few given free to allow the people that may want some inspiration (postive) to be able to read it.

WONDERFUL
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2006-04-27
I picked up this book in a gas station somewhere between North Carolina and Virginia. (It must have been on the border of Virginia/North Carolina because the line was very long for the lotto!)
I have a 19-year old away at school. He was brought up in the church and quite honestly he likes going to church. We've never add problems getting him to participate in church activities. So I feel he has the religious roots to stand on. However, being away from home, I know he is being challenged in his church attendance. More importantly I want him to "know the Lord" not just attend church. Flipping through the book at the store aroused enough of my interest to purchase it. I read it first before giving it to my son and was even more impressed. That's when I ordered 10 more to give to my husband, pastor, nephews, cousins, and brother-in-law being deployed to Kuwait.
I gave the book to my son the week before his Spring Break and told him I expected him to read it once, twice or as many times as necessary over Spring Break to get the message. And I would be quizzing him to be sure he read it. He truly surprised me and called to tell me he was almost done with it the week I gave it to him. My note inside the book said to him to pass it on to a friend if it benefited him. He said he had highlighted so much of the book, he wanted to keep his and could I send him 2 more to give to his room mates. (Yesterday he wanted 2 more for others who saw him reading it.)
I have not heard from my nephews that I gave it to. They may need a little more encouragement to read it, but that's why I gave it to them. They truly need "encouragement for a difficult journey".
Every Black young man that I know I want to share this with them and their parents. Some co-workers asked for some too. I teach Sunday School, ages 8-11 and I will use the section entitled, "Things I wished someone had told me at age 12" with my class.
I sent one book to a previous Sunday School student who is now incarcerated. The book was returned with a note that books could only be given to inmates if they were shipped directly from the printer or a bookstore. It would truly be a blessing to get this book into the prison.

An Inspirational Work!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-04-27
This book is an inspirational work for the reader. It explores the three aspects of life that causes conflicts and problems in the life of young men. The spiritual, mental, and emotional aspects of life that for so long has gone unaddressed are delved into in detail. Although the book talks about young black men, this is a lesson for all young men.

Fatherly advice - Full of wisdom
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2006-12-02
I do a chapel service in a Juvenile Detention Center in the Bronx, and this book is the first book that I have found that I feel would be VERY helpful to the boys.

The reason is - it is broken down in a very simple fashion that is super easy to read, designed for one that may have a short attention span and doesn't typically read a lot, and is very practical and directive as to why and how to get onto a good path.

I am so grateful to this author for creating such a wonderful loving tool so full of wisdom. It has no hint of being condescending, which I also love.

Works
Life Matters : Creating a Dynamic Balance of Work, Family, Time & Money
Published in Hardcover by McGraw-Hill (2003-05-16)
Authors: A. Roger Merrill and Rebecca Merrill
List price: $19.95
New price: $2.99
Used price: $0.43
Collectible price: $19.95

Average review score:

Life (does) matter
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-28
I read this book with my wife each taking assignments and reporting back after a day or two. What an incredible read and experience. There is a wealth of challanging material in this book to help anyone wishing to expand themselves into a more thoughtful person.

A pure blessing that has potential and material to make a substancial upswing in one's life.
Rocco

Read it and gift it to all your friends!!!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2004-12-12
I have been a fan of the Merills, since their synergistic work with Stephen Covey with "First Things First".

I am not married yet, nor do I have a job, but I find this book so practical and I am convinced as I grow up into the various future stages of my life, the wisdom within it, will become more and more obvious.

I really like the idea that balance is not in "balancing the scale" but in "balancing".

The sections that deals with Time Matters and Money Matters, is worth more than the price of the book. When I was browsing through the book, and got to read the Money Matrix diagram, I almost jumped out of my skin. I always felt the Time Matrix is always applicable to one's personal finance. I was so delighted to know the Merrills felt the same and has wrote and developed it further in this book. The book also feature a quote from my favorite personal finance guru, Robert Kiyosaki.

If you have a friend who is getting married, this would be an excellent gift to a newly wed couple. I recently gifted one to my best friend. Since the book is quite expensive for us living in India, I along with a group of friends, decided to give it together.

It's a book worth to be made a family heirloom. I am sure anyone would find it helpful. Its a rare diamond in the overly cluttered world of self-help books. Most self-help books offer advice, but ended up with platitudes and rehash of ideas. We need books like this one.

Another beautiful aspect to this book is the author's recognition that more than offering answers to people, it is more important to help people develop their ability to find the answer within. This is what they called navigational intelligence. It is the effort to develop personal conscience, and listening to it.

Its a book that will never leave my reading desk and will be refered to again and again and again, till I end this life and buried six feet under.

Thanks Roger and Rebecca for an enduring legacy for generations to come. I pray more and more people will embrace your message. If we all do the world will be a better place to live in.

Investment stragegies that go beyond money
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2004-05-26
This book is one of many that build off Stephen Covey's "The Seven Habits of Highly Effective People," and is a more in-depth discussion of prioritizing (Living in Quadrant II for those who speak Covey). This book is divided into four sections that reflect the four biggest concerns Americans face--the workplace, the family, time, and money. The basic message of the book is that one must think in terms of "investing," whether it be money, time, or effort. It is important to examine what one invests in so that maximum returns can be paid on that investment. As an example, investing money in a car yeilds a much lower return (a negative return) than investing in a mutual fund. Investing time in televison watching yields a much lower return than helping your child with his homework. Investing in effort in a long-term project that is still months away yields a much higher return than filling out some pretty-unnecessary paperwork. Other commentators are correct when they say that the examples of theory-in-action can be fairly unrealistic (even though they really happened!), but they illustrate the authors' points well. I would first recommend the Seven Habits of Highly Effective People. If you find that helpful (and I imagine you will), this book is an excellent follow-up to it.

Insightful!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2004-04-22
Prioritizing the building blocks of life - family, work, money and time - is paramount to happiness. Some people do it unconsciously by living within their intellectual and monetary expectations. Others need a framework for balance, such as the one that authors A. Roger Merrill and Rebecca R. Merrill provide. To achieve personal balance, the authors suggest becoming a better team player, working more effectively, learning about finances and setting home and work priorities. They establish the goal of building a strong family, centered around parental "family leadership." Do they successfully address the knotty issues they raise? Yes, in a folksy way. This is a useful self-help manual with checklists, self-assessments and personal anecdotes, which are sometimes touching, but sometimes impractical or saccharine. Though the management advice dons motivational language, the sections on family and work are particularly worthwhile. The authors deliver a solid antidote to misplaced modern values, albeit wrapped in some fluffy trappings. We recommend this book to corporate officers and human resource personnel, as well as to individuals seeking balance.

Another classic, good material, well presented
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2004-08-17

New books telling you how to improve your life come off the presses every week, maybe every day. Some are bad, and you realize you have wasted your time. Some are average, and you might learn a few new things, but they aren't all that memorable. Some are great, and you go back to them again and again. "Seven Habits of Highly Effective People" is one of the great books. Years later people remember it, talk about it, and reread it.

"Life Matters" is a great book. It covers a lot of good ideas, the thoughts and observations are well presented, and the book reads quickly.

The first chapter starts off talking about what is important in life. The authors focus on four areas: work, family, time, and money. They have a quiz to help in your self-assessment of how you are doing in each of these four areas. A big message of this book is there doesn't have to be conflict between the four areas.

The next chapter covers three things you have to do in any area of your life. The three "gotta do's" are:

1) Validate your expectations. You have to confront reality, for if you have an unrealistic expectation you will be frustrated. The authors make the point that the direction you are heading is more important than how fast you are going.

2) Optimize Effort. Look for ways to get the maximum benefit for your effort, and make sure your decisions are aligned with your goals.

3) Develop your "Navigational" intelligence. This is the ability to be aware of your changing environment, so that what looked like an important task at the start of the day may have to take a back seat when your boss gives you a new assignment, or a child needs attention.

The next four chapters are on: work, family, time, and money, with a chapter on each area. The authors weave each of the above three "gotta do's" into each area. For each area they explore different ways people see the area, for example how do you see your family, or your money. And then they discuss what is the reality. They have a list of "optimizers" which are techniques for getting the maximum benefit for your effort. And they talk about how to be flexible when situations change.

"Seven Habits" mentions a Time Matrix, which is a two dimensional matrix based on how important something is, and how urgent it is. Many people waste time on things that aren't important, or get caught up doing things that are important and urgent. Stephen Covey explores why doing things that aren't urgent, but important, can make a great difference in your life. For me one of the gems of "Life Matters" was exploring this same matrix in relation to money. The Merrill's point is that it is best to invest your money with the same Quadrant II focus, things that aren't urgent, but are important. For me, that idea alone was worth reading the book. There were a number of similar gems scattered through the book.

The last chapter was titled "Wisdom Matters" and here the authors explore why wisdom is important, and how to improve your wisdom. One of the points they strongly make is to develop an ongoing daily self-important program. The idea is to spend a few minutes each day improving your understanding of life, and how to make better decisions.

This is a great book. If you are interested in improving your life, buy this book, read this book, and then reread it. It will help you get better control of your life. For as the Merrills say, life does matter.


Works
Lives of the Musicians: Good Times, Bad Times (And What the Neighbors Thought)
Published in Audio Cassette by Audio Bookshelf (1996-04)
Author: Kathleen Krull
List price: $15.95
New price: $12.21
Used price: $0.04

Average review score:

Musicians, Musicians' Lives
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-14
A pleasure to read this book. I listen to a classical music station which includes interesting facts about the musicians' private lives. One day a guest mentioned that she knew where the host was obtaining these interesting facts. So it is a secret no longer; it's this book. Lives of the Musicians is light reading with approx. 2 pages of facts per musician, so it is not an in-depth look at their private lives; however put it on your "Fun" reading list. It is a highly amusing book and a great source of dinner conversation. Also Check out Lives of the Artists:Good Times, Bad Times (and What the Neigbors Thought)

Great musical resource!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-12
My daughter has been studying piano for two years and she is fascinated by the people who score the compositions she learns to play. In school she learns about a different composer each month and always wants to know more when she comes home. She also has a love for anything historical. This book was a great addition to our reference collection because it reaches her on several levels. We happened to come across it at the library and, after reading a few entries, we decided we'd like to buy it. Lots of bookstores stocked the paperback edition, but only Amazon had the hardcover in stock. This is the kind of book you really want in hardcover so that young children can more easily flip through the pages and study the humorous illustrations.

The book includes entries on 20 musicians from a wide range of styles, backgrounds, and historical periods. The entries are engaging for adult readers, yet accessible for a younger audience. My daughter is six and was totally engrossed in the stories of Chopin, Mozart, Clara Schumann and others. I know we will come back to this book again and again.

Great Book!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-11
This is a great book! My piano teacher checked it out from the library and loved it so much I had to buy her a copy! The illustrations are adorable and the bio's are so interesting. A lot of interesting stories that really give the great masters a very human quality! I love reading about the musicians that I'm currently playing! If you are into music and want to know just how human they really were this is a great book!

Gift
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-06-28
I got this book for my daughter who is a music teacher. I thought it would be a good reference and teaching tool for her.

GREAT for kids - first exposure to composers tough for little ones
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-09-06
My daughter's piano teacher gave her the assignment to read about Mozart as she started her first Mozart Minuet. My daughter was 7 at the time, and although she was reading at above 3rd grade level, I was shocked to find that there was NOTHING available on the internet or in her school library that give her information on composers at HER level. I finally found "Lives of the Musicians" and have actually purchased the book. It's just that good. She is able to read about each composer (for the most part the language is about her level, although she DOES need help with some of the words), and each section is engaging enough to keep her attention.

This book is a must for anyone with a child that wants or is assigned to learn about the great composers.

Works
Mastering Life's Energies: Simple Steps to a Luminous Life at Work and Play
Published in Paperback by New World Library (2007-02-23)
Author: Maria Nemeth
List price: $15.95
New price: $6.90
Used price: $6.89

Average review score:

book review
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-19
This is an awesome book. You will learn so much, and feel very good about yourself and your life. I highly recommend it.

Keys to a Successful and Meaningful Life
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-06
This book, by Dr. Maria Nemeth, is filled with easy-to-understand tools that you can incorporate into your life. It provides solid exercises that will provide the reader with clearly defined values for their life right now. Once these values are defined, the reader can see how to base all of their decisions and actions upon what they truly value. Value-based living only leads to the satisfying and meaningful life we all desire. The keys to successful living that are provided by this author are so valuable that I require all of my coaching clients to read this book. This empowers them to live the life of their dreams. Who could ask for anything more?

essential reading
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-30
This book has made my top three list of books. Not a "self help" book but a gentle "wake up call" for your "Self".

Excellent guide to organizing and accessing what works in life
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-01
Dr. Nemeth's use of personal experience and metaphor make some really complicated and big ideas seem simple and easy to follow. This book will be extremely useful to those who are making (or want to make) changes in their lives -- especially if they are tired of learning things the hard way or learning the same things over and over again! Even if you opt to skip the short, simple excercises in her book, you will find yourself doing them anyway in your daily life. A mind expanded can never return to its original size.

A Luminous Life Within Your Grasp
Helpful Votes: 12 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-18
There are just so many books that promise the earth but then do not deliver.

This one is a notable exception.

It is full of original and practical insights about ways in which we can each of us begin to realize our full potential, to live the life we were born to, whatever adversities may confront us.

As the book publicity says, "Everyone has had luminous moments in their lives. It's the "a-ha" moment when one experiences the beauty and grace of life, whether it be when looking into the eyes of a newborn child or watching the sunset over the ocean. But those moments are usually too brief."

I go much further: these brief moments usually vanish like the morning dew, leaving us with a sense of loss and yearning. How many people have returned from a camping trip, a retreat or a weekend seminar, only to catch the Monday morning syndrome: a crash back down to earth that can leave us depressed and disillusioned. Yet it does not need to be like that. There are dozens of ways of staying with and growing from these experiences. The trouble is that most of us have only been taught to try and hold on to experiences, rather than allowing them to help us grow and change. Have you ever run to a yoga or stress management class, and after a few meaningful minutes run straight home again? Have you ever felt worse after one of these classes or a weekend away?

That is where these novel and innovative strategies and approaches come in. You have only to accept the time-honored truth that your Inner Light is the fundamental basis of your life and that radiance and luminosity are the natural expressions of that Inner Light.

Then follow the very practical advice and exercises that shine through on every page. This is a wonderfully insightful book and it is clear that much of what it contains has been won the hard way.

It might, perhaps, have been nice if Maria could have avoided the word "energies" in the title. We never learn what she means by them and the rest of the book is so pure in intention and clear in expression that I would imagine that the term was introduced in production! This is only a small distraction in what is otherwise an outstanding book that I recommend very highly.



Richard G. Petty, MD, author of Healing, Meaning and Purpose: The Magical Power of the Emerging Laws of Life

Works
May I Walk You Home?: Courage and Comfort for Caregivers of the Very Ill
Published in Paperback by Ave Maria Press (1999-02)
Authors: Joyce Hutchison and Joyce Rupp
List price: $10.95
New price: $4.94
Used price: $3.25

Average review score:

As comforting as a cup of tea on a rainy day
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-29
This book was an easy and comforting read. I can highly recommend it if you are caring for someone who is terminally ill. It gives a very gracious and encouraging picture of the final months and days. The analogy of "May I walk you home" will stay with you long after you put the book down. It's also a great read for those who support the caregivers who support the ill.

A good "companion" for those companioning terminal loved ones.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-25
I chose this book for two reasons: Joyce Rupp is my favorite author of spiritual materials, and I was in the process of walking my daughter home during her final year of life.

The stories and prayers helped me feel that I was not alone in this journey. That others had experienced it before and lived through it to tell the tale gave me strength to do the same. I know that my daughter had a better quality of life through this process of dying from cancer and being in home hospice care because I was better prepared to companion her.

I highly recommend this book to clergy, family members, and other caregivers. It is full of 'hope' as well as practical suggestions gleaned from others' experiences of companioning the dying.

May I Walk You Home
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-10
A wonderfully comforting and uplifting book for caregivers and
those they care for.

A gentle passage to the other side of eternal life
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-12
Author relates how she comforted terminally ill people with compassion and love. Prayers for each situation are excellent.

More than Comfort
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-09-05
The prayers and Meditations were so helpful that I purchased extra for those I knew were experiencing this journey. The price enabled me to afford this gift.

Works
Mind Over Matter, Revised Edition
Published in Paperback by Sanctuary Publishing, Ltd. (2000-04)
Authors: Storm Thorgerson and Peter Curzon
List price: $30.00
Used price: $14.99

Average review score:

Magnífico!!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-28
Definitivamente es la mejor adquisición Floydiana que uno puede hacer de todos los lanzamientos del último año.
Thorgerson es dueño de una imaginación y talento asombrosos. En este libro que posee prácticamente todo su trabajo relacionado a Pink Floyd hay muchas pruebas de ello.
Vale la pena totalmente, junto al Libro de Nick Mason son un complemento perfecto para entender la magia que ronda a Pink Floyd en sus dos ámbitos principales: música y artes visuales.

The best!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-31
If you like Pink Floyd, art, design or album cover, this is the best book I ever read.

Buy NOW!! =)

Very good, but not a true graphic artists compilation
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2000-09-24
As a music fan, there are two things you want to add to your experience, a songlist compilation and a biography. Anything more is really too much, but in the case of groundbreaking album cover art, and knowing Pink Floyd's history of employing visual effects in their shows, a book like this is necessary, especially since albums are gone now, and the tiny graphics you get on a CD jewel case don't compare with the stuff promoters used to jam into album jackets. This book is a trip into Storm Thurgeson's head, not necessarily Floyd's. The difference is not much since Storm was a boyhood chum, and listened so well to his employer's ideas, instead of pushing his own. That's one reason the band was so successful musically as well, was Hypnosis' reliance on the members' themes. This book is not a graphic artist's design book, though I wish it were, but it would be tons bigger. It covers 30 years (and not even all the Floyd's covers (for instance, The Wall)). But you will appreciate the fact that Storm operated more under impluse as a designer than by today's modern design houses which try to render graphics in a production line style...can't be done. The author's bylines give us insight if not in technical process, then in the intellect process, and it's good fun knowing this guy was a friend to the Floyd for a LONG time, even having to uncomfortably stand in the middle of relationships for the 'Is There Anybody Out There?' live Wall issue. All in all, I'd give 5 stars for the artwork and presentation, but lose half of one for lack of technical explanation. Enjoy!

Perfect Companionship For Listening to Floyd
Helpful Votes: 12 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 2005-02-24
Storm Thorgerson is the artist who designed the bulk of Pink Floyd's artwork, and "Mind Over Matter" is a combination of memoir, scrapbook, and gallery. With the possible exception of Led Zeppelin, no British rock band of the 1970s paid closer attention than Pink Floyd to the potent magic a well-designed album cover could lend to music the album contained. Much like Zeppelin, it's almost impossible to think of Pink Floyd's music without imagining the incredible visuals on their album covers. In essence, Thorgerson is almost an adjunct member of the band.

Graphic artists will appreciate this collection because Thorgerson's almost Magritte-like graphic style is also perfectly and endlessly adaptable to the commercial marketing. Casual Floyd fans will get a kick out seeing so many classic Floyd images reproduced at much larger than CD size. More serious Floyd fans will savor Thorgerson's behind-the-scenes insights regarding the band. (I was surprised to learn that Thorgerson leans more towards Gilmour than Waters). Throughout,the author discusses his designs in a very straightforward, conversational, non-pretentious way. As a bonus, he also includes graphics from Floyd tour books, posters, and DVD clamcases.

Given that so little video footage exists of Floyd, this oversized hardcover collection provides the perfect collection of visuals to leaf through while you're listening to "Dark Side of the Moon" for the umpteenth time.

A "Beautiful" Mind
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2002-03-25
I absolutely knew I had to purchase "this" book the second I saw the book cover. Storm Thorgerson is utterly amazing, eyecatching & perhaps a bit eccentric (aren't most true artists?) I loved reading about his ideas/how he came up with them & how he laid them out in the end, and after reading this book, I now want to check out other material on him as well. Pink Floyd is indeed legendary as are the works of Storm Thorgerson. A Fantastic view of Unimaginable Talent. Check it out.

Works
Mind, Body, and Soul : A Guide to Living with Cancer
Published in Hardcover by Taylor Hill Publishing (2001-01)
Author: Nancy Hassett Dahm
List price: $27.95
New price: $11.99
Used price: $0.93
Collectible price: $28.00

Average review score:

Good insight from an experienced and compassionate insider
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-10-22
I found this book to be most helpful for me as a co-caregiver, but would be reticent to have given the book to my dad (the patient) to read as there was a lot of grim discussion that I'm not sure would have been useful to him at this point in his treatment. He was recently diagnosed with renal cell carcinoma and was scheduled for a radical nephrectomy when I got this book. His immediate focus was on the surgery and recovery. At this stage he has very good survival odds and this book on the whole seems to be geared for the seriously ill cancer patient. If his disease was one that was terminal or if it becomes terminal, I might think differently about it and recommend the book to him as well.

As a family member/caregiver I found two sections particularly helpful. The first was how to be a supportive family member (i.e. recognizing the stages of grief the patient and family experience) rather than isolating or shutting off the patient (which seems obvious, but when you are dealing with an angry/cranky person you're natural instinct is to leave them alone). The second was the information regarding pain and pain management. There is so much stigma regarding pain medication and fear of addiction that people suffer in pain unnecessarily.

For those reading this book as part of continuing education for psychceu, it's a straight forward question/answer test and the answers are easy to find. You'll also learn something along the way.

Mind, Body, and Soul : A Guide to Living with Cancer
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-05-21
This is a MUST READ for anyone who is going through a cancer ordeal. Whether it is for yourself or for someone else, you will find it to be an invaluable resource of practical and inspirational material. It is one of the most comprehensive, inspirational and hopeful books I've read on the subject. It has practical medical information, philosophy and stories of miracles and hope. I highly recommend this book to anyone who needs advice and comfort.

Pass It On
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-03-08
Nancy Hassett Dahm has been a God-Send for myself and my family from the initial shock of the diagnosis, through any illness, treatment, etc...all the way to the end. She is knowledgeable, but sensitive. She's a wonderful contact to have. She can answer all your questions and validate all your emotions. She's very honest, but in a very caring way. I am sending her book to my best friend, whose Mother was just diagnosed with cancer. I can't imagine going through this disease or seeing a loved one go through it without the help of this wonderful book. It is informative, comforting and so helpful in every way. Thank you, Nancy.

Author reaches out to those who need reaching out!!!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2002-10-31
Mind, Body, And Soul: A Guide To Living With Cancer by Nancy Hassett Dahm is a book that will better the lives of cancer patients, their family and friends. Nancy Dahm reaches out to those who need reaching out. Mind, Body, And Soul presents the answers to the questions that cancer patients need to know for higher quality of life during difficult circumstances. From pain management techniques to spiritual strength, Mind, Body, And Soul is an incredible and solid resource and guide.

John Weaver

A HUGE HELP FOR ME AND MY MOM!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2002-09-21
My dad was diagnosed with lung, lymphnotic and liver cancer on August 22. My mom and I both have read the book. It has help us to cope, with what to expect, with what he is feeling, what we are feeling and just to learn more. I couldn't have asked for a better book or a more helpful book than Mind, Body and Soul! This has been a God Sent!

Works
The Mislabeled Child
Published in Kindle Edition by Hyperion (2006-08-01)
Authors: Brock Eide and Fernette Eide
List price: $17.95
New price: $9.99

Average review score:

Positive + Positive=Positive
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-04
Parents, teachers, and anyone working with children will benefit from the positive approach of helping all children to learn their strengths and use them effectively. The text has ideas to share that may change the life of a child and those who support the child.

The Mislabeled Child
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-05
Comprehensive resource, valuable for doctors, therapists, parents and teachers. Learning styles and sensory processing explained well. Invaluable to apply philosophy at any age.

Tools and information based on the latest research
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2006-10-15
THE MISLABELED CHILD: HOW UNDERSTANDING YOUR CHILD'S UNIQUE LEARNING STYLE CAN OPEN THE DOOR TO SUCCESS provides parents, teachers and educators a fine, clear guide to children who are different, how diagnoses often fail, and how to look beyond labels to find the basics of a child's problems. Flaws in current methods of evaluation and diagnosis, especially by non-specialists, accompany tools and information based on the latest research along with first-hand accounts by the children themselves.

Diane C. Donovan
California Bookwatch

Excellent book with a novel approach.
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2006-12-08
The Eides take a new and refreshing approach to many of the concerns and challenges that impact our children's ability to learn. Informative and well-documented, this book is appropriate for anyone involved with children, including parents, teachers, therapists, and physicians. It is packed with important information backed by the latest research. Yet it is presented in a very readable fashion. I wholeheartedly recommend this book to anyone who wants to find out more about the many and varied ways that children learn, including those with ADD, autism, sensory processing dysfunction, dyslexia, and those who are gifted.

Review from Lindsey Biel, OTR/L, co-author Raising A Sensory Smart Child
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2006-12-08
The Mislabeled Child is a revolutionary book that looks beneath the labels children receive, and addresses the real underlying issues. Essential reading for parents, teachers, and health care professionals alike, this highly readable text provides specific, practical approaches to recognizing and capitalizing on children's strengths in order to help them flourish. From sensory processing difficulties to dyslexia, from language problems to poor handwriting skills, the Eides provide useful insights and marvelous advice.

Works
Monkeyluv: And Other Essays on Our Lives as Animals
Published in Hardcover by Scribner (2005-08-30)
Author: Robert M. Sapolsky
List price: $24.00
New price: $9.95
Used price: $4.45

Average review score:

Too much fun for such a serious book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-17
No one comes colose to sapolsky in having fun with genetics and evolutionary science. This set of essays is just a blast.

no surprise
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-09
It should come as no surprise that Monkeyluv, as with all of Sapolsky's books, is a masterpiece. There is no better science writer of our day.

Great book about your brain and your body in the world
Helpful Votes: 16 out of 17 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-28
I absolutely LOVED this book! I read it very quickly and had trouble putting it down. It is fascinating, educational, funny, enjoyable and well written about complex issues.

Sapolsky, who is the author of A Primate's Memoir, The Trouble with Testosterone and Why Zebras Don't Get Ulcers, is a professor of biology and neurology at Stanford and a recipient of a MacArthur "genius" grant. I found his genius not only to be in his insight and ability to frame questions and pursue their answers, but also to be able to write about it in a way that is accessible to a "nongenius."

This book is a collection of previously published essays that are updated for this edition (the updates include notes for further reading and on source materials). Sapolsky divides the book into three parts ("Genes and Who We Are," "Our Bodies and Who We Are" and "Society and Who We Are") and introduces each section with cogent current thinking on the issues addressed. For example, to introduce the first section, Sapolsky writes about how the nature-nurture argument is a red herring; genes contribute to personality/behavior when the environment interacts with them in ways conducive to gene-induced behavior! For example, in "Of Mice and (Hu)men Genes," Sapolsky writes about genes that may indicate a proclivity for depression, but only in certain environments, and summarizes that the reader should be wary of simple expanations. (And, he asserts, as humans we may have more responsibility to create positive environments that interact benignly with risky genes than to understand which genes cause what.) In the second section's "Why are Dreams Dreamlike?" Sapolsky illustrates how answering some questions about how the brain and psyche function just brings up other, deeper questions.

Sapolsky's illustrations of his points are fascinating and enlightening (and often funny!). In "The Genetic War Between Men and Women," he writes about how the genes from the father of a species have one goal ("greater, faster, more expensive growth") while genes from the mother have another ("countering that exuberance"). The success comes in nature's ability to balance these goals: "The placenta is ... the scene of a pitched battle, with paternally derived genes pushing [the placenta] to invade more aggressively while maternally derived genes try to hold it back." He lists other examples of this balance in humans and other species. This view of nature and how reproduction is nurtured fascinated me and helped me to see things in a new way.

Sapolsky's topics are wide ranging, and the book reminded me a bit of Freakonomics in its tendency to turn its problem-solving focus on whatever issue crossed its path. For example, in the final section, he writes about the differences between the
religions of desert peoples and the religions of tropical peoples -- the former tend to have a single god with miltaristic iterations and few rights for women while the latter tend toward pantheism and matrilocal marital residence. "Most evidence suggests that the rain-forest mind-set is more of a hothouse attribute, less hardy when uprooted." I guess that's evident, but Sapolsky's writings on the topic, again, gave me a new way to look at something I hadn't considered before. In this book, he addresses game theory, gene mapping, musical tastes, gender-communication issues and neurogenesis with wit, clarity and insight.

I recommend this book if you're the least bit curious about your brain, your body, the natural world and the society in which you live.

Fascinating reading, and learn stuff along the way.
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-06-05
This guy knocks my socks off. Read him just for pleasure and learn loads while your at it. I find this truly fascinating.

Delightful
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 2006-10-16
I have never read anything by Sapolsky before. Now that I have he goes right to the top of my list with Richard Dawkins and Desmond Morris.

Works
More Nitty-Gritty Grammar
Published in Paperback by Ten Speed Press (2001-10)
Authors: Edith Hope Fine and Judith Josephson
List price: $12.95
New price: $7.58
Used price: $4.33

Average review score:

Easy and Quick way to review basic grammar
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-20
This easy to read grammar book fit the bill for me when I needed to brush up on some basic rules quickly for an exam. There are plenty of examples to help cement each concept and the authors also use comic strips to emphasize each point. I highly recommend this book the anyone who wants to learn how to write a paper correctly.

Perfect for students & teachers -- grammar can be fun!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-01-26
This book, the authors' second, is just as great as their first. Who knew grammar could be so fun? The text is enlivened with hilarious cartoons, and the grammar rules are arranged alphabetically so it's easy to find what you're looking for. It's a great tool for both students & teachers!

A Response from Northern Minnesota
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-01-27
On this cold, winter day in January, I'm reading More Nitty Gritty Grammar. Who would have thought that a grammar book could be entertaining? Edith Fine and Judith Josephson have found the perfect formula. Similar to their first book, Nitty Gritty Grammar, this one is organized in an appealing, accessible way. I actually enjoyed testing my grammar skills with the quiz. Their compilation of nationally-syndicated cartoons addressing grammar issues adds visual interest and levity. They explain the rules, state the exceptions, and give plenty of examples. It's an excellent resource guide for yourself or for a friend. I highly recommend it.

Grammarians Without Rancor
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2003-03-10
There has never been a friendlier invitation to master English usage basics than Nitty-Gritty Grammar until its new companion, More Nitty-Gritty Grammar. I recommend them for all my community college students. Not in the ivory tower crowd, authors Fine and Josephson are, however, astute observers of language ills and, if laughter is the best medicine, most-palatable healers. Their topics are relevant, their well-researched explanations straightforward, their examples fresh and funny. My students agree.

The best single volume on grammar
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2003-01-29
Better organized and more comprehensive than even the popular _Transitive Vampire_ series or _Woe Is I_, this second book by Josephson and Fine is whimsical and easy to use. It's packed with humorous examples that are current and uncontrived. This is the only book I've found to cover some of the finer points that have always bothered or confused me--such as when British convention differs from that in America. Indispensible!


Books-Under-Review-->Arts-->Literature-->Authors-->C-->Chaucer, Geoffrey-->Works-->81
Related Subjects: Canterbury Tales, The Troilus and Criseyde
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