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Other BooksReview Date: 2007-09-03
Carroll's Short and Sweet Chaucer ImitationReview Date: 2007-02-12
The Baker actually attempts to tell a story, but the Bellman (who leads the group) says there's no time for storytelling. They have to catch the Snark before nightfall.
Along with the Bellman and Baker, a Banker, a Bonnet-maker, a Butcher, a Boots, a Billiard-maker, a Barrister, a Broker, and a Beaver tag along to hunt for the Snark. The Beaver is afraid of getting cut by the Butcher, so he puts on a dagger-proof coat and talks to the Banker about buying an insurance policy.
The Beaver is involved in a hilarious scene with the Butcher later, when the two attempt to compute sums. But perhaps the funniest scene of the entire book is in the Barrister's dream when the Snark declares sentence on a pig, only to find out the pig has been dead long before the trial even began.
I'd highly recommend this short poem for Carroll fans, even though it's not big enough to contain but a small portion of what's to be found in the Alice books.
The best nonsense I've ever readReview Date: 2006-05-04
Overall grade: A+
Agony? Hardly!Review Date: 2005-07-29
Yet, this masterpiece has that spark.
"How do you kill a _____?", you ask
To find the answer was the hunters' task.
"What was their fate?", you wonder
Did they ever catch their elusive plunder?
A paragon of haunting Carollian lore
Be in no doubt that you'll finish wanting more.
This poem is just great!
Brilliant twiceReview Date: 2005-02-15
Second, Martin Gardner's commentary adds depth and background to the reading. Gardner explains terms that are now obsolete, but also adds his own analysis and a rich history of the Snark phenomenon. It should be no surprise that Gardner is still best known as the long-time editor of Scientific American's column on Mathematical Games, a mathematician himself.
I can't add much to the scholarship or praise that already surrounds this incredible poem. I would like to point out, however, that most non-native English speakers are unfamiliar with this poem. Many of them have only ever seen the serious side of the English language, and have never seen English at play. I consider this short work to be the ideal introduction to the very best of English-language nonsense.
//wiredweird

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Wonderful bookReview Date: 2008-08-06
Two boys' review: Sing it together at bedtimeReview Date: 2008-07-29
Over the years, we've developed a three-part harmony (trust me, it isn't as good as it might sound) and we sing to their mother at bedtime. The book has also been reintroduced as an early reader, now that they are 5-years old and 4-years old.
This item is eligible for Amazon's 4-for-3 promotion as I write this review, which means you're getting a great value whether this is for your children or to be given as a gift.
I recommend it for your bedtime reading collection, for children ages one to six.
Wonderful Book for toddlers and preschoolersReview Date: 2008-02-27
Greatest Kid Book EverReview Date: 2007-11-23
Pre-reading Confidence & Reading Enjoyment wrapped up in a clever and fun poemReview Date: 2007-07-31
GREAT BOOK! Highly recommend. It's a keeper. I will purchase my own copy!

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Just a quick noteReview Date: 2005-07-01
Otherwise, for most purposes, this is the best collection of Benjamin's essays available for an introduction to his thought. This volume collects some of the best of his essays that are otherwise spread throughout the selected writings published by the Harvard U.P.
Indispensable readingReview Date: 2004-07-23
Benjamin is arguably the twentieth century's most important thinker--if there is anything left to say about our lives, it is surely in this book.
Of Benjamin, Dwarfs and AngelsReview Date: 2006-08-27
"The story is told of an automation constructed in such a way that it could play a winning game of chess, answering each move of an opponent with a countermove. A puppet in Turkish attire and with a hookah in its mouth sat before a chessboard placed on a large table. A system of mirrors created the illusion that this table was transparent from all sides. Actually, a little hunchback who was an expert chess player sat inside and guided the puppet's hand by means of strings. One can imagine a philosophical counterpart to this device. The puppet called "historical materialism" is to win all the time. It can easily be a match for anyone if it enlists the services of theology, which today, as we know, is wizened and has to keep out of sight." Walter Benjamin, First "These on the Philosophy of History", p 253.
One can measure how far the contemporary Marxist (better said, the post or semi-Marxist) left has fallen by how many books have appeared, since the fall of the USSR, enthusing over the radically Universal and allegedly 'Progressive' nature of early Christianity. Walter Benjamin, who was first to place the wise but ugly dwarf (Theology) in the beautiful puppet (Historical Materialism) would be amazed (or perhaps not, see the letters between Benjamin and Scholem) to learn that puppet and dwarf are on the verge of switching places! That is, now the ugly dwarf (historical materialism) wants to hide in (and of course direct) the beautiful puppet of Christian theology. ...Crazy, you say? But even Habermas, the Keeper of the Flame of Critical Theory, has on occasion made somewhat similar noises. The best place, btw, to start reading about this new 'political-theology' probably remains Jacob Taubes.
But perhaps this emergent trend is really not so crazy after all. The only reason the Church became so cozy with Capitalism was its fear of Atheism. The collapse of the Soviet Union ended that fear. Now Christianity faces Capitalism alone. Or not, if the detente being proposed between the left and the Church is actually consummated. But every detente is a conspiracy of enemies to destroy an even greater enemy. The Church was with Capitalism because it had to defeat atheism. Now it is likely that the Church will join (a moderate) Socialism in trying to contain the 'soul-destroying' ravages of capitalism. This is only another move on the chessboard of History. ...But what did Benjamin think of History?
"A Klee painting named "Angelus Novus" shows an angel looking as though he is about to move away from something he is fixedly contemplating. His eyes are staring, his mouth is open, his wings are spread. This is how one pictures the angel of history. His face is turned toward the past. Where we perceive a chain of events, he sees one single catastrophe which keeps piling wreckage upon wreckage and hurls it in front of his feet. The angel would like to stay, awaken the dead, and make whole what has been smashed. But a storm is blowing from Paradise; it has got caught in his wings with such violence that the angel can no longer close them. This storm irresistibly propels him into the future to which his back is turned, while the pile of debris before him grows skyward. This storm is what we call progress." BENJAMIN, Ninth Thesis on History, p 257.
Picture this Angel, wings pinned back by the wind, shoulders forced back because of that - the Angel of History is almost in the position of the Crucified Christ; except that this crucification does not end. It is this tone of almost ontological despair that was new to the left. This Crucified Angel is the perfect image of the left-wing theoretical pessimism pioneered by not only Benjamin but also Adorno and Horkheimer that split the intellectual left into two camps: the revolutionary and the cultural. And though no one is likely to admit it, the cultural left has quietly come to think of revolution itself as but another 'progressive' force piling up bodies.
It is one of the little ironies of history that this despairing fantasy described contemporary reality exactly. The Angel of History is the image of dialectical knowledge. Rather than seeing disconnected events this Dialectical Knowledge grasps History as One (single catastrophe). Always facing the past ('the owl of Minerva takes flight at night', Hegel said; meaning that dialectical knowledge is retrospective) the 'contemplating' Angel is overwhelmed by historical action - the storm that has been blowing since the expulsion of humanity from paradise - and can never Himself achieve effective action. His knowledge grows in lockstep with the accumulating horror, but each new historical event only results (i,e., gets 'caught in the wings' of our Angel) in more contemplation. So we see how theory (our Angel) is 'irresistibly' propelled into the future. And we also see that the Knowledge dialectical theory gains is precisely equal to the debris the storm hurls at our Angel's feet. With an irony that strives to be equal to the wind blowing from Paradise Benjamin ends this meditation by calling this storm progress.
This is perhaps why Benjamin insisted over 50 years ago that the dwarf Theology must guide the puppet Historical Materialism. Theory can never be equal to action; circumstance piles upon circumstance so rapidly that theory cannot effectively act, and if it does act (presumably) it only adds to the debris. Thus theology (myth) must guide materialism's hand because theoretical knowledge is powerless to help. Benjamin quotes the following remarks of Willy Haas, with approval, in his large Kafka essay;
"'The object of the trial', he writes, 'indeed, the real hero of this incredible book is forgetting, whose main characteristic is the forgetting of itself [...] The most sacred ... act of the ... ritual is the erasing of sins from the book of memory.'
What has been forgotten - and this insight affords us yet another avenue of access to Kafka's work - is never something purely individual." (Benjamin, Franz Kafka, p 131.)
(The last sentence was Benjamin's own.) Theology is a non-individual forgetfulness. Thus myth (theology) is the only forgetfulness worthy of the name. What needs to be forgotten by all of us is the unsurpassable fact of the futility of theory...
It is difficult for most to look such despair in the face.
Clarity and BrillianceReview Date: 2006-04-17
In this wholly excellent collection of essays, a remarkable introduction to Benjamin's life and work is provided by the late philosopher Hannah Arendt, who overviews his political formations and literary output. It's a model form of critical essay writing.
Perhaps the most famous essay in this collection is Benjamin's `The Task of the Translator,' widely regarded as one of the most important and thoughtful contributions to the field.
"No poem is intended for the reader, no picture for the beholder, no sympathy for the listener."
He argues that translation is a mode, and that the translatability of the work is the primary concern in the process.
Also included is an analysis of the philosophy of history.
BrillianceReview Date: 2005-05-11
In many ways, Benjamin's writing style is quite unassuming; reading even his most profound insights is like reading a letter from an old friend. His writing comes in layers; one must make time to savor his presence. This book covers a range of subjects, from critical literary essays (the aforementioned "Unpacking My Library", as well as essays on Kafka, Baudelaire and Proust), to more hermeneutical reflections ("The Task of the Translator"), to straight up philosophy/theory ("The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction" and "Theses on the Philosophy of History").
The 51 page introduction by Hannah Arendt is absolutely fantastic. It does not simply provide an overview of Benjamin's life, but sets that life within the culture of early 20th century Germany, focusing especially on the time between the two World Wars. She notes the influences of Zionism and Communism (and Marxism) on Benjamin's thought, as well as the broader cultural influence of a quasi-secularized Judaism in a culture where non-baptized Jews were still kept out of university teaching posts. Her introduction, like Benjamin's own writing, contains deep touches of the intimately personal (she selected the various essays that make up this volume).
In many ways, Benjamin was a deeply religious thinker. A friend of Gershom Scholem's (the founder of the modern-day study of Jewish mysticism), Benjamin and Scholem corresponded for a number of years. Although this particular volume pays little attention to his religious thought, "Theses on the Philosophy of History" (the final selection in the book which, in light of Benjamin's suicide, gives Illuminations a bit of a haunting finale), witnesses to Benjamin's poetic-religious insights:
"The soothsayers who found out from time what it had in store certainly did not experience time as either homogenous or empty. Anyone who keeps this in mind will perhaps get an idea of how past times were experienced in remembrance - namely, in just the same way. We know how the Jews were prohibited from investigating the future. This stripped the future of its magic, to which all those succumb who turn to the soothsayers for enlightenment. This does not imply, however, that for the Jews the future turned into homogenous, empty time. For every second of time was the strait gate through which the Messiah might enter."
Highly recommended.

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I love this book!Review Date: 2006-08-04
The best Blues book aroundReview Date: 2007-01-15
Yes!!! Perfect Book!Review Date: 2006-07-30
It's this type of work that will make sure the Blues and Blues history lives on!
comprehensive, entertaining blues music referenceReview Date: 2006-04-02
A work in progress that needs to be more scholarlyReview Date: 2006-07-27
Much is made of the fact she interviewed a number of blues performers and included the material with various entries. However much if not most of the interview material is irrelevant to understanding the language of the blues, or the entry. For example she briefly discusses crossroads focusing on the African conception which leads to a discussion of the Robert Johnson meeting the devil at the crossroad myth and notes that some believe it. Then she included a discussion of Robert Lockwood, Johnson's stepson which bears very little relationship to the discussion of the term. This would have been better included in a sidebar about Johnson and Lockwood. It would have also been instructive to include lyrics of several songs for specific terms to show contrasting meanings. As an example, Elmore James' 'Standing at the Crossroads,' clearly does not have the connotation that some impute to Johnson.
Also some of her sources are not exactly scholarly. In an entry on the Delta, she discussed Charlie Patton working for Will Dockery. She provides as her reference correspondence with Stephen Lavere. There are lengthy published biographies on Patton by John Fahey, and Stephen Calt and Gayle Dean Wardlow that should have been cited. There is no excuse to not citing these sources while citing private correspondence. Then there is this statement "In '34 Blues', Patton nails the desperation and anxiety of unemployment, but something good came out of leaving the plantation this time-Patton went to New York and recorded twenty-nine songs for the American Record Company. When these recordings were reissued in the mid-1960s, they sparked great interest in this Delta cropper who came to be known as the father of the blues." On the same page there is Patton's picture which noted he recorded for Paramount and became that label's biggest selling artist. It was the reissue of Patton's recordings by Yazoo, which presented mostly the Paramount recordings that led to this recognition of Patton's music.
Discussing Canned Heat which some strained to drink the alcohol from, DeSalvo notes that Canned Heat adopted their name from the Tommy Johnson recording and that the members of Canned Heat used their fame to help their blues heroes citing their collaboration in John Lee Hooker's "The Healer." Hmm, I would think that it was the classic double album, "Hooker and Heat," recorded when Alan Wilson, the Blind Owl, was still alive that not only was the recording that led to Hooker's crossover but it stands up with the best recordings Hooker ever made. It was an album the ghost band that is Canned Heat is today would be incapable of producing. Sorry for perhaps going off topic, but so many entries here go off topic. (Again sidebars would have been useful). However the fact she is so imprecise with this, makes me suspect the accuracy of some other entries.
She does include some suggested recordings, but more lyric quotes for the entries
would have been very helpful. Also there should have been more cross entries, such as in her discussion of policy numbers, cross references back to that entry should have been provided for some of the policy combinations. And there are numerous terms that are not discussed here. This is a really rough first effort and this work needs some serious reworking if it is going to be a useful tool, which probably also means she should find herself a collaborator and take into account the serious criticisms if she wants to put together a work that will stand up as scholarly and a reference.

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Leading from Within is the poetic way to leadershipReview Date: 2008-04-12
When I created The Poetry of Business - working from the inside out - I was using poetry to take a person through their career for the purpose of self examination and enlightenment. Poetry is one of the most powerful mediums to penetrate to the core of your beingness and invoke innate emotions and creativity. Leading from within is a great use of poetry and commentary used to inspire leadership, and I think it is exactly what it promoted itself as. I was thrilled to see another book combining poetry and its impact in the working culture. In addition it is a fundamental direction for the nurturing of poetry within, and the furthering of poetry in society.
Tracy Repchuk
Bestselling author of 31 Days to Millionaire Marketing Miracles
President and Founder of the Canadian Federation of Poets
Founder and Editor of Poetry Canada Magazine
A unique devotional resourceReview Date: 2008-03-25
For me, I turn to this book at the end of the day, sitting in my easy chair I flip through the book in no particular order. I find myself reading the reflection by an individual. I then read the poem, allowing the person's reflection to "color" my perception of the poem. And then I sit in silence. No difficult/complex process. Just reflection, poem, silence.
As we are reminded in the Courage & Renewal work, the soul/spirit comes to us "at a slant". It is in the silence that I feel a particular sense of the sacred. This book is a rich resource to be read one poem/one reflection at a time. It is food for the long journey.
A Double TreatReview Date: 2008-03-20
If you are expecting a collection of sentimental poetic candies, fear not. A few old chestnuts are here: "Invictus", for example, offered by a philosophy professor at the U.S. Naval Academy, but when you read his reason for including it, you read the poem with a new appreciation. Poets like William Stafford, Mary Oliver, and Langston Hughes are cited multiple times, and much-anthologized poets like Robert Frost and T.S. Eliot are here too, but so are poets new to me: William Ayot, Carol Zippert, or Ezzeddin Nasafi. Mystics like Rumi, Hafiz, and William Blake. Public figures like Eugene McCarthy and Martin Luther King Jr.
The 93 poems are thoughtfully grouped into eight sections with intriguing titles that will make sense to anyone who's been in a position of leadership: "Called", "Defining Moments", "Sometimes It Aches", "Pay Attention", "The Real Bottom Line", "Dare to Endure", "Leading Together", "Back At It". The editors have clearly paid attention to the poems and clearly thought deeply about leadership. We expect much of our leaders and project upon them powers and motives that only compound the responsibility they already carry. We hope they will inspire us, but we seldom think about where they find inspiration. This anthology offers their testimony and the result is an anthology that rewards multiple readings. Whether you lead a large corporation or a school PTA, you'll find it inspiring to listen to leaders praise the poems that inspire them.
Leading from Within- Poetry that sustains the Courage to LeadReview Date: 2008-03-17
A book to savorReview Date: 2008-03-11


Nice Version but It's not the same book as in Sex and the CityReview Date: 2008-11-09
Beautiful...Review Date: 2008-11-04
Love letters reviewReview Date: 2008-11-03
Excellent BookReview Date: 2008-10-29
amazing BookReview Date: 2008-10-20

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Treasure Trove for American Families Everywhere!Review Date: 2007-12-19
Christine Louise Hohlbaum, author of Diary of a Mother: Parenting Stories and Other Stuff and Sahm I Am: Tales of a Stay-at-Home Mom in Europe, lives near Munich, Germany, with her husband and two children.
An amazingly beautiful and creative book.Review Date: 2004-01-03
Brought the poem to lifeReview Date: 2006-04-14
Makes History Fun!Review Date: 2005-09-24
What a treasure!Review Date: 2003-02-19

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Poems that you can relate to;even if you don't normally care for poetry.Review Date: 2007-08-08
I must admit ,I have never really been much of a lover of poetry.We were all "subjected" to poetry in school,but I can't recall anything that spoke to me the way that the poems in this collection do.I have always enjoyed Robert Service's ballads about the North,but those were more about characters and stories.The poems in this book are very short and so clear, that instead of having to figure out what the message is,you will immediately think about the message. Most all of the things Ferrel writes about have been experienced by all of us.An expression that comes to mind to me when I read and think about these poems is;"He sees where others only look."
As we go through these poems, we encounter
happiness,sorrow,love,yearning,hope,dispair,passion,loneliness,fear,death,living,inspiration,and all those things we meet in our daily lives. Most of us just take these things in our stride,and move on.In other words,we just look but don't see.
To start with ,Ferrel is able to see,and more importantly is able to let us see, through his poems of amazingly few words. Is there any better way to express the idea of freedom and its loss ,than we see in his poem "Mighty Stallion"?
As you read these poems,you feel that Ferrel is speaking to you as well as to himself. Did he suffer the loss of his greatest love,did he find another? And you think what about yourself.
In "Blink of an Eye",he sums up the journey of life we all must take;
"In the blink of an eye
We are born.
In the blink of an eye
We die.
.
.
.
Think long,
Think hard,
Before you take
The step of no return."
Although I found meaning in every poem and many were personal to me;I also was spellbound by the way he dealt with crime in the last poem in the book. Throughout the book, the concept of "You reap what you sow" comes through over and over again;but never better than in ;
CRIME
A bullet
Broke the silence
Of a peaceful
Summer night.
It stopped the
Would-be robber
In his
Tracks.
The robber
Took the hit,
And then
He quickly fell.
One shot
Was all it took
To send him
Straight to hell!
This is a book that you'l want to turn to often for ispiration.
Thanks for sharing your thoughts with us.
A time for introspection! Review Date: 2007-07-21
These poems are slices of life; from love, friendship and happiness to loss, sadness, tragedy and death, Mr. Ferrel writes of it all. His short bursts of reflection are food for thought and make the reader reflect on his own life.
In reading poetry, I feel that only one or two poems should be read at one sitting, in order to savor the meaning and reflect on it. I got the most from each poem by reading in that manner.
My personal favorite was LINDA on page seventeen, and I appreciated the wisdom in LIVING IS DYING (p 12). The title poem, THE MIGHTY STALLION (p24) is also excellent, and the cover photo gives one a feeling of power ... of strength. What beautiful animals stallions are!
Thanks to this author for several hours of introspection. A slim volume but well worth the money.
The seekerReview Date: 2007-06-24
His poems are short and sincere. Ferrel writes verses about family and feelings. Some of them are sad, others, a little happier - but they are all surrounded by true feelings of life. "Seek to find/Your needs in true. And you will find/ A better you" tells us one of the poems. How can someone resist to such a thing?
Beautiful Reflections on the World and Our Interactions With ItReview Date: 2007-05-16
Cause for reflectionReview Date: 2007-05-13
A menagerie of emotions come into play here, from pleasue to pain, love to loss. Ferrel's poetry speaks directly to the reader in a straightforward fashion. Not a lot of stilted verbiage here, just good poems.
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A journey we all should takeReview Date: 2001-07-03
Must reading for trudgers on the road to serenity...Review Date: 2000-10-11
Touched and Loved to the Core!Review Date: 2000-06-14
Hits the nail on the head!Review Date: 2000-06-08
My Journey to SerenityReview Date: 2000-06-07

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Sensual and Poetic!Review Date: 2002-03-15
Good to the last page!!Review Date: 2002-03-01
Good Readin'Review Date: 2002-01-12
Great ReadingReview Date: 2002-01-04
ImpressiveReview Date: 2002-04-06
Alex's writing is clever and to the point. He does not waste a lot of time telling you the story eventhough sometimes I think he give you too much information (I liked the vacation on the island but I did not need that detail explainaion of the room decor). For his first novel, I think that Alex has written a very clever book that is different from a lot of the other stories that we are reading. I thought the poetry was really good. My personal favorite is "BLACK". Once you met Alex, his appeal will no doubt convenience you that the book is worth reading.
And speaking of covers- The illustration was made by his teenage
son! That is very impressive.
Congratulations Again Alex!! I look forward to your next novel from BET books.
Peace
and Blessings!!
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