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

M
How to Succeed at Being Yourself: Finding the Confidence to Fulfill Your Destiny
Published in Hardcover by FaithWords (2002-10)
Author: Joyce Meyer
List price: $19.99
New price: $8.48
Used price: $6.50

Average review score:

A great discovery!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-08
I have found this book to be so very eye opening to myself and the Sunday school class I facilitate of 60 women. There are so many nuggets of wisdom on how we are wired for God by God to have relationship with Him that we miss because we don't see who He has made us to be. I would highly recommend this book to anyone who wants a deeper understanding of the Word of God concerning our relationship with ourselves. How to Succeed at Being Yourself: Finding the Confidence to Fulfill Your Destiny

Greatest book by far................
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-27
I have read many books by Joyce Meyers. Some are repetitive but some of us need repetition to ever get it.

I am consently reading something. Some I can put down, some I can't and this book was one of the few I could not get enough of.

This book out of thousands I have read, would be in my top 5 of best books ever written.

I do believe this book is Inspired by God. It is for those of us who are figuring out what we will be when we grow up, no matter your age.

Thank you Joyce for blessing and enriching my Walk with Christ with this book.

fair-not great
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-09
I was a bit disappointed in this book as it is just a repeat of so many of her other books. I guess if this is the first book by her you read it is ok, but I have still read much better. Borrow it and read someone else's--or just skip it altogether.

Another milestone in my spiritual walk
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2005-03-30
I must say that in conjunction with Purpose Driven Life, Joyce's books have turned my life around. Joyce gave me the tools to drop all of the bitterness and self- doubt that had been plaguing me and keeping me from working towards the ministry God called me for.

This book has been a "true gem" as an earlier review stated. Joyce pushes farther into the "just believe in yourself" mantra and illustrates how the key to succeeding in life is to trust in God, and all things will be given unto you.

"Confidence is faith in God." So true- and a wonderful eye opener for me.

In my own life, I've been called to ministry and I've feel ignorant and ill- equipped to serve others due to my lack of knowledge of scripture. Joyce points out that God wants us to come on faith and that He'll perfect us through His work and not our own. Our stepping out "before we feel truly ready" ensures that we'll lean more fully on God and recognize His work in creating who we are.

I can now approach my own ministry with confidence thanks to the words spoken through Joyce's anointed gift.

Once again, I've been moved to tears by one of Joyce's books. And I thank God for her and I am grateful that she plugged on and answered the call.

A Daily Companion
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2006-04-18
I was lead to buy this book with no initial intention to buy anything! I was going through a personal crisis but wouldn't have thought of buying a book with this title. Nonetheless I just felt I should, so I did. It became the second best thing to the Bible for me. I can't believe how much I gained.. I normally get bored halfway through any book and end up putting it down. Not this one. I've underlined so much I think I've covered half the book in my pen! It's like I need it just to keep my mind in the right direction, my thoughts where they should be, and to give me what I need to face the day with strength! It honestly gives me the tools for confidence I haven't found in any other book. I treasure this one.

M
Human, All Too Human (Complete Works of Friedrich Nietzsche; V. 4-5)
Published in Library Binding by Gordon Press Publishers (1974-08)
Author: Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche
List price: $600.00
Used price: $28.00

Average review score:

". . . must overcome our humanity"
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 22 total.
Review Date: 2004-11-01
I am a yogi from an educated family, and my parents gave me this book when I was 12. Nietzsche's presentation is typically unsystematic and he was a pioneer ensuring that we could view philosophical beliefs in a non-linear manner. The dichotomy of his unstructured book organization and his clarity and precision of thought create a tension that can break through many Western Black/White, Right/Wrong thought patterns to see deeper truths. When he says "our humanity is to be overcome" - some have used this to justify eugenics, nationalism, and seeing others as "less than." If you read his entire thoughts (get the book!), it is more about overcoming the fragmented aspects of the self that weaken us, so we can be stronger and more pure. This is a spiritual thought from the man heralded as atheistic. Dig deep, and you will find that Nietzsche is beautiful. Yoga community friends - Neitzsche did not justify atrocities. He challenged us to grow and become better than our base qualities. He paved the way for Deserida's gloriously independent thoughts, and was an inspiration for the pop philosopher Ayn Rand's radical worship of the individual over "the masses" (which can be viewed as "cultural conditioning" in our times. This text is applicable to our lives today as the Tao Te Ching. For a completely different perspective (for balance of thought) read about Jainism as well. Then find your truth. Deep wisdom is timeless.

Is He Legit?
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 30 total.
Review Date: 2006-05-28
O.k. So I have a minor in philosophy and Nietzsche was one of my inspirations to pursue this as a degree in college. Nietzsche deals with androgony. In more modern terms, men and women are crossing over the line of androgeny with their jock image. They are getting more and more androgynous you can't distunguish between even basic differences between the sexes anymore. While my philosophy professor and classmates dismissed Nietzsche as "not being a first rate philosopher," he does have his points about god and androgeny. This is part of our changing world and in philosophy class I did make my points.

Correction
Helpful Votes: 54 out of 59 total.
Review Date: 2005-09-24
I feel obligated to correct a distortion suggested by `unraveler' below. It is popular to suggest Nietzsche was an anti-semite, but this is a rather lazy habit. Nietzsche's remark on `the youthful stock-exchange Jew' was mentioned. Here it is in its proper environment:

. . . the entire problem of the Jews exists only within national states, inasmuch as it is here that their energy and higher intelligence, their capital in will and spirit accumulated from generation to generation in a long school of suffering, must come to preponderate to a degree calculated to arouse envy and and hatred, so that in almost every nation . . . there is gaining ground the literary indecency of leading the Jews to the sacrificial slaughter as scapegoats for every possible public or private misfortune. As soon as it is no longer a question of the conserving of nations but of the production of the strongest possible European mixed race, the Jew will be just as usable and desirable as an ingredient of it as any other national residue. Every nation, every man, possesses unpleasant, indeed dangerous qualities: it is cruel to demand that the Jew should constitute an exception. In him these qualities may even be dangerous and repellent to an exceptional degree; and perhaps the youthful stock-exchange Jew is the most repulsive invention of the entire human race. Nonetheless I should like to know how much must, in a total accounting, be forgiven a people who, not without us all being to blame, have had the most grief-laden history of any people and whom we have to thank for the noblest human being (Christ), the purest sage (Spinoza), the mightiest book and the most efficacious moral code in the world. . . .

Is this anti-semitism???

Breath of fresh air
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2005-12-15
if you want to have your moral foundations knocked out from under you, read this book - and then build upon the ruins - Nietzsche's, in my opinion, most accessible work, as his aphoristic style floats over many different topics - don't stop here however, i recommend Kauffman's "Nietzsche, Philosopher, Psychologist, AntiChrist" as a starter if you find the complexity and diversity of Nietzsche's thought to be overwhelming or incomprehensible - he's frequently ambiguous and contradictory but it's more a positive trademark of his works and shouldn't dissuade one from further readings.

Nietzsche at his Aphoristic Best
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 2006-07-20
If you like aphorisms and philosophy, this book will become one of your bibles. If nothing else, it's just plain fun to read for his incredible wit. Of course you have to put his ideas in the context of the period in which he wrote and understand that he has his own odd prejudices, but the brilliance of his understanding of the human condition really shines through. The biggest mistake any reader could make is to think Nietzsche was an anti-semite---far from it. He was anti-neanderthal. In this book especially the reader sees his low tolerance for received wisdom. This book is nothing less than part of the origin of Western psychology as practiced today. It also represents the demolition of science and philosophy polluted by the received Western theological framework. Some of the best parts are when he skewers religion. You have to love his style even if you do not agree with his pessimistic disgust for piety. This is the kind of philosophy book you need not fret over, unless you harbor wishful thinking about a supremely benevolent deity. Instead of making an elaborate argument about the number of angels that can dance on the head of a pin, as preceeding systematic philosophers did literally and figuratively, Nietzsche bends the pin and throws it in the trash. I wish I had read this before his Genealogy of Morals, as knowing his thoughts here would have made that book far more interetsing and understandable. I highly recommend philosophy students first approaching Nietzsche pick up Human, All Too Human to start their study. And if you are religious and want to bolster your faith, well, you should stay far away from this book.

M
Kidscooking: A Very Slightly Messy Manual with Other
Published in Hardcover by Topeka Bindery (1987-09)
Author:
List price: $24.55
Used price: $50.00

Average review score:

Easy and fun
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-08
My son (6 years old) and I love this easy and fun cook book. We have been trying for the recipes every weekend.

Kids Cooking: A Very Slightly Messy Manual
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-08
This was the first cookbook I had recieved myself as a child. The ingredients are illustrated in a very clear appealing way. Even the measurements are illustrated which makes it very friendly for a child just attempting to cook. I gave this book to my neices and will pass on my copy to my boys, who are a little to young at this time. A great first cookbook. I'm glad to see it is still being published 20 years after I first recieved it.

I'm so glad I found this book!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-15
I had this same cookbook when I was a kid, so I was surprised that I was able to find it again, what? 20 years later? My daughter and I have made several of the recipes, and she adores the book just as I did when I was a kid! She constantly flips through the pages and picks out something to make for breakfast, lunch or dinner. It's nice to have something kid-friendly to share with my 5-year-old. She always wants to help me cook, and with this book - she gets to be in charge.

Good for the little ones
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-31
We have an old copy of this book and love it. My 3-year-old reads the pictures in the recipes. Our favorite is Hidden Hotdogs (pigs in a blanket). The ingredients are listed as both words and pictures. The instructions have visual aids as well. Younger chefs can read the pictures and help get the ingredients ready. Some of the recipes are a bit more intricate and may not hold the interest of the little ones. For the under 6 crowd, choose the easier recipes first. There are a few egg recipes that only have a few steps (Egg in a Frame) and can be done with 'helpers'. This cookbook can grow with your child. The measuring spoons are just a cute add-on.

recipes from this book are still family favorites... 20 years later
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-25
i bought this book 20 years ago when i was a little kid. i remember begging my mom for it b/c i thought it was cool b/c it came with measuring spoons... something my family didn't own and i wanted badly (i loved to cook when i was little, still do!). i remember reading it constantly, mesmerized by the recipes and whining and pleading with my mom and dad to help me make some of them and loving the illustrations. i still remember the one of the boy throwing the noodle at the fridge to see if it was done. i did that and got in trouble...

we tried almost every recipe, the play-dough being a favorite. 20 years later, my mom still makes "Ready Spaghetti" (spaghetti cooked in meat sauce, kinda like American Chop-Suey) and it's one of my favorite comfort meals. it's been modified to use jarred sauce and we add peas, mushrooms, and spinach to make it heartier. i also still make the tuna salad (but w/o the ice cream cones) and the Disgustingly Rich Brownies is my signature brownie recipe and i still remember me and my older brother begging my mom to let us make them!

the book is still around. it's missing it's cover, but it's still in good condition. a must for any kitchen!

oh, and we still use the measuring spoons and they're in mint condition (and have been through innumerable trips through the dishwasher)

M
The Lakota Way: Stories and Lessons for Living
Published in Paperback by Penguin (Non-Classics) (2002-10-29)
Author: Joseph M. Marshall III
List price: $15.00
New price: $8.58
Used price: $5.99

Average review score:

Great Resource
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-28
I'm a criminal defense attorney who represents many Native Americans all around the country. I've purchased this book for years. It is a must read for any new employee in this firm. I have also given it to many of my clients while they are in jail awaiting trial. It's a magnificient book. Mary M. McMahon, criminal defense attorney and author of Once a Warrior.

Can I have another?
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-24
This book is extremely accessible as if ingrained in human nature. I have no background in indigenous culture and spirituality. I wanted to capture this book and live there. I had to wonder if anything about me was uniquely tuned in to this book and I don't think there was. I had to wonder what kind of effect this book would have as a large scale required reading in families, schools, churches, prisons, cities, the White House, etc. The Lakota way creates a desire to become honor, dignity and peace by being unselfish.

Excellent!!! Loved it!!!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-31
Stories. Lakota stories that tell about morality and virtues---persistence, honor, love, respect, and so forth. We can all benefit from reading these stories. Interesting and enlightening. What more can you ask for? Recommended! boland7214@aol.

pleasant surprise
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-26
I bought this book at a store in Oklahoma City and it was wrapped in packaging. I had already read three of Marshall's books but when I unwrapped it after buying it, my first reaction was it was a mistake to buy it. It was not what I was expecting. Much to my pleasant surprise, I thoroughly enjoyed Marshall's story telling.

I highly recommend anything he writes. I am currently reading his book on Crazy Horse and it is excellent. His book, "Walking with Grandfather" is outstanding.

Marshall is certainly one of the Elders of his tradition and is an accomplished writer and historian. His works are a must read.

Worth Sharing
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-25
This book can change you if you are open to it. It made me rethink a few assumptions I had about myself. I think all of us know the dictionary definition of virtues such as generosity and wisdom, but Marshall shares stories and personal insights that teach how to weave those qualities into the fabric of your life. This book is warm-hearted and inspiring. Its organization is well suited for discussion groups. The Lakota Way should be the way of our leaders, neighbors, family members and our hearts.

M
Listen To Your Hormones: A Doctor's Guide To Sex, Love And Hormones-especially For Men
Published in Paperback by Wellness MD Pubns (2004-08-30)
Author: Abraham Harvey, M.D. Kryger
List price: $24.95
New price: $45.31
Used price: $39.98

Average review score:

I'm listening to my hormones...
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-10-05
I agree that this is one of the better books out there on the highly controversial topic of male hormone replacement. If you are seeking treatment however, you would do well to look elsewhere. Dr. Kryger handled my case with a lack of judgement and a level of incompetence that was simply appalling in my opinion...but yes, I would still recommend his book.

Clearly-written, lots of information. Best male HRT book yet.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-06-25
I've read several HRT books and found this to be the best. Dr. Kryger writes clearly and the book is a nice balance between referenced science and approachabliity. He knows his hormones and provides a practical, broad introduction to the challenges of maintaining youthful hormone balances in men throughout their lives.

I've purchased several of these books and given them to friends. If you're a man, even if you don't have low testosterone, you owe it to yourself to get and read this book. I would call it "required reading". If you're a woman, this book will help you understand the way your man's body works better than he does.

I'm looking forward to more great work from Dr. Kryger.

Excellent Book!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-05-19
I found this book to be an excellent read and would give it very high marks and a strong recomendation. Dr. Kryger has done an superb job of making the subject matter easy to understand and very informative! A friend of mine who happens to be an author mentioned how "Listen to Your Hormones" is also very well written which is rare with many medical and research books. I eagerly await Kryger's next book!

HELP AT LAST!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-05-05
Simply an answer that I couldn't even find from my own doctor.
We get tested on so many other things by our doctors but never get the real importance of hormones. Thanks Doc!

Written for the public but good for doctors too.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-04-12
This book does a great job of explaining the growing problem of mae hormone deficiency and it's causes and treatments. Dr. Kryger gets to the root of the problem and sheds light on things that aren't covered in medical school. Every man should read it and learn about how to prevent and treat hormone problems

M
Mathematical Analysis
Published in Paperback by Addison Wesley Publishing Company (1974-01)
Author: Tom M. Apostol
List price: $73.33
New price: $55.00
Used price: $41.00

Average review score:

Excellent Intermediate Real Analysis Text
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-12
"Mathematical Analysis (2nd Ed.)," by Tom Apostol, does an excellent job of bridging the gap between standard introductory calculus texts and full-fledged treatments of topics in analysis. Apostol's book covers significantly more material than the gold standard of such texts, "Principles of Mathematical Analysis" by Rudin, and does so in a very different style. Where Rudin is brief and elegant, Apostol is thorough, detailed and friendly. Both Apostol's and Rudin's books have been around a long time, for very good reasons.

Unlike some intermediate texts, Apostol's book spends little time restating the particular results of elementary calculus (e.g., the derivative of sin x or x^n) in the new language of a more theoretical approach. Unlike Rudin and similar texts, Apostol *does* give detailed proofs, with thorough explanations. As a result of this approach, Apostol's book is not particularly well-suited to serve as a reference work for use by more advanced students or by professionals -- it is strictly a vehicle, and a very good vehicle indeed, for moving from elementary calculus to an introductory careful theoretical treatment of the material. Apostol does a particularly good job of presenting the "backbone ideas" of limits and continuity in a brief but very clear chapter (Chapter 4).

Apostol's problems are excellent and should be considered an important part of his presentation of the material. (This is one area in which Apostol perhaps surpasses Rudin, although MIT's online materials contain answers to so many of Rudin's problems that they now must be viewed as "worked-out examples!") Students find Apostol's tone, and the hints given in connection with the problems, to be helpful and engaging.

I suspect that the final few chapters of Apostol's book are used only rarely, due to the typical two-semester structure of real analysis courses (with a third semester being devoted to complex analysis). If true, this is a shame, because Apostol does a nice job of moving from a fairly standard treatment of the Lebesgue integral to Fourier integrals, multiple Riemann integrals and multiple Lebesgue integrals.

I should mention, as a minor point, that students can become confused, at least momentarily and episodically, by Apostol's parallel system of numbering (i) subsections and (ii) theorems and definitions. For example, the first line of page 166 reads "7.23 RIEMANN-STIELTJES INTEGRALS DEPENDING ON A PARAMETER" and the very next line reads (in italics) "Theorem 7.38 Let f be continuous at each point (x,y) of a rectangle . . . " Although the fonts differentiate these two parallel numbering systems, confusion can occur.

A cut above the rest...
Helpful Votes: 15 out of 16 total.
Review Date: 2003-06-01
I am currently studying from Apostol's book, completeing a year-long course with his treatment of the Lebesgue integral. While my experience with comperable analysis texts is not exhaustive, I am familiar with the more notable: "Baby" Rudin, Marsden,... So, I can confidently say that Apostol's text is among best covering the subject. His treatment is well modivated with examples, and his proofs, while not as not as "elegant" as those of Rudin, are surely more pedagogical in nature. Apostol has included a large amount of exercises that range througout the gamut of difficulty, and the material is peppered with a treatment of complex varaibles. Also, the readability is something to be attained by all authors of mathematics texts.

One drawback to the text is a too abstract approach to the Implict and Inverse Function Theorems. I found these to be the most challenging in the text, and I was forced to return to my copy of Stewart's Calculus text to re-acquiant myself with each concept. Also, at times Apostol falls into the pattern of Definition, Theorem, Definition, Theorem,..., but this seems to be only in the cases when ample preparation is needed to provide noteworthy examples; eg. Lebesgue integration.

So, in spite of the cost, I highly recommend this text for the study of real analysis (even for self study), although at [this price] there are bound to be others that have a higher value to cost ratio. Having completed the text (almost), I feel prepared to begin a more abstract study of analysis.

The Cat's Meow
Helpful Votes: 20 out of 21 total.
Review Date: 2003-07-19
As stated by prior reveiwers, this books does assume that the reader is Mathematically mature (a saying most young Mathematicians despise), in the sense that he/she must be able to follow the logical development of any given arguement, be able to 'see' where and how topics are related as well as fill in any blanks that may present themsevles in a given definition/proof. Apostol, as compared to Rudin, does a nice job of filling in these blanks by adequately providing all of the necessary details within a proof. This book will provide the willing student with a solid foundation in elementary analysis as well as the confidence to persue higher analysis. The only draw back to Apostols book, aside from cost, is that the constant Theorem - Proof - Theorem format can be overwhelming at times and cause some readers to cover material too quickly. Despite the book's cost I would highly recommend this book over "baby" Rudin (that is, Principles of Mathematical Analysis) since Rudin is notorious for not filling in the blanks within a given proof and instead provides seemingly 'slick proofs'.

One of the best I own...
Helpful Votes: 21 out of 21 total.
Review Date: 2005-03-11
I own books on mathematical analysis by Browder (0387946144), Douglas S Bridges (0387982396
), Haaser Sullivan (0486665097), Pfaffenberger(0486421740), Dudley (0521007542),Abbot(0387950605) and Apostol.

All books cover abstract multivariable spaces, except Abbott who limits himself to the real line.
None of these books are perfect, but of all these books Apostol is the one I prefer for the following reasons :

1. The contents : I think a beginning analysis course should serve two aims :
a. teach basic techniques that can be used in other theoretical oriented courses like physics,economics,...
b. at the same time let the students discover the beauty of abstract and rigorous math.

In this context Apostol has reached the ideal mix between abstraction and usability. He covers practical topics , used as a basis in a lot of other courses, but he does this by making the needed level of abstraction in order to proof everything in a rigorous way.

Each book is self contained, though none of these books give a good introduction into basic mathematical logic. However an introduction to set theory is explained well in all books.
Dudley 's beautifull book is the most abstract but requires the highest level of mathematical maturity.

2 Layout : The books of Haaser Sullivan , Pfaffenberger cover excellent material in a very clear way but they are cheap Dover editions, putting as much text as possible on one page. Browder 's contents I like most (and contains really excellent explanations), but his layout is also very dense and not always comfortable to read. The layout of Apostol is the best of all these books, its pages are well filled, but the difficult proofs contain enough whitspace for a confortable read.

3.Completeness and rigor : Apostol and all these books, except Abbott and Douglas S Bridges, proof everything they mention (exceptionally, they leaf a proof as an exercise, but then the proof is relatively easy enough if you understand the material). This is an approach I like : present the complete theory and then (like all of them do) create challenging exercises seperate from the basic theory.
In contrast, the book of Douglas S Bridges represents all material as one big exercise.This is nice if you have anough time, but most of us do not have that much time,I am afraid. Also Abbott has a lot of difficult proofs left as an exercise to the reader. But at the same time, Abbott is the best in motivating the reader. Abbott often provides excellent background in order to motivate the reader and sharpen the readers mathematical intuition.

While Apostol is not best on all the criteria mentioned above, Apostol scores good on all off them and as a consequence he has the best total average. This being said, I must omit that reading Apostol requires patience. Yes his explanations are clear, but can be very terse (especially his examples). Though, in principle everything is explained without gaps. This book requires reading every word carefully and take the time to reflect, but maybe that is the only way to learn advanced math.

Finally a remark about the price, I bought this book in Europe where it is much cheaper (check amazon.co.uk)

So compared with the others this a very good book.

Great "second" book in introductory analysis...
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-23
This is an outstanding textbook that is also one of the more comprehensive books as advanced calculus and introductory analysis texts go. It makes an excellent reference because it is quite comprehensive, covering a number of topics that don't make it into most introductory analysis books.

Other reviewers have said enough about the quality of this book; I just want to add a few comments. The second edition of this book is very different from the first--it cuts out much of the material on vector calculus, but it adds material on Lebesgue integration, which it presents without the use of measure theory.

Anyone who finds this text a little too difficult might want to look at the book "Advanced Calculus" by Taylor & Mann. It moves a little bit slower than this book, is a little bit less abstract, and covers less material. This book is in some ways a logical "next step" after that book. I strongly prefer this book to the "baby" Rudin, both as a learning text and a reference. This book is more detailed, and the dependency of the material is less strict--it's easier to open this book to a specific topic and understand it without having to cross-reference earlier theorems.

M
Mommy I'm Still in Here: Raising Children with Bipolar Disorder
Published in Paperback by Behler Publications (2008-02-01)
Author: Kate McLaughlin
List price: $13.95
New price: $8.80
Used price: $8.80

Average review score:

A Passionate Story of a Family's Dealings with Bipolar Disorder
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-01
In "Mommy I'm Still in Here," Kate McCloughlin tells the unforgettable story of her family's experiences with bipolar disorder. As two of her children suffer from this condition, Kate shares a lifetime of observances and experiences, including the effect of the disease on her entire family and between siblings. The book is a wealth of knowledge for those suffering from or dealing with the effects bipolar disorder. But more than that, Kate's great strength and love for her children leave one feeling optimistic and hopeful. Kate is an inspiration to all--a symbol of hope and strength, a role model of motherly love and perseverance, and a concerned parent wishing to help others by sharing her experiences.

Heart and Hope
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-17
Kate McLaughlin inspires and teaches in this incredible journey through her experiences with bipolar disorder in her children. She opens her heart and deepest thoughts to the reader to allow us to join her in the emotions and roller coaster ride she lives through. This book was a quick read and will teach you about this condition but more about how a family survives together and that there is beauty and love to be found in every experience. Her writing is beautiful, riveting, real and impactful. I especially appreciate her acknowledgements that not everyone is blessed to have the resources to deal with the ongoing trials. She is a beautiful woman, mother and author and we can only hope that she will write another book to continue the chronicles so we can all benefit from her wisdom and attitude. She shows us how to live with challenges honestly, openly, and gracefully. Thank you!

Heart Opening
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-16
"Mommy I'm Still in Here" is a remarkable story of heart opening experiences. In viewing the issue of internal balance and how far from the midline it can swing, the reader views the beauty of each soul in this story and the strength and unconditional love required to endure. This story goes straight to the soul and provides the reader an opportunity to move into deeper levels of loving, acceptance, compassion and knowledge. A must read for anyone wishing to experience an important message regarding internal balance and the connection among us all.

Incredible family devotion
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-03
This book is an incredible story of family devotion! It kept me totally, emotionally engaged. I felt such a great sense of compassion for the whole family. Kate helps you "believe in" and feel the pain and suffering they must have gone through. These parents were remarkable with their struggle in keeping it quiet to most of the outside world, and also trying to maintain a normal life for their other children who did not have the illness. I commend them for their outstanding ability to regain their lives with such an amazing outlook after such a valiant fight. Kate is able to give you a profound explanation of the illness, while still keeping you immersed in her story! What an extraordinary read!!

Amazing story of love
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-26
An incredibly personal and yet educational story. The author shares her journey of confusion, pain ,learning and love that is inspirational to all of us. Although I started with no information about bipolar disorder..I ended with a sense of deep compassion around the complexities of every day living with mental illness. While the subject is serious the book ends with a spirit of renewal and hope leaving the reader wanting to meet this amazing woman.

M
Nate the Great (Streamers)
Published in Paperback by Scholastic Young Hippo (1989-12-08)
Author: M.W. Sharmat
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Average review score:

Welcome to Dragnet, Junior!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-07


Nate The Great lives up to his moniker as the neighborhood detective who works alone in this hilarious and page-turning novel for young readers.

The simplicity of the writing will add to the enjoyment for kids and parents, as well, who will be sure to be reminded of hard-boiled detectives in those old black-and-white movies we've all seen on TV.

You'll love sharing this book (and a big stack of pancakes) with your kids!

Nate the Great is, well....great!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-18
Nate is one of the best kid detectives I have ever met. The books are instant classics and I was inspired and interested in reading the whole series since third grade. I will buy the whole collection no matter what, just to have this smart gumshoe in my book case for my own pleasure to read again and again.

Nate the Great is Great!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-05
This book is a great detective book. Nate helps his friend find a lost picture.

Wonderfully Funny!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-09-26
I never did read any Nate the Great growing up...and what a shame. It's amazing that Sharmat can do so very much in terms of story and humor with so few words. It's great for beginner readers and uproariously funny as a read aloud story (especially if you can do the P.I. voice-over effect). This initial installment (I believe there are over 20 in this series) finds Nate the Great on hire for his friend Annie who has lost a favorite picture of her dog Fang. Nate is confidant that he can find the missing painting and sets out to systematically follow all the leads he's been given. He questions suspects and eventually tracks down the culprit, while enjoying meal after meal and snack after snack of, what else, but pancakes (his favorite food, of course).

This book is funny, charming and most of all...my kids just LOVED it! I have a 6 year old and an 8 year old, sometimes story time is tough and we're having more and more trouble finding books that appeal to both a 6 year old by and an 8 year old girl! We'll be reading more Nate the Great, because they both found it hilarious and best of all, Girl easily read it to Boy several times after having it read to them as a bedtime story! Absolutely Hilarious, I give it an A+

Nate the Great is, well, GREAT!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2005-03-30
With charming illustrations and a clever case-cracking hero, early readers will love to read this book as well as the others in the Nate the Great series. Nate has a kid's dream "job" of being the neighborhood detective, and he is surrounded by quirky companions whose cases he solves. These witty stories with a vintage originality will have kids reaching for the next one . . . and the next. . .

M
Resurrection of the Shroud: New Scientific, Medical, and Archeological Evidence
Published in Hardcover by M. Evans and Company, Inc. (2000-09-25)
Author: Mark Antonacci
List price: $21.95
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As an agnostic, this really opened my eyes
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-09
I have been fascinated by the Shroud ever since I read a decidedly church biased book back in the early '60's. This impeccably researched book is both pure reportage and emotional at the same time. It illustrates the Crucifixion in undeniable truths,because of the author's clarity and descriptive power. The chapters regarding the scientific analyses of the shroud, and the plentiful, fully documented results present a very strong case for the Shroud's genuineness. The many chapters about the Shroud's history are extremely well documented, and are tied together into a cohesive whole. The only flaw in this great book, (and it is a small one,) is that the illustrations are somewhat murky and hard to see. As a skeptic and an agnostic, this book was a true revelation. To a person of deep faith, I would say,"Read this!", for it will not only reconfirm and strengthen your faith, but will enhance your understanding of what the passion was like for Jesus the man. This is a superior book.

Atheists, Be Afraid. Be VERY AFRAID!
Helpful Votes: 21 out of 24 total.
Review Date: 2005-06-29
Five Stars? Oh! You'd better believe it!
The previous reviewers have done a very admirable job in extolling this "WONDER-FULL" book. I merely wish to add my voice to the chorus singing its praises.

THE SHROUD OF TURIN is an ancient burial cloth containing the mysterious image of a Man who had evidently been crucified - believed by many to be Jesus Christ. The internationally renowned, Peruvian poet, Yoey O'Dogherty, once wrote, "Nothing astounds like Truth." And the truth that has made The Shroud the most studied and least understood artifact on planet Earth is astounding indeed!

About 4 years ago, I happened to catch the author, MARK ANTONACCI, being interviewed on a radio program and found his statements so interesting that I went right out and acquired a copy of his book, 'THE RESURRECTION OF THE SHROUD.' From a young age, I had been intrigued by the implications of the Shroud although my knowledge was limited. Like countless millions of other people, when the 1988 Carbon-14 dating test results were announced, "proving" the Shroud to be a hoax conceived between 1260 and 1390 A.D., I thought, "Well, so it goes." Of course, I've learned A LOT about human nature and some so-called "scientists" since then. I'm not so gullible anymore, and after reading 'THE RESURRECTION OF THE SHROUD', I'm more intrigued than ever by this extraordinary treasure!

In the preface, the former agnostic, Mark Antonacci, relates how he was somewhat mysteriously goaded into investigating the Shroud, and how in pacing his apartment, reluctantly pondering some of its unfathomable anomalies, it suddenly hit him in midstep, "If all of the possible implications from the scientific examination were true, it would not be bad news - it would be good news."

Give Antonacci credit for having been an intellectually honest skeptic, unlike the flapjack who wrote the Kirkus review that our host has unwittingly presented in its Editorial section. That writer says that 'THE RESURRECTION OF THE SHROUD' "is unlikely to win any converts among empirical-minded skeptics." BALDERDASH! That is EXACTLY the sort of person who will be knocked for a loop by this great book! Actually, it is the intellectually dishonest (scared out of his wits) individual who will not permit himself to be converted, who will dismiss it. I know there are willfully ignorant people out there, but you'd hope that they could at least be a bit more imaginative and less blatant in their efforts to mislead others with their bias.

True, the book explores some fairly heavy scientific principles, but necessarily so. Unless the reader understands the science behind it, they will fail to appreciate the incomprehensible attributes of the Shroud. But if it makes you feel any better, I can tell you with perfect honesty that I'm one of the least mathematically and scientifically-minded people on God's green earth! I must be operating from the "left field" side of the brain, or something. If I could follow the science, so will you. I found the information unspeakably fascinating because of its portent.

Once you've grasped the complexity of it, you'll understand why John Walsh has written, "The Shroud of Turin is either the most awesome and instructive relic of Jesus Christ in existence...or it is one of the most ingenious, most unbelievably clever products of the human mind and hand on record. It is one or the other; there is no middle ground." And how the respected scientist, John Heller, could claim that, "If you were to give me a budget of ten million dollars and told me to make a replica of [the Shroud]...I would not know how to do it."

You'll learn why the faction that wants us to believe that the Shroud (which displays many anomalies that contemporary science can't even explain) is the handiwork of a medieval artist, doesn't have a leg to stand on. And why the Carbon-14 dating procedure, which supposedly put the final nail in the Shroud's coffin, was unreliable to say the least!

Antonacci's book examines the Shroud from every conceivable angle, including the very possible and enlightening connection between It and the Mandylion - gee whillikers! (Oops. Is one still allowed to say, "gee whillikers" in 2005?) It left this reader thoroughly mesmerized. Buy it and be amazed. Be VERY AMAZED!

I could go on all day about this book, but I'm going to pack it in here. I gotta go find that deceptive Kirkus Reviewer now and take him out to the woodshed. (Oh, come on, I'm only kidding! I know that God wouldn't approve of that. ...Would He?)

Jesus did exist and did leave behind artifacts to prove it.
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2006-09-03
In the last few years a great deal of discussions have taken place regarding the existence of Jesus of Nazareth and some have even come to deny his actual existence in the form of a human being. ASARIM has gone back in time and located the true garden where his physical body was laid to rest after he was tortured by the Romans and crucified. Jesus was laid on this shroud without a doubt, and we think Mark Antonacci proves this fact. Asarim only adds in passing that the Sudarium found in the Cathedral of Oviedo contains blood of the same man. The Sudarium came directly from Jerusalem to Spain and was never contaminated. As for the question did Jesus die on the cross? Asarim holds that the blood found was "live" blood and not of a "dead" human being. Jesus was given "Vinum Moratum" before his passion and therefore was able to survive being crucified. Pontious Pilate had already agreed with Jesus that all this would be carried out to fullfill the scriptures and that Jesus would be able to go to Rome and meet the others upon healing. To prove this theory, Asarim has used the Shroud, Sudarium, other artifacts and historic accounts found in the Vatican about the birth and extension of Christianity. Asarim highly recommends this book for all those that need new scientific, medical and archeological evidence that Jesus was and is alive, and continues to live amongst us in our soul and hearts.

Well argued!!
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2005-12-06
This book's "radiation" theory of image creation isn't as far fetched or a radical leap of reasoning as skeptics would have you believe. Why? Because the peer reviewed, scientific findings of a image composed of dehydrated, surface linen fibrils defies any "natural" explanation.

The image isn't a paint, powder, stain or transfer image. It's not imitated by decomposition stains, sweat stains, oils or herb stains. A heat scorch can't contain the subtlety or sophistication of this relic's image. If "vapors" created the image, there would be no possibility that the image would have any focus or definition. Nor is body contact the catalyst for image creation, since a body impression would have a fattened, "fun house mirror" effect.

Add to the exclusion of these past explainations the possible x-ray qualities of the Shroud image, the 3- dimensional "distance sensitive" intensity of the image, the exterior objects near the body "imaged" on the cloth... AND...

The MOST RECENT feature discovered, one Mr. Antonacci wasn't yet informed about as he wrote this book... a faint face image on the backside of the Shroud!

Why the imprinting of only the highest image features on the backside of the cloth? If it was paint or sweat responsible, it would diffuse outward and not be limited to (mostly) the face. Skin oils and sweat would had also darkened the Shroud man's "posterior" image dramatically... the back and buttocks which had the most weight pressure on the linen... yet the Shroud's back image is as subtle as the front image!!

Mark promoted the theory that the cloth collapsed through an image creating field of energy. The faint imprinting on the exterior side of the Shroud seems to validate this!

This theory now has support... discovered AFTER this book was released!!

As for whether the man in the Shroud is Jesus, consider... the Romans didn't always nail crucifixion victims; that a crown of thorns mocking of this victim should be unique to Jesus; the man was severely scourged; that this man had the athletic build of a manuel laborer (Carpenter, Stone Mason); was a young Jewish man beaten severely. The man was DEAD, as shown by the stiff, "rigor mortis" quality of the body image and the hemorrhage of the spear wound. And most significantly...

This crucified, Jewish "criminal" had a wealthy friend or relative who gave him a high quality linen Shroud! (Aka, Joseph of Arimetha?) Only high quality linens found at "Masada" featured the fine "invisible seaming" that this Shroud does.

This cruified Jewish "criminal" was allowed the privelege of burial!! Most crucifixion victims were considered defiled or cursed ("by the wood of the tree"), and were thrown on a disgusting pile of public decomposition by the brutal Romans. Dogs and crows routinely consumed the remains of crucified victims.

The man in the Shroud didn't decompose.

And the final point... ancient Jews overcame their aversion to "unclean" burial clothes and KEPT ... and PRESERVED... this shroud !! The blood stains ALONE would had prevented any normal Jewish individual from handling the cloth. Obviously, the man kept in this Shroud was considered "Holy," with "Holy blood."

How could this man NOT be Jesus?

Jeff Messenger, author of the novel "The Shroud of Torrington."

EXCELLENT AND THOROUGH
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2004-05-08
The Shroud of Turin is the most thoroughly researched artifact in the history of the world. Because of its wealth of astonishing attributes, the Shroud of Turin has draw over a quarter million hours of research by research scientists (mostly at personal expense) between 1977 and 2000--for good reason. All this rigorous attention is due soley to the merits and rewards they have reaped as they continue discovering its wonders.

Of all the books I have read about the Shroud of Turin, this is by far the most excellent, thorough, well researched, and well documented. Yochanan (John) records in his gospel that the miracles recorded of Yeshua (Jesus) were only the tip of the iceberg (John 20:30; 21:25). Back in those days people had different opinions about the miracles: some rejected them, some doubted, some believed (but took it all for granted), and some were appreciative and glorified God. Everyone must draw their own conclusions about the Shroud--don't let others and media spin masters make up your mind for you. When it comes to the Shroud, the powerful amazement of it lies in its details. If you do not know the details, you are missing the boat. This is the book to find those details. The more technology grows, the more they research the Shroud, the more powerful and impressive it is. Quantum leaps in technology uncover, corespondingly, quantum leaps in hitherto hidden mindboggling aspects about the Shroud. It seems evident to me that Yeshua has left this as a special sign, especially for our generation. We are the first generation to have the scientific technology to fathom the wonders of the Shroud. You owe it to yourself to investigate for yourself and draw your own conclusions. This is the book to give you the best coverage and analysis of the details among all the books I have read. My commendations to the author, Mark Antonacci, for his excellent work, resulting from 20 years of writing and research!

M
Richard the Third
Published in Hardcover by Routledge (1955-01-01)
Author: Paul M. Kendall
List price: $25.00
Used price: $7.54

Average review score:

The man and the statesman
Helpful Votes: 12 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 2005-11-14
This book is one of the few that succeeds in revising the historical profile of king Richard by giving him the place he deserves. For centuries Tudor historians, particularly More and Vergil (using all the heavy artillery of political propaganda on behalf of their masters the Tudor kings) had drawn a caricature of king Richard, making him a monster, the incarnation of evil, not to speak of Shakespeare's play, as brilliant as false. This book proves that king Richard was a wise ruler, an excellent warrior (he decisively contributes to the final Yorkist victory over the Lancastrians in the battles of Barnet and Tewksbury in 1471), loyal to his brother king Edward IV, tender to his wife, loved by the people (specially by Northerners, by the people of York, where he was almost adored, while Henry VII and Henry VIII, the first Tudor kings, were much hated, which explains the constant rebellions of Yorkshire under Tudor rule) The tragedy of king Richard III has nothing to do with Shakespearean plot; it is very unlikely that he ordered the death of Edward IV's sons (the book provides an interesting appendix on the matter) and, of course, he had no body deformity. His tragedy was both personal and political: a man who saw the death of his beloved wife, son and brothers, a king who tried to rule for the people against the barons and paid a terrible price, the price of being betrayed at Bosworth field in 1485; a ruler who tried to take control of the political turmoil, hopelessly, as he found himself trapped in the turmoil, overwhelmed and finally swept away. However, he set the foundations of modern Britain, creating a strong State by undermining the territorial rebellious powers of the old feudal peerage, which were the cancer that had consumed the nation since the Beauforts had made a puppet of Henry VI, the last Lancastrian king, and which degenerated into the open enmity between the dukes of Somerset and York and the subsequent civil strife. Apart from reading a fascinating period of the History of England, this book made me seriously think of how easy it is to falsify History. Richard III is somebody who definitely deserved rehabilitation. Well done, Paul!

`Loyaulte me lie'
Helpful Votes: 13 out of 13 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-18
This is a very readable biography of Richard III. While more recent research may have overtaken some of Mr Kendall's conclusions it by no means diminishes his scholarship.

Richard III's life has been the subject of many works of historical fiction. Additionally, he appears in the works of Shakespeare, is dissected by Sir Thomas More and others writing during Tudor times. Variously lionized and demonized, he is considered by many to be either the tragic hero slain in battle at Bosworth Field or the murderer of the princes in the Tower of London.

To see Richard solely as either a villain or a victim is to ignore the realities of the period in which he lived and the circumstances whereby he came to the throne.

I recommend this biography to those who want to know more about the life and reign of Richard III or are seeking some historical background to some of the works of historical fiction in which he features.

Jennifer Cameron-Smith

Objective biography of Richard III
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-27
Paul Murray Kendall writes an objective biography of Richard III from his childhood to his death on Bosworth Field in 1485. He examines contemporary accounts with an emphasis on the reports of Dominic Mancini, who wrote from his own observations. He reviews pro-Richardian or revisionist theories as well as traditionalist viewpoints in an attempt to provide an objective narrative about the king's life.

The book starts with the earliest known information (at about age 10) and continues through Edward IV's reign and into Richard's, ending with his death in 1485. Separate appendices deal with the disappearance of the princes Edward and Richard and Richard's character.

In a nutshell, the author characterizes Richard III as a loyal, honorable, talented (military skills) leader as well as a devoted and religious family man. These strengths, however, were offset by inflexibility - a mind that saw black and white, but nothing in between - and political naivete.

Kendall's analysis of the available information concerning the disappearance of the princes is objective and sensible. His conclusion: Richard probably knew what happened to them. If he sanctioned their deaths, he did so because that's what rulers did to deposed kings in medieval times. The times were cruel and Richard was a man of his times.

Equally objective is Kendall's assessment of Richard's character.

The book is an excellent introduction to the life of a fascinating man as well as the times in which he lived. Highly recommended. FYI, this edition is a reprint of the original work published in 1955.

Marvellous read
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2005-10-12
I bought this book to help with my a-level history personal study. Out of all the books i have used, this has been the upmost useful. The quotes, references to sources etc help the reader to bind in all the information from the book into a easily readable story. Full of facts whilst interesting. Having use to the appendix was very useful because i needed information about the 'princes in the tower'.

Bloody brilliant...
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2006-02-11
It seems that you can find two camps comcerning Richard III - people who think that he was truly the deforemed monster portrayed by Shakespeare or those who think that he ought to be canonized. Paul Murray Kendall did an excellent job of rendering a portrait of King Richard III that does not revolve around the typical Tudor propoganda and at the same time doesn't clamour for sainthood to be bestowed upon him. Anyone who is looking for a relatively unbiased view of this misunderstood monarch should definitely look into this excellent source!


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