Robert W. Norris Books
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Mexican fishesReview Date: 2007-01-09
Fishes of MexicoReview Date: 2006-07-20

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Beautiful Examination of Self DiscoveryReview Date: 2007-10-16
Toraware is the story of three people living in Japan trying to find their place in the world. Harlan is a writer and a Vietnam War veteran in his early thirties who is unsure what he wants exactly out of life. He has come to Japan to teach English and to experience a new culture. While there he's met two women who are also trying to find themselves and each has become connected to Harlan. Sachiko has fallen for Harlan and his writing but her feelings are not reciprocated. Sachiko has her own dark past and her own issues to work through and has a hard time dealing with rejection. Yoshiko and Harlan have a much closer relationship, but Harlan will not open up to her. Yoshiko is also fairly promiscuous, has an alcohol problem and also has a dark past stemming from psychological issues.
Toraware is the tale of a universal need for acceptance. As I mentioned before, we've seen these themes in other works, but they are presented beautifully here. Norris' words match the beauty of the Japanese landscapes that he describes. You can tell that Norris has spent quite a bit of time in Japan as reading the novel is somewhat of a study in the culture of Japan. I thoroughly enjoyed that aspect of the novel as Japan has always had a fascinating culture to me. Norris relates to his audience that through language barriers, culture barriers, and gender barriers, we can all relate at the core of what it is to be human.
This book was a great surprise and I look forward to getting to know Norris' work a little bit better. He's published a few other books, one of which is actually used to teach English to Japanese students. It's title is The Many Roads to Japan. Toraware was a book that could be extremely tedious if written by the wrong person seeing as there's not much action in the book. The book's main aesthetic is very voyeuristic. The reader is simply a fly on the wall as we experience the characters sorting out their lives. In Norris' hands, the book is a huge success and a pleasure to read. 4.5/5
SplendidReview Date: 2002-12-19

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More revealing than expected!Review Date: 2006-08-09
"Autumn Shadows in August" is truly a novel that brings one through the course of a life, with an ending that may be much more revealing than expected. This is the story of a man who spent the early years of his life constantly searching for a place to fit in, yet never truly finds it, and takes you along the deep and uprooted path of his previous years.
His early life is filled with drugs and hallucinogenics that may have upset the world as we know it, but may have led the main character, David Thompson, to the path he was destined. As he and his beloved wife travel through Europe, they seem to find the meaning of their own life within the experiences of many countries. Kaori, Thompson's wife, is a Japanese woman who was always lost too, until later in life she seemed to blossom into a comfort zone which included her husband. Thompson, referred to by his wife Kaori as "honey-chan", was never sure where he was destined to end up in life. Being hit with the normal trials of mid-life, he and his wife have other issues they have faced that perhaps help to give them a better perspective on life. She is a cancer survivor and he is bearing the medical problems of hepatitis. They come to grips with the realization that they not only are older, but have found a way to realize the comforts they have always searched for in life.
A combination love story and mid-life coming of age fiction, Robert Norris seems to be able to share the outside influences of this exceptional couple and the inner most, deepest feelings that are sometimes enhanced by hallucinogens. They not only find their own, individualized purpose in life through a travel of the past, but they find the soul touching need and care for each other as a couple. Meeting many people from David's past, Kaori and the reader gain a sense of self worth from the intense friendships David has formed with people throughout Europe.
This absolutely breath taking novel brings the reader to a whole new level of understanding life. It will not only stir your own realizations of where your life has taken you, but perhaps open your mind and heart to new adventures.
A timeless tale from the depths of an unhappy life in Japan to the hot pursuit of an aging ghost and an overall remarkable storyReview Date: 2006-05-08
Traveling the landscapes of the mindReview Date: 2006-04-23
Thompson is an American expatriate living in Japan. When several crises converge upon Thompson and his wife, Kaori, they decide to travel across Europe, repeating a journey that Thompson made twenty-six years earlier. They are planning to meet a friend from Thompson's past. In Amsterdam, Thompson meets a mysterious, other-worldly stranger who hands Thompson a box containing the key to the Magic Theater (readers of Hesse's Steppenwolf will instantly recognize this stranger). Thompson eats what he finds in the box and embarks upon a psychedelic journey where his memories condense and replay like scenes in a drama. Through this sequence, the reader learns why Thompson is an expatriate and begins to see the parallels between Thompson's life and the lives of Hesse and Lowry.
Thompson's journey continues as he travels through Germany (where he finds that the friend he has traveled so far to see has just died), Switzerland and Italy. As Thompson makes his way across Europe, Lowry's shape-shifting ghost occasionally stops by to check up on Thompson and offer guidance.
Author Robert Norris's writing style is rich in symbolism. Norris tends to intersperse his narrative with expository writing - a technique employed with great effect by yet another expatriate pacifist writer, Aldous Huxley. Autumn Shadows in August reminds me of Huxley's later novels in other ways as well, in particular for the protagonist's almost mystical detachment and sense that he and his loved ones are part of something greater than themselves. By the novel's end, the reader has glimpsed the forces and obstacles that shape an artist and compel him to write. I am looking forward to reading other works by this author.
A Thought Provoking Masterpiece!Review Date: 2006-03-18
It's an inspiring, meaningful story of a journey through the mind of an enlightened and experienced soul; at the same time it's an exhilarating and humorous adventure, an exploration of great art, literature, and architecture, and a beautiful, emotionally enthralling romance.
But this book is far more than the sum of its parts, and my feeble literary reviewing skills can do no justice to this eloquent and multifaceted tale.
This book is highly recommended.

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Good StuffReview Date: 2007-03-08
Easy and Complete TextReview Date: 2007-07-01
One caution is to remember the book was written at the beginning of the 20th century and so may be lacking recent scholarship. Nevertheless I recommend it as a good second text on the subject of church history. As the intro says, it is a book noted for its "clarity, compactness, and balance."
Irritating at times, but overall well-doneReview Date: 2004-02-23
The editors at the beginning make note of how Walker was indebted to the fruits of German scholarship--that becomes evident really quick in the book. In examing the early years of Chrisitanity (Christ through the rise of Docetism), Walker, although I disagree with parts of his methodolgy, has cogent arguments for the development of Christological thought. His contribution to early Trinitarian thought is outstanding. He outperforms himself in the times Jan Hus to the Reformation. Although I had a good grip on the Reformation, I found myself re-reading those chapters simply because they are so good.
This is a well-researched book. However, I was shocked when I saw the price. Nevertheless, and the bigger the checkbook the better, this book is well-worth the horrendous price (ok, I understand there is a reason for the price). Tolle Legge!
A Recognized Classic in the Field of Christian HistoryReview Date: 2005-09-17
The subsequent revised versions included a final section on 'Modern Christianity.' So much of what happen in the 20th century was added to later editions. The book is nicely divided into seven (VII) periods. These seven periods are:
Period I - The Beginnings to the Gnostic Crisis. This period covers the first two centuries of Christianity from Christ's time to the apologists ending in the second century.
Period II - From the Gnostic Crisis to Constantine. This is one of the better sections or 'Periods' marking the growth of the Church, the formation of Catholicism, and the development of theology.
Period III - The Imperial State Church. This section covers controversies which arose (Arianism, Pelagianism, etc.). It also covers the division which occurred between the East and the West, Augustine of Hippo, the Growth of the Papacy, etc.
Period IV - The Middle Ages to the Close of the Investiture Controversy. This section covers the expansion of Christianity into Europe, The Greek Church, the Papacy and the Ottoman Empire, and much more.
Period V - The Latter Medieval Ages. This is another excellent section covering the rise of Scholasticism and its thinkers (Anselm, Aquinas, etc.). The rise of Orders (Dominicans, Franciscans, etc.) The effects/theology of mysticism, Wyclif and Hus, and into the Italian Renaissance (and much more).
Period VI - The Reformation. This sections covers every aspect of the Reformation from beginning to end in as much detail as can be allowed in about 150 pages.
Period VII - Modern Christianity. This section covers the end of the Middle Ages to the current day. Christianity in America, Britain, the rise of Protestantism, the Great Awakenings, Deism, Pietism, the Puritans, Colonial discoveries and the spread of Christianity to North America, etc. are all covered in this section.
One of the best features of this work is the bibliography. The compilers have actually created a bibliography for every period mentioned above. So if the reader wants to do more specific research on any given period or thinker, there is a very detailed reference/bibliography section that is 21 pages long. This makes for excellent research sources and further study.
Overall, this work is very well balanced, very well written in such a short space. It covers nearly every detail from major to minor (with the exception of a few things that were left out that should have been included - e.g. Louis de Molina is not included, and thus Molinism is left out). It is quite easy to read, and is systematically put together in a nice chronological order (as history actually unfolded).
If you are looking for a detailed but somewhat brief (709 plus pages) Christian History text, then I recommend this one.
Informative but can be too detailedReview Date: 2002-09-03
Overall, a very worthwhile book if you try not to get bogged down with all the dates and names put forth. From my limited experience, I think this is also a very thorough book which has gone through several revisions to keep it current.
Except for the fact I needed this for a class, I would not have purchased it at full price, or close to full price.


Dull as ditchwaterReview Date: 2004-03-06
The sad thing is that with the settings and time period, this novel could have been fascinating. But the author has taken golden material and turned it into junk - reverse alchemy, if you will. I'm sure that this book was fascinating to live, but unfortunately that fascination was not translated onto the printed page. Don't waste your time.
One star.
Good travelogue and personal philosophy storyReview Date: 2003-12-30
The mountains of southeast Turkey are full of the sort of people who shoot first and don't bother with asking questions later. The two pass many disabled vehicles along the way, but don't even think of stopping; the philosophy is "every man for himself." They eventually reach Teheran, the Iranian capital. It's a dirty, noisy, congested place, like a city that's grown up too quickly. They continue to Mashad, Hasan's hometown, a much cleaner and nicer place.
David is invited to a meeting of an informal group of young people to discuss political philosophy; they have heard about his political rebellion. It's during the reign of the Shah, whose secret police, the SAVAK, are everywhere, so many precautions are needed. A few days later, the leaders of the group are arrested, and David is told to leave Iran immediately. He continues on to Afghanistan.
While there, he meets some Westerners who are more interested in drugs than in getting a different perspective of the world around them. He is told that he must continue on to India, to experience it first hand. Emotionally, it will hit him harder than anything in his life, but it's something he must do. Throughout his whole trip, and expecially in India, he experiences great kindness from total strangers. He also witnesses poverty and misery on a scale inconceivable to the average American.
This book is short, but it works on several levels. It's a good travel story, it's a good political and personal philosophy story, and it's a fine tale of an average person looking for his place in the world. It's well worth reading.

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Poorly PresentedReview Date: 2007-11-16
In fact I would say it is a downright shame!
awesome serviceReview Date: 2002-09-05
Shameful - Too many major errors - Best to avoidReview Date: 2004-10-17
By no means am I a Mathematics expert, but this book has too many glaring errors. See Chapter 4 in particular, they even answer some of their own test questions wrong. For example problem #23 or pages 71-72, the graph is totally wrong I can tell with out using a calculator.
How dare someone release such a poorly checked text.
A good start...Review Date: 2000-07-18
I cannot believe how much I paid for this book!Review Date: 2001-10-11
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