Works Books


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

Works
Where Jesus Walked
Published in Hardcover by Thomas Nelson (2006-03-01)
Author: Ken Duncan
List price: $24.99
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"Where Jesus Walked..."
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-17
I thoroughly enjoyed the book and its excellent photographs tied to Biblical excerpts and history. This enabled me to feel like I was there and saw all the important sites short of traveling there to see them. The presentation and color is fantastic.

Where Jesus Walked
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-08
It is an incredible book, and more people should know about it and purchase it! The colors in the book are so crisp and clear. It makes faith come alive! It shipped very quickly and came in perfect condition.

Don't miss an awesome book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-21
After I received my initial order and flipped the pages and read them, I realized that the contents were awesome and very easy to follow so I order 3 more copies as presents for my daughters. They are delighted with the book. I recomend this book for all followers of Jesus, as you graphically get to see and read about the places he must have been when he was with us on earth.

Inspirational Book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-21
In reading the Bible, I find it hard to invision the various places mentioned. This book is wonderful and it is such an inspiration--it makes me feel like I am walking the footpaths as people in the bible. The photographs are absolutely beautiful. I can't find the appropriate
words to explain just how much this book means to me and how it has given me insight to where bible history took place. The words of the Bible now
have pictures.

Where Jesus Walked
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-08
The book is brilliant - the photography superb and very sensitive. It is inspiring to see many of the places as Jesus would have seen them. I had seen the book before and searched online to get a copy for a friend and was very happy with the process and delivery via Amazon.

Works
Women's Work: The First 20,000 Years : Women, Cloth, and Society in Early Times
Published in Paperback by W. W. Norton & Company (1995-09)
Author: Elizabeth Wayland Barber
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Incredible history of women and fiber art
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2004-05-10
As a fiber artist, I am very interested in the history of fiber. Elizabeth Barber's "Women's Work: The First 20,000 Years" is fantastic, both as a history of the use of fibers and as a history of working women. I learned a great deal about women's role in society from her research, and it makes me proud to be a modern woman working with fiber, just as my ancestors did. Highly recommended!

One of the best books I've ever read
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 2005-08-25
Anyone interested in so-called gender studies, textiles, prehistory, or just in regular people ought to read this book. The authoress, in incredibly simple language (she can't REALLY be an academic, can she?), tells the story of women and the textile work that has (pre-) historically been theirs. Bringing the insight that only a practicing weaver or spinner could have to the dusty world of archeology, she sweeps the reader into the homes of real people. Lots of metaphors, but honestly, it's that kind of book: rich. I only wish I could read it again for the first time.

Fascinating Story, Gifted Storyteller
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-19
I ran across this book almost by accident. I was feeling rather glum one day, and I asked my wife to recommend a book for me - something that was out of the ordinary and would cheer me up. She recommended "Women's Work". I was a little skeptical that it would appeal to a techie guy like myself, but soon I was absorbed in Elizabeth Wayland Barber's storytelling.

"Women's Work" tells the story of textiles in human history. In nearly every society, spinning, weaving, and sewing have been done almost exclusively by women, so the history of textiles is also a history of women's work - or one important part of it. That's still reflected in our language, for example, when we refer to the "distaff side" - a distaff being a stick used to hold fiber for spinning.

Wayland Barber tells her story with with wit and clarity. And more than that, she tells the story of the story - that is, she traces not only what we know about textiles in ancient times, but describes how we know it. So, this is not only a fine history, but it's a fine, readable treatise on historiography as well.

I can warmly recommend this book to anyone interested in textiles, or women's history, or how history is written, or who has the blues and just wants to read a darn good book.

Excellent
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2004-03-13
Interesting history of some parts of women's work. I enjoyed it very much. Whether you are interested in fabric or not, I think you'll enjoy this book. It is scholarly but still a good read that keeps your interest.

A textile lover's delight, and great for history buffs as well.
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2006-06-21
I bought this book on the recomendation of my spinning instructor. I was expecting the documentation of early spinning and weaving techniques, and the discussion of preserved textiles. I wasnt expecting to be inspired to go out and buy a copy of the Iliad and the Odyssey to read about the textile and history references that she brings up! I had no idea that Greek mythologies mention items of clothing that have been found in the area and dated to pre-Greco times....and were stil identifiable items of clothing in the last century.
Basically this book is a textile and history junkies best fix.
If you are a re-creationist,(such as the SCA) or particpating in Lving History demonstrations, you will definately want this book for its discussions of documented cloth finds,
If you like this book, you may also enjoy reading "Salt, a World History" as they mention several of the same places, and historical finds.

Works
Advertising and the Mind of the Consumer: What Works, What Doesn't, and Why
Published in Paperback by Allen & Unwin (2000-10-01)
Authors: Max Sutherland and Alice K. Sylvester
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Average review score:

Too many footnotes
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-27
I have read about half the book so far.

One thing that irks me is all the footnotes. I have not counted them but they must total in the thousands. While I agree that it is important not to use somebody else's work without acknowledgement, this book seems to take it to the extreme. I can tell that the author(s) must be English majors because normal people would simply not use so many footnotes. It would have been better to use the "shotgun" approach - a statement something like "some statements in this book are not entirely those of the authors, other works have been used blah, blah, blah...."

As for the content of the book, there is the overwhelming hint of inside advertising for various companies. Examples are good, I agree, but I get the feeling there are many hidden advertisements for various companies.

A lot of the information is common sense. I thought this book would give me more insight into the way advertising works, so far I have been underwhelmed to the point of disappointment.

I can only hope the rest of the book will make up for a lackluster beginning.

The advertising behind the advertising
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-14
If I had to choose one book as a survival book in the adfield, this would definitely be my weapon of choice.
It has down to earth and truthful advertising insights about how things work or don't in the advertising universe.

It really, really is a must have for all us who deal from the agency side or the marketing side of the ad business.
Better if any agency and client read this before to fully understand one another, in working better off as one team aiming to one vision.

This book details and focus everything from the psychological point of view.
This one is definitely a keeper!

The best book on the psychology behind advertising by far
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-03
I was introduced to this book several years ago when I was in the ad agency industry.
Since then, my issue has been read and re-read, referenced countless times.
My copy mysteriously disappeared (hey who could blame them??) so have just rebought the newest version of this book.
The book is brilliant because it gets behind the psychology of the buyer, allowing you to really and simply understand the thought process behind the buying decision.
Others who have touched on the subject of the psychology of reasons why we buy have made the content too heavy, too theoretical and let's face it - Boring with a capital "B" ... but not these authors.
It has great examples of ad campaigns throughout the book.
Personally this book has helped me design and write more responsive advertising campaigns as the many learnings from this book have stayed.
This is a must-read for anyone in an ad agency, students of marketing and advertising, and anyone in the marketing industry.
Buy this book, you won't regret it.

VERY good book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-09-24
and you should read it. it keeps it's promise(advertising and the mind of the consumer:what works what doesn't and why).its all there in the book, explained, with plenty of examples and pretty complete. if you are interested in this field buy this book, and then consider other books if you really want to, but dont miss out on this book.simply a very good book. we should have more books like this.

Highly recommended
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2006-06-12
The most clearly illustrated book about the once mysterious mechanics behind advertising. I wish I would have read it ten years ago when I joined the ad. industry.

Works
The Amazing True Story of a Teenage Single Mom
Published in Hardcover by Hyperion (1998-09-02)
Author: Katherine Arnoldi
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Resistance art that is truly amazing!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-21
I've always been a fan of feminist comics. I wrote my thesis in 2003 on underground feminist comix as resistance art and include Arnoldi's work because it's so outside the norm. Autobiographic with stark images of people who've abused her turning into monsters. Her story of resistance and self-preservation is inspirational and moving. Her artwork is simple; it doesn't need to be more complex. Her story has enough complexity. It's a phenomenal read for an adult but it's also a great book to share with teens. I've used it in middle school and high school therapy groups and had a great response. I can't recommend this book enough!

The Heroism of Solidarity
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-12
Arnoldi's graphic-novel about a single mother is great. It is not only a direct and clear critique of the problems facing young single-mothers today (an increasingly large demographic in the U.S.), but it is also a hopeful and inspiring story about the way out of those problems -- a way out created by young single mothers cooperating as they find solidarity with one another. Although the story is simply told and very easy to read, it is not a simple story, and she weaves together issues of sexuality, family, and labor union politics.

great story in comic
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-10-13
I'm not a teen mother (or any sort of mother), but after reading a story about her struggles and her decision to put it in a comic form, I was intrigued. Her drawings describe her transition from being neglected by her mother and having no other place to go, other than to live with her sister and abusive brother-in-law. She was raped by a stranger in a car, after she left her sisters house and was again rejected from her mother, which left her to wonder the streets. She had the child from the rape, and she dreampt of leaving the town and attending college. When she was fired from her factory job after exposing hazardous working environments, she took off with her new boyfriend to Arizona. When her boyfriend began beating her, she left him, even camping out in the desert under the stars. Eventually she met up with a positive peer group, and began attending college. Great story, helps analyze the variety of circumstances that can happen to teenage mothers, particulaly alot of the negative social backlash that affects them.

Surprisingly powerful
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-06-17
I don't have a lot of experience with graphic novels, but this one is really powerful. It almost moved me to tears in several places. I love the illustrations in which she imagines what's going on in her daughter's brain. A great book to share with teen moms or any young mom who needs some encouragement about pursuing a college degree. Accessible even for those who aren't big readers.

Life is hard, but you can somebody if you don't give up.
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2000-12-24
This is the true poignant story of a young woman and her struggles to make dreams come true. Katherine Arnoldi, raped and left with a baby at 17, was forced, out of necessity, to take a dead-end, hazardous factory job. Her dysfunctional family tried to crush her and her dreams; her boyfriend turns on her and beats her. Yet through all of her pain and despair she does not give up. Arnoldi shows, in her comic book form, that if you hold on and pursue your dreams that you can overcome the ugliest past. This book is a treasure. It is simply great. And because it is so good you will want to pass it on. This is a book that can speak to the broken hearts of hundreds, if not thousands, of struggling teenagers, single moms or not. Her enduring love for her child, her courage to change her circumstances, a little luck, and a few kind people, transforms what could be a disheartening story into an inspiration.

Works
Approaching Zion (The Collected Works of Hugh Nibley, Vol 9)
Published in Hardcover by Shadow Mountain (1989-11)
Author: Hugh Nibley
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Outstanding book for endowed LDS Church members
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-10-07
Hugh Nibley was obviously a very brilliant scholar of religious and secular history and the associated languages. This book is a collection of his talks which focuses on how truly living the Gospel of Jesus Christ can help us to become like Jesus and our Heavely Father. Nibley's objective seems to be to help us understand what things are really of most importance in our lives when viewed from an eternal prospective. A reader of the book can only appreciate many of his references if he/she has received his/her temple endowments and returned to the temple often to appreciate the significance of the temple ceremony.

I enjoyed the book very much and feel that it has given me a deeper appreciation of what I need to be doing during my mortal probation in order to become what I want to be when this time has ended for me.

The True Law of Economics...
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-10-06
As a non-Mormon who was once a 20 yr temple going Mormon I have to say that it is funny that with all the truthsayers doing reviews and writing mormon books, after 8 years being outside the LDS Church and what do I do? I come full circle back to one of my favorite all time books: Approaching Zion! It's relavancy to the current state of our world economy which is based on a Monetary system that actually entices us to choose unwisely, creating further socio-economic problems for every human being (not just mormons) is the cause of the root problems we live under now. The Law of Consecration, if actually lived by the Mormons, would have kept me in the church, as seeking answers to my quest for justice and truth caused me to be spiritually motivated out of the limited church view. It turns out the answers I was seeking were historical as a start and related to larger core issues which are not addressed by any religious group at present - if it can be at all. It's a sad but predictable dilemma that once somebody has a great spiritual experience then others want to experience the same thing so methods and rituals are replicated so we, like robots, can fool ourselves into thinking we are as cool as they were! lol Joseph Smith actually said that to follow after the experiences of others without having the experiences for ourselves was the utmost folly! Religions which began as a stepping stone become stumbling blocks to further conscious living. It is the same with the United Order, the way of happiness or the Law of Consecration. Within the spirit of the "law" is an eternal truth: there is a way which if lived can make one happy. It can be described as an order formally but simply it is just a way of Being. It has been described as the economy of God, where those who live having "all things in common" were blessed, uplifted, full of joy and rich beyond money and profits. The times that groups of people were able to live in this way it seems that their core belief was not that Jesus is the Christ or any of that religous group-wish-think. The core acting belief was that we do love each other with a love unfeigned. Unconditional love for others and total acceptance of others beliefs whatever they may be were paramount. We eat, we share, we care. Now I have plenty of time to do research and study, write, invent things, whatever I love to do, whatever thrills me to spend my time at whatever I love to jump out of bed in the morning excited to do(the proper meaning of the word "WORK"; it is not menial boring labor; it is that which uplifts self and others). Right work is essential to happiness and the proper attitudes and values (righteousness) will automatically cause the cup within ones self to overflow so that others catch the fire also. It is a joy to live simply, it is affecting, spreads like thunder and brings immutable joy. The historical records are evidence of this though the records are small. The problems we have today are always the problems to reappear with the ideas concerning private property rights, money and then greed, avarice, theft, pride and other evils. Money has no place in a Zion society as it is just a piece of paper or rock or metal. Private property is unnecessary as well as "who can own the land or the sky or the water?" It is the unenlightened who think such things. The Resources (Rich things or goodness of the land) should be used to uplift the whole society, to lessen burdens and raise the standard of living for all beings. This is not limited to a larger home but was not meant to mean such at its core meaning. That which cannot satisfy is property. Who can gain the whole world but lose his own soul? No church and no religion has the key to building Zion. And here today, in 2008, we have to undo the damage that has been inflicted on our psyches our morals and our values by the current money based system which will not, never has and never will lead to happiness. I long for a Zion society and have committed myself to getting rid of any beliefs which hold me back from living it now not at some later date or when I'm commanded by some authority figure who sitteth in the temple as if he were God. As a mormon, I made a covenant in the temple to live it long ago and I'm doing so as best as I can. I stopped supporting our current monetary structure. I do not support the military machine which wastes resources and I've become active in politics such as might help alleviate the ruin on us slaves. Perhaps one day we will see that it isn't anything but beliefs that really separates us and causes us to serve the wrong master. Change your beliefs or discreate them entirely and watch how life will change! I loved Hugh Nibley's approach to Zion. He inspired my deep longing and spiritually encouraged me to delve deeper and be truly free. I don't own this book now but wish that I did. I used to own every volume in the series plus the Journal of Discources and other precious gems but if I had only 1 book of all of these I would choose Approaching Zion! Also see "Zeitgeist" the movie. It is eye opening and connected to this topic for those with ears to hear.

And it's Nibley with the rebound!!!!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-12
Dr. Nibley is Brilliant! Simply brilliant! Everything that he says in this book is outstanding. Face it people, both LDS and non-LDS, we simply cannot hope to dream about living in Zion based on the current situation that the world is in. We, as human beings, are simply too greedy to do so. And Zion is based completely on the idea that greed and money are non-existent. We cannot have Zion with the current political and economic mess that we have created, and Dr. Nibley shows us why. To the non-LDS reader, Dr. Nibley shows the joy in building Zion and the danger in denying it. To the LDS reader, Dr. Nibley shows the danger of denying the knowledge that they have gained by being exposed to the principles of Zion. He also details the principles of Zion and how people must live and dwell in Zion in order for the system and Law of Consecration to work. And he gives some very interesting history in detailing the history of Zion, including the city of Enoch. So this was a fantastic book written by an excellent scholar.

Nibley at his most personal and most challenging to our normal mode of life
Helpful Votes: 15 out of 16 total.
Review Date: 2005-09-21
This is Hugh Nibley at his most personal and most challenging. Here he expresses his faith, insights, and commitment to trusting the Lord and taking his covenants most seriously. He hammers home again and again that we receive everything from the Lord and that we are blind to many of the blessings we have all around us. We refuse to take them because we are after the things of this world and are of no worth, though we have been warned to turn away from them.

Dr. Nibley implores us to begin living the Law of Consecration. He gives us no quarter. We know what it means, we know how to do it, and we know the covenants we have made. We also know the promises the Lord has made to us concerning this Law. I don't know about you, but I find this beyond what I can do understand or do in my current circumstances. Yet, I feel the need to ponder what the author is telling me and to move towards this principle of life.

These are essays and papers that were written since the 1970s. Many are published here for the first time (unless you read them as papers from FARMS). As I say, these are very challenging writings. Not because they are hard to understand, but because they are challenging in very serious ways. Dr. Nibley takes the gospel very seriously and literally. He points out to us that we have too often inverted values to our detriment. He deplores the way education has changed and that learning and thinking have been replaced by feeling and degree accumulation.

The last few essays in the book are among the most directly challenging to our present way of life. His discussion of Aristotle's notion of goods of first and second intent is wide-ranging and quite informative. The last essay on the atonement is quite beautiful and insightful. I think my favorite essay is his funeral address for one of his friends.

Nibley's plain speaking about his faith in the atonement and the challenge it presents us for our lives here on earth and in eternity is inspiring. The writings here bear careful reading and re-reading and then meditation. You will have to change your life if you take them seriously. And that is unsettling and that is what we ask teachers to do: to shake up our lives.

Dr. Nibley continues his great teaching.

HUGH NIBLEY DOES IT AGAIN
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-05
ONCE AGAIN HUGH NIBLEY DOES IT AGAIN. HE IS MAGNIFICENT IN HIS RESEARCH AND COMPREHENSIVE CLARITY MAKING THE ISSUES BEING DISCUSSED CLEAR AND PRECISE.

Works
The Art of Nonfiction: A Guide for Writers and Readers
Published in Paperback by Plume (2001-02-01)
Author: Ayn Rand
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Average review score:

Seminal Text For Writers
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-26
Ayn Rand is one of the foremost communicators of our time. Her ability to communicate complex issues cogently, logically and passionately means that, decades later, her works are still being sited as `the text' to read, in politics, philosophy or morality. Clarity, integration and style are thoroughly discussed. The advice given here applies to all non-fiction writing (see also her book on fiction writing The Art of Fiction: A Guide for Writers and Readers) and it's not the usual recycled blurb. Rand's method of thinking, led to her method of writing and style. This book lets you into some of those secrets and allows anybody to improve their writing skills.

You cannot stop a bandersnatch.
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-05
I was rather impressed with what Rand had to say about writing and style. As the authoress of the second-most influential book ("Atlas Shrugged"), she has a lot to say on the matter. And, as always, you cannot stop a bandersnatch.

There are some preliminaries. First, as with all of her writings, this book's ideas are outgrowths of her philosophy of Objectivism. For Rand aficionados, you know that it keeps cropping up with everything that she writes. So if you either agree with her, or are willing to plow around it, then get this book.

Second, this book is really edited selections from a longer seminar she had on writing. If the discussion seems out of joint at times, it is due to the selecting/editing process. To help round out here ideas, I suggest reading "The Art of Writing Fiction" and "The Romanic Manifesto," all of which were extracted from this same meeting.

Rand is one of the finest systematic thinkers ever, and this book shows it. She is able to take something apart, separate, correlate, and analyze the parts, and then put it back together again.

By being so analytical, she gets the writing process right. The first five chapters are really the basting cap essential in explosive writing. Writing can be simplified by preparation, organization, and thinking, which is the message of these chapters.

Chapters 5 through 8 cover the more traditional nuts and bolts of writing. Chapter 5, on creating an outline, is the key link between thinking and writing. She is right when suggesting that everyone writing nonfiction should use an outline. It organizes both the mind and the writing. I was glad that the editors included some sample outlines of Rand's writing, to watch how the process proceeds from outline to full article.

I think out of all of the chapters, "Writing the Draft" was the most helpful. The editor subtitled it "The primacy of the subconscious." This highlights Rand's point that writing is really something that comes spontaneously form a disciplined mind. Furthermore, the chapter contains several subsections on "The Squirms," helpful mulling, euthanizing pet sentences, and handling interruptions.

This last point cannot be emphasized too much: writing is a job, and it takes concentration. Rand likens it to heating a blast furnace--you work up to a high temperature, and that temperature must be maintained for weeks to get the desired results. While writing "Atlas Shrugged," she had to sequester herself for thirteen years.

I have a similar experience while writing. People visibly see you clacking on the computer, but what they do not see is the amount of focus inside your head, invisible to your eyes. So they want you to answer the phone, run this errand, baby-sit, chat, paint a house, watch some idiotizing program on TV, or come in on your day off because so-and-so called in sick so they could stay home watching some idiotizing program on TV. You need to be as harsh with writing as you would with your bill-paying job. Indeed, a good writer sees writing AS A SECOND JOB!

The last chapters are a potpourri of topics that did not fit in either "The Romantic Manifesto" or "The Art of Fiction." They are helpful for what they are, but seem a bit out of place and curt. They serve as surveys to the topics.

The only critique I have would be rearranging the chapters. Move chapter 12 ("Acquiring Ideas For Writing") up between chapters 1 and 2, since the thinking process--the process of reverie and listening to the unconscious percolate--precedes the choice of a subject and theme. I would also move chapter 11 ("Selecting a title") to go after chapter 7 ("Editing"), and moved chapter 8 ("Style") between the chapters on writing the draft and editing. Since this book was edited posthumously, this organizational error is not hers.

Here is my ideal order:

1. Preliminary remarks
2. Acquiring Ideas for Writing
3. Choosing a Subject and Theme
4. Judging one's Audience
5. Applying Philosophy
6. Creating an Outline
7. Writing the Draft
8. Style
9. Editing
10. Selecting a Title
11. Book Reviews
12. Writing a Book
Appendix: Outlines

For a second or third reading, it may be helpful to use this order, since it follows the process of thinking-writing-rewriting.

*

I have put this book in my mix of style guides, and will read it along with Strunk and White, Trimble's "Writing With Style," The Chicago Manual, and "The Little, Brown Handbook."

(I would rate it five stars, but the disordered chapter organization talked me out of it.)

Excellent guide to writing
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-03
This book offers guidance on a variety of topics and problems that a writer of non-fiction, whether articles or books, might encounter. The advice is never formulaic, but rather gives the reader methods by which to improve his own writing process and style. Highly recommended.

One For Your Library.
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2006-02-23
It starts slow and plods along for a few chapters but eventually Rand strikes a resonant chord and the writing comes to life. Ayn Rand will get your mind 'right' about writing and get your mental tool-box organized, to handle odd-jobs or the magnum-opus.

Clear as a bell
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2005-08-09
As with so much of Ayn Rand's writing, she takes on an issue (in this case, nonfiction writing) that seems hopelessly complex, and then explains it with such clarity that you're left wondering what all the confusion was about in the first place. If you're stuck in your writing, even if you've never read anything by Rand before, this book is priceless.

Works
Asperger Syndrome and Adolescence: Helping Preteens & Teens Get Ready for the Real World
Published in Paperback by Fair Winds Press (2004-06)
Author: Teresa Bolick
List price: $14.95
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Average review score:

So Helpful
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-09
As the parent of an adolescent child with Asperger's, I found this book to be just what was needed -- a no nonsense approach to helping our kids with a sense of humor. This is the second book by this author that I have purchased. I will purchase more, I am sure.

Insightful, Useful, and Enlightening
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-15
This book is one of the best I've seen about the transitional issues that arise when someone with Aspergers reaches their teens. With my son, we find each developmental step has its own challenges, but the movement into middle school, with the increased expectations of self-management and the early teen student issues among peers has been a bigger challenge than most. This book helped me frame these issues as they apply to my son, improving my understanding. Then I could apply many of the ideas provided both directly and through the school. My biggest problem is that this is such a slow read ... not because it is hard to read (to the contrary, its very understandable and straightforward.) Its a "slow go" because of all of the underlining and page marking I am doing to track the "good stuff." Dr Bolick has done those of use living in these situation a major service with this work! I fully recommend it.

Excellent - Must Have !
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-10
More and more books are addressing the problems ASD kids encounter in their latter years . Teresa Bolick has written a well thought out and structured book that answers many of the concerns that parents and teachers have. Would you need another book dealing with this area ? I would say...yes. It is such an important time in these kids lives that a comprehensive knowledge is needed by all those that care for these yound adults.


reviewed by Special Education Teacher and father of ASD child.

HIGHLY RECOMMEND!!!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-25
I have a son with Aspergers. This book is a great help!

Extremely Helpful Resource!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-07
I haven't finished reading this book, but so far what I've read completely fits. My AS teen needs all the help he can get with organization, social skills, etc. This book gives real life examples and excerps from real parents and adolescents with AS. This book is helping me to better understand my child and to help him develop strategies and coping mechanisms so he can have a successful life. Definitely a good addition to my AS library!

Works
Atlas of Pediatric Physical Diagnosis
Published in Hardcover by C.V. Mosby (1997-03)
Author: Basil J. Zitelli
List price: $125.00
Used price: $13.88

Average review score:

Book review
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-10
A must have for NP school. Great book. Thanks Amazon for providing the best prices and great services.

Must Have for Pediatrics
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-07
If you work in a pediatric practice which serves children, you will find yourself turning to this book again and again. It has very helpful and complete text and pictures. Our pediatric residents use it as a primary board review text. I highly recommend it. Anyone want to buy a Nelson's???

Great for the boards and the office
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-28
I bought this to study for the pediatric boards and it was very helpful for the picture session. I've also found it extremely helpful everyday in seeing patients especially the dermatology section.

Sigh....
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2006-09-25
Another ubiquitous book. A "must have"....or "must have owned". Too big. People just buy it for the pictures anyway, has anyone really read the text in Zitelli's? Most people use it as an atlas to review for boards...My logic is, if you're gonna just use it for pictures, why not google images? There are other atlases out there that are less cumbersome and cheaper. Plus, do you think the pedi board people will take a picture right out of a well-known text?

Useful as a bookend or coffe table a-la Kramer in Seinfeld.

Could not be better
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-04-26
This is the finest text a pediatrician can own for daily practice, board brush up and companion to the standard textbooks. It can fill many gaps inherent in the nature of pediatric training and is eminently relevant. If the authors never pen another things, they can be forever proud of this work. Brava.

Works
The Bible and the Future.
Published in Paperback by Wm. B. Eearmans (1994)
Author: ANTHONY: HOEKEMA
List price:
Used price: $10.70

Average review score:

Back to the Future...
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-23
Anthony A. Hoekema's "The Bible and the Future" is a fairly thorough exploration of all the major issues surrounding the study of last things (eschatology). Admittedly, a three hundred page book cannot do complete justice to such a complex and varied field, yet he has given us a good place to begin exploring.

In my experience, eschatology is dominated by a sort of generalized randomness ("I don't know much about the end times, but I know I don't believe THAT...") or even a passive indifference ("I'm a PANmillennialist - it'll all pan out in the end") or even a sort of sensationalized excitement ("we may not be able to predict the day or the hour, but we can predict the week and the month"). Helpfully, though, Hoekema clears away some of the confusion, cobwebs, and craziness that is often associated with the doctrine of last things.

In his favor, there are not graphs or charts (except for a few in the appendix) to try to puzzle through. He attempts to be thoroughly biblical in his approach. He does use footnotes, but they are often short and to the point, which contributes to an uncluttered text.

Even if you disagree with an Amillennial view of the end times, Hoekema is a valuable resource - as one of my professors used to say, "The best place to start looking is a good book with solid footnotes - that will cut down hours of time doing research."

While he does engage both Postmillennialism and Historic Premillennialism, he spends the bulk of his time defending Amillennialism and refuting Dispensational Premillennialism. My guess is that when he wrote in 1979, Dispensationalism was (and continues to be) the dominant view among Evangelicals when it comes to studying end times.

One negative - because it was written in 1979, it does not engage the newest wave of Postmillennialism or Dispensational Premillennialism (Left Behind series and all that). However, the critiques of both explore the biblical roots that underlie the various expressions of the theology, so even being a bit dated, it still is worth your time.

Sound Biblical Treatment
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-07
Great book. The author treats even those with different views on the subject with respect. However his writing is to convince or persuade his readers. Good read even if you don't agree with his theology.

Why "Left Behind" Needs to be Left behind
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2006-06-26
The Bible and the Future is the single best volume written on the wide topic of "end things" (eschatology) If you really want to understand what the Bible says about "The Day of the Lord" or Christ's Second Comng, His coming at death, the after life and so on, then this is the volume for you. It is for serious students of the Bible who want a biblical, evangelical perspective and not pop-theology. What concerns me more than anything, when it comes to the topic of the end times is the fact that what may blind the church from seeing the signs is the dispensational interpretation of scripture which has been embraced by conservative churches as the literal, authoritative understanding of the end. This view, arising out the the Plymouth Brethren church, condified by J.N. Darby and polularized by the Scofield Bible, "Thief in the Night Trilogy" and the new update of this original series, "Left Behind" does not handle the scripture properly and is itself not a conservative approach to scripture but is more in line with modern liberalism. If you find this commment strange then you need to read this book and go back to a thorough reading of the whole counsel of scripture on this topic.

Fair look at eschatology
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-14
Good Reformed look at eschatology, giving a fair shake to all expressions of the Christian Church in regards to eschatology. It causes us to think deeply of the nature of eschatology and why it matters for life, ministry, and life in God.

one of the few books on "end times" stuff worth reading
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-22
many books about the bible and end times stuff (eschatology), are goofy, fanatical and just not worth the time to read. However, this one is a gem. It is sane, well researched, well thought out and really does a great job of interpreting this biblical subject with sobriety and intelligence. This book has a commanding reputation amongst more level headed bible scholars and theologians. Even if you end up disagreeing with some of the book's material, you will learn an immense amount on the subject either way. This book will educate you on this subject. It's just packed with material. Forget the popular "prohecy" books about doomsday soothsayers and world war III, and instead read this one by a scripture honoring, intelligent theologian. I would rate it six stars if there were a six star option.

Works
Chicken Soup for the Volunteer's Soul: Stories to Celebrate the Spirit of Courage, Caring and Community
Published in Paperback by HCI (2002-07-15)
Authors: Jack Canfield, Mark Victor Hansen, Arline Oberst, John Boal, Tom Lagana, Laura Lagana, Arline McGraw Oberst, John T. Boal, Mark Victor Hansen, Arline McGraw Oberst, John T. Boal, Tom Lagana, and Laura Lagana
List price: $14.95
New price: $1.80
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $15.00

Average review score:

Well received
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2004-01-20
'Chicken Soup for the Volunteer's Soul' was well received by our volunteers, and it has also touch many people's hearts.
Marion Jones
The Connecticut Institute for the Blind/Oak Hill

Love it so far
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-10-23
I am a volunteer my self at the my cities animal shelter. And I am going to let the president of the volunteers borrow it after I am done. I hope they make more about volunteering.

Inspired to Volunteer
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2004-06-08
I just finished "Chicken Soup for the Volunteer Soul," which is an excellent and inspirational book. Also, a few weeks ago, I went on a Social and Service Justice Retreat. Since reading this book, making the retreat, and other inevitable signs, I feel inspired to find a place to volunteer.

Sarah

Gurnee, Illinois

An Insightful Invitation to Volunteers
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2003-01-11
I would recommend reading "Chicken Soup for the Volunteer's Soul" to anyone who has a sincere interest in his fellowmen and possesses the capacity to relate to the needs, sorrows, and joys of others. I was impressed by the work's intent, format, and content. The selections are comprehensive and meaningful, offering a wide range of volunteer experiences for the information, delight, compassion, and consideration to the book's readers. Hopefully, this publication will encourage countless individuals to find the necessary reason and desire to give of their own time, talents, and hearts to those in need in our society. For others, it will provide an understanding of the wonderful gifts of volunteering for the volunteer.

Thanks to everyone who read!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2002-10-31
I contributed a story to this book about my daughter's tender heart for others. I have always been proud of her desire to help others and Chicken Soup gave me the opportunity to share it with the world. This book made me proud to be an American and to be allowed to live in this wonderful country that cares about it's neighbors. This collection of stories will enlighten anyone to give unselfishly to the needy or to those who have less. What a great feeling inside to be a part of it all!

Denise Peebles


Books-Under-Review-->Arts-->Literature-->Authors-->W-->Wharton, Edith-->Works-->69
Related Subjects: Age of Innocence, The
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