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Q and A Books sorted by
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Quick Cooking With Pacific Flavors
Published in Hardcover by Stewart Tabori & Chang (1997-08)
List price: $35.00
New price: $21.86
Used price: $10.89
Used price: $10.89
Average review score: 

This is truly an outstanding cookbook!
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2000-11-27
Review Date: 2000-11-27
A friend recommended this book to me a few years ago - and I have been thankful ever since! Easy to follow, with easy to find ingredients, and every recipe so far has met with rave reviews from family and friends. I have alot of cookbooks, but this is the one that I use often, always with outstanding results, and recommend to friends that are interested in recipes that result in fresh, lively flavors with no more than 20 minutes or so of preparation!! REALLY GREAT BOOK!

The "Racial" Economy of Science: Toward a Democratic Future (Race, Gender, and Science)
Published in Paperback by Indiana University Press (1993-10)
List price: $25.95
New price: $10.00
Used price: $3.40
Used price: $3.40
Average review score: 

A must read!!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 1998-06-07
Review Date: 1998-06-07
This excellent book will uncover for you the dangers inhent with the modern paradigm of science. The "S knows that P" model, and the atrocities that it can alow will become evident after reading just a few essays in the Racial Economy of Science. Chanllenge yourself to face the problems that feminism presents.

Radiology Word Book
Published in Paperback by F. A. Davis Company (1990-01-15)
List price: $29.95
New price: $40.75
Used price: $5.15
Used price: $5.15
Average review score: 

My review
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2000-03-28
Review Date: 2000-03-28
I had purchased the Radiology Word Book a couple of years ago, twice and each time it was, shall we say "borrowed". I then was unable to get another copy. When I finally decided to go to Amazon.com and search for medical reference books and saw "MY BOOK", I was overjoyed. The contents of this book as a reference are irreplaceable.

Raising A Behaviorally Healthy Puppy: A pet parenting guide
Published in Perfect Paperback by Island Dog Press (2004-09-30)
List price: $15.95
New price: $9.50
Used price: $4.49
Used price: $4.49
Average review score: 

fantastic
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2005-10-24
Review Date: 2005-10-24
THis is a great book for anyone new to life with a puppy! Very easy to read & excellent advice!
Ramanujan Aiyangar Srinivasa Xxxxxx Ref 3-540-18726-X
Published in Microfilm by Springer-Verlag Berlin and Heidelberg GmbH & Co. K ()
List price:
Average review score: 

no one can read this great monument truely ,just can read
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2002-03-03
Review Date: 2002-03-03
¾Æ¹«µµ ÀÌÃ¥À» Æò°¡ÇÒ ¼ö ¾ø'Ù.

Recharge Your Biological Battery: The Q Experience
Published in Paperback by Safe Goods Publishing (2003-04)
List price: $6.95
New price: $9.98
Used price: $7.61
Used price: $7.61
Average review score: 

Debbie Allen - Webdeb.Com - Internet Source for Anti-aging
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2003-04-25
Review Date: 2003-04-25
Discover the benefits of the Q2 Water Energy Spa through Dr Peiper's book. Learn how YOU can Re-Charge YOUR battery!

Return Trips
Published in Hardcover by Knopf (1985-08-12)
List price: $14.95
New price: $4.99
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $14.95
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $14.95
Average review score: 

Adventure, Romance, Discoveries: Stories About Travel
Helpful Votes: 15 out of 15 total.
Review Date: 2005-09-23
Review Date: 2005-09-23
Alice Adams writes fifteen stories ... each about some travel experience ... every story is different from the other and captures or explores some human emotion, self-discovery, personal quest, conflict or innner turmoil, or gradual awakening to some deeper aspect of being human and alive.
In "You are What You Own: A Notebook", a married couple inherit antique furniture after the death of one of their parents. The author explores the emotional ties of one partner to the furniture. The reader is drawn to how the author examines their marriage through the eyes of the other spouse who comes to unusual discoveries about her self and what she considers important in life. Ultimately, Helen totally surprises herself and the reader by her actions. The deeply engaging story "Return Trips" is about the romance between two people who are wildly in love. The reader learns it is a May/December relationship and Carl has a congenital heart condition, which essentially means ... he is dying. Oblivious to or blocking out the inevitable, they live a carefree existence on an island off the shore of Northern Yugoslavia. Told from the first person view, the main character revisits this island many years later, after she is married and has a successful career. She compares her current feelings and life situation to the memories of those idyllic times in the past. She resolves certain problems in her life by reliving the strong passionate emotions of the past. The story "Time in Sante Fe" examines the unexpected unusual friendship between a straight female and a gay male. They agree to meet in Santa Fe, New Mexico, stay at a hotel together and explore the city and sights. This trip renews their friendship and reinforces their positive feelings for each other. Most importantly it helps them transcend everyday reality to see life from new perspectives. It fulfills each of them in ways they did not imagine. Another extraordinairy story is "Elizabeth", a highly educated and cultured lady with a fine Austrian accent, who touches the lives of two people very deeply. Minerva, a law student, is "house-sitting" when her parents, both psychologists, leave town for a conference. Due to sheer boredom, Minerva invites Elizabeth, the neighbor, over for a swim. She becomes life-long friends with this world-traveler with whom she can share her cultural interests, intimate thoughts, everyday problems and hobbies - more so than with her own parents. Elizabeth buys a house on a beach in Mexico and invites, Judson,a poet, and Minerva, a lawyer ... The two are distantly cordial and each make assumptions about the other's relationship with Elizabeth. Elizabeth's intentions are not clear ... until an unexpected event draws Judson and Minerva closer together. All the stories are contemporary and thoroughly enjoyable to read.
Each story is deeply engaging and captures the readers interest from the beginning. The reader is magnitized and kept glued to the pages as emotions and events are explored, revealing nuances of meaning and transformational experiences. The stories are magical in how they portray the lives of ordinairy or extraordinairy people in either exotic locales or in everyday situations revealing perceptive insights.
Erika Borsos (erikab93)
In "You are What You Own: A Notebook", a married couple inherit antique furniture after the death of one of their parents. The author explores the emotional ties of one partner to the furniture. The reader is drawn to how the author examines their marriage through the eyes of the other spouse who comes to unusual discoveries about her self and what she considers important in life. Ultimately, Helen totally surprises herself and the reader by her actions. The deeply engaging story "Return Trips" is about the romance between two people who are wildly in love. The reader learns it is a May/December relationship and Carl has a congenital heart condition, which essentially means ... he is dying. Oblivious to or blocking out the inevitable, they live a carefree existence on an island off the shore of Northern Yugoslavia. Told from the first person view, the main character revisits this island many years later, after she is married and has a successful career. She compares her current feelings and life situation to the memories of those idyllic times in the past. She resolves certain problems in her life by reliving the strong passionate emotions of the past. The story "Time in Sante Fe" examines the unexpected unusual friendship between a straight female and a gay male. They agree to meet in Santa Fe, New Mexico, stay at a hotel together and explore the city and sights. This trip renews their friendship and reinforces their positive feelings for each other. Most importantly it helps them transcend everyday reality to see life from new perspectives. It fulfills each of them in ways they did not imagine. Another extraordinairy story is "Elizabeth", a highly educated and cultured lady with a fine Austrian accent, who touches the lives of two people very deeply. Minerva, a law student, is "house-sitting" when her parents, both psychologists, leave town for a conference. Due to sheer boredom, Minerva invites Elizabeth, the neighbor, over for a swim. She becomes life-long friends with this world-traveler with whom she can share her cultural interests, intimate thoughts, everyday problems and hobbies - more so than with her own parents. Elizabeth buys a house on a beach in Mexico and invites, Judson,a poet, and Minerva, a lawyer ... The two are distantly cordial and each make assumptions about the other's relationship with Elizabeth. Elizabeth's intentions are not clear ... until an unexpected event draws Judson and Minerva closer together. All the stories are contemporary and thoroughly enjoyable to read.
Each story is deeply engaging and captures the readers interest from the beginning. The reader is magnitized and kept glued to the pages as emotions and events are explored, revealing nuances of meaning and transformational experiences. The stories are magical in how they portray the lives of ordinairy or extraordinairy people in either exotic locales or in everyday situations revealing perceptive insights.
Erika Borsos (erikab93)

Revelations
Published in Paperback by Q-Boro Books (2008-07-01)
List price: $14.95
New price: $11.21
Used price: $26.96
Used price: $26.96
Average review score: 

All I can say is wow!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-02
Review Date: 2008-07-02
Latrese Carter has done it again, giving fans of her writing a delightful, heart-wrenching at times, funny at times, look into the life of Jewel. Fans of Liar, Liar will enjoy this novel as well and will definitely be inspired. You simply will not be able to put it down...
The root and the flower
Published in Unknown Binding by Harcourt, Brace (1947)
List price:
Used price: $6.99
Collectible price: $25.00
Collectible price: $25.00
Average review score: 

The Art and The Philosophy
Helpful Votes: 13 out of 13 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-07
Review Date: 2006-08-07
First off the mark, a slight disclaimer: I am of a very, very removed (to the nth degree, one might say) relative of this author, and while I was always aware of him and his father from an early age as the only authors in English literature slightly related to me, I always shied away from them because of 1) A dislike of the Theosophical twaddle for which the father is known and 2) A superstitious fear of what I might find that reminded me of myself, a fear that "blood will out" as it were.
That having been said, I found this trilogy both enchanting, and tediously tendentious, by turns. The writing is superb throughout and the scenes depicted deliciously evocative. Even at its most tedious and ham-handed, the writing (almost) always manages to pull one through. A review of the three separate books on its own merits is, I think, the best way to go about reviewing this trilogy. They are very different, indeed, despite a superficial show of having the same characters in play and having the same Asiatic backdrop. Before embarking on this, however, it is necessary to put to rest a criticism that has been voiced concerning all three books: To wit, that Myers never went to India (though he did travel extensively and to nearby Ceylon) and is therefore unqualified to write a book about it. The book is set during the reign of the Emperor Akhbar in Sixteenth Century India, where nobody has been for quite some time. You may as well criticise an author for not travelling to 16th Century England or America. As is commonplace: "The past is a different country. They do things differently there." So, on to the books:
1.) The Near and the Far---This is my favourite of the three, though clearly, I think, not what my distant relative meant to be the best. This trilogy has been dubbed a philosophical novel, quite rightly so. But in this book, the philosophy, such as it is, complements rather than obtrudes into the beautiful passages and contains the characters to whom most mortals can relate: Hari and Sita. Both characters are flawed, in a sort of moral sense, that is. On the other hand, they are the only three-dimensional, fully fleshed out characters in the whole trilogy. As Sita puts it to herself, "She preferred to love, even if loving meant suffering." And who of us doesn't?
2.) Prince Jali----Here, things start to unravel for the book as a work of art. Prince Jali is thirteen years old and though the book is described as a "Bildungsroman" by Penelope Fitzgerald, with whom I disagree on just about everything, in the Introduction. It isn't. Jali is thirteen at the beginning as well at the end of the book, there is really no detectable change or growth or "coming of age" of the character, which is what a Bildungsroman is all about. The critics are right about this one: It's a very flimsily veiled philippic reflecting Myers's own experience with Bloomsbury and "artistic" groups in general. Also, a caveat for homosexual readers: You are bound to be offended by Myers's depiction of Prince Daniyal and his "Camp" of catamites, which is really what this book is about. To my mind, it should have been entitled The Camp.
3.) Rajah Amar----Here the philosophy becomes overbearing and the writing heavy-handed and we are, indeed, a far cry from the deftness of touch in The Near and the Far. Clearly, Amar, with his renunciation of the world and unworldly affect are clearly what Myers admired most and desired most to effectively convey. But, really, it just won't do. The English humanist, Smith, for example, is so clearly a take on Bertrand Russell that the book seems to be a bit of a sham. Furthermore, the confusing political machinations that have always been in the trilogy come to the fore here and make for, perhaps deliberately, unpleasant and confusing reading. It is clear that Myers was attempting to contrast all this worldliness with Amar's calm (until the end) renunciation of it, but he just doesn't pull it off to good effect.
Summation: My distant relative once said, "Why should anyone want to go on living once they know what the world is like?" This thread of melancholy pessimism and renunciation is especially evident in the last book. It comes as no great surprise, to this reader at least, that said distant relative took his own life. What is surprising is that he was, nevertheless, able to write about the beauty of life and love so poignantly. Even in the third book, which I find generally disappointing, there are stirring passages like this:
Later, when all was quiet again, he and I walked down the bare spur of a hill to a point where we could look out over the plains. The night had been dark, but now the moon, which was nearly full, came out and hung above the low mists that lay like a sea beneath us. That ghostly sea was ruddy as if dust and mist were mixed up together; and it foamed against the globe of the reddening moon as she sank. Spectral and lurid she sank, and all that region of the sky about her became the scene of a silent symbolic tragedy. P.492
This sort of brilliance and enchantment is what keeps one reading and makes the work remarkable, for all its faults. As Amar says, "When Art is great, it is by virtue of something that is not itself..." What Amar is talking about, of course, is the transcendental. And it seems to me he is spot on. From Proust to Thoreau to Shelley to, well, any great artist, we know this trait when we feel it as the mark of great literature. I humbly submit that, especially in the first book of this trilogy, Myers, with his bewitching descriptions meshing human love and enchanting beauty has attained to this realm and deserves to be ranked as one of the (perhaps lesser) immortals.
That having been said, I found this trilogy both enchanting, and tediously tendentious, by turns. The writing is superb throughout and the scenes depicted deliciously evocative. Even at its most tedious and ham-handed, the writing (almost) always manages to pull one through. A review of the three separate books on its own merits is, I think, the best way to go about reviewing this trilogy. They are very different, indeed, despite a superficial show of having the same characters in play and having the same Asiatic backdrop. Before embarking on this, however, it is necessary to put to rest a criticism that has been voiced concerning all three books: To wit, that Myers never went to India (though he did travel extensively and to nearby Ceylon) and is therefore unqualified to write a book about it. The book is set during the reign of the Emperor Akhbar in Sixteenth Century India, where nobody has been for quite some time. You may as well criticise an author for not travelling to 16th Century England or America. As is commonplace: "The past is a different country. They do things differently there." So, on to the books:
1.) The Near and the Far---This is my favourite of the three, though clearly, I think, not what my distant relative meant to be the best. This trilogy has been dubbed a philosophical novel, quite rightly so. But in this book, the philosophy, such as it is, complements rather than obtrudes into the beautiful passages and contains the characters to whom most mortals can relate: Hari and Sita. Both characters are flawed, in a sort of moral sense, that is. On the other hand, they are the only three-dimensional, fully fleshed out characters in the whole trilogy. As Sita puts it to herself, "She preferred to love, even if loving meant suffering." And who of us doesn't?
2.) Prince Jali----Here, things start to unravel for the book as a work of art. Prince Jali is thirteen years old and though the book is described as a "Bildungsroman" by Penelope Fitzgerald, with whom I disagree on just about everything, in the Introduction. It isn't. Jali is thirteen at the beginning as well at the end of the book, there is really no detectable change or growth or "coming of age" of the character, which is what a Bildungsroman is all about. The critics are right about this one: It's a very flimsily veiled philippic reflecting Myers's own experience with Bloomsbury and "artistic" groups in general. Also, a caveat for homosexual readers: You are bound to be offended by Myers's depiction of Prince Daniyal and his "Camp" of catamites, which is really what this book is about. To my mind, it should have been entitled The Camp.
3.) Rajah Amar----Here the philosophy becomes overbearing and the writing heavy-handed and we are, indeed, a far cry from the deftness of touch in The Near and the Far. Clearly, Amar, with his renunciation of the world and unworldly affect are clearly what Myers admired most and desired most to effectively convey. But, really, it just won't do. The English humanist, Smith, for example, is so clearly a take on Bertrand Russell that the book seems to be a bit of a sham. Furthermore, the confusing political machinations that have always been in the trilogy come to the fore here and make for, perhaps deliberately, unpleasant and confusing reading. It is clear that Myers was attempting to contrast all this worldliness with Amar's calm (until the end) renunciation of it, but he just doesn't pull it off to good effect.
Summation: My distant relative once said, "Why should anyone want to go on living once they know what the world is like?" This thread of melancholy pessimism and renunciation is especially evident in the last book. It comes as no great surprise, to this reader at least, that said distant relative took his own life. What is surprising is that he was, nevertheless, able to write about the beauty of life and love so poignantly. Even in the third book, which I find generally disappointing, there are stirring passages like this:
Later, when all was quiet again, he and I walked down the bare spur of a hill to a point where we could look out over the plains. The night had been dark, but now the moon, which was nearly full, came out and hung above the low mists that lay like a sea beneath us. That ghostly sea was ruddy as if dust and mist were mixed up together; and it foamed against the globe of the reddening moon as she sank. Spectral and lurid she sank, and all that region of the sky about her became the scene of a silent symbolic tragedy. P.492
This sort of brilliance and enchantment is what keeps one reading and makes the work remarkable, for all its faults. As Amar says, "When Art is great, it is by virtue of something that is not itself..." What Amar is talking about, of course, is the transcendental. And it seems to me he is spot on. From Proust to Thoreau to Shelley to, well, any great artist, we know this trait when we feel it as the mark of great literature. I humbly submit that, especially in the first book of this trilogy, Myers, with his bewitching descriptions meshing human love and enchanting beauty has attained to this realm and deserves to be ranked as one of the (perhaps lesser) immortals.

SalonOvations Nail Q & A Book
Published in Paperback by Milady (1996-06-07)
List price: $47.95
New price: $17.97
Used price: $12.00
Used price: $12.00
Average review score: 

one of best no beating around the brush books i ever seen
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 14 total.
Review Date: 1998-10-23
Review Date: 1998-10-23
you made this book a great way to reinforce the ideas of how i would have done a service and also came in handy to prove a point to others that i not crazy i was right thanks
Books-Under-Review-->Arts-->Movies-->Titles-->Q-->Q and A-->44
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