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His Home, My HomeReview Date: 2000-04-07
His Home, My HomeReview Date: 2000-04-07
superb, beautiful narrative!Review Date: 1999-05-11
This book sings to me.Review Date: 1998-07-12
This book is one of the greatest influences of my life.Review Date: 1998-05-18

Used price: $0.34

Behind the scenes lookReview Date: 2002-06-10
Love that Dr. Inferno Jr.Review Date: 2002-05-24
A Must Have for BattleBot and Robot FansReview Date: 2002-05-03
Bot LoverReview Date: 2002-05-04
Everything you wanted to knowReview Date: 2002-05-04

Great Purchase for Many ClerkshipsReview Date: 2007-09-22
blueprints bundle (med, peds, ob/gyn, psych, surgury)Review Date: 2006-07-17
great series with a good overviewReview Date: 2001-05-01
BlueprintsReview Date: 2002-01-12
Outstanding SeriesReview Date: 2001-06-27
Iowa Orthopaedics Resident

Used price: $39.00

Comprehensive and ExcellentReview Date: 2000-02-18
Best Book in urologyReview Date: 2002-03-23
The bible of Urology....Review Date: 2002-10-15
The encyclopedic bible of urologyReview Date: 2004-02-27
1)Reference authors quoted directly in text. This makes the book fairly diffcult to read in a fluid manner and adds extra length to the already lengthy text. Gillenwater is a much more readble text.
2)Some chapters need a better overall framework. The best example of this is the chapter on adrenal pathology which does not provide a very good thorough to the asymptomatic adrenal mass, by far the most common adrenal problem.
3)Often excessive discussion regarding all the studies for and against an issue. I feel that it would be better to state that an issue is unresolved and then list some appropriate ways of attacking the problem.
4)Certain chapters are written in the 1st person. The chapter on the technique of radical retropubic prostatectomy is a personal account and not a reference chapter. MAny innovations from other centers are missing making this chapter somewhat biased.
Overall an excellent and authoratative view or urology
The basis for any urology libraryReview Date: 1997-12-30

Used price: $20.02

I Love the Case Files!Review Date: 2007-12-13
Another excellent book in a great seriesReview Date: 2007-11-17
Case Files in Emergency MedicineReview Date: 2007-04-15
The way medicine should be taughtReview Date: 2006-11-14
It then analyzes the case for you.
It is indispensible for exam study and more importantly refreshing approaches to common medical emergencies.
Everything from chest pain, sore throat to GI and Neurological emergencies is covered.
2 Thumbs upReview Date: 2004-11-22

Used price: $22.00

Best text for shelf exams.Review Date: 2006-09-26
The best thing since sliced bread.Review Date: 2006-12-22
satisfied med studentReview Date: 2006-03-04
Fantastic bookReview Date: 2005-06-22
Excellent light read for Step 2 CKReview Date: 2005-10-13

Used price: $6.48

No escape from painReview Date: 2008-07-07
At the outset, considering Czentovic's isolated and emotionally deprived childhood, I was prepared to allow him his arrogance and conceit. Acknowledged, he was a master at chess and his boorish behavior could be excused. When Dr. B becomes peripherally involved in the chess match and exhibits a mastery of moves, it becomes clear that this man has somehow or other been absorbed into the exalted realm of chess. As his story unfolds, the reader enters the world of isolation and solitary that Dr. B endured at the hands of his Nazi tormenters. Zweig is so masterful at the depiction of the incarceration and the man's mental salvation through the game of chess that we as readers are carried along so forcibly that we leave the confines of our homes for the world of Dr. B. Every emotion he experienced, every racing of his pulse, every fearful moment, his ultimate dissociation of his personality and his breakdown are experienced by the reader. The descriptions are powerful and cause a visceral reaction that is astonishing. As I was reading, I started to note a racing pulse and sweating and a sense of uncontrollable foreboding. As the story raced to its conclusion, I had the urge to shout, "Halt! Don't play again!" I wept when I set the book down. The tears were for Dr. B, all of the victims of the Nazi carnage and perhaps also a reaction to what came to pass, the suicide of the author. This gem of a small book explores and disturbs the human psyche like no other.
das beste Buch auf der WeltReview Date: 2008-02-02
This book is basically a psychological thriller that takes you inside the divided mind of one Dr. B and locks you there just as securely as his Nazi tormentors ever could through the final endgame. I cannot vouch for the quality of this specific translation, but the original work is a masterpiece.
One of the best and most imprtant short stories of the WWII eraReview Date: 2007-08-23
New translation of Zweig's last workReview Date: 2006-01-04
The story takes place on a cruise ship en route from New York to Buenos Aires in 1941. The world chess champion, Mirko Czentovic, is on board. Czentovic is a chess prodigy who is singularly ungifted in other areas of the intellect and social graces. Also on board is Dr. B, a former solictor for the Austrian imperial family who is traveling to South America as a refugee from the Nazi regime.
A nameless narrator sets out to lure the reluctant Czentovic into a chess match and unwittingly ensnares Dr. B as well. While Dr. B is pitted against Czentovic for two and a half games, the reader gradually learns what has happened to Dr. B and how he became so adept at chess that he can beat the reigning world champion. It is the story of a man who exerts such a force of will that his psyche splits in two and dissociates. This tragic story is all the more poignant knowing that Zweig made a similar voyage and took his own life almost immediately after forwarding the manuscript of Schachnovelle to his publishers.
Joel Rotenberg's translation makes clear points that I had missed with an earlier translation. In particular, this translation emphasizes the conflicts the protagonist encounters in trying to sustain himself. This is a book that deserves to be re-read. Even if you have already read one of the earlier translations entitled Royal Game, consider reading this fine new translation.
Salvation and Curse Review Date: 2008-02-17
Chess Story centres around two extraordinary chess players. One is the world champion, Mirko Czentovic, who travels across the world for tournaments. The other is the enigmatic Dr. B., who claims not to have seen a chessboard in more than twenty years. The two are opposites in terms of personality, background and in their paths bringing them to a chance meeting on an ocean liner en route from New York to Buenos Aires. The narrator, who exhibits traits of an aspiring psychologist "passionately interested in monomaniacs", finds his first subject in the twenty-one year old chess prodigy, who otherwise exhibits poor education, intellect, and crude social behaviour. To satisfy his curiosity he instigates a game of chess between Czentovic and a group of "amateur chess lovers". Dr. B. watching the game in passing, is suddenly drawn into it, advising the hapless amateurs so that they reach a draw. His manifest expertise at the game as well as his strange conduct intrigues the narrator as much as the reader.
Using language that is sparse yet precise in detail, the first-person observer, although commenting on the game, is more fascinated by his subjects' personality and psyche. The narrator's inquisitiveness, heightened by Dr. B.'s unusual behaviour, leads him to follow his subject as he hurriedly flees the game room. Out on deck, Dr. B. eventually shares his personal story and recounts the recent harrowing events that forced him abruptly into exile from his native Austria. The narrator becomes at the same time listener and astute analyst. Dr. B.'s account reveals why chess for him has been both a salvation and a danger to his survival: his "involvement" with chess had gone beyond what a person can endure without dangerous consequences for the rest of his life.
Zweig's ability to build emotional tension and drama while keeping his choice of words neutral and objective is superb. The fluidity of language is maintained in the English translation. The story's impact is deepened by Zweig giving the narrator the dual role of audience and commentator. The intensity of the author's fascination with diametrically opposed characters and the clash of cultures they represent is evident throughout the novel. Certain parallels between Dr. B. and Zweig himself come easily to mind. Chess Story conveys a premonition of events occurring in the author's own life. Zweig, a well known and widely read Austrian author of biographies, essays and fiction in the first half of the twentieth century, left behind a remarkable opus of work. He fled Austria in 1935 anticipating the political upheaval in his country resulting from the rise of Nazism in Germany. Shortly after completing the novella in 1942, written during the previous three years, the author and his wife committed suicide while in exile in Brazil. Even after more than sixty years Chess Story remains pertinent today, both in its historical context and its primary subject matter. Peter Gay's informative introduction adds to the understanding of the story's context. [Friederike Knabe]

Used price: $1.20

His CousinReview Date: 2006-04-23
However, many comments are off-base, and as His Cousin, I find inappropriate. Ask, and you may find Truth!
"No disrespect..." ..."but"... there is that word again... don't listen to what I just said, just what I am about to say...
Amazing how the critics, nearly a Century later, have criticisms that sting, but couldn't find the gumption to face Him... or me!
Let's get it on!
The Holy Grail of True Crime LiteratureReview Date: 2000-09-03
Great tales in an unsatisfactory editionReview Date: 2000-11-15
Re-issuing Roughead's work is really a feather in NYRB's cap, and yet I can't help wishing they had taken more pains with this edition. (Because of this, I felt I could not really offer it the five stars it otherwise would've deserved.) The introduction by Luc Sante is interesting, but not without errors: he notes that all of the crimes excepting those of Burke and Hare "are discoveries [on the part of Roughead]"; yet Roughead himself admits that Deacon Brodie's case has been dramatized many times, and inspired Stevenson's "Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde." Madeleine Smith's trial inspired a film, "Madeleine," directed by David Lean in the 1950s. Similarly, no editor seems to have taken the time to annotate some of Roughead's more bizarre (or anachronistic, or peculiarly Scottish) terms: "douce" is used repeatedly for "sweet", and "lands" (apparently a term for the highrise towers in Edinburgh) recurs often too, yet there's nary a word of explanation. This lack of editorial interference is not welcome, especially since Roughead often refers repeatedly to other writings of his which his original audience would have recognized but which remain obscure to a contemporary reader.
Still, this book is a real treasure--and, as with all NYRB books, it comes on beautiful paper and with a gorgeous cover.
Classic collection by the greatest true-crime writerReview Date: 2000-02-24
Delicious DerelictionsReview Date: 2006-02-12
The only thing in literature to which one can really compare it is Sherlock Holmes-Sir Arthur Conan Doyle makes an appearance in one of these cases, btw.-I don't mean to do Roughead a disservice in this comparison-Certainly, these are as true to the actual facts as Roughead could make them (and he goes to great lengths to do so), and several of the cases remain unsolved or "Not Proven"-a verdict in Scots law with which you shall become all too familiar if you read this book. - But, the same Victorian atmospherics are present as in Doyle, the Victorian moralisms, the eerie descriptions, the bumbling Dogberries of police constables. It's actually refreshing to know that these things existed just as Doyle wrote of them....except these cases are REAL!
Of course, there's the question the contemplative reader asks himself from time to time as to why he is interested in the macabre and the details thereof.-An interesting question.-I know not the answer.-But we all are, it would seem, to one ghoulish extent or the other.
5 Macabre, Scottish Stars!
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Classics of the Horror Film by EversonReview Date: 2005-05-18
- Phantom of the Opera
- The Magician
- Dr. Mabuse
- Frankenstein
- Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde
- The Mummy and White Zombie
- King Kong
- Cat People
- Hauntings and Possessions
Photos by Boris Karloff, the Bride of Frankenstein and Son of
Frankenstein provide an historic dimension to the overall
presentation. Lesser horrors are included; such as, the Creature
from the Black Lagoon , The Mole People and Monster on Campus.
The photos of Fredric March and John Barrymore depict the
Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde characters in all their glory. A first
edition rendition of this work will be treasured most by
horror enthusiasts. The cost is modest for the value provided.
j1156@cholian.netReview Date: 1999-03-11
Invaluable resource for the classic horror film fan.Review Date: 2004-12-29
Well Done History and CriticismReview Date: 1998-11-06
Well Done History and CriticismReview Date: 1998-11-06

Used price: $25.75

well written bookReview Date: 2008-06-16
Clinical Epidemiology, The EssentialsReview Date: 2007-12-07
A excelent book to the beginnerReview Date: 1997-10-26
Essential textbook for health care professionals!Review Date: 2003-01-28
Thorough insight into basic clinical epidemiologyReview Date: 2003-01-05
I recommend it for every person who is related to the health sciences and interested in obtaining the best out of medical literature.
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