The Empire Books


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The Empire Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

The Empire
Apres l'empire: Essai sur la decomposition du systeme americain
Published in Unknown Binding by Gallimard (2002)
Author: Emmanuel Todd
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Un livre renversant
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-08-18
Ce livre ma étonné par son contenu. J'ai découvert la relation entre alphabétisation, la dénatalité et les troubles politiques.
Appliqué au contexte actuel, ce livre nous éclaire sur les troubles a venir,pas plus tard que la semaine dernière l'angleterre suspendait ces liasions avec l'arabie saoudite.Et bien l'auteur nous avait averti. Les informations contenue dans ce livre me seront très utile pour mes placements boursiers. Je remercie l'auteur de nous faire partager sa sagesse, espérons que nos politiciens s'en inspirerons.

The Empire
Ark of Empire: The American Frontier, 1784-1803
Published in Hardcover by Ayer Co Pub (1963-06)
Author: Dale Van Every
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A thrilling account of the winning of the Near West
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-26
This book tells the now-forgotten story of how Americans acquired the territories between the Appalachian Mountains and the Missisippi River during 1784 to 1803.

We are rarely taught in school how to envision the United States as it existed immediately after the winning of our independence in 1783. The "national" government was an impotent confederation. The British were in effective control of the lands north of the Ohio River, intending to recombine them with Canada. The Spanish claimed the lands west of Georgia and south of the Tenessee River, hoping to recombine them with their Province of Florida and Louisiana.

With the national government impotent, the annexation of the Mississipppi Valley to the United States would depend on the heroic actions of a few thousand American pioneer families scattered around the frontier of Kentucky and Tennessee. These families waged an incessant war against the Indians and the British and Spanish agents who armed them. They wavered between declaring allegiance to Britain and Spain or maintaining allegiance to the impotent Articles of Confederation government east of the Appalachians. Ultimately, these few thousand frontier people decided to remain Americans and preserve the unity country. They kept the "door" open to allow the Americans to retain possession of the Mississippi Valley, then move on to acquire Gulf of Mexico, Texas, and the West.

Almost all the Americans of this 1784-1803 generation who lived west of the Appalachians died fighting hostile Indians or succumbing to illness and malnutrition. But they would not yield their land to the powerful empires of Great Britain and Spain. Dale van Every reconstructs their remarkable stories and breathes life into the epic struggles of a period that has been largely forgotten. Today the United States has acquired 90% of our land area due to these few thousand people who held the frontier at a critical time. As Winston Churchill might have said, "Never before has so much been owed by so many to so few." Dale Van Every gives life to this epic generation that created the United States of America as we know it.

The Empire
The Arrogance of Nations: Reading Romans in the Shadow of Empire (Paul in Critical Contexts)
Published in Hardcover by Fortress Press (2008-04-01)
Author: Neil Elliott
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Places Paul's letter firmly in the context of Roman imperial ideology
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-07
Written by Neil Elliott (adjunct faculty member in Biblical Studies, Metropolitan State University) The Arrogance of Nations: Reading Romans in the Shadow of Empire is an interpretation of the Biblical text Romans that dares to divest itself from older interpretations of Paul's theology of law and gospel. In addition, The Arrogance of Nations traces surprising parallels between ancient Roman ideology and the contemporary Western world. Refuting modern attempts to frame Paul's letter in terms of noncorporeal spirituality, The Arrogance of Nations places Paul's letter firmly in the context of Roman imperial ideology. Interpreting the letter as a confrontation between Paul and the arrogance of the Roman empire, as well as the temptation implicit in the power that gives rise to such pride, The Arrogance of Nations is a welcome addition to biblical studies shelves.3

The Empire
Art and Empire: Treasures from Assyria in the British Museum
Published in Hardcover by Harry N Abrams (1995-09)
Author:
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Kings, Genies, and Winged-Bulls
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2002-06-12
"Art and Empire" is a good-looking catalog of Assyrian artifacts in the British Museum. The book begins with chapters on the discovery, history and civilization of Assyria and then come eleven chapters on the museum collections, some of which are: Reliefs and Sculptures; Palaces and Temples; Magic and Religion and Literature and Science. Each begins with a nice introduction including the history of the finds.The strength of the catalog is of course the photos of the discoveries, drawings and paintings. A very informative and attractive production. Henry Layard would be proud.

The Empire
The Art of Gupta India: Empire and Province
Published in Hardcover by Princeton University Press (1982-01)
Author: Joanna Gottfried Williams
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yo
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2000-03-27
this is the greatest book, it has valuable information you wouldn't find anywhere else, get it now.

The Empire
The Aspinwall Empire
Published in Paperback by Mystic Seaport Museum (1983-12-24)
Author: Duncan S Somerville
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A fascinating biography
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2000-04-03
I admit that I am a pretty biased reviwer because the author is my late grandfather, and the book is a biography of my great-great-great uncle. However, it is not just a book for us relatives! The Aspinwall Empire is a biography of William Henry Aspinwall, a highly successful 19th century American businessman and philanthropist. Aspinwall has been all but forgotten today, but he made many important contributions to the United States. Among other things, he was a pioneer in the clipper ship area, built the railroad that traversed the Panama isthmus, was a founder of the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the ASPCA, and a benefactor to many causes and institutes, including the Virginia Theological Seminary (where Aspinwall Hall still stands as a tribute to him and his brother, John Lloyd Aspinwall). There are many more noteworthy contributions that Aspinwall made, and my Granddaddy spent over five years putting together an extremely thorough, but still interesting, biography that chronicles them. It is a very interesting read, especially for history buffs (and of course Aspinwall relatives!) . My grandfather was very proud of his book, and I encourage everyone to check it out and see why.

The Empire
Astoria and Empire
Published in Hardcover by University of Nebraska Press (1990-08-01)
Author: James P. Ronda
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Rediscovering the Context of the Fur Trade in the Building of an American Empire
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2005-09-28
Frontier historians have long been appreciative of the path-breaking establishment of Astoria as a fur-trading post on the Columbia River in 1811 and its short history as a pawn in international rivalries. James P. Ronda, well respected for his work on the Lewis and Clark Expedition, presents in this book the first full-length study of Astoria to appear since Washington Irving's "Astoria" in 1836. The result is a fine work that is more significant than just a story of adventure in the Pacific Northwest or just one more account of a single aspect of the fur trade. It moves with a sweep and a dimension that places the little post on the banks of the Columbia River in the vortex of world events, a pawn in games of international rivalry and chance.

Ronda describes carefully the efforts of John Jacob Astor, head of the Pacific Fur Company and several other business enterprises, to establish Astoria as the capital of his far western trading empire during the first decade of the nineteenth century. That effort moved from New York to Washington to St. Petersburg to Montreal to Canton as he manipulated international politics and appealed to personal desires. Astor, motivated by a quest for wealth but fortified by a sense of national prominence, appealed to the expansionist-minded politicians of the United States to gain support for Astoria's creation. He was finally successful and in 1811 the site was settled by representatives of the Pacific Fur Company traveling in two contingents, one overland and the other by sea. For the next three years Astor and his lieutenants battled bureaucracy in several nations, international ambitions on the part of several countries, rival fur trading companies, and the economics of the business to keep Astoria in operation. They failed, and it succumbed during the War of 1812 only to become one of the British North West Company's posts for the next twenty years.

But "Astoria & Emoire" is more than a recitation of the life and death of the American settlement. Although it is little more than a footnote in most history texts, if Ronda had limited his book to the Astoria's history irrespective of other events that affected it I would have questioned the necessity of its publication. Instead, Ronda provides an excellent study in the history of international relations at several levels of governments and between private citizens. Astoria is, essentially, a case study in business and politics in an international setting. Ronda's work, moreover, is a social history. He uses some untapped historical materials to reconstruct life on the trips to and from Astoria as well as activities at the post. In so doing, he presents a very useful portrait of activities in an early fur trading establishment. He describes something of the interrelationships of cultures and allegiances between the Americans, the Indians, the French and British Canadians, the Russians, and the Hawaiians. This social portrait is especially welcome also as a glimpse of the diversity present on the early fur trading frontier.

"Astoria & Emoire" is one of several refreshing books to appear on the development of the American West. It is a commendable work, and because of the skill of its author its 344 pages of narrative make interesting reading. One word of caution, however, this is not just western or frontier history, it is sophisticated analysis of several historical trends focused through the lens of Astoria; present in it also is social history and business history and diplomatic history and probably some other types of history yet unnamed. Those seeking staid fur trade literature with the emphasis on minutiae will be disappointed. Those readers pondering broader vistas, however, will be rewarded by considering Ronda's work.

The Empire
Astrosaurs: Riddle of the Raptors (Unabridged)
Published in Audio Download by audible.com ()
Author: Steve Cole
List price: $18.16
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StegTrek - First of a series of excellent 'dinosaurs in space' sci-fi books aimed at preteen boys
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-21
My son (10) isn't very good at reading, so I read these Astrosaurs books to him at bedtime. He really enjoyed them and so we have bought all of the series (8 books at present) to encourage him to like books as much as his Playstation 2, TV and DVD's. Most books we have are shared with his 12 year old sister, so he appreciated a good book aimed at young boys. The sci-fi stories are quite good (we are Dr Who, StarWars, and New Captain Scarlet fans) and you get the boys top favourite (dinosaurs) thrown in as well. The only problem with them is that Steve Cole can't write them quick enough - and the SciFi content of the stories is improving with each new book.

The series follows the space adventures of a troupe of vegetarian dinosaurs (they escaped the meteor hit 50 million years ago by leaving Earth in spaceships). Captain Teggs and his crew, Gypsy, Arx and Iggy are no ordinary dinosaurs - they are Astrosaurs! They fly through space in the Dinosaur Space Service starship, the DSS Sauropod, keeping the peace in the vegetarian sector of the Jurassic Quadrant. They also patrol the neutral VegMeat zone to defend against the inhabitants of the notorious Carnivore Sector. Plus they are explorers, who boldly go where no fern chewing reptile has boldly gone before.

This is the first book of the excellent series. In order the books are Riddle of the raptors, The hatching horror, The seas of doom, The mind swap menace, The skies of fear, The space ghosts, Day of the dino-driods, and The terror bird trap.

In this book newly promoted Teggs and his crew are transporting the sector's top vegetarian athletes to the Great Dinosaur Games at Planet Olympus. Suddenly a Raptor Deathship appears and attacks the DSS Sauropod, and a Raptor boarding party kidnapps two of the best athletes. But there's more to the Raptors' plot than meets the eye, so can Captain Teggs solve their rascally riddle in time? Like the rest of the series, the book it is suitably tense in places for little ones.

They are best read in order. My son says 'Like the other books it was cool, I liked the characters and the pictures (the reading books are filled many good line drawing illustrations). I also liked the cut-out cards at the front' (in our UK version, probably not present in the US book)". I would think the books would suit any pre-teen boy older than four, who appreciates space travel (probably up to age 12). I also enjoyed reading them out loud. There are surprisingly few good books aimed squarely at young boys about, so highly recommended. Also try 'The tentacled terror', 'Horrid Henry', 'Seriously silly stories', `The demon headmaster', 'Dinotopia - a land apart' and the 'Captain Underpants' series of books.

The Empire
At the Zenith of the Empire (Prairie Play Series)
Published in Paperback by Newest Publishers (2007-04)
Author: Stewart Lemoine
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Average review score:

A play by a theatre lover and artist, for fellow theatre lovers.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-03
Playwright teacher and artistic director of the Edmonton Theatre Company Stewart Lemoine has crafted a brilliant play, At the Zenith of the Empire. Set in 1913, when well-known tragedienne Sarah Bernhardt traveled to Edmonton, Alberta to perform in the final act of Alexandre Dumas' "The Lady of the Camellias", At the Zenith of the Empire is a saga inspired by "Fallen Empires", John Orrell's famous history of Edmonton's early theatre scene. Narrated by "The Divine Sarah" herself, At the Zenith of Empire imagines theatre in a time of yore with flair and color, steeped in emotion and heavy with the history of timeless landmarks such as Ada Boulevard and the Groat Ravine. A play by a theatre lover and artist, for fellow theatre lovers.

The Empire
Atlantis -- mother of empires
Published in Unknown Binding by DeVorss & Co (1973)
Author: Robert Benjamim Stacy-Judd
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This 1939 Classic is the best book on the subject
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 2001-06-11
Stacy-Judd's 1939 classic is the best book ever on the subject of Atlantis. Stacy-Judd was a Los Angeles architect who was fascinated by the Maya and their connections to Atlantis. This is the book that has the original photo of the famous Mayan frieze of a pyramid being destroyed in a volcanic explosion and people escaping in a boat. Packed with Stacy-Judd's photos and illustrations, this book belongs in every Atlantis library!


Books-Under-Review-->Arts-->Movies-->Titles-->S-->Star Wars Movies-->Fan Works-->Fan Fiction-->The Empire-->45
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