News and Media Books
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More Detail Here than the Series Finale!Review Date: 1999-12-03
A really good book!Review Date: 1999-10-10

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wowReview Date: 2000-04-06
Wonderfully richReview Date: 1999-11-09

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Learn to patent your art and entertainment yourself.Review Date: 2006-10-28
You can't go wrong with all the possibilities shown in this book. Gregory Aharonian and Richard Stim have you covered on so many fronts within the art and entertainment venues, you can only succeed. Even better, you've got nothing to lose. Even if you're denied a patent by the USPTO - and they're blunt about that possibility here - you won't always regret not having tried, or even wonder, "What if I had tried"?
Patenting is part art unto itself. Add to that the eclectic theories and arguments pro and con of this still-growing discipline, and you have a very unique niche of law of which to be part.
This book gives you every tool you could need as a novice (and even not-so-novice) self-patent seeker. It even gives detailed advice on how to get a professional, a.k.a., lawyer, to help you on more complicated matters best not left to one's self.
Good Book for People with Good IdeasReview Date: 2004-11-17


Pigs, Pies ,and Plenty of more ProblemsReview Date: 2003-07-01
DJ and Stephanie had already won a blue ribbon for their pie.Now Michelle wants to follow her sisters steps and win a blue ribbon too.Michelle is sure she is going to win with her gramma's secret recipe.But will Michelle win with Rachel Tilly (a new girl from school)whose dad is a chef and learned how to cook in a school in Paris.Michelle is not sure she'll win now.Will Michelle win?
I was very excited by this book because I wonder will she win or not.
I really enjoy this book because it was fun,exciting,and suspenful.
I recomend this book to everyone and anyone who likes fun and comedian books like this one.
I really think someone will like this book because it makes you wonder alot and its very interesting and you can know that just by reading the first paragraph.
Two thumbs up for Michelle!Review Date: 1999-11-13

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jack sparrow book bold new horizonsReview Date: 2008-08-30
Jack vs. his old enemies!Review Date: 2008-08-29
In "Bold New Horizons," Jack meets up with his old crew and encounters the merfolk, once again. This time the merfolk need his help. But is Jack going to give it?
He finds himself trapped suddenly in a cavern with his old crew from the Barnacle and Capt. Laura Smith from the Fleur de la Mort. Now he has to try to find a way out. But, the mermaids, from "Siren's Song," are the only ones who can help and they won't unless Jack helps them get back Poseidon's Trident from the evil Capt. Torrents. From then on, it's a fight to the death- Jack's and his crew or the merfolk who are under control of Capt. Torrents. Leave it to Jack to save the day.
"Bold New Horizons" is a fantastic end to the Jack Sparrow series, filled with action, danger and surprises at every corner! Although I am sad for it all to be over, my sons and I look forward to the next series "Legends Of the Brethren Court."
Can't get enough of Jack Sparrow!

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Cultural studies at its finest !Review Date: 2008-06-02
The second way O'Connor's project might be characterized is as a critical assessment of postmodern thought and media theory of the last quarter-century. In fact, his engagement with Gilles Deleuze and Marshall McLuhan in particular, coupled with his 'new' look at filmmakers like David Lynch and poets like David Trinidad puts him in dialogue with Zizek, Matsumi, Hayward & Co. That is, O'Connor distinguishes himself as a media theorist in his own right - be it through re-assessing Deleuze's later work in a positive light contra Zizek and other Hegelians, or railing against politically aspiratorial psychoanalytic takes on Roy Orbison's "Crying" - and this in itself merits attention by those critically engaged in the postmodern/anti-postmodern debate. Highly recommended for students in continental philosophy (the readings of Nietzsche are extensive and highly pertinent).
How PoeticReview Date: 2007-09-22
Utilizing the writings of Gilles Deleuze, O'Connor identifies "poetry" as a simulated form of expression that generates meaning within the contingent, contextual circumstances of its making. Thus, in "poetry," no meaning is predetermined, making its world-view fundamentally in opposition to the far more "popular" approach towards meaning a representational" view offers--where meaning has already been codified or pre-established.
After defining his approach to "poetry," O'Connor begins with a discussion of poetry as it occurs in its traditional, printed-text format. Specifically, O'Connor highlights how "media poetry" (the name for his specific conception of "poetry") can be distinguished from L=A=N=G=U=A=G=E poetry, which also wishes to distance itself from a representational mode of thinking. While L=A=N=G=U=A=G=E poetry conceives of verbal language as consisting of a series of arbitrary signs that do not refer to reality, but at best, only themselves, O'Connor's distinguishes his "media poetry" by noting how it conceives of meaning not as arbitrary, but rather as contingent upon context, and thereby, the very real, lived moment of its creation.
O'Connor then shifts his attention to the presence of "media poetry" in film through a discussion of three films: Mulholland Drive, Vanilla Sky, and Being John Malkovich. As these films contain narratives which deal with the dangers of living a representational mode of existence against the need for a poetic sensibility, so all three central characters are shown to engage in a "poetic" journey whose ultimate "destination" is identified not as an ideal place or "happy ending" (typical of a representational point-of-view) but a contingent perspective more in line with the possibilities of what their lives can be.
Having touched upon each of these films, O'Connor then takes us into a discussion of television, first via the short-lived, prime-time series Twin Peaks. Here, O'Connor shifts and expands his theoretical approach to focus upon the presence of "bourgeois mythology" as a particular embodiment of a representational mode of thinking, while locating a particularly "poetic" sensibility in the teenagers of that show, most notably the female characters.
Then, O'Connor sets his sights upon a second television program, Buffy the Vampire Slayer, while further extending his perspective by equating a "poetic" sensibility with Nietzsche's Noble Ethics and Will-to-Power. O'Connor locates these Nietzschean "poetic" sensibilities within Buffy herself as well as many of the show's supporting cast who are likewise engaged in an ongoing battle against those forces who are not merely supernatural in nature (vampires, etc.) but all-too-indicative of a timeless, and thereby, anti-life perspective which seeks to eliminate any contingent vantage point from which to generate one's own life and the possibilities inherent in it.
O'Connor then comes full circle in his Coda with a return to "poetry" in its traditional verbal form, though ironically, the poem he chooses to discuss, John Kinsella's "TV," suggests that "poetry" and the more popular mediums of expression are not necessarily antithetical. Indeed, as the powers-at-be which dominate these mediums tend to operate from a representational perspective, O'Connor steadfastly believes that the presence of poetry both in its verbal form and in our more popular media is vitally important because it can resist and thus transform any dominating bourgeois mythology or representational world-view.
All in all, O'Connor's first book is both enlightening and accessible, while its most notable attribute is its willingness to not merely assume a stereotypical view of popular media as somehow "bad" in and of itself. Rather, O'Connor turns many assumptions we have about such media on their heads, and in the process, highlights the actual achievements and possibilities inherent in a more "poetic" way of approaching them. In short, if you hold any interest in "new media" studies or even a basic interest in television and/or film as mediums of potential meaning/significance, O'Connor's book is a must.

A masterful translation of a great classicReview Date: 2001-11-01
Where would we be without Homerin?Review Date: 2004-12-28

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Just like the show!Review Date: 2002-04-12
I LOVE ITReview Date: 2000-06-19

A delightful, funny, touching tale for all ages!Review Date: 2003-04-29
Princess Gorilla and a New Kind of Water: A Mpongwe TaleReview Date: 2002-12-31
A must-do story for you teller of tales!

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A most important BookReview Date: 2006-08-21
Growing as an incurable lover of ChristReview Date: 2007-01-19
If you truly believe that you are an incurable lover of Christ by God's grace, then I would encourage you to read this book, knowing you will read it again and probably encourage others to do the same. Tom Wells has written a compelling and inspiring work that needs to be read by all who claim to be "Christians" and know Christ as their Savior. As in Tom's other works, a great depth of meaning is expressed in a very direct and conversational tone. If you have ever heard Tom teach in person you will know what I mean. I read this book to my wife as a way of ending some evenings together. It is not a very long book considering the easy on the eyes type set, but when you have finished reading the book it is difficult to realize that you have read a relatively short book, yet gathered so much information. Tom's love for Christ and his pastor's heart exudes from each page. There is a deliberate pace set at the beginning which builds a solid foundation for the reader to biblically understand the priority of Jesus Christ in God's historic/redemptive purpose. If a true believer does not come away with a desire to seek the priority of Christ as the normal way of living as a Christian, then I would have to say what Paul writes in 2 Cor.13:5 Examine yourselves, to see whether you are in the faith. Test yourselves. Or do you not realize this about yourselves, that Jesus Christ is in you?--unless indeed you fail to meet the test! ESV
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