Papers Books
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Collectible price: $89.95

Get the lowdown from the masterReview Date: 2000-10-13
This is why he was the "genius"Review Date: 2005-09-14
Apparently,no one wanted to call it that but we all know where that offense was derived from. This book shows you how inteligent and articulate the man was and why he's recognized as one of the best ever. Here's some handy advice in regards to this book,if you don't understand football that well,there's no point in reading this because you probably won't know what he's talking about.
a splendid book by The GeniusReview Date: 1998-07-12
Good stuff from one of the NFL's greatest coaches!Review Date: 2001-10-27
Then there's his biggest challenge and achievement- the turnaround of the San Francisco 49ers from league doormats to the team to beat in the 80s. From season to season, Walsh discusses the many highs and lows of coaching the Niners. He also goes into his philosophy and methods that helped keep the team successful over the years he coached them, and helped to maintain their success for several years following his departure. Sadly, many of his thoughts on how to improve and maintain a championship-form team would likely be considered outdated today, what with the added difficulties of less restricted free agency and the
salary cap, which he covers this in his follow-up, 'Finding The Winning Edge'.
Walsh also goes over the many trials and tribulations that he endured, such as learning the effects of drug abuse on players (lowlighted by a disastrous tryout by the infamous 'Hollywood' Henderson), and his coming close to quitting following the team's horrific showing in the strike-shortened 1982 season. I found his memories of dealing with the media somewhat absorbing, the high point- or low point, rather- being a confrontation with legendary Monday Night Football commentator Howard Cosell. Then there's the aspect of coaching that no sideline leader enjoys: the cutting of a beloved past-his-prime veteran. Walsh admits that this, out of all his duties, is the one he dreaded the most when he was running the show.
The last few pages are a small index of some of the most famous plays in 49er lore. Included is 'Brown Left Slot- Sprint Right Option' (Dwight Clark's Catch against Dallas), 'Red Right Tight- F Left- 20 HB Curl- X Up' (Montana's TD pass to Taylor to win Super Bowl XXIII), and a few other notable offensive formations.
Whether you're a Niner fan or a football follower in general, this is definitely one for your must-read list!
'Late

American Couple Retire to IrelandReview Date: 2005-11-19
They learn goat keeping, rabbit raising, and the ways of bees and geese. The evenings chatting in the pub, the village interactions, the local customs and other trivia of daily life make you feel a part of their Irish experience.
Excellent armchair escapismReview Date: 2004-03-27
A Different Way of Looking at LifeReview Date: 1998-02-17
This book is a credit to IrelandReview Date: 1997-07-20

Used price: $9.67

Big Help!Review Date: 2008-07-08
also gives you a few card ideas for each. Totally helps you think outside of the box. Get ready to create lots of fun new cards for family and friends!!
Great book for beginners!Review Date: 2008-02-22
Great Book for Anyone who Loves Making Cards Review Date: 2008-06-21
It has 40+ sketches for different card designs and then 4 or 5 examples of completed cards
You can use the sketches over and over again
Everytime I look at the book I notice a patterned paper or embellishment that has been used on one of the completed examples in a way that has never occured to me before.
I LOVE this book ...Review Date: 2008-05-31
Think of it as a set of "blueprints" for cards. Just as with architect blueprints for a house, you'll get diagrams showing proportion and placement of different elements that make up the card. You won't get detailed directions on making specific cards, although there are dozens of examples in the book, just as a book of house blueprints usually contains some illustrations showing examples of how the house will look if constructed in various colors, etc.
You WILL, however, get a ton of "patterns" that you can use to construct your own cards, with some assurance that the end result will be balanced and visually pleasing. Colors, trims, embellishments, etc. are entirely up to you.
This is the first book I turn to when I need to make a card for a specific occasion. I always find a pattern than "jumps out" at me, and from there, it's easy to put together a great card.

Used price: $0.01

Hank is awesomeReview Date: 2003-11-17
are written in Hank's perspective, which, I think, makes them funnier than if they weren't written in his persppective. He tries to talk "intelligent," but really he is actually quite, um,
well, to be to-the-point... DUMB. And Hank's conversations with Drover are priceless. If you don't have this book, you really should get it. This is one of my personal favorites.
My other faves are:
The Curse of the Incredible Priceless Corn Cob
The Case of the Missing Bird Dog
It's a Dog's Life
Every Dog Has His Day
The Case of the Fiddle Playing Fox
The Phantom in the Mirror
The Case of the Burrowing Robot
The Case of the Deadly Ha-Ha Game
...And too many more to list!...
The best book I read is Hank the cowdog!Review Date: 2002-11-14
Hank the Cowdog 36Review Date: 2001-05-01
Great BookReview Date: 2007-12-15
Author of "Hobo Finds A Home" editor "Of A Predatory Heart"

Classic work of 'linguistic analysis' school of philosophy.Review Date: 1996-08-17
Excellent BookReview Date: 1999-09-28
DETERMINISM, EUDAIMONIA AND URSANEIVLSReview Date: 2006-09-14
Whether or not Austin pronounced any doctrines, he certainly established a method. The great philosophers have in general tried to create or identify some over-arching theoretical scheme for organising human thought, and in general they finish up like mechanics with several parts left over after supposedly completing their work on the car - it never seems to fit exactly. You can read Austin's own basic manifesto here in A Plea for Excuses, the most relaxed and informal item in this collection. Human language, says he, has had time to make any distinctions humanity has yet thought worth making - `words are our tools and, as a minimum, we should use clean tools.' This and the chapters following (excluding the one on Plato) are probably the easiest to follow as examples of his approach in action, and the earlier How to Talk-Some Simple Ways is actually the hardest. It all depends on an acute ear for language and meaning, but the least of us ought to be able to get the hang of Austin's approach, observing in passing the ruins of more traditional theories. In the Plea for Excuses he toys with the idea of cataloguing our language systematically, but I doubt he really believed that this would do the work of his own presence of mind and accuracy of aim, the very qualities that Housman praised in Bentley's genius for the sister science of textual criticism.
Specious assumptions are dispersed like chaff, e.g. does a statement have to be either true or false? Even if we throw in intermediate gradations such as `likely', 'apparent', `misleading' etc, can we deal with `A cat sat on a mat' on this basis? This is an example of an elementary sentence for infants, and to ask whether it's `true' is nonsensical - it's committing what Ryle calls the category-error, and the same goes regarding any work of fiction. Ifs and Cans is not basically concerned with free will and determinism, but it contains enough about them to whet my appetite. Austin claims that determinism has not been properly defined, but I take it to mean that anything that happens, including our own actions, could not have happened otherwise, and that it is all the result of an incalculably large network of causes and effects. I have seen one scientist try to get us off this hook by appealing to a randomness in the behaviour of subatomic particles, but I can't see that that helps. Either we are glorified machines or we are not, and if we are there can, logically, be no validity in a guilty verdict in a trial as the prisoner's action was predetermined. Austin clearly doubts determinism, and he makes the valuable point that `free' as in `free will' is a device for discounting alternative possibilities, as `real' also is. Free will as opposed to what kind of will? The difficulty is in `will' not in `free' -- what is it? Can thoughts and associated concepts such as choices and decisions be classified as `events' like the weather, subject to causes? If detective D decides that suspect S1 is guilty of the crime because S1's eyes are too close together we can `account for' or `explain' D's view by his temperament or his upbringing or his experience of life and so on, but do any of these `cause' his opinion? It makes good sense to say that D later `forces himself' to take account of the evidence that the guilty party is really suspect S2 and changes his mind against his natural inclination. This is my own idea of `will' in action, but can evidence (which is not an `event' anyhow) be said to have `caused' the change?
Can you make yourself believe that Aristotle said that happiness is the main objective in life and that it is defined as `a sort of activity of the spirit in accordance with complete virtue'? Neither can I, but a lot of his translators and commentators can. Happiness is something that Aristotle or any of us take when we can get it, and it is no sort of activity. Richard Robinson (in Definition) says briskly that Aristotle is really defining the means towards happiness, but I believe Aristotle meant what he said, and I don't believe he said `happiness'. To his credit Austin has some doubts about this standard translation. He tries `success', but on balance makes do with `happiness' after all. I'll try `wellbeing'. This makes sense as `a sort of activity', sc the non-intellectual aspect of life, well encapsulated in the Greek `eudaimonia' or `enjoying the favour of the gods' - the Greek for `happy' is `olbios' not `eudaimon'. Take `eu prattein' in its sense of `faring well' rather than `behaving well', and take this `virtue' as `finest characteristic' (as in `the virtue of soya is in its nutritional properties not in its flavour of which there is none') and it all seems to make better sense.
I find it all wonderful and liberating to the mind and spirit. This does not involve agreeing with everything, indeed Austin often marks his thoughts as tentative or provisional. It is all about how to think not what to think, and Austin's own beautiful aphorism makes a good summing-up for the activities of the mind `Neither a be-all nor an end-all be.'
An exciting findReview Date: 2001-12-02

Used price: $12.13

The World is Too Much Much With UsReview Date: 2003-10-12
A compelling and moving experienceReview Date: 2003-09-24
I was fascinated by the heroin, Ruth Levin, her life story, her promise as a talented imaginative child, her determination to make a difference in the world, her efforts to realize her dreams and her painful realization that she failed to overcome her own shortcomings. The writing is so intimate that anyone can easily relate to Ruth's difficulties and heartbreaks, her trials and tribulations in family and professional life. But beyond the universal human story, the novel gave me deeper insights into Israeli society and the complex position of women in this society. Indeed, anywhere. I disagree with some of Ruth Levin's assertions about the feminist movement, but the questions the heroin poses give one pause for thought.
I felt that through Ruth's eyes I was taking a sobering look at our world. Under the surface of Ruth Levin's idyllic childhood in a remote utopian commune, the devotion to high ideals, hard work and love, lurked jealousy, hatred, murders, suicide, and rape. Ruth's story is Israel's story, cleverly blended throughout the book. The founding of the state of Israel, the utopian longing for creating a new just society and the twist that some of these ideals have undergone.
CLEAN DEATH IN TELAVIV is not to be read lightly. It is a challenging and enriching book. I strongly recommend it.
The coin other faceReview Date: 2003-09-07
Besides her huge works "The Hebrew Education in Eretz Israel" and "Zionist Utopias" she has largely published academic articles, for instance on the place of women in the Zionist Revolution and on the controversial dilemmas confronted by Zionist leadership during the epic developments of Modern Jewish History.
Her main assumption in these works has been that History is always written by hegemonic voices or in her words: "History is written by winners".
While writing History and researching Utopias she has silently proposed a latent and silenced question: What if? Think what if....
From this point of view her novel "Clean Death in Tel Aviv" is the coin other face.
Elboim Dror' novel characters and their interwoven plots tell us about the place of individuals as participants in epic historical deeds and the prices they had personally paid for subsuming their own narratives to the public one.
Tel-Aviv, the "normal" city, becomes in "Clean Death in Tel Aviv" the ultimate stage of the dramatic "mise en abime" of the tension that the plots' novel irremediably develops toward self destruction in a world where tenderness, love, understanding and communication have been subsumed to much more heroic and perhaps much more legitimate social targets.
From this point of view fictional writing utopically completes in Elboim Dror work the possibility of History to reflect the entire landscape of social creation and lets weak voices be heard loudly as if history could be told by combining the "official story" and the "unofficial" too.
Elboim Dror style interweaves an erudite metaphorical imagination parallel to almost sculpturing passionate and intuitive, almost naïve, images that play a contrapuntal and unsolved morose competition mimetically reflecting the human longing for love lost among the social mandates of social institutions in a given moment of History.
Brilliantly written!
Must read!Review Date: 2003-07-27
Drawing on realms as seemingly disparate as science, mythology and poetry, Dror takes the reader on an intense emotional, intellectual and sensual journey through one woman's life - it is impossible to read this novel without emerging changed from the experience!

Used price: $10.00

Great book - perforated cards terribleReview Date: 2008-07-05
A Must Have BookReview Date: 2008-06-24
This is a great book to have especially when trying to choose a colour scheme. Great for scrapbooking or any other crafts.
Highly Recommend this book. This book you must have in your library.
A Must HaveReview Date: 2008-03-04
Great book!Review Date: 2007-10-22


great, inexpensive fun for adults and teensReview Date: 2006-01-22
This is a great book!Review Date: 2004-07-13
I love it!Review Date: 2000-08-08
Fun and easy hobby!Review Date: 2000-01-23

Used price: $12.89

WOWReview Date: 2008-01-03
A Jill Haglund follower...Review Date: 2007-03-24
I first saw Jill's work in SOMERSET STUDIOS and loved her style. This book is along the same lines as her cards in SOMERSET, but my only wish is that Jill Haglund had included just a few more photos of her vintage cards. Still, considering the limited space that Jill had in this book, I think she did a nice job.
PS: (this is an addition, after review was already given:)
.... I have used a few of Jill's ideas from this book, as of September 2007. The cards turned out so nice and the recipient loved receiving the card.
Great book!Review Date: 2005-04-05
Creating Vintage CardsReview Date: 2007-11-02
Linda

Used price: $4.43
Collectible price: $24.00

Worth the read!Review Date: 2005-09-25
I was suprisedReview Date: 2001-10-29
Find out what the papers are about!Review Date: 2001-08-23
On the edgeReview Date: 2001-10-02
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