Tools Books
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Used price: $3.90

Good valueReview Date: 2006-11-03
Makes a great housewarming gift!Review Date: 2006-04-04
Everything you need to know about your lawn.Review Date: 2007-07-17

Used price: $3.70

WHEW! Last Minute Relief!Review Date: 2000-03-03
A great resourse for rookie & veteran youth workers.Review Date: 2000-01-25


Hollywood Road MapReview Date: 2008-05-08
Fast, Simple Guide To Getting Yourself Known as an ActorReview Date: 2008-03-24

Used price: $2.03

Impressive.Review Date: 2003-04-27
dream.
Knife experts provide articles and reviewsReview Date: 2002-10-07

Used price: $7.00

Had to share with friendsReview Date: 2007-05-14
Packed with infoReview Date: 2007-02-07
Jeni Wright makes a book that is made for the kitchen. The cover of the book can be wiped off from splashes and splatters, as the cover was designed for use in the kitchen. I like that with each entry, she will tell you how to choose the ingredient, what it will taste like, how to store it, its preparation, and what it can be used for. Often small recipes are given to have demonstrate the use of the ingredient.
The book also spends much time going over meat of many varieties and dairy products. When covering the meat, she tells you about the different cuts of meat, what they should be ideally, and then how to prepare these cuts. A few recipes are given as well so you can prepare food. When it comes to the poultry she gives all of the information about cuts, what they should look like ideally, and how to prepare, but she also spends time telling you how to cut up a chicken, duck, and even pheasant.
21st Century Cook is a wonderful book packed with all sorts of information. With this book, I can easily find information about techniques and ingredients. I like that she covers the common, and not so common techniques and ingredients. This book would be a great addition to anyone's cooking library.

Used price: $2.55
Collectible price: $194.95

Full of great practical informationReview Date: 2001-11-13
Thank you Mr. LinkReview Date: 2001-08-01


Don't Adopt Without Reading This!Review Date: 2008-04-03
Crucial readingReview Date: 2000-05-13


Contemporary master of sound.Review Date: 2008-07-18
I once heard that the two things that can't be taught in creative writing were metaphor and rhythm. If that's true, Spitzer came out of the lifeshoot endowed with extraordinary gifts. Poems here live in the mouth instead of on the page; and the physical pages seem only to present poems out of obligation, barely keeping them from running off the paper as the form literally follows gravity - down and to the right.
Everything about the book is awesomely wrong. The sections, as if about to be replaced by subordinates, have their own sections, which are right-justified procedural poems that suggest the books maddness comes from outside instead of in. The poems themselves are not marked by titles, but instead (and probably in a small effort to avoid comparisons to Dickinson) are marked by asterisks; and even then, several times, the tone and content of consecutive poems run together and disrupt the category distiction of "poem." Words are invented to suit the sound, punctuation is delightfully overused, taboo is finds itself revered instead of marginalized, and nearly every formal convention Spitzer establishes is at sometime or another broken (a few "normal" stanzas sprinkled throughout, for example, lend a few well-chosen moments a certain seriously-treated silence). Despite all of this, Spitzer avoids the powerful suction of the "Postmodern" label with shear emotional intensity and consistency.
More than anything, the book is music. And more than any other living poet, Spitzer is a master of sound. Spitzer's sound has been evolving in subsequent books. And it has all been for this. Sound has been an important part of his previous works, most notably his "Junkyard" poems and "The Pigs Drink from Infinity;" but it has always been controlled. Here, it is released. Any reader who reads this silently, hell, even in a whisper, is both missing a one of the only truly unique poetic experiences available and doing Spitzer (and themselves) a disservice.
Spitzer breaks away from the pack here.
It's Vision Quest TimeReview Date: 2008-06-20
In a standard book review, this is where I'd attempt to place Age of the Demon Tools into a poetical evolutionary progression, comparing it to earlier books by other poets, shooting for a bookmarks magazine-type of sidebar you could clip n' carry with you on your next safari to Border's. I can't.
I can't do either of those things because this is not a standard book review. It can't be, because Age of the Demon Tools is a wholly unique, totally original book of verse. No kidding, people; Spitzer, like an erudite Huck Finn of the 21st Century, takes us out into the Indian Territory. It's vision quest time.
This is truly uncharted country. Stanzas creep and slither across pages like psychedelic snakes. The reader is bathed in a kaleidoscope of images and characters---a "tiny christ", an "anorexic possum/retching in the ethersphere", "Captain Tracheotomy". Words are spelled phonetically or flat-out invented---"a Flapalooza of Flinging Fladdle!/Uvulas of Udder Grubbage!"---as Spitzer riffs off the King's English like a jazz master bending musical scales to serve his vision. This is a new, intriguing language.
But this isn't mere surrealism for surrealism's sake. Sandwiched between the lights and sounds is telling commentary on a modern society drowning in its own bile. The corporatization of America, the Iraq War and the systematic destruction of the environment are among the topics addressed in honest and engaging ways.
Hear that? It's the sound of Mark Spitzer breaking new poetic ground. Buy this book now, so you can say you were There When It Happened.

Used price: $18.75

a step ahead for who wants to lead in the new millenniumReview Date: 2003-08-24
I believe that any Executive should have it and use it in his everyday activities and that the ones who help Executives in companies like HRD, coaches and facilitators should own the whole package for their greater results.
It's a very enjoyable book, a good manual that makes itself be read with interest, fun and ... action. We need more 'Alpha Leaders'!!!
This should become THE management book of 2002Review Date: 2002-07-06
It's so well written that's irrelevant whether you have ever heard of NLP. When I wrote "7 Steps to Emotional Intelligence", I wanted to make my book accessible, helping people to develop a practical EQ, using the findings of behavioral sciences such as NLP. The authors of this book have done the same for the field of management, and I think they've done wonderful job! The result is a practical book that fits amongst the top business books, and I hope that Wiley will be able to put the needed marketing efforts behind it to turn this masterwork into a bestseller.
It's fully applicable by anyone leading an organization, so that doesn't leave many excuses for not being a good leader...
Patrick Merlevede - co-author of "7 Steps to Emotional Intelligence"

Used price: $7.99

Practical, insightful, innovative techniques Review Date: 2004-11-15
Most helpful was the way the author showed how to use and improvise tools to make my designs come to life in wood. My lamp project will light up the room in more ways than with bulbs when I finish.
Thank you, Mike Burton, for taking my woodworking to another level.
Best in ClassReview Date: 2004-11-21
Don't have a lot of funds to buy those certain do-all, can't-live-without-tools that you see the other pro's use? That's just fine, because Burton will show you how to make what you need and keep your wallet intact.
He even explains how you can resharpen rotary burrs and an old, rusty rasp by using some toilet bowl cleaner. Anybody else would have told you to buy new stuff. If you've ever thought about getting involved in architectural carving, or just want to further your mental horizons of how these works of art are made, then, this is a must-have book.
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