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Resources Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

Resources
Morgan and Me (Serendipity)
Published in Library Binding by Sagebrush Education Resources (1999-10)
Author: Stephen Cosgrove
List price: $12.70
New price: $12.70

Average review score:

Morgan & Me
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2002-12-13
Morgan and Me had a great impact on me as a child. I would suggest that anyone pass this book along to their child. It was responsible for igniting my love for horses and consequently for the name of my youngest child! :) Enjoy!

Wonderful book
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2001-10-11
I loved this book as a child for the story as well as the beautiful illustrations. I treated the book well and some years later now share it with my daughter who loves it as much as I did.

Great book
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2005-07-20
30 years ago my mom read this book to me. Recently my 4 year old's procrastination reminded me of the princess in this book who always says "just a little later." I was thrilled that the book was still available and even more pleased that it is every bit as good as I remembered. My daughter enjoys it as much as I did when I was her age.

a teenager who still loves this book
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2000-06-16
i LOVE morgan and me. as a 16 year old, i can still recallevery detail of this wonderful book about a princess and"her" morgan. sadly enough, through handing it down to a younger sister and moving out of our house, the book has disappeared. however, i have every intention of asking for the book for my 17th birthday.

Wonderful Story About A Princess & Unicorn
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2001-09-26
"Morgan and Me" is the story of a young princess who lives in the Land of Later. She's a dreamer, but mostly she's a procrastinator, always putting off her duties until later.

One day she gets lost in the woods and finds a unicorn with his horn stuck in a tree branch. Morgan, the unicorn, asks if she'll help him break free. The princess, however, would rather go play than help Morgan this minute. But she promises to return later.

Once she grows bored of playing, the princess returns and cuts the branch away for Morgan. Together they roam the meadow, Morgan having since forgiven the princess for her belated rescue. However, the princess doesn't watch her step while they are playing and falls into a pond. From the safety of a lily pad, she calls for Morgan to help her. Morgan replies he will--eventually.

The princess realizes her mistake earlier and heartfully apologizes to Morgan. Convinced, Morgan rescues the princess from the pond. And ever since, they've been best friends.

I would recommend this book to young children, but I'm sure most adults will enjoy it just as much. Robin James is the talented illustrator of "Morgan and Me" and many other Stephen Cosgrove books. I highly recommend you read all of Cosgrove's books if you liked this one.

Resources
Morgan and Yew
Published in Library Binding by Sagebrush Education Resources (1999-10)
Author: Stephen Cosgrove
List price: $12.70

Average review score:

the pinnacle of childhood reading
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-12-18
I was raised on the Serendipity Books, and this was always my favorite. Not only is this book still touching and beautiful, it holds a special place in my heart, being the first book I learned to read. To this day, even as an adult, it is a comfort to go back and revisit this old favorite after a hard day.

I highly recommend this book for any parent or teacher.

Still makes me cry
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2001-12-21
This was the Serendipity book I saved for special, cathartic occasions in my childhood when I had to have a good tearing-up. Possibly the most excellent and moving of the series, with the same beautiful illustrations.

Still makes me cry
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2001-12-21
This was the Serendipity book I saved for special, cathartic occasions in my childhood when I had to have a good tearing-up. Possibly the most excellent and moving of the series, with the same beautiful illustrations.

Best Book Ever!!
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2003-03-16
I bought this book when I was in 3rd grade, it made me cry then and it makes me cry now! This book is great for kids as well as grown ups. The lesson in this book teaches about having material things at the expense of those we love. Good thing Yew learns the lesson and is able to fix it! In this day in age I am glad they are bringinning these books back. Not only will your child be reading, but learning a very important lesson. Not many books today do that! If you decide to purchase this book you won't regret it and there is a whole series of them, but this one is my favorite!

A lesson for young children about envy.
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2000-08-14
A dumpy little sheep named Yew wishes he could have a unicorn's horn like his best friend Morgan so that he can feel special instead of ordinary. When the Morning Star grants Yew's wish, he wears the horn for one day, but at the cost of his friend Morgan: the unicorn is gone! After crying of guilt and loneliness all night long, Yew pleads with the Morning Star to restore things to normal. After Morgan comes back to him and the horn is returned to the unicorn, the two friends play together forever and Yew never again envies his best friend.

Even very young children "get" the message in this book. It's been around for years--I even used it while doing my student-teaching more than 15 years ago. With bright, colorful illustrations and sweet characters, this book is a perennial favorite for primary school students.

Resources
Multimedia for Learning: Methods and Development (3rd Edition)
Published in Paperback by Allyn & Bacon (2000-11-19)
Authors: Stephen M. Alessi and Stanley R. Trollip
List price: $113.80
New price: $55.00
Used price: $54.50

Average review score:

The First Book on My Reading List!
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2003-05-05
If I could only put one multimedia learning book on my bookshelf, this would be it. The "General Principles" section provides one of the best overviews I've read of Behavioral, Cognitive, and Constructivist approaches to learning (although I do think they misrepresent the Instructional Systems Design process and treat it as a purely Behavioralist approach). This section also presents an excellent overview of the learning process. The book moves on to discuss methodologies and learning sequences at an unparalleled level, including a brilliant discussion of simulations and educational games. The book closes with an overview of an approach to Design and Development that's worth reading, but far less valuable than the previous sections. Of all my design books, this one has the most dog-eared pages and underlined text; the chapter-level bibliographies alone are worth the book's price! Anyone looking to delve deep into multimedia design for learning should have this book on his or her shelf.

Excellent breadth and and depth of coverage
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2002-10-05
This is an excellent text in terms of coverage and pacing. If you are interested in human-computer interaction, this is a 'must have' text. What astonished me about this book is that it covered more issues in HCI than many dedicated user interface design books. The text admirably blends practical considerations with theoretical concerns and trends. It strongly focuses on motivational issues surrounding users of learning packages(an area largely ignored in the bulk of standard HCI texts). Don't pass over this book.

I love it, it IS the bible of Multimedia design in learning.
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2002-01-06
I just find it very well put together.. It takes you through the various facets of designing a course/presentation that will actually be used and useful.

Intructional Technology at it's best.
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2003-05-12
Had to buy it for a class; execellent resource for it's target audience. Make sure you're a memeber of that target audience (instructional technologists) before you buy :)

The source for multimedia production
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2001-11-09
The first clue as to the value of a book is the number of editions. Generally, the true standards in a field will continue to live and be revised. This book is the standard for multimedia design and production. The foundations and theory that are explored in the beginning are as valuable as the detail in the production process that is explained. The most significant aspect of this book has to be the detail concerning methods, especially instructional simulations. Simply a must have for anyone in the field of multimedia who is looking to develop products that go beyond the traditional page turner.

Resources
Nine Keys to Effective Small Group Leadership: How Lay Leaders Can Establish Dynamic and Healthy Cells, Classes, or Teams
Published in Paperback by Kingdom Publishing (2001-06)
Authors: Carl George and Warren Bird
List price: $12.97
New price: $1.50
Used price: $0.01

Average review score:

Very Practical
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-23
Nine Keys is a very practical step-by-step process in how to implement successful, healthy small groups into the local church.

This is the book on small groups that I hand out to pastors
Helpful Votes: 30 out of 30 total.
Review Date: 2000-04-22
I am a small-groups person. I have been in one small group or another, often as a leader, almost continually, for the past 30 years. I believe small groups are just about the most important aspect of a church's life.

I have read many books on this, gone to many seminars. There is a lot of good material on this topic.

But in my present role as a church consultant, this is the book on small groups that I hand to pastors who are wanting to know how to grow a small group ministry or how to better equip their small group leaders.

Why? As George explains in this book, most church small groups do a good job of promoting nurture and fellowship, but most stop there. George believes an effective small group should perform three basic functions, not just nurture. In addition to nurture, he believes small groups should be effectively engaged in small-group-based evangelism (George says that in any given year, only one small group in four does any evangelism), and he thinks that small groups should constantly be training small group leaders through apprenticeship. I agree that a small group needs all three functions. And so I use this book as the entry point for someone who is new to these ideas about small group life.

After this introduction, I point churches to further training or more in-depth printed materials about various aspects of this approach to small groups, but in my opinion, there's not a better starting point than this one.

Practical, thorough tool that helps Churches a lot
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2005-10-25
We have used this tool since it came out. I've found that this tool is best for easily organizing the 'how to' stuff of small group leadership. It does not cover the ministerial philosophy issues. A good book for that is 'Master Plan of Evangelism' by Robert Coleman.

As the title for this book says, it covers nine keys for effective small group leadership. Each key really has four or five sub points...so in reality it is nine times about five...or forty five keys if you will. But George has organized them into nine groups...or keys.

We've found that leaders who study this material are easier to work with and easier to build a vision with for a local church ministry. There are a lot of books on Small Group Leadership that will help you. This one is very practical. It's so well written you can use it even if all you do is read the paragraph headers. Everything is well explained and easy to find or follow.

So even for leaders who don't like to read or who you suspect will not read everything you ask them to read, this book still might get through to them. I recommend it as a curriculum text for a course in a local church/ministry for leading small groups.

Enjoy it!

Best book on Small Groups
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2001-11-15
The best two things about this book are: 1) it helps the small group leader coordinate with the pastor, and 2) it includes shepherding, building community, discipleship and evangelism as part of the small group experience. It is the best balanced book available today!

Nine Keys More than enough
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2002-09-26
Carl George effectively communicates the essential basics. This book does a good job of highlighting the difference between being a facilitator of small group time and being a leader (someone who is a disciple-maker). I have used this book as the main text for training small group leaders. It provides great material for interactive discussion and presenting a wholistic picture of all that small groups can be.

Resources
Orchestrating Collaboration at Work: Using Music, Improv, Storytelling and Other Arts to Improve Teamwork
Published in Ring-bound by Pfeiffer (2003-03-21)
Authors: Arthur B. VanGundy and Linda Naiman
List price: $90.00

Average review score:

Change You Can Believe In
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-29
This fantastic workbook is a labor of love and full of great solutions to complex business problems using the arts to facilitate collaboration at work. I bought this book to learn how to begin to facilitate corporate workshops using the arts for The Bite-Size Arts Ensemble, an organization I have created devoted to entrepreneurial growth for artists. Not only will it provide a platform to build on, but it will serve as the model for using arts based learning as a change agent in organizational development. Don't let the price of this book stop you! Buy it.

Great Resource
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-21
This is a great resource. It's a great collection of exercises that draw upon a wide variety of arts modalities. Each exercise is described in enough detail to be able to easily implement them.

Great insight and fascinating exercises
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-21
This book was one of the first and best to explore using arts-based techniques and processes to address organizational issues. The introduction is a superb distillation of some of the reasons why the arts work in the business context and the exercises themselves are generally well thought-out and easy to use - they should be, as they come from some of the leading practitioners in this ever-growing field. The book may be expensive, but it is worth every cent for any trainer or facilitator who wants to take a more creative approach to their work.

A wealth of enablers in the form of training excercises
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2004-12-17
I have discovered the power and the simplicity in finding/applying a wide variety of experiencial excercises that spark creativity and imagination in groups. The beauty of this valuable workbook is that it unleashes our hidden potentialities. I have successfully used these activities in private business and in non profit organizations and in every ocassion the results have been the creation of high energy and relevant discoveries among participants.
Thank you Arthur and Linda for your valuable contribution.

Will VanGundy Ever Run Out of Creativity?
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2004-11-20
Arthur VanGundy has already given us just about every conceivable aid to creative work--from "Brain Boosters" to "101 Games" and "101 Activities." Now with Linda Naiman he delivers the most comprehensive and accessible creativity and innovation resource for groups I've ever seen.

And it's about time someone got business people to start thinking like artists. Anyone in business creativity, ideation, and new-product development will find the VanGundy-Naiman approach not only inspiring and fun but incredibly effective.

This binderful of brilliance would be a bargain at $900.

Resources
The Oxford Dictionary of American Usage and Style (Essential Resource Library)
Published in Paperback by Berkley (2000-07-01)
Author: Bryan A. Garner
List price: $6.99
New price: $48.34
Used price: $2.15

Average review score:

Yank usage, the pleasures of
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-30
Ani Hurwitz, NYC PR pro and another grammar brat, recommended this book with glee in her voice. Professional writers enjoy having a few of these things around, for instant rulings on commonly encountered knots such as "which vs. that." Bryan Garner's American usage rule book is an uncommon delight. It does its basic job with panache, but there's so much added linguistic pleasure between these covers. When you find yourself (as I did) reading random entries for their wit, precision, and style, you have a winner. A distinguished, modern addition to your "how should I properly put this?" reference shelf. Excellent casual reading material for the guest bathroom, too.

Easy to use, never fussy, balances what's right with what's effective
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2005-12-19
If you're ever afraid that you've mistaken "it's" and "its," or if the sight of everyone reading "Eats, Shoots, and Leaves" makes you terrified to write a note, you'll want a copy of this book on your desk. Although a good usage manual depends on the reader having some sense of style (enough to look up uncertain techniques or phrases), too many treat you either like a child or an English teacher, scolding you or explaining their advice in impenetrable jargon. (Many such books don't seem to have taken their own advice about simplicity and clarity.) "The Oxford Dictionary of American Usage" is the exception, a book about language that's well-written and inviting, one that doesn't make you feel like you're back in your grandmother's parlor having every sentence corrected. As one of the other reviewers notes, the range of sources and examples is phenomenal--one way you can double-check your phrasing is to see if you'd want to sound like the writers in Garner's citations. But I'm even more impressed with the simple organization and headings. I sometimes have trouble finding advice in a writer's reference because I can't recall the technical term for what I'm trying to do, but entries in Garner's book are easy to find and richly cross-referenced. Most important, Garner's ear for English is impeccable, and you'll want it listening (as it were) over your shoulder. He acknowledges long-held rules but--where applicable--demonstrates their obsolescence; he also recognizes new usages and gives fair warning of the connotations you risk if you use them before they've become standard.

An em-dash of salt, to flavor
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2005-02-07
Concise, clear, well-developed, and engrossing entries show Bryan A. Garner employs the annotations he presents in The Oxford Dictionary of American Usage and Style. Not only is this abridged version of Garner's Modern American Usage fun and interesting to read (and shorter than the original, obviously), it covers the fundamental (all 360 pages worth) details of American English that anyone truly serious about the language should pay attention to.

Garner writes in the preface, "Although there are good, clarifying forces at work on the language, there are also bad, obscuring forces. And these bad forces tend to work most perniciously on people who are heedless of their language. It's hard to know such a thing, but this segment of society may well be on the rise.
"This book could never reach those people."

This dictionary makes one aware of those bad, obscuring forces and their effects. But it also effectively explains those misconceptions, misused forms, mispronunciations, needless variants, useless words, and, in many cases, how the "mistakes" evolved. Garner also gives longer essay entries confronting usage and style questions based on topic rather than word.

The over 2,000 quotations from publications (usually newspapers and books), serving as both good and bad examples, paint the objects of Garner's entries into a vibrant mural embodying effective American English. This visualization, combined with Garner's strewn-about humor, takes dry topics and makes them flow more easily for the average reader.

I find myself constantly going back and looking up things in this dictionary, because while few are going to remember everything in it, there's at least the chance of remembering there is a question on the word or subject. If you want answers, keeping The Oxford Dictionary of American Usage and Style handy will likely help you find what you're looking for. (And yes, "Perfectly natural-sounding sentences end with prepositions, particularly when a verb with a preposition-particle appears at the end.")

A Valuable Resource
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2003-09-28
I have found this not only to be very useful, but also it is ver readable. This book consists of enteries of common style, grammar, and word choice mistakes. It's ver easy to find what you are looking for because the enteries are in alphabetical order.

The enteries are quite fascinating to read. For example, is "data" plural or singular? What's the difference between "flaunt" and "flout"? Can you end a sentence with a preposition? Is the plural for octopus "octopi" or "octopuses?" The list goes on and on. This book is not dry at all. If you have any interest in language and writing, this is a necessity to have.

Sound advice, good principles, fun reading
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2002-12-21
Fowler's guide is too British. Merriam-Webster's guide is much too descriptive and seeks the low ground too often. Garner strikes just the right balance between descriptive (what most people actually say in common practice) and prescriptive (what good usage should be). The result is that his guidance is high toned without being stuffy. He also gives excellent counsel on proper pronunciation of words that confuse many. This is also fun to read!

Resources
Panic and Anxiety Disorder : 121 Tips, Real-life Advice, Resources & More
Published in Paperback by Simplify Life (2001-04)
Author: Linda Manassee Buell
List price: $9.95
New price: $7.99
Used price: $4.36

Average review score:

Panic and Anxiety Disorder: 121 Tips, Real-life Advice, Reso
Helpful Votes: 17 out of 17 total.
Review Date: 2001-09-22
Having personal experience with an anxiety disorder, I found Linda's book to have practical, reassuring information that I have been searching for for a long time. No one can really understand an anxiety disorder unless they have first-hand knowledge of it. The author speaks from her heart. Many of the mental-health professionals I have spoken to do not have this level of insight.

A way to support family and friends
Helpful Votes: 18 out of 18 total.
Review Date: 2002-02-15
Having a close family member recently diagnosed with Panic Anxiety Disorder, I found the book extremely useful in both understanding the illness and knowing how to support this person. The author provides easy-to-understand details about the illness and solid ways of supporting loved-ones. Now, I feel like I can talk to my family member and no longer have to side-step the discussion. A must-read for anyone who has loved ones with this condition.

Simple, basic stuff that works.
Helpful Votes: 28 out of 29 total.
Review Date: 2001-05-23
I'd heard about Linda's upcoming tips book on Panic and Anxiety Disorder, but wasn't really interested in reading it, mainly because it was a "tips" book; I've seen those booklets in the check-out line, and always considered them vague and rather gimmicky. So, when I first picked up "Panic and Anxiety Disorder, 121 Tips, Real-life Advice, Resources & More", not only was I surprised by its book-like appearance, I was also drawn to its calm, down-to-earth approach to self-help. Yes, there are numbered tips, but as I read, I realized this wasn't implicitly for someone coping with anxiety disorders; Linda has written to everybody. Her tips, while pinpointing individual aspects of anxiety, actually address the very simple, basic, moment-by-moment steps to follow in order to successfully survive just about any stressful inner conflict. From digging in the earth to truly relearning the art of breathing, Linda's guidance is straightforward and simultaneously profound. Not leaving any stone unturned, Linda has dedicated an entire chapter to folks who've found themselves in the challenging role of support, and included numerous sources of additional literature and information.

Linda Manassee Buell has written this book with the compassion and personal landscape of someone who's lived in the cave of fear, and who's triumphantly emerged into the sunshine.

She did it again!!
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2003-06-08
'This is a little book.......filled with
amazing tips....in order to overcome anxiety
and panic attacks....I am majoring in Clinical
Psychology at the University.....and I am too
suffered from panic attacks since 17 years old..
so the advices she give us in her book....are so
simple and practical..coming from a wonderful
woman who also knows how to experiment a full
panic attack...I recommend this book to all
people who is feeling alone.......who feels that
nobody understands.......you will connect with
the compassive Linda...who shares with us....all
the tips available to handle this uneasy condition...
Buy this book....you will not regret.......the message
there is.....THAT YOU CAN LIVE A FULL LIFE EVEN
WITH THIS CONDITION...like everyone else!!!

A valuable resource
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2001-09-20
This book is a valuable addition to the others on the subject. Written in a direct and compassionate voice, it provides great insight and assistance to anyone connected to this disorder. I myself do not suffer from it; however, I'm close to a number of people who do. This book is a tremendous help to those of us who must learn to cope with a loved one who has a panic/anxiety disorder. And it provides an excellent tool to begin safely discussing the topic with that loved one. Lastly, I've had the privilege to meet the author on a couple occasions and talk about the issue -- she is truly knowledgeable, sensitive, and passionate about it.

Resources
Parallel Peaks: Business Insights While Climbing the World's Highest Mountains
Published in Paperback by HRD Press, Inc. (2007-11)
Author: John D. McQuaig
List price: $17.95
New price: $17.95
Used price: $15.99

Average review score:

Hair-raising, Inspirational, Humorous, Insightful
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-15
When you climb a mountain, your goal is clear. You can see the summit, you can picture yourself standing way up there on top--exhausted maybe, but exhilarated, proud and awestruck.

In business, the goal frequently isn't so clear. Owners, employees, bankers, advisers and investors can find themselves climbing toward what they assume is a business's summit... but instead end up scaling different peaks.

Now this insightful book by John McQuaig---CMC, CPA--entrepreneur, consultant, banker, organic farmer and veteran mountaineer----reveals secrets to building a successful business, secrets based on unique insights that came to the author while working his way upwards toward many of the world's loftiest natural summits.

Through hair-raising, inspirational, and sometimes humorous stories drawn from his own mountaineering adventures, John applies mountaineering principles to building a successful business or managing a successful department and staff. He explains, "I have come to appreciate the relevance of preparing for a major mountain climb to the preparations required to succeed in business. There are many parallels between climbing to the summit of both and tackling the peaks, chasms, glaciers and slippery slopes of figurative and literal mountaintops."

To get to the top in either field, you need that clear goal (envisioned summit) and a SWOT (strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, threats) analysis of your team members. And you need an experienced guide, too. Think Sir Edmund Hillary could have scaled Mount Everest without Tenzig Norgay? Unlikely.

Author John McQuaig has lived what he preaches, both on the world's highest peaks and as an entrepreneur since the day he began mowing lawns back in grade school. He followed that by starting and running a painting business as a high-schooler. At 23, he founded his own CPA and consulting firm, McQuaig & Welk, PLLC (www.mcqw.com), which still thrives.

"Owning a business has inherent dangers that most of the workforce prefers to avoid, but that just gets the adrenaline pumping in the true entrepreneur," he says.

The founder of North Cascades National Bank, a $300 million institution with more than 120 employees, and its Chairman of the Board, he's also an organic farmer who grows apples and nectarines on 25 acres in Washington state. This Certified Management Consultant also consults with companies on how to establish their "vision paths" and advance their strategic plans toward high peaks of achievement.

As for his actual mountaineering feats, John has made it to the summits of many mountains including Mount Rainier, Kala Pattar, Mount St. Helens, Orizaba and Kilimanjaro. Now his thoughts and lessons-learned during such formidable treks can be yours for the asking. Buy this book!

NOTE: This review also appears on my website www.thoughtleading.com

A Great Parallel
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-19
For anyone that has started a small business, a new venture or acted on a great idea knows that the process is an adventure. It can also be terrifying, humbling and risky. Thankfully we now have a book that helps us reconcile our desire for the adventure with the reality of the risk.

Parallel Peaks is a quick and entertaining read - perfect for that 2 1/2 hour plane ride. It's written in a clear, concise way that even an entrepreneur with little business savvy will be able to understand.

I have referred back to it many times during my first year in business and feel more educated and prepared with McQuaig's 8 keys to the summit. I highly recommend this book for anyone that is ready to start climbing toward their goal.

Advice for uphill climbers: launching a business or scaling a mountain
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-14
John McQuaig sat down for a well-deserved rest at the summit of Mount Kilimanjaro, "the roof of Africa," on the morning of January 31, 2005. After five days of climbing more than 19,000 feet, he had finally fulfilled one of his dreams. He celebrated his accomplishment with his fellow climbers, and then began to think about ... business. After all, running a business is a lot like climbing a mountain. McQuaig had found success in both venues. He could share his experience in both fields by outlining this analogy to others. Hence the inspiration for this book.

PARALLEL PEAKS is organized around eight keys, the common elements that McQuaig identifies as being crucial considerations for both endeavors. These include: creating a vision; doing a SWOT (strengths-weaknesses-opportunities-threats) analysis; assembling a supportive team; engaging the expertise of a knowledgeable guide; and making progress, one step at a time. Each chapter begins with inspirational quotes and b&w snow-capped photos, then launches into explanations and examples. The author could have taken a trite and flippant approach, using various metaphors and making endless analogies between launching a business and scaling a mountain. But thankfully, he doesn't choose that route. He bases his observations on his own solid achievements in various companies in the Northwest and in summiting various mountains around the world. To that advice he adds real-life examples as well as best practices and research done by other notable business authors (Jim Horan, Michael Gerber). The result is a volume that is slim but hardly superficial. Above all, the text is easy to read, and the process as a whole makes perfect sense.

PARALLEL PEAKS is highly recommended for anyone who has entrepreneurial or high altitude aspirations. Even a small-business owner, a middle manager, or someone embarking on a large project will find helpful and logical suggestions here. McQuaig makes it even easier by including several summary pages at the end, complete with simple questions to answer. The only ingredients missing are you and your dreams / goals.

Parallel Peaks
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-07
Over the years I have probably read a couple of dozen "how to" management books by a wide range of authors, and thisis one of the best I have read.
Two reasons why it is good: first of all, it is short...which means it is not verbose, but in fact is quite tight and well edited (and well written). Second, it is based on the author's personal "been there, done that" experience. A lot better than some academic theorizing.

"...Your life in the mountains is intertwined with those who share your rope."
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-16

John D. McQuaig, business consultant and mountaineer, draws for the reader a set of parallels between his two pursuits. He tells us that all the vision, planning and focus that go into a successful climb are likewise the keys to building a successful business.

While there are many books on business ownership, I have never read one that so happily blended business with action and adventure. Parallel Peaks: Business Insights While Climbing the World's Highest Mountains is short (116 pages) and highly readable, and makes a good starting point for anyone planning a business venture--or wanting to reclaim the joy and enthusiasm of a pursuit gone stale.

McQuaig's eight keys to success are enumerated elsewhere so I won't list them here. All of them, however, are well within the control of a committed entrepreneur. Even his eighth key, luck, can be managed to a certain extent: prepare to capitalize on good luck and mitigate the bad effects when circumstances go awry.

The linkage between climbing and business came to McQuaig at the summit of Africa's Mt. Kilimanjaro. Throughout the book he entertains with stories from this and other climbs, and there are numerous highly apt examples and anecdotes. It may be "business lite," but on the other hand "fourteeners" (mountains exceeding 14,000 feet in elevation) are risky to life and limb, so a climber's technique has to be sound if he's going to come back to his desk and write about it.

John D McQuaig, like Douglas Adams, delightfully exploits "the fundamental interconnectedness of all things." (Dirk Gently's Holistic Detective Agency)

Thanks to J. Kaye Oldner, on whose Book Blog I won this book. I recommend it to you as a quick and inspiring read.

Linda Bulger, 2008

Resources
Parenting the Office
Published in Hardcover by Pelican Publishing Company (2001-07)
Author:
List price: $23.00
New price: $2.95
Used price: $0.05

Average review score:

De-mystifying organizational behavior
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2001-09-12
Finally! A simple, informative perspective on the complex office dynamics that so many of us face. The scenarios are well laid out and the examples easy to relate to. While other discussions of office dynamics tend to over-analyze situations, this book provided me with a straightforward roadmap to recognize and deal with daily personnel issues.

Helpful to employees and employers alike.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2001-09-06
In an easy-reading format the authors have pointed out many office situations that relate to family situations. They give practical and useful suggestions for handling these problems. Worthwhile reading for anyone who works in an office setting.

A must for managing
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2001-08-22
This book is a must for anyone who has to manage people in an office, organization, and even on a committee. It is easy and interesting reading and a MUST to understand why the people you manage behave as they do.

Uses case histories to discuss applications
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2001-08-11
Many of the issues raised in the workplace are also common to family life, from the desire of the youngest to rival the oldest child to bullying and rivalry. Parenting The Office equates these lessons learned from children to business and family life alike, using case histories to discuss applications and clarify problems.

A Great Paradigm for Understanding Management
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2001-07-16
I thought the book was a very fun and informative read!! I thought the best thing about the book was that it gave a model to understand and apply real-life management techniques in my office. The book caused me to think about the myriad of situations that happen in my office and how I can handle them better. My wife read the book as well. She was fond of it as well.

I highly recommend this book to anyone who deals with people in a business situation!!

Resources
Payroll Accounting 2007 (with Payroll CD and ADP CD) (Payroll Accounting)
Published in Paperback by South-Western College Pub (2006-10-31)
Author: Bernard J. Bieg
List price: $146.95
New price: $26.48
Used price: $7.15

Average review score:

Payrolling Accounting 2007
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-07
My wife needed this book for an Astronomy class. She wanted a book with a two cds and not all marked up. I got it for a good price and it looks like a new book with no extra marks. I am very impressed with the quick delivery time, the ease of ordering and the condition of the book. I was also kept posted on the sent date and anticipated delivery date and it was accurate. This was very much appreciated, especially during the holiday season. Good Job!

Payroll Acctg
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-16
I received this book through Amazon way before my class started. I saved quite a few bucks and it came in mint condition.

a good foundation book for payroll accounting
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-16
This book is very thorough and not too grotesquely boring. Accounting textbooks can seem to drag on and on but the information in this book seems to all be relevant and pertinent. There are plenty of review questions and problems at the end of each chapter and the chapters do build on each other well, so the further into the book, the more questions from previous chapters. Some other nice things about this book are the continuation problems that utilize the posting of payroll accounts and ledger pages to further help the student grasp the content.
The CDs included are wonderfully useful, too. There doesn't seem to be a relevance issue with this text as I have experienced with textbooks in the past.

Good Book
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-09
Good book, but the problems in the chapter reviews could be more discriptive as to what answer the want.

Very Helpful
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-08
I have found this book to be very helpful in gaining a practical understanding in the workings of a Payroll function. This book has helped the entire department which has recently started performing the US payrolls for our organisation. I hope that a listing of courses that currently use this book as a recomemded text is included in its next edition.


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