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A classic, and a book for everyoneReview Date: 2008-10-02
excellent word funReview Date: 2008-09-06
C D BReview Date: 2008-07-27
Great book, but needs the answersReview Date: 2007-07-24
CDBReview Date: 2008-04-27
I was very excited to find this book for my grandbaby. We had great fun with it when her aunts were small. Who would have thought back then that William Stieg invented 'text speak'. I even stumped my youngest daughter with NQ!


Well done!Review Date: 2008-07-02
The DNA of Successful Leaders is what I would call the "real-life personality profile." Mr. Tate's philosophy is simple - you were born to lead and influence others for the better, but your leadership will only be effective if it is true to who you are.
The information in this book is invaluable, and is a must read for everybody to use in business and in life. It encourages readers to be authentically themselves, and to allow others to be the same. As a Coach, this insight alone made me cheer!
Incredible and Uniquely insightfulReview Date: 2007-01-24
A "Must Read" Review Date: 2007-01-24
Without this book - my company would be dissolvedReview Date: 2007-02-10
Psycho-babble nonsense. Really.Review Date: 2007-01-02
If you're a banal mid-level managerial type whose anonymously boring career is stuck in a rut and who buys into the "I'm Okay, You're Okay" malarkey pop culture continues to force feed the masses, than this might just be the book for you. If you're a thinking human being with a personality more complex than a coloring book, look elsewhere.

Used price: $20.44
Collectible price: $37.99

Wonderful!Review Date: 2008-09-08
Core, must-have owner builder bookReview Date: 2008-06-06
Beautiful Book!Review Date: 2008-05-31
More than a bookReview Date: 2008-02-25
Tree Hugging HumbuggeryReview Date: 2008-07-19
I was looking for a practical guide on Cob building - not on living according to the new age hippie ethos of the authors.
I've read the first few chapters, and there are nuggets of practical advice, but the narration keeps getting bogged down by Ianto Evans digressions on how evil humans keep screwing up the environment.
It is my hope that I can finish the book, collect some useful information, and in the end, be satisfied with my purchase. I'm just finding it difficult to wallow through the enlightened philosophy.
I will attempt to read it through to the end and perhaps revise my review. I've looked briefly at the sections written by the other two authors (Smith and Smiley) and they both seem, on the surface, to be a little more instructional in their writing, and less interested in teaching me about their new age voodoo.

Used price: $30.00

Important Home Staging ReadReview Date: 2008-06-20
The best book I have on Staging so far...Review Date: 2008-04-06
Great intro so far...Review Date: 2008-04-22
The layout is like reading a term paper, but it's kind of nice reading on such a big format for a change. No color pictures to speak of, but if you're buying this, you're not looking for color ideas. Just tell me what the biz is all about, and what i could expect from giving it a go, is all i'm looking for.
I'm really enjoying the way that it's written as if the author is talking to you. It's much more entertaining, and it makes me feel like she's there for any questions, which she says she is!
So based on the 30+ pages or so i've read, this book is a definite for those looking for some insight into this growing business.
Extremely helpfulReview Date: 2008-07-08
Am finding her to be highly thorough and knowledgeable.
Every bit of info is useable. Let you know later if I
make lots of money putting her techniques to use.
Many thanks, Gerri
Packed with good info for a noviceReview Date: 2008-05-26

Used price: $8.99

More craziness for crazy quiltsReview Date: 2008-05-08
All it says it isReview Date: 2008-04-14
Well written Review Date: 2008-02-09
Its the bestReview Date: 2007-08-11
Good crazy quilting resourceReview Date: 2007-05-13

Used price: $48.97

Great resource for IT Portfolio Management & Project Portfolio ManagementReview Date: 2007-12-08
Major pros of the book:
- No jargon, acronyms and generally useless platitudes and overgeneralized frameworks like I've seen in other books on the topic. Straightforward, conversational tone makes the book very easy to read.
- Very practitioner oriented
- American Express case study - What the company has achieved is remarkable and definitely the best example I've seen
- 7.5 deadly sins of corporate portfolio management - These were spot on
Optimizing Corporate Portfolio Management: Aligning Investment Proposals with Organizational Strategy
Highly RecommendedReview Date: 2007-09-30
My favorite part is the section where Sanwal lists "the deadly sins" of CPM. These negative examples provide managers tools to anticipate organizational difficulties and adjust their proposals on CPM proactively.
A useful do-ers guide to resource allocationReview Date: 2007-09-17
High on substance and styleReview Date: 2007-09-14
The title is promising - unfortunately the contents do not live up to the promiseReview Date: 2007-09-12
What is undobtedly the most valuable contribution of the book is its practical approach to managing corporations as portfolios. The book contains a number of proven examples that a pactitioner is sure to find useful. This is also what the author promises to do: to write a book from the point of view of a practitioner for the purposes of enlightening a fellow practitioner. So much so good.
From the perspective of an (customer) portfolio management expert (i.e. advanced level practitioner), I found the book quite "light" on all of the key words in the title: corporate portfolio management, aligning investment proposals, and organizational strategy. In more practical terms, the book does not manage to answer the question stated on the cover: how to align investment proposals with organizational strategy?
All in all, I find the book an OK source if you are an absolute beginner and need to get a first glimpse of the subject matter. For anyone with more ambitious aims, the book may not live up to its promise.

Used price: $7.70

Good Overview of Training..Review Date: 2006-01-19
Recommended if you need an overview, although in some chapters goes into details. Yet, there are several other books that focus on preparation, presentation, evaluation etc. which might be more focused on these topics.
all the things togetherReview Date: 2007-07-17
No Train, No GainReview Date: 2008-03-20
Author, Elaine Biech covers the instructional systems design model (ISD) or A.D.D.I.E., in detail. These are analysis, design, development, implementation, and evaluation. She states the difference between what it means to be a teacher vs. being a trainer. This is one of the only texts I have seen that offers some construction of an instructional design draft, although I wish she would have shown and explained a two-column format in depth. She did provide samples of a three- and four-column format.
Biech goes into overdrive regarding implementation from room set-up, the things that could go wrong, dealing with nervousness, and handling the disruptive influence, all types of them, to mention just a few. She also covers the four (or five if you prefer) levels of evaluation superbly.
One area I was hoping that she would address is how trainers can deal with managers who make disastrous training decisions that will be a supreme waste of time and money, but will blame the trainer rather than recognizing their decision as the reason for failure. (I was once asked to do training to control or reduce absenteeism. Thank God, he had a poor memory)! This is a constant uphill battle for trainers and I see half-hearted training efforts squandered on almost a weekly basis. (If you're out there reading this, no, you can't have Team Building in only one day Why? Because it's not enough time to build teams, dummy)!
I have a few dozen texts on training. If you could only have one of them, this would be the one I would give you. If you're serious about training, it is one book you need to keep on your table instead of your shelf.
Remember...
No train, no gain.
P.S. Don't get overconfident if you have a full seminar in Hawaii or Scottsdale, AZ. They might have other reasons for being there.
Concise and usefulReview Date: 2007-02-12
GREAT BOOKReview Date: 2007-03-28
I have a masters in training so I wouldn't say I am a dummy in the field, and I believe this book is a fantastic resource to remind you of many training techniques and principles. I Def. Recommend!!!!


Abby is the best one!Review Date: 2006-08-05
Anyways Abby is made to write a bio about her life for English. I seriously think this is the best one out of the Portrait Collection. Abby is so down to earth, humorous, and down right honest it's hard not to like her.
There are painful siturations in the book such as the details of her father's death, and the way she and her family handled it. It was with such honestly, you felt for Abby really bad espeically if you lost someone you truly and honestly love.
The hightlights of the book were whenever her family decided to go to Florida for Winter Break, and they althrough started out in seperate ways, but ended up retelling their favorite holiday stories, and creating new ways to celebrate the holidays together as a new family.
If you haven't read this book you should have. You will not be dissappointed. The way the book was written you find it hard not to like Abby especially after all the tragic situration her and her family had to endure, makes her a winner in all levels.
Cool!Review Date: 2005-12-13
Sad :(Review Date: 2004-05-04
Abby's the best!Review Date: 2000-06-29
BRING BACK ABBY! SHE ROCKS!Review Date: 2000-08-18

Collectible price: $10.00

Poetry and love in the age of the Internet.Review Date: 2000-02-04
Real Poetry - Real PeopleReview Date: 2000-01-14
A Treasure Trove of HonestyReview Date: 1999-12-07
A Heartwarming ExperienceReview Date: 1999-12-05
Bytes of PoetryReview Date: 1999-12-08
Collectible price: $24.00

A good story about what happens when the supernatural meets the real world at an old ManorReview Date: 2007-11-01
The story revolves around Toseland, a young child who goes to live with Mrs. Oldknow. He goes to live in a big manor in a country estate (think the estate the Pevensies go to live on in Lewis' THE LION, THE WITCH, AND THE WARDOBE). He soon realises there's something odd about the house, and is puzzled why Mrs. Oldknow talks about the history and past inhabitents of the place like they were around only yesterday. It turns out the house is inhabited by children of the past, and he learns of an evil gypsey named Green Noah who he ultimately must confront. This final confrontation is rather scary, and Green Noah is one of literature's most memorable villains that I've encountered in a long time.
The book is a rather charming blend of supernatural meets reality, and there is something very delightfully English about the whole affair. The author's Catholocisim is rather apparent n the book, and she fits a lot of different allusions to literature, music, and history.
For those looking for good Children's fiction, this is a powerful story. It's too bad it's not well known.
The Children of Green KnoweReview Date: 2005-09-21
Loved it then, love it nowReview Date: 2007-08-30
Kristen's reviewReview Date: 2004-10-07
The book I'm going to talk to you about is called; The Children of Green Knowe, by L.M. Boston. I didn't really like this book. It was a little confusing and hard to understand. There just wasn't a clear point. There was not middle, or a climax and resolution. I thought this book was about a mystery or a ghost story, by the cover and the blip from the back. I was very disappointed in the ending, and that it was appoint-less fantasy, that bored me half to death!
The Children of green knowe was about a boy named, Tolly, who was the age of 8-11,whose parents die (they don't say how),so he was sent to live with hisGreat-Grandmother in Penny Soaky. Her house was called Old Knowe.
Three children, Alexander, Toby, and Linnet, died in Tolly's(the boy's name), Great Grandmother's house many centuries ago. They started appearing around the house just days after their death. They played with Tolly, and went on great Adventures. Enjoy one of Granny's stories every 20 pages, and learn about Tolly and Granny's love for the flute andthebirds.
Almost Enchanting, but ....Review Date: 2006-07-07
But Green Knowe is different- perhaps because it was written in a gentler, kinder time. While there is fantasy, and a sense of the blurring of the dimensions (ghosts that are not evil, a world within our world that has connections to the past, and the interpenetration of them all) overall, this work has as much depth as Potter's does for the adult reader, without all the preachiness of 'PC' dogma which has so marred Rowling's later writings, and has influenced all of the film treatments. One really does not need to rehash Shirer's work on WWII in a Children's fantasy novel, which is all Rowling's works have become at the hands of her American editors...
Boston's world is alive- with literature, history, music, and artistry, which Rowling's is not. For adults, the references to the Restoration, Cromwell, Purcell's music, Anglican Church, and British Christmas customs provide a wealth for any HS parent discussing the period 1660-1700. But, as another reviewer noted, she never GOES anywhere- unless just BEING is enough. Her world is one to inhabit, not to holiday through, as if it were an itinerary of sights to check off. The ONE confrontation is scary, and could frighten younger audiences...but a vision of a redeemed world shines through. I was reminded while reading Boston, of Jame's novella, that Britten set to music in the opera, "Turn of the Screw." NOT "cheery" stuff, that!
If I seem ambivalent, it is because, while there is much to recommend in her writing, and the pictures she paints are very vivid, and full of life, the theological issues of the spirit world interacting with the real world, the malevolent curses of a gypsy long dead, and the subtle hints of either a strong genetic lineage, or a nascent reincarnationalism, coupled with clear Christian imagery and pious sentiment (Do ghosts really sing Christmas carols, without malevolent intent?) bothered me.
Is the book magical? oh yes, in many ways. Is it troubling, as say, Wind in the Willows is not? Oh, yes.. in equal measure. Is it a good read? Definitely. But the rest? I'm not sure....
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