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Worth Every PennyReview Date: 2008-01-14
The best guide book to retirement planning I've foundReview Date: 2006-10-11
immensely helpful. Finally, a book that equips those who save seriously
for retirement with real direction. The charts and tables are
incredibly easy to use. All I had to do was fill in my age, income, and
current savings. I now know how much I'll need for retirement and what
I must save each month to reach my goal. I never dreamed it could be so
clear-cut and simple.
I've already made adjustments to my retirement investment plans.
Mike Rose the Retirement Decision - GREAT BOOK MUST READReview Date: 2006-10-09
AS THE PRESIDENT OF A EXECUTIVE SEARCH FIRM I AM SENDING COPIES TO ALL OUR BEST CLIENTS. I HOPE MIKE WRITES A FOLLOW-UP BOOK BECAUSE I REALLY APPRECIATED HIS DIRECT NATURE AND INFORMATION THAT WILL HELP ME AND MY CLIENTS FUTURE.
Wish I'd had this 25 years ago.Review Date: 2007-03-15
Great Book, Highly RecommendedReview Date: 2006-11-13


Cats and Solar EnergyReview Date: 2007-08-12
Cats *can* be the best teachersReview Date: 2004-02-11
Are People as Energy Savy as Cats?Review Date: 2003-12-12
Fun in the SunReview Date: 2003-12-11
Teacher Sets Solar Cats Loose in ClassroomReview Date: 2003-12-09
I loved The Return of the Solar Cat Book immediately, and I realized my students were ready to appreciate it too. I took a chance and shared it with my students.It was a great decision. They adore the drawings, the author's wry wit, and the way the
book makes difficult science concepts very accessible.Now we learn and giggle together. I love it. Thank you, Jim Augustyn

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Packed with Knowledge!Review Date: 2002-05-22
Understand the critical importance of an employee reward systemReview Date: 2006-02-21
Author Thomas Wilson explored many different reward systems from different firms. As he reviewed the most successful firms, he started to notice similarities. The author noticed that regardless of the individual goals of each organization's reward program, they all shared these 10 key factors:
· Reward systems play a crucial role in performance.
· Measures give rewards relevance, rewards give measures meaning.
· Alignment with the company's philosophies and values, along with consistency are essential.
· How people are paid is often more important than how much they are paid.
· Build programs with a vision, improving them over time.
· The value of the reward, including psychological value, should exceed its cost.
· Recognize that the program does not become real for workers until the first payment.
· Translate measures into action guidelines for employees.
· Make rewards more meaningful by combing financial with non-financial rewards.
· Use rewards as strategic management systems used to support the strategy, goals, and values of a company.
Find out how America's leading orgs. reward their employees.Review Date: 1999-07-15
I really liked the way the cases were grouped, because it shows that reward systems need to be defined differently for different applications and company cultures. Best practices are useful to study, but Wilson's book goes beyond this to show how and why the best companies do what they do and align their reward systems with their business objectives.
It's refreshing to see a book from a leading consultant not geared to "provide just enough" to entice the reader to want to know more -- this book truly tells the whole story, and does it in a way that proves to be a compelling read.
This book is simply great. A must read for everyone.Review Date: 1999-05-22
10 Key Factors Make Reward Systems Successful.Review Date: 2001-01-16
In this context, Thomas B. Wilson focuses on:
* How does an organization such as Amazon.com instill or retain the entrepreneurial spirit that it had when it was small?
* how companies such as DuPont, Coca-Cola, and Cisco Systems seek to create a bridge between the requirements for success and each individual.
* how companies retain a customer focus so that people collaborate and strive to perform better.
* how companies such as DuPont, Cumming Engine, and K/P Corporation encouraged people to collaborate and provided a share of the benefit if improvements could be achieved.
* how companies retain their critical talents.
* how companies such as Allied Signal, and Harvard University Health Services have integrated a variety of quality management processes into their organizations.
* how companies have changed their reward systems to support new business strategies.
Finally, he writes that "to aid you in developing your own approach to change, I have summarized the 10 key factors that seem to most accurately determine what makes reward systems successful. While this list summarizes common characteristics, the true significance is in applying these principles to your own situation and to learn from the direct application of experience."
1. Reward systems play a crucial role in performance.
2. Measures give rewards relevance; rewards give measures meaning.
3. Alignment and consistency are essential.
4. How people are paid is often more important than how much they are paid.
5. Build programs with a vision, and then improve them over time.
6. The value of the reward should exceed the cost.
7. The program begins after the first payouts.
8. Translate measures into action.
9. Make rewards meaningful.
10. Take a strategic, systemic, and holistic approach.
Highly recommended.

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Saving the world, one continent at a timeReview Date: 2008-06-10
I'm often frustrated by books on "the environment," much of which talk about pollution, toxic chemicals, recycling and related topics. Those strike me as questions of human health and safety - - these issues don't really value the environment for itself, but only in terms of whether or not humans are fouling our nest.
This book lays out a different vision, one much closer to the kind of manifesto that I've been looking for. Foreman wants to "rewild" large chunks of land in North America. Some of these lands will be strictly preserved, such as wildernesses and national parks, but much of the action takes place in buffer zones, corridors between preserved areas, and thinking about how to make the human-occupied matrix more friendly to nature.
Foreman wants to create four "Continental MegaLinkages," which would preserve a network of preserved lands. The MegaLinkages are breathtaking: the Pacific MegaLinkage (Baja to Alaska); the Spine of the Continent MegaLinkage (Central America to Alaska through the Rockies); the Atlantic MegaLinkage (Florida through the Appalachian Mountains to New Brunswick); and the Arctic-Boreal MegaLinkage (from Alaska across Canada to the Maritimes).
Did you notice that the prairies of the United States and Canada are completely left out? Neither did Foreman. He never discusses them. That was my biggest single disappointment of the book, and it cost him that fifth star.
To make his argument, Foreman talks about how humans have caused extinctions from the Stone Age until the present - - 40,000 years of environmental destruction. Then he talks about the core ideas of conservation biology to set the stage for his proposed MegaLinkages. In particular, he emphasizes the importance of cores, corridors and carnivores.
Both the extinctions chapters and the presentation of conservation biology are well-written and clear. If you're not familiar with these ideas, this is a good place to get an introduction.
Then Foreman descends to the nitty-gritty details about how activists can survey a region and put together proposals for preserved lands and linkages between them. These chapters draw heavily on his own experience in the Southwest, especially in New Mexico. It's not obvious to me that they translate well to, say, boreal Canada - - or to the prairies. A greater diversity of examples would help him here.
Objections aside, this is an impressive and impassioned manifesto. Foreman makes a convincing case that we need to think about how to preserve a lot of lands on a very large scale. There are other books making similar cases, and I've reviewed a few others on Amazon, but this one is the best for the general reader.
FinallyReview Date: 2006-03-13
The "Sand County Almanac" of our time!Review Date: 2005-03-08
"Rewilding North America" is THE environmental vision for this era and for this continent. The book begins with the most succinct and heart-stoppingly depressing summary of the bad news of biodiversity and ecological losses that I have yet encountered. But hang in there, because Foreman then masterfully unfolds a program of possibility that is both radical and realistic -- and inspirational beyond measure!
As we biodiversity and wilderness advocates continue the important work in the paradigm of preservation (that is, saving all the pieces we can against the onslaught of vapid consumerism), we can also begin to take the exciting first steps in a new form of ecological restoration. Dave's "rewilding" proposal is long-term in both directions: He considers a baseline for rewilding that goes back 13,000 years to just before the first humans arrived in North America, while setting forth a vision that is intended -- dare I say, destined -- to grow over this century and the next. That means we don't just stop at bringing back Wolf and Griz; we also start plotting paths for repatriating Cheetah to its continent of origin, and assisting Order Proboscidea in once again leisurely reshaping the tusked behemoths of the Old World into New World natives.
Onward with the Great Work!
A level-headed, serious call to action!Review Date: 2004-08-11
This is a MUST READ book for anyone with an ounce of caring in their bones for the future of life on Earth.
Bring on the predators -- a real vision for a renewed AmericaReview Date: 2008-03-12


Thought-provokingReview Date: 2007-09-22
Strong Mother; Stronger SonReview Date: 2007-07-31
Listen in to American Muslim DiscourseReview Date: 2006-05-09
A must read for allReview Date: 2006-04-24
Scattered Pictures is an inspirationReview Date: 2006-02-13

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Fascinating portrait of a little-known country and of the gold-mining industry Review Date: 2007-03-11
There are two main ways in which gold is produced. One way is used by large foreign-owned internationally-financed mining corporations, mines which employ professional geologists and millions of dollars in heavy equipment. The other is used by small-time local miners, sometimes working in small groups, often independently. These are subsistence operations and are run with only a few crude tools, often by uneducated if not illiterate men.
Local miners can produce gold from the creeks and rivers. River-mining uses slow rafts that float low in the water, made of scrap metal and of questionable seaworthiness. Located on the center of these rafts is an engine and pump, connected to a hose that goes over the side. A diver (breathing through a small rubber hose gripped in his teeth) takes the hose to the riverbed, dredges the bottom, and the other miners (usually there are about five or six) collect the riverbed mud, which is treated with mercury, which bonds with the gold in the sediment and forms heavy nuggets which drop out of solution in the mud. The mud is strained to remove these nuggets and the rest of the mud is dumped back into the river.
Land mines are created when miners cut down a patch of trees and dig holes ten or twenty feet across in the forest floor. Men would then enter the clearing and wet down the bottom and the sides of the hole with water from buckets or high-pressure hoses (the water drawn from a nearby river or swamp). Other miners would haul out the mud and place it in a long box where it would be treated with mercury.
With either method, once the nuggets were obtained the miners would use a blowtorch on them. Most of the mercury would boil and rise as vapor though some could be saved, often collected in a rag which was later wrung out. What would be left would be small amounts of gold, often just a few ounces resulting from tons of mud being collected.
The small-time miners had it hard. The work was very physically demanding. There were no police (indeed, the mining was often illegal) and the miners had to keep their gold on them in the form of cheap, badly made jewelry or gold teeth. Miners were occasionally robbed or more often forced by other miners off of particularly rich patches. They would also have to compete with miners from other countries, such as Venezuela or Brazil (border control being almost nonexistent in the jungle) or being preyed upon by corrupt police (more often a problem in Venezuela than Guyana). The mercury was very toxic over time and eventually many got sick from that as well as catching malaria.
Herman viewed a large mining operation at Omai, located on the Essequibo River, four hours south of the Guyanese capital of Georgetown. At the time of his visit it was the largest gold mine in South America. The large gold mines can afford machinery to process hard rock in addition to mud; Omai blew huge chunks of rock out of the ground, took the several ton boulders to their mill, and ground down the rocks into sand in huge rock tumblers nicknamed "cyclones." However, instead of using mercury they used cyanide, which much like mercury could draw or leech out all the gold dust from the sediment, though apparently cyanide pulls out more gold than mercury does. This type of operation is very expensive, and as a consequences mines could and did close if the prices of gold on the world market fell too much, and also made Guyana dependent upon foreign companies (as Guyana did not have the money to operate its own mines).
Both methods have their pros and cons. Omai and other mines require large lakes of very deadly cyanide (which occasionally did spill), while the local miners only need small amounts of mercury. However, cyanide decomposes in direct sunlight while mercury can stay in a region for centuries (mercury used by the California gold rush still is causing problems). Unfortunately cyanide is too expensive for local miners to use and is also more deadly (cyanide can immediately kill you while mercury does not). By and large however, environmentalists, if forced to chose, would rather have a single massive cyanide mine than fifty teams of untraceable local miners using mercury throughout the jungle.
The mines and mining caused many problems. Miners spread diseases such as dengue deep into the rain forest to the detriment of Amerindian groups. Fights often occurred, either between local miners or involving Amerindians and/or the big mines.
For all their effort, most miners were very poor (a nation of "gilded paupers"). For instance, a crew of six might work for an owner, the owner getting 70% of the gold, the crew 30%, split six ways. Each man might get 5% of the week's gold, which might be half an ounce, working out to wages of about a dollar or two U.S. a day.
Unfortunately, gold-mining is a declining industry. The value of gold has been declining for two decades and changes in the jewelry industry and in international currencies has increasingly made gold a commodity exchangeable for money rather than money itself.
Guyana though has few choices. Mines make up one-fifth of the national economy and mining is often the only job open to thousands of people.
The book is not all grim, as Herman did provide many amusing stories of his travels.
Fantastic accounts of his encountersReview Date: 2003-07-22
So funny, so smartReview Date: 2003-02-24
How can a country so full of gold have so many problems? Journey with Marc and find out; and have a blast along the way.
The right type of travelogueReview Date: 2006-08-15
1. The writer visits an exotic location, finds the scenery appealing, the locals quaint and whimsical but good hearted, has some sort of personal ephiphany, and writes a condescending, patronising book about all the amusing things that happen to him. Possibly he later sells the film rights. Call this the "My autumn in Europe" type book
2. The writer maximises to an adsurd level the level of discomfort in order to have a "real travel experience" and is found quaint and whimsical but good hearted by disbelieving locals. Call this the "Down The Nile on Crutches" type book
3. The writer goes somewhere he knows little about and actually learns something, which he manages to pass on to the reader
Thankfully this is the third type. Herman doesn't find Guyana quaint, he finds it on the brink of collapse with little prospect of future improvement, increasingly hopeless. Its unlikely that this book has done anything to boost the fledgling Guyana tourist industry - indeed he'll be lucky if they let him into the country again
Herman reveals the extent of the Amazon gold rush, but also its utter futility, with neither big multinationals nor small miners able to turn even a small profit. But he also reveals the desperate lack of choices that will continue to drive so many down the mines to the deteriment of both their, and the nation's health
Herman vividly brings to life the people he meets in his (genuinely) arduous travels and while his writing is often laugh out loud funny, it never belittles its subjects.
Before reading this I knew little about Guyana or about the gold rush. I now feel like I do. I heartily recommend this book
A great read!Review Date: 2003-09-01

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Poetry that makes you feel aliveReview Date: 2000-07-27
I've performed these poems to great effect, and had many people ask where they could get the book. I've heard it's coming back in print and that's tremendously exciting.
Patricia Monaghan has written numerous books on Goddesses and myth, including the brilliant "O, Mother Sun," and has another poetry collection, "Winterburning."
A dream, a rush, a treasureReview Date: 2002-09-19
There is also a gorgeous accompanying CD, featuring several performers who have set selected poems to music. You'll want to hang on to this, too, either just to listen to for pleasure, or to play during ritual.
I would talk more specifically about the poems, but I can't do them justice in prose. I wish Amazon had a "see inside" feature on this book, so you could browse the first few poems and see if you like Monaghan's style.
I also must commend cover artist Gavin Duffy. For a moment, I thought Monaghan had switched publishers! Note to Llewellyn: More covers like this, please! In fact, more books like these--both in appearance and in content. This is a rare gem.
Inspirational rather than instructionalReview Date: 2002-06-03
This book is a collection of some of Patricia Monaghan's work. The book is divided into seasons, and each season is created in our minds in beautiful poetry and visualized prose. We are lead around the seasons, shown the associations of the elements, the Wheel of Life, and the different forms of the Goddess.
Ms. Monaghan is a talented and very well known poet. Her works have appeared in many magazines.
This book also contains a CD which has placed 25 of her poems into song. The poetry becomes devotional songs, and we find ourselves delicately woven into the visualizations by the enchanting voices of Peggy Monaghan, Sally Coombs, Susan La Croiz, Claudia Blythe, Kirsten Baird Gustafson and Lili McGovern. James Robbins also appears on one of the tracks.
As you read, and listen, you are drawn in by the delicate imagery Ms. Monaghan uses. Ever present is her love for the Goddess, her understanding of the elements and we feel her love and warmth in each piece.
This is a nice break from the handbooks and instructional manuals that dominate the market. Personal expression rather than personal opinion is always a nice change. The CD is professionally produced, the book is nicely bound, and the quality of the material makes this an outstanding package and a nice presentation.
This is a book that can be appreciated by anyone with a soul for poetry or devotional prose. It would make a wonderful gift and a lovely addition to your library.
Sometimes we need to step back from the "how to" books and remember "why".
Beautiful and movingReview Date: 2003-08-17
The CD is very good too. It's well-produced, and the music meshes well with the poems. I haven't done so yet, but I think it would be excellent music to use in ritual.
Beautiful, rich poetry and songsReview Date: 2002-11-25

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A refreshing meditation on the nuances of the Cross.Review Date: 2008-11-06
Pink uses one chapter, and a total of 139 pages, for each of the seven things Jesus said while dying: the word of Forgiveness (Luke 23:34), the word of Salvation (Luke 23:42-43), the word of Affection (John 19:25-27), the word of Anguish (Matthew 27:46), the word of Suffering (John 19:28), the word of Victory (John 19:30) and the word of Contentment (Luke 23:46). Each of the seven chapters is then broken down into seven profound insights (some more than others) on what Jesus said, why he said it, and the far reaching implications for us who hear it.
Pink is a classic writer. No where near as classic as some of our Puritan friends. He lived from the late 1800's all the way through to the the 1950's. But a classic writer none the less. Seven Sayings is among the easiest Christian books I've read. The words roll off the page into your mind and there's no confusion about what he's saying. However, unlike most modern Christian literature, this is worth reading. He doesn't stay away from theologically important ideas and he never lets Jesus' words just stay information bouncing around in our heads. He always tries to help guide these things down into our hearts and lives. He's not always successful, but there's much to be said for trying.
Pink adhered to a pretty rigid structure in this book. Seven chapters. Seven sub-sections, per chapter. Unfortunately, it seems that because of that there were points made that perhaps aren't especially relevant. Although an irrelevant point can still be deeply impacting. However, in terms of his immediate goal, it may have been better to leave them out for the sake of staying on topic.
Aside from that one very minor complaint, Seven Sayings was an excellent read. A great companion for meditating on the Work of Christ and its impact on our lives. I recommend anyone and everyone read it.
A True ClassicReview Date: 2008-06-24
In this book Pink looks at each of the seven words Jesus spoke while hanging in agony. In his introduction to the book Pink says, "The death of Christ...was unique, miraculous, supernatural. In the chapters which follow we shall hearken to the words which fell from his lips while he hung upon the cross - words which make known to us some of the attendant circumstances of the great tragedy; words which reveal the excellencies of the one who suffered there; words in which is wrapped up the gospel of our salvation; and words which inform us of the purpose, the meaning, the sufferings, and the sufficiency of the death divine." He dedicates a chapter to each of the words of forgiveness, salvation, affection, anguish, suffering, victory and contentment. In every case he spends some time discussing the meaning of the word and usually equal time applying these words to the faith of the individual Christian. Far from "mere" theology, this book is intensely practical and immediately applicable.
The Seven Sayings of the Saviour on the Cross deserves the accolades given to it. It bears repeated readings and is ideal for group study (and, indeed, I led a group of over 100 people reading it in tandem). It is worthy of a spot in the collection of every Christian.
Aspects never thought of...Review Date: 2006-04-15
A.W. Pink - Incredible Depth of UnderstandingReview Date: 2008-06-19
A.W. Pink has a remarkable ability to bring forth truth and understanding that lies incredibly rich in the understanding of the seven sayings of Jesus on the Cross.
If you would like to understand the lessons from Christ on the cross then you must read and understand this text.
I am nearly done with this book and I must confess that Pink has done an incredible job in pointing us to Christ.
Buy this book!
The Seven Sayings of the Saviour on the Cross.Review Date: 2007-08-26

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Engaging book that all readers will enjoyReview Date: 2003-11-12
The Guadalupe River RevealedReview Date: 2003-09-16
Page-turner!Review Date: 2003-08-28
Enthralling first novelReview Date: 2003-07-22
A gripping educational novelReview Date: 2003-07-08

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True vignettes pepper this handy, sensible, down-to-earth guideReview Date: 2006-12-09
Crossing the LineReview Date: 2006-08-29
Need for this discussion is long over due in corporate AmericaReview Date: 2006-07-16
Finally Common Sense wins!Review Date: 2006-06-30
Noll and Boogaert on the Edge AgainReview Date: 2006-07-28
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The investment guys sometimes go over everyone's head and there's a lot of ego involved. What I liked about this book was that you go step by step and in all of 10 minutes, you've got a pretty complete picture of what you need to do and why.
Rose recommends that the first $100,000 is the hardest to collect, but it's the most critical to do as fast as you can. (I'll leave the details to the reader. It's pretty obvious once you sort of get the argument).
This is a book that EVERY person entering the workforce should read. I plan on giving it to many of my family members as the time is right. It explains what retirement is, and how to do it.
The language is simple to understand, and what I appreciate most is that it's not some lacky hawking an investment product. It's a veteran adviser sharing a career's worth of nuggets.
My only complaint with the book is the appendix material doesn't explain how the "column B" factor is calculated.
Five stars. This is one of the most important books I've read in the past 10 years.