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A terrific self directed guide for personal improvement.Review Date: 1999-03-14
Encounter with the sacred & extraordinary in the ordinary.Review Date: 1999-03-11
I appreciated the challenges of gaining insight from self assessment and from feedback from others. The simple, basic and loving approach of acceptance, affirmation and care for every person and circumstance is refreshing and energizing. Near-Life Experiences is insightful and inspirational. Thanks Tom!
The title itself gave me a fresh perspective on my life!Review Date: 1999-03-06
Inspirational with simple advice on how to enjoy life more.Review Date: 1999-03-04
Best self-help book I have ever read!Review Date: 1999-02-21
I can't remember in sixty years when I have read something that has had such a meaningful impact on my life.
"Near-Life Experiences: Discovering New Powers for Personal Growth" should be a featured book on Oprah and every other book list in America.
With what our country has been through lately in Washington, capitalizing on our "near-life experiences" would be a blessing for us all.

ExcellentReview Date: 2007-12-25
Fantastic Reference Text for ChiropractorsReview Date: 2008-05-21
New Edition AvailableReview Date: 2005-09-17
THE Textbook of Pediatrics.Review Date: 2006-09-25
In Depth Pediatric ReferenceReview Date: 2004-05-15

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The New Science of Strong MaterialsReview Date: 2008-07-14
great bookReview Date: 2008-02-26
Good Text, as an engineering studentReview Date: 2006-11-10
Good reading, if you are an engineer, scientist, or not. Great examples. Dry british writing, but if you can get through it and the silly jokes, you can learn a lot.
Must ReadReview Date: 2004-08-04
A great book, but buy "Structures" insteadReview Date: 2004-07-10
Because I liked it so much, I purchased "Structures," also by Professor Gordon. As it turned out, that book covers the same material, but in greater breadth and depth, and with more illustrations. There's much to be said for reading both books, but if you're only going to read one, "Structures" is the one.


Chaos - .... - Violent IntrigueReview Date: 2003-11-08
The climax of the Zancharthus Series... a must readReview Date: 2003-06-20
Mark E. Rogers has a style of his own. It blends Dark Fantasy, Horror, and Erotica all into a single hot firebrand of a style. His writing is not for the faint of heart or those easily offended. When he describes love. He does it well. However, when he describes EVIL, INSANITY, LUST, and many other potentially dark emotions he does them exceedingly well. Why? Simply, because he holds nothing back in writing and it is obvious when you read his books that he has a vivid imagination when it comes to describing these things. Some scenes are so vivid it will leave you wondering if he was sitting over in the corner of a room watching the lustful scenes unfold and jotting down notes on a sheet of paper. Seriously, he is VERY good at describing these things.
This book culminates with the scene that starts Zorachus. Zorachus is Zancharthus son and Mark actually wrote Zorachus first. Zorachus is one of my all time favorite books. So, of course I simply had to read the rest.
If you liked the first two books in this series then this book will captivate you just as much and will leave you wondering where you just were when you get done with the book.
So, treat yourself to a good book.
One note these books are intended for a mature audience. I would consider them an NC-17 rating if I were in charge of rating. So, with that in mind. Get ready for a great book!!
Gripping to the Final PageReview Date: 2002-08-24
Harrowing finale to most deranged series ever!Review Date: 2002-08-01
ExcellentReview Date: 2003-05-14

Learning to read Old EnglishReview Date: 2008-05-07
The author begins with a simplified but fairly comprehensive grammar of Old English which runs about 40 pages, and covers pronunciation; an explanation of gender, number, and case(s); the forms of the definite and relative articles; strong and weak verbs; adjectives; nouns; additional sections dealing with more advanced declensions/conjugations of nouns and verbs; and i-umlaut.
I read the grammar several times initially, and returned to re-read several times as I progressed through the readings, to review some of the concepts. As an earlier reviewer noted, you don't want to rush through the introductory grammar in your haste to get to the Old English texts; only confusion and frustration will ensue.
I should note in respect to pronunciation that Prof. Diamond uses distinctive symbols to denote palatalized C and G, which allows the beginner to avoid having to check the rules constantly to determine if a given C or G needs to be palatized in its environment within a word. This allows the student to pronounce Old English with confidence from the beginning, and I found that I quickly internalized the use of palatalized C and G using this method.
The readings are interesting and challenging. They are printed with Old English on the left- and Modern English on the right-hand page, allowing the student to plunge right into reading Old English without memorizing long vocabulary lists, with minimal flipping back to the glossary. The readings are graded, increasing in complexity of grammar and vocabulary as one progresses, and also incorporate fewer word-for-word translations as the student is guided into Old English poetry; this makes the student work harder on translations as he/she advances through the readings, and prevents excessive reliance on the Modern English.
There is a full glossary in the back, which includes all divergent verb and noun forms for the student's convenience. For example, it lists "seoles", the genitive singular of "seolh"; and "slog", the preterite singular of "slean". For a beginner, these situations might otherwise be nightmarish, trying to feverishly determine the infinitive of the verb or nominative singular of the noun, sufficient to look it up and find its meaning.
This book fulfilled my fondest hopes, allowing me to gain a reading knowledge and proper pronunciation of Old English in a relatively short period of time, and I highly recommend it.
Old English Made Easy...Review Date: 2005-01-29
The prose works include 'The Voyages of Ohthere and Wulfstan', selections from the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, and the preface by Alfred the Great to the medieval work on Pastoral Care by Pope Gregory. There are relatively few Old English prose works that have survived into the present day; there are even fewer authentically Old English pieces, as many Old English prose works are in fact translations of Latin pieces, and for some reason adapted their grammar to the Latin original rather than the Old English natural pattern.
The poetry exhibits the paired-verse pattern (although the translations accompanying them do not strive to keep the metrical pattern). The poetry include majors works such as Caedmon's Hymn, The Battle of Brunanburg, The Battle of Maldon, The Wanderer, The Seafarer, maxims, riddles, and other poems. There is no Beowulf contained here, nor any other heroic poems (such as Deor), as Diamond states that these are the most likely follow-up readings after one gains a grounding in Old English, and the poems contained here are often overlooked by students save for the most dedicated of scholars.
The texts here are normalised to Early West Saxon dialect, with a grammar very simplified; concepts are introduced that are directly useful for the texts contained herein. The glossary is similarly normalised, and cross-referenced for various verb forms and other vocabulary links such as prefixes and alternatives. In a remarkable insight on how students use texts, Diamond states that, for the purposes of this introductory text, notes have been eliminated, as students rarely refer to them anyway. The section on metrics introduces the five principle types of verses, as well as some minor variations.
Diamond includes a brief bibliography with dictionaries, grammars, commentaries and more; this is now somewhat out of date, but also shows the slow pace at which some aspects of Old English scholarship proceed, with references going back to volumes published in the late 1800s.
A very useful and fun text from which to learn!
Old English Grammar and Peter Baker's Introduction to Old EnglishReview Date: 2007-08-18
First, although trivial, I have learned other inflected languages such as Greek and Latin and they always present noun declensions for the various cases in the following order: nominative, genitive, dative, accusative, ablative, etc. Prof. Diamond presents noun declensions in the same way while Prof. Baker's book presents them in the order nominative, accusative, genitive, dative, etc. It throws me off just enough to be irritating when I am trying to memorize the case endings.
Second, as mentioned in other reviews, Prof. Diamond presents translations with each text. This makes it possible to learn a few words and them jump straight into the texts without having to guess whether or not you understood the various pieces.
Prof. Baker's book has its merits such as its companion website and its more detailed discussion of grammar, but I would recommend starting to learn Old English with Prof. Diamond's book.
One more point - if you are considering buying both keep in mind that many of the literary samples in both overlap so if you buy Prof. Baker's book you should buy it because you want a better understanding of grammar not because you want more samples of Old English.
Dr Diamond was a wonderful teacher of old EnglishReview Date: 2007-04-16
A good little readerReview Date: 2003-07-14
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A mainstay in any libraryReview Date: 2004-06-24
Read it. You will enjoy it.
Thorough, Comprehensive, Relevant, Excellent!Review Date: 2000-08-28
Thoroughly honest, revealing, radical and inspiring.Review Date: 2005-06-27
The figure of Jesus has always been of utmost interest to me, particularly his human side -- and now of late, his spiritual significance. Jesus is without a doubt the most influential person who ever lived in Western society, witness the countless buildings and institutions that exist today in his wake. And yet it is extremely difficult to separate the mythical from the factual aspects of his life and death. This is where this book and a previous one I reviewed, "The Gospel of Jesus Christ" by mathematical physicist John Davidson, have come to my sorely-needed rescue.
Kung's book is a thorough, brilliant, and ultimately convincing attempt to get at the heart of the motivation and end result of Jesus' short life on earth. I was led to Kung by a sermon I heard a number of years ago at a Unitarian Church in Ft. Collins, CO in which an excerpt from Kung's book described the difference between the end of Jesus' life and the deaths of other religious leaders. That sermon was powerful to me then, and still speaks to me today. It pointed out with Kung that whereas others died in old age, surrounded by their disciples and wives after satisfactorily accomplishing their mission, Jesus' early death was stark, brutal, and utterly cheerless. He was tortured, deserted by his followers -- seemingly even deserted by the personal God of whom he so ardently and sincerely spoke. Is this seeming abandonment at a young age by man and God the ultimate source of his meaning to mankind?
A respected Catholic theologian, Kung is unremittingly honest in his attempt to get at the truth of the times. In contrast to Schweitzer's somewhat impersonal theological style in "A Quest for the Historical Jesus", Kung's style results in a much more human narrative, drawing you convincingly into the times and mind of Jesus. The book is almost equally divided into two parts, half before and half after the death of Jesus. I must admit that I have read only the first half; the revelation of the meaning of Jesus' life is yet to be given by Kung. But even at this point I cannot resist encouraging others to pick up this amazingly insightful and thoughtful volume -- to peruse it, to underline and to savor it.
Man has learned to fathom many of the secrets of the universe, but they are limited to its non-spiritual aspects. This knowledge can lead either to exaltation and benefit from man's influence on earth, or to our death and destruction. The ultimate outcome of our reign on earth will be determined by spiritual aspects of our search for knowledge that so far, and maybe even in the long run, are inaccessible to science. They are immensely important to understand; this search is urgent for all to participate in. Kung's book, as well as Davidson's, provide significant steps to broadening our grasp of knowledge in this direction.
Never judge a book by its authorReview Date: 2005-09-24
His reputation as a formost theologian kept many of us away from his works, thinking they would be as difficult to follow as so many papal encyclicals.
Not so! Lucidity is his watchword, although he certainly gets prolix at times. The first time through, when he had outlined his proposed method of reasoning, I would skip through to the guts of his argument. Second time through, I'm taking it all in, as far as I can.
A Tour de Force on the Essence of ChristianityReview Date: 2006-11-05
When this book first appeared in the 1970s, I hesitated to read it. Aside from the intimidating length of the work, I had the thought--if Kung is on the margins of Catholic theology, then what impact could his work have? Suffice it to say that I was neither a theologian nor a very astute young Catholic. However that may be, I was surprised to find that, except, perhaps, for matters pertaining to Church governance, Kung is hardly a leftist firebrand or a Bishop John Shelby Spong-like skeptic; Kung, essentially, is a fairly orthodox theologian, it seems to me. As a committed Catholic Christian, he's devoted, though, to scraping away the barnacles that have adhered to the mother ship of Roman Catholicism over the past two millennia.
Kung does not shy away from the difficult issues: in the course of ON BEING A CHRISTIAN, he tackles thorny issues like Karl Rahner's "Anonymous Christian" concept, the Resurrection, the Trinity, liberation theology, and a Christian's response to war, among many, many problems. I was often in awe of Kung's deft handling of these issues, but other times felt somewhat lost in the theological discourse. For instance, Kung accepts the "reality" of the Resurrection, but rejects the theological and historical necessity of the Empty Tomb. He claims that the disciples could not just have had some sort of self-realized epiphany after the death of Jesus; for the Christian movement to have taken off as it did, it must have been because the disciples of Jesus had a real experience of Jesus' resurrection. But since Kung also rejects the notion that a Christian must accept the violation of the physical laws of the universe, is he trying to have it both ways, or is it that his argument is simply beyond me? For Kung, what is *real* about the Resurrection?
Kung's root answer to what Christianity is about is given early on in the book: "Christianity exists only where the memory of Jesus Christ is activated in theory and practice" (p. 126). For Kung, Jesus is "in person the living, archetypal embodiment of his cause" (p. 545). One who accepts this Jesus in his or her life receives the call to be radically human. What ultimately counts in life is not accomplishments (not that accomplishments are bad), but trust (faith) in the Christ Jesus. In fact, Kung demonstrates from the opening section on "The Challenge of Modern Humanisms" throughout the course of this book, that the Christian as true humanist is the principle that underlies his concept of Christianity.
For a long time many people have encouraged me to read ON BEING A CHRISTIAN. I am heartily glad that I have finally followed their advice. I know that I will be returning to this book in the years ahead to revisit Kung's keen insights into what being a Christian truly means. In these days, when Christianity has been degraded and sold out as a tool of politicians, this is a book whose message should be read all the more to call us to metanoia, a change of heart.

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Very UsefulReview Date: 2003-07-03
nothing out there like it,
What every Bride needs (not to mention every groom)Review Date: 2003-06-18
a must!Review Date: 2003-06-18
WHAT A GREAT IDEA FOR A BOOK!!!Review Date: 2003-06-17
every brides dream helperReview Date: 2003-06-17
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Stand Up and CheerReview Date: 2007-11-08
Plimpton summarizes (page 254) his experience with the Bruins to Junior Achievers in Edmonton, "I described some of my brief forays into sports as a participatory journalist, and what it was like, and how I envied the athletes their skills and the fellowship, but how I had always left their camps with a faint twinge of relief that I was returning to my own world..."
Plimpton is the vanguardist for creative-nonfiction/participatory journalism, and Open Net is the standard by which other hockey books should be measured. I envy not his weak ankles, for they're as instable as his writing is strong, but rather his wit and way of balancing humor and enlightenment.
I didn't grow up in New England, but I suspect those that have will still enjoy the way Plimpton brings back to life the boldness and brashness, the grit and the glory, of the Big Bad Bruins.
From Plimpton's interaction with the likes of "Grapes" and "Taz" and with goalies "Seaweed," and "Cheesy" to our hero's own moment in the crease, you'll want to stand up and cheer!
Great Hockey bookReview Date: 2006-06-30
THE MAN BETWEEN THE PIPES SCORESReview Date: 2004-12-05
WONDERFUL BOOK...I MISS GEORGEReview Date: 2004-04-03
I guess thats my ringing endorcement. If I'm looking to read a book on football, the author must be wonderful. Quick, funny, well written, and vastly enjoyable, you wont regret buying this book, no matter what the price.
He shoots and scores!Review Date: 2006-01-30
Plimpton does a wonderful job of painting a realistic view of life as a goalie. He uses the voices of other players to help the story along, rather than as just filler from big names. He also tells his tale without a lot of false excitement. You can tell he totally loves the experience, yet at times, you can see the effort does drain him (naturally).
His comments about and conversations with the likes of 'Seaweed' Pettie, Garry Cheevers and Don Cheery really add a lot of depth to the book. In conversations I have had with some of these men, I clearly got the point that they enjoyed this as much as Plimpton did and as much as I did as a reader.
This is a great read for the unfulfilled athlete in all of us.


Looking Forward to MoreReview Date: 2008-06-09
The chapters were long enough to tell a good portion of storyline, yet short enough that you could flip ahead and say "OK, I'll read one more chapter before bed" several times before actually going to bed.
I would highly recommend this book and am looking forward to future writings from this author.
A New Author to Watch... I Can't Wait for His Next Novel!Review Date: 2008-05-29
Compelling Peek Into The Human PsycheReview Date: 2008-05-03
Barely escaping with his life, Jim soon begins to struggle with the enormity of the events that comprised the worst terrorist attack ever waged on American soil. Understandably, the entire foundation of his well-being is shaken to the roots - an apt metaphor for the United States citizenry at large. Rather than lose his mind in a swift snap of insanity, though, Jim slowly descends into an increasingly introverted world of psychic shadow, one in which the certainty of the present yields to both the haunting spectre of the past and the instability of the future.
What follows in Paranoia, the debut novel by J.E. Braun, is a series of disjointed flashbacks to which Jim surrenders mind, body, and spirit. Each flashback highlights, in vivid detail, a defining moment in Jim's life that signifies yet another twisted turn down the inward spiral of his devolution: his escape to his aunt's remote Colorado farm; his continued efforts to rationalize the reasons for his worsening neurosis; the departure of his wife and son, who can no longer traverse the emotional distance required to connect with him. Through each subsequent "phase" of his new existence, Braun, by degrees, pulls the reader further and further into Jim's increasingly darker world, deftly intermarrying his physical reactions with the spiritual impetuses that give them life.
Ultimately, Jim yields to his self-serving paranoia, even going so far as to charge himself with the duty of tracking potential terrorists. His justification: there were people who knew and unwittingly interacted with the airline hijackers in the days leading up to the September 11th terrorist attacks, and, if they had been more vigilant, the entire tragic ordeal could have been avoided...in his patriotic haste, though, Jim fails to realize that the appearance of guilt doesn't always equate to actual culpability - and when his actions lead to the shedding of innocent blood, he is forced to ask himself who the true terrorist really is...
Paranoia is an interesting, engaging read that touches on significant topics and issues that many would prefer to avoid. Rather than serve as an incendiary call-to-arms against ideological extremes, though, it actually pulls off the opposite effect of forcing the reader to question why such action ever becomes necessary - regardless of the circumstances that spark it. Through compelling storytelling, Braun skillfully manages to engender just the sort of raw introspection that is so quickly - and needlessly - avoided in this era of obsession with all things politically correct.
A must read .Review Date: 2008-05-07
Intriguing ReadReview Date: 2008-04-18

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A wonderful light and entertaining read!Review Date: 2006-06-10
For anybody who loves animals, I definatly suggest this book! It even serves as a good read-aloud book too!
If you happen to be a furre, you'll eat it up! :3
Truly EndearingReview Date: 2004-03-26
A good book!Review Date: 2003-08-29
An enchanting fantasy for young dog lovers!Review Date: 2000-04-16
Adorable! A great childrens fantasy.Review Date: 2002-06-19
Related Subjects: Readers Compilers
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