Year 2000 Books


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Year 2000 Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

Year 2000
Vladimir Nabokov the American Years
Published in Paperback by Trafalgar Square (1993-12-02)
Author: Brian Boyd
List price:
New price: $38.65
Used price: $5.92

Average review score:

Behold the splendid Bird of Paradise!
Helpful Votes: 33 out of 39 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-05
Who would have thought that the world's foremost Nabokov expert is a Kiwi? Amazing. Boyd's two volume bio is a must for all Nabokovistas. He splits the life neatly between the Russian Years, ie from birth until emigration to the US, and American Years, ie the rest.
Boyd tells us Nabokov's life story and interweaves the main prose works and their interpretations. While still a Russian novelist, Nab published under the pen name Sirin, which means Bird of Paradise. How appropriate this choice of name!
The man was born towards the end of the 19th century in Zarist Russia to an aristocratic family of latifundistas and jurists in parlament and government service on cabinet level. He grew up in riches, spending his childhood between the town appartment in St.Petersburg (to which I made a pilgrimage in 2006) and a splendid country mansion in the vicinity. He began collecting butterflies as a boy; he started painting, but dropped that, it was not his real talent. He started writing poetry early.
He became personally rich as a teen, when he inherited a fortune from an uncle. He lost it all in the Bolshie revolution. He escaped to Western Europe with the family as a young man. He studied in England and was a notorious playboy, a gifted chess player, soccer goalkeeper, tennis coach and poet. He moved to Berlin, which was the center of Russian emigration. His father was killed by Monarchist assassins, perversely. (One of the assassins later became a Nazi spy on emigrants.) He earned the family upkeep with English and tennis lessons. He became a well established novelist as Sirin. He met Vera and married her and had a son with her. When the Nazis took over, they prepared to move to France, which however took a few more years, partly because Vera earned well as top secretary to Berlin businesses. Her Jewish family background remained a strong motivator to leave, however. They moved to Paris, and a few years later were lucky to get away in time to the US.
Nab always claimed that despite his many years of living in Berlin, he never learned German. This is doubtful, and probably a political statement. Other writers have traced some of Nab's texts and letters to sources such as Schopenhauer or H.C.Andersen, an important source and probably in the German translation. It is even likely that he did read his favorite subject of ridicule Thomas Mann in the original. Possibly also Freud, who was his supreme bete noire.
If you want to look at Nab's Russian novels, my suggestion would be The Gift, Lushin's Defense, Bend Sinister, and the Invitation to a Beheading. But actually, go for all of them, and don't forget the short stories.
The American years of the 2nd volume include the Swiss years. He spent the last years of his life in a hotel on the Lac de Geneve. Odd that he never owned a house after losing the 'paradise' in Russia. He refused to try to replace the loss.
His work in the US can be divided into 3 categories: museum work as a curator for the enthomology department, classifying butterflies; teaching work as professor for European literature (from which came some volumes of highly interesting texts on literature); and writing novels and stories, plus the so-called non-fiction of Speak, Memory (a most fantastic autobiography); and a Gogol monography; and a Pushkin translation plus some minor translations. The man did work a lot. For fun he went hunting butterflies all over the US. From this came Lolita, which made him rich.
Asked why he chose to live in La Suisse despite his professed good American citizenship, he said that he and Vera wanted to be near their son, who was a professional opera singer with assignments in Italy, plus a mountain climber and race car driver.
Among his English books my favorites are Speak, Memory and Pale Fire.

Great book- Even better than Nabokov himself, at times
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2003-04-12
Having read what little Nabokov anyone has read (Lolita) I exchanged this book for a Bogart biography I received as birthday present. I was hooked and, having read the whole book through in a few days, I bought the second volume and I wasn't let down. The book is a jewel and Nabokov becomes almost as close an acquaintance of the reader as Johnson became per Boswell's book.

The elegiac childhood that Nabokov enjoyed as the son of an upper class family of political liberals and Russian patriots is hard to imagine given the awfulness of Russian history since the 1905. After the death of his grandfather Nabokov became a millionaire at age 10. His family was close knit and loving (which may explain his deep love for his wife Véra and his son Dmitri, named after Vladimir's father). The Nabokovs managed to escape Russia from their Crimean summer house and eventually ended up in Germany, where they endured hardship and persecution. Nabokov's father, who had been an Education Minister during Kerensky's brief democratic administration, was murdered by an extreme-nationalist from the "Black Hundreds", a paramilitary organisation. Amazingly, Nabokov never bored to learn German although he lived in Germany for twenty years because he felt German would destroy his gift for Russian. His French was flawless, though (he died in French Switzerland). His meeting of the beautiful, brilliant Véra is touching, a rare moment of perfection on this cursed globe, and they became a very close couple. Mrs Nabokov was much more than a wife: she was a soul-mate and a loving collaborator in all Nabokov's efforts. Nabokov, in spite of his poverty managed to continue to live with aristocratic non-chalance and was always able to afford extensive and elaborate holidays that nowadays are only possible for the very well-to-do. The book ends as the Nabokovs and young Dmitri move to America, barely escaping France before the German invasion. Better times were yet to come, and they are aptly told in the second volume.

Most of the books Nabokov wrote in this period were in Russian and thus they have not been as widely divulged as his books in English. I can't appreciate their quality, not reading Russian, but Boyd notes many references of experts which regarded them as some of the best writing in Russian in the 20th century, and more deserving of a Nobel prize than either Pasternak or Solzhenitzn.

The title of my review will probably be deplored by many Nabokov fans, but in fact I was deeply attracted to Nabokov's elegance, charm and tolerance, by his revulsion to snobbery (he was always annoyed by some Europeans' disdain for US culture or some Russian emigrés' disgust at the accent of Jewish Russian speakers), by his unerring political sense that led him to distrust most extremisms of the last century (he was one of the few important authors not to have written blatant political nonsense), and very much enjoyed his curious interest in butterflies (his fantasy of a lavish, multi-volume Encyclopedia of butterflies of the Russian Empire smacks of Borges to me), and his extensive work at Harvard concerning them (he does have a species to his name). Boyd's descriptions led to me seek Nabokov's literal translation of Pushkin's epical poem, Eugene Onegin (I found the translation unreadable, as many people have), and, in spite of Boyd's wonderful summaries, I couldn't really get into some of Nabokov' other works in English (Ada or Ardor and Pale Fire I thought too modernist for my taste- his literary criticism was great, although I winced at his evident distaste for Jane Austen- and shared his love for Dickens). But Nabokov is as great a writer as he as a biographer's subject, and Boyd's book is probably the best literary biography after The Life of Johnson. I heartily recommend it (it's great even if you haven't actually read Nabokov).

Brilliant
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2000-08-31
Both volumes of this set are excellent. This is the way literary biography should be done. It's so good, in fact, that you wouldn't necessarily have to be a huge Nabokov fan to want to read both books. (Of course, I am a diehard Nabokovian, so I raced through them even more eagerly.) Bravo to Brian Boyd.

Probably the definitive Nabokov biography for years to come
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2004-05-18
The man himself once said, "Biographies are generally fun to write, less fun to read." The implication is that the person who authors the biography becomes so immersed in the life of their subject that biographies end up being labors of love. However, take that biography and assign it to a student...

I would have to say that this two-volume biography of Nabokov is the mathematical proof that disproves the formula above. Boyd plays the role of historian/biographer, spending time explaining the political scene of Russia early on in N's life, and traces the movements of the most significant person in N's first twenty years; his father. Of course, this is probably out of necessity considering his father's position in the whole political mish-mash that was fin-de-siecle Russia. I might gripe and say that there's too much attention paid to the politics, but that's because I'm an English major, not a historian or a politician, and I'm reading for pleasure. Were I reading for a thesis, these excerpts would be invaluable.

I'm thrilled about the chapters of Russian emigre life in Europe following the Bolshevik Revolution. Not only does it trace the influence that wafts through N's early stuff (and follows through his life), but it also gives us a taste of the climate of those years, plus a roster of sorts of who was part of that microcosm. This is going to be, in my estimation, a highly researched period of literature, once it becomes fashionable that is, and this biography will be a resource for all those students looking for a glimpse into that world. Studies in Nabokov are really beginning to blossom, and this will spur interest in that era as well.

N's life is portrayed as an emerging talent, rather than a natural genius who could command language and characters as well at 20 as at 70. This humanizes Nabokov, a figure who can sometimes seem a little god-like to his devotees. Expelling mist and myth is the mark of a good biography, next to joyously reporting the life of the subject. The analysis provided by Boyd in the sections dealing with early literature (such as the comparative criticism of his first novel "Mary" and the story "Return of Chorb") is revealing in this case because he can explain what Nabokov lacks here, or does not do so well early on.

Extensive references and a collection of satisfying photographs complete the package. One of the best photos being a shot of the Rohzdestveno manor that Nabokov inherited from his Uncle Vasily at age 17. A 17 year-old with his own mansion. Can you say harem?

One of the best biographies I've ever read
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2001-12-22
Brian Boyd's scope and research in this book are just outstanding. I'm not usually that interested in biographies of writers, often the biographer does not relate their life to their literature in a way that interests me, but Nabokov is one of my favorite writers, so I thought I'd give this book a try. First you should note that it is a huge book that spans a large time frame, but you shouldn't be put off by the size, because Boyd's prose is very succinct and the chapters are manageable. It's clear to me that he appreciates Nabokov's works, as the best chapters are the ones detailing the periods of time when Nabokov is writing his works. There is so much great background information to be found here, that Nabokov wrote on index cards, the road trips that influenced Lolita, and Nabokov's relationship with his wife, Vera. This is what literary biographies should be like. I highly recommend this to any fans of Nabokov who want to learn more about his life and his writing.

Year 2000
Y2K: You Can Burn This Book!
Published in Paperback by Chef Brio LLC (1999-02-08)
Author: Thomas F. Potter
List price: $16.95
New price: $13.21
Used price: $0.05
Collectible price: $24.95

Average review score:

A great book for your employees, to make sure their prepared
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 1999-06-10
In his book: Y2K: You Can Burn This Book!, Tom Potter has done an excellent job covering the basic elements all our communities should consider as the Year 2000 approaches. We've all spent many months and considerable resources reconfiguring our hardware and software so they will continue to support our businesses - now we need to look at our personal preparedness efforts and those of our employees. Potter devotes a chapter to each area of fundamental needs (water, heat, power, food, etc), explaining where disruptions might occur and then providing suggestions for different levels of planning. For a detailed resource that follows up on topics mentioned in many preparedness primers, this is just the book you need. ---Deben Tobias, Board of Directors; Business for Social Responsibility

A great resource for taking the 1st step to being prepared.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 1999-05-27
Tom Potter's Y2K: You Can Burn This Book! is an excellent resource for anybody concerned with disaster preparedness. With an emphasis on personal and household preparation, he sets a positive but proactive tone for pursuing these preparation activities. Using his expertise in industrial energy use, he discusses the scope of neighborhood preparation that Boulder > is also concerned about, and offers a broad range of solutions. Potter's book is a great resource for taking that first step toward being informed - and ultimately being prepared. He's also been an excellent speaking resource for Boulder County Y2K meetings. > --K. Garcia, Community Coordinator, Boulder County Y2K Preparedness Group >

Emergency preparations with application to Y2k
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 1999-04-07
This book is thought provoking and droll. Ice storms and blizzards here in Canada make emergency preparations useful for everyone. Most of the information so delightfully presented here is of use in any of those situations. This book will be valuable even after the Y2k has passed.

Best down to earth and fast help to get ready
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 1999-04-04
I've read a bunch of these now and this one is easy to read and understand. I'm trying to get my church group to use it, becuase it would be good for helping people in the local area when things get rough. Bunch of lists and its funny too!

I wish it would have had more stuff on where to buy food and things. But he has it on a website, I guess.

Excellent family and community based guide to preparedness.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 1999-03-22
Unlike some of the other Y2K books I looked at, this one offers a reasonable approach to personal, family, and community preparedness. In some ways, it's unfortunate that it's linked to Y2K, because it is such a useful preparedness book. Living in earthquake country, I can really appreciate the author's checklists, worksheets, and insights on how to calculate how much water, food, and energy a family will need to ride out any crisis. Also, the very optimistic outlook and focus on non-violent responses to crises was a unique approach, given many of the other guides that seem focused on seige mentality. I would definitely recommend this book to anybody who lives in an area that is subject to earthquakes, floods, blizzards, hurricanes, tornadoes, or any other possible disasters, including Y2K.

Year 2000
COBOL for OS/390 Power Programming with Complete Year 2000 Section (MVS Training, Inc. Mainframe Series) (Mainframe Series)
Published in Paperback by MVS Training Inc. (1998-06)
Author: David Shelby Kirk
List price: $68.00
New price: $69.43
Used price: $39.15

Average review score:

We LOVE this book!!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2004-03-10
This is a GREAT book for people who know COBOL and need to know the differences among the COBOL versions. This book is LOADED with programming tips.

Discuses the Different COBOL Versions
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-07-13
Covers how to improve coding techniques along with the differences in COBOL versions. Great for seasoned programmers too.

New features of COBOL/390
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2000-02-06
This book is for programmers who learned OS/VS COBOL or COBOL II and are now upgrading to COBOL/390. This is IBM's latest version of COBOL, with an emphasis on open systems and object orientation. There are a lot of new features in COBOL/390 and David Shelby Kirk describes them clearly and thoroughly.

Author comments on the book
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2003-08-02
The book was written for experienced professionals, not for novices or entry level programmers. The book does not explain basic syntax of statements or other organizational aspects of a COBOL program. I wrote the book for the professional programmer who already knows COBOL and wants to move that skill to a higher level. This includes incorporating the COBOL language with the enterprise server environment for effectiveness and efficiency, and creating extended software architectures.

To my knowledge, there are no other books that focus on the advanced techniques of COBOL in the IBM enterprise environment. This book introduces new techniques for program structure and memory management and explains the major components of optimizing programs within the IBM enterprise environment. If you are developing enterprise applications, this is the book for you. IBM has made major expansions in COBOL in recent years and this book will help you unlock those new features.

Good but incomplete
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2001-06-30
For the basics, this is an excellent writeup and you SHOULD have it. What is NOT covered is LE and object programming. Intrinsic functions are slighted but you can figure them out.

The author is very upfront about not covering the object extensions - I can almost forgive him. But these are the future - our top management is very object/web oriented.

I think there is a slide on the LE coverage. After we went through the Y2K conversion, our programs are loaded with language environment calls. Section 3.13 is a listing only of what should have been a great amount of detail on using LE calls and intrinsic functions.

In defense of the author I did find an example of the function used with a date (on page 384) MOVE FUNCTION CURRENT-DATE (1:8) to WS-GREGORIAN which is close to our shop standard MOVE FUNCTION CURRENT-DATE (1:14) TO WS-DATE-TIME.

Year 2000
Everyone's Guide to Making A MILLION DOLLARS on the Year 2000 Crash
Published in Paperback by First Wave (1998-04-01)
Author: David Steelsmith Elliott
List price: $44.95
Used price: $84.68

Average review score:

How to take maximum financial advantage of Y2K
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 1999-08-21
This is the only book I've read that primarily tells you how and identifices specific places to invest your money to minimize risk due to the Y2K situation and mazimize profits. It recommends specific stocks and areas to invest in. And warns of the areas that are most likely to be high risk. There are tons of books out there that tell what Y2K is and how it can hurt your but few give any specifics of what to do with you money and investments to protect yourself. This one does! It's unique.

Great investing ideas for upcoming confusion and crisis
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 1999-04-15
Whether you believe Y2K or not, expect problems and volatility in the markets. That means opportunity. This book and "The Survivor's Guide to The Year 2000" by David Epp are the best investment books I have read explaining how and when to profit from the coming confusion. I had my own ideas, but now I know how to make money at it. They even explain options for beginners to get started on a level playing field with the pros.

Only financial Y2K book on the market , there's hope.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 1998-12-08
This was great reading. This is the only book that I found that addresses the potential effects of Y2K on the financial markets. This adds easy to understand details to the market sell-off that Dr. Edward Yardeni has now predicted. Mr. Elliott has covered many areas in the stock market and the commodity markets. This should be a warning to many Americans living abroad! Turn a disaster into a positive financial event. Only the foolish would ignore the impending potential from Y2K. This is a great how to do it book.

The must have "BIBLE" for investment success!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 1998-07-22
This informative, no-hype, "petal to the metal" book is a "must have" for anyone interested in being successful in trading the markets! Not only does Mr. Elliott explain the Y2K problem in detail, he does it in a way that the average person can understand. This book literally provides you with a "roadmap" to guide you through the twists and turns of the complex investment maze. With all the "bogus" Y2K information available to the public today, it is a breath of fresh air to have such a simple guide to understanding the real problems that will be facing us in the near future. Concise,straight forward, factual information that "anyone" can use and "everyone" needs. I will be giving copies of this book to all my friends and family so that they will have the ability to understand, and profit from, the coming computer crisis!

Informative, educational, eye-opening and motivational
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 1998-07-16
The author does a great job of introducing the reader to the full scope of the Y2K problem. Then he shows the reader multiple strategies for capitalizing on the millenial bug and even gives the reader the information needed to get started right away. An important book to read and re-read. If you know anyone who should learn about the Y2K problem, tell them to buy this book (you won't want to lend your copy out!!) Well researched and very complete. Well worth the cover price. Reading it has changed the way I am investing for the future.

Year 2000
The Chaos Protocol
Published in Paperback by Malmesbury Books (1999-06-28)
Author: Nancy J. McKibben
List price: $19.95
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Average review score:

Sympathetic characters & exciting plot make this a must-read
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 1999-10-11
I liked the plot of The Chaos Protocol - fast-paced, exciting, lots of twists and turns. Good high-tech research, credible scenarios. And the device of using a countdown - starting out with June 10 as Day 205 and counting down, scene after scene, as the millennium gets closer and closer, was quite effective. But I usually read a book for character, and I liked these characters because they weren't supermen, they were flawed and human. Alex, head of the y2k consulting firm, cool and professional at work, but in therapy because of his nightmares about what the year 2000 may bring. Annette, the brilliant, driven y2k project manager who is nevertheless clueless in her own love life. And one of my favorites, although a minor character, Norman Krebbs, a lowly accountant who fantasizes that he is a super-hero: Captain Bean Counter. Then there's Leo the nerd, and Volodya the charmer, and Harry the irascible old federal programmer - all the characters seemed well-drawn to me. I was cheering all these people on as I read the book, wanting them to find the computer worm, get their y2k project done, beat the deadline. As good as the high-tech stuff was, and as suspenseful as the plot was, it was the characters that made the book live for me. And here's a case of the headlines being ripped from the book!! The author actually anticipated headlines with this book. Newspapers are reporting potential massive embezzlements as a result of unethical y2k remediators - the very plot of the book!! Don't wait another day to read The Chaos Protocol!!!

Fun book with a realisitc plot.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 1999-09-16
This was a fun read. Having worked in the programming field and on Y2K projects for many years, I was impressed the accuracy and possability of the story.

Nancy McKibben has done an excellent job of describing high-tech problems in an easily readable style.

Annette reminds me of someone's sister though....

enjoyable, fast paced, good plot and educational
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 1999-08-02
First of all, I rarely read a book in a weekend. I'm a slow reader and I'm easily distracted by shiny things. So that is about the best review that I can give it! The book is a mixture of a Tom Clancy novel and a Y2K primer. The plot moves along at a rippingly good pace and has a satisfactory ending. It also serves as a good primer for the Y2K problem, as well as preparations that companies and families should make. For Y2K experts, the discussions about Year 2000 issues may give you an excuse to skim a little, but be careful not to miss important stuff. The book finishes up early in 2000, but that is all I'll tell you. You and I will have to wait and see what really happens.

Y2K buffs may recognize a few of the characters. As an added bonus, my book even came with a Hollerith card for a bookmark. I've been looking for one of those to use in my lectures. Thanks, Nancy for an excellent read. So, when's the sequal?

In a nutshell: enjoyable, fast paced, good plot and educational.

Y2K -- Computer Glitches Are Just the Tip of the Iceberg
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 1999-07-25
So you thought Y2K's computer snafus would be the main thing to worry about come January 1, 2000? Get a grip. Get this book. Like looters during a blackout, economic opportunists -- hackers, e-thieves, and saboteurs -- will certainly take advantage of all the confusion created by Y2K's more prosaic problems. With gripping and even sympathetic characters to drive her plot and subplots, McKibben delivers.

The confusion at year's end is not exactly what Nancy McKibben means by "The Chaos Protocol," which in the book describes an insidious computer virus with worldwide economic consequences. But it's McKibben's possibly prescient rendering of the exploitation of the chaos at year's end that is most riveting -- and most newsworthy.

This is a well- and fast-paced page-turner. It's more than a thriller. Unlike the stuff of Clancy et al., the premise in "The Chaos Protocol" is actually within the realm of possibility -- and is something we should all be aware of lest we be caught unawares.

How long do we have? The countdown on McKibben's own website will let you know. But in the meantime, do yourself a favor and whisk through this thriller.

I stayed up all night reading this one
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 1999-07-18
Super! I started reading late in the evening and at some point fell asleep. I woke up at 330AM and knew that I had to finnish the story and read through the night. Tired as I was, I had that good feeling you get when you have just seen a good movie or finished a rewarding task.

The story was mesmorizing. So many twists and turns, and I found myself engaged in the characters as much as the story. Y2K will come and go (we hope), but the characters should live on.

This timely story has all of the makings of a movie. It is thought provoking, and somewhat unnerving since we really don't know what to expect with Y2K and it certainly doesn't lack credibility.

Although this is her first book, I suspect we will see more of this author. (I hope). She is creative, articulate, careful and clearly knows how to research a story. Nancy, if you read this, I hope you are considering a sequel!

Year 2000
From My People: 400 Years of African American Folklore (An Anthology)
Published in Hardcover by W. W. Norton & Company (2002-02)
Author:
List price: $35.00
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Average review score:

A fine volume gathering a diverse range of tales
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2002-06-06
400 years of Afro-American folklore are represented in From My People, a fine volume gathering a diverse range of tales, from Brer Rabbit and African motifs to proverbs, recipes, and folk songs. It's the range of writings which sets From My People apart from competing collections on Afro-American oral traditions, making for a comprehensive and important title.

One of the best Black folklore anthologies
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-01
It is a sad fact of our times that the folklore of Black America is almost a vanishing art. As a folklorist, historian, and story teller, it saddens me that I often ask kids if their parents tell them any stories and they don't have a clue, and our older folks tales of Old John, Anancy, Brer Rabbit, the Signifying Monkey, Shine and the Titanic, Raw Head and Bloody Bones, etc. are unknown to most people of my age and younger.

Fortunately, people like Prof. Daryl C. Dance are doing what they can to rectify this situation by anthologies such as this. She does an excellent job not only in preserving this kind of material but also the classic folk sermons of Rev. C.L. Franklin and lesser known preachers as well as songs and children's games. Material such as this has been done before, especially by Zora Neale Hurston, Richard Dorson, and Roger Abrahams, but not very recently.

So overall, this book is a treasure. However,as much fun as Black folklore is to read, its better if watched or heard orally. Somebody needs to make a CD or DVD documentary of this sort of thing (hint hint to my fellow folklorists and scholars out there).

a must for your library
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2002-01-28
This huge anthology covers black folklore going back to slavery and up to the latest classic email story. Poems, spirituals, great speeches and famous sermons are included. There is a chapter on little written about black crafts and art and culural activities such as step shows and rent parties. It could be argued that the book is too big. Bibles and dictionaries weigh less than it does but From My People is a reference book. It gives a quick overview of 400 years of folklore. This should be in school libraries across the land.

Kimberley Lindsay Wilson, author of Work It! The Black Woman's Guide to Success at Work.

An amazing collection!
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2004-07-05
For most people, the term "folklore" probably conjures the image of songs and stories, but as Daryl Cumber Dance illustrates, it's much more than that. It's about quilts and the history they embody. It's about hair styles, dress, food, traditions of marching bands, sermons, speeches...even internet rumors and graffiti. As one chapter is headed, it's about "The Style of Soul."

Start at any topic that piques your interest, and I promise, you'll find it impossible to put this book down. There are surprises around every corner...for example, I was delighted to find a low fat recipe for greens!

This vast, rich book belongs in every library.
Curator, AfroAmericanHeritage dot com

Capturing Culture
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2004-10-09
How often have we sat at the feet of our elders and heard stories imparted to us regarding the days gone by? Handed down through the generations, these tales were not only meant for entertainment purposes, they impart wisdom and provide a living lesson. In 400 YEARS OF AFRICAN AMERICAN FOLKLORE, author Daryl Cumber Dance has created a compilation of folktales, folk music - including spirituals and freedom songs - as well as blues and ballads, folk arts and crafts, proverbs and many other pearls of wisdom that breed familiarity in the Black community. The African slave trade tore our early ancestors from their native lands, stripping them of their individual identities and beliefs, yet our strong forefathers were able to maintain some of their culture and the stories that were once told to them.

Ms. Dance does a wonderful job in capturing the vernacular used in some of the stories as well as providing some historical background to set a frame of reference for her readers. Each story and every entry into this collection caught my attention. I was compelled through the pages by my curiosity and to be reminded of days gone by. Each was very well put together, yet I found my favorite folk tale to be "De Ways of De Wimmens" which is a humorous short tale revolving around Adam and Eve's first days together and the establishment of gender roles. This story literally had me laughing out loud because even today, I can relate to the basic truth found in this tale.

400 YEARS OF AFRICAN AMERICAN FOLKLORE is not just a collection of folk tales. Don't get me wrong, Ms. Dance does rightful justice in providing glimpses into our dynamic society. She reaches back into the early days, guides us through the civil rights era by including powerful sermons by Reverend C.L. Franklin, Martin Luther King Jr., Jesse Jackson and many more. She even addresses some of today's disconcerting issues, such as urban gentrification and gang violence.

In summary, the selections included in this book run the gamut throughout the reaches of time. It provides glimpses into the strong traditions held by the Black community and imparts some wisdom as to how these traditions may have taken root. In writing 400 YEARS OF AFRICAN AMERICAN FOLKLORE, Ms. Dance stated, "My goal throughout my career and in this anthology has been to collect, transcribe, preserve and respect the integrity of the folk text." In my humble opinion, she did just that. Ms. Dance should be lauded for her efforts.


Reviewed by Nedine
of The RAWSISTAZ Reviewers

Year 2000
Autocourse: 50 Years of World Championship Grand Prix Motor Racing (Hazleton History)
Published in Hardcover by Hazelton Publishing (UK) (2000-05)
Author: Alan Henry
List price: $59.95
New price: $190.00
Used price: $174.99

Average review score:

Autocourse Does It Again
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2000-05-15
For readers who are familiar with Autocourse, its reputation for high quality, accuracy as a book of historical record, and photography that stands on its own merits, this latest book from Alan Henry should be on every enthusiast's "must have" list.

There are about a dozen books on Formula One that I'd take with me to a desert isle (Jesse Alexander's "At Speed," Horst Baumann & Ken Purdy's "The New Matadors," William Court's "Power and Glory," and Henry's "Autocourse History of the Grand Prix Car 1945-65 and 1966-91," among them). This one is added to that short list, undoubtedly.

Alan Henry is well known for his insider knowledge of the sport--there is a full page word sketch of Bernie Ecclestone included here that is worth the price of admission alone. If you love the sights, the sounds, and most of all the personalities of Formula One, both past and present, you have to read, savor and then HORDE this book for the future!

F1 Fans get it ASAP!
Helpful Votes: 13 out of 13 total.
Review Date: 2000-07-08
This title is even more precious than the other already outstanding Autocourse Annuals. You can see how it looked when it all started back in 1950. Live through different eras of the past 50 years in F1 racing. I suggect all F1 fans get this book asap or it will disappear from book stores very soon. The team of Henry and Cahier(s) should get more than 5 stars just for this outstanding work.

Magnificent!
Helpful Votes: 15 out of 15 total.
Review Date: 2000-05-18
The Formula One world driving championship was inaugurated in 1950, making 1999 it's 50th season. The people of AUTOCOURSE have chronicled the sport since 1951, and have never had any equals. This AUTOCOURSE history of the first 50 years is absolutely breathtaking. An "art" book of immensely high quality, it marries the journalistic expertise of veteran correspondent Alan Henry (editor of AUTOCOURSE since 1988) with the photographic brilliance of Bernard Cahier (covering primarily the 50's, 60's and into the 70's) and his son, the imcomparable photographic artist, Paul-Henri Cahier (primarily 80's and 90's). Their photos are simply stunning. The decision to restrict the photographic content of a 50-year history to just 2 men was a brave one, but considering that they chose the true artists of their eras, the choice was clearly inspired. It puts the book on another level entirely. A comprehensive championship table (season-by-season) is present at the back, but there is nothing dry or statistical about this book. Rather than comprehensively document the series "race-by-race", this is a book in which the essence of each era and the true character of its participants (and the cars involved) is brought to life. The people at AUTOCOURE have no peers, and with this book, they've truly outdone themselves. A "desert island" F1 book for sure. Congrats!

Near perfection
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2003-04-20
Grand Prix motor racing, despite a long parade of contenders to the pinnacle of motor sport, remains the ultimate distillation of technology and driver courage/skill. The 50 years since WWII, thoughtfully framed by a "Before the War" chapter for historical perspective, are recorded superbly in this magnificent book. No significant aspects of the cars and drivers of this eventful half century have been neglected. Sidebars constantly divert and inform. Even the advertising is captivating.
The reader comes away in awe, sated by the integrity of the text under Alan Henry's meticulous editing and the wonderful photographs of Bernard and Paul-Henri Cahier.
Younger enthusiasts who read this book, who have been watching the boring, little-passing parades of advertising-festooned F1 slot cars of recent years, will acquire essential perspective from this great book and will note--perhaps wistfully--the transition from a high-risk driver's sport to a technology-money game in which the driver has become increasingly subordinated to the machinery and lawyers manipulate the rules. They may also note, by studying the evolution of Grand Prix machinery, the transition (not only in GP but in prototype sports cars) from vehicles that could be driven on road courses to caricatures that can only be driven on billiard-table-smooth tracks, whose characteristics (mile-wide slicks, ground effects, minimal ground clearance, bizarre aerodynamics aids, engine lifetimes measures in minutes or hours of running) have virtually nothing to do with any other kind of road vehicle. The great Stirling Moss, one of the finest drivers who ever raced, railed against this loss of relevance to 'real' cars when interviewed by me on the microphone at Sears Point (where he was Grand Marshall of a historics event). Beyond nostalgia, who is to say that he is not right in decrying this disconnect between racing cars and real cars? Don't suggest NASCAR, fake into the bones, as representative of any remotely real road vehicle.
Alan Henry sensibly avoids much of the recent controversy over rules and money, which have effected so many not-so-subtle changes in what used to be a sport and not a business, although he does gum the issues of the tobacco wars and the rise of lovable Bernie Ecclestone to the role of F1 dictator. The book was published in 2000 and thus could not have anticipated the struggle of F1 in the new Millennium, blandly asserting its posture as "firm and secure." Well, maybe.
In the end, nothing that the recent philistines can do diminishes the ultimate greatness of this world motorsports arena or the care with which this book and brilliant historical record has been assembled.

Year 2000
Celebrating Silence: Excerpts from Five Years of Weekly Knowledge 1995-2000
Published in Paperback by Art of Living Foundation (2001-06)
Author: Sri Sri Ravi Shankar
List price: $12.00
New price: $7.07
Used price: $3.15

Average review score:

I wish I had read this book earlier
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-28
Even many years after I bought the book, every time I open the book, the right answer to my problem comes.
It is beautiful ancient knowledge for the modern days.

Super..!!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-10-11
This will be the best use of $12 you could ever make. One page knowledge sheets takes 3 minutes to complete and is useful on any day. Makes you stop and think and then smile.

I have gifted this book to others as well and everyone LOVED it.

A must for everyone in this current age
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2001-12-16
This is the most essential and relevant book to guide us to higher understanding of life and elevated consciousness. It's layed out in a very practical and creative manner. With topics that range from love to anger and enlightenment and God. It really gives you the deepest of knowledge in an easy to read and simple yet brilliant manner. A must for everyone wanting more out of life.

Practical guidence with a divine touch
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2002-02-17
This is a handy book for all occasions and situations. Giving a very profound yet simple meaning to everyday challenges of life. A very good buy for people from all walks of life and religion.
I have picked up this book practically everyday to read Sri Sri's comments on life. And it has given me a new meaning and showed me directions to go forth in any situation. It is a simple yet very powerful book to understand the complexities of daily life and the solution to them, in the most uncomplicated manner. A must buy for today's world.

Year 2000
A Chronicle of World History: From 130,000 Years Ago to the Eve of AD 2000
Published in Paperback by University Press of America (2002-07)
Author: Frank P. King
List price: $72.50
New price: $54.73
Used price: $54.75

Average review score:

Brilliant book:
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-05-03
If ever there were the opportunity to grasp the scope, meaning and lessons of history, The Chronicle affords the conscientious reader that opportunity. Despite divisive passions and ideologies, humankind's search for their own identity and concept of justice finds expression and definition here. In Dr. King's vivid and incisive description of our resourcefulness, creativity and developing humanity, we awaken to a transhistorical sense of universal human destiny. The Chronicle not only provides acute analyses of humankind's collective conscience, it shows humanity's capacity for intelligent survival across the millennia. To read The Chronicle is to assimilate the significance of history through the matured insights of a true historian.

A book for every historian
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2003-02-09
This book should be on the self of every historian for a proper orientation into his research. It is a gifted work providing unknown historical details with a flowing narration, connecting the passing of people andevents. Perhaps a quote from its pages will relate its value. Who wouldthink the brutal Vikings of old would destroy the beautiful inland Paris,illustrating their long extensive game of warfare in the "dark" period:"854: the Vikings burned the new city of Hamburg and looted Paris."
Comments by D. Moore, Roman Historian

one fine referance
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2002-12-20
in these pages is a massive amont of information. this book can lead one to much more research in a very timely manner. if one had any idea of a date, they can find out much about the subject and then be able to research further.

History from its pre-historic origins down to the present
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2002-12-09
A Chronicle Of World History: From 130,000 Years Ago To The Eve Of A.D. 2000 by independent scholar and freelance writer Frank P. King is an impressive, 480-page compendium of human history from its pre-historic origins down to the present day. The brief and succinct entries are organized by date and rang from a single sentence to a small paragraph. Ideal for the non-specialist general reader with an interest in history, A Chronicle Of World History is as much fun to simply browse through, as it is informative. Highly recommended for personal, school, and community library collections.

Year 2000
Crisis Investing for the Year 2000: How to Profit from the Coming Y2K Computer Crash
Published in Hardcover by Birch Lane Press (1999-04)
Authors: L. Jay Kuo and Edward M. Dua
List price: $22.50
New price: $1.75
Used price: $0.01

Average review score:

It is the reasonable person's guide to investing for Y2K.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 1999-06-04
As an ex Chief Information Officer for a fortune 500 company, I've spent many years communicating to government and industry alike, what impact we could reasonably expect from the Year 2000 Computer Date Change Problem. This is the best book I have read to date, which provides reasonable and definitive answers to one the questions I am most frequently asked regarding Y2K, "What should I do about my investments?"

Today, as a consultant and author of THE REASONABLE PERSON'S GUIDE TO Y2K, I spend my time communicating about what moderate, down-to-earth, level-headed governments and individuals can do to prepare. In that regard, I consider L. Jay Kuo's and Edward Dua's book the reasonably person's guide to investing for the Year 2000 transition. I highly recommend this book for those who believe Y2K will not be a disaster, nor will it be "business-as-usual", and that reasonable preparedness for something "in between" is warranted.

If you believe Dr. Ed Yardeni, Chief Global Economist and Global Investment Strategist for Duetsche Bank Securities, when he predicts a 70% probability that Y2K will create a global recession which could last 12 to 24 months, then this book is must reading.

What I particularly liked about this book, is that the information is usable and it is not the "don't worry, be happy" message most brokerage houses are espousing. Not only do the authors provide powerful insight into how and why you should defensively posture current investments against a Y2K induced recession, they also venture forth suggestions on how to profit from it as well. Something I have been trying to get my broker to tell me for months. Come to think of it, I highly recommend this book for stockbrokers and fund managers too.

Wow.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 1999-04-01
I read an advance copy of this book. A very timely look at a problem (opportunity) that will soon be upon us. Dua hits the nail on the head when he says, "With Y2K there will be winners and losers in the investing world. Try to be one of them." Excellently written. Highly recommended for the casual or professional investor.

Absolutely THE best book on Y2K investing!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 1999-08-17
This book was a refreshing change from some other books that have been published on the subject of Y2K investing. Specifically, it is an extraordinarily well-researched book. It provides indepth details of possible y2k strategies and names specific stocks. Truly an outstanding effort!

An investment guide not only helpful but hugely interesting!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 1999-04-12
Not being someone who typically reads a lot of investment guides, I was very happily astonished at how easily this book reads. L. Jay Kuo is an excellent writer, describing the background of the Y2K problem without getting too technical and obscure, and depicts the issue with extreme clarity and (dare I suggest it?) engaging wit. People from all backgrounds, from the investment-astute to the "digerati" (as Mr. Kuo puts it), to the neophytes, hesitant about investing in general but looking for some simple but straightforward insightful commentary and/or advice, will be able to get a lot out of this book. Oddly enough, it's even entertaining (!) -- Mr. Kuo is clever with his subheadings and his turn of phrase. While it is definitely not written to be "over people's heads" (as many investment guides seem to be), Mr. Kuo still manages to deliver deceptively clear prose with many witty allusions and insights, such that the book does not fall into the "pedantic trap" (as many investment guides ALSO seem to do). He explains the areas most likely to be adversely (and positively) affected by the upcoming confusion surrounding Y2K, presents really quite sound reasons for these views, and then suggests some viable approaches and at-least short term solutions so as to best protect oneself (and one's portfolio) from the inevitable chaos Y2K will present to the financial markets. Even if you never read another investment guide in your life, I recommend this one. Highly.


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