Titles Books
Related Subjects: Crafty EXchess Fritz Gromit Rebel Chessmaster Competitions HIARCS Winboard and Xboard
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Used price: $8.37

The gentle color illustrations add the perfect touch to this fableReview Date: 2007-11-05
Splendid Compassionate TaleReview Date: 2007-10-10
lovelyReview Date: 2006-08-01
wonderful, warmReview Date: 2003-12-18
Heartwarmng storyReview Date: 2003-11-20

Used price: $74.00

Theorical Soil MecanicsReview Date: 2006-07-10
Terzaghi's Original MasterpieceReview Date: 2003-04-13
The original soil mechanics book written in 1938.Review Date: 1996-07-14
State-of-the-art soil mechanics textbookReview Date: 2001-09-07
Yes, it's classic but require some knowledge backgroundsReview Date: 1998-07-27

Used price: $12.03
Collectible price: $29.95

Truly UniqueReview Date: 2008-02-23
The Three Golden KeysReview Date: 2007-07-27
Peter Sis takes a magical visit back to Prague, the city of his childhoodReview Date: 2005-09-01
Three times in this story, as the seasons change, the man comes to a special place from his childhood, and in each place an old Czech legend is revealed to the man and his cat. The first is the legend of the night Bruncvik, the second the story of the Golem, and the third the story of Mast Hanus and his astronomical clock. Attached to each legend is a golden key, and once the man has collected them the city comes alive and he goes to open the door to his house and see what magical things await him there. Just be forewarned that when you kids read this book that they might be disappointed that their parents were not born in a distant land (fortunately I am safe on that score, although I have never been back to the city of my birth, but I would like to go, although by something other than a hot-air balloon).
The cover illustration for "The Three Golden Keys" does not give you any real indication of the visual delights inside. My only real issue with this book is that the three legends are each told in a single double-page spread, with twenty-four illustrations (approximately one-inch by one-and-a-half-inches each) surrounding the text section, which has captions for each (unnumbered) drawing after an introduction, surrounding a giant drawing of a key. Given that the rest of the book consists of full-page or double-page illustrations rich in detail and full of color, the little comic strip versions of the legends suffer a bit in comparison, although they are as finely detailed as the rest of the art work. Besides, it would not bother me if this book was two or three times longer to work everything in because you are not going to get tired of Sis's artwork.
An Excellent Awakening to Prague!Review Date: 2000-04-18
this book opened new doors to children's literature for my familyReview Date: 2005-11-21
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InformativeReview Date: 2003-01-16
The Twentieth Century World: An International HistoryReview Date: 2006-01-12
Author William Keylor is consistently strong in describing how geopolitical forces - geography, demographics, technology, and finance - affect national development and international relations. He shows that political arrangements need to be consistent with the operation of these forces to be successful. But he does not imagine that international relations are determined entirely by objective forces: he recognizes that ideas are important too. For example, because it holds itself out as a model of democracy, the United States is judged by the same ideals that it professes. The ideologies of democracy and national self-determination advanced by the United States have not eliminated its self-interested behavior but they have constrained it. Keylor also recognizes the role of leadership in international relations. For example, he describes how competent and farsighted leadership in many Asian countries has helped produce impressive economic growth over a period of many decades, lifting hundreds of millions of people out of poverty and exerting pressure on neighboring countries to adopt similar export-oriented policies.
In fact, I found his explanation of development processes in East Asia to be particularly illuminating. He describes how Japan pioneered a development path based on trade and government coordination of large, oligarchic export companies. Japan first specialized in textiles and other manufactures that relied on cheap labor. By postponing consumption and sustaining a high rate of savings and investment over an extended period of time, the Japanese achieved a comparative advantage in accumulating capital for investment in capital-intensive manufacturing industries. Finally, having developed a cadre of highly qualified scientists, technicians, and engineers, the Japanese became world leaders in high technology industry. This same developmental path was successfully replicated by the Asian Tigers (South Korea, Taiwan, Singapore, and Hong Kong), and is being followed now by the ASEAN countries.
The Twentieth Century World, now in its fourth edition, is suitable for lower-division undergraduate courses and will also be of interest to the general reader. It includes many useful and attractive maps but no footnotes. The book also includes a 23-page critical bibliography, two glossaries, and a detailed, reliable index. Since I finished the book a couple months ago, it has served me as a reference several times.
Probably What You're Looking ForReview Date: 2003-03-26
Insightful, Didactic and EnjoyableReview Date: 1998-05-16
"The Book of the Century"Review Date: 1998-10-04


Thanks DaveReview Date: 2007-08-03
Everytime I cook butterscotch pudding, I think of you, with love to you and your family.
This is a good book for laughing and crying.Review Date: 2005-06-18
Childhood MemoriesReview Date: 2004-03-04
With first hand knowledge, I remember some of the events that occurred on the boys ranch during long summer days and weekends. Some of my best childhood memories hearken back to time I spent on the ranch.
While many years have passed and I have lost contact with Dave and his family, I can truly say they were, and I know, still are awesome people.
From the day our families first met in church, until the last time I visited the ranch, I always felt like I had a second home there.
Jane and Jerry Farhenbacher are two other wonderful people whose good deeds and actions must not be overlooked. They were truly wonderful people.
I wish that everyone who reads this book could have spent a day with Dave and his family on the boys ranch. Through an experience such as this, I know that anyone with an open mind would have come away from his or her visit with a renewed sense of spirit for the American dream.
If the news and print media spent more time focusing on the benevolent deeds and actions of families such as the Goodwin's, America would follow the examples set by them and others thus creating a more harmonious, hard working, generous society.
Bravo Dave!
Respectfully,
Navin
Where is Volume 2?Review Date: 2004-02-26
A must read!Review Date: 2003-11-25
Used price: $2.54
Collectible price: $20.25

The Last Word in Flow Leak Detection!Review Date: 2006-08-24
congratulationsReview Date: 1998-07-02
If you work with vacuum systems, DON'T LOAN THIS ONE!Review Date: 1997-05-09
everyone in semiconductor industrie must read this bookReview Date: 2005-09-03
Execellent, practical and comprehensive reference book.Review Date: 1997-05-16


this book is extraordinary!Review Date: 2005-09-29
The Water of Life : A Tale from the Brothers GrimmReview Date: 2000-06-03
Beautiful tale for all agesReview Date: 1997-12-01
A true Classic Fairy taleReview Date: 2000-06-27
It is not a short read for a 5 year-old, but it held his attention again and again. It is one of his favorites.
I bought this book because I love the illustrations of Ms. Hyman. We have read "Bearskin" by Howard Pyle, "Little Red Ridinghood", and "The Fortune Teller", all illustrated by Ms. Hyman. Her colors are vibrant and exciting. It seems that every book Ms. Hyman is involved with includes a great story and a great story teller.
"The Water of Life" has it all, love, tests and trials, devotion, greed, and betrayal. It gives us, mother and son, lots to talk about. I recommend this book heartily.
Do Not Hesitate: Buy this BookReview Date: 2003-11-13
Don't believe me? Well, when I was no more than five years old my father got this book out of the library, but nine years later, all I could remember was a certain illustration that depicted the prince escaping from the enchanted courtyard. It was such a narrow escape as the gates closed on him, that his heel was torn off. This picture and the narrative stayed with me all those years, till I picked up another Trina Schart Hyman book, whose style of illustrations seemed vaugely familiar... After some typing on the public library's search engine "The Water of Life" was refound, and I stood in the library parking lot staring in amazement at the illustration that had stayed in my head for over nine years.
Well enough reminising, I'll get to the plot of the story. It is based on the Brother Grimm story, but unlike other retellings of their tales which "shear" certain components of their narratives, Barbara Rogasky keeps in all the details and subquests that make the story so intricate. If you've ever read Brothers Grimm you'll know that the pretty little stories you usually see nowadays are very unlike their original counterparts. Often the Grimm Brothers would go off into tangents in their storytellings, adding unexplained or irrelevent people and events, which made them slightly confusing, but all the more colourful and fascinating. "The Water of Life" tells the story of three brothers whose father was very ill. After the two eldest brothers go, are rude to a small dwarf traveller and therefore trapped in a ravine between two mountains, the youngest son rides out to find the Water of Life and cure his father. He is not so coarse to the dwarf and so gathers some useful advice: that the Water is held in the fountain of a courtyard in an enchanted castle, guarded by iron gates and fierce lions. The Prince enters this place and there meets a beautiful Princess. You guessed it, it's love at first sight, and the Prince gathers the Water for his father, promising that he'll return to wed the Princess in a year's time. But his treacherous brothers have other plans - to have their brother destroyed and claim the Princess for themselves.
It has all the components of a traditional fairytale: an ill king, three feuding brothers, a castle under a spell, a dwarfin companion and a beautiful princess, but here appear like brand new under Barbara Rogersky's working of the mysterious narrative. There are passages of intrigue and detail galore: the table of enchanted princes, the youngest son's travels with the magic bread and sword, the huntsman sent to kill him, and the wise Princess's own plan to secure her true love. Yet despite the darker tones of the tale, the morale shines through: that of honesty, love and truth always coming through in the end.
And then of course, there's Trina Schart Hyman's illustrations. They evoke a beautiful and deep medieval/fairytale world, and perfectly echo the story, as well as creating an extra depth of their own. Long after the dwarf disappears from the narrative, he features in the illustrations, peeking from behind trees and watching the action from high bluffs. Likewise, the lions that guard the gates of the castle appear in the narrative only as "watch-dogs", but continue to appear at the Princess's side like overgrown house cats. There are stories within stories, as the tapestries in the king's bed chamber seem to tell an unknown but fascinating woodland tale, and there is no picture more intriging than the table of enchanted princes: one with butterfly wings, one with stag's horns, one with a unicorn horn, another with a bird's head... Likewise, the sight of the two elder brothers wedged between two mountains on horseback is comic, claustrophobic, inventive and completely realistic. Finally, everyone may groan at the "love at first sight" passage, but Hyman's incredible details create love and adoration between two figures that *make* you believe in it. Her details and use of colour are perfection, and out of all her works, "The Water of Life" is one of the best.
Children are some of the most underestimated creatures in the world, and they deserve to have this wonderful story read to them. Turn off the T.V. and open "The Water of Life". Hopefully Amazon will place a picture of the product on this webpage so that everyone can see for themselves and not just take my word for it just how beautiful this book is.

Used price: $0.01

The World Before This One- Janey DeTommasoReview Date: 2006-05-10
The main characters in this book are a young man named Crow, and his grandmother. The setting is at a lodge, and in the forest. The climax is when grandmother asks Raccoon, Crow's old friend, to spy on him and see why he doesn't bring home hardly any books from hunting a full day in the forest. The plot is how grandfather stone tells Crow the legends of the world before this one, and it is up to him to see if his fellow villagers are ready to hear the legends.
Teaches life's lessonsReview Date: 2003-09-14
A Moving and Mythic ReadReview Date: 2003-03-10
Rafe Martin, a gifted storyteller, posesses a rare ability to bring to life for adults and children alike the world of magic inherent in nature. THE WORLD BEFORE THIS ONE is partly a coming of age story, as Crow finds his true path as a tale teller and guardian of his people's wisdom. Martin's retelling of these Seneca legends reaches all of us to touch a deeper consciousness within, and imbues our present world with meaning.
Perfect for reading aloudReview Date: 2003-02-10
Good BookReview Date: 2003-02-10
Used price: $0.03

The best idea-generation book for writersReview Date: 1997-01-14
Write to Learn, 2nd editionReview Date: 2002-01-04
I liked the way he led us through his process of writing an article about his grandmother. I also enjoyed reading drafts of his students writings and their finished, successful product. I was enticed to keep reading and therefore learning.
The book has widespread application. My nephew, a college professor, used this as his favorite textbook, yet I adapted the information easily for younger students. It works for both enthusiastic or reticent writers.
I was going to purchase a later edition at our local college bookstore, but found the topics written about were too controversial for my taste and too adult for me to use to teach younger students.
"Write to Learn", 2nd edition, is more than a textbook. It is a LIVING book!
A true book on How to WriteReview Date: 2002-04-17
He starts you out with writing to yourself. Then takes you through each step of the process of preparing what you wrote for the reader.
Murray talks to you like are sitting in front of you. You feel like he can hear your questions, answers them, and then shows you what he is talking about.
The most important part of the whole book is Chapter 9, "'Read' as a Writer". He analyzes today's writers as a writer, a major step to really understanding the craft.
Other writing books tell you about practice sessions, structure, and voice. Murray shows you how to do the work.
Yes it is a very...book, but weather it is a textbook or not, it is a book of valuable information for those of us who can't work at the Boston Globe or go to Harvard--yet our passion to write is very real.
Inspirational, easy-to-read tips on the writing process.Review Date: 1998-09-30
great little book-WAY too expensive!!Review Date: 1999-02-04

EXTRAORDINARY BOOK!Review Date: 2000-07-18
Women of TexasReview Date: 2000-11-17
I'm goingReview Date: 2000-07-13
Inspiring and Uplifting!Review Date: 2000-08-29
You go girlReview Date: 2000-07-14
Related Subjects: Crafty EXchess Fritz Gromit Rebel Chessmaster Competitions HIARCS Winboard and Xboard
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