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Hearts Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

Hearts
Enchantments of the Heart: A Magical Guide to Finding the Love of Your Life
Published in Paperback by New Page Books (2001-01-01)
Author: Dorothy Morrison
List price: $16.99
New price: $8.47
Used price: $6.73

Average review score:

Wonderful book!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-30
Dorothy Morrison knows her stuff. This book is chock full of down to earth usable advice. A nice break from the new-age garbage that's recently been flooding the market! A must read for anyone wishing to clean up their life and find a mate!

A must for the solitary practioner
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-22
I loved this book! It was a nice addition to my collection. Worth the money.

Fun and yet still practical
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-03
Even if you don't practice magik, this book is full of good practical advice for finding a great partner but also for being a great partner. However, I have myself found the spells included to be extremely effective as I have with all of Dorothy Morrison's work.

Great Book!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2004-08-28
This is a great book. The rituals really work. One little quibble, though -- in the second ritual, she says to throw your stuff (including clothes) away and bury it. Why not advise donating it to the homeless instead? There's enough garbage in landfills.

I don't think that donating your useable stuff to a charity would make the ritual any less effective. In fact, it might even make you feel better about yourself, which is the whole point of the ritual anyway.

Find the love of your life and a great read!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2003-10-25
Within reading five pages of this book it was very obvious to me that Dorothy had obviously reached inside my head, jerked out every thought, idea, and opinion on love I've ever had, then proceeded to scribble them down on paper. I was honestly amazed at how much our views are similar.

Whether anyone is searching for their perfect love or not, I would definitely recommend this to anyone and everyone, if only to give them a chance to recognize how propoganda from society has affected us, but also, to combat it, which will hopefully make you a healthier and happier person in the long run.

She doesn't come across as a preachy "Here's my advice!" type of author. She actually gives practical advice, but also ways to use it and take an active role in your love life. These aren't just pretty words and philosophies on paper, but a working book for those who wish to work towards a life filled with love, of all kinds.

Her experiences have clearly not been great in love in the past, which is perfect since who wants to take advice from someone who hasn't had a rocky love life? She's been there, I've been there, through this book she will definitely attempt to get you through the maddness that is love to a place where you can be at peace and content with a successful love life.

Hearts
Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing: Basic Principles, Protocols, and Procedures
Published in Hardcover by The Guilford Press (1995-04-24)
Author: Francine Shapiro
List price: $46.00
New price: $23.55
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Average review score:

EMDR book
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-05
This is a very information book. I am in the process of becoming certified in EMDR therapy, and this book has really helped me to understand the origins of EMDR, the reasons why it works, and how to use it in my practice. This book is a very useful tool in addition to an EMDR training program.

Indispensible Text for EMDR
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-05
This book is a companion to the live course, the foundation for EMDR. A must have text if you are a therapist using this modality.

The Standard Still Works
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-17
This restatement of Francine Shapiro's standard overview of Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR)outlines the standard protocols for this proven treatment method. The methods, theory, and failsafe procedures are carefully explained for clinician practitioners. Careful liability reduction checks are examined and encouraged throughout the manual. This book alone is not a substitute for training in EMDR, yet will assist the new and veteran EMDR practitioner in remaining competernt in the skills and therory. I keep it handy for frequent review.

Promising intervention with unpromising reservations
Helpful Votes: 48 out of 61 total.
Review Date: 2004-08-21
EMDR may be an excellent form of overcoming trauma, and the research tends to suggest it does, although if you read the literature in a disinterested way, you will find there are many mixed reports on study results. Some find EMDR equal to or better than Cog/Beh Therapy intervention; some find it better; some find it not as effective. As someone who has conducted experimental research, I wish to point out several issues that should be addressed, even for true believers. First, EMDR is a perfect intervention for a technological age: after all, don't all our life's problems supposedly have a technological solution. Our culture says so, but of course, history tells us otherwise. Spiritual meaning, social integration, a personal credo, culture and religion still appear to be the ingredients that hold us together..or as Paul Tillich says, "Our ground of being." Technology may be helpful but it is ultimately ancillary. Of course, those who suffer from trauma may require immediate relief, and if EMDR can reduce suffering efficiently and quickly, that's fine. HOWEVER, that being said, one must look a bit further. First, one must consider the individual client him/herself. EMDR helps us return to a traumatic event, see it more objectively, and hopefully allows us to use our reasoning faculties which may not have been in play during such events owing to stress, shock, immaturity, ignorance, and so forth. However, we all have varied levels of experiencing or "reliving" memory. Some can visualize quite easily and can "see" the experience as vividly, even more vividly than the true life one. In keeping with Gardner's idea of "multiple intelligences," we should consider that different individuals have different "intelligences" in reconstructing or reliving events. Furthermore, we should consider that individuals have varying degrees in their ability to make associations. While a trauma may be a single event or several similar events, in all likelihood they have developed as narrative themes that compose the self-concept the client has. The better a client can connect the trauma to such themes, the more holistic the effect. A good EMDR clinician can encourage this reconstruction, but one should be aware that we have different cognitive styles.

Second, some of us have more entry into traumatic events than others. This may be attributable to personality traits such as openness to self-disclosure, and environmental influences of trust, and/or varying levels of general repression of uncomfortable (let alone traumatic) thoughts and events. So, one size may not fit all.

Another important variable that should be examined by practitioners/researchers is the background of the therapist. For example, since much of EMDR is used to uncover traumatic childhood events, I believe it is important that the therapist have a background in treating children--at least to some minimal level. For, as the client recalls events from childhood, he/she is recalling them as a child and may be in a child-like state during the process. Therefore, the therapist must be able to talk to the client as a child (not the inner child because EMDR, if it works for childood trauma, brings the inner child "outward." Finally, the therapist must sense when the client is "ready" for the treatment. The trauma may be known, but the ability for the client to address the trauma in a safe and secure environment may take time to establish and nurture. I do not see the metaphor of the mind as a computer. If we begin to think that way, our society is in very big trouble. Much of our culture already does. In conclusion, this method should not be viewed as a mere technique, but like any intervention for change, as a technique largely dependent on the individual therapist/client. It helps to have a rich sensory life and a good sense-memory. A therapist might be able to jog some of it, but it still is a trait. And finally, about the eye movement part, there have been few studies comparing EMDR with and without the eye movements. Studies regarding whether they are necessary to the process have not been highly encouraging.

Recommend!
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 14 total.
Review Date: 2004-04-12
Easy to read and helpful for understanding the process of EMDR. I would have to agree with the previous reviewer Laura M that PEACEFUL HEART : A Woman's Journey to Healing is a must-read. Aimee Jo Martin's story clearly illustrates and details her journey with successful EMDR treatments. Quite powerful if you want to really see how effective EMDR can be.

Hearts
The Heart of Motherhood: Finding Holiness in the Catholic Home
Published in Paperback by The Crossroad Publishing Company (2006-10-06)
Author: Donna-Marie Cooper O'Boyle
List price: $14.95
New price: $8.76
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Average review score:

The Heart of Motherhood in the Heart of my Home
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-18
"The Heart of Motherhood: Finding Holiness in the Catholic Home" by Donna-Marie Cooper O'Boyle is both encouraging and inspirational. A mother of five, Donna has weathered the storms and inspires me (as a new mom) with her experience and wisdom.

Peppered with inspirational quotes from Mother Teresa, among others, Bible passages and heartfelt prayers, The Heart of Motherhood, inspires from within. Donna-Marie begins the book with the statement that motherhood is, indeed, a truly ordinary and yet extraordinary vocation. By being mothers and by welcoming, loving and teaching our children, we are truly doing the Lord's work. She explains,

"A mother's day is filled to capacity with many ordinary tasks, not unimportant, but rather works of love that may be overlooked or unnoticed. Changing diapers, doing laundry, schedule keeping, house cleaning, planning and cooking nutritious meals and helping with homework are just some of the ordinary tasks in a mom's repertoire. Her own family family may take these loving acts for granted. Although these tasks may seem mundane, or even monotonous, they are the nitty-gritty details that keep the family going and together. . . . A mother's deep inner faith affirms that a day's sacrifices and seemingly ordinary tasks please our Lord because they are done with extraordinary love."

And later reminds us that "love is not merely a feeling or emotion. Love is also a decision . . . at times, this decision may be an enormous sacrifice."

Donna-Marie notes that today's society, unfortunately, rarely respects the woman's role as mother and wife nor the mother's domestic role in the home. However, rather than focus on that, she encourages her readers to bring back the dignity and respect motherhood deserves by being an example of holy mothering to one's family and, ultimately, to society. She continues by explaining how one can focus on holy mothering, the importance of a mother's prayer life, shares inspiration for those times when you feel anything but holy in your mothering, gives inspirational examples of holy mothers (including the most holy mother, Mary) in history and ends each chapter with beautiful prayer.

It is a blessing to me to have read this book. I kept starring and underlining passages and prayers that spoke to me! I couldn't put it down! This is a book that will be an inspiration for years to come. It does not tell you how to run a household, how to clean a sink or how to get your family pulled together each Sunday morning to make it to church on time. Instead, it delves deeper into the holy vocation of motherhood and encourages mothers young and old to keep the faith and to recognize the immeasurable importance of the job to not only their children and families, but to society, the Christian family and God.

I'll be keeping this book handy, by my bedside, on my kitchen counter, in the bathroom (yes, you read that right. You KNOW it might be the only quiet time you get all day!) . . . maybe for a few minutes of refreshing, or even for 30-seconds of inspiration and prayer.

The essence of "The Heart of Motherhood" is love. God is love. "And the greatest of these is love. . . . " We do easy, and difficult, ordinary and extraordinary things for our family and children because we are mothers (and wives) and we do them out of love.

Encouragement for the journey of motherhood
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-10
This book came in a brown paper package a few months ago, and I saved it to be my hospital book (though it nearly killed me to see it sitting there so patiently on my shelf, waiting for the baby right along with me). What a book to read during those first few days with my new baby! As I savored the excitement of my new daughter, feeling much the way I remember feeling on the Christmas mornings of my single-digit years, Donna's book reminded me about the hard work and the bright rewards of motherhood. She doesn't gloss over the difficulty, nor does she make light of the responsibility. In this book, she does what she does so well - she encourages all of us mothers.

In the past few months, I've gotten to know Donna a bit, through her blogs and some emails we've exchanged, and reading this book was just like talking with Donna. Each chapter ends with prayer, the kind that you'll want to copy into your prayer book or post on your bathroom mirror. I felt the same sort of comfort in reading this book that I feel when I'm having a cup of tea with a dear friend. So go and grab a copy of this book and a steaming cup of tea. Donna has some words of encouragement for you!

Life Changing!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-29
I am a mother of soon to be 3 children ages 3 and under and have read THE HEART OF MOTHERHOOD and it has truly changed my life! The author's outlook on the vocation of motherhood could only have come from the Holy Spirit....Donna Marie Cooper Oboyle's writings are awe inspiring. I encourage all mothers to read this book. It is easy reading and one you can't put down. The writings of this book are ones you remember in the middle of the night when you are up with sick children and want to break down and cry or the days you don't know how you are going to make it through the day....the voice of this book sticks with you and truly helps you become a better mother and helps you to live a holy life at home. IT is a reminder of the true vocation of motherhood that has been lost in today's society.

The Heart of Motherhood:Finding Holiness in the Catholic Home
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-14
This is exactly the book I was looking for. I am a stay at home Catholic mom who at times needs a few words of encouragement. It is hard to pray when the 3 year old is up at 5am, the 1 year old just went back to sleep, the 11 and 14 year old need to get up and be ready to go at 7:30 and I am trying to find time for a conversation with God. It is helpful to hear that everything we offer up for our children is a prayer. While I was reading this book I thought of friends and sisters who have and have not given up comfort and wealth to raise souls for God. The Chapter on the Cross made me think of my own Mother who lost my adult sister a few years ago. This book is highly recomended for moms and dads who suspect that there is more to life than what our culture is trying to sell us. God is love and the fullness of his love is in loving our children.

Excellent & Beautiful book for all Catholic Mothers
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-11
I've read MANY books about being Catholic, being a Mom & being a Catholic Mom...but none of them have touched my heart & mind the way this one did. It was SO common sense about how to weave our Catholicity into our daily lives when there are children at our feet before 5 AM (when it's near impossible to get up before them to pray...even if we really, really want to) and at night, we just pass out, not fall asleep. I read this book twice, have MUCH highlighting throughout & even bought a 2nd copy to give to my sil for her birthday this past Feb. Being a Mom can seem to be a thankless job, being a stay-at-home mom is less than respected in today's society and being a Catholic Mom in the truest sense of the word, can be rougher than anything else I could imagine. Using the practical wisdom in this book helped me to see that even though I can't physically be on my knees in prayer, my heart can be bowed down & focused on Our Lord all day, everyday, keeping my focus on the true Heart of (Catholic) Motherhood.

Hearts
A Hole in the Heart of the World : Being Jewish in Eastern Europe
Published in Paperback by (1998-02-01)
Author: Jonathan Kaufman
List price: $16.00
New price: $22.88
Used price: $6.98

Average review score:

Returning Home
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-27
Kaufman. Jonathan. "A Hole in the Heart of the World: The Jewish Experience in Eastern Europe After World War II", Penguin, 1997.

Returning Home

Amos Lassen

With Holocaust Memorial Day almost here my thoughts turn to that horrible period in the history of my people. At this time of year, almost every year, I find myself wondering "What If"? If Hitler had been accepted to art school would things have been any different for the Jews of Europe? What would have happened if the Jews had been able to fight back? Where are they now? What of the ones who hid and stayed? These are tough questions. Joseph Kaufman concentrates on five families of Jews in Eastern Europe who survived the Holocaust. Among them are a West German cantor and survivor of the concentration camps who crossed to Berlin after the war to be a minister to the Jews who were still there, A prominent Berlin communist Jewish family, a Hungarian rabbi who was dismissed by the leaders of the Communist party, young people from Prague, Warsaw and Budapest who discover their Jewish roots after the war, and a Polish Catholic woman who helped care for the Jews.
Kaufman magically weaves these stories together and gives the reader a touching look at the lives of people who were either impacted or touched by the madness of the Third Reich.
Most of us probably think that after the war there would be few Jews in eastern Europe but we learn that is not true. There has been something of s rebirth of Jewish culture and Kaufman accounts for the Jews who are there and shows how they survived fascism and communism and survived. It is even possible to identify with these people as Kaufman tells us their stories. Some of these courageous people have returned to their motherlands and there are not many left to tell the story. The book keeps interest high and the triumph of these men and women show that the Jewish experience made and kept them whole.

Heartwarming story
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2003-06-30
This is a beautifully touching book that takes a glimpse into the lives of people impacted by and living through Europe during the war and the following decades. It covers the lives of many people in Germany, Hungary, etc. in a way that makes you truly appreciate the impact to people's lives and sense of identity. I highly recommend it to anyone interested in this period of time.

a nice little book . . .
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2002-07-12
about how a few people experienced life after the Holocaust in Eastern Europe. Probably the most interesting things I learned were (1) that the decline of the Jewish population in Eastern Europe didn't just all happen during the Holocuast -- instead it kept declining even after 1945 as the Communists made Jews' life more and more miserable, and (2) how vibrant some Jewish communities still are - for example, I had no idea that there were still 100,000 Jews in Hungary. Short, easy to read, not too deep, in short beach reading.

Engrossing, enlighting book
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2001-07-25
Like many people, including the author, I thought the Jewish population was close to nonexistant in Eastern Europe following WW II. After the fall of the Wall in 1989, the author discovered that was not totally true, and does a wonderful job of writing about the experiences of 5 Jewish families in Eastern Europe during the Cold War. It was an eye opener for me. While I knew that the Communist regimes hadn't exactly strongly supported Judism, I didn't realize they had launched such strong anti-Semite campaigns (or pogroms). Very easy read and it teaches you quite a bit about post-War Eastern Europe.

Haunting story of Judiasm under the Communists
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2001-08-03
Jonathan is first a journalist. He gives you a penetrating view of what it was like to be in Europe under communism as told by people that lived it. He makes you identify with these people and feel their stories. This is no simplistic story of good and evil. This is the story of real and complex people dealing in their different ways with an impossible situation. Some rebelled, some hid, and some joined the enemy. The only common thread is that they were all alive to tell Jonathan their stories when the Berlin Wall fell. Fortunately Jonathan was there at this unique point in time to listen to their stories and tell them to us.

Hearts
Home Is Where the Heart Is
Published in Hardcover by Authorhouse (2003-01)
Author: Valerie J. Steimle
List price: $25.45
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wonderfully written
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-12-15
This is a great book for anyone looking for ideas and thoughts on how we can strengthen family relations at home and in our communitites. It taught me principles that I will use not only in my relationships now with my parents and siblings, but for future days when I will have kids of my own. This is a fantastic read and is highly recommended.

Wonderful read
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-08-10
This book is a wonderful example of how the moral of the family should. It brings us back to basics, things that most of us have forgotten in this busy world of ours but things that are still so important. Wonderful for parents or even for young married couples like myself. Not too heavy a read and gets your opinions going. Thoroughly enjoyable.

Good ideas to get you started.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2004-10-26
This is a nice collection of essays that will help get you started on your way to thinking about what it takes to build a stronger family, community, and country.

Looking forward to the next book!

Great book for men and women
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2004-09-07
This book is an ideal source for parents. This book is great for both male and female parents who want to make the most of their family times. A MUST read!

A must read for every parent and everyone who plans to be.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2004-09-07
This book really gets one thinking about the role family plays amidst the confusion and chaos of the world in which we live. As a newly-wed man in my late 20's I was pleased to read a book that gives me hope that I can positively affect my future children's future.

Hearts
Hymns for a Kid's Heart (Focus on Family) (Focus on Family)
Published in Hardcover by Crossway Books (2004-03-15)
Authors: Bobbie Wolgemuth and Joni Eareckson Tada
List price: $21.99
New price: $12.79
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Hymn Book very interesting!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-05
This book is well written and very interesting to my children of a wide range of ages. The accompanying CD is of very good quality and fun to sing along with. My children look forward to doing a hymn study.

Great school resource too
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-16
I have used this not only at home, but at school. The stories of the hymn writers are fascintating, and the children enjoy singing along with the cd. I've been amazed at the number of children who don't know My Country Tis of Thee. Each of the stories are short enough to be understood, but they always have a moral principal. Just a great resource for parents and Christian educators.

A Joy for young and old to share
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-14
Great stories to help love the old hymns even more. The music is the only children's singing I haven't felt nauseated listening too! Tastefully done and enjoyable to share with our children.

Excellant
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-15
Wow, what a treasure to have. It is great to have the story about the hymn, the music and a CD altogether in one place. I have enjoyed it as much as my children.

Praise God !
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-01-09
We are a homeschool family of four children (ages 2,4,6,8). Each and every one of us loves this book and CD. It's great for teaching God's truths, music and history. It's been an established part of our day throughout the year -- not just during our schooling months. Thing is, it doesn't FEEL like learning or school. It feels like fun. Last summer, after six months of enjoying this book, it wasn't uncommon for our children to start belting out Amazing Grace or other hymns while climbing trees, swinging, playing in the sandbox, or jumping on the trampoline. Amen! We also enjoyed the Christmas book and CD.

Hearts
Instant Karma: The Heart and Soul of a Ski Bum
Published in Paperback by Ghost Road Press (2007-10-15)
Author: Wayne, K. Sheldrake
List price: $17.95
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Average review score:

Skiing, Healing, and Humor
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-02
It's a memior of a man who skies and wrecks. Lots of wrecks. Both on and off the slopes. The skiing is how he deals with the mess of life and it is both his balm and his bane. His mother's multiple attempts at happiness, his own struggles of identity often find him wrestling it out going downhill at 70 mph, often out of bounds, never wearing a helmet.

Wayne Sheldrake's philosophy of dealing with the junk of life? "No goggles. No helmet...All I needed was a pair of skis. I didn't stop for food. I didn't stop for water. I didn't use sunscreen. (Only [expletive] wore sunscreen.) I never worried about getting hurt."

Then something changes and you realize that the book isn't really about skiing. Okay, it is about the skiing but it's MORE than just skiing. It's about healing and hope and living in the moment with people who are just jacked up as you are.

It's about the messy, funny, painful redeeming process of healing.

What can I say..
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-14
Simply put: what can I say about a person who took the oppurtunities that life gave him and milked them for MORE than they were worth. It was a nostalga trip to the Rockies of MY youth as well as some of the same places/experiences!
Just because YOU were born too late to see/experience those days - read this book and see how it was done BEFORE all that great gear you have today!

SKIING LIKE IT WAS MEANT TO BE!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-10
Wayne transported me back to the ski area of my youth. Through his eyes I was right there powder skiing Alberta's Face with all of my friends. It is apparent through Wayne's book that the ski bum life is not all hot tubs and bikinis as depicted in the movies; rather it is a deeper experience for him with Vreni at his side.

The snow stopped swirling around me when I looked up from Instant Karma and out the window from my home in central Texas where I now reside. There was no snow outside of the window, so I plunged back into the words where I rejoin Wayne standing at the top of the continental divide just before he jumped off the cornice into the powder.


Does one dare review - Karma ?
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-24
Wayne has really captured the thoughts of most die hard skiers in this writing. But as I read the book, which I picked up - after meeting Wayne, where else; but on a ski Lift at Wolf Creek Pass ski resort, I realized that its meaing was deeper. I could see paralells into other aspects of daily lives.
Wayne is a great writer, who connects with the reader.
I am glad to have met him, and to have read Karma.

P.S. I am heading back out to Wolf Creek Pass this Holiday season, as they now have over 14 feet of snow.

AN "INSTANT" CLASSIC
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-30
Wayne's history as a poet and wordsmith serves him well as he weaves this amazing adventure tale of his personal journey of the heart and soul. Chock full of descriptive passages: dirtbag chic, near death experiences and winter storms in the Southern San Juans that had me shivering in my slippers! And then....between the lines and pages there is Vreni and the heartwarming love story that exposes our Mr. Sheldrake for the hopeless romantic that he is, binds first his wounds and then the yarn itself into a fascinating whole.

Hearts
Kind of Heart
Published in Hardcover by Quality Printing & Publications (2000-10-01)
Author: Molly Lemmons
List price: $23.70
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Kind of Heart
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-02
Each chapter is a short story of life as lived in the 1950's by me, the author. It is a book that will bring tears, laughter, and warmth into the heart of the reader as stories of our family's love for one another unfold during a time that is gone forever. I have put together this book from columns I wrote for the Mustang News for three years beginning in 1993. The book is the result of patrons' request after the columns ceased. My hope was to instill in all readers--both old and young--the memories I have of a time when family values were top priority, and a dream that one day, they might be like that again. I hope the book will cause you to celebrate life, families, and God. --Molly Lemmons

Growing up in the 40s and 50s
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2001-09-22
I guess growing up during the 40s and 50s in a blue collar family was a universal experience! At least, even though I grew up on a farm on the West Coast, the stories of this family touched my memories. Very definately a "Christian" orientation. The stories made me smile and remember back to a simplier time of life in middle America.

Pure Nostalgia
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2001-08-19
Reading this book transported me to the 1950's, and I relived many of those experiences. For readers who are old enough to remember, this book is pure nostalgia. For younger readers, it will give you an idea of what life was like in the "olden" days of mid-20th century United States...and, yes, such families DID exist. I was a part of one of them! It makes you wonder whatever happened to the innocence and unsophistication of childhood, parents who were good and decent, teachers who cared and inspired, entertainment which was happy, fun and maybe even uplifting, role models who were worthy of emulation. Since each chapter is a complete story in itself, this book is easy to read--a great book to keep in the car or the bathroom! And it is the perfect gift for any occasion.

Kind of Heart
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2003-09-25
I purchased this book direct from Molly at our high school reunion during the summer, 2003. I knew Molly in high school and remember her as always of high moral character, always happy and fun to be around. I did not know her family but was certain that she came from a fine Christian home.

When I began reading her book, I quickly found out why Molly was the type of person I had known previously. What a great family background she grew up in, as characterized in her book. Each chapter got better and better, and once I started reading the book, I finished it quickly, always looking forward to the next chapter. After each chapter, she wrote a thoughtful paragraph and a corresponding Bible verse, each very meaningful and thought-provoking.

I liked the book so much that I purchased a dozen copies to give to friends. As soon as that supply is gone, I intend to purchase more. I sincerely recommend this book as one of the best I have ever read.

Thank you, Molly, and best wishes always!

Kind of Heart or Kind Heart of Molly Lemmons
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2001-08-12
Molly Lemmons' 'Kind of Heart' is devoted to simple people, their life ,family traditions and family values which are common for most of us wherever we live. The book sounds like a diary- and who of us didn't start writing a diary in the childhood? The details and places may differ from country to country but the main remainds. Following Molly we remember our own early years, our parents' warmth and love, smoothless relations with sisters and brothers, sometimes very close, sometimes rather sharp and jealous as we were fighting for parents' attention. At the background of the crime, violence and cool sex that overload modern screen and literature Molly's kind heart helps to remain human being and be proud of this.

Hearts
Learning from the Heart: Lessons on Living, Loving, and Listening
Published in Hardcover by Sterling (2008-03-01)
Author: Daniel Gottlieb
List price: $17.95
New price: $10.95
Used price: $10.95

Average review score:

loved it
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-13
i loved it, and think it is a useful read for anyone who needs a reminder of what is important in life.

A must read!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-04
Dan Gottleib, host of Voices in the Family and author of this book is a true inspiration no matter who you are, what you do or think. I can't recommend this book or advocate listening to his show enough. Voices in the Family.
[...]

You'll be hooked by the time you read the cover!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-25
Daniel Gottlieb's LETTERS TO SAM was one of the best
books that I've read over the past few years . . . so when I
saw that the author came out with something new, LEARNING
FROM THE HEART, I rushed to get hold of it.

And was I ever glad that I did . . . I was hooked after
just seeing the cover and the subtitle: LESSONS ON
LIVING, LOVING AND LISTENING . . . Gottlieb, a practicing
psychologist, presents this information via short
essays on a wide variety of topics . . . best of all,
he brings in his own personal experiences and openly
shares them.

I especially liked his view about not always having to be
best in everything:
* I've ended up feeling a great deal of gratitude for my failures. Of
course, there are people who don't believe me when I tell them
I belong in the last seat in the second row. They challenge my position
by reminding me of books I have written and the many wonderful
accomplishments I've been fortunate to achieve. Over the years I have
learned that there are some aspects of my humanity--perhaps my
kindness and my ability to understand others--that probably belong
in the first row. But there are many other aspects of Gottlieb that belong
in the last row--technical skills, attention span, and
memory (to name a few).

Gottlieb also got me thinking about how good life can be--and is--when
he related this account of a friend's visit:
* I do believe in coincidence, and I was involved in a quite a fortunate one
when my friend Amy came over to visit just two days before that phone call.
At one point, she asked if I believed in heaven. Without giving it any thought,
I said, "Yes. You're in it right now."

I saw the dazed look on her face that I often see when I make proclamations,
so I went on: "What were the chances of that sperm fertilizing that egg and
producing your life? And what were the chances that you would have lived all
the years you have lived in relative good health? And what were the odds that
you would have so many people in your life whom you love and who care
about you? And what were the possibilities that you could look out of almost
any window and see the beauty of nature? Heaven? You bet."

Of course, my version of heaven is not the perfect one we read about in
mythology or that many believe in. There is great pain and suffering and loss
in this particular heaven. But deep inside, most know it-heaven, life-is
precious. It just takes some careful noticing.

Lastly, the author had me laughing when I read passages such as this
one:
* Even trauma like my accident carries good news and bad news. I suffer,
still get frustrated and sometimes depressed, and yet there is good news
about being a quadriplegic.

The good news about being quadriplegic?

Well, first, there is the obvious--great parking spaces.

Then, think shoes. I don't have to spend a fortune on comfortable shoes,
and they last as long as I want them to.

But the great news about quadriplegic is that I don't have to get up to pee in
the middle of the night. So, in the middle of the night tonight, when you are
sitting or standing. I'll be sleeping. (And they say I have special needs!)

On a serious note, this disability has helped me become the man I am. The
image I have carried for nearly thirty years is that when my neck broke, my
soul began to breathe. Because of my differentness, I have not been
intimidated by my need to be like everyone else. I might not have become
the man I am today were it not for this trauma.

After reading LEARNING FROM THE HEART, you'll feel like you know
Daniel Gottlieb much better . . . in fact, in reading it, I thought I was
having a one-on-conversation with him that made me realize that
if I was ever in need of a therapist, I'd certainly want to seek him out.

Learning from the Heart: Lessons on Living, Loving and Listening
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-15
If only the majority of the human BEINGS would learn, practice and listen as it is shared in the book, what an awesome world we would experience!

Humanity is healing
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-31
This is an extraordinary book. Honest and caring, it distills a broad sweep of psychology, philosophy and religion into clear, honest human terms. Dr. Gottlieb translates the mystery and jargon that often obscure professional discourse into something directly useful. There is not advice so much as something more important, which is acceptance. This book gives us permission to sit with what we feel, and be OK with it. In my opinion, his life experience gave him a perspective and a compassion to be admired and emulated, no matter what hand life has dealt us. Buy this book, you will be glad you did.

Hearts
Living Jesus: Learning the Heart of the Gospel
Published in Paperback by HarperOne (2000-02-01)
Author: Luke Timothy Johnson
List price: $15.95
New price: $7.49
Used price: $4.50
Collectible price: $15.95

Average review score:

Discovering the Rich Traditions of the Christian Gospels
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-06
This book is more or less a sequel to Johnson's REAL JESUS, which exposes the fallacies of many New Testament scholars who enjoy pop culture status on various cable channels by extolling the idea of a "Jesus Movement" that seeks to interpret the gospels from a purely historical perspective. In this articulate, logical, and compelling book, Johnson moves past the arguments of the Jesus Movement and demonstrates how a divinely inspired New Testament focuses on a risen, living Christ. Johnson's book is a dynamic blueprint for understanding Christian living in the twenty-first century. In flowing prose, he shows us the diversity and richness of the gospels that have been seen one-dimensionally for such a long time. Johnson's scholarship is of the highest caliber and is used here to show what is truly at the heart of the Christian tradition.

Living Jesus: Learning the Heart of the Gospel
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-10
I purchased copies for family and friends, believers and sceptics because Johnson convincingly portrays the faith of the early church that precedes the writing of the New Testament Gospel.He provides a needed emphasis on the real presence of Jesus by His Holy Spirit as a powerful interrealtional reality. Belief in the resurrection as a past event, even at the word of apostolic eye witnesses, does not adequately account for the rapid growth of the Church-communities. There had to be more than an acceptance of a message:individual and group experiences accompied the preaching and teaching. Johnson describes the 'matter of fact' phenomenon that produced conversions and the writings of the New Testament. This is the faith reponse of believers today who greet eachother at Easter in the present tense: He is Risen!

A Book to be Read More than Once
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-14
I write from the perspective of a Protestant Evangelical who has often had misgivings about some of the Catholic literature I've read, but I can say that Luke Timothy Johnson's "Living Jesus" is one of the most Christ-exalting books I have read in many years. Johnson has brought Jesus Christ from the place of cold, hard historical facts (which is where most Catholics and Protestants alike often leave Him) to the place of the living Lord experienced by the early church and whom we can experience today. In the process, Johnson ably points out the fallacies employed by those involved in the quest for the historical Jesus, a quest that seems determine to deny practically every essential truth about Jesus. Though it's easy to see Johnson's Catholic roots in his writing, I encourage my Protestant brothers to read this book. You will find yourself fellowshipping with a true brother in Christ in the pages he has written. This is a book you will read more than once.

Learning About Jesus
Helpful Votes: 24 out of 25 total.
Review Date: 2000-08-04
Luke Timothy Johnson does a masterful job at creating a book that engages the reader's mind and heart. Though this book is written from an ex-priest and still retains much Catholic tradition, the Protestant reader can also enjoy and gain insight from this well written text.

This book is not written for the skeptic or the Christian revisionist, like his previous book "The Real Jesus." Instead this material will penetrate the heart of the believer. As he wonderfully points out, "To be a Christian means to assert that Jesus is alive, is indeed life-giving Spirit." This book reminds the Christian that we should be learning from a living Jesus. To often, we look at Jesus as a piece of history. This is a wake-up call to Christians everywhere.

We are to learn from Jesus from great Christians, the church, and the New Testament. I find Dr. Johnson's book to be honest and forthright and appreciated his candor about the church and himself. This is a must read!

EXCELLENT AND CONCISE
Helpful Votes: 36 out of 37 total.
Review Date: 2000-08-12
lt johnson is a moderately conservative catholic (in fact an ex-monk) who has written extensively on nt studies. this 203 page book can be read in a few hours and is not bogged down with scholarly jargon. essentially he is putting into perspective the value of historical Jesus studies. lt states that if Jesus is today alive for Christians, how then can we get a reliable picture of Him by using the means by which we study dead people! he has been gently criticised by some including ben witherington and raymond brown for separating the Jesus of history from the Jesus we worship - but i don't think that is the focus of johnson's argument. i think lt is simply pointing out (quite validly) that historical critical studies can give only a limited picture of Jesus. he uses as an interesting example adolf hitler. if we were to perform a study in "historical hitlerology" (attempting to construct a portait using what hitler thought of himself as well as the thoughts of his closest associates), we would indeed come up with a picture of hitler that would be quite different than what we know to be true. i would agree that this comparison is a little oblique, but johnson makes a good point. the first few chapters may seem a little fluffy to some but they move quickly into the meat of the work. all in all, this is a very readable work. not everyone will agree with johnson but all those interested in Jesus studies need to be exposed to his point of view!


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