Massachusetts Books
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Used price: $1.70

A must read for every student of American legal history!Review Date: 2007-09-19
The lessons of the past illuminate the failings of todayReview Date: 2005-05-26
The final chapter detailing the modern day reaction to the
case serves as a warning that even one of the most advanced Western democracies has a way to go in ensuring Justice For All is more than just a slogan and that, with one or two minor exceptions, the case could occur again in modern times.
Informative and well-writtenReview Date: 2005-04-27
This quick-read will turn even one with little prior knowledge of this episode into a well-versed expert. If more historical passages were covered as well, the historical awareness of our citizenry would skyrocket.
Used price: $1.94
Collectible price: $15.95

Compelling reading for anyone with ancestors . . . .Review Date: 2005-02-02
My first reviewReview Date: 2000-08-22
This book tells how past cultural trends, local conditions, and historical events affected ordinary people and shows clearly that in order to know the people, we have to know the history.
This is not the book of an amateur genealogist but of a professional historian -- deeply researched, well reasoned, and skillfully written. A very satisfying book.
Outstanding portrait of America from 1801 to 1901!Review Date: 1999-12-19

Used price: $5.50

AdrienneReview Date: 2005-02-05
the best book I ever readReview Date: 2004-03-13
SOMEDAY You should really read this bookReview Date: 2003-09-16
It is WONDERFUL. I can't believe I've never heard of the author or the book before. The characters -- daughter, Mom, Grandmom are all likeable and entertaining. They each have very different desires and the back and forth as they negotiate their daily lives is very funny and very believable. I haven't finished the book yet, as it outlasted the drive, but each day as I jump in my car I can hardly wait to get back to it (don't ask why someone old enough to drive a car is listening to a tape in the juvenile section).
Ms. Koller, this book is the berries!!! (Only the author, those who have read the book, or are fairly old will quite understand the meaning of that line).
Collectible price: $14.94

passionately rational lovingReview Date: 2005-10-27
We are in Athens, 416 B.C.E. The scene is a banquet at the house of Agathon, who had the day before celebrated the victory of his tragedy. By the end of the party, seven men - and one absent but central woman - will have presented their views on the nature and meaning of Eros, or love.
There is no difficulty keeping the characters distinct in our minds. Plato has great fun contrasting the opinions - and verbal styles - of tragic poet, comic poet, politician, physician and the rest, allowing absurdities and profundities to mingle freely. Socrates is very appealing, saint-like, yet utterly down-to-earth, in his usual role of 'philosopher' - one who 'knows only that he does not know' - always in passionate search of the truth, but catching only revelatory glimpses of it.
Phaedrus gives the first speech, praising lovers' (especially homosexual) passion and loyalty, which makes them perform mighty and heroic deeds. Pausanias differentiates between virtuous, or spiritual love, and common, or bodily love. Virtuous love between men should not be primarily about sex, but about improvement and education of the soul. Eryximachus, the doctor, makes a mostly irrelevant (and boring) speech, claiming nature's contrasting elements illustrate the need to balance the healthy and unhealthy aspects of love. Aristophanes then delivers a brilliantly memorable speech, hilarious and poignant by turns, telling of how humans were once two-in-one, back to back, with two heads, four arms and four legs, with three combinations of sexes, male/male, male/female, and female/female. Their strength and speed made them threaten the gods, so Zeus cut them in half, leaving them to search forever for their other halves, and through loving attempt to regain their original oneness. Agathon then gives an over-the-top, ecstatic spech, praising love as the youngest, most graceful of the gods, saying he brought order to heaven itself, 'empties men of disaffection and fills them with affection', etc, climaxing with the suggestion we all follow in love's footsteps, 'sweetly singing in his honour'.
It is then Socrates' turn. He performs for all conversations that took place between himself when much younger and Diotima, a 'wise' woman from Mantineia, to whom he had gone for instruction in the highest truths of love. In sum, the lesson is that love is the desire for the everlasting possession of the good and beautiful, which brings happiness. We crave immortality, in order to be happy eternally. We love our offspring, artistic works, laws and institutions, because they are all attempts to achieve an immortal name. These, Diotima claims, are the 'lesser' mysteries of love.
The 'greater' proceed from the 'lesser' in ascending steps. From the love of one beautiful body the lover creates 'fair notions', then he sees all bodies are similar and equally worthy of love. From bodies he proceeds to the beauty of the virtuous mind, then the beauties of institutions and laws, climbing from there to the beauties of the sciences, until, after much growth in wisdom, he reaches the vision of all creation as beautiful. The final step is to rise to the contemplation of unchanging, eternal, absolute beauty itself. To spend your life in union with perfect beauty allows you to bring forth 'real' things, not 'images', and 'be immortal, if mortal man may'.
A drunken Alcibiades bursts in at this point, and gives a rambling, often funny, speech about his love for Socrates and how he - a very beautiful man - was spurned sexually by him. He describes Socrates' near-supernatural control of himself, totally above the effects of pain and pleasure. The book ends with Socrates' companions all falling asleep as dawn breaks (after all-night drinking) and his going about his usual day.
Throughout the Symposium, Plato makes it clear that sexual relations are not the best thing for 'lovers'; they who wish for the highest happiness must seek to grow in virtue and wisdom and become increasingly detached from earthly pleasures. This is the origin of the phrase 'Platonic love'. Women were not considered their intellectual and spiritual equals at the time, so men of sophistication had to look to each other for emotional sustenance.
What then, we may ask, can the Symposium offer human beings today who are not interested in purely mystical/intellectual living and prefer the sexual and emotional satisfactions of personal relationships?
A great deal, I believe. In his introduction Benjamin Jowett states that Plato 'is conscious that the highest and noblest things in the world are not easily severed from the sensual desires, or may even be regarded as a spiritualized form of them'. In other words, earthly pleasures and transcendent ones are inextricable. Plato used words such as 'good' and 'virtue' to describe freeing oneself from the world of the senses, by using our reason to choose correctly who - or what - to attach to as we move through life. If we choose correctly, be it friends, sexual or lifetime partners, we strengthen our sense of inner freedom, until finally we experience it at the deepest, mystical level - the profound shift in consciousness that Plato was pointing to as the highest good - which in and of itself is morally and values-neutral.
The genius of Plato is that he communicates the total commitment required to attain perfect freedom and the moral obligation of all human beings to strive for the happiness it alone can deliver.
great story, fab translation, and cool drawings!Review Date: 2002-02-09
That's how it was with this one. The cover was funky, with half-finished etchings. What was written inside was even better. It was a beautiful discourse on the nature of Love. From Agathon's (it was Agathon that told of Achilles and Patroclus...wasn't it?) tale of devotion, Aristophanes' haunting fable about our "other halves" (and the interludes in between, especially the one about hiccoughs) to Socrates' speech on love "involving the mind and not the body", this is a timeless and highly accessable study.
Read it a few years ago, and have been into philosophy ever since.
Love a la SocratesReview Date: 1999-10-15

ThanksReview Date: 2003-04-06
Very intriguingReview Date: 1999-10-27
A poetic, courageous story of loss and redemption.Review Date: 1998-03-04
Used price: $100.00

Insightful historic portrayal of Black American HistoryReview Date: 1999-03-03
Dorman has set a new standard in African-American Genealogy.Review Date: 1999-01-14
Book evidences sound and balanced scholarship and reads wellReview Date: 1998-10-31
Collectible price: $13.00

Book One of Four Great Comic MysteriesReview Date: 2002-05-01
Vermillion is the first of 4. The others are Cobalt, Slate and Canary. (Actually, they could almost be the titles of Pet Shop Boys albums ...) Anyway, the Boston/P-town settings are great, the Daniel & Clarisse team is hysterical, the stories solid, and the 80's period --once current with the first publication -- is sweetly nostalgiac.
If you want a good, light, comic romp .. get these books. And hold onto them .. they come and go quickly from print.
Valentine gets to the heart of the matter!Review Date: 2002-12-05
Perhaps better known for its tea parties and baked beans, nonetheless, the city of Boston is all aghast at this latest turn of events, especially the political factions and the gay community. Of course, the police have set this case on "top priority." Valentine, who works as a bartender by night and a detective by day, involves his best friend, Clarisse (who's a not-so-inspired straight real estate agent). Author Nathan Aldyne balances well the suspense and intrigue of the murder and its implications with some very wry, dry humor that makes fast reading reading this novel.
Of course, by book's end, the murder is solved--but not without first involving some very smart sleuthing and calculations on the part of Valentine and Clarisse, a path that leads them into some very seedy, questionable, and dangerous areas.
Nathan Aldyne is also the author of "Cobalt," "Canary," and "Slate." ...
Whole series is excellentReview Date: 1999-09-29

Used price: $14.97
Collectible price: $25.00

the Hobo PhilosopherReview Date: 2007-08-26
Wonderful look at Irish immigrant life in NEReview Date: 2004-11-26
The book is very well written. It describes many aspects of life in Lawrence as seen through the eyes and poems of Peter Cassidy ("the Shanty Pond poet"). Cassidy lived from 1861 to 1938. Cassidy's poems are very down to earth and at times touching in their sincerity and simplicity.
The author explains the historical background of the period (and the poems) using just the right level of detail. The subjects covered in the book include work in and strikes against the textile mills, the role of religion and politics in immigrant life, sports (baseball and boxing), saloons, World War I, Prohibition, and the Depression.
If you enjoy an account of real people living their lives through tumultuous times, you will enjoy this book.
An important, unique contribution to Irish American history.Review Date: 2000-04-04
Used price: $32.07

excellent!Review Date: 2008-05-03
Villa VictoriaReview Date: 2007-06-16
Brilliant!Review Date: 2004-08-02

Used price: $0.01

Great tour Guide!Review Date: 2002-01-23
Great travel guide!Review Date: 2002-01-23
Walk Boston with confidenceReview Date: 2003-05-29
It is endorsed by the ava which has a web site to list more walks
[...]
AJ
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