New York Books
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Ironworker LifeReview Date: 2008-03-31
Simply an Amazing StoryReview Date: 2003-03-06
Excellent read-Fascinating story of an American iconReview Date: 2003-08-21
They consistently remain true to the values of hard work and honesty while truly living the American Dream. It makes the World Trade Center even more of an american symbol.
The facts regarding how they built the trade center and how they even received the job are fascinating in of themselves. The author's personal family struggle only make it more amazing that it ever happened at all.
AN EDUCATION IN LIFE AS WELL AS THE CONSTRUCTION BUSINESSReview Date: 2003-03-31
I enjoyed this book so much that I bought 15 copies and gave them to family and friends as Christmas presents. Each review from the recipients mirrored my enjoyment. I would highly recommend this book to anyone even if they have no conception of the contracting industry.
Excellent, But Know What You're GettingReview Date: 2004-05-24
You learn a lot about ironworking in this book: About how the steel frames of buildings are put together, and about how the tools and techniques have changed over time. You also learn a lot about construction management: Estimating costs, writing bids, dealing with suppliers and unions, and keeping things running smoothly on the building site. Koch writes from the manager's perspective more than the workers, but there are other books (say, Mike Cherry's _On High Steel_) to give you that. Even dedicated civil engineering buffs are likely to learn a lot from Koch and Firstman's sure-footed narrative. The chapter (or so) on "kangaroo cranes" alone is worth the price of the book.
Koch and Firstman also give a unique view of *one* aspect of the World Trade Center project: How the framing and flooring was erected and what the process did for (and to) the company. They reveal things about that aspect of the process that no other book does--much of it critically important. This is exactly the right approach to take: ironwork is Koch's (and his family's) business, it's what he knows, and it's what the rest of the book is about. It means, however, that _Men of Steel_ is *not* a book about "the building of the World Trade Center." Rather, it's a book in which the ironwork that went into the World Trade Center is one of several key threads.
The epilogue, dealing with the 9/11 attacks and the collapse of the Twin Towers deserves special notice. It is short, concise, and unflinchingly honest: a model of how we *ought* to learn from the unexpected failures of less-than-perfect structures. If I could figure out how to do it, I'd make those 15 pages required reading for the engineers-in-training that I teach. They could have far, far worse role models than Karl Koch III.
How much you like this book will depend a great deal on what you want to get out of it. If you want THE book on the building of the World Trade Center, you may well be disapprounted. If you want a great family saga, a great business story, or a gripping insider's history of ironworking in America (including the WTC), you may well have a hard time putting _Men of Steel_ down.

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A Brilliant Piece of WorkReview Date: 1999-03-29
A great debut hardboiled mystery by Henry MazelReview Date: 1999-01-08
engrossing, realistic portrait of politics, scene, characterReview Date: 1999-12-23
The Best Mystery Iýve Read in a Long WhileReview Date: 1999-03-30
A great accomplishmentReview Date: 1999-03-02
"About forty-five minutes -- that's what it took to let the excitement really build, to allow the gathered throng to generate a feeding frenzy. Less time and they wouldn't peak, any more time and there would have been that bead of anxiety that leads to restlessness and the first signs of resentment. And you couldn't have that."
. . .This book is both different and fun. Recommended for all types of mystery fans -- and especially for those favoring hardboiled/noir fiction.

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Just plain fun!Review Date: 2001-12-19
Fabulous Bedtime Reading!Review Date: 2001-12-20
My son loves this bookReview Date: 2001-12-14
Interesting Perspective...Review Date: 2001-12-13
The illustrations are wonderful--very warm and loving. The text is easy and my daughter loves to say some of the phrases as we read together.
The dictionary and definitions at the end of the book are so well written. Words are defined in easy to understand ways. This author clearly understands how children think.
My daughter and I give this book two thumbs up!
a must have!Review Date: 2001-12-20

Used price: $6.07

What a great find!Review Date: 2006-09-11
When I moved to GA I brought it with me and I often lend it to friends and friends of friends planning to visit NYC or "The Garden State". They are always delighted and wonder why we don't have such a resource for GA.
Still the best!Review Date: 2003-11-18
Get the 9th editionReview Date: 2003-09-30
Thanks, Barbara Hudgins, author.
very helpful...Review Date: 2002-09-24
This is not the latest editionReview Date: 2003-10-23
Used price: $3.72
Collectible price: $40.00

BeautifulReview Date: 2008-05-19
A great reference book for almost any photographerReview Date: 2007-06-19
Even if it applies to B&W, I find that much of the content can be applied to color work if you think a bit more about it - mostly now, in the digital age with separated luminance and chrominance controls.
You'll also read some good ol' kitchen recipes about developers and toning... These will be less and less useful, but can bring back the smell of the darkroom to your memory ;o)... And quite often, the principle that based the recipe can be applied to another media.
A reference, whether shooting film, digital or glass plates (and of invaluable interest for the two former).
with great knowledge comes great responsibilityReview Date: 2007-06-27
content excellent, one little remark for the publisher.Review Date: 2007-04-24
One little remark would be for the publisher. The paper the book is printed is gloss with quite a high reflectance index. This results in making reading the book at certain angles quite impossible for your eyes.
This is great bookReview Date: 2004-06-14
The majority of the text concentrates it's efforts in educating the reader in the art of B&W photography. This book tells readers that what are good prints making techniques. After reading this book you will feel like that your printing skills are very improved. The reader will see many wonderful pictures as examples, that will surely create a better impression as to what type of pictures Adams takes.

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MOST COMPLETE RECORD -NY ONEReview Date: 2000-12-04
FABULOUS BOOK!!!! - -historyuniverse.comReview Date: 2001-09-10
TERRIFIC YANKEE BOOK -Review Date: 2000-07-12
THE ULTIMATE YANKEE BOOK ----- The Reading Room***********Review Date: 1999-09-17
Go Yankees!Review Date: 2000-11-10

A fairy tale for big people...Review Date: 2001-07-04
Fantasy Lovers DreamReview Date: 2001-11-26
Fantasy Lovers DreamReview Date: 2001-11-26
BUT WHAT IS A KING,REALLY?Review Date: 2001-06-12
Wonderful Fantasy book to read to yourself or aloudReview Date: 2005-07-22
A. A. Milne has done it again with this story of pure fantasy. He did not write this book for children, as he states in his introduction, yet it is fun and exciting for all ages. If you need a great bedtime story, check this book out. Would you care for some light reading? "Once On A Time" is the book for you. I recommend this book with a happy heart and hope you will feel the same way too!

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I love New YorkReview Date: 2008-02-18
Well done.Review Date: 2007-12-09
Go out and wander around New YorkReview Date: 2007-01-11
Bet you missed a lot on each street.
Then go out again and do it all over.
A real treat.
Excellent companion volume to White & WillenskyReview Date: 2007-03-17
America's peninsular cities; San Francisco, New York, Charleston and Boston also happen to contain the best architecture. Hmm...
As solid and beautiful as the buildings they describeReview Date: 2006-05-18
There are hundreds of buildings that, for whatever reason, have escaped landmark status and/or the attention of New Yorkers. Although "One Thousand New York Buildings" does discuss the familiar structures, like the Empire State Building, the Woolworth Building, and Grand Central Station, it also devotes equal time to those that have been ignored or overlooked. What are those tiny, Colonial style houses on Harrison and Greenwich Streets? How old is that building at 2 White Street? Who lived in those somber buildings at 130-132 MacDougal Street? "One Thousand New York Buildings" answers these and hundreds of other questions. In this sense, this book is much like "New York Streetscapes: Tales of Manhattan's Significant Buidlings and Landmarks" by Christopher Gray and Suzanne Braley, in as much as it pays equal tribute to the famous and not so famous structures.
One last note, this is a solidly put together book. The binding is sturdy, the paper thick and glossy, and the photos are clear and intriguing. It as well constructed as the buildings they pay homage to.
Collectible price: $11.49

Classic Nero WolfeReview Date: 2003-11-14
In this mystery, the utterly unswashbuckling Wolfe is revealed, in his younger, svelter days, to have been quite a romantic. Not only did he fight on the anti-Imperial side in Montenegro during the Great War, but he adopted and may even have actually sired a young girl.
To his shock, this young Yugoslav maiden--whom he had lost track of--reappears in his life, up to her neck in a particularly messy, intricate affair that may or may not include missing diamonds, a dead body or two, international intrigue, and a bellboy's uniform. For all of the peeks into Wolfe's previously unsuspected soul, he remains as crumudgeonly and as immovable as ever. Archie Goodwin, of course, remains the wisecracking, milk-drinking sidekick, flirting with anything in a skirt and even giving a Nazi agent a black eye just for the fun of it.
The joy of these books is their marriage of the American gumshoe attitude and the British cozy focus on character. Where they generally fall short is their plotting. This entry in the series is, without a doubt, the most successfully rounded out of the lot. Stout manages to keep the mystery truly mysterious, and yet never manages to confuse the reader so thoroughly that s/he can't find the exit. The plot actually ends on the last page--many of the Nero Wolfe mysteries fizzle out, wrapping up a chapter or two before the end, leaving nothing but rumination and grumbling for the final pages. Others seem never quite to wrap up all the loose ends. Here, the conclusion is both inevitable and unexpected--utterly satisfying.
Confound it, another great Wolfe novelReview Date: 2007-06-03
This book is a prime example of a Nero Wolfe novel. Archie Goodwin is in top form as a wise cracking pain-in-the-neck. Inspector Cramer is present more than a lot of stories giving Goodwin plenty of opportunities for zingers besides the ones he routinely fires at Wolfe. Wolfe himself is definitely out of his comfort zone dealing with the situation of his adopted daughter and this also adds to the potential for laughs.
This is a very entertaining book and I would recommend it for readers unfamiliar with Nero Wolfe as a great place to start or for established fans.
We Meet Wolfe's DaughterReview Date: 2006-05-10
First rate Nero WolfeReview Date: 2007-06-02
A Britsh undercover agent is murdered at a Manhattan fencing school, skewered by an epee with a gizmo attached that turns it into a weapon sans blunt end. Yugoslav women who are instructors there are possible suspects, one of whom is Nero Wolfe's adopted daughter from his days as an ill advised Austrian agent in the Balkans, pre World War, before we started numbering them. This alone is a startling revelation about Wolfe. Wolfe slender? Youthful? Abroad, outside, involved with people? I was astonished.
As usual, the beer drinking, orchid collecting, erudite, corpulent food lover Nero Wolfe declines, under any circumstances, to leave his brownstone abode with a greenhouse rooftop for his rare flowers. Using Archie, his assistant, as legs, Wolfe solves the baffling case. I knew he would. He's solved all the other mysteries in the Nero Wolfe books I've read.
Mystery fans who have not read mysteries from the golden age (pre-1950) do not know what they are missing. There is no sex to lure the lascivious reader, very little violence, no profanity. What there is (and this book is an excellent example of the sub-genre) is intelligence.
That's a rare commodity in most modern mysteries.
Hvale Bogu!Review Date: 2004-10-08
Rex Stout decides to deal us a little shock in this one: Nero Wolfe, woman-hater, has a daughter he's not seen since she was a baby. She comes from Yugoslavia to New York, unknown to her pops, and gets into a real tight spot involving murder by "coldymort."
When Archie learns this, he considers resigning on the basis of his boss's morals. You just have to read this one to find out.
Or, again, buy the A&E series - they did a great job here.

Used price: $9.34

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