Organizations Books


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

Organizations
Early Dominicans: Selected Writings
Published in Hardcover by Paulist Press (1982-01)
Author:
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Early Dominicans: Selected Writings
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-15
Extensive coverage of the history and practice of Dominican Spirituality. Recommended for anyone considering further investigation of the Order of Preachers and the Dominican Life.

A Dominican Goldmine!
Helpful Votes: 14 out of 14 total.
Review Date: 2000-05-05
It was not until I read Fr. Tugwell's book that I fell in love with the Order of Preachers. This massive collection, beginning with a short history of the Order's beginnings, includes the Primitive Constitutions of the Order, letters of Blessed Jordan of Saxony, and Humbert of Roman's tips on how to preach; any one who reads this volume is sure to have a firm grasp of the Order founded by Saint Dominic. Paints a startling picture of the early years of the Dominican Order. A goldmine!

Great Collection of Works
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2006-01-13
The editor of this volume has put together some amazing works from the early period of the Dominicans. Perhaps what is best about this volume is that it gives the reader the work "On the Formation of Preachers" by Humbert of Romans; to my knowledge, this is the only English translation of what has been called the most important work on homiletics in the Western Church. An absolutely wonderful book, well worth the price.

Organizations
The Education of the Negro
Published in Paperback by AB Publishing (1998-05)
Author: Carter Godwin Woodson
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Education Negro
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-12
Anything Woodson writes is a winner. I have enjoyed his other books as well. He can be highly controversial at time which lends such extrordinary flavor to his books. Enjoyed it and recommend it to all.

This is a very good book to read
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2002-11-12
I recommend everybody to read this book. Everyone that is an African American.

Ending African-American dependence on white America
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2004-06-15
Carter G. Woodson's constructive critique of the how the education system in America plays a pivotal role in ensuring African-Americans' dependence on white America. This is not book of protest. In fact, Mr. Woodson proposes that, "One should rely upon protest only when it is supported by a constructive program". The writing here is clear, concise and compelling. I often don't finish reading books. This one was very difficult to put down. This book is a MUST READ for all African-Americans. You didn't hear me...READ THIS BOOK!

Organizations
Educational Administration
Published in Paperback by Random House (1978)
Author: Wayne K. Hoy
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Educational Administration
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-09
This text was required for a class in School Administration in my post grad class at Seton Hall University. The author is easy to follow along with as he presents theories along with examples of organizational life in the education system. An excellent chapter on the Culture and Climate of Schools can be used by administrators in any field to better recognize these characteristics, as well as organizational health, before taking steps to change the culture or climate. Another very good chapter deals with Leadership in Schools and helps to identify the various theories of leadership and the strengths and weaknesses associated with each type. A great book for administrators in either the private or public sector.

Quickly Received
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2002-01-18
Very quick receipt, well packaged, and fairly priced for the excellent condition of this book. Thank you so much for the great service.

Excellent Book
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2000-09-27
This book was and is the best introduction to school administration available. I was the foundation for my doctorate program.

Organizations
Educational Administration: Concepts and Practices
Published in Hardcover by Wadsworth Publishing Company (1991-05)
Authors: Frederick C. Lunenberg and Allan C. Ornstein
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Quick and easy
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-10
The book arrived in a very timely manner and was in excellent condition. Online shopping should ALWAYS work out this well. This seller did an excellent job and I look forward to buying more books from them.

Easy, quick, no hassel
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-06
After purchasing this book, it arrived quickly, no problems and it was in great condition.

Great book!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2005-12-04
I got this days ago from halfvalue at 56 dollar for my online course study, and I found it the best textbook ever in educational administration so far.

Organizations
Effectively Managing Human Service Organizations (SAGE Sourcebooks for the Human Services)
Published in Hardcover by Sage Publications, Inc (1992-12-16)
Author: Ralph P. Brody
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Brody Text Review
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-30
Needed this book for the LSUS Master's Program in Human Services Administration. Got it very quick. Text in MINT & EXCELLENT condition and at a great price! Would've paid alot more at BAM or other vendors. I'll order from amazon again in a heartbeat. Brody is an excellent author and amazon's price and timing was the icing on the cake!

Good book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-04
This book cover the basis to run a human services agency. Easy to follow with good advice. I used it a part of my MSW curriculum.

Wow, I was impressed with this being my first time to order from Amazon.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-03
The book arrived in excellent condition and had minimal highlighting. I was very satisfied with my purchase. I will order from Amazon for all the books that I need for college, because the price was right.

Organizations
The End of Management and the Rise of Organizational Democracy
Published in Hardcover by Jossey-Bass (2002-01-15)
Authors: Kenneth Cloke and Joan Goldsmith
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The end of management is long overdue
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-03
This review is a shorter one I wrote for the journal Personnel Psychology.
I couldn't resist reviewing this book. Its title is beguilingly ambiguous. I had to see what it really meant. Are the authors describing a reality I have yet to discover? Or are they prophesying? Or writing a manifesto? Or wishfully thinking? The authors, both organizational consultants who "have drawn on over thirty years experience with hundreds of organizations," raise and dismiss in the same sentence the fourth interpretation. But can it be so confidently dismissed?

The book was written "as a tool to help build more collaborative, democratic, self-managing organizations." Note the use of multiple qualifiers. Done occasionally would be tolerable, but the authors' habit of frequently tacking three and four onto nouns and of also running trains of verbs and nouns in a single sentence annoyed me a bit (e.g., "---we have separated, disengaged, detached, distinguished, and divided---in order to clarify, categorize, and recommend---.").

Part One is devoted to "making a case for the end of management" through a review and a critique of hierarchies and their management. In tracing the evolution of management, three of the influences posited by the authors had never occurred to me before yet seem quite plausible. They are slavery, then serfdom, and much later on, increasing governmental regulations that the regulated have to increasingly manage. Nor was I aware that the French novelist, Honore de Balzac, and I share the same sentiment, namely, that bureaucracy is "a gigantic power set in motion by dwarfs." I also learned that "hierarchy" stems from the Greek word hieros, which means holy, implying sacred power at the top, and that a contrasting word, "heterarchy," stems from heteros, meaning neighbors.
The authors dust off and briefly examine Taylorism, scientific management, and Theory X rationales. I wish they had gone further in their review to present and debate more recent and starkly opposite arguments, including those that are unabashed paeans to hierarchies and bureaucracies (e.g., du Gay, 2000; Jaques, 1990).

Making their case includes presenting, each in a separate chapter, the familiar arguments that management "reduces communication, morale, and motivation," "constricts quality," and is intransigent, resisting change and innovation. While I think a separate chapter should also have been given to the moral inferiority of hierarchies, it's very clear throughout the book that the authors recognize such organizations foster unethical conduct by their members, and a separate chapter in Part Two is devoted to suggestions on how to "shape a context of values, ethics, and integrity."

The authors argue that hierarchies are the source of bureaucracy, the formal mechanisms that support the organizational structure and provide a "safe haven" where managers can escape accountability and exercise autocratic power. Each of these elements reinforces the other. They also violate, the authors contend, four "value-based propositions" about all people in organizations. One, everyone is a human being, not merely an employee or a human resource. Two, everyone is fully capable of acting responsibly and thriving on challenges. Three, the only natural relationships of any worth aren't hierarchical. And fourth, human beings deserve all of the different dimensions of freedom that should be available to them in an organization, such as the horizontal dimension of cross-functional teams and the "hyperdimension" of community. Regarding this latter observation, the authors' argument most appealing to me affectively is that it's incongruous for people to live in a democracy where they can vote for their country's leaders, yet work in hierarchies where they aren't free to select their organizations' leaders.

Time and again the authors remind us that their case is being made against management as a system rather than against management as a class of people. But the authors often contradict themselves (e.g., "Managers who hold these assumptions---micromanage---restrict----and institute---."), and I wonder if they aren't being a bit disingenuous, for as consultants they do feed off the hands of that class of people. Furthermore, not all management processes or systems are dysfunctional. Performance management, for one, is both inevitable and essential as a process. It couldn't end if you tried, and you wouldn't want to try. It can be done well or poorly, but it will be done. I think all species instinctively manage their own performance.

My assessment of Part One is that the authors make a better case against management on rational than on empirical grounds. What supporting evidence is offered is mostly piecemeal and largely anecdotal. Further, no footnote citations are provided for the few surveys and research studies briefly mentioned, and numerous assertions are made (e.g., "many managers report," "many organizations seek," etc.) with no corroborating evidence given. Even so, the evidence that is provided and all of assertions made do seem relevant and plausible, and I have no reason to doubt the authors "who have been inside enough organizations to know how dysfunctional most of them are."

In Part Two, the authors explain how to use their book as "a practical guide to organizational democracy." It does indeed seem practical, but a caveat is necessary. Almost all of their consulting experiences appear to be with limited interventions in hierarchies, not heterarchies. I found only one instance where the authors' intervention, in this particular case the design of a conflict resolution system, was for a large corporation they say had already been reorganized into self-managing teams. Their guide would thus appear to be untested for making the wholesale, even revolutionary changes they believe are required but apparently have not fully tried anywhere.

I don't mean to be dismissive of the second part, however. To the contrary, I would guess that any business organization that followed the "seven key strategies" the authors describe, each in a separate chapter, would "shift from management to self-management," "hierarchy to heterarchy," and "autocracy to democracy." The authors begin, logically and necessarily I believe, with a strategy for transforming the values of the organization's culture. Then there's a strategy for forming "evolving webs of association" (in contrast, say, to rigid functional departments in a hierarchy), for developing leadership skills throughout the organization, for building self-managing teams, for implementing "streamlined, open, collaborative processes" (e.g., teamwork as opposed to the adversarial processes common to hierarchies), and for creating "complex, self-correcting systems" (i.e. the kind of feedback you won't find in hierarchies). The seventh is having an overall strategy to ensure that all changes are integrated together.

The book ends with a final chapter on "the consequences of organizational democracy." The authors argue that greater organizational democracy is bound to have positive effects not only on members of the organization but also on society and politics.

While I basically agree with the distinguished business professor, Ian I. Mitroff, who endorses the book very favorably as "bristling with wisdom and practical advice," I don't want to conclude without mentioning two more significant faults I find with the book.

Nowhere in the book do I get a sense of whether heterarchies are gaining in number over hierarchies. I don't think the authors know or even tried to know, yet I would have expected them to know or try to know given the book's title and their treatment of the subject. They waffle on the matter, too. They say, for instance, that "---management continues, with few exceptions, to manage autocratically---." Then they turn around and say, "We have reached---the end of management---." Perhaps their waffling simply reflects what may be an accurate observation during a transitional period, for when I read the research literature on organizations, some findings suggest a shift towards heterarchies, (e.g., Purser & Cabana, 1998), some don't (e.g., Koch & Godden, 1996), and some are totally silent on the matter (e.g., Collins, 2001; Collins & Porras, 1994).

Secondly, the authors fail to differentiate sufficiently between business and government organizations. The latter have an endless lifeline to taxpayer pockets and no market incentive whatsoever to undertake the seven strategies toward heterarchies, no matter how strong of a case is made for making the shift. It will be the 12th of Never, I say, when heterarchies prevail in government.

In closing, if you are simply interested in the subject of if you do consulting in the subject area and regardless of whether you already appreciate arguments for heterarchies, I would recommend you read this book. If you are also empirically bent, then this book alone won't totally satisfy you unless you already know what's happening out there.

References

Collins, JC. (2001). Good to great. NY, NY: Harper Business.

Collins, JC. & Porras, JF. (1994). Built to last. NY, NY: Harper Business.


du Gay, P. (2000). In praise of bureaucracy: Weber, Organization, Ethics. London: Sage Publications.

Jaques, E. (1990). In praise of hierarchy. Harvard Business Review, 68, 127-133.

Koch, R. & Godden, I. (1996). Managing without management: A manifesto. London: Nicholas Brealey.

Purser, RE. & Cabana, S. (1998). The self-managing organization: How leading companies are transforming the work of teams for real impact. NY, NY: The Free Press.

Packed with Knowledge!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2002-09-30
Newscasts are filled with reports of democracy's relentless spread across the planet, but less is heard of its expansion through the corporate world. Just as dictators and oligarchs everywhere are being toppled from power, the hierarchical management structures that have governed organizations since before the industrial revolution are falling. Their usurper is self-management - the concept that motivated employees empowered to make their own decisions will work harder, faster and smarter than their rigidly controlled counterparts. Kenneth Cloke and Joan Goldsmith document this organizational coup and instruct executives on how to incite the revolution in their own companies. While acknowledging the scarcity of hard data to prove some of the book's assertions, we from getAbstract highly recommend The End of Management to all executives for its innovative take on modern organizational theory.

Management is dead . . . Long live management
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2002-04-23
This is the best book on the changing face of management that I've read in 10 years. As part of the new Warren Bennis Management series, it provides the framework for the new Organizational Democracy and how it can (and should!) replace the outdated, ineffective heirarchical forms of management most common today. If you manage or lead a team, department or organization and desire to manage less and produce more, this is the book for you. I felt the same excitement in reading this book as I did when I read Drucker's classic many years ago.

The chapter entitled "A Brief History of Management" is worth the price of the book -- and its just 10 pages. In the rest of the book you will be given step-by-step guidance for implementing a new way of managing. Among the many practical applications of this book, you will learn:

How to shape Values
How to create Webs of Association
How to develop Self-managing Teams
How to implement Effective Process
and How to produce Self-correcting Systems.

Management (Drucker) is dead, long live management (Cloke).

Nelson Searcy, Chief Innovation Officer, Smartleadership.com

Organizations
Environmental Politics in Japan: Networks of Power and Protest
Published in Hardcover by Cambridge University Press (1998-03-28)
Author: Jeffrey Broadbent
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Outstanding book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2004-02-10
An outstanding book on contemporary Japanese environmental politics. The author brings a deep knowledge of Japanese society and politics, as well as substantial field research experience, to this important work.

Best book of the century
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-05
I love this book written by my Dad. I recommend for all.

Awards for this book
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2001-04-18
(*Sorry, as author it is not proper for me to rate the book, but the computer program demanded that I do so, so I went for the gold :) ). I just want to convey the following information.

This book has won two awards:

1. "Outstanding Publication Award 2000" from the Environment and Technology Section of the American Sociological Association.

2. "Masayoshi Ohira Memorial Prize" for 2001, awarded by the Masayoshi Ohira Memorial Foundation, Tokyo, Japan, in memory of the late Prime Minister of Japan.

This book has been reviewed in over twenty journals and sites. Here are a few quotes from the reviews: "Broadbent's book remains a first rate account of environmental politics both within Japan and worldwide. It also offers one of the most valuable sources of reading for anyone interested in learning more about the complexities of social, cultural and political processes of contemporary Japan in general" (J. Royal Asian Inst); "With general discussion ranging over theories of regional development, power structures, social movements, social control, and elites, this is a book of wide appeal, beautifully written and refreshingly free of the jargon which so often pollutes social science" (Econ. Hist. Rev.); "As a model for future research, this is a book that should be translated and widely read within Japan (in Japanese, Kankyo to Kogai); "When all is said and done, this is an impressively researched, very thorough study of a series of milestone events in Japanese politics. It is a must-read for anyone interested in Japan or environmentalism" (J.Japanese Studies); "I was left with a rich understanding of the Japanese social, political and cultural context. I found the synthesis of theoretical perspectives to be extremely thought-provoking. This book makes a major contribution to the literatures on policy networks, social movements, environmental activism, and the structure-agency relationship" (Connections); "Environmental Politics in Japan is a major accomplishment, rich in empirical research and theoretical reflection. Besides being a comprehensive ethnography, the book is complex in its use of multiple theories and analytic perspectives - it can be read and reread from a number of viewpoints. Those with an interest in social movements, protest or environmental politics should be sure to add this to their reading list (Am. Pol. Sci. Rev.).

Organizations
An Evangelical Looks at the Bible, Church and Politics
Published in Paperback by Outskirts Press (2007-11-14)
Author: Bob Moore
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Logical Perspective - Very Informative
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-19
When looking at the chapter headings of this book I thought they sure sounded interesting, and interesting they were. I thoroughly enjoyed reading all the segments on the Bible, but the superb chapters on the 9-11 Terror attacks, War in Iraq,, our President and God, and the thorough coverage of the contentious politically hot topics of Embryonic Stem Cell Research, Abortion and Homosexuality certainly holds your attention too. This book is genuinely informative giving one a different understanding of the Bible and a better perspective on how religion influences our national political process one way or another. In summation, the 522 printed pages of this book is as the Author's preface states, being both informative and interesting reading, and it gives one a diverse insight about the Bible and Politics. I thoroughly enjoyed reading it and would recommend this book to everyone, because it is as good a book on religion and politics that you can buy.

An Evangelical Looks At The Bible, Church and Politics
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-14
While I am not a church-going Christian, I must say that I found this book to be very interesting, entertaining and informative. It is easy to read, even for the lay person. To me, it reveals one man's struggle to overcome his childhood beliefs after reality, maturity and experience has led him to other conclusions. Most people are not capable of such powerful growth during their lifetime. His way with words keeps the reader involved in what he has to say, and his knowledge of the subject is unending. Everyone to whom I have shown the book has expressed a desire to study it. In my opinion if more Christians were exposed to his moderate views, the world would be a better place.

Great Book!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-27
I've read a lot of books about church, religion, and the Bible. I probably should say I've started to read a lot of those books and became so utterly bored that I did not finish many of them. I have read most of this book of 500+ pages in the week that I have owned it and have not read a boring page. Bob has thoroughly researched his topics and does a wonderful job of explaining things so that people who are not scholars can understand what he is saying. He adds a touch of humor in places and also relates his personal experiences that make the reading even more interesting and readable. This is a book you can pick up, read a chapter, a few pages, or several pages and then pick up again and not have to read 20 pages to remember where you were. You will refer to it often. If you are at all interested in religion and the Bible, this book book belongs on your bookshelf.

An Evangelical Looks at the Bible, Church and Politics
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-15
"An Evangelical Looks at the Bible, Church and Politics" was, and is, an outstanding book and a very interesting read. I am a Christian and believe the basic foundation of Christianity as described in the Bible. Since I was a child; however, I have had many questions that have gone unanswered. This book discusses many of these questions and led me to a better understanding. It also adds very interesting insight into religion and how politicians USE religion to promote their agendas. The book, about the Bible and Political issues, is well documented and holds your attention through all 500 plus pages and is a must read. A good buy!

Organizations
Facilitating Organization Change: Lessons from Com Plexity Science
Published in Unknown Binding by Jossey-Bass Inc.,U.S. (2001-08-08)
Author: OLSON
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Universal Framework for OD Work
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-03-21
I read this book when it was written several years ago. The book has staying power. I find that I have adopted the concepts from complexity science as a framework for my organization development work. I think in terms of the simple, yet powerful, metaphor of breadmaking when consulting and facilitating.

practical book about promising org. change approach
Helpful Votes: 35 out of 35 total.
Review Date: 2001-10-04
This is an interesting book about an approach to managing and changing organizations, which is quite different from traditional change approaches: complexity theory. You might think: "Ah, here we go again.... Is this just the next new management hype, destined to be forgotten soon?" I don't think so. I think complexity theory is to be taken a bit more serious than that. What is it? It is a rapidly developing theoretical framework that describes and explains fundamental processes of complex adaptive systems, like organizations. What is a complex adaptive system? The authors of this book, Edwin Olson and Glenda Eoyang, explain that in a complex adaptive system, a multitude of different players (called agents) held together by some cohesive force (called a container) and constantly interacting with each other in all kinds of ways (these interactions are called transforming exchanges).

The self-organizing nature of human interactions in a complex organization leads to surprising effects. Small actions, events and interactions can lead to dramatic outcomes affecting the whole system. Human interactions in complex systems lead to so-called emergent properties, which are features of the system that the separate parts do not have. (For example, brain cells don't have consciousness, but the human brain does). All of this explains why it is often impossible to understand let alone predict or control events and developments. This is a rather big departure from the traditional view, which tends to see organizations as understandable, predictable and ... controllable!

Then how exactly is the complexity theory approach to change management different from the traditional approach? Ed Olson and Glenda Eoyang summarize the main features of the CAS approach to change as follows: 1) Achieve change through connections between agents (instead of trying to control the change top-down), 2) Adapt to uncertainty (instead of trying to use predictable stages of development), 3) Allow goals, plans, and structures to emerge (instead of depending on clear and detailed plans or goals), 4) Amplify and value difference (instead of always directly focusing on consensus), 5) Create self-similarity (instead of difference between levels), 6) Regard success as a matter of fit with the environment (instead of focusing on one dimensional success measures).

It's hard to accurately summarize in a few words what's in this book. So, if you're organizational development consultant, perhaps you'd better read it yourself. What you will find is that the book is a nice mix of theory, case descriptions and practical tools which (some of which are very nice and handy). I think this is the first book that makes complexity theory so practical.

The Best Practical Guide to Using Complexity
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2002-01-17
This is the best practical guide in existence for using Complexity to transform an organization. The authors give valuable tools and techniques for concrete processes which promote Complexity transformation, along with examples of real business situations where the tools have worked. Especially valuable for those who have a background in organization development. Highly recommended.

Organizations
Faithful Volunteers
Published in Paperback by Cumberland House Publishing (1996-11)
Authors: Stephen Mansfield and George Grant
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The Colonel
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2000-11-24
Agressively researched, beautifully written, and wisely presented, this is one of the best books of any kind I've ever read. History, particularly history of such a narrow scope, has seldom been presented in such a moving pageant. It is also fair, treating Native Americans and blacks, Catholics and Protestants with equal fairness and compassion. A truly great work.

A Faithful Story
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2000-02-07
I think there should be one of these for every state - a history book of how a state ends up with its religious mix. Luckily, I live in Tennessee and have this little gem of a book to reference. The authors present historic regional tidbits that elementary textbooks often leave out (all properly footnoted and indexed.) But the book doesn't get so far into religion as to forget history by sketching the role of the Indians, the wars and other key political events. And it doesn't get so far into Tennessee history as to overlook what's going on spiritually in the rest of the nation by including the likes of Wesley and Whitefield.

This is a state side version of Marshall's epic "The Light and the Glory." It's a quick read but perhaps goes too quickly through coverage of the last few decades leaving the reader wanting more (perhaps a sequel). Overall, a must read for the history buff and teacher or those wanting to spiritually map the state they're in.

Faithful Volunteers: A Review
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 1999-12-10
This book is an inspiring account of the history of religion in Tennessee. Chapters like "Paths of Hope, Trails of Tragedy," will help the reader to understand the passions that forged a land---the passion of what people believed that drove them to make the history that is written about in this book. I highly recommend this book, especially for anyone with interest in Tennessee, but also for those from anywhere who love to see how history can be shaped from what people will live and die for.


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