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

Game
Sam Maloof, Woodworker
Published in Paperback by Kodansha International (1989-01-15)
Author: Sam Maloof
List price: $50.00
New price: $22.50
Used price: $6.21
Collectible price: $50.00

Average review score:

Such beautiful furniture!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-27
I've been woodworking for a a little over a year and had read about Sam Maloof in articles here and there. A few months ago I got to visit the Sam Maloof foundation and I fell in love with the way he shapes his pieces of furniture. As part of the tour we got to sit on one of his rockers and not only do they look beautiful but they are amazingly comfortable. That's when I decided to buy this book to learn more about him and his art.
This book includes Sam Maloof's story from when he first began and his experience as he grew into his woodworking career. It is inspiring to read and to see how he persevered even though it was not easy at the beginning. The book is full of pictures of his work, more than was available at the Maloof foundation. It includes a high-level description of how he makes his famous rockers too.

A must-own for anyone who appreciates art in its purest form
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-10
As you most likely know, Sam Maloof is an icon in the world of woodworking. This book does a great job of both highlighting his many creations as well as to tell the story of the man who would define an entire style and change the face of fine furniture. Written by Sam himself, the book gives you an insight into his genius and humility that you can't get anywhere else other than from the man. And it's clear he had creative input into the design of the book itself, as it's beautifully illustrated and elegantly laid out. I'm relatively new to woodworking and the brilliance of Sam Maloof, but I'm so glad I'm able to have discovered him while we're still blessed with his presence on the earth. Get this book.

FANTASTIC !!!!!!!!!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-07
IF YOU ARE INTO WOOD OR WOODWORKING AS MUCH AS I AM, OR EVEN IF IF YOU ARE ONLY INTO READING ABOUT GREAT ARTISTS/CRAFTSMEN, THIS BOOK IS A MUST FOR YOU !! IT DETAILS WITH GREAT CLARITY SAM'S LIFE & WORK THROUGH BOTH PHOTOS & REMARKABLE WRITING. I FOUND IT INFORMATIVE & INSIGHTFUL!! DO NOT PASS UP THE OPPORTUNITY TO OWN THIS BOOK !!!

BILL

Most excellent book. A must have for any woodworker!
Helpful Votes: 19 out of 20 total.
Review Date: 1998-11-24
Sam Maloof is a world treasure. His book reflects his passion and skill as a master. Sam's book is not written in a pompous manor but in a matter of fact point of view. Sam shares his life with us and puts it on paper. I have had the opportunity to meet Mr. Maloof and his lovely and gracious wife, Alfreda before her passing. Sam's love and passion for his craft is second only to his devotion to God and his love for his beautiful wife. His book reflects that in a way that is educational, thought provoking and simple. His warm and friendly demeanor in person is very evident in this book! Sam beleives there are no secrets in woodworking. He shares his finish and techniques in this book, although this is NOT a "how to" book. Reading this book, you will learn something about philosophy, Spirituality and some woodworking along the way.

Keith Kidd Vice-President Cerritos Student's Woodworking Association (CSWA)

sam maloof a briliant man
Helpful Votes: 20 out of 26 total.
Review Date: 2000-01-12
I bought this book when I was a student of woodworking/cabinetmaking in college, after hearing and seeing and studing some of Mr.Maloof's work in class. I found his command and respect for his craft, and the material that he works with to be second to none. His work is a insperation in it's self but once you find out the story behind this unbeliveable man it is all the more fasanating. his simple thoughts and down to earth style are a insperation to all. after reading this book I was amazed and inspired by this man and will remember and re-read this book may times.he will always be a insperation to myself and all woodworkers for years to come

Game
Scarne on Card Tricks
Published in Paperback by Signet (1974-02-01)
Author: John Scarne
List price: $2.25
Used price: $6.84

Average review score:

Arrived Promptly It Is As Advertised Not read it yet.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-07
I can only rate the service of the delivery and the accuracy of the description of the book. I haven't had a chance to read it yet.

Great shape!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-01
The book arrived fast & in great shape. My nephew loves it! He loves it so much that he had to have the Scarne book on magic.

This can make you a true card magician
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2003-02-22
Many magicians own the Classic book "Scarne on Card Tricks." But it is said if you want to keep a trick a secret, put it in print! Most of what's in Scarne on Card Tricks is no doubt a complete mystery to most laymen--and many magicians! Its a great book for the card beginner.

On the other hand, there's a lot of boring and tedious count-down stuff in there as well.

The book is BIG--over 300 pages of carefully detailed effects. It can be a little overwhelming to someone the first time he picks it up. How do you separate the wheat from the chaff?

Best, in my view, are the tricks that can be done TOTALLY impromptu, with very little or no stacking, when a deck is shoved into your hands and somebody says "Do a trick!".

Here are some of the effects that I have judged to be best, based on the above criteria:

The Upside down Deck by Francis Carlyle
Hit the Deck
Scarne's Follow the Leader
Cardini's Color Discernment
Card on the Ceiling
Card through the Handkerchief

Of course, You Do as I Do is also a classic, though it is fairly well known among magicians.

In short, a little work digging out the best tricks will make you a true card magician in most people's eyes, with enough practice and performing experience.

The best book on non-sleight-of-hand card tricks available!
Helpful Votes: 14 out of 14 total.
Review Date: 1998-10-12
John Scarne is today perhaps best remembered as a leading authority on gambling scams and card cheats. However, in his prime, he was one of the best magicians in America. In the late 40s, as stated in the Introduction, Scarne decided to gather for magicians a set of card tricks involving no sleight-of-hand. The result is "Scarne on Card Tricks". The 155 effects in the book range from quick tricks and puzzlers to more elaborate card demonstrations. All of the effects are attributed to either the originator of the effect or to a magician who used the effect frequently. The book clearly bears Scarne's unique genius not only in the selection and variety of effects, but in Scarne's improvements of the original effects. There is no doubt that anyone can put together a most entertaining routine with the material in this book. Two words of caution. First, the copyright of the book is 1950 and so some of the patter is clearly dated and needs to be revised for contemporary audiences. (Patter is the words or story that accompany the effect.) Second, because the effects are easy to do when practiced, there is a tendency to perform the effects before fully thought out. For every hour learning the basic effect itself, two hours should be spent on how to present it in an entertaining and interesting manner. The book itself, however, remains one of the very best in card magic. Scarne's work clearly stands the test of time. Frankly, the book is a steal at the published price. I bought two copies because I knew I'd wear one book out. I did. The book is that useful.

Still the best
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2001-10-26
This is the definitive collection of non sleight-of-hand (you don't have to be quick with your hands) card tricks. I bought my first paperback copy in 1974 when I was still a schoolboy. Some of the tricks are easy but astounding, such that I've memorised two of them and have amazed my friends over the years until now. Since then, there hasn't been any other card trick manual that can beat this one, to the best of my knowledge.

Game
Secrets of Pawn Endings
Published in Paperback by Everyman Chess (2000-03-01)
Authors: Karsten Muller and Frank Lamprecht
List price: $24.95
New price: $32.50
Used price: $17.39

Average review score:

An awesome pawn end game book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-20
Despite being a novice player and owning other excellent end game books, in this book there is much material that is not out of my intellectual reach. It feels like I will be learning from this book for decades to come!! The accuracy and clarity of the text with the numerous diagrams makes the book excellent to even the weaker players. Doubtless this book has even material useful to grandmasters. Enjoy reading it, I do.

Secrets of Good Books
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 2003-12-29
Ok, endgame books are mostly raw facts and calculation. Accuracy is more important than writing ability. If you purchased this book, there is no doubt what you expected to take from it.

When I found the first typo on the first page of chapter one I thought I made a bad purchase. I don't care about excuses...poor editing, hard to translate from German, or anything else.

As I continued to read I found the book to be better than I had expected. Once I got used to the codes and symbols, the book was very enjoyable. The exercises were outstanding. They hammered home the critical ideas without wasting your time on exercises that would never occur in an actual game. And yes the book was very accurate. I learned a few new ways to quickly evaluate complex positions. The order of the exercises was perfect. Each exercise built on the previous exercises as they flowed smoothly through the book. You can not spend too much time with a book like this.

After living and playing in Germany for the past two years I am amazed at the strength of German players and their passion for the game. They are absolutely crazy about chess. I find chess everywhere I go in this country. These two authors are a direct reflection of chess in Germany today. I will look for more of their books.

Putting phase in chess.
Helpful Votes: 13 out of 16 total.
Review Date: 2005-10-20
This is a rather difficult book for us, C-players, to follow. The positions have only two types of pieces, Kings and Pawns. In order to win, some Ps must reach the 6th or 7th to demonstrate to us that game is decided. The King- and Pawn-moves are single squares; therefore to achieve this goal the game must take many moves. This makes the variations of many (sometimes dozen of) moves deep. Unless we have the visual ability like the masters or grandmasters do, we need a chessboard or program to follow the moves incrementally. To study and understand these deep analyses, the authors recommend us, average players, to use chessboard and play them through. I think this is good for even masters and GMs. For us, amateurs, with 10 percent of its knowledge we could hold ground fairly against our opponents. I need at least one year or so to go through all the details the book provides.
I just caught three major mistakes that I wrongly believed all these years.
1) Two isolated P's separated by 1 file against a King are an automatic win. Wrong.
2) Two connected passed P's with the rear P blocked by enemy lone P is an automatic win. Wrong.
3) In pawn ending with two P's each, the outside passed P wins always. Wrong.
Above are three of many simple rules I often aim for when reaching the pure P endings.
Diagrams 8.01D, 4.07 and 3.12 from this book debunks my beliefs. What is missing with my simple rules? The King-position. In the pure pawn endings, the K-position is the single most important factor. The list on the Crash Course page is very helpful. There are about 40 different themes. So far I could recognize and understand 3 or 4 of them, but not 100% certainty, unless I have to carefully and quietly study the book.
This book is worth 5 stars. Hope I could use what it offers in real games. At C-class, our games are often over during the middle-games by blunders. The fewer pieces on our endgames are, the stronger (or more equal) are we. Good luck to all.

the works
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-02-24
This book starts with the basic concepts of King and Pawn against King, gives a thorough tour of the situations arising with progressively more pawns, and ends with general advice about finding plans in complicated situations. The whole exposition is given in clear, logical prose supported by valuable and well-diagrammed game analyses and exercises. The authors do not shirk giving clear explanations of the basics, while there is enough advanced material to give food for thought, I suspect, to much stronger players. In short I was delighted with this book, and strongly recommend it.

Perfection
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2004-08-18
I'm a class C player interested in seriously improving my game. My first endgame book was by Yasser Seirawan, Winning Chess Endings. I didn't really get enough out of the book's section on pawn endings. Due to this I decided to purchase this boook and I was amazed at what I could learn and how quickly. I believe this is the easiest to understand book on any aspect of chess theory I have ever read.

To get the most out of this book I highly recommend playing through the positions against a strong chess engine (Fritz, for example). Evaluate the test positions in your head and if you get any incorrect play through the positions against the engine.

I rarely reach endgames in my play, but I'm sure that I am able to correctly evaluate if I should trade off into an ending or not when I am faced with the choice.

Game
The Skin Game
Published in Paperback by Xlibris Corporation (2002-08)
Author: Joseph T. Wilkins
List price: $20.99
New price: $19.49
Used price: $6.38
Collectible price: $40.00

Average review score:

My Husband Kicked Me out of Bed when I was Laughing So Hard, Reading This
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-27
I was in a book store near Atlantic City last week, searching through the 50% off bins, which backed up to the "Books on New Jersey" shelves. The title, THE SKIN GAME, kind of grabbed me, but I turned it over, saw Wilkins was self published, and I went, "Ehhhhhhhh." Harcourt publishes my novels. And I think many of us try to buy self published books about our state/city on Amazon for a penny, because, well, you know (they're generally overpriced, under edited, and as amusing as watching a mud puddle dehydrate.) But something came over me. I was thinking it was the anti-Christ, because I coughed up $12.95 for a self-published story written by a local guy.

Well.

I have this laugh like a ballistic rooster. I almost got kicked off a public beach reading THE SKIN GAME because my response was "deeply disturbing to the bathers," said the beach patrol captain. It's Wilkin's writing style, though the fodder is certainly there. He wrote this "novel" via memories he garnished as a defense attorney for Legal Services in Atlantic City just before casinos were legalized. Hence, he represented the hookers, bookies, and loadies, with an occasional divorcee thrown in for respectability. Welcome to Atlantic City, circa 1970.

Wilkin's tale centers on one particular case where lawyer Tim Donovan (whom Wilkins swears is not himself, uh-huh uh-huh) had to defend a client assocated with a Skin Game. That's an illegal card game played out in the bowels of Atlantic City for nearly thirty years. One night, some even badder guys broke into the Skin Game to rob it. They forced twenty-seven players (all men) to strip naked and pile into a two-stall bathroom. Obviously this request sparked a shoot out. The cops arrived, there was more of a shoot out, and naked men were running around the street like crazy. One of the even badder guys holed himself up in a ripe, aluminum trash can until dawn, hoping the cop he shot at wouldn't find him. He got found. Wilkin's Donovan was called upon to defend him.

Wilkins weaved in other characters with the timing of a pro. By the time he'd introduced Mary the near-sighted hooker, Cindy the goose egg wife of an even dumber pimp, the grandmother who kept changing her will to give her ugly ceramic turtle to a different relative, I'd been kicked out of my bed for laughing too loudly while reading. I even tried to read holding my nose, but the whole bed was shaking, so my husband said, "No more."

If you're familiar with Atlantic City in the 1970s, you'll love this read. But if you don't know AC, it's still a great ride just because Wilkins--yeah, self-published--is the funniest guy I've ever read. Last time I got kicked out of bed was ten years ago with Winston Groome's FORREST GUMP, and this was funnier that that.

I hope self-publishing was a business choice, because the thought of the New York wigs passing on this makes me dizzy. Wilkins is a terror. In fact, there is no longer any way to contact him, and I'm assuming it's because he got so much fan mail--so many of us wanting to tell him what Atlantic City Street we worked on in 1970, and wanting to ask free legal questions--I bet he's hiding out and can't take anymore of us.

I don't want this book to die out. Do your holiday shopping NOW!

CAROL PLUM-UCCI
STREAMS OF BABEL (Harcourt, May 2008)



Laugh Out Loud
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2002-12-22
Once I started The Skin Game, I could not put it down. It was a great and funny read, I laughed out loud many times. I look forward to Mr. Wilkins providing some more laughs in his next book.

Tell It Like It Is
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2002-12-11
The type of book you don't want to put down untiil it is finished. Keeps one laughing throughout. A must read for anyone who ever visits Atlantic City. Even more entertaining for those of us who knew the city before the casinos came.

The Skin Game
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2002-12-10
Treat yourself to the comic escapades of a variety of eccentric characters playing their own game within a dubious justice system. I laughed out loud reading this book. You will too!

Exposed to the Skin Game
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2002-12-08
Joseph Wilkins has a free and easy writing style that shifts easily from anecdote to anecdote. The book is funny - very funny.
If you know Atlantic City - and I do - the book captures the City before it becomes swamped by casinos. It exposes the inside city - the side you can't get without reading this book or another one that informs as well. The trouble is - there are no better, not even equal, performers.

Martin L.in

Game
The Sorcerer's Apprentice
Published in Paperback by New in Chess (2009-05-20)
Authors: David Bronstein and Tom Fnrstenberg
List price: $34.95
New price: $23.07

Average review score:

Forget Harry Potter, Here is a Real Sorcerer!!!
Helpful Votes: 13 out of 24 total.
Review Date: 2002-05-27
Lets cut to the chase, this is a real Sorcerer at work... The book just for the 40 combinations is worth picking up... Still lets not waste time talking about that stuff...

Bronstein loves chess, not studying this line and that line... Not just memorising and trying to think what is this or what is that... He actually Played the game, he would do moves just to see what would happen... He talks about chess in a way where it makes you wanna play... Not all boring technical stuff that most don't understand but pretend to :)... No he talks about it in his own simple way... Calls people Fox or hedgehogs and explains how the Fox will try something even if it might lose... That is what its all about, tossing it on the line... Not just playing all safe and in worry about losing... Gotta roll the dice and just go for broke... Yes he basically says he tossed the games vs. Bot cuz of pressure and this and that... So he does admit to a shady side of chess... Still he makes it very clear he just loves playing the game... He did not seem to care about all the politics and having that on him... I wish that he would of beat him though, I wish he did not give in... Still when your in his situation thats the only way you can understand... I wonder if Tal had pressure to lose in that first match in 1960... Still lets get back to Bronstein, he played very far into his life... He is almost pure Chess I think, Im not a huge fan of his... Still if you read this book, its hard not to like the guy at least to some degree... I do not agree with him telling people to build a little house and castle early... I think many games are lost cuz people castle wrongly or too early... Still Im free not to agree with him all I wish... This book really is enjoyable just to read, even if you don't go over the games... So throw out that Harry Potter and get a book with a real Sorcerer :)...

If You play with Passion for the game, get this book... This book is not for those that play boring and never take chances... So if your a Fox, pick this up, if your a hedgehog, go play with Sonic :)...

Chess Magic
Helpful Votes: 13 out of 22 total.
Review Date: 2000-02-14
Just let me say that if you love the game this book HAS to be in your library.

A student could pick no better player to study. No one explains like Bronstein!

A great book. Along with Tal's book, this book belongs in the, "Chess-book Hall of Fame." !

by far the most enjoyable chess book ever made
Helpful Votes: 16 out of 19 total.
Review Date: 1998-12-10
First, the book itself:it is beautiful (really nice art work), clean (wide and clear letters and a lot of space for personal appoitments) and with a good number of diagrams (which means that is easy to follow the games without a chess board). Second, the contents: amazing, even a weak player like me can follow the games AND understand what is going on. Mr. Bronstein is a superb writer and can transmit his ideas in a very simple way. Third, the overall work: wide cover of openings, very interesting games anilized and the analizis themselves, very personal comments of the author that makes the book even more interesting. Final veredict: the kind of book you can really read on a cold sunday afternoon, next to the fire place, while seeping hot chocolate, and at same time have a LOT of fun. (where can I find more stars to place in the rate stuff??!!)

This is one of the greatest game collections there is.
Helpful Votes: 24 out of 24 total.
Review Date: 2000-09-18
This book consists of four major sections. The first is forty of Bronstein's greatest combinations. These forty games have one diagram of the position before the decisive combination. The rest of the page has Bronstein's comment on the combination. The next section is a collection of fifty of his games. Most have a medium amount of annotation, but a few have extensive annotations. Many of the games have cute annecdotes attached to them. These annecdotes are part of the charm of the book. From one of these annecdotes, one can bring proof to the theory that the Russians 'fixed' certain tounamant results. The next section is sixty games by diagram. Practically speaking, this means that there are about 5 diagrams per game. The last section is called seventy picturesque games. Unfortunately, no clue is given to what David Bronstein considers picturesque. The added bonus to the book is that between each section there is an interesting article about Bronstein. Overall this is a game collection/autobiography that is as good as Tal's, and this one has the advantage that it has a much larger percentage of Bronstein's chess career that Tal's book has.

an entertaining, down to earth lesson by one of the best
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 1999-09-23
Bronstein doesn't patronize readers. His own comments of his games are invaluable. The combinations, in the form of puzzles will improve your tactics almost immedaitely.

Game
Sports Off-Center: A Timeless Spoof of Today's Sports World
Published in Paperback by Three Rivers Press (2006-05-30)
Authors: Ken Widmann and Dan Appel
List price: $14.95
New price: $8.32
Used price: $0.01

Average review score:

A must for any sports lover with a sense of humor.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-12-12
As a big fan of The Onion style humor, this book really delivered for me. Its sports spoofs are right on and completely hilarious. The photos and ads make the parodies look so real, adding to the fun absurdity of the book. I loved it! If you're a big sports humor guy like I am, I would also recommend Robert Gussin's TRASH TALK. It's a pretty new and really funny fiction book that imagines an accidental pairing up professional athletes and environmentalists. Sounds wacky - and it is. In the best way possible! Check it out.

This book makes Bone of Pig proud
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-09-23
When I saw that this book had come out, I immediately thought, "Ooh, Leyritz!" Unfortunately there were no appearances from the lovable bald catcher, but there are plenty of humorous stories to both make you laugh and provoke fond memories of your favorite sports memories. It's a perfect blend of sports-insider humor and witty comments on society at large (see the guest appearances from Noam Chomsky and Joyce Carol Oates and the frequent "corrections"). Definitely buy this book -- you won't regret it!

Hilarious
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-09
This book is very cleverly done. It's very accessible to sports fans and even if you're not, the snippets are hilarious. My wife sometimes scoffs at my obsession with sports but when I read her some of the pieces aloud, she was cracking up. The book reminds me of the various sports "Hall of Shame" series I read as a child and hopefully these guys will follow suit. I enjoyed this one and look forward to more!

Oustanding satire!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-07-06
From the title itself to all of the content, this book is thoroughly entertaining and very humorous. I enjoyed all the spoofs on sports metaphors, the swimsuit issue, the interviews with fake sports celebrities, and all the little jokes woven throughout the book. There are many clever and witty gags that any sports fan would surely relish. I definitely recommend this title!

Swing my way!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-06-30
Hilarious! Hard to read the articles because the next headline is so funny. But stick it out-- these guys don't overcook the roastbeef. Some morsels:

"Rocky VIII: Rocky vs. Bullwinkle"
"NASCAR Rookie Asked to Stop Using Turn Signals"
"Woeful Season Blamed on Liberal Media"
"Nike Signs Spelling Bee Champ to LIfetie Non-Endorsement Deal:$4.3 Million Agreement Ensures Gawky 8th Grader Will Never Wear Company Apparel"

Really more of an investment in humor than a purchase...

Game
Subsistence herring fishing in the Eastern Bering Sea Region: Nelson Island, Nunivak Island, and Kuskokwim Bay (Technical paper)
Published in Unknown Binding by Alaska Dept. of Fish and Game, Division of Subsistence (1991)
Author: Mary C Pete
List price:

Average review score:

Superb Photographic History
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-12
This superb collection shows now-gone buildings and architectural treasures of our beloved city's past. These remarkable black-and-white photos show famous vanished bridges, churches, buildings and arenas, including the Colesium (nominating site of four Presidents). The City's downtown and surrounding areas were rebuildt after the Great Chicago Fire of 1871, in the largest building boom in U.S. history. Wood gave way to brick, steel, and concrete - the fire led to strict building codes - and many structures rose as the city expanded from 320,000 people in 1871 to 3.4 million by 1930. Readers learn about our city's history, plus the valuable contributions from world-famous architects and planners like Frank Lloyd Wright, Louis Sullivan, Miles Van De Roh, Mortimer Adler, and Daniel Burham. Today, many call Chicago the nation's architectural marvel - yet we also lost many famous structures as this superb book shows.

I'd have liked more photos of rail structures (Chicago was and probably remains the world's railroad capital), but it's a minor flaw. This is a superb book about a great city and its architectural past.

Great book, but somewhat depressing
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-29
The well written story and photos of Chicago are great. It was amazing the number of outstanding architectural building that were built and torn down in such a short number of years.
Having grown up in Chicagoland during the 40' & 50's, I found myself depressed to see such destruction - only to be replaced by glass and aluminum boxes. Even efforts to save the outstanding and much beloved main lobby at the Chicago and Northwestern station failed in the name of the almighty dollar!

Chicago the city of Cities! Thank You Mr. Lowe
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-13
First of all...Mr. Lowe obviously has a deep rooted love for our wonderful city of Chicago. Most importantly...he is ensuring future generations and historians the ability to reference so many facts. This simply said...is an incredible work of love and a dedicated effort.
Thank You Mr. Lowe...my children's children will know what an important part that Chicago has played as our nation grew and prospered.

L. Curt Erler Author of "Southside Kid"

Stunning
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-01
Stunning photos of a beautiful city. This book is truly a step back to a time when buildings were built to withstand centuries, although tragically these examples did not. Chicago has some of the most impressive examples of architecture in the country and this book is a powerful archive of not only what the city was, but what it is today. I wish there was a similar book on the buildings of Detroit, many of which are sadly slipping into oblivion.

A Lot of Memories
Helpful Votes: 12 out of 13 total.
Review Date: 2006-07-07


There is much to enjoy here even if one does not have a special interest in architecture. As a lifelong Chicagoan, I especially liked the photo of St. Stanislaus Kostka Church (p. 79) which occurs in the formerly Polish neighborhood that I grew up in. I also enjoyed the old maps of the Chicago area from the 1600's.

Game
Surviving the Fitness Game
Published in Paperback by Bridge-Logos Publishers (2008-01-01)
Author: Joanna Ward
List price: $14.99
New price: $7.93
Used price: $7.98

Average review score:

Awsome book and CD
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-02
I read the entire book from cover to cover and viewed the CD the first night I purchased it. Have you ever read a book that you couldn't put down because it held your interest? Surviving the Fitness Game is an awesome book that gives inspiration from a true life story. The fitness CD is easy to follow with exercises that can be done by both young and seniors.

My Kind of Multi-Tasking!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-14
Survivor Amazon Contestant turned Author JoAnna Ward combines user-friendly fitness and nutrition tips with daily devotions. Her simple, yet effective guidelines help those seeking ways to incorporate spirituality with caring for the body-temple. Thank God for JoAnna's insite and creativity!

Get Spiritually and Physically FIT!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-27
Surviving the Fitness Game is the key to creating a healthy body from the inside out. Joanna Ward not only teaches key excercises to loose body fat and tone muscle, but she teaches us about our spirituality and its connection to our health.

This book is excellent for everyone, from the gym fanatic (like myself) to the gymphobe (like my mother), looking to be fit and healthy. Start working out today, buy the book it's a MUST!

Great Motivator!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-20
Surviving the Fitness Game provides the motivation needed to get going and take great care of the body God blessed us with! We all know what we should be doing, but lack the motivation to actually get up and do it. The daily devotionals help put things in proper perspective, reminding us to step up the program towards physical and spiritual health!

Try it, you'll like it.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-11
Surviving the Fitness Game is a practical and realistic guide to losing not only physical weight, but emotional and psychological weight as well. Thanks to the concepts outlined in the devotional I have gained a closer relationship with God, a brighter outlook after the demise of my 15 year marriage and I feel better and look better than I have in years! The first step is to take the first step and positive results will follow. I recommend this book for anyone in need of losing any type of negative weight in their life.

Game
Tarot and the Journey of the Hero
Published in Hardcover by U.S. Games Systems (2001-06)
Author: Hajo Banzhaf
List price: $19.95

Average review score:

i won't add to the verbiage...simply highly RECOMMENDED
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-10-02
i luckily found this at a remainder store for under $5....but i'd pay $20+ for this easily. LARGE formate book and beautiful colors of (i think) the Universal Waite tarot of P. Colman...not just excellent descriptions of each card/archetype, but the resonances between cards are explored.

wow.

A lucid contemplation on the Path of the Hero
Helpful Votes: 12 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 2000-11-23
This is a very useful book. For one, Banzhaf traces the "hero's" progress consecutively from one tarot card to the next and frames his hero's progress according to an understood direction of enlightenment. Each card is viewed as evolutionary stages that may potentially yield insight into our current spiritual, material or social placement and well-being. What I find insightful and comprehensive about Banzhaf's schema is that Banzhaf explains the "hero's" path through the use of many different religions, myths and motifs, which serve to encompass a broad perspective on what enlightenment means. This is no small feat, since the Waite deck, which Banzhaf prominently displays (as on the front cover), is very Judea-Christian. This broadening of the hero's journey, to encompass a universal experience, manages to make the heroes journey a universal journey on becoming oneself; and it therefore functions well in a number of spiritual and religious frameworks.

Banzhaf-as is characteristic of him-uses brilliantly practical language. His layout is intelligent and well presented. Each tarot card is summarized in a chart, which appears at the end of each essay, and which has the following layout: Title: Keywords for (the tarot card's name goes here); Categories: Archetype, Task, Goal, Risk, and Feeling in life. As you can see, Banzhaf's focus is always lucid and balanced.

I do wish, however, that Banzhaf had extended his approach to encompass the minor arcana, too. In the minor arcana there is also a feeling of progression, which is not quite so clean and neat as in the major arcana. The minor arcana exposes the many side paths and loopholes, which the hero will meet and be challenged with. One can say, that they express the minute details of the hero's' experience, which I feel could have been quite innovatively placed in this hero's journey. However, my comment is not a criticism. Rather, it is a suggestion, which any tarot reader can meditate on. Since, Banzhaf's has the gift of lucidity and practical focus, I just wish that he had considered a broader and more complex schema.

Overall, I think this book is a well-written addition to any tarot card reader's library, and I do not think that it is too difficult for a beginner. In fact, this book has the uncanny ability to grow with you as you progress in your tarot card understanding, which mimics the "hero's" own growth. Of course, this is whole point. You will come to understand that you are the hero, and that both your paths are alike.

An Amazing Book - Diverse, In Depth, yet Accessible
Helpful Votes: 24 out of 24 total.
Review Date: 2001-01-06
I'm by no means a Tarot, psychology or any other sort of scholar. What I am is a person who has been deeply fascinated by the place of enlightment found at the intersection of Tarot, psychology, and mythology. I itch to relate the Hero myth to Jung, Jung to Tarot, Tarot to the Hero Myth.

This book satisfactorily scratched all those itches, and more. It is a pleasure to read visually and in terms of the thought it provokes. I don't believe anyone could walk away from reading this book without having been enriched in many ways. Its diversity in the cultural, mythological, philosophical, and artistic traditions upon which it draws is enormous. This book could make a fine basis for teaching a university course in a number of disciplines.

I will leave you, gentle Amazon reader, to the wisdom of other reviewers, but I urge your consideration of this book. I believe you will not be sorry.

Enjoy.

The gate is narrow and the way is hard....
Helpful Votes: 27 out of 29 total.
Review Date: 2002-03-09
If you know something about the Tarot cards, you may find TAROT AND THE JOURNEY OF THE HERO by Hajo Banzhaf contains familiar material as he agrees with much of what has been written elsewhere by Joseph Campbell and other experts. However, Banzhaf is extremely articulate, his writing clearly stated and beautifully illustrated, and his exploration of the links between the arcane language of the ancients and modern Jungian psychology rich and comprehensive.

If you are not familiar with the Tarot cards, Banzhaf's book is a good place to begin, especially if you have an interest Western literature, music, and/or the visual arts -- including Medieval and Renaissance paintings, German philosophy, and films by the Fargo Brothers such as "Oh Brother, Where Art Thou?"

Banzhaf is a very educated man who has studied religious and/or mythological tales and/or classical stories and appears to have an in-depth knowledge of the religious and/or philosophical nature of humans. He not only interprets key myths and tales, he explains the content of artworks from ancient India, Egypt, Greece, Rome, Italy, and Medieval Europe used to illustrate his text.

Banzhaf uses the Waite and Marseilles decks to illustrate each of the Major Arcana. Although he appreciates much of the content of the Waite deck, he challenges some of the changes Waite made relative to older decks. Banzhaf eschews discussion of the Minor Arcana suggesting these cards are more recent and may be nothing more than playing cards or cards for fortune telling. On the other hand, he views the 22 cards of Major Arcana (the Fool and his 21 stations) as the organizing principle for the classic tale of the hero -- whether Moses or Parzifal, Galahad or Ra, Gilgamesh or Jesus -- and the core story of every human life.

Banzhaf lays out the cards of the Major Aracana sequentially and divides the layout into two major paths -- the path of the daytime sun (active) and the path of the nighttime moon (passive). He suggests that each soul must follow this path to reach paradise, heaven or the spritual world however it is defined. The daytime path has to do with becoming EGO, the worldly individual. The nighttime path is more difficlut and many become snared like the hanged man, slowly twisting in the wind. The nightime path involves the spiritual life where the gate is narrow and the way is hard.

This is a beautiful book, and although I bought the paperback, I plan to purchase the hardcover since I will be referring to the book again..and again. As Banzhaf says, "If we look to the path as a spiral, that gradually leads us to what is Highest, then each turn on this spriral corresponds to one hero's journey. Seen in this manner, as long as we are traveling, we will return to all twenty-one stations over and over, yet--at least we hope--this will always be on a somewhat higher level. At the uppermost point of the path, but really only there, does this last card mean the unity of all things."

A Species of Initiation
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-05
An entirely unique approach to the Major Arcana, returning us to A Sacred Process available in the Deep Minds of us all.

Fine illustrations. A brilliant mind. One can only marvel that the book is so cheap.

If you're looking for a book to help you with "readings," this is not the book for you. If you're looking for a book sharing deep insights into Tarot (the reading of which itself is a species of Initiation), this IS the book for you.

I've been a student of the Tarot off and on for 40+ years - and canNOT express what a delight it was to find this book.

Game
Toon: The Cartoon Roleplaying Game
Published in Paperback by Steve Jackson Games (1991-10-07)
Authors: Greg Costikyan and Warren Spector
List price: $24.95
Used price: $11.45

Average review score:

Loony Toon RPG
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-18
Loony Toon the RPG is wonderful fun for all ages. Prepare to laugh till you hurt.

Prepare for Insanity and Mayhem!!!!!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2002-02-06
Toon: The Cartoon Role-playing Game was published by Steve Jackson Games in the mid-1980s, and many copies of the sourcebooks are still available with a little effort. This RPG primarily focuses upon American-style cartoons where truly anything goes!!! The entire focus of Toon is to be funny and to do and say things which are funny... and many anime characters and series fit quite well into this worldview: Debutante Detective Corps, Project A-ko, Otaku no Video, Galaxy Fraulein Yuna, Idol Project, the Slayers saga, City Hunter, D4 Princess, Mezzo Forte, etc.

One of the most popular Toon campaigns is the Toon Olympics. Those familiar with the Hanna-Barbara Laff-a-Lympics series already have an idea of the premise of Toon Olympics: Bring together many animated characters from various series/genres and have them compete in a number of sporting events. When I first played the Toon Olympics, one player created his own cursed medieval knight character with a sentient sword which didn't always do as he commanded (which he later played in a Sailor Moon RPG campaign I was then running), someone else played a unicorn (who eventually had to drive a car), another played as Lara Croft, and I personally played as A-ko - truly an eclectic bunch!!!

However, anime fans should NOT overlook Toon as a role-playing option. Granted, Toon is not as adaptable to a wide variety of campaigns (for campaign genre/character adaptability, see the Big Eyes Small Mouth second edition sourcebook); however, for a change of pace, Toon can be used to give almost any anime character (pre-existing or original) a chance to be a comedian. For example, when I played in another Toon Olympics as A-ko, I called upon B-ko to fight a Pokémon in my place, with the promise of conceding C-ko to her if she should win (that was funny enough to earn me an extra Plot Point)!!!

Best RPG Ever!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2003-02-11
This is a great game for anyone who has ever wanted to be a chartoon character. Or just for anyone who loves cartoons. Like the best board games (Balderdash, Malarky), the important thing is having fun and making the other players laugh. ...

Great game but book binding is bad
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2001-06-12
This game is the best. The only problem I have is that every page you read falls out after you turn the page. Spiral binding would be great for this game because the game master has to use the book often if he is following any of the preplaned adventures. I would give it 5 stars if the binding were better.

The best way to let your mind go!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2001-05-28
This is the only rpg Ive seen that anyone can master in one or two tries. Your dreams to be bugs bunny or Daffy come true in this classic rpg. A must buy!


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