C Books
Related Subjects: Campbell Chapman Carr Carrera Chambers Chase Christman Clark Clarke Clausen Clay Clifton Cochran Collins Colvin Condon Connolly Connor Cook Cooke Cooley Cooper Corcoran Cox Crawford
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Used price: $9.99

Great diagrams, didn't feel complelty cohesive thoughReview Date: 2007-04-10
excellent bookReview Date: 2003-07-15
Fantastic book for learning and understanding the muscles!Review Date: 2004-06-18
Highly recommended for anyone that works in any field where the muscles are the focus!
Ideal reference guide of musculoskeletal anatomy.Review Date: 2004-04-17
I esspicially found the Latin and Greek derivation section's to be very helpful in understanding the origins of the muscle names.
This author's logic and approach is unmatched.
Kudos to Dr. Joseph E. Muscolino!!!
Excellent Resource for Musculoskeletal InformationReview Date: 2003-07-28

Used price: $9.37

A Must ReadReview Date: 2008-03-01
Yatsko's experiences writing about China's economy led her to explore the many facades she discovered pervading contemporary China. According to the author, while the exteriors of many facets of Shanghai look glitzy and modern, the interiors often tell a vastly different story. The book is divided into key aspects of the city's revival: real estate, the budding world of high finance, growing socio-economic disparity, the return of the multinational firms and their expats, vice, the future of state-owned businesses and their employees, and the status of the arts.
Summarizing Yatsko's conclusions would spoil a juicy read. So, suffice it to say that she uncovers the ways in which expectations for the city have often not been realistic and means by which the future lies in the ability of reality to catch up with these expectations. Considering the industrial and cultural wasteland the city became between 1949 and 1979, Shanghai truly has undergone an amazing renaissance. Will it become the New York City of Asia? Should it? The author gives us pause for many such thoughts. I lived in Shanghai from 2005-2007, and this book clarified many aspects of the "new China" for me.
The book is well-researched and sheds insights on both the city's achievements and her challenges for the future. All of the key elements making up this brave new city are helpfully placed within their historical context. New Shanghai makes essential reading for anyone who seeks to put modern Shanghai life into perspective.
Fun Fact: On the inside book jacket, you'll find a review by one of Shanghai's own literary celebrities, Lynn (Ling) Pan. She was also interviewed by the author for this book.
Truly ShanghaiReview Date: 2004-11-25
Not the obviousReview Date: 2003-05-12
Fascinating Story, Great Window into Emerging ChinaReview Date: 2004-07-28
New ShanghaiReview Date: 2002-10-07
Yatsko has captured Shanghai's fastest socio-economic changes since it lost the luster as the most prosperous city in the Far East early last century. With her solid knowledge of economics and first-hand experience, the stories are credible and the analysis is insightful. Whereas "old Shanghai" has aroused most scholarly interest due to its relation to modernity, Yatsko's depiction of Shanghai's rebirth in the 1990s also offers a unique hindsight on its past.
Although I wish I could have read this wonderful book earlier, it's not so late in the sense that I now know more interesting places

Used price: $4.25

FOR THE KIDSReview Date: 2007-11-13
The Out of Sync Child has funReview Date: 2006-11-03
helpful, but...Review Date: 2007-04-24
Very useful bookReview Date: 2006-08-07
Best Book for Sensory Integration out there!!Review Date: 2006-03-09
Used price: $0.01

Perfect for my daughterReview Date: 2007-10-05
PeriodReview Date: 2008-03-07
Good, but not as fun to read as othersReview Date: 2007-10-07
I would recommend this book, but if you're only going to buy ONE book, I'd recommend "Ready, Set, Grow".
Excellent HelpReview Date: 2007-06-09
Wish I'd read it sooner!Review Date: 2007-03-07

Used price: $7.40

This is THE SERVICE bookReview Date: 2007-01-11
Into the lightReview Date: 2000-07-12
Best of its kindReview Date: 2001-01-14
From the beginning the author has the attitude that NT services are easy to understand and his "prophecy" becomes self-fulfilling throughout the book. The book is well organized and it pays special attention to service design and usage patterns.
Also notice that the book does not cover hardware drivers. By the way, do read the previous review titled "One of a kind" as it gives very useful tips on installing ATL services (using "myservice.exe -Service") and housing COM objects in a service; I have not found that information in the book.
Right on target!Review Date: 2000-07-26
One of a kindReview Date: 2000-12-09
Professional NT Services describes the issues involved in writing services, such as security and threading, and provides sample code every step of the way. The book also details how to build a service with ATL and even tells you how to improve ATL's implementation. It even talks a bit about Microsoft Transaction Server (now part of COM+).
Here are three bits of information that I discovered elsewhere that I wish were more evident in the book -
1. If you create an ATL service, the default registation code registers the EXE as a COM server instead of a service -- run "myservice.exe -Service" to register the service.
2. The easiest way for multiple clients to be able to use a single COM instance that's housed in the service is to implement the COM class using DECLARE_CLASSFACTORY_SINGLETON. This is your typical "server" pattern.
3. Clients that want to connect to COM objects housed in the ervice should use CLSCTX_SERVER in CoCreateInstance
Perhaps this information is buried in the book somewhere, but I didn't find it. At any rate, without this book, I wouldn't have known where to start.
Finally, for all its great qualities, the book needs to be revised for Windows 2000. It mentions some new features of "NT5" but I wonder how accurate this information really is.
Used price: $10.95

REBELS The Irish Rising of 1916Review Date: 2008-07-03
A Must Read for Anyone with An Ounce of Irish Interest!Review Date: 2008-04-16
Who Dares To Speak of Easter Week?Review Date: 2007-12-17
Apart from the seizure of the General Post Office in Dublin, the rebels were unable to secure most of their objectives. British forces were able to suppress the revolt within a week. Due to disputes and internal squabbles between competing factions, many Irish militias simply refused to take any active role in the rising and the rebels in the GPO were hopelessly outnumbered from the start.
The revolt may have proven to have been unnecessary had Britain not chosen to suspend Irish Home Rule for the duration of World War One. John Redmond's long awaited legislation was enacted and then immediately placed on indefinite hold. Had Home Rule been permitted, it is quite possible that Ireland might be a member of the British Commonwealth of Nations today. Britain's refusal to implement Home Rule, despite its Parliamentary approval, gave rebel leaders the opportunity to plot a course for independence.
With British Army fully engaged on the Western Front, it was thought that assistance could be readily obtained from the Central Powers to arm the rebels. Roger Casement spent months in Berlin where he took part in a series of unproductive meetings with skeptical representatives of the Kaiser. An open revolt in Dublin would be a useful diversion, but the Germans were wary about committing significant resources to such a plan and to a motley crew of disorganized and impoverished revolutionaries.
Casement's efforts to raise a revolutionary brigade composed of captured Irish colonials who were being held as British prisoners of war in German camps proved to be futile as these soldiers overwhelmingly refused to defect. The promised weapons offered by Imperial Germany turned out to be a cargo of antiquated army surplus, including some obsolete cannons and mortars that probably dated back to the Franco-Prussian War. A single ship was provided to deliver the arms to the Irish coast.
After the disguised ship skillfully evaded the British naval blockade, the entire shipment was captured on the beach within mere minutes of its unloading. Casement, himself, was placed under arrest almost as soon as he arrived on shore. His betrayal was the work of a paid informer, a homosexual renter, who had been communicating with the English about Casement's activities and the shipment of arms for weeks.
Initially, many Dubliners had been enraged at the rebels both for the disruption of their daily lives and the destruction that had been visited upon their city. When the British imposed a brutal state of martial law, which included the summary execution of most of the captured rebels, Irish public sentiment changed abruptly. The rebels were no longer reviled as damned fools, but considered as martyrs to the cause of Irish freedom. Padraic Pearse had been vindicated. Out of the blood sacrifice of the rising on Easter Monday came heavy handed British reprisals which reignited the spirit of revolt on the part of the Irish people.
While not a historical novel, the book does contain some fictionalized dialogue mixed with actual quotations. This does not detract from fascinating and sometimes hilarious account of cowardice, heroism, idealism and stupidity that attended the birth of the Republic of Ireland.
WonderfulReview Date: 2007-04-27
A wonderful and powerful book!Review Date: 2005-03-21

Used price: $5.98

What a miracle!Review Date: 2008-01-26
Basic But goodReview Date: 2007-07-20
While there is nothing new here, it is nicely written and accessible. I liked the fact that the third and final section of the book actually provided an outline of basic steps to manifestation with some helpful examples. It would be nice if authors would put in new stories as opposed to relying on the same, old, tired vignettes. This book provides a nice review of the Science of Mind principles for advanced students. Perhaps more importantly, it provides a solid foundation for beginners.
Old and NewReview Date: 2007-05-12
Readable and InspirationalReview Date: 2007-02-18
If you are interested in reading about financial success, you may want to look at "The Richest Man in Babylon," by George Clason, and "The 17 Principles of Creating Wealth," by Phillip Collinsworth.
Understanding what Miracles REALLY are ... Review Date: 2007-01-08
I've felt for a LONG time that our "hopes and dreams" reached for things our "abilities to make our dreams come true" just couldn't accomplish without incredible damage to the rest of our lives. Working 90 hours a week, ignoring our families and punishing our bodies can't be the best way to make our dreams come true. This book is one of the best in showing us how to make all our dreams come true in a balanced, healthy, mutually beneficial and "effortless" way.

Dora has it down!Review Date: 2008-07-16
Bought at 2 - used it at 3Review Date: 2008-06-29
Show me your smileReview Date: 2008-04-22
School nurse loves this book!Review Date: 2008-04-08
My daughter could wait to go to the dentistReview Date: 2008-04-05
Used price: $11.97

The Tartar IronyReview Date: 2004-12-18
We are sorry to report that we will not be able to obtain the following item from your order:
Dino Buzzati, Stuart C. Hood "The Tartar Steppe (Verba Mundi)"
Though we had expected to be able to send this item to you, we've since found that it is not available from any of our sources at this time. Having delayed shipment multiple times already, we realize this is disappointing news to hear.
We must also apologize for the length of time it has taken us to reach this conclusion. Until recently, we had still hoped to obtain this item for you.
You may wish to continue searching for this item on Amazon.com Auctions and zShops. It's possible that at some point someone may be selling the item you're seeking.
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Loneliness without being aloneReview Date: 2002-02-06
There is little humour in this vision, little hope, little respite. Always an aching emptiness prevails. But for all that it does have a crystalline beauty - a clear and shining crystal with cold, sharp edges. Read if you dare, but brace yourself when you do. This is no roller-coaster of action, its pace is slow, slow, slow ......
A brillant and haunting existentialist fableReview Date: 2005-03-12
"The Tartar Steppe" is, to my sensibility, a great (little known) masterpiece of the 20th century Italian and European literature.
Filling the gaps of existence... with sandReview Date: 2003-01-23
Sharing this sense of absurdity with Kafka and Camus, Buzatti creates an atmosphere within which not only the main character gets trapped, but also the reader. They both expect something that never actually occurs, and the tension this anticipation generates page after page makes the novel a compelling read.
The story of Giovanni Drogo, a simple man who attempts to make of his destiny something grand without really doing anything but live and wait and let go, is one of the most fascinating and moving stories in the 20th century literature.
19th century adventure/20th century sensibiltyReview Date: 2003-09-12

Used price: $7.25
Collectible price: $13.95

A remarkable title.Review Date: 2008-03-01
FascinatingReview Date: 2008-01-23
Very Good Book!Review Date: 2008-01-14
Temple Grandin's Thinking in PicturesReview Date: 2008-03-06
He was incarcerated for 17 years for sexual abuse of a female girlfriend and we could not understand how he failed to get parole or help while in prison while some of those serving time for far worse crimes, including murder, were paroled after only half the time. We now know that sensory problems and being able to "go with the flow" in the prison system kept him incarcerated to serve his entire sentence.
Luckily, family was able to run across articles about Asperger's and did research on it concluding that so many adults such as my brother had not been identified with this symptom. We are much more successful with dealing with him after reading Temple Grandin's book and have pegged her thinking to be very similar to my brother's--he also thinks in pictures but could not describe it and frequently did not know what we were talking about since he was unable to feel emotions as related by Ms. Grandin. He has read her book also and is reading it a second time. It has given the family insight into our brother's condition for the first time in 53 years and we are so very thankful for this book.
Fascinating Book - Very AccessibleReview Date: 2008-03-28
She covers her career, her interests, and her autism. If you are interested in animal husbandry, interesting women, autism, then this is a good book. If you have autistic kids and feel really under it, its very reassuring to see how this one autistic person has done very well for herself, thanks to early intervention by her parents as well as determination and intelligence on her part.
I also like her personally, because I have had mixed feelings about being an omnivore and am glad she's out there making the experience of animals in our food production a lot less harrowing.
Related Subjects: Campbell Chapman Carr Carrera Chambers Chase Christman Clark Clarke Clausen Clay Clifton Cochran Collins Colvin Condon Connolly Connor Cook Cooke Cooley Cooper Corcoran Cox Crawford
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