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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AthanasiusReview Date: 2008-02-23
FINALLYReview Date: 2008-05-11
A great introductory work to the early church fathers.Review Date: 2007-12-17
Second, the book is not terribly difficult to read. The book is short and well organized. Some of the passages take rereadings, but the arguments for the most part are fairly straight forward and accessible. Meditating on what God did through the incarnation, the reasons for the incarnation, and its impact on our lives and history as a whole can not be a bad thing.
Very readable and pastorally invaluableReview Date: 2007-09-15
I can't do better than quote C. S. Lewis in the introduction:
"The student is half afraid to meet one of the great philosophers face to face. He feels himself inadequate and thinks he will not understand him. But if he only knew, the great man, just because of his greatness, is much more intelligible than his modern commentator. The simplest student will be able to understand, if not all, yet a very great deal of what Plato said; but hardly anyone can understand some modern books on Platonism. It has always therefore been one of my main endeavours as a teacher to persuade the young that firsthand knowledge is not only more worth acquiring than secondhand knowledge, but is usually much easier and more delightful to acquire.
This mistaken preference for the modern books and this shyness of the old ones is nowhere more rampant than in theology. Wherever you find a little study circle of Christian laity you can be almost certain that they are studying not St. Luke or St. Paul or St. Augustine or Thomas Aquinas or Hooker or Butler, but M. Berdyaev or M. Maritain or M. Niebuhr or Miss Sayers or even myself." [Cited today from http://www.spurgeon.org/~phil/history/ath-inc.htm#ch_0 ]
Great Book, So-so TranslationReview Date: 2006-10-09


Essential reference, with only slight problems.Review Date: 2008-03-29
The book for the World War IIReview Date: 2008-02-12
Correction to "page count" comment in earlier reviewReview Date: 2007-04-23
However, the new edition is also a bit easier to read despite the smaller size, because the new edition uses a glossy paper and the text seems more sharply defined on the page. This is particularly noticeable in the text of the maps, which I have struggled to read in the first edition, but seem clearer in the new edition.
As an aside, I agree with the general view that this is the single best reference book on World War II. I can't really tell what is changed in the new edition, although it may just be minor corrections, since the several longer articles I have compared seem identical.
The Facts about WWII without the SpinReview Date: 2006-06-26
A Cautionary NoteReview Date: 2006-09-10
In the case of The Oxford Companion to Music, there was a beautiful, lavishly illustrated edition of 2,017 pages of 1983; it was replaced by a revised edition in 2002 that had 1,434 pages---a whopping loss of almost 600 pages of material. In this case I know what I'm talking about, because I have both editions: the 2002 edition represents a substantial abridgement and cheapening of the 1986 edition; I doubt that anyone who had the chance to compare the two would choose the newer edition.
I don't know if the same thing is going on with this Oxford Companion to World War Two (I don't have the new edition at hand to compare the two), but the loss of 23% of the material in the first edition, and my experience with The Oxford Companion to Music described above, would incline me to approach the new edition with caution.


The Wonderful Art of Patrick DemarchelierReview Date: 2002-12-13
Extremely Good PhotographyReview Date: 2002-02-05
Beautiful Display of photographyReview Date: 2001-07-20
BeautifulReview Date: 2000-06-23
Superb Portraits!Review Date: 2001-03-14
Before going further, let me observe that the book contains much female nudity that would earn an "R" rating if this were a motion picture.
Glenn O'Brien in the book's introduction captures the essence of the book well, "The beauty standard is being raised once again."
Whether the subjects are beautiful (and many are) or not, the result is the same -- a deep look into the personality and character of the model done in large, vivid detail in wonderfully contrasting duotone. One of the best tests for this book is to compare the celebrity images you see here with others you have seen of these same people. These images are more warm, more revealing, and more fun to see. Mr. Demarchelier has a light touch that gets out the happiest version of a person. You'll find yourself laughing and smiling your way through this collection, for sure.
The portraits displayed here are uniformly of very high quality, and provide nice contrasts of subjects (nose rings, boulders, children, and elephants among the beautiful people).
Here are some of my many favorites:
Nude, St. Barthelemy, 1994
Nude, St. Barthelemy, 1989
Her Royal Highness, The Princess of Wales, London, 1993
Warren Beatty, Annette Bening and their daughter, Los Angeles, 1994
Versailles gardens, Versailles, France, 1994
Gianni Versace, Paris, 1992
Nude, New York, 1995
Corbassiere, Paris, 1994
Helena Christensen, New York, 1992 (second image)
Cindy Crawford, Leh, India, 1989
Jasper Johns and Leo Castelli, New York, 1993
Roy Lichtenstein, New York, 1993
Naomi Campbell, New York, 1990
Isabella Rosselini, New York, 1994
Robin Williams (4), New York, 1990
Robert De Niro, New York, 1990
Sisters, St. Barthelemy, 1991
Christy Turlington, New York, 1990
Alice Dodd, New York, 1994
Natasha Kinski, New York, 1993
Warren Beatty from "Dick Tracy," Los Angeles, 1989
Elton John, Paris, 1992
Janet Jackson, Miami, Florida, 1993
Arthur Demarchelier, New York, 1991
Patrick and Mia Demarchelier and their three sons, New York, 1987
Meg Ryan, New York, 1994
Claudia Schiffer, St. Barthelemy, 1991
Paul Newman, Beacon, New York, 1994
Elle Macpherson, New York, 1990
Cindy Crawford, New York, 1990
After you look closely at these images, notice how lines and flaws provide balance and perspective in the same way that perfect figures provide proportion. How can you create more waves of enjoyable symmetry?
Drink deeply from the bubbling joy of humanity!

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Turning PointReview Date: 2008-07-06
Werner Heisenberg is one of the most important figures within the world of quantum mechanics. Since Max Planck discovered that electromagnetic energy could be emmited in quantized forms a series of new discoveries revolutionised the world of physics. Albert Einstein confirmed Plancks's discoveries and theorized that light was composed of discrete quanta. This discovery was just too strange. How can light behave as a wave and as a particle. You can see the double slit experiment and observe how light behave when one slit is open and when the two slits are open, just amazing.So it seems that dualistic thought can not be applied here. Is light particle or wave, the answer: BOTH!As Heisenberg says in the book: "that what we observe is not nature in itself but nature exposed to our method of questioning". Thus observer and observed are in some way connected and not separated as in cartesian-newtonian world.In the introduction is written clearly: "...the act of of measurement defines the thing being measured, or that the thing being measured and the thimg doing the measuring are inextricably interwined"
This is why there have been some analogies between this new physics and eastern traditions (like Fritjof Capra's Tao of Physics)like buddhism and the Indian philosopher Nagarjuna, founder of the Madhamyaka school that developed the concept of emptyness, that is, all phenomenon had no "self-nature" "or idependent origins", there is no such thing as Parmenide's Being.All is interconnected,like Indra's jewels in Hinduism there is no gap between the observer and the observed in the world of quantum physics. Quantum mechanics is more familiar with Heraclitus where Change is the main principle, Becoming and not Being.Particles are not "things" but are like Aristotle's potentia. Heisenberg tell us: "A quantum object, in itself, is neither one thing not the other. If you decide to measure a wave-like property, the thing you are observing will look like a wave. Measure a particle property (position or velocity), on the other hand, and you will see particle-like behaviour." Note that Heisenberg that one can measure position OR velocity, this is the pillar of the uncertainty principle. In Heisenberg's words: 2The better you measure the position of a particle, the less you can find out its velocity, and vice versa."
Thus, the first years of the 1920s was a turning point in the world of physics. The Copenhagen Interpretation established the principles of quantum mechanics, some of this are: The uncertainty principle, the Complementary Principle (wave-particle duality of light) and that the description of nature is probabilistic.
Now you can have a little clue about the book subtitle: "The revolution in modern science". Newtonian mechanics can' t be applied to the subatomic world.Thus, the view of nature as a Big, impersonal Machine and that it was a matter of time that "all mighty rational humanity" was to discover all its laws is far from true. Even Einstein was not happy with this group of physicians that were saying "there is no such thing called objectivity" "newtonian laws are like a fish in the desert". Einstein after the theory of special and general relativity spent much of his time lookink for a Theory of Everything (TOE), and in some isolated himself from this great discoveries being made in the field of quantum mechanics.
Today there is this String Theory or M Theory wandering arround, and could be the best candidate that will unify the 4 forces: Gravity, electromagnetism, strong and weak interaction. Time will tell...
About the book:
Heisenberg explains the developmet pf pshysics reviewing Thales, Anaximander, Anaximenes (the three Milesians)Heraclitus, Parmenides, Empedocles, Anaxagoras, Democritus, Leucippus, then a quntum leap to Descartes and Kant.
He explains relativity, space, time, the Copenhagen Interpretation, the limits of language to describe the quantum world, the role of scientists, his Nobel Lecture and much more.
I think it is not a difficult book, but don't expect to understand quantum mechanics, because if you do, you really didn't understand a thing about it. So forget about binary-aristotelic logic and start developing fuzzy logics to understand a lot of weird things.
Just get it...Review Date: 2008-05-07
a physicist with philosophical depthReview Date: 2008-02-21
From one observer to anotherReview Date: 2007-12-29
Truly BrilliantReview Date: 2007-11-18

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excellentReview Date: 2008-04-07
great reference materialReview Date: 2008-03-26
Great Veterinary Medication ReferenceReview Date: 2007-11-17
love itReview Date: 2007-09-27
Excellent Resource!Review Date: 2007-03-21
A "must have" resource for any serious breeder!


Sheer Genius, and a Rollicking Good TimeReview Date: 2008-02-26
Pride of Chanur starts with an unforgettable image--a mostly naked fugitive human writing numbers on a spaceship deck in his own blood to prove his sentience to the startled alien who has just slashed him with her claws in self-defense. From there it rolls along into an intelligent, funny, and utterly satisfying adventure. Cherryh achieves an amazing feat in telling the story entirely through alien eyes, yet still giving us completely satisfying, believable, and likable protagonists. She vividly depicts four entirely distinct and fully realized oxy-breathing species, each complete with distinct patterns of thought, traditions, and psychology, plus several other more mysterious methane-breathing species, in all their complex and troublesome interactions, plus humans (well, mostly just one) thrown precipitously into the mix. The human is the alien in this story, and we hear his perspective only through the often garbled and always incomplete computer translator, an approach which is unusually realistic (unlike so much SF where translation always works perfectly, instantly) and always leaves you curious to know more. The reversal of perspective is so convincing and complete that you'll find yourself looking at your own species' psychology as the strange one.
Plus there's the fascinating reverse-sexism of the hani, the main alien culture, which essentially follows the structure of a sentient lion pride: men are considered too volatile and unstable for everyday business, thus are kept secluded except during dynastic battles; the sensible, pragmatic females take care of commerce, law, alliances, and space-faring. (In the sequels, these beliefs get confronted and deconstructed in interesting ways.) The quintessentially feline temperament and mannerisms of the hani--vain, swaggering, hot-tempered, affectionate, physical, fierce, loyal--are convincing and irresistible, especially if you're a cat person anyway! And be warned, the pidgin and idiom the characters use for inter-species communication will completely infect your brain.
Dive right into this satisfying yarn, and know that in the next three books a far, far wilder, bigger, and more complex story will unfold...nail-biting action intertwined flawlessly with deep psychological and cultural insight, tangled intrigue, agonizing moral dilemmas, and extraordinary character transformations. Enjoy the ride!
Gods rot the kif! (. . . and stop laying your ears back like that)Review Date: 2007-01-14
Fun, fast-paced--really cool.Review Date: 2002-05-06
This is another one of Cherryh's first-contact type novels, and I think it's the thing she does best, really. It involves a lone human somehow lost in alien space who manages to sneak abord a Hani merchant ship, and how his presence upsets the delicate balance of power there. It's serious without being too oppressive, and it is without question the best of the series. I've read the other three, and really you can take those or leave them--the book is complete enough in itself. (With the others, I kind of feel myself playing the Star Trek 5/Aliens 3 game--if I didn't like it, it didn't happen. Trek 5? Nope. Went from 4 straight to 6....)
I highly reccommend this book. It's typical Cherryh, in that you'll have to wait for your gratification until the very very end--but then, it's always worth it.
Deep Space Wild Cats & Lost Humans United by Fate.Review Date: 2005-06-06
Ms. Cherryh creates, once more, an astounding backdrop Cosmos full of intricacies, depicting the other end of the universe shown in "Cyteen".
Here she elaborates The Compact's Media where many alien races compete, trade and fight. There are oxygen breathers and methane breathers; big cat-like people and gray somber entities; aggressive races and peaceful ones; some species are deceitful and others are straight forward.
Just to make things more complex a Human show up demanding asylum from the Hani (Chanur's kind) and giving way to a feud between Hani & Kif (the bad guys of the story).
One astounding feature of the book is that the main character is Captain Pyanfar Chanur and her ethnocentric point of view is THE point of perception. All other races (including human) are strange and requires all her imagination to figure up what kind of entities they are. Are they friendly? Stable? Trustworthy? All these and many more questions she has to answer in order to survive.
The other bewildering aspect is that Hani kind is conducted by their females. Ladies are in charge of commerce, space travel, politics and any other significant activity (even war). Males are the Lords, pampered by females, sporting and hunting. Only one by Clan, he may be defied by other males (his own exiled sons are suitable) to singular combat and the winner takes all.
The novel has the typical Space Opera structure, enriched by new elements as character's depth and culture's coherence.
It is a very good sci-fi novel that will be enjoyed by fans & general public!
Reviewed by Max Yofre.
Excellent Stand-Alone Start to "The Chanur Saga"Review Date: 2003-09-11


We love this book!Review Date: 2007-10-19
A Story Every Child Needs to ReadReview Date: 2007-08-03
Children today have so many issues with their appearance, body image, self-esteem and the list goes on. This story touches on each of these areas and children can easily identify with Princess Briana as she experiences these "growing pains" and realizes that she is beautiful just the way she is!
I applaud Yaba Baker on an amazingly written story! The art work is incredible! I just didn't want the story to end!
Every parent, teacher, and child should have this book on their shelf TODAY!
Beautiful book about self-esteem!Review Date: 2007-12-12
Princess BrianaReview Date: 2006-03-05
Beautiful, Affirming BookReview Date: 2007-03-17
The girls, many of whom attend predominantly white schools, could see themselves in what Princess Briana was going through. They talked about what it felt like to be one of the few girls of color. They cheered at the story's triumphant ending. After discussing the themes, they decorated foam crowns and wrote about the quality they love best about themselves.
We celebrated the lesson of the story in a princess parade. The girls strutted their stuff for their moms and then one by one shared their poems. It was beautiful to see them talk about the beauty of their brown skin, richness of their heritage and keenness of their minds. It was one of our best meetings yet.
Princess Briana is a special story. In a world that still struggles to embrace diverse standards of beauty, this book is like balm to the soul.
Collectible price: $11.00

Best all around book for food preservationReview Date: 2008-07-17
Very complete bookReview Date: 2008-07-08
I found it very helpful, but a little intimidating. They emphasize safety, and they definitely should, but almost to the point of scaring you to death! I think sometimes the completeness makes the whole process seem much harder than it really is.
I've made two batches of jam so far, and all went well.
All in all the book is great, but I'd also read through the Ball books, as they make the process seem easier.
The bible of Canning and FreezingReview Date: 2008-04-19
All You'll Ever NeedReview Date: 2007-11-02
Putting Food By (Plume)Review Date: 2007-01-13
You cannot find these type of books in the Midwest.
This was a gift to my friend that lived in the midwest but has now located to Arizona that is fortunate enough to have these beautiful trees!
The rest of the book is excellent and comparable to what I already have, but this has figs! Thank you Thank you Thank you!!!!

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Victoria's family albumReview Date: 2008-06-12
Excellent resource for Victoria fansReview Date: 2007-05-17
I have perused through this book many times, and have recently given one to a friend, who absolutely loved it. This is not a history book that will just sit on a shelf. It is a required addition to anyone interested in the history of Queen Victoria and the Eurpoean monarchies.
Loved it!Review Date: 2004-03-18
Great bookReview Date: 2002-10-01
What a photo collection!Review Date: 2003-12-13
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KudosReview Date: 2007-01-20
From Mid-90's until today these poems create new ImagesReview Date: 2005-10-28
After contributing my early copy to the Prison Library, I never thought I would need see that familar print again: But...I Did!
Editors, Robert Bly, James Hillman, and Michael Meade combined a short Introduction, preceeded by these poignant thoughts from William Butler Yeats: "Those masterful images because complete/ Grew in pure mind, but out of what began? ...Old kettles, old bottles... Old iron, old bones, old rags...I must lie down where all the ladders start, In the foul rag-and-bone shop of the heart."
If being reminded in twelve selections of William Butler Yeats, added to dozens of Robert Bly, Robert Frost, Emily Dickinson, E. E.Cummings, Langston Hughes, John Keats, Stanley Kunitz, Dylan Thomas, William Blake, Walt Whitman, 500 pages of familiar and new poems, surely is sufficient then check out groupings under a few orderly headings: "Father's Prayers for Sons and Daughters; WAR; I Know the Earth and I Am Sad; The House of Fathers and Titans; Making A Hole In Denial; Zaniness!" Completely fitting these six most unque titles are combined with ten more, equally imaginative and descriptive!
From the perspective of a Poetry Addict, into being a creator of my own poems, not yet note-worthy, I am back in "Poetry Heaven," with this second memorable discovery of rich word treasures! Sing-cerely from a retired Singer and Chaplain Fred W Hood
treasures untoldReview Date: 2004-02-29
poets featured are not so well-known over here) to, among many others, Balaban, Nowlen and the wonderful Robert Haydon - his poem about his father is heartbreaking, a perfect poem.
Bly is a hero. I`ve long loved his poetry and his approach to the art. Here, with his compadres, he has given us a cornucopia of living, fire-breathing verse to live, love and get lost in for ever.
`Volume Two?`
Disregard the "canned" editorial on this anthologyReview Date: 2004-11-13
This anthology celebrates a new masculinity. One that is grounded in compassion, awareness, and, ultimately, the most important aspects of our existence as men.
For instance, one of the most important poems in the collection is Goethe's "The Invisible King." Through Goethe's genius we come to understand, as men, that if we deny the murmurs and whispering of our souls, we do so at grave peril to that which is most dear to us.
Buy it if you dare become something more than Madison Avenue made men in the 1980's and 1990's.
Good Medicine for the Male SoulReview Date: 2004-03-31
Simply, this is a wonderful anthology of poetry, organized thematically, for men. Many of the individual poems are brilliant, and the overall organization is intelligent and, at times, profound. As I have grappled with marriage, fatherhood, aging parents--all the trappings of midlife--this book has been a constant source of wisdom and comfort for me. Do a kind thing for yourself or for a thoughtful man in your life and buy this book.
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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