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

Clay
Learning to Sing
Published in Audio CD by Random House Audio (2004-11)
Author: Clay Aiken
List price: $21.95
New price: $9.99
Used price: $7.00

Average review score:

Inspirational
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-14
When I read this book I laughed, I cried, and reflected to my own experiences. Clay Aiken has so much wit and is a wonderful story teller.
I would recommend this book for anyone but especially kids that get picked on at school, as Clay was. His childhood was filled with pain but he chose to rise above it all. From his biological father to his step-father,
he had always gotten the short end of the stick and wondered what it would take to be loved. Wonderful, inspirational reading.

Revealing Story
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-14
I recently finished his book in just a few hours. Excellent! The book reveals his life as a child, facts about his biological dad and his step dad, and his lovely mother. Many chapters actually moved me to tears. This man is humble, extremely talented and gifted.
A definite Must Read! You will enjoy the trip down memory lane with Clay.

Incredible and Inspiring!
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-11
This book is truly a masterpiece! I read this book because I am a Clay Aiken fan, and I thought, 'Hey, a book by Clay Aiken, this should be cool.' I would recommend this book for anyone! Even if you aren't a fan of Clay, this is still an inspiring book. Let's just say: I laughed, I cried, it moved me!" I'm ordering the book and the audio cds. This is one of those books that you read front to back, then open it right back up and read it again!

I admire him sooo much
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-18
Clay Aiken is one of the few celebrities I look up to. He has devoted fans because people see him as a friend or a brother. He is a very kind, humorous, and generous man. I am glad I read this book.

A great book!
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-03
I don't really like to write reviews, but I couldn't resist this one. Let me just start by saying I wasn't a fan of Clay when he was on Idol. I guess I was a bit young to really appreciate his talent. Well I've rediscovered him and have become a HUGE FAN. I can call myself a claymate.

Anyway, this book is great. I finished it in a day. I couldn't put the book down, not even for a minute. From the very beginning Clay opened himself up and showed that he's vulnerable. He says that he wants people to realize what you see is what you get when it pertains to him. You can't help but cry when things are rough, and smile when he sees the light at the end of the tunnel.

This may be a spoiler, but one of the many things that really stood out for me was when he was talking about his stepdad. When his stepdad died, you can tell at that time, Clay felt incomplete, not knowing whether he was loved by him or not. Then he remembered a story his mom told him; his mom said, a friend of his dad had visited him and he was talking about his brother Brett and how he knew he would turn out to be a great man. Then his stepdad said, "my other son is going to be a famous singer one day because he has the most beautiful voice."

That part of the book really touched me bc I felt like he got his closure and he knows his stepdad really loved him.

Anyway, I don't mean to go on and on, but this is a great book and is a page turner. You can't help but love Clay more and I'm sure people who read this book can relate to him in so many levels.

Clay
The Johnstown Flood (Unabridged)
Published in Audio Download by audible.com ()
Author: David McCullough
List price: $34.95
New price: $18.35

Average review score:

A perfect Father's Day gift
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-10
This was a Father's Day gift that he really enjoyed. McCullough's 1776 was great, and this seemed to be just as good, even though written a number of years ago & given a new cover.

Vivid, thrilling and sad... what a great book!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-13
I've lived in Pennsylvania all of my life but I never knew too much about the Johnstown flood. Now that I've read McCullough's book, I'm hooked on the story and I'm getting to the flood museum as soon as I can.

This is an incredible story set in another time, yet I couldn't help be reminded what Katrina did to the New Orleans area and how similar these stories are. Man, in all of his wisdom, relies on those around him to ensure that their great works are safely monitored. The Johnstown flood provides historical proof that we shouldn't be quite so trusting.

Great Book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-08
I love ordering stuff off Amazon. It is so easy and affordable. I'm in the middle of this book right now but so far so good. Lots of great history.

Another great McCullough story
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-21
David McCullough tells a compelling story of this tragic event. As always, he does a thorough job and gets behind just the basics of the story he is telling. It is a wonderful presentation of history.

First person perspecitve on history
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-10
This early McCullough book provides a look at one of the most catastrophic disasters to strike America. The Johnstown Flood destroyed more than 2500 lives and changed the landscape of western Pennsylvania. It moved the nation towards relief efforts and spurred a country to act on behalf of their common man. As always the author captures the people and the time in stunning clarity and really puts the reader there giving them a first person perspective on what happened to the people. After living in Pennsylvania for more than six years I found that few people really knew about the flood but this book does an excellent job of filling the blanks. If you want to see a trying story told in wonderful detail this is the place to start.

Clay
Unsung Valor: A GI's Story of World War II
Published in Hardcover by University Press of Mississippi (2000-03)
Author: A. Cleveland Harrison
List price: $28.00
New price: $43.35
Used price: $4.90

Average review score:

The book I've always wanted to read!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-17
This is the book I've always wanted to read! I had just turned 6 when Pearl Harbor was bombed and my uncle and most of the other men in our family and neighborhood disappeared to that thing called "WAR"! I prayed for all of them and wondered, "Where did they go, what happened to them, what was it like?" My uncle was captured in the Battle of the Bulge, spent time in a German prison camp and came home very different - now I know and understand better why! Reading Prof. Harrison's book I finally know what happened to the young men who were suddenly jerked from their families, schools, futures, through no fault or desire of their own, and were trained and sent to see and do things they could not have previously imagined. They were pushed to and beyond limits they did not know they had, degraded, treated like cattle at times by our own army, and thus molded into a great and loyal fighting unit.

How any of our men experienced this and stayed sane, that they were able to return home to slip back into the lives they had expected, is incredible. I have read every book I find on World War II and studied military history in college trying to understand and know what happened, what war is REALLY like for our men. I've always known it wasn't what we saw on the movie screen. Now I know. Thanks to Prof. Harrison's detail and honesty, it is possible to get a sense of what it was like for the draftee. UNSUNG VALOR is very properly named - to go when called, to perform with the best of your abilities, to respond to the unknown and unbelievable with fear and courage, that is valor at its best - and it was unsung.

To survive, to return home, to teach hundreds of teenagers to speak properly in public, to act and produce plays, to put up with all the campus nonsense that young people in their late teens and early twenties produce, and to never lose your cool, never tell them what he saw and experienced at their age - that was also UNSUNG VALOR! A. Cleveland Harrison is an unusual man and has written a book that should be required reading of all Americans!

Excellent Personal Memoir Of Solider.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-30
"Unsung Valor" by A. Cleveland Harrison. Subtitled: "A GI's Story Of World War II". University Press of Mississippi, Jackson. 2000.

This is a very complete and detailed book, tracing the experiences of a skinny Southern boy, (in 1943), drafted into the United States Army, deciding on the Army Specialized Training Program (ASTP), trained at the University of Mississippi, transferred into a regular Army unit (the 94th Division) and then sent to the European Theater of Operations, ETO, just when things were becoming really hot. General George Marshall had shut down the Army Specialized Training Program so as to supply warm bodies as replacements for all the causalities in the ETO. The author, A. Cleveland Harrison, recounts being wounded (88 artillery fire,) as his Division advanced on the town of Orscholz, his treatment, infection, his stint in hospital and, finally, his recovery. Then, he remained in England until his reassignment, April 1945, to the hostilities in Europe. Happily, the war in Europe ended in May 1945, and the author became a "Clerk-Typist" in Versailles, France and later, a "Mail Clerk-Draftsman" in Frankfurt am Main.

If you have had the opportunity to study the history of World War II, you probably have been exposed to the grand strategies of different battles, the movement of this numbered unit on one side against another number on the other side. You might even have become impatient with the stories of how one American general (or two) could not get along with a certain British field marshal, and begin to wonder how many people were killed by the egoistical personalities of such high ranking individuals. So, this present work, by A. Cleveland Harrison, is a refreshing relief in its detailed examination of the feelings and daily experiences of an ordinary Americana solider in the ETO

I became the fiftieth reviewer of this book because of the correspondence form Dr. Harrison prodding me to add his book to my Amazon Listmania list on the Army Specialized Training Program, ASTP. The first two chapters of Dr. Harrison's book deal extensively with the Army Specialized Training Program. certainly merit a place on any list on the ASTP. Thos chapters speak about an ASTP experience at a Southern university, which, from what I read, quite different than the ASTP experience at Manhattan College, my alma mater. I do not believe that an ASTPer at Manhattan College had to be concerned with how to wear a saber without getting the weapon caught between his legs. On the other hand, the Manhattan College ASTPer had to be concerned with living in an apartment on 7th Avenue.

I am happy to join some 45 other Amazon reviewers in assigning five stars to this book.

An extraordinary book
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-11
Unsung Valor is truly an extraordinary book. I am 44 years old and have studied World War II rather extensively in the past. However, this book has revealed this war (and all wars) to me in a way that is completely surprising and unique. I now have a different frame of reference for studying all wars, especially World War II. For someone like me who has never served in the military, this book provides an invaluable insight to truly understanding the realities of war. The common, mundane, everyday details, which are made so interesting, provide a setting which only heightens the intensity of the actual battle scenes in an unusually enriching and exciting way. This book reads so easily you literally feel as if you are going through the experiences with Dr. Harrison. Unsung Valor brings the reality of war to the reader in a unique way and succeeds where most other narrowly focused books fail. Dr. Harrison should be commended for educating a younger public on the extraordinary sacrifices made by ordinary men who answered when their nation called. It is well worth the read and the time invested.

One Soldier's Story
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-20
After posting a message on the 94th Infantry Division's website looking for information on the attack on Orsholz, Germany January 20-21, 1945 I was contacted by Cleveland Harrison. Mr. Harrison put me in contact with other members of the 301st Regiment of the 94th Division who were with a family friend when he was captured outside of Orsholz. Mr. Harrison mentioned his book and suggested it might provide more detail about the battle. After reading his book I was amazed at the clarity and detail of his recollections. I have corresponded several times with Mr. Harrison, and he was gracious enough to sign my copy of his book with a dedication to my friend. His story is wonderfully expressed as the memories and journey of one man in a time of fear and uncertainty. It is written in a way that will touch the average person, and make them understand, if only for a moment, what it was like to see the world through his eyes.
To all the 94th Division veterans, and to you Cleveland, thank you for your service.
Welcome Home.

Brother-In-Arms
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-10
Upon reading Unsung valor I discovered that Cleveland Harrison and I had been inducted into the army the same day at Little Rock, Arkansas,we went through the same sweltering day of probings,punchings,bendings,spreadings, and at last were sworn into the Army of the United States.our serial numbers were just a few numbers apart,yet I never met Professor Harrison. Upon reading Unsung valor this fall I was immediately taken back in time to 1943, and to the years following throughout WWII of which our president Franklin Roosevelt said" This is the generation which has a rendezvous with destiny"I relived that traumatic,hectic day of gathering together the eighteen year olds of our state predominately ,recent high school graduates ,to perform the miracle of making us into soldiers and sailors to free a world in chains. That group of newly inducted soldiers went to all parts of the globe.Prof. Harrison went as a rifleman;I went into the Army Air Corp as an aerial gunner with the Eighth Air force and was shot down over Germany and spent the last months of the war as a P.O.W..Our generation kept that rendezvous and fully met the responsibility placed upon our young shoulders to the satisfaction of a grateful nation and world. Professor Harrison's book tells about all this through the eyes and heart of a young Arkansas lad who as we said in those day "took up arms as a boy,became a man overnight,and a hero in a twinkling of an eye,some to come home,some to remain. Since reading Unsung Valor I have met Cleveland Harrison via E-mail and have discovered that we have much in common. it took took 63 years and one most touching,moving literary epic to do this.For Professor Harrison's time,effort,and no doubt many shed tears,I am truly thankful to him. Hand Salute <><

Clay
Making Polymer Clay Beads: Step-by-Step Techniques for Creating Beautiful Ornamental Beads
Published in Paperback by Interweave Press (2007-04-01)
Author: Carol Blackburn
List price: $24.95
New price: $15.29
Used price: $16.26

Average review score:

THE best book for polymer clay techniques!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-27
I have 3 books that I've purchased on polymer clay bead-making and this is the best one. Lots of easy-to-follow techniques and ideas for the serious bead-maker. I go back to this book time and time again for inspiration. Before you venture into using polymer clay for your jewellery, you must get this book first!

Great projects!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-24
This is a very insightful book on the real how-to's of polymer clay. She has given me endless hours of inspiration and I have still more to do! Give us more of her stuff!!

EXCELLENT accumulation of techniques and tutorials!!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-20
I saw this book in my PC beginner class, and once opened, I knew I HAD to have this. It's clear, simple directions for MANY techniques are easy to follow and create what you envision THE FIRST TIME. It has such a variety of techniques listed that it should be the basic curriculum for any beginner class. I don't think that those experienced in the craft would be a thrilled as I was, but it has SO many faux techniques so detailed with excellent photos, I think anyone would find this valuable. The creations are also excellent inspiration for variation and construction of jewelry. Definate Keeper!

Worth the price
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-15
I own several polymer clay books and have waited months for the release of this book. I was not disappointed in any way. There are detailed instructions and clear photos for many techniques of bead making that I have not seen in other books. Although the gallery of works is fairly small, each instruction page contains finished projects that are fine examples of the craft.

This is probably not a true beginners book, but anyone who owns other polymer clay books should have enough basic skills to enjoy this book and be able to accomplish the interesting projects shown here. I would recommend this book highly.

Gorgeous beads
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-29
This is a wonderful book to give to both beaders and polymer clay artists/crafters. I gave it to my mom for Christmas, but I really wanted to keep it for myself. Since she already has a good library of polymer clay books, I wanted to find one that had something new and distinctive to show to clay artists, and this book definitely fits the bill.

Clay
The Polymer Clay Techniques Book
Published in Paperback by North Light Books (1999-10-15)
Author: Sue Heaser
List price: $22.99
New price: $6.99
Used price: $4.99

Average review score:

most inclusive book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-18
I have a few books on polymer clay but this book teaches everything from simple beads to how to make figures. I wish this was the first book I bought . Very inspiring

A Helping Hand
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-29
This book is an excellent reference for the beginner in polymer modeling. Just keep it at hand, you'll find in it all the help you'll need!

very happy with this book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-22
highly recommended. For every beginner this is a very good choice, it covers ALL of the basics.

GREAT BOOK FOR BEGINNERS
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-20
The book is wonderful for a beginner. It tells you the tools you need, talks about how to make beads, miniture furniture and many other projects. It is a very basic book that hits on pretty much everything to help you make beads.

All 'Round Book for Beginners
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-03
This book has more information in it than any book I've found so far on Polymer Clay.

There is enough information on the basics to get a beginner started. How to handle clay, storage, baking, and differences in products.

There is such a variety of techniques and projects that you're sure to find some you're not interested in as well as a LOT that you love.

Most of the other books I've found on Polymer clay specialize on specific uses. This one shows the range of things that are possible, and how to do them.

This will get a beginner started and give you ideas to get started in your own direction.

Clay
War songs: Metaphors in clay and poetry from the Vietnam experience
Published in Paperback by Lizard/Harp (1995)
Author: Grady Harp
List price:
New price: $12.00

Average review score:

Pain Up Close And Personal
Helpful Votes: 127 out of 134 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-04
`War makes you do such things/ as keeping an IV running on a dead body all night/ so his neighboring wounded buddy/ won't give up until he can be MedEvaced/ to a field hospital/ the next lonely morning.'-from poem number 12 by Grady Harp

There is no better way to describe Grady Harp's short but powerful poetry collection, enhanced by Stephen Freedman's evocative clay sculptures, than to quote the author himself. He states that `these poems represents one physician's survival kit in Vietnam.'

While death and destruction soared all around him, Dr. Harp, a dedicated healer of men, dealt with the antithesis of his calling with the sort of grieving that demanded from the mourner's heart the profound beauty of poetry to make some sense of it, or if not make sense of it, place the carnage he witnessed as a physician, in some sort of perspective.

Because of my lottery number back in 1969/1970 (352 I believe) I was not called to arms for the Vietnam War, but from then to now I have been touched by its senseless waste of braver men than me.

My often-arrogant attitude when I was young, rebellious, revolutionary, reactionary, and maybe too artsy-fartsy for my own good (not one of these things in and of itself was wrong or ignoble, well maybe the arrogance, which could have been as certifiably screwed up as our then war policy), presented me with an artificial viewpoint of that war.

I experienced the Vietnam War peripherally in real time and later re-imagined through Francis Ford Coppola's grand opera cinematique "Apocalypse Now," Michael Cimino's near cinema-verite "The Deer Hunter," and Oliver Stone's heart-wrenching melodrama "Platoon."

Still, as moving as those experiences were, nothing has quite moved me as much as Grady Harp's up-close-and-personal experience with pain so complex, yet so simple and unadorned and, ultimately, pure.

"War Songs" deserves, no, is obligated to be a perennial. What its poems say about war is as constant in our consciousness as thirteen-year-old Anne Frank's diary entries and Alex Haley's simple examination of his family's roots from African royalty to American slavery.

No, it's not easy to make sense of the evil some visit upon others. But may we ever be reminded. May the poet's voice ring through with simple, anguish-filled, agenda-free observations, so that we may learn from our pasts in an effort to better our future.

Hopefully, Doctor Harp will re-release "War Songs" so that we may all have a copy in our library for the ever-resonant poetry, and for the constant reminder that we are human beings.
Looker: A Novel

"the indescribable horror of war"
Helpful Votes: 147 out of 150 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-12
Grady Harp has written 20 poems about his experience as a physician in Vietnam-- a place that few Americans could have found on a map if their lives had depended on it before that awful ill-fated war that still haunts us. It appears that Harp wrote them with no thought of ever having them published. (We are grateful he did, however.) He says in an eloquent essay that he wrote the poems as a diary: "If I could arrange the day's events in poetic form, my attention could be focused on the poem, resolving form and verse while actual atrocities could be codified, then put away for now, allowing me to go on." Mr. Harp's collaborator is the potter Stephen Freedman who is photographed creating clay pieces that make a statement, as he says in his essay, in "the only language I know well enough to communicate emotion this close to the souls of all of us."

Accessible and short, the poems often start with a harmless enough image, soldiers having a beer, a comrade talking, a "happy laugh," and end with devastation and death. I have read these poems again and again. Two of them are seared in my brain: Number 16, about a favorite Vietnamese nurse who "wasted all her patients with a stolen M16" and Number 12 that shows so much compassion. Like all good poetry, it speaks for itself and is much better read than paraphrased.

War makes you do such things
as keeping an IV running on a dead body all night
so his neighboring wounded buddy
won't give up until he can be MedEvaced
to a field hospital
the next lonely morning.

I heard a lot of one-way conversations
at night
in Vietnam.

While these poems may have been written to keep one army physician sane, they speak to the universal: the awfulness of war, the suffering and dying of men just about to live and of course are as relevant in 2007, almost 40 years later, as the day they were written. They rise to the level of fine literature and deserve to be compared to the writing of Walt Whitman and Rupert Brooke, both of whose works I thought of when I read Mr. Harp's poems.

"Heartfelt"
Helpful Votes: 27 out of 88 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-04
I' ve heard about WAR SONGS and read so many of the reviews.
I felt in my heart I had to read the Poems for myself. It's so
touching just writing about it makes me sad. I was a teenager,
but I do remember hearing the news and the reporting about
Vietnam so many young American men were being killed. When
Mr. Harp brought his Poems, to Stephen Freedman to read,
he cried that's exactly what I did when I read them. You can't
help but feel the pain, he has written in the Poems. 2,4,5,11,
the Poems are very painful for me to read. Grady Harp and
Stephen Freeman did a superb job in the composition of the book.

I ordered two WAR SONGS one for me and one for a friend. I've
known over the years who lost her husband in Vietnam MIA,
all these years, she hasn't reach the point of closure. Her
husband never came home to have a proper burial.
I highly recommend WAR SONGS!

GENIUS!
Helpful Votes: 29 out of 58 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-23
Forget the naysayers! Harp is fantastic. This poor man is under constant attack. There are many people who are envious of his standing. Don't fall prey to their comments. He is a genius and should be honored as one!

This book helped me heal and understand my father better.
Helpful Votes: 78 out of 85 total.
Review Date: 2006-04-29
I just read a copy of this book, loaned from a friend.

I'm too emotional now to write a good review. I cried like a baby when I read it, but they were healing tears. My father passed away recently without my ever understanding the horror he had suffered in Viet Nam.

I wish I had had this book to share with him; then perhaps we could have talked. It might have helped him too.

I've tried to get a copy of this book for myself, but it's out of print and everyone who owns one must treasure it for himself.

Thanks Mr. Harp for your sensitive, healing book that helped me and so many others, I'm sure. Please try to bring this book out again.

Clay
Dragons (Beyond Projects: The CF Sculpture Series, Book 1)
Published in Paperback by Don't Eat Any Bugs Productions (2005-11-15)
Author: Christi Friesen
List price: $9.95
New price: $5.30
Used price: $6.33

Average review score:

Wonderful Dragon Book!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-19
I just recently decided to dabble in polymer clay. I bought a previous book on "how to" and techniques. Then I bought this book. This is not a book for someone who has never dealt with polymer clay. She gives ideas on how to make dragons. As for things on mixing clays, tools, etc you will need to find in another book. After I read the first book I bought, I then read this one. I started and finished my first dragon last night. I used Christi's directions from beginning to end and was extremely pleased on how my dragon turned out. I couldn't believe that I made it myself. Christi's book is very detailed and explains what you need to do step by step. She also adds some humor to it which makes it a lot of fun to read. I highly recommend this book.

Talent and humor, a great combination
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-05
Christie Freisen/s claying books are entertaining, informative but above all, she encourages you to explore your own creativity and it works. I love all of her books. They are an entertaining read and a great how to books, full of humor and other good stuffs. Keep up the good works Christie....... We clayers here in St Louis, MO love you.

For all dragon enthusiasts. Christ makes the cutest dragons ever!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-20
Such a fun book! Christi is highly entertaining. Her lovely personality comes shining through Loud and Clear!!! I have a great time pulling out these books and following along with her step by step. I am always very satisfied with the results. And usually I am not a step by step kinda person. I am more of the no rules/color outside of the lines kinda gal but, Christi makes it fun to follow along! I can't wait for the rest of the series. So far I've made a few frogs, a dragon, a sea-horse, and some flowers, vines and foliage.

I recommend the entire series. Even my young nieces and my mother-in-law creating projects from these books!

Fun and Inspiring
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-10
Wow, this book is fun from front to back. I have it on my work table open to a favorite page even if I am not working on "whimsical, small creatures of polymer clay" at the time. It has very good directions and clear colorful pictures. It is "user friendly" and I hope there will be more like it. I would like to have a collection of her books. KF

A Joy to Learn From!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-29
This is the 3rd book I bought of this artist and it was just as much of a joy to read and study as the other 2. Her writing and her instructions make it a real joy to read and study. She really makes learning fun. Isn't that what we would like everything to be?! Fun?
I wasn't a big fan of dragons until I bought this book. It just might change your mind too!

Clay
Basic Clinical Massage Therapy Real Bodywork DVD (Solo)
Published in CD-ROM by Lippincott Williams & Wilkins (2006-02-01)
Authors: James H Clay and David M Pounds
List price: $5.00

Average review score:

Basic Clinical Massage Therapy
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-03
This book is so beneficial as reference material. The images are unreal and so specific. At least four therapists I know have bought the book since flicking through my copy.

Wish this textbook was used in class.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-23
This is the most practical and informative book that teaches what you need to know and what is relevant...not filler material.

Best massage therapy book on the market
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-08
Why you should buy this book:
1. If you want to teach yourself massage.
2. If you massage school gave you a crappy Milady's massage book, or worse, their own hand written, poorly illustrated version.
3. If you really want to own a great massage therapy reference.

Why I think its so great:
The illustrations and visuals, give you everything you need to know to massage any area of the body. They have created a much more 3-d experience to learning massage from a book and translating that experience to a real body. ANYONE can learn from this book. Its an incredible resource. I don't know why every school doesn't use this book! If you are in school -- buy it!

I borrowed this from my library before purchasing it.
It is a must for an massage therapist, bodyworker, or closet healer!
Also great for National exam review.

Basic Clinical Massage Therapy: Integrating Anatomy and Treatment (Lww Massage Therapy & Bodywork Educational Series.)
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-15
can only say 'FABULOUS'!!! One of the most clearly illustrated, and easy to understand texts available, great for students and teachers alike!

Just Great
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-16
I have bought many books and DVD's on massage and anatomy and this is by far the best. It acomplishes what others often fail at and what all my teachers tried to instill in me, looking at a body in a 3 dimensional way. Did I mention the DVD? I was soo suprised that it actually showed everthing (well at least all the anatomy, palaptations, striping and crossfibering) thats in the book. I am very glad I bought this book and see using it again and again, unlike several DVD's and books I currently have.

Clay
Creating Life-Like Figures in Polymer Clay: A Step-By-Step Guide
Published in Paperback by Elvenwork Press (2003-11)
Author: Katherine Dewey
List price: $28.00
Used price: $159.89

Average review score:

Life Like
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-11
This book is just great for beginners and experienced sculptures alike. Very informative with step by step instructions including measurements and patterns. Inspires me to create and sculpt life like beautiful sculptures. Love the Book. "M"

Great condition!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-13
I received this book and have been using it ever since. This is an amazing book! The condition that I received it in was great, which is important, because its totally necessary to be able to view all of the details in the pictures. Thanks for the great and timely service!

Very well done.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-17
I find this book very helpful and full of interesting and wonderful pictures of works, as well as the process one goes through to make little clay beings come alive. Anyone interested in making clay dolls would be interested in the process, and this is extremely helpful in that regard.

life figures step-by-step
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-29
this is an amazing book, if you were afraid before to try life like figures before this book will get you going. there are step by step information for even the worse scary cat. this has to be one of the very best books on the market today. love it .

New edition on the way!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-01
This is a great book by a fabulous artist, but please don't shell out the ridiculously high prices certain sellers are asking for used copies. Instead, support the artist/author by waiting until May when Watson-Guptill releases the updated edition (ISBN-10: 0823015033).

Clay
Polymer Clay Creative Traditions: Techniques and Projects Inspired by the Fine and Decorative Arts
Published in Paperback by Watson-Guptill (2006-01-01)
Author: Judy Belcher
List price: $21.95
New price: $10.50
Used price: $7.95

Average review score:

Judy's the bomb!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-24
She knows all the ins and outs of using polymer clay. She can make it gorgeous and, with easy directions, she can show you how to as well. I have followed the signs and, in the end, unlike many others, my pieces look just as good as hers!! Miracle!

Very Helpful Book about making Pretty Polymer Clay Stuff!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-04
Very Helpful Book about making Pretty Polymer Clay Stuff! I really like this book alot. :0)

Expert presentation
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-13
At first I was not interested in "creative traditions". After a friend showed me a copy I decided this was a must have. The photography is excellent and step-by-step instructions are clear. I was surprised and pleased by how Judy Belcher's techniques could enhance my most contemporary work and with the wide variety of "traditions" she presents.

Polymer Clay Creative Traditions: Techniques and Projects Inspired by the Fine and Decorative Arts
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-02
This is the perfect and complete polymer clay book. Step by step are so clear and Judy Belcher is a talented and generous clay artist. Must buy.

Right Up There With the Best of Them!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-13
This is a wonderfully inspirational polymer clay book, with a fresh approach and new ideas. The photos, diagrams, and written instructions are detailed enough to actually be useful and the projects are enticing enough to make readers want to actually try them, rather than just view the pictures. This is a fine addition to my polymer clay library and a book I'll refer to often.


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