United States Books
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What's a matter with you. Not having a knowledge of the US Constitution????Review Date: 2008-08-02
US Constitution and Bill of RightsReview Date: 2008-07-12
constitutionReview Date: 2008-06-23
Small and Easy to UseReview Date: 2008-04-26
This is a great little book, but the binding doesn't hold up well.Review Date: 2008-01-24
The book is compact and students can easily carry it with them everywhere they go. This book is also very affordable.
There is a problem with this book's binding though. The book tends to come apart. The book's good for students, but since the Constitution is so important, I would give students a hardback when they graduate which they can have in their personal library for the rest of their lives.
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Buy a copy for the office, lend it to everyone.Review Date: 2008-09-16
Winning the Peace after Winning the WarReview Date: 2008-07-22
Also keep in mind that it's not enough to win a war. You also need to win the peace that follows. During World War I and for several years afterward there was a fierce debate over how to make a peace that would last. Pacifists thought the world would come to learn that wars don't pay, an idea so absurd no one mentions it today. Internationalists thought the League of Nations could keep the peace, even though it soon failed its first test, a war between Poland and Russia that immediately followed the war. Militarists, a group little seen immediately after such a bloody war, continued to insist on the importance of bigger and bigger battleships. Even Churchill, although he later regretted it, thought for a time that disarmament would work.
In retrospect, there was only a few who got it right and the one who got it right the best was a popular English writer, G. K. Chesterton. In 1932 he would warn that Germany was going to find itself a dictator and that the next war would break out over a border dispute between Germany and Poland, precisely what happened in 1939.
If you want to win a war, read this book. If you want to learn how one war can be used to prevent the next war, read Chesterton, who bluntly wrote in 1917 that, "Peace without victory is war without excuse." Chesterton also gave some of the most telling arguments against pacifism ever put into print, noting that: "the real point against the cause of Pacifism is that it is not a cause at all, but only a weakening of all causes. It does not announce any aim; it only announces that it will never use certain means in pursuing any aim. It does not define its goal; it only defines a stopping-place, beyond which nobody must go in the search for any goal."
--Michael W. Perry, Editor of Chesterton on War and Peace: Battling the Ideas and Movements that Led to Nazism and World War II
Warfighting on land, sea, air -- and businessReview Date: 2008-06-30
Absolutely Brilliant, Simple and ProfoundReview Date: 2007-04-18
If you aren't familiar with Clausewitz then I'd recommend picking up On Strategy by Summers; Warfighting will not give you all of the elements necessary to understand concepts like Friction.
This book travels with me wherever I go-- it is relevant to business and even personal development and is more than worth the price being charged for it.
A Fine Pamphlet, But Not a ManualReview Date: 2006-11-20
Additionally, those westerners who enjoy axioms focusing on the flux of life, war, or what have you might also like to take a look at Heraclitus' "Fragments." The basic tenets of Taoism that permeate Sun Tzu (and, by proxy, "Warfighting") can be equally well found in Heraclitus. His primary "thesis" if you will, "nothing is stationary, life is flux," is the axiom upon which maneuver warfare strategy is founded.

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Great message and to the pointReview Date: 2008-10-09
Great book!Review Date: 2008-07-02
Leadership SimplifiedReview Date: 2008-06-14
Leading with the HeartReview Date: 2008-04-21
Great bookReview Date: 2007-12-31


Penentrating BookReview Date: 2005-09-15
I highly recommend this book.
EnlighteningReview Date: 2003-04-07
I identified with the bookReview Date: 2003-04-02
I see no reason why the wisdom Brown inculcates wouldn't be useful to anyone as a coming-out guidebook. I would recommend it, especially to people just going through the coming-out process, regardless of their age.
Loved the bookReview Date: 2003-01-23
A delight.Review Date: 2002-12-29

Interesting and insightfulReview Date: 2007-09-13
I work as a prostitute because the client wants meReview Date: 2005-08-01
As the author says: 'There should be laws forbidding poverty, but no laws forbidding a woman to accept money from a man for her company.'
The numbers are staggering: alone in the US, there are approximatively 1300000 prostitutes.
A main theme in this book is hypocrisy.
Of the people arrested in the sex trade only 10 % are clients.
Sexual 'entertainment' is written off as a business expense.
Condoms are distributed freely to the military.
In the Philippines doctors blamed prostitutes for introducing AIDS into the country ... not the American servicemen.
This book is a worth-while documentary about an important aspect of human behaviour. It shows that human beings are not primarily rational.
Ms. French is a good person.Review Date: 2005-11-23
This book changed my life!Review Date: 2001-10-14
The best book on subject & educational one.Review Date: 2003-07-19

Perfect Christmas StoryReview Date: 2008-09-25
This is a surprisingly gritty story of wartime heartache, but it still managed to perfectly capture the Christmas spirit and the true meaning of the holidays. The prose is gentle and folksy, and the illustrations are to die for.
The Year of the Perfect Christmas Tree: An Appalachian StoryReview Date: 2008-08-13
The Year of the Perfect Christmas TreeReview Date: 2008-01-07
Christmas bookReview Date: 2008-01-02
From a veteran of Christmas picture books...Review Date: 2007-12-17

Alice in AprilReview Date: 2004-06-15
This insallment of the series is a little less chirpy, like past might have been. Gone are the silly 6th grade "what will I wear?!" chrisis that everyone can probably relate to. Now, it's about becoming woman of the house, and dealing with deeper problems. For example, Alice encounters a loner. She invites her to her dad's party and they start a bond. Well, just a few days later [I haven't read the book in 2+ years so forgive me!], the friend commits suicide, and in comes the feelings of "I could've done this...It's my fault".
A solid book for kids of most ages.
Frances's review for Alice in AprilReview Date: 2004-01-27
Funny and realReview Date: 2006-12-29
To make matters worse, the seventh-grade boys are naming the girls after various states...depending on the size of their chests! Alice lives in terror, uncertain which would be worse: getting dubbed the name of a flat state, or being overlooked altogether.
Readers will enjoy hearing about Alice, who is just an ordinary girl going through ordinary things, but in such a humorous and interesting way, they can't help wanting things to turn out okay...
A funny book about a troubled girlReview Date: 2005-10-21
Yet another great Alice book!Review Date: 2003-08-07

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American FreemasonsReview Date: 2008-03-15
A Pleasure to ReadReview Date: 2007-10-27
As mentioned by at least one other reviewer I did detect a slight bit of bias, but then again every author has some bias based upon experience and beliefs. However, the book provides so many references that I would have difficulty doubting the credibility. The book also provides beautiful illustrations that accent the points in the text.
My recommendation is to purchase the hardcover as this book is a beautiful bookshelf reference. Whether you are interested in the organization or just a history buff I highly recommend this work.
Excellent Work of American Masonic HistoryReview Date: 2007-09-24
Tabbert cover many Masonic topics including Freemasonry's influence on the Founding Fathers, the anti-Masonic hysteria that followed the Morgan scandal, Masonry during the Civil War, the Golden Age of Fraternalism in the late 19th Century, the founding of service organizations during the early 20th Century, Freemasonry's boom years following WWII, the state of Freemasonry today, the York and Scottish Rites, the Order of the Eastern Star, the Nobles of the Mystic Shrine, the youth orders, Prince Hall Freemasonry.
American Freemasons is a superb work that was written for both the Mason and non-Mason alike. It would be an excellent addition to your lodge library, your home library, and your public library. Would make a great gift for a new Mason or a prospective candidate. You will enjoy this book!
American Freemasons:Review Date: 2007-01-04
American Freemasons: Three Centuries of Building CommunitiesReview Date: 2007-01-04

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Behind the scenes at history's most expensive joyrideReview Date: 2008-07-14
They add, "Whether this was inevitable or an unlucky juxtaposition of Apollo with Vietnam and domestic upheaval will never be known." Or maybe the main reason was NASA's insistence on two phony images: one, squeaky clean (and boring) personalities for all hands; and, two, the no-sweat attitude to crises.
Had NASA told the stories Murray and Cox tell, the public would have been thrilled and appalled.
We have long known that the astronauts were not squeaky clean. Astro Walt Cunningham let that cat out of the bag in the mid-'70s in "The All-American Boys." In "Apollo" we learn that the engineers were humans, too. One is described as "Butch Cassidy born 100 years too late," which is probably overstating it, but you don't operate the most complicated mechanical system in history by being timid.
"Apollo" also reveals that the "no-sweat" attitude was false. There was plenty of sweating, although NASA's engineering culture required everyone to remain composed at all times.
The really terrible crises were known to the public, if poorly understood: the testing fire that killed three astronauts and the fuel system failure that nearly stranded Apollo 13 in orbit.
Other problems that were potentially just as serious were successfully covered up by NASA, a bad habit that cost it its reputation later on.
But the unraveling of the causes of these engineering dustups reads like a mystery novel, or, a closer comparison for those who have read it, the epidemiological reporting of Berton Rouche.
What, for example, would make a rocket lift two or three inches off the pad, then shut its engines off and settle back? The answer: A technician had filed a tiny bit off one prong of an electrical plug.
Anyway, the people who designed and built spaceships were emphatically not computer nerds -- once you understand what they were up to, scientists and engineers are always interesting. This is certainly the case with the launcher specialist Werner von Braun, a mass murderer.
Murray and Cox say, "no such charges were substantiated" against Hitler's rocket scientist. They are wrong.
Von Braun's V-weapons were built by 30,000 slaves at an underground factory camp called Dora. Thousands of these slaves were worked to death, starved or slaughtered. This factory was not run by Braun's team but it could not have functioned without the intimate advice of the rocket scientists. With complicity goes guilt.
A band of unknown guys accomplishes the impossible.Review Date: 2008-05-18
The HIGH POINT of AMERICAN CREATIVITYReview Date: 2008-04-20
A Book Every System Engineer Should ReadReview Date: 2007-09-08
Of course I am not in a position to state the correctness and completeness of the contents. I rely on other people's comments on these criteria. But accepting the contents as correct and complete, the book clearly describes how a huge R&D project can be run (or can not be run), from every point of view. It is the next best thing after participation in a such project.
I believe every engineer and technical administrator has many things to learn from the book.
I highly recommend the book. I do not know whether it is also used as a lecture aid in other academies. If it is not so, another recommendation the the lecturers: The book contains one of the best case studies.
Inner workings of humankind's greatest accomplishmentReview Date: 2007-11-23
After reading this book, I realized how much we have lost the memories of what is probably the most incredible achievement in humankind's history. Shockingly enough, most people think about Apollo about being a thing of the past, while it is in fact our future.
Reflecting back on the sad end of the Apollo program (the plug was simply pulled in the mid-70s without any kind of follow up), it is a shame that we have lost all these years. Just imagine if we would have persevered with more missions, the eventual setup of a moon base in the 80s, moon exploration of resources, etc... Who knows where we would be now in 2007 ? Perhaps on the verge of a Mars mission, or Jupiter ? We would have impressed new generations with the same sense of awe-inspiring achievements and exploration that Apollo did 40 years ago. These emotionally inspiring achievements are the ones that elevates humankind to new heights, and this is probably the strongest feeling I felt about Apollo after reading this book.

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Very good readingReview Date: 2008-06-23
A Very Difficult Book To Read But Essential!Review Date: 2007-02-15
A first rate history of an American tragedyReview Date: 2005-09-10
Very informativeReview Date: 2005-10-05
One word - outstanding.Review Date: 2006-01-29
Related Subjects: Alaska Arizona Arkansas California Colorado Connecticut Florida Idaho Illinois Indiana Iowa Kentucky Maryland Massachusetts Michigan Minnesota Missouri Nebraska New Hampshire New Jersey New York North Carolina Ohio Pennsylvania Tennessee Rhode Island Texas Washington Wisconsin Sout Carolina South Carolina
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Sigh!
Tom