Pennsylvania Books
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Used price: $60.99

Well written portrait of the early Quakers.Review Date: 2001-02-01
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Fascinating, highly detailed, great pictures!Review Date: 2002-01-17
Collectible price: $15.00

Good bookReview Date: 1998-04-01


Garry Adelman's done it again!Review Date: 2000-08-04

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Collectible price: $89.95

Review of Living with Defined Contribution PensionsReview Date: 2000-02-03
Individuals serious about understanding the personal, corporate, and societal impacts of the shift toward defined contribution pensions should read Olivia Mitchell and Sylvester Schieber's Living with Defined Contribution Pensions: Remaking Responsibility for Retirement. The book is a compilation of the work of today's premier researchers on pensions. ...The articles in each part provide insight into many of the major issues ... along with a wealth of current data in support of the analysis. Examples include but are not limited to questions such as the following: What factors influence employees to contribute to plans? How financially literate are employees? Why do some employees spend, rather than roll over defined contribution pension amounts when they change jobs? What are the trends in defined contribution pension services? What policy options would spur more savings by employees? What is the future of the defined contribution revolution?
The book's major strength is its superb integration of corporate and personal financial planning, pension, and political issues. Understanding pension behaviors and trends requires a multidisciplinary approach. One particularly distinctive contribution of Mitchell and Schieber's editorial work is that the corporate issues have not been relegated to the background. Employer incentives are relevant to pension trends; to ignore business issues is to have a very incomplete picture. The articles in this book give the necessary attention to the nexus of corporate issues surrounding the core trend toward a shift to defined contribution plans both in the United States and abroad.
Don't expect to digest one of these articles in five minutes. This book is full of thought provoking, rigorous work aimed at those individuals with some background in economics and statistics. ...The incentives and policy implications are complex, and the analysis and discussion in this book reflect this challenge. But for those seriously interested in providing pension services, advising others about pensions, or understanding the trends for their own retirement needs, taking the time to read and comprehend the issues in Living with Defined Contributions Pensions: Remaking Responsibility for Retirement is definitely a worthwhile endeavor.

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Praise from a Penn studentReview Date: 2004-05-24
One nice thing about the guide -- one of the things I noticed when I was trying to figure out which guide to Philly to buy, is that this Lonely Planet book covers neighborhoods like South Philly, Manayunk and Northern Liberites clearly, in detail, and with maps. As far as I could tell, no other guide to Philadelphia does this. Instead, they mostly deal with Center City. So if you want something that thoroughly covers the city, this is it.
Used price: $84.97

GREAT plates! For a builder, or reinactor, a must!Review Date: 1997-08-24


Fiction Based on Reality from One Who KnowsReview Date: 2002-11-22
I also liked getting into the mind of the criminal. Although I found it very disturbing, this criminal was developed better than in many of the other detective novels I have read. You can see where Bartow has had experience in profiling the criminal mind.
While I won't give away the ending, it is extraordinarily satisfying. It makes you think about the adequacy of our justice system. Whether you like it or you don't, Pale Horse will surely get you thinking!

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Just plain moving and rewardingReview Date: 1999-02-15
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Reprint of a Rare 19th Century Indian Captivity CollectionReview Date: 2003-01-04
This work is replete with tales of white settlers and soliders who were captured by Indians during the late 18th and early 19th centuries on the trans-Allegheny frontier. Among the more than 25 accounts included here is that of the famous Col. James Smith and his more than 5 years captivity with the Wyandots in northeastern Ohio. This work also includes extensive accounts of Indian life, religion, foodways, hunting, warfare, and, of course, torture. It is understandable how this book became so popular, as it was written at a time when the danger from Indian raids along the frontier was still a viable threat, and it is easy to picture frontier families huddled together on a cold winter night around the fireplace, reading of tales of Indian depredations and scaping and torture, all the while listening for the faint echoes of the war whoop in the dark woods nearby.
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The book may be seen as controversial, as it seems sometimes to portray George Fox in a less than admirable light. However, it is careful not to lower itself to character assassination, and instead paints Fox (who some authors find hard to criticise) as an altogether human character.
My biggest problem with the book is that it seems to somewhat gloss over the specifics of James Naylor's rift with Fox, but perhaps this is because there are many other books which cover this aspect. However, I did find this to be a strange omission in an otherwise flawless study of the charismatic Quaker movement.
My final criticism is that this book ends too soon. I would have liked to read more about the Quaker movement in the final years of the 17th century, and how the movement came to terms with the state that had for so long repressed it. I guess I must hope for a sequel.
Despite the minor criticisms outlined above, I still highly recommend this book.