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Poems that endureReview Date: 2004-04-14
On "Cricket Weather"Review Date: 2000-06-06

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Right on the mark! Where have you guys been?Review Date: 2002-01-19
The "Customer Delight Principle" is the first publication that has been bold enough to shoot a hole in past theory and validate true bottom-line, measurable, results. Completing the final lesson in the ultimate goal for a customer oriented operation.
Practicing customer satisfaction techniques in the past can be compared with buying into the Lexus marketing and going out and buying a vehicle without a test drive. Until you know the feel, smell, taste, touch of a principle, and then truly have tested the outcomes, you never know what you are getting into. This book takes you through the test drive, and truly delivers the missing link!
Buy it, read it, create an internal educational project to incorporate this theory into your practices with management. If you do, you'll get a leap on the competition (before they read it).
Sincerely,
Thomas Bell
Note: Thomas Bell is a respected educator having dedicated much of his career advising corporate marketing departments with companies such as Gannett, CitiGroup, RDI Marketing & Research, and BMI.
The Customer Delight PrincipleReview Date: 2001-12-06

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A fun and interesting mysteryReview Date: 2002-07-26
Dead of WinterReview Date: 2000-02-28
Bravo, Mr. Crossman for yet another fantastic book.


Jacket Blurbs plus moreReview Date: 2007-12-23
Tania Runyan's wise and elegant poems in Delicious Air accomplish small miracles: They alchemize the ordinary into the extraordinary. Whether Runyan is considering mortality, motherhood, the mysteries of the body and soul, or the power of love, her poems are awash with insight and grace--their truths always poignant and moving. Here is a poetic debut to celebrate, a new voice singing its gentle laments and hallelujahs, a poet who "cannot stop leaning over / the verge of possibility"
-- Maurya Simon
This is is my review:
Tania Runyan's Delicious Air is one of the most powerful and beautiful collections I have ever read. This book is a treasure.
-- Leah Maines
An Award WinnerReview Date: 2007-12-07
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Intermediate Learners Will EnjoyReview Date: 2007-08-03
The exercises in the book are excellent. They have you use sentences from the literature and dissect them in order to build grammar skills. There are also questions to answer about the reading that provoke the use of good sentence form. Der Weg zum Lesen provides a well-needed break from textbook learning, while still providing enough learning material to make it worth every penny.
There is only one slight problem. This book was written before the 1996 German spelling reform (Rechtschreibreform) and contains what would now be called spelling errors. This is very minor though, and won't get in the way of learning whatsoever.
Overall, this is a priceless resource for the intermediate German student who's ready to read German literature or strengthen their vocabulary and grammar.
great for English speakers learning GermanReview Date: 2000-03-28

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fuddy-duddy and philistine...?Review Date: 2003-11-27
Just because he wants to see less offensive material in art, Spalding is not therefore out to argue for something underhahdedly smarmy and specious, like the importance of art's being earnest or being accessible to "the people." Spalding is by and large impartial in his attitude toward what art used to be, did, and can still do. In other words, he accepts art's aristocratic alliance as a matter of historical fact. He also accepts the break with tradition that modern art had to accomplish in order to open new horizons. Spalding is neither a condescending snob nor a churlish champion of the hoi poloi, but he presents the situation of today's art as one that has no voice, and no language, to speak to anyone (high or low) but only to its deaf self and a handful of self-appointed members of the pointlessly esoteric priesthood.
Spalding has been around a while and has seen much of the making of modern art on both sides of the Atlantic and now tells the story of how, and when (1937) the eclipse of art in our time began so as to put us in total darkness today. But the story he tells is not all gloom and doom. He does not deny that there is great art in our time. But the main focus of his argument is that art has today become, for the most part, something akin to an abomination, and a very tedious and depressing one at that. "What is there to really get out of looking at a rotting cow head being eaten by a swarm of flies?" he asks rhetorically, referring to what the Tate Modern bought having declared it a significant work of art.
If Spalding seems the odd man out in the art establishment, he probably is. Spalding's stance is simply that of a thinking man who still believes that art's core values are tied to its ability to communicate something about that by which human beings are oriented and reoriented, if strangely, unto some plane of experience most of us feel is higher and more vibrantly life-affirming.
Spalding apparently lacks humor, patience, or artistic acumen, but he just cannot be convinced that human excrement packaged in tin cans is art. And perhaps that's where and how he stands apart from his colleagues at prestigious museums who think nothing of spending $20,000+ for such cans putatively filled with some artist's own excrement. (Not that they ever verified the content.)
His argument will have some people throwing eggs and tomatoes at him -- real or cyber -- for not appreciating the spirit of contemporary art. But Spalding presents a very cogent picture of why and how the eclipse -- or a series of eclipses in learning, language, content, and discipline -- came to be historically, and how that eclipse has come to benight art's original and engendering powers.
Spalding's vision of art is wide enough, I think, to encompass any medium and style of expression. What he is asking for in art is intelligence. Not cleverness, but intelligence, a show of reflection and care.
What he is arguing against is pseudo-intelligence, pseudo-spirituality, and contrived ideas about creativity. Spalding's argument is not against any particular artists' work but against the entire structure of Byzantine politics and machinations behind the tyranny of art world's decision-making process.
His plea is one that would have art itself "function" creatively, not just made in the name of anything-goes. Spalding's general definition of art by way of an attitude is that art is a compression, not just expression, of intelligence, love, observation, insight, reflection, care, and reconfiguration of vital human experience so as to deliver us ultimatley to that realm whose name is now considered taboo to mention: beauty and grace.
Spalding's brief analysis of the history of art education in Britain, of Marcel Duchamp's role in the (d)evolution of modern art, and of the reasons behind the rise of Jackson Pollack in the identity-desperate postwar US, and comparison of Pollack's work with that of Edward Hopper are very illuminating even as he tracks the eclipse of art.
In Romania a man who had committed suicide by hanging himself in the sculpture garden section of a public park was left hanging for nearly two years because everybody thought it was a "work of art." If you think you too might have walked past a dead man thinking it was art just because it was in a "art" park, then this is a book for you. Highly recommended.
A well articulated viewpoint on modern artReview Date: 2004-01-18

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Just the Thing for a Pleasant Summer ReadReview Date: 2008-07-06
People loved thisReview Date: 2007-12-10

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Beautiful ReadReview Date: 2005-04-27
englishteacher23Review Date: 2005-09-03

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A truly heart-felt workReview Date: 2006-10-10
Grumbach at her bestReview Date: 1999-05-27

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Beautiful!Review Date: 2003-06-20
Great book for the photographer visiting MaineReview Date: 2006-02-25
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