Colleges and Universities Books
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Comprehensive, indespensible, invaluable resource.Review Date: 2000-02-04


THE Best Book on College StudyReview Date: 2000-01-12
I wish I had this book last year when I started college - I wasted SO MUCH TIME working on figuring out how to handle my courseload, and I still didn't figure it out until I read this little book.
The author's ideas are so annoyingly simple and easy to follow that I was angry with myself for not seeing these things on my own.
I really believe that EVERYONE graduating from high school should get two things - a diploma, and this book.

Perniola knows his Pali grammarReview Date: 2006-02-26
This grammar is extremely rich. Rich of course in all the morphonological and morphological elements of the language. This is a great help to follow the meaning of words and the evolution of the language. The author seems to favor the idea that Pali is directly derived from Sanskrit. Very often he uses the sanskrit root or origin to explain the particularities of the Pali forms. The book is also extremely rich in syntactic morphology and syntax. The author details all the possible compositions of words with many examples. This is essential to understand the complexity and the density of the language. A composition relation can cover an at times very complex relation between the two elements and a simple nominalisation of such a compound can produce the equivalent of a full sentence or clause if one of the elements is a verbal form. There seems to emerge the idea that compounds are ordered from right to left (the dominant element on the right and its subordinate elements on the left) but it is not always clear because the formulation, the terms used by the author are not purely linguistic, at least from a hierarchical linguistic approach of language, but rather descriptive and hence on the surface of things with deictic elements that do not express a hierarchical or mastering relation. This leads me to another remark about the translations. Most of the time the translations are not expressing the relations between the various items of a compound or a sentence, but the final semantic translation that can, and does very often, cover up the real syntactic or morphological derivation, composition or construction. In other words this book is not for a dilettante or a beginner. You need to know Pali already and/or to have a dictionary next to you to follow. The second great section, of the book is that concerning the verb. Tenses and moods are clearly identified and examplified in their various meanings and uses. Then the description of the non-finite forms of the verb is very useful especially to understand the various participles that do not exist in our languages. But the real understanding we get must be derived from the translations because the various modal and aspectual values of these participles and gerunds are not really identified as modalizations and aspects, hence introducing some fuzziness in the values. Finally the book examines the cases and their uses very closely, but once again not from a really linguistic point of view but from a compiling and descriptive point of view. For one example, the genitive can be used both to express the source of a moving object and the goal of it, according to the context. This is a real problem since the genitive expresses contradictory values and assumes the « goal » value which is commonly expressed by the dative for example, a dative that is very absent from Pali. Here we need to wonder a lot more than just state the fact in order to come to an explanation. That is the main shortcoming of the book : it leaves many explanatory domains totally uncovered and open. Yet an essential book for those who are interested in Pali. I will note that Geiger's « umlaut » concept seems here to have been completely abandoned. Paranavitana has at least been effective on that point.
Dr Jacques COULARDEAU, Université Paris Dauphine, Université Paris I Panthéon Sorbonne

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A Grand Collection of EloquenceReview Date: 2004-09-27
Joshua Lawrence Chamberlain survived the Civil War - including a horrible wound at Petersburg - to become one of Maine's most prominent citizens. His postwar career included four terms as governor of Maine, a stint as president of Bowdoin College, numerous business enterprises, and perhaps most importantly, many years as a writer and lecturer on his Civil War experiences.
The correspondence included by editor Jeremiah Goulka covers nearly every aspect of Chamberlain's personal and professional life. Chamberlain's heartfelt letters to his family, especially those to his wife Fannie, reveal him to be a loving, thoughtful husband and father. His relationship with Fannie, stormy and difficult though it was for many years, survived numerous crises until Fannie's death in 1905.
Chamberlain's Civil War experiences transformed him, and his separation from the army often left him feeling restless. In 1870, Chamberlain wrote to the King of Prussia and offered his services in Prussia's war with France. In 1898, Chamberlain contacted the Secretary of War to volunteer for the Spanish-American War. Even with all his postwar positions and projects, Chamberlain never quite filled the space in his soul left empty by the end of the Civil War.
Critics of Chamberlain, in his lifetime and in our own time, claim that he inflated his role at Little Round Top in an attempt to horde the glory of that important engagement. At least one letter included in this volume refutes this criticism. In a January 1910 letter to Union veteran and author Oliver W. Norton, Chamberlain says of his brigade commander, Strong Vincent, "He was a noble man, and I have not known an abler commander in his grade. Nothing could exceed his skill and energy in taking the position on Little Round Top and the confidence he inspired in his subordinates. To this the result of the fight on the left at Round Top is very largely due [emphasis added]."
The correspondence also clarifies an often incorrectly reported fact concerning the July 1913 fiftieth anniversary reunion at Gettysburg. Chamberlain, while he visited Gettysburg in May as a member of the planning commission, did not attend the July reunion. Chamberlain's doctor strongly urged him not to go due to his declining health, and he stayed behind in Maine.
Rather than being castigated for his prolific eloquence, Joshua Lawrence Chamberlain deserves the timeless thanks of everyone who studies the Civil War. Jeremiah Goulka deserves thanks as well, for his skillful editing, and for giving us a deeper understanding of a genuine American hero.

Greatest Time of Design!Review Date: 2003-01-17
this period of work is profound because of it's ingenuity, daring graphic experiments in text and layout, and it's use of collage, photos and text, and dada influences to create bold graphic statements. the pieces included in this volume span many different media in the graphic arts...war propaganda, art exhibition posters, product advertising, civil program posters, packaging, publishing, and even fine art.
it is a testament to this collection of designers, because many of them worked simultaniously in many different mediums all at once, especially those involved in the bauhaus movement and the russian avante-garde artists.
this book is an excellent overview of this period in graphic design, and would provide endless inspiration for anybody involved in any field of design. i cannot recommend it strongly enough!

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Great BookReview Date: 2002-04-06

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Slam DunkReview Date: 2008-04-14

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A really great book!Review Date: 1998-07-03

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A Pretty Good Book on "Popular" MajorsReview Date: 2008-08-06

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A great college admissions book.Review Date: 2002-10-13
The Guide to Getting In, however, is completely different. It was written by a group of funny and talented Harvard undergrads (actually from the same group that writes Let's Go, I think). They tell you all the important facts you need to know to get through the admissions process, but in a way that is enjoyable to read. I actually found myself laughing out loud during certain chapters, which is pretty impressive for a college admissions book.
My only criticism would be that it lacks some of the admissions office inside info that a few other books offer. I would recommend getting The Guide to Getting In, along with A is for Admission, or another similar title.
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