Virginia Books


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Virginia
The Richmond Campaign of 1862: The Peninsula and the Seven Days (Military Campaigns of the Civil War)
Published in Hardcover by The University of North Carolina Press (2000-09-18)
Author:
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Fascinating Detail on Key Battles , Leaders and Politics
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2001-06-01
Great book to read after Stephen Sear's Penninsula Campaign (even noted by the editor). This great collection of CW historians take the leading characters and events of the 7 days campaign and provide insights to this fascinating series of battles that set the Union back three years. Fascinating writing of John Bankhead Magruder, the hero of the lower Peninsula, whose prewar reputation for drink and ladies combined with lack of sleep, stress, illness and improper medical treatment created a magnifyer for his failures particularly at Malvern Hill. Lee's desire to rid himself of Magruder who was a hero just weeks before is in stark contrast to his retaining of Stonewall who as R. K. Krick writes was virtually ineffective for a multitude of reasons, primarily due to sleep deprivation. Also, great essays on McClellan whose grandiose ego was not able to stand upright on the battlefield and his engineers who could build anything he needed but were used as scapegoats just like anyone else to excuse his own conduct. Additional essays are on the great importance of the seven days battles to lift southern morale and the enhancement of the radicals position contributed to by McClellan's failures during the campaign. Superb article on the artillery duel on Malvern Hill and confederate attack that collapsed under murderous and accurate union artillery fire. The Union's artillery was no match for its southern counterparts. R.E.L. Krick highlights Whiting's Division (with Hood) breaking the Union line decisively at Gaines Mill. No one knows the battlefield better than Krick. Longstreet may have wished he never picked up a pen after Krick writes of Longstreet's post war confusion of facts over his command of Whiting, "It appears an unusually early example of the gasconade for which Longstreet is now famous". That commentary would have made "Old Jube" proud.

Insightful essays about Richmond Campaign
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2001-09-19
I agree with an earlier reviewer who writes that this book is a great companion (or follow-up) book to Stephen Sears "To the Gates of Richmond". Mr. Sears books gives a vivid account of the overall campaign, while this book offers some insightful essays about certain aspects of the campaign. The authors are all experts in the field, and offer well written essays for the reader to contemplate.

I really enjoyed this book because the authors cover a wide range of topics to include General McClellan's flawed performance, "Stonewall" Jackson's less than stellar leadership during the campaign, the artillery battle at Malvern Hill, "Prince" John Magruder's struggles, and the affect of the campaign on both Northern and Southern society. These detailed essays offer readers the latest and greatest scholarship about the Richmond campaign. They really helped me gain a much deeper understanding about what the campaign was like, why it was so important to the overall war effort (for both sides), and most importantly, how did if affect those involved.

I highly recommend this book for those "students" of the Civil War (like me) who are looking to gain a richer grasp of the events that happened during the Richmond campaign. If you have not read anything about the Richmond campaign (usually referred to as the Pennisula and Seven Days campaign) then I suggest that you read "To the Gates of Richmond" by Stephen Sear first, then this book.

Nine essays exploring questions regarding high command
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2001-03-11
The April-July 1862 Richmond campaign was a critical point in the American civil war that resulted in more than 50,000 casualties, 35,000 of whom fell in seven days (June 26 - July 1). The Richmond Campaign Of 1862: The Peninsula & The Seven Days offers nine essays exploring questions regarding high command, strategy and tactics, the effects of the fighting upon the politics and society of both the Union and the Confederacy, and the ways in which emancipation figured in the campaign. Included is an invaluable analysis of the Richmond campaign's place in the broader sweep of the war in 1862, assessments of George B. McClellan's generalship and Stonewall Jackson's flawed performance, an examination of the campaign's impact on white and black civilians in the region, the role of the engineers in the Union effort, the role of artillery in the battle of Malvern Hill, and more. Highly recommended for personal and academic Civil War studies reading lists and reference collections, The Richmond Campaign Of 1862 is an impressive work of painstaking, informative, insightful scholarship.

Virginia
Sacred Buffalo: The Lakota Way For A New Beginning
Published in Paperback by SYCAMORE ISLAND BOOKS (1996-01)
Authors: James G. Durham and Virginia Thomas
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Sacred Buffalo Live
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2001-11-17
Mr. Durham's book gives an excellent look at some of the beliefs of the Lakota, without being overly romantic. His love for both the Buffalo and Sundance are evident as he shows how walking a sacred path is a full time job, not for the weekend warriors. I have already recomended this books several times, and read my copy twice so far.

The Sacred Buffalo: The Lakota Way for a New Beginning
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2001-05-28
I have read this book and found it wonderful. It is very spiritual and gives insight into the Native American spirit and ways. We could all take a lesson from this book. I also had the privilage of seeing the Sacred Buffalo Skeleton in person. Very inspiring!!.

A Spirit Quest Fullfilled
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2000-08-25
This book is an amazing journey about what went into the creation of a sacred object. It takes you through the mechanics of how it was done, as well as what the people involved put into it spiritually and emotionally. Their dedication to this project was very inspiring. Having been lucky enough to actually see this beautiful piece of art, I felt the book further enhanced that experience.

Virginia
Sacred Heart Yoga: A Personal Resurrection Into Love
Published in Paperback by Celestial Productions (2005-02)
Author: Virginia Ellen
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Sacred Heart Yoga Practitioner, Rosalina
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-05
For me, this Sacred Heart Yoga Practice as detailed in Virgina Ellen's book is a deep self-love and true union experience. The practice is filled with prayer, mudra, poses, sacred sound and key words that turn on the energy that I can actually feel in my physical, mental and emotional bodies. In the devotional phase of the yoga, a deep connection and reliance on the Divine within is created. This sets up a safe place to commune and tell the God within everything. Enfolded in the pure love and wisdom of the Sacred Heart of God, my human self (ego) is free to express and receive loving guidance and nourishment from the Divine. It has been the safest and easiest place for me to evolve into higher thought and consciousness. No other yoga, meditation or spiritual practice has brought me into these deep states of connection, devotion, surrender, gratitude and holy union with my True Self. If you long for incredible connection and true union with the Divine, then this exquisite Sacred Heart Yoga is for you.

A path that really causes enlightenment
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-10-26
I have been a student of Sacred Heart Yoga for the last 3 years. I am actually expereicing what Virginia talks about in the book. I am expereincing the God within awaken. It's a physical and energetic experience. I feel the blissful and powerful energy flowing through my body as the God within is responding to my prayers. I never expereinced anything like this with any other yoga practice I have done. My whole life is changing, I am loving myself and allowing myself to receive everything I have ever wanted. In the last 20 years, I have done therapy, co-counseling, new thought practices like what Abraham teaches, Landmark, Meditation etc. None of them have taken me very far. Reading this book and practicing this way has caused my Seals above my chakras to activate(kudalini). I now have access to the holy wisdom and other gifts that have been "sealed" away until I was ready. I highly recommend this book and this path for those who are ready to get out of the intellectual realm of spirituality and who are ready to stop looking outside themselves for everything. Go within and discover and experience and feel who you really are. Namaste

A Transformative Healing Experience
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2006-05-23
Sacred heart yoga combines postures, toning and prayer to open the heart to unconditional love, the mind to divine wisdom and the body to clearing all that is keeping us from embodying and expressing joy, abundance and purpose in this world. These are powerful teachings for all who truly want to heal and transform their lives.

Virginia
Self Esteem
Published in Hardcover by Celestial Arts (2001-10)
Author: Virginia M. Satir
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I AM ME - poster
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2004-08-19
A wonderful read for all ages and I would really like to get hold of the poster. Is it available anywhere?

I have not read the book but have seen the "I AM ME" poster
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 13 total.
Review Date: 1999-06-16
I am trying to read the book but it is out of print. I have seen the poster in my son;s Dr.s office "I AM ME" I will write the Celestial Arts in Berkley and try to get a copy of at least the poster and hopefully the book. does nayone have any other ideas?

Beautiful illustrations, poetic, written with love
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 1998-10-13
This book was written by Virginia Satir to help a fifteen year old girl understand life. It demonstrates in a just a few words, what we could spend a lifetime trying to learn or explain.

Virginia
The Seton Miracles : Weeping Statues and other Wonders
Published in Paperback by Marian Foundation (1998-10-15)
Author: James L Carney
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Excellent!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2003-01-25
The Seton Miracles, By James L. Carney, is an excellent discussion of the alleged miracles that took place in Lake Ridge, VA at the parish of St. Elizabeth Ann Seton in the early 1990's. Carney's presentation is well-balanced, detailed, and scholarly--qualities that are unfortunately uncommon in this genre. Unlike many other books sympathetic to miracle claims, Carney does not ignore counter-evidence and he does not attempt to push mitigating circumstances under the rug. Nor is his presentation filled with an overabundance of devotional material that might lead the reader to doubt his ability to evaluate the data fairly. The only suggestion I would have to improve the work is to provide even more of the interview transcripts with key participants--though this would not necessarily make the book a more interesting read, it would further strengthen the already impressive archive of first-hand information, which could be of use to persons in the future.

Though I have never met or spoken to the author, the fact that such a seemingly sensible man is sympathetic to these reports (and indeed has been an eyewitness to many of the events) is a great testament to their seriousness and importance.

The Seton Miracles: Weeping Statues and Other Wonders
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2000-07-18
What a WONDERFUL Book! Written in a very readable, journal style, by author James L. Carney, this fascinating, amazing, inspirational TRUE-LIFE story "pulled me in" to the true accounts of weeping Madonna statues, changing-color rosaries, miracle colors and lights in the sky, miraculous healings, Father Bruse's stigmata wounds, and events surrounding this humble parish priest, from 1991 to 1993, right here in the Lake Ridge area of Woodbridge, VA. USA! When I started reading this book, I couldn't put it down, until I'd read the whole story, and gone back several times to review, and study the color photographs, too. I was personally, very emotionally moved, to tears, by this true and powerful history of events. James Carney has included experiences and eyewitness observations of his own, of his wife, and of many other people interviewed, who had personal, life-changing experiences and observed incredible physical phenomena. I would highly recommend this book to readers of any faith or religion, and even to skeptical "non-believers".

The Seton Miracles: Weeping Statues and Other Wonders
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2002-04-02
In this well-written, thought provoking book, the author, James L. Carney, describes for the reader the dramatic spiritual journey experienced by many at Saint Elizabeth Ann Seton Church, Lake Ridge, VA from November 1991 through 1993. Factual eyewitness accounts permit the reader to interpret for themselves the meaning of the numerous miraculous events. As one of the eyewitnesses, I feel that my personal experience and the book serve as powerful reminders of the reassuring words spoken by Jesus, "And know that I am with you always." (Matthew 28:20) I highly recommend this inspiring book.

Virginia
The Shot from the Mountain: An Appalachian Odyssey
Published in Hardcover by The Pricilla Press (2004)
Author:
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2005 Writers Notes Book Award Notable
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-04-20
The Shot from the Mountain covers the tribulations and quests of an Appalachian miner struggling to improve his life and the life of his family. A world of which I knew little, peopled with characters I grew to care about. Realistic, memorable.

a shot from the mountain: an appalachian odyssey
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2004-05-24
A great novel by a Ph.D.? You bet! And a good one at that. A shot rings out from the hills in a coal minning town in West Virginia killing the local big shot, Avery Murphy, by the protaganist, Clyde Fuller, whose best friend has just been murdered by Murphy. A borrowed gun, an ambush above the town, and only one person- though not a witness- knew who the killer was (he remained mum through the years).

These events set off a train of actions that takes you through the beginning of the great depression and including the beginning of the Roosevelt administration.

Claude S. Phillips who knew them thar hills as a native whose father was a miner, writes with a commanding authority in flawless grammar rarely found in a novel these days...and that without pedantry.

Meticulous in detail, the novel has all the prime elements of a great narrative: exposition, complication, climax, resolution, and conclusion.

At the start the setting is "Appalachia" before and during the Great Depression and the early days before John L. Louis and his United Mine Workers of America came on the seen. Early attempts to organize were met with violence from the coal companies, the violence of which Clyde is intimately involved. The suspense is gripping. The fear in the back of Clyde's mind that his crime will be found out dominates this young man's mind, giving the novel a thrust that grips the reader's attention through a divorce, two marrages, and the restless obsession of a man driven by an ambition to get ahead in life.

The characters are real and the reader is aware of a struggle for the very existance in the West Virginian coal mining town.

The ending has an ironic twist and an O'Henry-like ending.

The novel ends where it begins...but happily.

Press Release From Author
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2004-04-28
A Novel Set in the Appalachian Coal Fields of the 1920s and 1930s

Entitled The Shot from the Mountain: An Appalachian Odyssey, the novel was written by Claude S. Phillips, who was raised in the coal mine regions of West Virginia and is now a retired professor from Western Michigan University. The protagonist of the story is a fictional character named Clyde Fuller, but the setting is real: a time of bitter conflict between mine operators and miners over the latter's attempt to form a union in the southern part of the state. The story includes Fuller's role in two violent events, known historically as the Massacre at Matewan (where he thinks he killed a mine "detective" with a shot from the mountain) and the Battle of Blair Mountain. Other events include his heroic act connected with a mine explosion, his two marriages, his determined attempt to rise to a high position in the mines, and his confrontation with the brother of the man he thinks he killed.

Virginia
Shrinking the Judge : Freeing the Inner Child
Published in Paperback by Education & Health Resources (1997-12-31)
Author: Rick Malter
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A powerful book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-25
I haven't written a review before, but I felt compelled to say that this little book offers extremely valuable insight into how a reliance on judgement and criticism of others to defend our own self-image can be very destructive. It is helpful in limiting the damage that this coping mechanism can have in one's life. I recommend it strongly.

This book might just change your life...
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2002-12-21
I was amazed by "Shrinking the Judge." I really didnt expect too much when I first picked this book up, but a few pages in I was hooked. By the time I had finished it, I was just shaking my head in disbelief and giggling...I had quite an epiphany while reading this book! Amazing. Ive been studying myself through meditation, psychedelics, depth psychology, mysticism, world religion and philosophy, recovery, etc. basically my entire life and "Shrinking the Judge" helped me more in a few hours than anything else ever has. To my genuine astonishment, I discovered that this book was the exact conceptual monkey wrench I needed to start dismantling the mechanisms of childhood pain that have kept me depressed since about the age of 6.

As the title suggests, the book is about the Judge. What is the Judge? The Judge is the pathological, anti-life part of every person whose sole function is to criticize and condemn. The Judge operates outside of your awareness, attempting to use fear and shame to take control of your life, make you miserable and stop any attempt at personal growth. If you have ever suffered from attacks of fear, hoplessness, shame, depression or a sense of worthlessness for no real reason at all, then you have met your Judge.

This no-nonsense book will help you to identify your Judge, learn how it functions in your life, and then to "deflate" it--negate the power it has over you and reclaim that power for yourself. The Judge operates in darkness, terrifying your inner child. This book shows you how to turn on the light and see the Judge for what it really is, just a pile of old memories, like a TV showing scary old movies, powerless to harm you.

Describes the powerful use of imagery in healing & therapy.
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 1998-12-26
The powerful use of imagery in healing is beautifully depicted in Shrinking the Judge: Freeing the Inner Child by Rick Malter, Ph.D. and Rosalie Malter, M.A. By combining unique "Judge-work" concepts that apply to all humans with Jungian Psychology, Inner Child Work, and Transpersonal Psychology, this book becomes more than just fascinating reading; it becomes an experience in personal growth. This book encourages the reader to engage in active participation. The models that come to life include a Judge, a Wounded Inner Child, a Natural Child, and a Warrior. The concepts within its pages can be applied to life at an inner personal level, to relationships, to institutional and social life, and to international relationships in the world. This book doesn't get stale. During the first reading, my mind focused on active Judge-work. I drew my Judge, felt its impact, and destroyed the illusion of its control. During the months that followed, I became acutely aware of the times my Judges became inflated. The second time I read Shrinking the Judge: Freeing the Inner Child, it seemed like a different book. I picked up a new and deeper understanding of the ploys of my Judge and was able to take my personal growth a step further. To free the Natural Child within the soul takes courage. This book guides the person ready to embark on the journey with the vision to rally all of their inner strengths into a Warrior image which can stand up to the Judge, comfort the Wounded Inner Child, and free the creative intuitive life force of the Natural, Spiritual Child within each of us. I highly recommend Shrinking the Judge: Freeing the Inner Child to all people and especially to those in the mental health profession.

Pamela Re, M.A., Professional Counseling

Virginia
Sins of the Fathers: My Experiences With The Eighty-Second Airborne During World War II
Published in Paperback by AuthorHouse (2003-06-03)
Author: Virginia Kreimeyer
List price: $12.95
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Page Turner
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-11-13
It is a fast-paced action/romance novel that becomes a "page turner," after the stage is set in the first two chapters. The author's artistic ability is apparent. Story, descriptions, and character development are masterfully written by someone who experienced war in the Balkans. The powerful underlying subject of the book is genocide, which is delicately and artistically dealt with from a Christian Biblical perspective. A must read on anyone's contemporary book list. It is an especially empowering book for women.

From a former female soldier's perspective...
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-11-20
Sins of the Fathers portrays the essence of how wars encompass the political views of not only religious sects and cultures, but also the roles played by women in those wars. The main character in this book finds herself in a compromising position as a Christian and an American female soldier in a Muslim environment. Her job is complicated by the way she is perceived by militant Muslims. As a former female soldier in the Gulf War, I would recommend this book to all females who consider the military as their career choice. In lieu of more women taking part in wars today, it gives great insight as to how we are viewed by our own male members, as well as by other cultures and nations.

Great read for public relations professionals!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-11-18
This is an intriguing book for public relations/public information professionals. Suspense and romance are all rolled into one story! The main character, Leslie Johnson, is a public affairs officer stationed at the Pentagon, but on temporary assignment to the IFOR Headquarters in Zagreb, Croatia.

Her experiences are educational and entertaining!

Virginia
Slavery, Secession, and Southern History
Published in Hardcover by University of Virginia Press (2000-05)
Author:
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Interesting Essays
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2002-04-30
The essays in this book are consistently interesting and thoroughly researched. The writers are some of the finest active historians of the American South. I particularly recommend Robert Paquette's article on slave drivers and Eugene Genovese's interview in Appendix A. I also liked Clyde Wilson's analysis of John C. Calhoun's economic thought. Calhoun's dual executive theory may have been off the mark but his economic thinking was first-rate and profoundly republican.

An outstanding analysis & interpretation of Southern history
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2000-09-05
Twelve scholars provide essays debating the cause of Civil War history and the relationships between slavery and master-slave relationships in the South in a title which revises and challenges central themes of Eugene Genovese's work on the subject. The result is Slavery, Secession, and Southern History, a new analysis and interpretation of Southern history recommended for any student of the era.

Slavery, Secession, and Southern History
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2000-05-08
If you are intrested in Slavery, Secession, and Southern History as am, this book is perfect fo you. Edited by the brillant Professor of Economics Louis Ferleger, this book is a collection of articles that discuss diffrent parts of th 19th century south. I think it is a great book every history buff should own, no collection is complete without it.

Virginia
Sometimes I Feel Awful (Prestine, Joan Singleton. Kids Have Feelings, Too Series.)
Published in Paperback by McGraw-Hill Children's Pub. (2002-06)
Author: Joan Singleton Prestine
List price: $6.95

Average review score:

An introduction to kids on emotions and feelings
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2002-09-05
Sometimes I Feel Awful focuses on a child's rough day, with a first-person presentation exploring how a positive day turns negative. The focus is on emotions and how they develop, and how communications become scrambled. Sometimes I Feel Awful will prove the perfect title for an introduction to kids on emotions and feelings. Highly recommended.

Great for teaching children about feelings and actions
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2001-10-13
This is one of my very favorite resources for teaching young children the difference between feelings and actions. I am a school social worker in an early childhood center and teach "social skills" classes to our kindergarten students. After we spend time identifying feelings in ourselves and others, and how children might express them, I read this book to the class. The author does such a wonderful job of portraying this little girl's impulsive responses to her day's disappointments and fears. The children in our classes are captivated by her struggle and have no trouble "reading the feelings" on her face. They really relate to this story and illustrations. After reviewing each problematic situation, they brainstorm more appropriate ways the little girl could let the other characters know how she is feeling. One dilemma for our five year olds is that the main character does not have a name and they often want to refer to her by name. This is one of the books that the children talk about for many weeks after it's initial presentation, and revisit it during our "problem solving" unit. Parents also like to borrow it from our "Life Issues Library" of children's books, so I need to buy another copy to be sure it is available for "social skills" classes this year. Some adults may be put off by the title, thinking it sounds too depressing for a children's book, but we have found that it is one of the most popular, powerful, and relevent books to help teach children about feelings, behavior and consequences, without being "preachy".

excellent
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2000-03-05
This book is wonderful -- I can't recommend it highly enough. My daughter is a preschooler who is developing all sorts of complex feelings and emotions. Reading this book with her has helped her identify what she is feeling and learn to articulate what she wants and needs. What makes this book about kids' feelings stand out from other similar books is that it runs through a variety of situations where the little girl in the book could have used her words, but didn't, and what the effect was on the situation. It goes just a bit deeper than some similar books, but it is presented in a very positive and child-friendly fashion. My husband and I enjoyed reading this book over and over (and over and over... :-) almost as much as my daughter did.


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