Organizations Books
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Fantastic View into the Life of NunsReview Date: 2003-03-11
The Way They Were (and some still are)Review Date: 2003-05-21
A classic in books about religious lifeReview Date: 2001-07-10
In her writings on Saints Francis and Clare, her pen paints pictures that make these wonderful saints come alive for us. Mother Mary Francis shares with us their teachings to their nuns, and what impact those teachings have on their lives. So many consider the cloisered religious life to be a dark, solitary, very solemn life, but that is far from the truth. A monastery is a place of love, and light, and laughter, and no one tells us that so well as Mother Mary Francis.
I highly recommend this book to any and all, but especially to those discerning religious life and to those with a devotion to St. Clare. This book may be old, but it is far from outdated.
So full of joy it practically glows!Review Date: 2005-02-06
Though this book is about life in an enclosed order of nuns, it's not just for Catholics. I'm not a Catholic myself, but I feel like I gained about as much from it as anyone could, and I don't feel any separation or strangeness between myself and the sisters. I strongly recommend this book to seekers of God from whatever path or religion, because don't we all share the same human nature and face the same struggles? And this author kindly shares one way of gracefully navigating the difficult waters. Since the Poor Clares have been following the same path for over 750 years now, without dying out or changing their ways, we know that it is one road, no matter how unusual, that does work, and we can all take something from it.
Finally, I appreciated the prefaces that Mother Mary Francis added to this 2001 edition of her book. Since the book was written in the 1950's, don't you want to know what has happened in the Roswell monastery since then? I did! So the additonal material from the years 1973 and 2000 was most welcome. I don't want to spoil the surprise for anyone, but I'm happy to report that the monastery is thriving. Lucky them: Mother Mary Francis is apparently still the Abbess, God bless her beautiful, wise heart.
Note: Feb. 2006 addition to this review from February 2005: I have just learned that Mother Mary Francis passed away this month. May she rest in eternal peace.
pure joyReview Date: 2006-08-16

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Comment's on "Romero's Legacy"Review Date: 2008-11-05
This is a morally challenging and intellectually stimulating collection of essays which could be equally at home in a course dealing with international development as in pastoral discussions focused on community organizing. The keystone concept is the book's basic understanding of what "poverty" means - for a committed Christian, but really for all human beings who must share the planet.
Although all the essays stand out and stand on their own, I was drawn in particular to Gustavo Gutierrez' essay entitled "Liberation Theology for the Twenty-first Century." Several ideas immediately hit home: "...the preferential option for the poor forms 90 percent of liberation theology..."; "...poverty is not destiny...[it is] not misfortune ...it is an injustice"; "injustice...is the refusal to love in other words, sin"; and, finally, "the option for the poor ... for a Christian... is a conversion."
These ideas link up with other, equally resonant and provocative notions throughout the seven essays, which, taken collectively, argue for human solidarity and change at the material and spiritual levels among all peoples, but especially among Christians. The call to peace and justice which emerges from this book is not easy to ignore, nor to follow; but after reading these articles, I felt strangely like I did in the 1960s and 70s, when change seemed possible, and possibly imminent - and commitment was not a luxury, but a necessity.
Romeros LegacyReview Date: 2008-03-06
Romero's LegacyReview Date: 2008-01-02
In the late 1970's Archbishop Oscar Romero accepted his call to prophecy and began to complain bitterly about the oppression of the poor in El Salvador. In 1980 he was shot to death while leading a religious service.
His short life as a prophet and his death have inspired many who serve the poor, including many members of St. Joseph's Cathedral in Camden, New Jersey, home to some of the poorest people of the United States.
Among many other efforts to engage the poor, St. Joseph's began the Romero lectures in 2001, effectively reviving Romero's spirit with annual meditations on the complicated relationships of good, evil, fear, justice, compassion, revenge and the meaning of being Christian - all in relationship to the poor and oppressed.
These seven lectures, delivered yearly from 2001-2007 chronicle the oppression of the poor in today's dynamics: economic and social injustice, incarceration, (including the death penalty) racism and demonization of immigrants; and offer a religious and theological response to engaging the poor: a preference for the poor (liberation theology) and a reminder for those who would be Christian that their faith makes the poor a part of their family. As John Hogan notes, "in the New (Eucharistic) Covenant), we become blood relatives...of one another." (p. 27)
These edifying lectures can inspire the private reader, but their thrust is clearly towards our responsibility as a people to turn our collective, our structural hearts towards the poor. With Romero's spirit, the prophets of Camden are showing us the way.
A must read for all ages.Review Date: 2007-11-27
Must Read Primer on Social JusticeReview Date: 2008-01-29

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Great hands on Xen coverageReview Date: 2008-10-14
Running Xen ReviewReview Date: 2008-06-17
Running Xen takes a unique approach to introducing Xen to both the novice and expert virtualization user. The authors start off introducing just enough of the core concepts to give the reader an adequate basis on which the book later builds on to provide the required skills to effectively run a virtual environment. A brief explanation of Xen architecture follows with an overview of the management tools with real world examples showing actual output. I found this attention to often overlooked detail refreshing such as the use of ssh with keys and X Forwarding to securely communicate with guests impressive, instead of simply using an easier less secure method for example. The reader could choose to skip ahead if the topic was already understood but providing that level of detail is integral to the learning process in my opinion. Simply getting a Xen server up and running accomplishes nothing for the user needing to actually run and administer it after, which is where most technical books fail.
The walk through with guest disk images and creating them correctly was well appreciated instead of leaving that to the reader to hopefully figure out. All popular methods for populating guests were covered which allowed distro specific tools to be utilized instead of requiring non native methods or leaving the reader unprepared. Device virtualization was covered, but I assume as Xen is constantly evolving the information at print time regarding hiding a PCI device from Dom0 was still accurate but is now slightly different. Fortunately, all the pointers to additional reading would lead the user to finding the current procedure. Networking was covered in detail which is an often misunderstood part of Xen and a working example of a purely virtual segment using a dummy interface was shown which I found fairly useful. Guest resource management provided an understanding for topics such as the IO Scheduler and gave examples on how to tune it.
This was my second book on Xen and completely replaces the first as a much more competent reference. I highly recommend this book for anyone using Xen for its concrete basis and good reference it provides.
Solid Technical Intro to Xen and VirtualizationReview Date: 2008-06-09
Encyclopedic coverageReview Date: 2008-05-05
I don't mean horribly, and I certainly don't mean so much as to make this useless. But this is a common problem in the fast moving field of open source: things can change radically in the time it takes to get a book out the door.
For example, the first thing I learned here was about a Xen LiveCD. Chapter 2 is devoted to playing with that, and it's a great idea: a non-threatening, very quick intro to Xen. Unfortunately, that's way
out of date: the LiveCD can still be found, but it's not where the book says it is because it is several versions old now.
However, I'm sure that much of this book will remain useful for some time. This isn't just technical details (though there is a lot of that); it's also advice on configuration and deployment.
As is common nowadays, the book includes a coupon to get 45 days free access to the on-line Safari version (interestingly, that doesn't have 624 pages either).
Finally a Really Good Book on XenReview Date: 2008-06-09
I think that "Running Xen" book ("A Hands-On Guide to the Art of Virtualization") will be a great help. It is written by the team of people who not only know Zen inside out, but who are also major contributors to the source.
The book is a hands-on guide for most popular distributions, but what I specially like is that it gives a very good theoretical background on virtualization (architecture, benefits, over of xen hypervisor etc). The hands-on section covers hardware requirements and software requirements, including specifics for the popular distributions (OpenSUSE, Centos (RHEL) and Ubuntu as well as notes on other Domain0 distributions.
Significant attention is given to managing of the custom installed or pre-built Guest images, management of unprivileged (guest) domains, storage, device virtualization, security, network configuration, management of guest resources, saving/restoration and live migrations.
What gives confidence while reading on these hands-on tasks is the authors' familiarity with the subject. They are people who know Xen inside out and many tips and notes you encounter will save you hours of browsing of mailing lists or trials and errors.

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Concise, creativeReview Date: 2001-02-14
Vigorous and insightfulReview Date: 2001-02-14
A welcome additionReview Date: 2001-02-14
First rate!Review Date: 2001-02-14
Lively and controversialReview Date: 2001-02-14

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Easy Read and Simplifies the ProcessReview Date: 2008-09-30
Simple but clearReview Date: 2008-09-30
Simple and complete.Review Date: 2003-09-27
Excellent for students and practitionersReview Date: 2003-04-04
Good Project StarterReview Date: 2007-03-19

Witness to social declineReview Date: 2007-06-05
Well-written history of women with guts and compassionReview Date: 2003-11-09
"Where have all the Sisters gone . . . "Review Date: 2003-03-26
Sisters the History of the Religious Sisters of MercyReview Date: 2006-02-01
Sisters: gutsy, fearless, inspirational womenReview Date: 2005-07-22
I felt thankful to all of the sisters who had worked diligently in the Catholic schools I attended as a child and I am glad that Mr. Fialka wrote this book to give nuns recognition which they neither desire or expect, but certainly deserve.
It should be a part of our American history curriculum.
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The Essentials of Good Interpersonal SkillsReview Date: 2003-11-16
Dr. Gimbel's book will assist educators in this pursuit of excellence.
Principal-on the other sideReview Date: 2003-11-08
I found it so engaging, as I read how you described your personality. Since I know your engaging effervessance, I can imagine how devasted you must have felt to be "shut out" in the teachers lounge.
I am so happy that other principals and administrators will have the opportunity to benefit from
your years on both sides of the fence. I am hopeful that you will finally be able to evoke some real school reform.
I
am so proud of you, BRAVO!!!
Love,
Harr
Enjoyable and Concise ReadingReview Date: 2003-11-08
Marcia Bromfield, Ph.D.
Director, Division of Field Placement and Professional
Partnerships
School of Education
Lesley University
Cambridge, MA 02138
Promoting Principal/Teacher TrustReview Date: 2003-11-07
A Must Read for School LeadershipReview Date: 2003-11-11

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Good Stuff....Review Date: 2004-06-22
Must Reading for AdministratorsReview Date: 2004-02-22
Chock Full of Practical AdviceReview Date: 2003-09-22
As a former principal and superintendent of schools, I can honestly say that this book is a must read for not only practicing principals and other educational leaders, but for apsiring school principals as well.
David H. Larson, Ph.D.
Executive
Director
Connecticut Association of Public School Superintendents
West Hartford, Connecticut
Inspiring!Review Date: 2004-07-15
Upon reading this book, I shared it with all of the middle school principals in my district. They, too, have found the book to be uplifting, inspiration and extremely helpful. This book is now required reading for my Assistant Principals and teachers in leadership roles.
If you are going to read anything about the principalship -- this is the FIRST book you should read!!!
Validation & InspirationReview Date: 2003-10-22
Reading the book made me happy. I recommend it to anyone who is now a principal or is thinking of becoming one. Yes, the job has changed dramatically over the years. In my opinion it is much more difficult than it was when I started. The differences are all external, however. Being a dynamic principal is still very possible and just as much needed as ever before. Read the book to feel good about what you do. Read the book to help you decide to be a principal. Read the book to help you understand why American high schools are such wondrous institutions, creating magic often under dire circumstances. Read the book. You owe it to yourself.

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Good guide for the licensed therapistReview Date: 2008-09-13
Great Book for Developing a Therapy PracticeReview Date: 2006-06-20
Well-written, practical, and immediately usefulReview Date: 2006-01-29
Clear and informativeReview Date: 2006-01-22
Leslie J Hoy, MA, LPC, www.hiperformance.netReview Date: 2006-04-01
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Comprehensive book on neuroscience/cortical networksReview Date: 2007-05-14
The Synaptic View of Brain FunctionReview Date: 2004-06-11
^^*Review Date: 2001-09-08
A classic work now in its 5th editionReview Date: 2005-11-05
As others have pointed out, the book requires concentration to read, even to somebody with my long background. But it is rewarding to see how far the field has come in the nearly 30 years I've been studying it. It's only marginally clinically relevant for a neurologist, but for basic neuroscientists I'd consider it a must read.
Marvelous book for the brain aficionado ...Review Date: 2004-03-17
I agree with an earlier reviewer: this book is not for the uninitiated, although it is spectacularly helpful for theoretical neuroscientists who are modeling cell assemblies as well as experimentalists working at the cell or systems level. However, I disagree with his list of good introductory books. "Principles of Neural Science" in particular is a good reference but not terribly readable. I would recommend Nicholls' "From Neuron to Brain" as a more accessible book about brain function. The Scientific American series, including "The Scientific American Book of the Brain," is quite good factually and provides a more general overview including some psychology, but the quality of the writing varies. Finally, for kicks, a newcomer should try the enjoyable, controversial "How the Mind Works" by Stephen Pinker. He is biased and arrogant, but also clever and entertaining.
Related Subjects: Standard Gauge Narrow Gauge
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