Brown Books
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SpectacularReview Date: 2006-07-01
Picture of South African Victorian CultureReview Date: 2000-07-12
IncredibleReview Date: 2007-12-01
Much more than a feminist novel, novel for every oneReview Date: 2003-09-04
For me It depicts how inadequate we all are men and women, when it comes to Love, and expressing it and sharing it. it flumoxes us all, Its too big for us, "the chickens had more sense"....pass the worms please.
Complex, Deep and MovingReview Date: 2005-06-15
Ostensibly, the book revolves around the lives of three children (and, later, adults) who live in the Karroo plains of South Africa. The main focus, however, is on two of the characters - Waldo, the earnest and deeply curious son of the German farmkeeper, and Lyndall, the beautiful, outspoken and rebellious orphan who suffers all her life for her ideals.
The book itself is semi-autobiographical. Waldo represents Schreiner's journey from fanatical, childlike faith to bitter skepticism, who reaches a watershed of sorts when he hisses to Lyndall 'There is no God - none!'. Lyndall, on the other hand, embodies Schreiner's frustation with her station as a woman - barred from the upper echelons of society, and her inability to find a mate who is both her intellectual match and willing to accept her as an equal. "I want to love", she whispers to the grave of Waldo's father, "I want something great and pure to lift me to itself."
There are many other themes that flesh out the subtext of this extraordinary book - the tragedy of solitude, that ultimately, all humans are alone in the cosmos. "Dear eyes", the dying Lyndall whispers to her mirror, "they will never part us."
Readers who expect a narrative will be dissapointed. What narrative there is serves only to undersore the book's many themes. Often, the flow of the story is out of sequence, or devoid of context, and deliberately so. Roughly, the book is divided into three sections - the first introduces us to the characters as children, and reveals their innermost thoughts. The second, and shortest section is entitled "Times and Seasons". It is somewhat of a summary of what has gone before, dealing mostly with Waldo's journey from Christian fanaticism to dispairing atheism, and foreshadows some of what is to come. The third, and longest section, covers the lives of the characters as adults, and is by far the most powerful, and moving piece of the book.
The reader who is looking for mindless action is advised to pick up the latest Tom Clancy novel, or whatever passes for literature these days. Those who are willing to put aside all preconceived notions, and have their cherished beliefs challenged are invited to read this book. The search for truth is endless. But this book is a perfect place to begin.

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Swindled got meReview Date: 2006-11-24
History and Mystery - the ultimate combination!!Review Date: 2006-05-15
THE BEST IN THE WORLD!!!Review Date: 2006-05-15
NabbedReview Date: 2006-05-10
Another Hot Bill Doyle Book!Review Date: 2006-05-10

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Good stuffReview Date: 2008-08-25
A genius of political humorReview Date: 2007-12-15
Very possibly the best of the Bloom County collections.Review Date: 2005-04-20
Nostalgia so soon?Review Date: 2004-09-19
Most of the strips, however, are timeless. Opus' personality is as sweet and doofy as ever. Oliver Wendell Jones still gets in trouble, the kind no one has the heart to punish him for. Steve Dallas is still a jerk, the kind of jerk that I still find today. All the rest are still there, too, as good as they ever were.
It's a funny mix, news from the 80s mixed with topics that work today, and it's still a funny strip. If, someohow, you missed the original run of Bloom County in the daily funnies, you'll find that it's never too late to catch up. Enjoy!
//wiredweird
Humor and political insight unparalleledReview Date: 2004-05-16

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Best explanation of estate planning I've ever read.Review Date: 1998-12-31
Concise, complete, to the point. Perfect Tax GuideReview Date: 1998-12-16
It worked really well--taxes done very quickly!Review Date: 1999-03-05
Short and to the point. Covered the key subjects. Funny tooReview Date: 1998-12-28
Take a look at the Deferred savings account article. In only 4 pages it describes up to 9 choices. I also liked the short descriptions of capital gains, areas to worry about, etc.
The quality of the paper and the graphics is good too. Terrific value. I plan to use their $9.95 Internet service to file my Fed and Ohio taxes, efile, and get my refund FAST. Internet is the way to go!
Anyone who can lighten up taxes has my vote!!
Clear simple to the point. Quick read; fun too.Review Date: 1998-12-22
I like their concept of less is more. Wading through reference materials in most of the other tax books is like going through a jungle. They provide directions to deeper information through IKONS that refer you to the IRS pub you need.
Has all the websites for IRS, States, etc. And you can file your fed/state taxes, plus e-file for only $9.95.
Also, I really don't like the name "Dummies" or "Idiots". Survival sounds a lot more supportive and less like a joke name--and taxes are no joke!
Less than $10; so how can you go wrong. Enough from me. Good reading!

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An innovative and indispensible addition to the I Ching bookshelfReview Date: 2008-08-22
This latest of Karcher's books on the I Ching, Total I Ching: Myths for Change, is a masterpiece. Karcher successfully takes the original texts and jettisons almost all the moralistic moorings that are at times difficult to get around in other translations. He takes a shamanistic and pragmatic approach, eschewing doom-and-gloom predictions for succinct, somewhat dispassionate advice. For instance, rather than hearing hopelessly negative news from the 6th changing line of Hexagram 24 (Return), Karcher says "Trap!...You are returning to an old delusion, blinded by self-deception and infatuation. If you go on in this way, your hard-won growth will be destroyed. It will take at least ten years to deal with the repurcussions of this catastrophe. The Way is closed. Think about where this desire comes from. Whatever you do, don't act this out....Take things in. Be open and provide what is needed." I find this type of advice far more useful than the the stark proclamation of horrific bad luck given in some versions of the I Ching, which could almost cause the susceptible to contemplate jumping off the Golden Gate bridge.
His commentary on the 2nd line of Hexagram 49 (Skinning/Revolution) is: "There is excellence in moving now. This is your time. Move into the dance. You can change the world. Put everything into solution. Don't be shy. Be a hero. Vigorous action opens the Way. This is definitely not a mistake. Be resolute. You are connected to a creative force." This successfully communicates the positive energetic information without quite making one giddy. I enjoy and need a slightly sober reminder that my good fortune lies in remaining connected to the creative force, from which all blessings flow. Total I Ching provides this without the puritanical tone found in some other versions.
It is easy to bypass some of the more esoteric information on each hexagram and go directly to the sections most important for divination. The tone is helpful and grounding, yet invigorating. I personally am more interested in that than the scholarly details, but those who seek them won't be disappointed. My only criticisms are that it would have been far, far more helpful to have the Hexagram numbers placed on each page. You have to go through pages and pages to get your bearings in the text, rather than being able to flip easily to the hexgram you want. Also, I really wish this book was available in hardback. For those of us that actually use and refer to the I Ching on a regular basis, this is essential as well as aesthetically preferable. The text deserves to be preserved in a hardback edition. This is a wonderful, wonderful book.
One of the Best TranslationsReview Date: 2008-03-24
Better for people who already have experience with the I Ching and Chinese and Taoist philosophy.
Awesome Awesome AwesomeReview Date: 2004-06-30
If you love the I-Ching; If you read every single one you can find; this book is simply eons beyond all the rest.
The other I-Chings I used to really like were the one by Alfred Huang, and the one by Rudolph Ritsema. This is like taking the best aspects of both of those two and combining them and making them even better.
Check it out!
Could give this one TEN STARS!!!Review Date: 2004-10-24
One of the best indepth books on I Ching.Review Date: 2006-02-01
The print in this book is smaller compared to the authors "Symbols of love" book.Both books are very similar but "Total I Ching" is for all matters.
I also recommend these books:
1)"I Ching:a new interpretation for modern times."By Sam Reifler.
2)"Practical guide to the I Ching".By Kim-Anh Lim.

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InsightReview Date: 2006-04-22
Ms. Brown's characters are richly drawn and should be immediately recognizable even to the non-musician. They crackle with angst, jealousy, bitterness, and, occasionally, hope and enthusiasm. Her dialog is crisp and her imagery so vivid, you'll be able to taste the stale dinner rolls at the gig.
For the musician, "Trading Fours" will cut to the bone. Ms. Brown, herself a musician and artist of rare, uncompromising quality, knows this world well. This is an accurate mirror, an honest reflection of a group who despite popular opinion really has no other choice but to do what they do. The empathy Ms. Brown has for her colleagues is obvious.
On a personal note, as one who has had the joy and honor of making music with Angela, I must say that "Trading Fours" reminds me of the real reason we do this, the reason that gets pushed aside far too often: Music.
Thank you, Angela.
Write on, Angela!Review Date: 2006-02-24
I literally couldn't put it down.
Thank you, Angela, for a gifted performance. Looking forward to your next literary gig...
Hitting HardReview Date: 2006-01-28
with all the tortured thought processes but a really good storyline as well.
The deathbed scenes with Hayes and Seth are truly dramatic and will touch you all the way down to the core of your deepest sensitivities.
You can recognize all four main characters and all sub-characters because Ms Brown has made them familiar to anyone who's been or still is part of this world.
The feelings and thoughts behind each situation pass through all our consciousness at one time or other- some more than once.
some are just constant nagging and torture. (that ringing in my ears bothering anyone?)
I recommend this read to anyone who doesn't understand this level of the music business - and why some choose it.
(starting with my mom)
"Trading Fours" - a MUST read!Review Date: 2005-12-04
Angela Carole Brown captures, in a "take no prisoners and pull no punches" style, the true realities of what it is to be a free-lance musician working the casual gig scene on LA. The roller-coaster lifestyle, the compliments, the insults, the loves and heartaches, the sacrifices and rewards, the way musicians are looked at by other people and the way musicians look at other musicians - it's all in "Trading Fours." This book should be required reading in every college and university music school under the heading of "Gig Reality 101."
I have had the privilege of working with Angela in a variety of situations in LA over the past 8 years, and rest assured - she's no "chick singer." She is a true musician, in every positive sense of the word. It's a shame her CD's are not included with the book. They would, without a doubt, establish her credibility to anyone who might have any doubt as to what she is talking about.
"This One's For Hayes"Review Date: 2005-11-18
I'm talking about Casual musicians. No, not the musicians you see playing in the Symphony Orchestra down at the Music Center. Not the kids making a racket in your neighbor's garage trying to play Linkin Park covers. Not even the Top 40 band playing down at the local nightclub. I mean the tuxedoed mercenaries who show up 20 minutes before downbeat to play the live music for your Wedding, Bar Mitzvah or Corporate Party.
This is what is known as a Casual. No rehearsal. You may never have met the other Casual musicians you're about to play with. You have all been sent to this hotel or Country Club ballroom by a Casual Agency, which books the gigs and takes most of the money. It will sound just fine however, because everybody knows all three or four hundred tunes they're expected to, and can fake or sight-read the rest.
Maybe it has something to do with the tuxedo (or black evening dress that female Casual musicians wear), or maybe it's the income bracket, but Casual musicians hover in the social food chain somewhere between the waiter at your table and the guy that parks your car when you pull up to the hotel. This in spite of the years of diligent practice and yes, talent that it takes to master their craft and yes, their art.
Art and Commerce make strange bedfellows, and most Casual musicians would scoff if you asked them if they considered a Casual an artistic event. Nevertheless, all but the most jaded and bitter among them bring as much musicality as they can to these proceedings and under the best circumstances, they can be very enjoyable events. They can also be endless, hellish tribulations, hence the raising of one's wrist to look at one's watch being known as the `musician's salute'.
There is a certain camaraderie among Casual musicians. Perhaps borne of a shared feeling of being outside the mainstream of society. Artists forced to prostitute their gift in return for a wage far below their qualifications. This is one of the favorite topics of conversation between musicians on Casuals. They will always chuckle when you tell them the old joke: "How do you make a musician complain?" "Give him a gig".
Almost all Casual musicians have something else that they're working on besides Casuals. Something with a future, and something more fulfilling than playing slavish imitations of the same old songs, night after night. In this era of the home recording studio, everyone now has a studio quality CD of their own original material and performances. And there's always that possibility in the back of everyone's mind that they themselves could rise above this workaday existence with the stroke of a record company executive's pen.
The fact that it is a statistically tiny possibility does not banish the tinge of dreams that it brings to this lifestyle, like being permanently enrolled in the lottery. Not since the gold rush have there been so many dreamers happy to plug away at such a long shot. Actors don't qualify, because they make their living waiting tables. Indeed, simply earning your livelihood playing music is the fulfillment of a dream. As they say, it beats working.
This fraternity of dreamers lives right in the midst of the rest of us, and yet they have their own world, which is mostly invisible to everyone else. This is the world that Angela Carol Brown brings to life in Trading Fours. She is a natural born storyteller, and she has lived this life, so it exudes an air of autobiography. Indeed, you would swear these characters are real people. Maybe that's because they are.
I am aware of very few works of fiction that deal with this interesting world where art meets commerce and dreams encounter reality. The Adam Sandler movie `The Wedding Singer' dealt with the subject in a somewhat slapstick vein, and did nail some of the truly hilarious aspects of this business, but the characters were cardboard cutouts.
In Trading Fours we get glimpses into the lives of four central characters, all in the course of one 24-hour period. Each chapter deals with each of them in turn, emulating the Jazz musical device of `trading fours', where each musician will improvise for four measures and then on to the next musician and the next in turn. Each four measure `solo' by each musician should reflect and complement those of his band mates, and this is exactly how the chapters work together in Trading Fours, eventually coalescing into a whole at the denouement.
But this is much more than a book about a lifestyle. It is a rumination on life itself, and what's important. It's about four people finding their way to their own answer to that question. It is all leading up to a tribute to a dying musical icon named Hayes DeWitt, who symbolizes the spirit of fierce loyalty to ones own dream, even in the face of worldly failure. This is a masterfully woven tale by a master storyteller. The spirit of the book itself is summed in one of the last lines of the book: "This one's for Hayes".
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A lesson in the possibilities of humorReview Date: 2004-02-18
Playwright describes her early life in NYReview Date: 2004-09-28
This one is a classic!Review Date: 2001-01-16
Truly, this is the funniest book you'll ever read.Review Date: 2000-07-01
This book, like all of Miss Hanff's works, makes you feel great to be alive.
I've come to love my native city more and more by seeing it through Miss Hanff's eyes.
Broadway misadventuresReview Date: 2004-01-09
I couldn't help laughing at the merry-go-round of a Broadway agent shopping a play all over town. Ms. Hanff tells how 'Oklahoma!' was named (she was there). One of her many jobs involved speed-reading long novels; her take on Tolkein is slightly different than Peter Jackson's.
I echo a previous reviewer's thought: this book would make a terrific film. 'Underfoot in Show Business' is a gem, a memoir full of magic and wit. Highly recommended.
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Marvelous and hopeful book!Review Date: 2008-04-14
the oneness of body and mind; oneness of man and environment; cause and effect, are explained in simple terms. Eastern views of karma, collective karma, karmic suffering, and karmic disease are also discussed, and explained in detail. Profound discussion and analysis of the mind and diseases of the body and mind, psychology, science, health, astronomy, and so much more, are also discussed. Questions such as how we can cultivate the unique potentials that all life has inherent inside itself, as well as ways to overcome challenges in our own individual cosmos (our lives), and that of the entire world itself, are also examined. It becomes increasingly clear, that our individual life, and our beliefs, instantaneously impacts that of another life, either imparting value or worthlessness and of lack of concern, or awareness that the two are one. We have potentials to build ourselves, others, and our planet up, or to destroy ourselves, others, and our planet. Whichever we choose thoroughly affects our individual happiness and has a penetrating effect on our the Cosmos as a whole.
Deeply thought-provoking and enlighteningReview Date: 2000-05-27
In the first part of the book, the author examines issues of birth, longevity, health, sickness, and death as they affect people today. Later chapters are concerned with explaining fundamental concepts in Buddhist theory. Throughout the book, he illustrates the fascinating correspondence between Buddhism and current scientific thought. Complete with a glossary, index, and foreword by noted astronomer Professor N. C. Wickramasinghe, this book is a wide-ranging, vigorously-written exposition which will challenge and absorb the non-Buddhist reader as well as those more familiar with Buddhism.
One of the best books I've ever readReview Date: 2000-03-08
Buddhism teaches that all individuals innately possess infinite power and wisdom, and reveals the process whereby these qualities can be developed. In this incredible book, Daisaku Ikeda, leader of the world's largest Buddhist organization, the Soka Gakkai International, explores this premise and its means of realization, while charting the universal relevance of Buddhist thought and practice in today's world.
Buddhist patterns of thought can offer release from the suffering of birth, old age, sickness and death through a progressive understanding of their place in the cycle of universal existence.
This book is a wide-ranging, vigorously written exposition which will challenge and absorb the non-Buddhist reader as well as the Buddhist.
Highly recommended.
Life and death discussed in an open and refreshing manner.Review Date: 2000-07-11
Definite Must ReadReview Date: 2000-07-19

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More than a recipe bookReview Date: 1999-09-12
Beautiful!Review Date: 2005-09-09
Wonderful Book!Review Date: 2001-11-04
Absolutely The Best!Review Date: 2004-08-30
The REAL Woman's Martha Stewart.Review Date: 2003-02-15

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We Came As AngelsReview Date: 2008-02-08
Earth had to go into hibernation till now. It may be confusing to read at
first but keep reading.....You'll understand
Heartfelt bookReview Date: 2003-06-03
InsightfulReview Date: 2003-03-10
WOWReview Date: 2002-10-28
many levelsReview Date: 2002-10-16
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