Brown Books
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This book can change your outlook!Review Date: 2002-03-25
wow!Review Date: 2002-03-23
I Loved "Live Food Dead Food"Review Date: 2002-03-18
I Loved "Live Food Dead Food"Review Date: 2002-03-18
A Real Eye OpenerReview Date: 2002-02-28

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good bookReview Date: 2008-11-03
A delight for children and adultsReview Date: 2007-09-03
Wonderful Book!Review Date: 2006-12-05
Excellent for kids going from kindergarten to 1st grade!Review Date: 2001-06-29
Lunch Bunnies is the story of a little boy named Clyde who harbors an irrational fear of making a fool out of himself on his first day of school, in the lunchroom. Anyone with small children can instantly relate how Clyde becomes obsessive with doing the lunchroom thing right!
The night before his first day at a new school, Clyde is seen "practicing" by carrying a tray of food. Of course there is a big brother present (Jefferson)who does his best to plant seeds of doubt in Clyde's mind and delights in tormenting the poor lad with stories of inedible food ("Mystery Goosh), and the ubiquitous lunch ladies with "bristly" faces who have all of the charm and caring of a Third World Dictator. Poor Clyde is scared to death!
My favorite part of the book was when it was time for the children to queue up, and proceed into the lunchroom. As a teacher of small children myself, I can't help but wonder if the author is not poking gentle fun at the anality of the lunchroom ritual, where children must quietly, in monk-like manner, line up and process orderly, much as inmates are required to in correctional centers.
Nevertheless, this book was a hit with my 10 year old daughter when she first started school, and it is a hit with my son, who will start first grade this fall. All children, and even some of us adults, have irrational fears that we blow way out of proportion. But the message of Lunch Bunnies, a message adults would do well to heed, is that nothing is as bad as we imagine it, and things always seem to work out just fine.
enticing and lovable story for getting ready to start schoolReview Date: 2000-02-07

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its the best... when things are to be looked up fast!Review Date: 2008-02-23
a must have!Review Date: 2007-07-10
New Gold Standard HandbookReview Date: 2007-05-23
Treatment plans are cutting edge but available to the community and the presentation of controversies is helpful in understanding the topic.
The most compact informative review of surgical oncologyReview Date: 1999-02-07
THE comprehensive cancer bookReview Date: 2003-08-17

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Bradley at WARReview Date: 2007-11-30
At War, AgainReview Date: 2007-11-23
Comprehensive bookReview Date: 2007-12-12
The chapters in the book were well laid out, text was detailed but easy to read, chapters flowed logically from one aspect of the Bradley to another. A joy to read if you are interested in armoured vehicles.
Good up-to-date reference on the BradleyReview Date: 2007-11-17
Excellent Mid-level overview.Review Date: 2007-12-30
The rest of the book is written in plain English, with enough pictures to support the documentation and provide a visual reference to what one is reading. As a Bradley commander, I can pick out a few very small, niggling errors in the technical descriptions, but this does not detract from the general overview one would get as a reader with a more-than-passing interest in the vehicle but without getting to the level of being an operator's manual. Definitely recommended.

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"But peas in your ears make it tricky to hear"Review Date: 2006-08-13
Witty Children's Book that is Fun for both Adult and ChildReview Date: 2006-04-20
LOVE IT!Review Date: 2007-07-05
This is a winner!Review Date: 2006-03-08
It also passed the important child test. My four-year-old granddaughter and I share the delightful ritual of reading books over the telephone when we're miles apart. I read Mabel O'Leary Put Peas in Her Ear-y to Caroline and she giggled and clapped her hands joyfully, and when we'd finished reading it, she asked me to read it to her again. Now that's a recommendation!
Mabel doesn't like peas but she can't leave the dinner table unless she eats them all. What to do! But Mabel has a plan. She hides the peas in her ears. The problem is that she is unable to hear anything her mother says and that causes many problems for Mabel and her mother.
Armchair Interviews says: Mabel's adventures will delight children and adults alike. You'll find yourself laughing along with your special child.
Brilliant Rhyme. Fun story!Review Date: 2006-03-02
When you don't like veggies, you must eat them anyway or devise a plan to make them disappear. Mabel O'Leary chooses to hide her peas in her ear-y, which makes for an interesting day when she can't understand a word her mother says.
Rollicking rhyme coupled with gorgeous illustrations of the young trouble-maker and her exhausted mother make this book laugh-out-loud funny and an entertaining read-aloud.

Another winner from Lena KennedyReview Date: 2004-01-17
MaggieReview Date: 2000-02-28
Whenever I'm down, I read it and it lifts me up again.Review Date: 1999-11-17
IF ONLY THERE WERE 10 STARS TO RATE THIS BOOK!!Review Date: 1998-07-10
A MOST TREASURED STORYReview Date: 1999-12-07

Magic HolidaysReview Date: 2005-05-11
A beautiful bookReview Date: 2001-04-12
Richie's Picks: MAGIC BEACHReview Date: 2006-07-06
WHERE MAGIC MEETS REALITY - SEASIDE FANTASIESReview Date: 2001-05-11
A rhyming story line in a child's picture book seldom works well. They often seem so contrived and sometimes downright corny.
Not so in Alison Lester's << Magic Beach >>. This book deserves the status of a classic in contemporary children's literature. In fact, the book is regularly listed in the Best Seller lists in Australia, where the author resides. ...
All children love the freedom and fun of a trip to the beach. Alison transports us to one of the childhood's favourite playground, that place where the land meets the sea. The real joys of beachside fun are joined with pleasurable and harmless seaside fantasies.
On alternate pages, we are taken from beautiful realities to even more captivating fantasies. We go from a scene with a sparkling sea to an exciting world where we can ride waves pretending they are "wild white horses". We go from sandcastle building to a land of fire breathing dragons. We explore rock-pools and their magic world of starfish and crabs, and then go to an evenmore magic Kingdom where we can ride seahorses.
The beach is still magic when it's a cloudy and gray day, our imaginations will help us discovered a treasure chest. We can go boating in the safety of bay, and then let the wind and our fantasies take us to the "edge of the world".
We fish and laze on the jetty, and in our daydreams, we catch a monstrous shark.
It is now evening-time, we are toasting marshmallows around the glowing fire, and in the shadows, there may be smugglers hauling in crate-loads of booty.
It's time for bed, and to the sounds of the ocean, we drift off to sleep on the evening tide.
This is a fabulous book which has universal and popular appeal. Let's see if we can get it back on the publisher's lists in the US. It deserves the widest audience possible.
Great Aussie summerReview Date: 2000-05-01
This is a lovely book. It depicts various activities throughout the day at the beach, from building sand castles falling asleep at night within sound of the ocean.
Each double page describes a time and activity (the verse is a little bit inferior to the pics). The subsequent double page has an imagined fantasy activity.
I give this 5 stars for the illustrations, 4 for the text.
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Mainstay is a wonderful complement to When The Man You Love Is IllReview Date: 2007-09-04
I still think Mainstay touches the heart of all who have been through the experience of being a caregiver. Five stars
Validation and Practical Help for a Well SpouseReview Date: 1998-10-29
From the heartReview Date: 1999-08-04
The author offers solid advice, restorative supportReview Date: 1998-09-04
Indispensable for caregiversReview Date: 1998-07-08

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A must for any person responsible for health careReview Date: 1999-09-02
insightfulReview Date: 2001-04-06
IncisiveReview Date: 1998-08-12
Making my OWN miracle happenReview Date: 2000-08-16
My MiracleReview Date: 2006-02-24
Here it is 5 years later.Am I walking?Yes!Not only that I walk as well as I did before I got hurt.I work 2 jobs and generally lead a full life.
Mr.Smith's book says all the things I feel.The fight against self pity.The realization that your life will never be the same again.The hard work after.The nature of hospitals.The angels in one's life(my mother comes to mind as does the rest of my family and some good friends).
I feel like I was with him the whole time I read the book.I related to all of the stories he cites.I especially like his line that doctors are like weathermen.I say it all the time.They are NOT God...and I myself am a podiatrist.
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An excellent introduction to Late AntiquityReview Date: 2001-02-15
Excelent introduction to the Late AntiquityReview Date: 2001-02-16
The poisoning of the classical spiritReview Date: 2003-08-10
I found this book to be an extremely clear and well-written explanation of the decline of classical Greco-Roman civilization. The period from the second to the fourth centuries, from the Antonines to Constantine, is covered. The author makes a very good case that the cause for this decline in the classical world was primarily due to a concentration of wealth and power into fewer and fewer hands. He shows this to be true in economic, political, cultural, and most especially, religious spheres. He also shows the obvious parallels with our own age without being heavy handed.
First he shows the grand show of power and tradition in the age of the Antonines to be primarily an empty hollow thing. It was the gigantism that precedes decline even if the players of the time could not see it. The societal restraints and governors that constrained individual ambition began to erode. The old code of civic virtue, of demonstrating your greatness by contributing to the benefit of the society, the polis, crumbled. Wealth was concentrated into fewer and fewer hands. The common people were forced off of the land. Bankruptcy became commonplace across the empire. Politically, power concentrated into a smaller and smaller circle centered on the court in Rome, and then Constantinople, and away from the provincial towns and capitals. Culturally and scholarly, all status depended on ones mastery of polished Greek and the ability to quote precisely from the classics (i.e. scholarship depended more on the size of your library than the size of your intellect.)
It is in the religious and spiritual sphere that this tendency to place all authority in the hands of an elite becomes the most insidious, and the most damaging. It is demonstrated that ,traditionally, the average man of the Greco-Roman world saw that world as alive with supernatural forces that he interacted with on a daily basis. The pagan participant in the mysteries experienced the divine through direct contact. This slowly changed with the rise of Christianity. Men were told that only "official" intermediaries could bridge the gap between heaven and earth. As a result this gap widened into a chasm. The old comforting classical assumption that heaven and earth lived side by side in gentle communion faded away. In the author's words, the leaders of the Christian church came to stand between heaven and an earth emptied of the Gods.
With all economic, political, scholarly, and religious power concentrated in the hands of a tiny, ruthless, corrupt elite, is it any wonder that the common man lost any interest in maintaining the empire? The old system of civic virtue and of the old delicately balanced system of obligations from ruled to the rulers, and the rulers to the ruled, had been poisoned.
Any of this sound familiar?
One of the best books on the subjectReview Date: 2006-08-29
The poisoning of the classical spiritReview Date: 2003-08-10
I found this book to be an extremely clear and well-written explanation of the decline of classical Greco-Roman civilization. The period from the second to the fourth centuries, from the Antonines to Constantine, is covered. The author makes a very good case that the cause for this decline in the classical world was primarily due to a concentration of wealth and power into fewer and fewer hands. He shows this to be true in economic, political, cultural, and most especially, religious spheres. He also shows the obvious parallels with our own age without being heavy handed.
First he shows the grand show of power and tradition in the age of the Antonines to be primarily an empty hollow thing. It was the gigantism that precedes decline even if the players of the time could not see it. The societal restraints and governors that constrained individual ambition began to erode. The old code of civic virtue, of demonstrating your greatness by contributing to the benefit of the society, the polis, crumbled. Wealth was concentrated into fewer and fewer hands. The common people were forced off of the land. Bankruptcy became commonplace across the empire. Politically, power concentrated into a smaller and smaller circle centered on the court in Rome, and then Constantinople, and away from the provincial towns and capitals. Culturally and scholarly, all status depended on ones mastery of polished Greek and the ability to quote precisely from the classics (i.e. scholarship depended more on the size of your library than the size of your intellect.)
It is in the religious and spiritual sphere that this tendency to place all authority in the hands of an elite becomes the most insidious, and the most damaging. It is demonstrated that ,traditionally, the average man of the Greco-Roman world saw that world as alive with supernatural forces that he interacted with on a daily basis. The pagan participant in the mysteries experienced the divine through direct contact. This slowly changed with the rise of Christianity. Men were told that only "official" intermediaries could bridge the gap between heaven and earth. As a result this gap widened into a chasm. The old comforting classical assumption that heaven and earth lived side by side in gentle communion faded away. In the author's words, the leaders of the Christian church came to stand between heaven and an earth emptied of the Gods.
With all economic, political, scholarly, and religious power concentrated in the hands of a tiny, ruthless, corrupt elite, is it any wonder that the common man lost any interest in maintaining the empire? The old system of civic virtue and of the old delicately balanced system of obligations from ruled to the rulers, and the rulers to the ruled, had been poisoned.
Any of this sound familiar?
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