Burke Books


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Burke Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

Burke
Eye Count
Published in Hardcover by Chronicle Books (1995-04-01)
Author: Linda Burke
List price: $14.95
New price: $1.75
Used price: $0.60

Average review score:

multiple meanings - brain teasing
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2000-04-18
Count from one to twelve -- each number shows that specific number of a secret word and also shows a clue to the next secret word. Example: the number 3 shows three diamonds (a baseball diamond, a diamond ring, and a Jack of diamonds playing card). The next number is four -- four what? Four jacks! The publisher should bring this book back into print.

Burke
Fathers of Tomorrow
Published in Paperback by Write Words, Inc. (2008-10-16)
Author: Carl E. Burke
List price: $16.95
New price: $16.95

Average review score:

Fathers of Tomorrow
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-11-11
This book draws you in from the first page up until the climatic ending. As I read this book I never would have guessed that the this was Carl Burke's first published work. For those that have often wondered about their own ancestors this novel brings together murder, mystery, romance,and greed, and that burning question that many of us often ask, who were my ancestors? If you have ever read a book, only to put it aside to read again, this is one of them. I am patiently awaiting Mr.Burke's next book.

Burke
Fear Not - Story of Hope: A (Touched By An Angel Classic)
Published in Hardcover by Thomas Nelson (1998-09-22)
Author: Monica Hall
List price: $14.99
New price: $0.01
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $14.99

Average review score:

Sweet rendition of TBAA's first Randy Travis Christmas
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 1999-11-03
A sweet little rendition of the first Randy Travis Christmas episode with lovely drawings. But the best thing, for those of us who adore "Andrew", is that they replaced "Adam" with "Andrew".

Burke
Federal Income Taxation of Corporations & Stockholders in a Nutshell (Nutshell Series)
Published in Paperback by Thomson West (2007-10-29)
Author: Karen C. Burke
List price: $29.00
New price: $26.00
Used price: $27.94

Average review score:

Research Paper Source
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-07
This book is very easy to read and was a very helpful source of information regarding the Corporate Tax. The book is definitely written for someone who really does not have an indept knowledge of taxes. I recommend this book to students who are doing a research paper on the Corporate Tax.

Burke
Fire Watch : A Novel
Published in Hardcover by Little Brown & Co (T) (1980-04)
Author: Alan Dennis Burke
List price: $11.95
Used price: $0.39
Collectible price: $12.00

Average review score:

great
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 1999-05-04
I think this was a very good book. I loved it. I'm not very good with words thats why i love reading so much (I get to read the words of others) so I'm gonna' make this short and sweet, this is a great book and you should see if you can get your hands on a copy of it. I read it years ago and just ran into it on the internet and had to write a review. Great book!!!!!!!!!!!

Burke
Folk tales;
Published in Unknown Binding by Burke (1968)
Author: Wilhelm Matthiessen
List price:
Used price: $8.50

Average review score:

Escape again and again
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-22
I received this book as a birthday present when I was a child. I have read it over and over again, and recently bought copies for each of my children. The stories in this collection are unique, though each feels like an old friend. The illustrations are colorful and clever enough to entertain children and adults.

I highly recommend this vintage book.

Burke
The Food That Went With The Whine: Grandma's Home Cookin'
Published in Paperback by AuthorHouse (2001-06-25)
Author: Kevin Burke
List price: $10.95
New price: $6.81
Used price: $6.76

Average review score:

GREAT home cooking!!!!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2001-12-11
Quite simply put, I was amazed. I came across recipes from the 1940's which until now have been family secrets. This cookbook is a MUST have and I must say, a perfect gift.

All the recipes are well written and I have tried several myself. What an indulgence!

Burke
Four Feet and Two - An Anthology of Verse
Published in Mass Market Paperback by Penguin Books (1960)
Author: Leila (compiled by) Berg
List price:
Used price: $10.00

Average review score:

Happily waiting
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-05
I happened upon this little Puffin Book whilst waiting for a hospital appointment. Someone maintains a bookcase full of interesting books and I suppose in the circumstance of most waiters a poetry anthology is suitable, particularly one aimed at children. I was immediately attracted by R C Trevelyn's "Winter Rains" which suited the February day on which I found it, a very hopeful piece. Other choices varied from Ogden Nash to the Book of Proverbs covering many great poets writngs on animals and people. A delight, the editor choosing only easily accessible poems.

Burke
Frankenstein, or, the Modern Prometheus
Published in Kindle Edition by LeClue22 (2008-03-07)
Author: Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley
List price: $0.99
New price: $0.99

Average review score:

Gothic at its best
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-11-12
Mary Shelley was the daughter of the famous feminist and author, Mary Wollstonecraft, who is best known for her work The Vindication of the Rights of Women. In Mary Shelley's Frankenstein, a young university student, Victor Frankenstein, obsesses with wanting to know the secret to life. He studies chemistry and natural philosophy with the goal of being able to create a human out of spare body parts. After months of constant work in his laboratory, Frankenstein attains his goal and brings his creation to life. Frankenstein is immediately overwrought by fear and remorse at the sight of his creation, a "monster." The next morning, he decides to destroy his creation but finds that the monster has escaped. The monster, unlike other humans, has no social preparation or education; thus, it is unequipped to take care of itself either physically or emotionally. The monster lives in the forest like an animal without knowledge of "self" or understanding of its surroundings. The monster happens upon a hut inhabited by a poor family and is able to find shelter in a shed adjacent to the hut. For several months, the monster starts to gain knowledge of human life by observing the daily life of the hut's inhabitants through a crack in the wall. The monster's education of language and letters begins when he listens to one of them learning the French language. During this period, the monster also learns of human society and comes to the realization that he is grotesque and alone in the world. Armed with his newfound ability to read, he reads three books that he found in a leather satchel in the woods. Goethe's Sorrows of Young Werther, Milton's Paradise Lost, and a volume of Plutarch's Lives. The monster, not knowing any better, read these books thinking them to be facts about human history. From Plutarch's works, he learns of humankind's virtues. However, it is Paradise Lost that has a most interesting effect on the monster's understanding of self. The monster at first identifies with Adam, "I was apparently united by no link to any other being in existence." The monster, armed only with his limited education, thought that he would introduce himself to the cottagers and depend on their virtue and benevolence; traits he believed from his readings that all humans possessed. However, soon after his first encounter with the cottagers, he is beaten and chased off because his ugliness frightens people. The monster is overwrought by a feeling of perplexity by this reaction, since he thought he would gain their trust and love, which he observed them generously give to each other on so many occasions. He receives further confirmation of how his ugliness repels people when, sometime later, he saves a young girl from drowning and the girl's father shoots at him because he is frightful to look at. The monster quickly realizes that the books really lied to him. He found no benevolence or virtue among humans, even from his creator. At every turn in his life, humans are judging him solely based on his looks. The monster soon realizes that it is not Adam, the perfect being enjoying the world, which he is most alike. Instead, he comes to realize that he most represents Satan. The monster is jealous of the happiness he sees humans enjoy that he has never attained for himself. The monster tells Frankenstein that he found his lab journal in his coat pocket and read it with increasing hate and despair as he came to understand what Frankenstein's intent was in creating him. The monster curses Frankenstein for making a creature so hideous that even his creator turned from him in disgust.

Shelley's intent here is plain to see. "The fate of the monster suggests that proficiency in `the art of language' as he calls it, may not ensure one's position as a member of the `human kingdom." In a sense, she is showing that both her parents were mistaken when they advocated greater education reform for people. They thought education would make people better, which in turn would improve society for all. Mary Shelley's Frankenstein contradicts this belief.

Starting with the full title of Mary Shelley's book, Frankenstein: or The Modern Prometheus one can instantly see that mythology was integral to her book. Lord Byron, poet and friend of the Shelley's was writing a poem entitled Prometheus, and Mary was reading the Prometheus legend in Aeschylus' works when she had a dream, which was the impetus for her book. The Greek god Prometheus, is known for two important tasks that he performed, he created man from clay, and he stole fire from the gods and gave it to man. The stealing of fire really angered Zeus because the giving of fire began an era of enlightenment for humankind. Zeus punished Prometheus by having him carried to a mountain, where an eagle would pick at his liver; it would grow back each day and the eagle would eat it again.

The presence of fire and light in this gothic story helps to point to the similarities to Prometheus and Victor Frankenstein, the creator of the monster, in Shelley's book. The book uses light as a symbol of discovery, knowledge, and enlightenment. The natural world is full of hidden passages, and dark unknown scientific secrets; Victor's goal as a scientist is to grasp towards the light. Light is a by-product of fire that the monster learned quickly when he is living on his own. The monster experienced fires' duality when he first encountered it in an unattended fire in the woods. He is mesmerized by the fact that fire produces light in the darkness in the woods, but is shocked at the sensation of pain it gives him when he touches it. Victor is defiant of god in the same way that Prometheus was defiant of Zeus. Victor steals the secret of life from god and creates a human out of spare body parts. He does this out of an altruistic wish to spare humankind from the pain and suffering of death. Thus, Victor Frankenstein embodies both aspects of the Promethean myth creation and fire. Victor in a sense has the same experience with the fire of enlightenment similar to his monster; he is "burned" by the fire of enlightenment. Victor also suffers from the classic Greek tragic condition of hubris for his transgression against god and nature.

The book also adopts two other great mythic legends. One is Adam from the Bible. Victor Frankenstein bears striking resemblance to Adam and his fall from grace for eating the fruit from the Tree of Knowledge. The other is Satan, a mythic figure that Shelley admired from her readings in Milton's book Paradise Lost. In an interesting juxtaposition of booth myths, she expands on the motif of the fall from grace in her book when she portrays the monster comparing himself to Adam; after he read, Milton's book Paradise Lost. The monster tells Victor, that he at first identifies with Adam God's first creation. "I was apparently united by no link to any other being in existence." However, after several incidents of mistreatment that he suffered from the humans he encountered in his travels; the monster soon realized that it is not Adam, the perfect being enjoying the world, which he was most alike. Instead, he came to realize that he most represented Satan. The monster's feelings of hatred and despair stem from the fact that humans found him grotesque to look at and would not accept him as a member of human society. The monster cursed Victor for making a creature so hideous that even his creator turned from him in disgust. Thus, it is obvious for all to see that Shelley's Frankenstein is replete with mythological references and they are central to the plot.

This was required reading for a graduate course in the Humanities. Recommended reading for anyone interested in history, psychology, philosophy, and literature.


Burke
From France to Italy through a Merovingian Descendant
Published in Hardcover by Burke's Peerage (1998-07-01)
Author: Riccardo Capasso
List price: $253.27
New price: $253.27
Used price: $200.00

Average review score:

The Real Thing...
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2004-01-20
This book is the real thing! As 2004 begins, there are a number of other books on the bestseller lists which deal with related topics. But, these other books are nevertheless fiction.
FROM FRANCE TO ITALY... traces the line of descent of an actual, real family. The book is filled with copies of antique documents accompanied by illuminating text, and makes a great addition to any library, whether casual or professional.


Books-Under-Review-->Reference-->Biography-->B-->Burke-->26
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