Burroughs Books
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susan magoffinReview Date: 2001-03-23
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A BRANCH IN TARZEN'S FAMILY TREEReview Date: 2006-08-11

To boldly swagger --Review Date: 2008-01-19
The story gets off to an odd start, with a vignette that doesn't really do much for the remainder of the book. In it, Carson and his woman (Burroughs's phrase, not mine) encounter a savage band of Amazons. As you might expect from stories so thoroughly sex-typed as these, the warrior women are portrayed as belching butch brigands who terrorize their sissified men-folk, who have names like Lula. The good guys escape nicely, everything about this interlude sinks quietly out of sight, and the real story begins.
It pretty well fits the checklist of Burroughs swashbucklers, with good guys practically tripping over their senses of honor, skulking traitors, and romance found, foiled, and fixed in the end. Carson drops pretty much out of nowhere into a civil war, and makes it his own. Once he's picked a side, we then see the opponents as stupid, brutal tyrants, their down-trodden populace cowering under constant threat of arrest by the imperial storm-grunters, for any reason or none at all. This story came from the late 1930s, during the run-up to the Cold War, so it's pretty easy to assign real-world meaning to the two sides in Burroughs's description.
If this were a movie, it would demand a rainy Saturday and a bucket of popcorn. Instead, it presents a great bit of adventure with plenty of chaste romance and bloodless violence, a holdover from the age before irony. If you're looking for some escapist reading, it's a great place to escape to.
-- wiredweird
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Edgar Rice Burroughs offers us the flip side of TarzanReview Date: 2003-09-04
ERB really stacks the deck against poor Waldo, who is in bad health and terrified of shadows in the night. By the end of the first chapter he is a total wreck, convinced he is being stalked and on the verge of madness. Attacked by a group of savages, Waldo is aided by the titular character, a half-naked young woman, in saving their skins. In their own secluded "Little Eden," Waldo learns the language of the young woman, whose name is Nadara, and some other things that would not be deemed proper back in Boston. However, as is usually the case in one of ERB's pulp fiction adventures, Nadara has some unwanted suitors and believes that Waldo, whom she has named "Thandar" the Brave One, will defend her honor and fight for her. However, Waldo is not absolutely sure about that, especially once he sees Flatfoot.
Basically the story has two halves. The original story of "The Cave Girl" has Waldo turning into Thandar, claiming his mate by the law of the jungle, and walking away from the rescue party that has arrived to save him (now that he does not want to be saved, you understand). The second half, "The Cave Man," has Thandar and Nadara returning to live with her people. King Big Fist is wary of the new strong man and out in the jungle the red-haired Thurg is seeking his revenge. Meanwhile, Nadara is trying to understand why Thandar insists on asking her parents to be allowed to mate with her instead of just sticking to cave man rules. More importantly, it seems that Nadara was not born into the tribe, but was adopted as a baby after her parents were found dead in a strange floating boat. But the question of Nadara's true parentage and real name will have to wait, because the Smith-Joneses are launching another rescue to find their lost boy Waldo.
As a "Tarzan-in-reverse" story "The Cave Girl" still manages to fit the standard ERB yarn from this early part of his career. As with John Carter, David Innes and other ERB heroes, there is the attempt to learn the language and ways of a strange new culture. Obviously the biggest difference is that Waldo is not a burly he-man. But living in the jungle and having to fend for himself forces him to strip away the veneer of civilization and turn him into a cave man, albeit one with Boston bred sensibilities. "The Cave Girl" ends up being an average Burroughs yarn, where "The Cave Man" sequel ends up taking away some of the power of the original story.

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Unveiling climate: review of Climate Revealed W J BurroughsReview Date: 2000-04-25
William J Burroughs, 1999, CambridgeUniversity Press, 192 pages.
The impact of volcanoes, proxy records,El Nino, the Sahel drought, weather modification, sea-level rise,tornadoes, the cost of climate change, the ozone hole - this is traditionally stuff of coffee-room discussions of the meteorologist. No longer! In brilliant color and in an extremely well written text, Dr Burroughs has produced a book that is not just another book on climate and the environment. In this photographic guide to the world's climate, he demystifies these terms.
According to the book jacket: "From the catastrophic impact of drought and avalanches to concerns about the effects of El Nino and La Nina, this book raises topical questions, yet creates a sense of wonder as it reveals the magical intricacy of the Earth's climate. The Climate Revealed explores and explains this complex story through specially commissioned, dynamic illustrations, illuminating photographs and accessible text from an expert author".
The book is divided into separate chapters that may be read independently - only one to two pages with a number of chapters grouped together under a central theme. The grouped chapters include Climate in Motion, Climate Records, Polar Regions, Desert Regions, Mountain Regions, Mediterranean Regions, The Prairies, The Tropics, Desert Regions, Temperate Regions, Polar Regions and Tundra and Taiga.
With a good balance of photographs, graphics, and text, each chapter consists of non-technical text that can be read independently of every other chapter. This makes it a book that will sit on my coffee table for visitors and myself. He does not confine himself to discussing just meteorology but rather the important aspects of meteorology that impact directly on all of us. He has taken material from many scientific disciplines and presented this important information for us all to read and understand. In my opinion, he has the balance between simplicity and the science of it all exactly right. There is also the very interesting occasional brief historical sketch of scientists such as Edward Lorentz, Sir Gilbert Walker, Edmond Halley, etc.
There are many books on weather and climate with a similar title but I believe that Climate Revealed by Dr Burroughs stands out in the crowd. Would I fork out my hard-earned dollars for this one? Without hesitation. It is a color spectacular that I would recommend to anyone interested in climate, the biosphere, and the impact of climate on our environment and us. I would even recommend it for the expert. Its price too is reasonable.
Dr Burroughs challenges the scientific community by emphasizing where the gaps of research knowledge exist. Also, he keeps to the facts and presents what appears to be a non-emotional summary of past, present and possible future climate and climatic impact events. In his final chapter, he sparked my interest - he hints that climate change issues should be addressed through issues that touch on welfare, education and health and not be a knee-jerk reaction when there are new extremes.
My main reservation, and there are precious few, is that the font used is too thin for my eyes - I can comfortably handle only a couple of chapters at a time. This is not too much of a problem since I would normally use the book as a reference work. There is a glossary and an index, which enabled me to narrow my searches very quickly. I did not spot any mention in the introductory sections about a glossary - two pages of terms used in the text. Occasionally, there was an abrupt end to the chapter - this did not detract significantly and I could not spot material, graphics or photographs that could be excluded so as to include more material to offset the abruptness. In a few cases, the order of the chapters grouped together could have been different but this is perhaps a personal preference.
Given the sheer volume of material, the work is surprisingly scientifically accurate and technically correct. My suggestions for change would be for additional material, not the removal of material - for example, including a time series on the historical record of the concentration of carbon dioxide would have made the book longer.
In summary: would I purchase this book? As previously mentioned, yes...the amount of material it presents is cross-referenced well and I would judge it to be technically correct - lots of glorious color graphics and photographs to boot. I can now unveil climate to my friends without having to haul out my slide projector!

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Subversive WorkersReview Date: 2005-02-08
Excerpt: Since the mid-1990s, there has been an explosion of research interest in behaviors at work that harm employees and organizations. Much of this interest has been stimulated by media attention given to workplace violence, especially that perpetrated by coworkers-for example, shootings within the U.S. Postal Service. Although such violence is quite rare, harmful behavior of lesser severity is commonplace. Research on milder forms has been featured in the national media, where it is often called "desk rage." As editors of this volume, we will call the domain of research counterproductive work behavior (CWB), although not all contributors will agree with this umbrella label.
There recently has been interest among researchers, managers, consultants, and the general public in the widely reported experiences people have of being recipients of harmful behavior at the hands of supervisors, coworkers, and others. These experiences can range from systematic, openly abusive bullying to milder, ambiguous episodes of incivility.
Research concerning counterproductive behavior at work has considered two major classes of factors-individual employee characteristics and characteristics of the workplace. A variety of personality variables, such as conscientiousness, locus of control, narcissism, trait anger and anxiety, and Type A impatience-irritability are among a few of the variables linked to these behaviors. Some researchers have focused on characteristics of the perpetrator, others on the victims, and still others stress the dynamic inter-play between the two. Research has shown that factors related to job stress, including lack of control, excessive workloads, poor relations with coworkers and supervisors, and both intrarole and extrarole (e.g., work-family) conflicts have been linked to harmful behaviors. In addition, fair treatment and workplace justice are important factors.
As the domain matures, more emphasis is being placed on the ramifications for individuals and organizations of these kinds of harmful behaviors, as well as approaches to solving the problems they create. This may prove to be the most controversial aspect of counterproductive work behavior research, because opinions vary widely regarding the locus of accountability (e.g., selection approaches versus organizational change) and the gamut of options available and hurdles facing victims of bullying. Our own work has suggested that a focus on employee perceptions of control and emotions can lead to job design and human resource practices that reduce harmful behavior.
The relative recency of most CWB research has undoubtedly contributed to a rather disjointed literature, with different camps developing different terminology and looking at somewhat different sides of an overlapping set of behaviors. These phenomena have been variously labeled as aggression, antisocial behavior, deviance, delinquency, revenge, retaliation, and our preference, counterproductive work behavior (from the actor perspective), and abuse, bullying, incivility, and mobbing (from the target perspective). The earliest empirical studies in the area of workplace aggression were published in the mid-1970s (Inkson & Simpson, 1975; Spector, 1975). Other early studies included Hollinger and Clark's (1982) paper on organizational deviance; Matthiesen, Raknes, and Rokkum's (1989) study of workplace bullying; Leymann's (1990) seminal work on mobbing; and Morrill and Thomas's (1992) paper on retaliation at work. Most papers in the area have been published since 2000.
The rapid and recent development in parallel of different perspectives has not left sufficient time for integrative work. This issue was noted as one of the most important for the field at an interactive paper session at the 2001 Academy of Management conference in Washington, DC. The session participants found that they were studying overlapping sets of behaviors from somewhat different theoretical perspectives, and tended to focus on distinctions and what is unique in each contribution rather than on connections. A need was felt for substantial integrative work to better tie the work together. Several of the contributors to this book participated in that discussion, which inspired this volume.
The chapters in this book have been written by scholars who have adopted different perspectives, perhaps different vocabularies or labels, and who have studied somewhat different sets of possible causes, consequences, or solutions. We have emphasized the desirability of relating, where feasible, each contributor's work to work done from other perspectives. The goal of this volume is to offer an integrative perspective that highlights connections and distinctions among different people's work, as well as a discussion of how conditions-events in modern organizations contribute to CWB and on things organizations might do to combat it.
As noted earlier, we have chosen the global term of CWB because it seems to encompass the critical features of the domain without excluding the distinct contributions of the various conceptualizations. It is not the intent of this book to force everyone into taking the same perspective or using the same terminology. Rather, its purpose is to build bridges among the different perspectives, showing where they overlap and where they are different. One of the strengths of CWB research is that there are so many different ideas that are contributing to an understanding of the underlying causes and consequences of the various behaviors that we study. Each perspective adds something important to our overall understanding.
This volume is divided into two sections, based on whether the central object of study is the actor or the target of the behavior in question. Section I looks at counterproductive work behavior from the actor perspective. Seven chapters discuss CWB from a variety of theoretical vantage points, focusing often on different precursors and consequences.

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A leader of women writes from her personal experienceReview Date: 2001-01-16

More swashbuckling adventureReview Date: 2007-11-17
And everywhere he goes, Hadron meets men like himself: bold, chivalrous, scantily clad, willing to fight to the death at the drop of a plot mechanism, and utterly clueless about womankind and their own feelings toward same. The chaste romance builds conspicuously across the length and breadth of Mars, through pitched battles and covert rescues, obvious to everyone around except the oblivious guy in the middle of it.
If you like the swords'n'zapgun class of fantastic silliness, Burroughs's Barsoom is as good as it gets. Enjoy!
-- wiredweird

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A Thrilling AdventureReview Date: 2008-04-02
This is adventure writing from the age of pulp fiction, so don't expect the writing to be the best. You'll find people talking in highly unnatural ways and people will do highly unnatural things. In addition, a lot of the story development relies heavily on chance meetings. However, if you read it just for fun, you'll find a highly imaginative tale that will keep you on the edge of your seat. If you can take off your critic's glasses, you'll find this to be an enjoyable read.

John Carter returns to Barsoom to find his beloved Dejah ThorisReview Date: 2006-02-24
When John Carter returns to Barsoom a decade has passed and he finds himself in that part of the planet that the natives consider to be "heaven," which proves to be a more ironic idea indeed. Carter first reunites with his friend the fierce green warrior Tars Tarkas, fights with the great white apes of Barsoom and plant men, violates some significant religious taboos, survives the affections of an evil goddess, helps with a slave revolt, fight in an arena, and stills manages to save Dejah Thoris in the middle of a giant air battle between the red, green, black and white people of Barsoom.
"The Gods of Mars" is an early Burroughs novel, which means it is high on action and low on details. ERB would set his adventures in strange worlds such as Barsoom, Venus, Pellucidar, etc., but beyond the basic idea of it being a strange world he was content for such places to be the settings for this stories. The writing is a bit stilted and ERB likes to mix cliches and ponderous phrases that make the narrative seem dated, but "The Gods of Mars" meets his basic criteria of providing a ripping pulp fiction yarn for his readers. The best thing you can say about this novel is that the action never stops from start to finish.
The worst thing you can say about it is that Burroughs puts off reuniting our hero with his beloved, but if you have read many of ERB's novels, Tarzan or otherwise, you know that once his happy couple is back together the story is pretty much over. However, even at the end there is another cliffhanger that will make you track down "The Warlord of Mars," the next installment in what is clearly the best Burroughs series. ERB milked the Tarzan character dry and still produced another dozen novels in that series, while the Mars books (sorry, the Barsoom series) remained relatively fresh. With the long awaited "John Carter of Mars" movie finally in production it looks like ERB's hero will finally make it to the big screen before we get to the centennial for "A Princess of Mars," at which point this series should enjoy a well deserved revival.
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