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

Butler
Green Bay Packers: The Complete Illustrated History
Published in Hardcover by Voyageur Press (2008-06-15)
Author: Don Gulbrandsen
List price: $30.00
New price: $19.74
Used price: $15.90
Collectible price: $60.00

Average review score:

Worth the Money
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-01
This is a great book. A very comprehensive history of the team with tons of great photos. I would definitely recommend this book to any fan of the team!

great packers and nfl history
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-12
ive been a packer fan since the lombardi era, but only vaguely knew the pre-50s history of this franchise and players, this is a well researched and informative history of the earlier years . there are lots of pics and sidebars highlighting the packers own hall nof fame greats, as well as how the fans and citizens of green bay have stuck by this team through many trials and financial hardships . in the fight for survival,( that is the money generated to keep a pro franchise in town), this book exposes the great character and love of a city and its inhabitants to support above and beyond the call of duty, the glory as well as the lean times , my love for this, the last of the small town teams from the beginnings of the nfl has renewed my passion and makes me want to move to green bay to live the dream, unique among the nfl and at the top!!!!!!!!!

Outstanding
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-07
This book gives a comprehensive history of Green Bay Packers from the beginning. It highlights great players and coaches. It is hard to put down.

Very good reading for a Green Bay Packer fan.

Green Bay Packers: The Complete Illustrated History
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-12
I purchased this book for my brother as a Christmas present. Upon receiving the book I shared it with several fans and they were so excited. I thought it was a great book and know that my brother is going to Love It!!!! We have been Packer fans since the 60's.

Paul S
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-19
My 88-year-old father grew up in Wisconsin. He's a lifelong Packer fan. I haven't seen or read the book, but he's absolutely enthralled by it. We talk frequently, and he brings the book up often. Every page has a memory for him.

So, don't take my word for it: take the word of a man who watched Don Hutson catch passes on blustery Green Bay Sundays.

Butler
Managing Your Mind: The Mental Fitness Guide
Published in Hardcover by Oxford University Press, USA (2007-03-08)
Authors: Gillian Butler and Tony Hope
List price: $50.00
New price: $41.09
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Average review score:

Must have book
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 15 total.
Review Date: 2000-04-05
this book has changed me inside out. I wished I had read this in my teenage years.

A great, great book
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2002-04-21
I hope the authors know how many people they have helped with this book. Perhaps they can update it for the latest stresses that the accelerated information age and the post-September 11th world have brought.

As others have said, I wish I had read this book in my teenage years.

Some excellent skills with some major philosophical problems
Helpful Votes: 54 out of 62 total.
Review Date: 2002-05-07
It's unusual for me to read chapters of a book out of order. Had I read this book from front to back, I would have angrily tossed it out when I hit chapters 3 and 4. The authors have not had the pleasure of grasping the virtue of selfishness. Instead, they occasionally apologize and appease. In these early chapters they recommend "unconditional positive regard" stating that it's "not selfish, nor egoistic" to have this attitude towards ourselves. This chapter is a philosophical junkyard. They ask why we admire a Mother Teresa and answer that it's because she sacrifices herself for others. They ask "Would you admire her if she sacrificed herself for something worthless?" and omit the possibility that she is not admirable because she lived a life of sacrifice by choice and encourages others to do likewise. The authors also invent the contradictory concept of the "unselfish I."
So heaven help me! Why would I recommend such a book? I recommend it because it is chock full of simple good tips - e.g., good study skills, identifying and pursuing healthy goals to bring you pleasure, keeping friendships fair - with a lovely undercurrent of egoism despite occasional nosedives. For example, "Cultural attitudes, including religious ones, seem to make rewarding oneself seem bad..." (Were it my book, I would omit the "seem to") - or "Do not make a virtue out of being a martyr." The mix of good and bad ideas in this book makes me wonder if one author was philosophically healthier than the other one. This book offers valuable thinking skills. I recommend skipping chapters 1-3. This is a good book to keep in your reference library. If you are having difficulty with a particular issue in your life, read the chapter on that. Some skills that are helpful include:
- "swat" the NATs (negative automatic thoughts)
- distant elephants (do not commit yourself to unimportant activities no matter how far ahead they are)
- focus on important but non-urgent activities, rather than urgent non-important activities
- avoid "pressurizing" words: "should, must, have to, ought" which drain motivation
- avoid avoidance - actively solve your problems rather than run from them
- reduce the "inside" load of stress by changing attitudes
- learn how to unpackage your fears
- motivate yourself by focusing on the personal benefits of your success

brilliant
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 13 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-30
a very clear and concise book. One of the best "self-help" books i have read. Intresting and fast, dosent preach like other books. No religious mumbo jumbo about god being your savior. If there is anyone who can help you, its you. They show you how.

This book changed my life!
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 2003-01-16
Great educational read. Stimulating. Straight forward and easy to read chapters. This book helped me through one of the worse times in my life.

Butler
The Meaning of Relativity.
Published in Hardcover by Butler & Tanner 1960. (1960)
Author: Albert Einstein
List price:

Average review score:

A Classic Collection
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-12-16
This book is an excellent collection of 'lectures' by Einstein himself and present the 'eventual' form of the Special & General Theories of Relativity (as in the 1950s). A handy accompaniment to undergraduate study in relativity, the book is a *mathematical* exposition into its broad features - and is NOT by any means a popular/lay account of what the theories mean. The title of the book may be a little dis-orienting in this regard - but the subtitle should lay to rest any doubts!

Einstein starts with pre-relativity physics formulated in the language of tensors and moves on to present the Special Theory using the same apparatus. The next two chapters delve really deep into the philosophy of the General Theory (GR) complete with equations. The Appendices are further advanced topics in GR - and may be of interest only to graduate students.

For a non-physicist like me, with a sufficent background in the requisite mathematics and some prior exposure to the topic, this book was a real treat. It is a classic well worth its place in a personal library. This book is, however, not recommended for those who are looking for something along the lines of Hawkings' A Brief History of Time.

Einstein goes deeper.
Helpful Votes: 19 out of 24 total.
Review Date: 2001-12-27
The Meaning of Relativity is an advanced book. The title should have made it clear. Einstein delves here into what his theory
actually MEANS. That is, what must we change (if anything...) in our world conception, in the way we think, as a consequence of his immense discovery. Just think that he meddled with time, a concept static since so long that it is registered deep in our DNA: our concept of time goes back to the epoch where our main purpose was to survive the day
(sounds familiar? No, no, it was different! It was permanent. What you experience now is transient...)
So what? Read it! It is a marvellous book. Perhaps you will have to reach for other, more elementary, books, in this enterprise. All right! That almost characterizes a book worth reading. So... go on! It will repay your efforts. It IS doable. You will come out, for instance, with a precise CONSTRUCTION OF SPACE! Your brains will be enriched.You deserve that!

A dense, but brilliant, collection of lectures
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-29
Laymen, such as myself, are familiar with the equation e=mc2; yet how many of us non-scientists actually know what this means? Einstein explains this in a series of four lectures. While the explaination is clear, the mathematics behind it (and the implications of relativity theory) are far from easy for the layperson to understand.

The first section on space and time in pre-relativity physics provides the foundation for exactly why his theories are so revolutionary. I was able to digest this without much difficulty. The real challenges (for me at least) began with his explaination of special and general relativity - that space, time and light are dependent on each other, and in fact are (hence the name) all relative ... a real mind-bender. Sadly, I was unable to make it through the second half of the lecture on general relativity - too abstract for one who is not a scientist by training or vocation.

Nonetheless it is a worthwhile (if difficult) read. For those who are weak in mathematics (Euclidian geometry or below) much of the details will be incomprehensable; don't let this dissuade you - part of the genius of Einstein is his ability to explain what the mathematics proves. A seminal work in science, and highly recommended for those with the patience, training or deeply committed interest in the subject.

Will never collect dust....
Helpful Votes: 27 out of 30 total.
Review Date: 2002-02-02
There are numerous books on general relativity currently on the market, and these range in difficulty from those written for the beginner or the layman, those written for graduate students in physics, and research monographs covering specialized topics. It is always refreshing to go back to the originator of the subject, and take part in his special insights on the topic. Philosophers and historians of science can definitely benefit from a perusal of this book.

The author begins this book with a discussion of the origin of the concepts of space-time, the emphasis being partly philosophical and partly psychological, and the reader can see the origin of the author's operationalism in reading this introduction. He is clearly against the philosophers who attempt to remove concepts from experience and put them in his words "in the intangible heights of the a priori". The motion of rigid bodies is used to set up a discussion of Euclidean geometry and linear orthogonal transformations. The author emphasizes the role of the physicist in discerning whether a system of geometry is true or not, contrary to the pure mathematician. Examples of geometrical invariants, such as the Cartesian line element and the volume element are discussed, along with the role of vectors and tensors. Both of these are used as means by which one can give expression to the independence of Cartesian coordinates. Maxwell's equations are put in tensor notation as an example of covariance with respect to Cartesian coordinate transformations. All of this is done to motivate the theories of special and general relativity.

The theory of spectial relativity is treated in chapter 2, the author introducing his famous principle of special relativity. The author poses the problem of calculating the coordinates and time in an inertial system moving with uniform translation relative to another. He shows how this problem is solved by assuming that time and space are absolute, and if the coordinate axes of the systems are parallel to one another, the Galilean transformations result. Newton's equations of motion are covariant under these transformations, but Maxwell equations are not (but the author chooses not to show this explicitly). He then gives an in-depth discussion of how the Lorentz transformations arise as being those that guarantee the covariance of the Maxwell equations. The author also discusses the signature of the Lorentz metric and how it is related to the light cone. He ends the chapter by developing the energy tensor of the electromagnetic field and matter.

The author's rejection of inertial frames as being priveleged leads him in the beginning of the next chapter to a short philosophical critique of the principle of inertia. This leads to a discussion of the principle of equivalence and to the origin of the general theory of relativity, a theory which the author developed, amazingly, single-handedly, and which he clearly believes is very much superior to classical mechanics. The intuition to be gained by reading this chapter is invaluable for serious students of general relativity. One can see the simplicity and power of the author's arguments, relying on keen physical intuition and sound use of mathematics. In particular, the author's heuristic derivation of the gravitational field equations from Poisson's equation is briliant. In addition, he is not ashamed to interject philosophical argumentation into his writing, particularly in his discussion of Mach's principle. Such discussions are becoming more rare among physicists at the present time.

The Meaning of Relativity by Albert Einstein
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 17 total.
Review Date: 2004-02-27
Einstein's theory seeks to unite time, space and impliedly
distance and light phenomena into a rational set of equations which are congruent to the Euclidian geometry. In essence,
the concept of time is meaningless except in relation to
light . Without light, there would be no reference point
for measuring distance in space because the whole area would
be dark and unidentifiable for scientific measurement and
comparison purposes. The use of the volumetric triple integral
seeks to make a measurement on 3-planes. i.e. x,y and z
Later in the work, Einstein explains that the laws of
configuration of rigid bodies with respect to K' do not agree
with the laws of configuration of rigid bodies that are
in accordance with Euclidean geometry. He provides an example
wherein two similar clocks rotate simultaneously on the
periphery and the center of a circle, then judged from K- the
clock on the periphery will go slower than the clock at the
center. He explains this difference as the result of the
gravitational field influence as determinants in the metric
laws of the space and time continuum. What happens when the
clocks are in a perfect vacuum? In addition, time travel is
a function of how light travels. Finite differences in the
radii of the clocks (periphery and center) imply distances with
slight changes in respect to the time light takes to travel
from one end of the radii (periphery or center) to the other.
In the Riemann Tensor, Einstein depicts an amorphous masse
dependent upon the path of displacement. The outline of the
masse approximates a square so that the area or volume is
determinate by approximation to the closest geometric form
to the amorphous masse i.e. a square

On page 92, Einstein states that the rate of a clock is slower
the greater is the masse of the ponderable matter in the
neighborhood. This comports with the theory and computation
of inertia. As the base and height increases, the inertial
computation is geometrically greater in accordance with the
formulas of inertia [ ((b x h^3)/12) ]. In the discussion of
Mach, Einstein states that the inertia of a body must increase
when ponderable masses are piled in the neighborhood. This is
proven by computing inertia utilizing more massive bases and
heights. As the base and height increases, the inertial
computation is geometrically greater thereby proving that the
inertia of a body must increase when ponderable masses are
piled up in the neighborhood.

Einstein discusses the theory of Mach in relation to inertia
and the mutual action of bodies. The actual measurement of
Mach has at least 3 different levels; namely, subsonic,
sonic and supersonic measurements

Einstein argues that the hypothesis that the universe is
infinite and Euclidean at infinity is complicated from the
relativistic point of view. The universe expands and contracts .
Accordingly, the nature tends to approximate non-Euclidean
or quasi-Euclidean objects in the evolution toward the
expansive and infinite state which Einstein postulates as
potentially Euclidean in order.

Einstein argues against an infinite space by stating:

" 1. From the standpoint of the theory of relativity , to postulate a closed universe is very much simpler than to postulate the corresponding boundary condition at infinity
of the quasi-Euclidian structure of the universe.

2. The idea that Mach expressed, that inertia depends upon the mutual action of bodies, is contained, to a first approximation,
in the equations of the theory of relativity; it follows from these equations that inertia depends, at least in part upon
mutual actions between masses.

3. An infinite universe is possible only if the mean density
of matter in the universe vanishes. Although such an assumption is logically possible, it is less probable than the assumption that there is a finite mean density of matter in the universe."

Critique:

The idea of a closed universe is simpler. It comports with experience. For instance, why does Haley's Comet return every
75 years. The idea of an infinite universe would imply the existence of a less dense outer-superstructure. As objects hurled in space, they would be drawn into the less dense regions. The idea of a bounded universe implies a boundary
to ricochet speeding objects. Otherwise, every speeding object
would continue into an infinite universe with a denseless
path of space.

To prove the third postulate, scientists must have better information on the mean density at the outer edges of the universe. Does density remain constant or does it evaporate
with greater distances toward the universe boundary regions?
If a boundary exists as postulated in the finite universe,
what is the boundary? Is the boundary a wall in space?
If so, what exists beyond the wall? At the corners of the universe, what structures exist to modulate areas of higher
density and less density or infinitestimal density?
In addition, there is a theory of an expanding universe.
How does the universe expand and what outer region accomodates
this expansion. The idea of an expanding universe admits to
an expanding boundary. Again, this poses the earlier question.
i.e. There must be free space to accomodate an expanding
universe. Is this free space dense or denseless.

This concept is similar to a computer gigobyte superstructure.
Users can define different regions on the computer disc.
These regions consist of utilized space and free space.
Conceptually, the universe may be seen in the same way.
It consists of both bounded and unbounded space.

Butler
My Body / Mi cuerpo (English and Spanish Foundations Series) (Book #8) (Bilingual) (Board Book)
Published in Board book by me+mi publishing (2002-07-01)
Author: Gladys Rosa-Mendoza
List price: $6.95
New price: $3.18
Used price: $4.26

Average review score:

great for teching children & adults
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-10-30
I just love this whole series. Such a huge help in teaching Spanish & English for my children & myself! Easy to read.

my body - english - spanish
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-12
Great book for bilingual ed. or children learning English or Spanish. Very elementary level. Clear drawings and nice labeling in English and Spanish.
edconnectionsllc.com

My granddaughter LOVES this book!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-12
I have purchased several Spanish books on Amazon and as always make many of my purchases based on the reviews of those who have gone before me. My daughter is trying to teach my granddaughter how to speak Spanish and she loved this book. Of course she loved sucking on the corners too but it was colorful, well planned out and joyful.

helping us learn
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-06
We bought this book because my son loved "Mi familia y yo" by the same author. This one has a bit more vocab to get hold of, but we are slowly getting to learn the body parts. Love it that both languages are side by side. Another great resource from Gladys Rosa Mendoza.

Divertido (Fun)
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-31
This is an excellent book with respect to teaching young children Spanish! My granddaughter will be three years old next month (01-15-08) and there is nothing she cannot say in English, so teaching her Spanish is fairly easy. She is familiar with the language since I speak to her. However, she finds it more fun to speak when we use the book. In the back of the book there is a section that teaches the reader how to pronounce the words for the children in the event that the reader is also learning. I am fluent in Spanish, but did not teach my two boys. I am now teaching my two grandchildren; books like this are a perfect way to help children and adults learn.

Butler
New House 5: How a dorm becomes a home
Published in Paperback by PublishAmerica (2005-05-02)
Author: Andy Butler
List price: $24.95
New price: $16.45
Used price: $16.43

Average review score:

This is a really great one
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-09
I loved this book. Andy has a great grasp on College and what a first year hall is all about. The details and ways that he portrays the character are accurate, deep, multidimensional and compelling. This book was recommended to me by a friend and I recommend it to anyone, college or not.

This book is Andy through and through.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-07-22
To begin with, Andy is the best RA that an incoming freshman could hope for. Down-to-earth and compassionate, he also has a peculiar knack for being right every single time. Naturally, with so much respect for him, I began his book with a bit of an established bias, yet with or without one, this book is an excellent read.

Andy takes you and shows you what being a college kid is like. I was able to sympathesize with and recognize a portion of myself in every single character in this book. It's an accurate portrayal of how a dorming community should be, and a good glimpse of what to expect in college.

I don't know how anyone could finish this book and not feel their spirits soaring. This book is a wonderfully real tribute to his floor and it emanates Andy's philosophy in life, one which he lives by and which I find so inspirationally admirable.

Way to go dude, thanks for keeping me sane. :)

A book (and a community) that stays with you
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-22
I've read this book several times over the past few years, and enjoyed different parts of it for different reasons each time. Overall I highly recommend it to anyone who wants better insight into being an RA or a college student, or anyone who just wants to read about a really great, interesting group of people.

Andy's conversational tone and smooth story-telling ability make this a quick, fun read. The characters are engaging, and every reader can find something or someone to connect to. Sometimes it's hard to keep track of each character, but in the end, it doesn't necessarily matter because the real story is about the community as a whole, its ups and downs, its evolution.

(Plus you can always flip back to refresh your memory!)

This book has stayed with me since the first day I read it, stimulating my thoughts and emotions. I don't think I will ever forget it, and I don't ever want to.

WOW!!!!!!!!!!!!!! :-D
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-09
As a former RA at the same "Ashford" University, this book hits close to home. While I was not an RA for the same dorm as Andy, a lot of situations are similar, and it made me realize how lucky I was that I didn't have to go through as much drama as he did.

I highly recommend this book to anyone who has been or is ever thinking about becoming a RA. It provides extremely helpful insight on what a successful RA should be like, and how to build and learn from your floor and what it really means to have a community. It would help any freshman students too during their freshman year realize that everything doesn't work out necessarily like you plan, you can't just forget your past when you go to college if you want to, but you can overcome these things and that's what college is about.

Bottom Line: Andy Butler is the shiznit.

A first-hand account from one who has seen it all
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-04-14
Many parents sending their newly grown-up children away to college for the first time simply have no idea what being a freshman is really like these days. The freshmen themselves may have expectations and anxieties, but are almost as clueless as their parents are. New House 5: How a Dorm Becomes a Home gives insight for all into the true experiences of college students, and manages to be at once compelling, touching, and humorous.

The book is well-written and surprisingly easy to follow, considering the number of characters involved (more than fifty) and their complicated relationships. It is the characters themselves who make it great: their fears, their mistakes, their triumphs belong to every young adult who has lived the college life. Though the emotions and ordeals are common, the characters themselves are not generic; from the start it is clear that Butler has the greatest respect and love for them. His own personality shines through his writing, and he becomes your own personal RA and friend, calling you "dude" and "buddy" while you chill on his maroon futon. And what a story he has to tell you.

While some might criticize New House 5 for being preachy or too good to be true, the advice offered is heartfelt and the hindsight analysis helpful, especially for a reader considering taking on an RA position in the future. This is an impressive first book with the potential to reach diverse audiences.

Butler
Weekend Warriors: Men of the National Lacrosse League
Published in Paperback by New Chapter Press (2007-04-01)
Author: Jack McDermott
List price: $9.95
New price: $5.94
Used price: $5.19

Average review score:

Interesting summaries of Lacrosse players
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-18
This was a very professionally written account of the lives of 15 very diverse people who also happen to be professional lacrosse players. The book really makes you view these athletes as interested in their sport, valued members of their community, and very different from the multi-million dollar primma donnas who play other professional sports. I definitely recommend this book.

stories of professional lacrosse players
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-09
This book is filled with stories of professional lacrosse players. The players are atypical from other professional sports players, who are often filled with self-admiration and greed. Yet, they are not exactly everyday people either. The players do have full time jobs and families, but many of them are in noble fields such as teaching, law enforcement, the armed forces, fire fighting... Of course, it takes a noble character to be devoted to such an underpaid and under-appreciated sport. The players sacrifice their bodies, time, and some family commitments for the love of their sport. The writing is clever, and the author gives good insight about the players' individuality, achievements, reminiscences, and dedication.

"Great Book about NLL Lacrosse"
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-14
After the Duke Lacrosse scandal, it was refreshing to see an upbeat well-written book about lacrosse. These players truly honor their sport, and make the casual observer want to learn more. The stories were interesting, and it was a good overview of the NLL, and the players who make the league work. I really enjoyed it, and hope to see more books like it.

Fascinating Book about Lacrosse Players
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-13
This book was interesting, insightful, and sometimes even funny when explaining the lives of 15 "ordinary" people who have jobs, wives, kids, and play professional lacrosse on the weekends. It makes you realize how different pro lacrosse is from other pro sports. (And I mean that in a good way.) The writing was clear and engaging, and I thoroughly enjoyed the book.

Great NLL Book for Fans
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-12
It was great to finally read a good book on professional lacrosse. The writing was interesting and insightful, and provided a good mix of lacrosse history combined with people who play the game. I would definitely recommend this book for the lacrosse fanatic, or even the casual observer. I enjoyed it!

Butler
Well Connected: Releasing Power and Restoring Hope
Published in Paperback by Authentic (2006-03-01)
Author: Phill Butler
List price: $19.99
New price: $12.91
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Average review score:

Insight and practical help for those with a vision for kingdom collaboration
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-10
Well Connected has proven to be a powerful tool for inspiration, evaluation, and growth for our organization--the International Council of Ethnodoxologists (a network of Christians involved in encouraging culturally-appropriate music and arts around the world). Our organizational DNA is permeated with the value of collaboration, so this book really speaks our heart language!

In our board meetings this year, we are systematically examining the principles of effective networking and partnerships laid out in Well Connected; we rejoice to see that much of what we're doing is hitting the bull's-eye. We're also receiving insightful and practical suggestions for improvement.

Especially helpful for us was Phill's clear definition of the relationship between networks and partnerships - we see now that our network has given birth to a number of effective partnerships; some project-oriented, some long-term. If our network is healthy, these partnerships will continue to form.

The superb organization of the book includes several features that make it easier to unpack (and to share with others at the drop of a hat):
* a concise three-sentence description of each chapter right in the table of contents;
* a "quick-start chapter" at the beginning of the book summarizing the principles and benefits of kingdom collaboration;
* a short "core idea" paragraph at the beginning of each chapter (an effective hook!)
* an appendix with outstanding resources such as:
1. a list of practical, downloadable resources available from related web sites.
2. Assessment and evaluation tools for partnerships and networks
3. Summary of the 15 critical principles of being well connected
4. Bibliography for further reading on partnerships and networks

In short, this ground-breaking volume is a "must read" for those who are ready to take seriously the scriptural principle of the interdependence of the body of Christ and who desire to truly collaborate with others to see the Church at its most effective. Phill is right - "working together is God's idea." Well Connected puts "hands and feet" on this great idea, offering insight and realistic help for those with a vision for kingdom collaboration.

Robin Harris
Founder, International Council of Ethnodoxologists (ICE)

This Book Puts a Handle on Community Transformation
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-07-28
"Well Connected" has truly given me the kind of insight that brings community transformation into the realm of real possibility! I know worship and prayer are the key ingredients for transformation, but what are also the practical steps that really enables me to get a handle on getting started. "Well Connected" gave me the answers! And it really wasn't something new ... but how I needed to be reminded. Everything starts with relationships and then carefully and spiritually moves forward to collaborating and partnering about the work in our community that's on God's heart. And what we're discovering is, God already had in the community all the ingredients to accomplished His purposes for our city. We had just never connected the dots (real people and ministries). Now God is helping do just that ... and "Well Connected", by Phill Butler, is the catalyst God is using to help pastors and non-pastors learn and grow together in new Kingdom partnerships! This is going to help YOU a lot!
~ Joe Walsh, [...]Sacramento, CA

Finally! a book to help churches become THE Church
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-07-19
While there are a myriad of books about churches growing bigger and better, here's a book that provides what we are all missing - that churches become the best they can be by connecting with other churches and becoming THE CHURCH. Phill Butler's book hits the nail right on the head and is much needed in our day of churches thinking that they are the whole body of Christ or that they don't need the rest of the body. Quite the contrary - we cannot be the body of Christ we were meant to be without the other churches in our communities! I HIGHLY recommend this book!

Just the best on the topic
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2006-06-10
A vital book on a vital subject - how to actually co-operate across organizational or denominational barriers on Christian projects which would be impossible alone. I liked the frequent case studies and practical advice, all offered in a gentle spirit, obviously from many years of experience.

de-putting asunder
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-19
Phill Butler gives us one of those books that takes an action sport or skill that is usually performed on an intuitive or visceral level and reduces it to a formula.

Don't get me wrong. This is not a criticism. Many of us need precisely such a formula that provides a handle, a method, or a path. Butler has given us that, and is to be thanked for doing so.

Six more or less balanced sections move from top to bottom as they view the complex dance that leads to partnership among Christian churches, parachurch organizations, and related missional groups:

One: The Big Picture
Two: The God Design
Three: Behind the Scenes
Four: On the Way
Five: Working It Out
Six: Special Cases, Special Opportunities

After telling his own story in an introduction, the author utilizes Part One ('The Big Picture') to build a case for partnership based on both pragmatic and biblical principle. In the first instance - and since 'all truth is God's truth' - Christians have much to learn from the business world and its own experience of strategic alliances. What's more, we ought to anticipate that many of the dynamics that lead to success or failure in that arena will also prove to be operative in our own.

With respect to biblical instruction on partnership, Butler believes that partnership is akin to unity and that unity is near to the Father's heart. It may work, and that's all to the good. But it's also *right*, Butler would seem to argue, and that's almost justification enough for the significant and sometimes grueling exertions that true partnership requires.

Finally in Part One, the author defines the menu of alliances that are commonly available, subjugating structure and talk to matters of mission as he does so. Butler has a penchant for graphs, many of which repay careful analysis. He introduces his first one here in a visual that anticipates his perception that certain commonalities in form and process produce the possibility of discerning laws of partnership, though I am not aware that he uses such terminology.

In Part Two ('The God Design'), Butler unveils the theological conviction that drives his work. Many Christians launch facile declarations about 'unity' that mistake intense preoccupation with the matter and location of one's calling with a fractious spirit. This is an unfortunate and undeliberated conclusion, and one that Butler comes perilously close to adopting as he explains why unity is God's idea before it is ours.

Yet he skirts the danger by his confidence that unity is not only God's idea but God's project, thus only worthwhile as God births its, nurtures it, and teaches it to flourish. It is not essentially a feat of human engineering and is to be seen as a process that is watered by human laborers insofar as they offer prayer and relationship in service of its growth. In my judgment, Butler hits the mark with these observations and escapes the tendency of elevating partnership for partnership's sake to the top rung of an organization's strategic planning ladder.

Part Three ('Behind the Scenes') fleshes out how vision, prayer, and relationship join together like three strands of a strong rope.

It was not until reading Butler's Part Four ('On the Way') that I was persuaded I'd depart this book with something valuable in hand. Here WELL CONNECTED morphs into a practical manual for partnership-building to which I will refer frequently by taking it down from the book of well-thumbed manuals perched within reach on the shelf above my desk. In these pages, the author distinguishes himself as someone who has done the thing rather than as a dreamer of fine dreams that lose their pertinence by Thursday afternoon's leadership meeting. If you read only one portion of this book, start here.

Parts Five ('Working It Out') and Six ('Special Cases, Special Opportunities') move the discussion in the direction of case studies and special circumstances. In doing so, they link closely to the fundamental declarations of Part Four.


Phill Butler's WELL CONNECTED is not likely to be of service to you as a quick read. However, if you find yourself in leadership of a church or Christian organization, you probably already undertand that today's world is not kind to those who go it alone. If you embrace that apparent fact, then this book can prove a valuable manual as you seek to build the right partnerships for the right purpose at the right moment. It's value will only be multiplied if the coterie of leaders at the head of your organization covenant to read it together.

Butler
50 Psychology Classics (Unabridged)
Published in Audio Download by audible.com ()
Author: Tom Butler-Bowdon
List price: $34.98
New price: $18.37

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Bulter-Bowdon Has delivered the quintessential text for psych majors or anyone wanting an overview of Psychology
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-03
This is now the fourth CLassics book I've read and I have yet to be disappointed. I can't wait to pick up the continuation 50 More Psychology Classics.The Power of Inner Guidance: Seven Steps to Tune In and Turn On

An excellent guide to sources that can help us to "make a real difference" in our lives
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-17

Previously, I read and reviewed Tom Butler-Bowdon's 50 Self-Help Classics and 50 Success Classics and was not surprised to find that his most recently published volume in the "50 Classics" series is their equal in terms of the quality and value of the material provided. Butler-Bowdon employs essentially the same format for the three volumes: brief background on each source, major insights, final comments, and mini-bio of author. The "great thinkers" he discusses in 50 Psychology Classics are also organized in alphabetical order, although I would have preferred (one man's opinion) that they had been organized within discrete thematic clusters, and not in alphabetical order but in terms of sequence of influence. Sigmund Freud followed by Carl Jung and Alfred Adler and then Anna Freud followed by B.F. Skinner, for example. Frankly, as I checked out the table of contents, I was initially surprised to see Edward de Bono, Howard Gardner, Malcolm Gladwell, Daniel Goleman, Steven Pinker, Gail Sheehy, and William Styron among the "iconic figures" listed so I read their segments first and, sure enough, Butler-Bowdon explains the inclusion of each.

In the Introduction, he provides an overview on the development of modern psychology as a field of study, once "early titans" (e.g. Williams James, Sigmund Freud, Jung, and Adler) had written books that the general public could understand. Within the Introduction, he also suggests seven themes that offer different perspectives on "who we are, how we think, and what we do" and assigns to each a cluster of relevant commentaries. Readers can then decide which themes are of greatest interest to them, and, on which selections to focus. For example, five sources are suggested for "Tapping the unconscious mind: Wisdom of a different kind." They are:

The Gift of Fear (Gavin de Becker)
My Voice Will Go With You (Milton Erickson by Sidney Rosen)
The Interpretation of Dreams (Sigmund Freud)
Blink (Malcolm Gladwell)
The Archetypes and the Collective Unconscious (Carl Jung)

I read some books cover-to-cover sequentially; with others, I hop around back and forth in random fashion; with still others, I read strategically after checking out the table of contents, as I did with this one. My guess (only a guess) is the latter approach will work best for most readers and many may decide what to read and in what order after reviewing the seven thematic clusters in the Introduction. For those who feel overwhelmed by the number of books in print and need help selecting what will be of greatest interest to them, the volumes in the "50 Classics" series will be especially valuable.

I view Butler-Bowdon is an erudite "travel agent" for readers, but also as an enthusiastic "tour guide" who then accompanies them from one "landmark" to the next. One of this book's several value-added benefits is that Butler-Bowdon discusses several authors and works of which many (if not most) of his readers may have been previously unaware. He also does a skillful job of comparing and contrasting perspectives on a specific subject as in this volume, for example, when noting that a "central idea in Adlerian psychology is that individuals are always striving toward a goal. Whereas Freud saw us as driven by what was in our past, Adler had a teleological view - they we are driven by our goals, whether they are conscious or not."

Those who share my regard for this book are urged to check out the other volumes in the "50 Classics" series. To those in business, I also highly recommend several volumes in the Capstone reference series written by Des Dearlove, notably The Ultimate Book of Business Thinking.

Tom has done it again!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-11
Tom Butler-Bowdon again provides an informative, passionate, and engaging guide through literature that will improve our lives as well as those around us. His choice of books and their descriptions are brilliant. I wonder what he will come out with next? I always look forward to his books and his enthusiastic and superb style of writing. Tom thanks again for providing us with the knowledge we need in our journey of life.

Highly recommended.

Psychology overview for non-psychologists
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-17
This book offers an engaging overview of 50, for the most part, widely popular psychology books as well as short biographies of their authors. Knowing the backgrounds of these psychologists helps to understand where they are coming from and what motivated them to explore a particular area of human mind, or behavior and arrive at particular conclusions.

Some of the authors covered are William James, Sigmund Freud, Karl Gustav Jung, Abraham Maslow, Dr. Milton Erickson (as a hypnotherapist, I was thrilled that he was mentioned here), Robert Cialdini, David Burns, and many others who have contributed not only to the greater understanding of human mind and behavior, but also to creating methods and techniques some appropriate for use within therapeutic environment and others designed to help people to use on their own to cope better with life's challenges, to feel better and to live more satisfying lives.

Excellent comprehensive overview of psychology
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-04
Following on from Tom Butler-Bowdon's previous volumes in the "50 Classics" series, this first class collection of summaries of key psychology books and authors continues in the same broad, accessible, but also in-depth, style.

As the sub-title says, psychology is all about who we are, how we think, what we do. In other words, what it means to be human. Topics covered include the unconscious mind, happiness and mental health, the study of personality, motivation, love, creativity and relationships.

With key "in a nutshell" comments, the author cuts to the essential message of each writer, while addressing more complex subtleties in the accompanying text. As with Tom's other books, there is a very wide range of carefully chosen authors. I had come across several here in an academic context, but in general the emphasis is on popular psychology, "Psychology for nonpsychologists" as the jacket puts it. The range includes RD Laing, Oliver Sacks, Fritz Perls, Ivan Pavlov, Eric Berne, to pick a few random names. The founding fathers such as William James and Sigmund Freud are covered, alongside over a century's worth of contributions right up to Malcolm Gladwell with his 2005 bestseller on the importance of first impressions and split-second judgment.

There is a huge amount of psychological and self-development literature available these days. It can be difficult to know where to begin but each volume in the "50 Classics" is an excellent starting point. "50 Psychology Classics" is another winner in the series and I wholeheartedly recommend it!


Butler
Grand Obsession: Harvey Butchart and the Exploration of Grand Canyon
Published in Paperback by Puma Press (2007-08-01)
Authors: Elias Butler and Tom Myers
List price: $19.95
New price: $12.21
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A real life view of a Grand Canyon legend
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-05
Harvey Butchart is held high on a pedestal with the majority of Canyon hikers and deservedly holds the respect of all for what he accomplished through shear grit and determination. Knowing that he had a wife and family in Flagstaff, I was always curious how he was able to balance family, his work as a Northern Arizona University mathematics professor and his passion -- no, his obsession -- with the Grand Canyon. Elias Butler and Tom Myers did an EXCELLENT job in researching and writing about Harvey's life from early childhood in China to missionary parents until his death in 2002.

Be warned; you will learn that Harvey was human. A person cannot be a super human explorer of the Grand Canyon and still maintain healthy relationships at home. His family life did indeed suffer; how could that be avoided? Several of my friends were disappointed to learn of this, but it only makes sense. You cannot be obsessed with something and not have other aspects of your life get neglected. I feel the authors dealt very fairly with this. They did not paint Harvey as malevolent or saintly; they just stated the facts and very tactfully. The book is well written and the story of Harvey's life is extremely interesting. I highly recommend this book!

I regretted each moment I had to put this book down
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-26
Harvey Butchart was the first person to thoroughly explore the Grand Canyon on foot since Native American times. Obsessive by nature, he took detailed trip notes, and incorporated his notes in a trail guide that is still unrivaled. Butchart was the first person to walk the length of the park below the rim, and his tips were what enabled Colin Fletcher to become the first person to walk through the canyon in one season. Colin Fletcher's The Man Who Walked Through Time: The Story of the First Trip Afoot Through the Grand Canyon made Fletcher, and later Butchart, famous.

Elias Butler and Tom Myers have produced an engrossing book on many levels. Most of the book is about events from the 1950s into the 80s. The hiker climber authors followed several of Harvey Butchart's routes while researching the book. Their personal stories lend a feeling of suspense to what would otherwise be a historical account. The book is a biography of a man, an exploration of a hiker's obsession and its effect on his family. Other books cover Colorado River exploration, but this is the first one I have seen that documents Grand Canyon exploration by foot. Researching the book was a fifteen year effort, and it is well documented with footnotes, photos and supplemental notes.

As a long distance hiker myself, I was caught up with the multiple aspects of the book. The authors managed to impart the addictive nature of endurance sports, and the ramifications of a sport that consumes many hours. While Harvey hiked, his family grew up and moved on, seeing little of him.

Hikers and Grand Canyon enthusiasts are certainly going to enjoy this book, but I strongly recommend it to anyone getting into a sport that consumes immense time away from family.

Don't read this before bed...
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-12
...or you'll never get to sleep!

Grand Obsession is a riveting biography of one of the most interesting characters ever to set foot in the Grand Canyon. An author himself, many hikers are familiar with Harvey Butchart's series of "guide books", Grand Canyon Treks. Even though Harvey somewhat vaguely reveals the secrets of the Grand Canyon in his books, he himself has remained a mystery until now.

It is evident that the authors put an amazing amount of work into writing this biography. Every detail of Harvey's life, from his childhood in China, to "settling down" in Sun City, has been clearly and interestingly explained. The biography takes the reader on a roller coaster ride of emotions, from the elation of summiting a virgin butte to the heartache his frequent forays in the Canyon caused his wife.

The authors break up the biography with the tale of their own adventure; following the footsteps of Harvey Butchart to the summit of Wotan's Throne. Their quest, a series of triumphs and failures, mirrors the life Harvey Butchart and helps the reader understand what Harvey must have felt in an even more profound way.

I didn't want to put this book down. Every page was a new adventure, leaving me hungry for more, and making me want to go to the Canyon and follow the footsteps of Harvey Butchart myself!

A Great Biography of a Great explorer
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-09
This is a tremendously interesting and enjoyable biography. The writing is superb, the photographs enriching, and the flow and structure of the book are excellent. Most importantly, the authors have beautifully and humanely illuminated the life of an extraordinary -- and until now for me and many others -- a somewhat mysterious man.

I met Dr. Butchart 35 years ago when I took his Algebra course at Northern Arizona University. He was a challenging professor (the best kind!), and as a young hiker and beginning Canyoneer, I was in awe of his Canyon reputation. I didn't get to know him beyond class. In subsequent years and after many off-trail and below-the-rim miles attempting to follow his terse guides, I was mystified as to who he really was. Thanks to Butler and Meyers, I have finally come to know him. And what a great arm-chair adventure getting to "know him" has been!

"Grand Obsession" is not only a fine addition to the ever enlarging literature of the Grand Canyon, it is a fittingly great biography of a little known but great western explorer.

A Grand Book for a Truly Grand Obsession
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-25
Harvey Butchart was a mathematics professor. His doctoral thesis was "Helices in Euclidean N-Space", and at one point he had to get twenty feet of wrapping paper to do his massive calculations for it. He looked the part, for he was scrawny at five foot seven inches and 135 pounds, and he had thick bifocals. He was socially awkward and shy. He was a good mathematician, with further papers and competence within the Northern Arizona University Mathematics Department. He had a perfectly respectable professional life. So far so dull. You would not have known it if you had seen him in his professor role, but he was a tenacious adventurer who made the Grand Canyon his realm of expertise. He logged 12,000 hiking miles in over forty years of canyoneering, he found new routes of access from the canyon rim to river, and he climbed 83 of the buttes in the canyon, often climbing by himself, and 28 of those climbs were the first recorded conquests. Everyone who knew him knew of his obsession with the canyon, and he is a hero to the many who have followed the trails he described. No one appreciates Butchart's life's work more than hikers Elias Butler and Tom Myers, who have written an admiring biography of the man who knew the Grand Canyon better than anyone, _Grand Obsession: Harvey Butchart and the Exploration of Grand Canyon_ (Puma Press). Not only is this big, well-illustrated book an account of Butchart's life and work, it chronicles much of the history of the canyon, especially after the boom in camping and nature appreciation that has occurred in the past decades. It is also an account of an obsession that was dangerous at times, and even tragic. The obsession was also hazardous to Butchart's family life, but he did put it to practical use for the benefit of others.

Butchart only started hiking the canyon when he was 38 years old and moved to its region. It presented one challenge after another; he might have to bushwhack through a disused trial, float down a river, ascend sheer cliffs, or raise himself up scorching buttes. The almost photographic memory he used when he did mathematics was also put to work on the trial, so that he could remember routes long after he had trekked them. However, he took to documenting each hike he made, obsessively typing up a description once he returned home. He remained extremely fit, and as supervisor of the college hiking club, he found he had to take care so that he would not leave his students, less than half his age, in the dust. He was hard on himself. "You aren't really living if you don't risk your life once every six months," he wrote, and he was only half joking. Butler and Myers examine at length the effects of his hiking on his wife. Roma had no interest in hiking and had disdain for the fellow hikers who would visit her husband. She was able to have a truce when Butchart kept to schedule and made it home for bridge games and other activities Roma needed. Butchart had to slow down as he aged, although the slowing was very long in coming. After he had done his last hikes, there was a reconnection and delight in his relationship with Roma, and after she died in 2002, he was heartbroken and followed her just a couple of months later.

Butchart's fame is assured, not because he had so many firsts in climbing and hiking the canyon (although these are considerable), but because of the three volumes of _Grand Canyon Treks_ he produced, going from the logbook notes he made after a hike and turning them into trail guides for others to follow. Butler and Myers are devoted to the books and use them often (even on a hike to Wotan's Throne, a butte that was a particular favorite of Butchart, to put his and Roma's ashes there). "Although a casual hiker could use _Treks_ to negotiate the beaten paths, Harvey presents the trails as mere frames upon which to drape the more exciting information, his routes that lead into the wild. _Treks_ thus introduced the sport of canyoneering to a generation of eager practitioners." Butchart was not unappreciative of the beauty of the canyon, but his guidebooks reflect his priorities, getting out there, getting to a goal, and getting there in time, rather than pointing out the sights. What he thought was important about his life is in those books. _Grand Obsession_ contains wonderful pictures of the canyon and Butchart at work in it, and is engagingly written even for people that don't have anything like a devotion to hiking. It is a full and admiring portrait of a remarkable, flawed man who blazed a trail, thousands of trails.

Butler
How to Study (Fry, Ronald W. How to Study Program.)
Published in Audio Cassette by Highbridge Audio (1997-08-01)
Author: Ron Fry
List price: $11.00
New price: $4.50
Used price: $3.10

Average review score:

Nice!!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-14
Man i need it this for like My Whole Life. It teaches you good fundamental stuff to succed in your study life. Good examples and easy to understand.

Years saved
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-25
I learned most of these lessons the hard way.... years and years of studying the wrong way. Save yourself time and a GPA and take a look.

Study Smarter, not harder
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-23
love this book, and highly recommend it for anyone...received my order super-fast on regular delivery.

great book
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2006-12-28
great! if you need help w/ studying this book is the way to go.

Changed the way I learned forever
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-14
I read this book many years ago (maybe it was the first or second edition) and it changed my style of studying forever. I was failing my pre-med courses when I found this book. I ended up getting A's in organic chemistry and applied calculus. This book should be required reading before undertaking any serious scholastic endeavor. This is the only book that doesn't disguise the effort that is required in learning - no magic tricks nor skills that only "special" students have - the ability is in all of us and Ron Fry shows you how.


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