Campbell Books
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Home to TexasReview Date: 2004-12-31
Good Book!Review Date: 2004-02-02
fine Texas romanceReview Date: 2004-01-10
Grady McKinney was born in Crystal Creek, but feels the road is his home. However, an injury has sent him to the last place he wants to be: his family home. While Tara works on turning the former dude ranch into a thriving equestrian school, Grady helps her. They fall in love and her son worships him, but Grady cannot commit to staying in one place though the temptation is great and Tara still tastes the bitter herbs of her last marriage.
Though the relationship between Grady and Tara seems too soon as she recovers from the nastiness of her divorce, fans will appreciate this Texas romance between a commitment phobia rover and a scarred marital victim. The story line is typical of the Crystal Creek tales as the lead couple seems an unlikely matches yet love ties them together. Del is a delightful child, perhaps a bit too precocious, but the audience will want to hug him as he turns to Grady for fatherly attention. HOME TO TEXAS is a delightful romantic soup with several tasty ingredients making for a fine entry that mini-series fans will appreciate.
Harriet Klausner
A Terrific ReadReview Date: 2004-01-31

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Great Read While TravelingReview Date: 2007-05-31
Great!Review Date: 2004-04-14
Walk With MeReview Date: 2002-05-14
Delightful and thoughtful collection of short storiesReview Date: 2001-01-20

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Just like it wasReview Date: 2001-12-18
You are there.Review Date: 2002-03-06
AN EXCELLENT KOREAN WAR NOVELReview Date: 2001-10-14
Donald E. Chab, USMC Korea, 1951-1952
Well worth the readReview Date: 2001-12-18

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Inner StrenghthReview Date: 2006-07-22
Deborah D.
Of value to anyone needing to get out of a rutReview Date: 2006-11-30
On the surface, Duane Campbell's book, "Inner Strength Defies the Skeptic," is about looking inside oneself to find your personal truth, path and spirituality. His main claim is that value and identity has to come from inside a person, not outside, and especially not from anyone who has a vested interest in skewing that identity for the worse. His stated goal is that he wants this book to startle awake his audience. Awaken them to how they have accepted someone else's priorities, ideologies and limits.
Despite an early claim that his work, referenced under the title of `The Awareness Project," was for "all facets of people, regardless of age, social class, racial or religious background, economical or educational level," pp17, I felt his target audience was clearly poor, black, urban Americans; especially males. This feeling is an example of Duane Campbell's skill in writing. What he writes is more layered then most authors' works. For instance, tracking back on my feeling about his target audience, it started from his repeated use of "man" and "mankind" in one chapter and of course the male pronoun throughout. This was startling since I had heard about this disassociation from other females in other writings, yet I had only once felt that way myself. I suspect this feeling was solidified from the poem extolling the wonders of black women and the next poem a dirge for the black man. As you can see, all of this is subterranean; and very different from his explicit words.
Much of the book has these layered meanings. On the whole, while his route to finding inner strength was helpful, I am uncomfortable with the sub text about the purpose and use of this inner strength. The author states that "some may consider the (main section) of (this book) to be radical and/or confrontational" pp19. I however found that section to be the best part. I can understand why he thought this since on the same page he defines the choice faced after the reader uses that section as either a "rebellion of an oppressive state of existence or the acceptance of a corrupted social and/ or psychological hierarchy," pp.19. This kind of choice is like asking a man if he has stopped beating his wife. By definition any answer is an admittance of violence in the past. Likewise, because the author only allows those two options, it defines you as either with him or against him.
The setup of the book brings this lens up early, in the first of the three sections. This first part explains the `Awareness Project,' the book, and about the author. The second section is titled `Outreaches' and is the bulk of the how-to. In this part, a poem starts each chapter. The last section, labeled `Flow,' is all poetry. All in all this is quite a short book and very lyrical. "Inner Strength Defies the Skeptic" is a great example of how different written English usually is from spoken English. The entire book has a rhythm; ponderous on the statements, dancing on the poetry. A minor quibble is that the first two sections are a little disorientating to read since almost all of his sentences are statements and each sentence is a different paragraph. This is probably due to his goal of having all of his ideas "in statement format and not within the terminology of the theoretical" pp. 12. And this format does make it easy to meditate on any paragraph/ idea. Mostly these sections read like they should be orated from a pulpit or in a rally. On the technical side there were a couple of grammar mistakes that might be deliberate since his poems used e. e. cummings' method of lower-case letters as the standard of punctuation. It did bother me that his great `Awareness Project' mantra of "Within the seed of an apple there lives an orchard invisible" was under a picture of a sprouted acorn.
In conclusion, I believe "Inner Strength Defies the Skeptic," follows the author's intention very well. This is not a comfortable book and probably has layers I couldn't see or didn't notice. I found his message interesting, the methods helpful, and the purpose disquieting. I believe this book would interest any person who is spinning in place, convinced that their value depends on what "everyone knows" is important. I get the impression that this is the first of many planned publications and applaud Duane Campbell for following his path.
A friendReview Date: 2006-11-21
The book is great at giving u a diiferent point of view, from poems, to the author's point of view.
Very, very enlighting.
Brilliant Inside LookReview Date: 2006-06-22

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nutty, but trueReview Date: 2003-07-08
Wow What memoriesReview Date: 2003-07-31
Wonderful book about great memoriesReview Date: 2003-04-29
LAUGH TIL YOU PEE YOUR PANTS HILARIOUS!!!Review Date: 2003-03-24
Who this book is for---anyone who remembers flannelgraphs of Jesus, Sunday School in the church basement and potlucks with lots of macaroni salad.
Who this book is NOT for---Anyone who had no emotional response whatsoever upon reading "Who this book is for." It's also not for those who fit the bill "who this book is for" BUT who take themselves way too seriously and have no sense of humor. The genius of this group of "born again" authors is that they manage to poke fun ad infinitum at the "if you're saved and you know it" generation with complete hysterical...I mean historical accuracy while maintaining a spirit of absolute fun and not an ounce of disrespect or guile. They're not poking fun at God. Their humor is aimed at us, the people who in our sincere attempts to love God, tend to say and do things that are quite frankly fertile ground for laughter.
Again a word of caution, do NOT buy this book if you are easily offended, especially by religious matters. On the other hand, BUY THIS BOOK NOW "if you're saved and you know it" and you want to grin about it until your mouth hurts.
Lisa from California

Very useful for researchReview Date: 2008-04-27
The Hobo PhilosopherReview Date: 2007-11-07
A nice quality and designed book also.
One child's responseReview Date: 2000-08-02
Labor History Lives!Review Date: 2000-03-30

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the tales that teachReview Date: 2002-05-15
Shimmering ZimmerReview Date: 1999-11-23
Shimmering ZimmerReview Date: 1999-11-24
A must have for the chela on any esoteric path!Review Date: 1998-01-04
Indologist Heinrich Zimmer provides an easy to comprehend text taking four time-out-of-mind-myths and relating them to the esoteric "grail" path! It makes an excellent study for the seeker/student who would wish to follow Wolfgang Von Eckenback's "I learned my ABC's without the use of black magic".
In this writers opinion very few scholars have been suited to blend eastern thought processess into western concepts. Zimmer adeptly crosses this void as if stepping over a puddle of water, making "The King and The Corpse" highly informative and a joy of the heart to ponder.
If you are a seeker on any esoteric path you will find yourself and your 'map' within it's cover.
Shri Rajeshwari Pujari Maharaja
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Compelling critical analysis of HIV prevention effortsReview Date: 2003-10-15
Not only for HIV education efforts!Review Date: 2003-10-21
I also found it a pleasure to read, profoundly interesting, although often tragically so.
Damocles SwordReview Date: 2003-10-16
The book describes the author's experiences with a project that started out by trying to reduce the risk of infection by HIV amongst three groups in a mining town in South Africa - female sex workers, male miners, and young people. There were two approaches to doing this: peer education and the "promotion of partnerships between a diverse array of community groupings of stakeholders to coordinate and support the variety of local HIV-prevention efforts in such a way that maximized their overall cumulative effectiveness". The interventions chosen were all invested with the glowing approbation of the international `AIDS project' community as prime examples of what should be done in such situations. In terms of having any impact on the epidemic or on the sexual culture of the area the project has so far been a failure. The author analyses the reasons for this failure in a number of analytical contexts.
The author is very well placed to analyse the history of the project. She herself as a social psychologist had been involved in the township in 1995 in trying to understand the reasons why there is such a high prevalence of HIV infection amongst the miners and sex workers despite their obvious knowledge of the existence of HIV and the ways in which it is transmitted. The studies themselves form part of the opening chapters, and provide very good insight into the conditions of these people's lives and the enormous social factors that influence their lives and decision-making. The following chapters describe the way the project grew as a result of a drive from some local people for work that would affect the growing numbers of people with AIDS and from a group of scientists and professionals (including the author) who had an interest in the area. One chapter provides the initial theoretical justification for the various actions that were taken, with heavy leaning on the writings of Paulo Freire on the conscientisation side, Pierre Bourdieu for social capital, and on the experiences of peer education with sex workers in Zimbabwe of David Wilson and others.
The book will be invaluable for the discussion of the importance of the social context for behaviour, and indeed will be read by many for that alone. It also details the very many ways in which the project's ideals fell by the wayside (the rates of sexually transmitted infection in miners actually rose during the period of the project, there were many difficulties with the peer education approach for young people in school, the stakeholders were far from unified in their vision or even interest) or were partially successful (there were several changes amongst the sex workers), and again these experiences will be as interesting as they are familiar to many who work with such projects.
However this book goes far beyond such a discussion. She points to the inadequacies of our current theoretical and modelling frameworks for such interventions; to the fact that the stakeholders who were involved did not see themselves as part of the epidemic or as people whose behaviour had to change; to the fact that the designers and researchers of the project had much discord and competition amongst themselves; to the great mistrust that developed between the researchers and much of the `community'. In fact, although the author tries to scotch the problem with the definition of `community' by stating that in this case the term `community' refers to the people in a geographic area, the tension behind this definition continues throughout the book as it is acknowledged that only a few of the many individuals and groups in the area were in fact being requested to change their ways - the paternalism and continued power of the `senior' stakeholders continuing throughout.
The value of the book is still more. The lessons drawn in the concluding chapter smack of a level of desperation in the author to find lessons, and this may perhaps be the only weakness of the book. In these lessons the author still struggles to keep the idea going that somehow in a better world the interventions could have had an impact if only people had carried them through according to the wishes of the project designers. The deep question the author raises in the mind of the reader is whether such approaches can ever work in relation to an epidemic (as opposed to being valuable for a few individuals or groups). This question is not actually present in the book (although there are numerous hints of the author's disquiet concerning the mismatch between the daily reality of people's lives and the wishes and interests of the project managers) but it hangs over ever sentence as did the sword over Damocles. As for Dionysius in relation to those who wield power, it is a question hanging over all those who praise mindlessly the black art of development.
SuperdReview Date: 2006-09-18
Using several concepts of the social sciences, like empowerment, critical consciousness and social capital, she describes and analyses behaviour of the aforementioned groups in relation to the HIV epidemic in South Africa.
Making use of findings from 'The Summertown Project' she comes to a clear and lively story of the choices people from a marginalized community make.
I used this book for my final thesis on a research I did at an AIDS project in South Africa. It helped me to prepare myself on the things I was going to experience and to put my research in a broader perspective.

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Dropped Back in Time---1957Review Date: 2008-02-08
Great summary and big picture viewReview Date: 2007-09-01
Very Informational oabout SegregationReview Date: 2000-03-29
Dramatic Pictures, and hope for the futureReview Date: 2004-06-28
While the book would be worthwhile for the pictures alone, it is all the more compelling by bringing the story up to date. Centered around the fortieth anniversary of desegregation of Little Rock High School, the author tracks down both the black student and the white student spewing hatred. There are pictures of them together, having gone through a process of healing and reconciliation.
The ultimate question--why such hatred--is not answered, nor could it be, given the format and limitations of what is, af4er all, basically a book of narrated pictures. But the question is certainly raised and explored.
This is a great book and should be on the shelf of anyone who loves photography or wants to understand why the Civil rights movement was so important to the history of this country (although I would strongly urge that no one take the advice f the other reviewer, and use this as the primary source for information on this struggle).
My only criticism is that the upbeat tone of this volume needs to be questioned. As James Meridith has said--If a black man can be kicked ten times in open view, and has no redress, is it really "improvement" if he is only kicked nine times, but still has no redress? Is Little Rock really free of prejudice and discrimination? Is America?
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A Wonderful Book!Review Date: 2003-01-24
Highly Informative and HelpfulReview Date: 2002-11-12
A BOOK EVERYONE SHOULD READ!Review Date: 2001-03-22
Addresses a need for an improved and more refreshing sleepReview Date: 2001-05-21
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Robert White