Clark Books


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

Clark
The Face of Our Past: Images of Black Women from Colonial America to the Present
Published in Hardcover by Indiana University Press (2000-06-15)
Author:
List price: $19.95
New price: $9.95
Used price: $3.64

Average review score:

your mother's mother , mother
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-21
i was amazed at the photos. i could not help but to wonder if any of these women and men could be my ancestors. you see so many similarites in the faces on the pages to people you see everyday. i wish there were more in the captions to explain the photos. but when you consider the time that many of these photographs were taken, the captions are in the faces and the demeanor of the subjects. why? is probably the question that could never be answered. and if a reasonable explanation could somehow be given it wouldn't be enough. no matter how broken the mother, father, sister, brother in these photograghs looked. i wish they could all know that their unbearable weight, sorrow and pain helped to develop a strong, defiant, capable and proud race of people.

A Must Purchase
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2001-11-28
This book covers generations of history. The pictures are
breath-taking....it gives you a sincere sense of purpose.

A Must Purchase
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2001-11-28
This book covers generations of history. The pictures are
breath-taking....it gives you a sincere sense of purpose.

Good intentions, amazing illustrations, poor captions.
Helpful Votes: 14 out of 22 total.
Review Date: 2000-12-09
The visual imagery in this collection is terrific, enabling readers' memory, longing, wisdom, regret, sorrow, enormous admiration (of the subjects and all that they represent)- and wonderment. The people and the settings resonate. These are important images. You might well be moved to tears. There is no shortage of emotional appeal to the viewer. One cannot be unaffected by this collection, and all that it represents.

In addition, historically important works of art (engravings and paintings) are reproduced - although unfortunately none in color. The captioning is - for a work of this scope and size, and for illustrations of such power - inconsistent and therefore disappointing, though.

Because it's published by an academic press, I expected a more careful and rigorous treatment. Books of this scope and ambition are few and far between, and one treasures the illustrations - the historic visual record - in and of itself. It's dicey to criticize a collection that has as its focus such a compelling (and neglected) subject: the history of African American women.

The subject matter is terrific - but the book is less so. One wishes that the editors had had an editor. (Why, for example, is the "b" of "black" capitalized? To my knowledge this is not conventional usage, and it detracts.)

So what happened? At times the work seems rushed. For example, three people are photographed, two are identified by name, the third called "unknown." In fact, the writer means "unidentified." Accompanying a photo of a shoeless farm worker is the caption telling one, redundantly, that she is barefoot. A number of captions identify the subject as "Unidentified woman, [location, date.]" That seems lifted directly from states' historical societies' archives. One expects more - or less - but not words that merely interfere with one's experience. One does not need to be told that a photograph is a "photograph."

Occasionally, the editors engage in assumptions regarding the illustrations that, in my view, interfere with the power of the imagery, and reduce the value of this compilation. Guessing as to the subjects' activities in a photograph by Jack Delano, they write that a woman and several children are "possibly waiting for the husband and father to get his hair cut." In fact, one cannot know, and do not need to know, what the people were doing that day. The photo is about much more than that. Another incredible photo of a woman and a girl is accompanied by more guesswork as to the relationship of the subjects (mother and daughter?). There is wordiness to many of the captions. Worst case, there is sometimes unintentional patronization: subjects are identified as "lovely young women," (p. 81) or "fashionable," "attractive" (p.4). The end result is a sense that this book was rushed, and that - despite the impressive pool of archival material from which it was assembled - some corners were cut. The editors use interesting and illuminating quotations in places - but meagerly. There is brief index of names of subjects, and names of quoted women, omitting place names and more.

I wish that the authors of this work either done more, or less. Mostly, I wish that they had more convincingly respected the ability of these powerful and important illustrations to speak clearly to the reader, and had also trusted readers to make the connections between text and visual imagery that is so satisfying and essential to the meaningful experience of organized archival material.

Beautiful pictures, beautifully captioned
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2001-01-02
This is a marvelous and moving selection of visual moments, carefully chosen and elegantly captioned. It is refreshingly free of the stuffily convoluted prose one would expect of a book from an academic press. Although the pictures could be said to speak for themselves (and sometimes they can), the information supplied by the gracefully literate writer(s) is helpful and interesting.

Groups of photographs can be wonderful to look at. This collection rises far above what it might have been by means of the exquisite care that was taken in its selection and the highly accessible captioning that accompanies the images.

Clark
The Great American Barbecue & Grilling Manual
Published in Hardcover by Abacus Publishing (MS) (2000-04)
Authors: C. Clark Hale, C. Clark "Smoky" Hale, Sandra Lyon, and Bob
List price: $29.95
New price: $20.95
Used price: $15.95

Average review score:

Kind of disappointing
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-05
I guess it depends on what you expect when someone tells you their book is about "Barbecue". With the photo on the front (a pile of great looking ribs)I was hoping this would concentrate on the "Big Three"---Ribs, Shoulder and Brisket.
These subjects are touched on, but for instance the section on smoking Pork Shoulders is maybe three pages long, two of those taken up by a couple recipes.
If you want to know how to smoke ANYTHING (pickled shrimp, lamb, oysters, venison) you may enjoy this, and perhaps down the line I will find some useful information.
I was hoping to find tips on how to smoke Righteous southern BBQ, and this just wasn't it.
By the way, for those looking for the stuff I wanted, I have found a book titled "Competition BBQ Secrets" on the Web. It's available as an e-book or a spiral-bound pamphlet. Don't know if Amazon carries it or not. It is a great book on how to do a few things very well---Brisket, Pork, and some stuff on Poultry. I'd highly recommend it!
Jim Bob

A must have book for the BBQ libary
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-23
This book belongs in hands on all BBQ and Grilling personnel. The books gives tips for the beginner through the expert levels. If you ever wanted to know anything about this art of cooking then make sure you have read this book. It has provided me with areas that I never new about. It also has many recipes from Rubs to the finished products. This book will NEVER SEE DUST IN OUR HOUSE. Can`t wait to get the grill hot!!! Thanks for a super book.

Good book for your collection
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-17
I liked the book. It had good recipes and information. But it also has a weakness that most barbecue books have. It doe not guide the user on setting the fire and how to maintain it. I wish it had dedicated a whole chapter to it.
I also noticed that the author doe not have a high opinion of spit roasting which I disagree.
Overall, good use of money.

If you want to learn how to barbecue and grill better buy this.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-13
As the author Smoky Hale points out most barbecue books, bibles and manuals throw a few pages of instruction and a lot of recipes at you. This is the only book I found that actually gives meaningful instruction. If you have a question not covered by the book email the author and he'll answer it. He also has a website with an "Ask Smoky" FAQ page but it's still well worth buying the book.

It covers everything from selecting your meat to selecting your equipment, from preparing your meat to preparing your "fire", and a myriad of rubs, sauces and recipes as well.

Highly reccommended.The Great American Barbecue & Grilling Manual

I predict you will enjoy this book...
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-28
...even if you never follow any of the author's advice.

When was the last time you really enjoyed reading a cookbook? Actually, when was the last time you really read a cookbook? I mean REALLY read the entire book from cover to cover? This is the one.

Smokey Hale is an opinionated cuss with a sense of humor that keeps you reading. His advice is also pretty darn good, too.

Highly recommended.

Clark
Long Knife
Published in Library Binding by Topeka Bindery (1994-06)
Author: James Alexander Thom
List price: $16.95

Average review score:

riveting piece of history...
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-08
a piece of American history that is overlooked so easily in an fascinating tale by James Thom. Mr Thom combines history and storytelling to make this story of the Northwest campaign of George Rogers Clark into an American hero.

Not one of Thom's better works.
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 13 total.
Review Date: 2001-10-28
I believe this was Alexander Thom's first novel, and it certainly reads like a first time effort. It's not half as good as his later works like "Follow the River" or "The Red Heart." In "Long Knife" Thom recounts Patriot George Rogers Clarke's epic march during the Revolutionary War to destroy British power on the western frontier. Thom is only partly successful in relaying this powerful tale into a moving work of fiction. The weakest element is a cliched and poorly developed romantic subplot involving Clarke and a Spanish commandant's sister. Pretty amateurish stuff. However, the strength of the novel is, of course, Clarke's army's 240 mile epic winter march, including long stretches through icy waist-deep water, to attack the British fort at Vincennes. It's here where Thom really shines bringing immense detail to the agony and fatigue faced by those men. (It's actually very reminiscent of Kenneth Roberts' description in his terrific novel "Northwest Passage" of a similar march by the famed Robert Rogers and his Rangers during the French and Indian War.) Unfortunately, Clarke's march is just a small part of the book and, although it's historical fiction writing at its best, it does not completely atone for the weak parts of "Long Knife."

I would recommend this book to Revolutionary War buffs and Alexander Thom fans. However, if you're new to Alexander Thom then I would recommend you check out some of his later books before reading "Long Knife," his first attempt at a historical novel.

Not a quick read, but well worth it.
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2003-02-01
This is the second book I've read by James Alexander Thom. I love the way this author writes. Like the first book that I read, Follow The River, this book pulled me in and I couldn't wait to get back to reading it to see what happened next. Thom does a superb job in his research. I read the book over the Christmas holiday when I was travelling. After the holidays I happened to catch a History Channel presentation on George Rogers Clark. To my surprise, Thom was included among the experts that they interviewed. I would recommend that anyone who likes to read about history and have it brought to life in the story read this book. I can't wait to read another book by Thom.

Incredible story of harship and American heroism
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2004-11-20
What an incredible tale! Most people focus on the campaigns east of the Appalachain Mountains when it comes to the Revoultionary War...but very few are aware of the details of the campaign by George Rogers Clark to take the Nowrthwest Territory west of the mountains.

And nobody tells such a tale better than Thom.

Despite recruiting a far smaller force than desired, George Rogers Clark set out to do the impossible, displace the French, to defeat far superior British forces, defeat or pacify far superior numbers of Indians, to control as big as the thirteen colonies...and to succeed with less than 200 men.

This is a story of the classic American spirit overcoming all odds to win for liberty. Sadly, it is also a tragic tale about how a true American hero was forgotten by the country that should have hailed him alongside Washington in so many ways.

If you are interested in American history, and want to read a finely researched piece of that history presented in as compelling a fashion...read Long Knife.

long knife
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2002-03-24
this story shows how the efforts of "george rogers clark" contributed to the growth of this country. we are used to hearing about the exploits of the revolutionary war but not often do we get a chance to know what was going on in the northwest territory. this is one of the best books i have ever read that covers how important a part was played by what was happening there. i recommend this book as an excellent read and most informative.

Clark
Teaching Art with Books Kids Love: Art Elements, Appreciation, and Design with Award-Winning Books
Published in Paperback by Fulcrum Publishing (1999-09-08)
Author: Darcie Frohardt
List price: $19.95
New price: $10.99
Used price: $9.50

Average review score:

Fun Approach
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-20
This book is a fun approach in communicating the elements of art, fun for teacher and student. And what could be better than getting kids to take an interest in reading and art. Can you say future children's book Illustrator? This book will open many more books. I would highly recommend it for the elementary art teacher or home schooler.

Teaching Art with books kids love
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-11
This is an excellent book.It helps children visualize ideas from their favorite books and to apply them to a visual art experience.

Teaching art
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-10
This is a book full of ideas for teaching art classes to young children.

Great
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-10
This book has a lot of ideas for lesson planning in the art room. It is divided into sections so that lessons are easy to find and also offers many great children's books to base lessons off of. GREAT!

Excellent Resource for Educators!
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2006-09-08
I would recommend this book for elementary classroom teachers. It provides outstanding projects and ideas for integrating Art into Language Arts. The author does and excellent job of teaching the elements of art and principles of design in the art projects! I am an Art Teacher and have taught many of the projects in the book. All projects were successful!

Clark
Zebra
Published in Hardcover by Richard Marek Pubs (1983-08)
Author: Clark Howard
List price: $1.98
Used price: $0.44

Average review score:

Why Have We Not Heard Of These Murders?
Helpful Votes: 21 out of 25 total.
Review Date: 2005-11-07
I read somewhere on the internet a few weeks ago about the Zebra murders and wondered what the heck was that about, and how it was said that the main-stream-media had ignored this huge news item and then the book about it. BINGO! I knew I had to read the book right away, and did! It is true, like any good crime story, once you start reading it, you can't put it down. The chapter about the tracing of the gun was an interesting short story in itself.

The murders occurred in 1973 in San Francisco, and I talked to some people about it and they never heard of it, and neither did I ever recall hearing anything about it myself. But, basically these murders held a terror siege on the city of San Francisco for nearly six months! The brutality of these murders was shocking! Who they were committed by, for, and against was just as shocking. The story ends each chapter with a short memorial of each victim as the body counts begins to build up.

Though the story is well-written by a capable author, I must say there was one part in the book that was confusing and I thought the author could have stated it better. It read, "While the white family had its picnic and Ward Anderson visted his friend, the two black Muslims known an Skullcap and Rims had a philosophical discussion on the subject of murder". This part had me thinking that Ward was talking to the two Muslims as pals and I only realized this was a mistake several pages down as the story wasn't making any sense.

So, why was this book and and essentially racist crime news ignored by the big media? Sigh... somethings never change (look at today's current events). It involved race and religious beliefs, something the Left and the MSM won't touch unless it coincides with their agenda. This time it didn't, and thus, the deafening silence.

Chilling Tale of Mass Murder and Savagery
Helpful Votes: 23 out of 23 total.
Review Date: 2004-01-14
This book recounts the horrifying crime spree known as the Zebra killings that happened in the Bay Area in the early 1970's. This spree, committed by black members of an offshoot of the Muslim religion, was done in an attempt for the murderers to win "Death Angel" status. This dubious honor was given to any "true believer" who murdered a certain number of white children, white women, or white men, or a combination of the three. (One received more credit for slaying a child or woman than a man supposedly because it would take more fortitude to do it. However, the author believes [with good reason, I think] it had more to do with the murderers being cowards afraid of anyone who might fight back.) Taking place over several months, the killers took several lives and wounded others in their barbaric attempt to win Death Angel wings. The author does a splendid job in recreating the events as well as allowing the reader to get inside the head of the people who actually believed it to be an honor to murder others. What is even more chilling than the specific Zebra murders is the fact that other Death Angels supposedly existed in California and could be walking the streets even today. For those with a strong stomach wishing to find out about a savage wave of crime (a wave that has strangely been forgotten), this is a must read.

A Psychotic killing contest.
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-04
"Zebra" is focused on the related crimes in San Francisco. But the "Zebra" crimes were actually happening state-wide. They were racially motivated, a psychopathic race to kill enough innocent victims to rate the killer as a "Death Angel."

Some of the killers were intellectually deficient and almost always chose the victims at random, on impulse. They were encouraged to seek out children or women as victims.

True to the expectations of some investigators, the killers were cowards and offered no resistance when arrested.

The name "Zebra" was inspired by the "Z as in Zebra" radio channel that was reserved for the investigation. Although there are other racial connotations for the case name.

The statistics in San Francisco were 23 assaults resulting in 15 deaths and numerous survivors scarred in one way or the other from the assault that they survived. Mr. Howard does a commendable job portraying the victims as everyday people rather than merely numbered victims.

I echo the surprise of the other reviewer that this case hasn't recieved more attention over the years. It was a huge case,more like conspiracy,of murder throughout California that had as amany as 70+ victims!

Clark Howard's "Zebra" is a very good read for any true crime reader.

why is this case considered closed?? it should still be open
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-11
considering just how limited/censored the info on this case is, Zebra is an OK read, I wish it was more from the police perspective as the killer perspective has to have some serious conjecture. Why this case was never fully solved is astounding , they convict a few people for a 14 murders, when there were perhaps dozens of killers and 70+ confirmed murders, the pattern was Black Muslims, so how hard could it have been to pursue that avenue.

Incredible story, compelling characters
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-23
I simply cannot understand why the media covers up stories like this but gives stories that are far less provoking front page news. It is frightening to know that many of the ideals revealed in this novel still exist today. I highly recommend this novel for anyone interested in true crime. It was so well written, it was easy to foget that these events actually happened.

Clark
301 Simple Things You Can Do to Sell Your Home Now and for More Money Than You Thought: How to Inexpensively Reorganize, Stage, and Prepare Your Home for Sale
Published in Paperback by Atlantic Publishing Company (FL) (2007-03-06)
Author: Teri B. Clark
List price: $24.95
New price: $14.60
Used price: $13.83

Average review score:

Informative but with a repetitive hard sell
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-05
If you are unsure if staging works, you will get a definite hard sell that it does in this book. Over, and over, and over again. To the point of being tedious. However there is some good information to be found here. Just didn't take the 288 pages to do it. Cut to the chase, tips include fresh paint, clean the place, get rid of clutter, depersonalize the house. In short, you are trying to sell a product. Spruce it up! Its all in the packaging. Rest is fluff and repetition, such as convincing you that staging works. Apparently the author felt the reader could not get that in a few sentences or even a chapter. Would have given a higher rating if it was less monotonous on that topic.

something for everyone
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-20
If you are selling your home, this book will help you get ready. It has a variety of ideas. Some are complicated, some are expensive, but many are simple and easily implemented. The author helps you understand you are not selling your home, you are selling a house to be someone else's home. If this is the only thing you get from this book it is worth the price and time you invest in buying and reading it. I higly recommend it.

Excellent advice.
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-10
This book is full of helpful advice when undertaking the tremendous task of selling and moving out of your house. Some of the advice is common sense, but they offer great ideas.

A Must Have For EVERY Homeowner
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-23
Teri B. Clark shares her expert tips on how to make your house look like a model home to showcase its potential to prospective buyers. Each page is filled with tricks of the trade and advice from professionals, and each chapter is summarized with a numbered tip list for easy reference. The book also includes before and after photos, as well as true stories of houses that sold for more than the asking price.

I recommend this book to everyone, regardless of whether they have a house to sell. Who doesn't want their house to look like a model home? Or, at the very least, sparkling clean, less cluttered, and more stylish? Teri B. Clark has written a do-it-yourself, fix-it-up, reorganization, cleaning, and decorating manual all rolled into one! The best part about her cleaning tips is that all of her methods entail using natural products such as orange oil and baking soda--very Earth and wallet friendly. There is an entire chapter on how to stage your home on a shoestring budget, which is ideal, especially in the current marketplace. She has ingenious ideas, and she demonstrates with data that a small investment can bring a large return. This is a tremendously useful book for all homeowners.

Staging Made Easy
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-27
Even if you are not planning on selling your house any time soon, this would be a good book to have around. In fact, by the time you get through following all of the advice here, you might not even want to sell, but if still do, there is a very good chance that you will indeed see the benefits of getting up to10 percent more from the sale.

This book looks at everything from the inside out, and from top to bottom. It is probably not the type of book you would just sit down and read from cover to cover, though you could because its style is easy to read as well as informative. Some of the best features include "This Could Be You" success stories interspersed throughout the book. These achieve their goal to inspire the reader. While these are balanced with the rest of the text, at times some of the other inserted text boxes almost become annoying. For example, the Professional Bonus Tips are helpful, but sometimes they seem to be overused. This is especially evident in the chapter, "Putting It All Back together," where it seems that most of the chapter is made up of text boxes instead of text.


Aside from this formatting issue, the tips are valuable and range from advice about how to pay attention to the smallest details such as wiping clean light switch covers to more significant aspects of staging, such as depersonalization in order to appeal to the largest number of perspective home buyers.

Before and after photographs are used to illustrate some of the main points. These include color insets and some smaller black and whites throughout. Sometimes the quality of these are not all that great--in a few cases the before and after photos are not take from exactly the same perspective in the room. Still, most of the photos do help to get the point across, so they are generally are useful.

All in all, this book is inspiring. It makes me want to get off the couch and transform my own home even though I had no plans of selling. I suspect it can have the same the effects on you as well.

Clark
The Bear Necessities of Business: Building a Company with Heart
Published in Hardcover by Wiley (2006-04-21)
Author: Maxine Clark
List price: $24.95
New price: $2.00
Used price: $0.53
Collectible price: $24.95

Average review score:

Love it!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-24
I love Build-a-Bear and retail management...so of course I loved this book. But I think anyone who has an interest in bussiness would find this interesting. It is well written and a fast paced read. Plus...the cover is eye catching and fun and makes you want to pick it up everytime you pass it on the nightstand or coffee table! A great book and a great company!

Great book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-20
This is a great book that gives good ideas about starting up your own business. However, it makes it sound as you need way too much money to start so a bit disappointed that is not as easy as I thought. I guess many people would be able to start a business with more than a million dollars. I believe she had to ask investors for more than four million.

Very enjoyable read, packed with good advice for entrepreneurs
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-11
As a huge fan of Build-a-Bear, I picked up the book to learn more about the company. I have a daughter who is in the target market of Build-a-Bear and I have spent many enjoyable hours in the stores. I have always found their marketing to be amazing and wanted to understand more about the company. The book does talk a lot about Build-a-Bear, but it also gives a wealth of marketing and customer service ideas that could be used by any company. The book appears to be written for entrepreneurs, but the marketing and customer service ideas could be used by any size company, that has an entrepreneurial spirit. I really enjoyed how Maxine shows how many well-known companies are using the ideas from the book.

the bear necessities of business
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-31
The Bear Necessities of Business was an inspiration. It re-enforced one should always believe you are capable of success when you make the decision to go out on your own and develop your business. There was a tremendous amount of information on how to be a good boss and to inspire your employees to work for the success of your company. I will definitely use the information from Maxine Clark to make a success of my own new business.

3 books in one, and each book has something to offer the wanta-be entrepreneur in his or her pursuit to become a business owner.
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-26

I very much enjoyed finding this book in the bookstore a few days ago, and then reading it yesterday morning. It was an easy read, and it was jam packed full of information. It is really three books in one. The first book is the story of Maxine Clark, a short round energetic woman originally from Florida who went to the University of Georgia majoring in journalism. When she graduated she started a career in retail that she continues at today. And what a career! She now makes St. Louis her home with her husband who is also an entrepreneur. She has no children, but her business is basically kids. I think she can be a great role model for many women out there.

The second book is a PR plug for her company: Build-A-Bear Workshop. I had never heard of it before I picked up this book. But while I was at one of my local Malls yesterday (Quakerbridge in Lawrence, NJ) I noticed in the mall directory one of her franchised stores exists there. Naturally I visited the store and the book had greater meaning to me at once. The company was started in 1997 probably as an LLC. And I suspect in 2000 when it was converted to a corporation that is when it did its initial IPO. But that is just a guess. The philosophy behind the company seems to me to be a mix of Starbucks Coffee Shops and the Disney Retail Stores. Quite a combination, and it is proving to be a successful approach to entertainment retail in Mall environments.

The third book is a words-of-wisdom tome on how to vision, plan, implement, and work a business from scratch. It talks about the importance of reinventing traditional products or services from the ground up and then put your own unique spin on them. The author says she sells a brand experience, not a product. But she does move products - and lots of them. She also says that planning and self-reflection are the key to creating a business. And she says she took almost a year to research and write her masterpiece of a business plan she used to start Build-A-Bear Workshops.

The overall book is divided into seven parts:

1. Getting Started
2. Being a Great Boss
3. Connecting with Your Customers
4. Creating an Incredible Experience
5. Using Essential Marketing Strategies
6. Growing Your Business
7. Giving Back

My favorite part of the book was the first: Getting Started. Part 3 was pretty good. And I very much liked parts 5 and 6. I thought at page 64 "marketing tools and strategies" should have been included in the list there. But all in all this is a wonderful book and an important addition to what is available for entrepreneurs to read and study when thinking about getting involved in starting their own business. 5 stars!

Clark
Growing Old Is Not for Sissies II: Portraits of Senior Athletes
Published in Paperback by Pomegranate Communications (1995-10)
Author:
List price: $22.95
New price: $8.59
Used price: $6.83
Collectible price: $22.95

Average review score:

Stock Birthday Gift
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-26
This book is great for someone turning 40, 50, 60, 70...
It is so inspiring to see images of happy, healthy, active seniors.
I guarantee this book to be a big hit.

Great book!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-31
This book is an inspiration to all! Great pictures of senor athletes who are in fabulous shape. If we all could look this great at advanced age!
Just goes to show that physical excercise can keep you young and fit!
Looved this book and think it's a great gift item.

inspiring book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-13
A terrific follow up on the original book; "Growing Old is Not For Sissies" - highly recommend both

Gotta love the [...] kicking old farts
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-09
As a 50 year old runner and biker, I loved this book. I am now firmly entrenched in middle age and need the occasional inspiration to get out on the trails of Houston especially during the brutally hot summers. This book is full of what I need. A beautifully photographed and written book portraying active seniors competing and loving life, some well into their 90s. Truly amazing. The book is generally formatted with a picture and a few paragraphs written about and in some cases by these special people. By personal favorite is 83 year old surfer "Woody" Brown pictured with his 6 year old son Woody Jr. (Yep.... do the math) A copy of their picture is posted on my refrigerator for those days I hesitate to lace up the running shoes.

Wonderful gift idea!!!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-14
I have bought this book now as a birthday gift for my father, my husband and two of our friends (all of whom are athletes who are definitely NOT sissies!). It is such a beautiful testimony to the fact that age is just a number. I hope someday I might qualify to be in one of Etta Clark's future edition of this book.

Clark
The Hunting of the Snark
Published in Paperback by I. E. Clark (1987-09)
Author: Lewis Carroll
List price: $4.00
Used price: $57.20

Average review score:

Other Books
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-03
The Hunting of the Snark is a whacky piece of poetical silliness by Lewis Caroll. Complete nonsense, no-one knows what a Snark is, or why Snark hunters hunt it, or why anyone would want to become a Snark hunter to start with. Anyway, the poem is definitely amusing at times with some of the humour he slips in.

Carroll's Short and Sweet Chaucer Imitation
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-12
The Hunting of the Snark seems to be a very, very short imitation of The Canterbury Tales. The first chapter (titled a fit) introduces all of the occupations of all the different people going on a journey. However, instead of going on a general pilgrimage and telling tales along the way, their trip is very specific to hunting.

The Baker actually attempts to tell a story, but the Bellman (who leads the group) says there's no time for storytelling. They have to catch the Snark before nightfall.

Along with the Bellman and Baker, a Banker, a Bonnet-maker, a Butcher, a Boots, a Billiard-maker, a Barrister, a Broker, and a Beaver tag along to hunt for the Snark. The Beaver is afraid of getting cut by the Butcher, so he puts on a dagger-proof coat and talks to the Banker about buying an insurance policy.

The Beaver is involved in a hilarious scene with the Butcher later, when the two attempt to compute sums. But perhaps the funniest scene of the entire book is in the Barrister's dream when the Snark declares sentence on a pig, only to find out the pig has been dead long before the trial even began.

I'd highly recommend this short poem for Carroll fans, even though it's not big enough to contain but a small portion of what's to be found in the Alice books.

The best nonsense I've ever read
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-05-04
I have read a great deal of nonsense in the past, but this was by far the best nonsense that I have ever read. There is no point, no meaning, no sense, and no boringness. It is a delightful poem (which is well written and very fun to read aloud) about a crew on a ship hunting a snark. The crew includes a captain who only rings a bell, a beaver, a cook who only cooks beavers (the beaver and the cook did not get along well), a man afraid that the snark would turn into a boojum and make him disappear, etc. As you can tell, this makes for an insanely silly poem. The subtitle is rather fitting, as my sides were definitely hurting from laughter when I was done. Well done Mr. Carroll.

Overall grade: A+

Agony? Hardly!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-07-29
Nonsense poems can easily miss the mark
Yet, this masterpiece has that spark.

"How do you kill a _____?", you ask
To find the answer was the hunters' task.

"What was their fate?", you wonder
Did they ever catch their elusive plunder?

A paragon of haunting Carollian lore
Be in no doubt that you'll finish wanting more.

This poem is just great!

Brilliant twice
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-02-15
First, this one of the most delightful pieces of writing that ever appeared in (more or less) English. It succeeds as a sustained exercise in illogic. I am sure that only a mathematical logician like Dodgson could possibly have pulled it off - only someone with such deep understanding of reason could master unreason so completely.

Second, Martin Gardner's commentary adds depth and background to the reading. Gardner explains terms that are now obsolete, but also adds his own analysis and a rich history of the Snark phenomenon. It should be no surprise that Gardner is still best known as the long-time editor of Scientific American's column on Mathematical Games, a mathematician himself.

I can't add much to the scholarship or praise that already surrounds this incredible poem. I would like to point out, however, that most non-native English speakers are unfamiliar with this poem. Many of them have only ever seen the serious side of the English language, and have never seen English at play. I consider this short work to be the ideal introduction to the very best of English-language nonsense.

//wiredweird

Clark
Is Anybody Listening?: A True Story About POW/MIAs In The Vietnam War
Published in Paperback by AuthorHouse (2005-05-23)
Author: Barbara Birchim
List price: $25.45
New price: $15.94
Used price: $10.80
Collectible price: $26.00

Average review score:

Heartbreaking Story and Very Eye-opening!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-23
This book is very good...It is well written and a fast read. I could not put it down.
The story is gut-wrenching and I have come away, once again, very angry and frustrated with out goverment!
It tells a story of a POW'S wife and her quest for the "real" truth behind her husband's disappearance. The lengths she has gone to to get answers are unreal. She is a hero herself for standing up and never giving up.
This is one of my more favorite books regarding the Vietnam Pow's.

The Stuff of Nightmares, and It's All True
Helpful Votes: 22 out of 22 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-12
I love my country and I couldn't be more proud to have served two and a half decades in its military. But neither our government nor our military are perfect. Sometimes the mistakes and transgressions are small, and sometimes they're enormous.

Barbara Birchim and Sue Clark pull back the sheets and reveal one of the really big ones. Maybe the biggest of them all -- the calculated decision of our leaders, past and present, to turn their backs on the POWs and MIAs who are still missing.

Barbara's husband, Army Captain Jim Birchim, has been missing in action since something went terribly wrong during a rescue mission in Vietnam in 1968. The story of Barbara's search for details about Captain Birchim's disappearance will break your heart and chill your soul. The response of our own government to her relentless inquiries will shock you to the core.

- Jeff Edwards, award-winning author of Torpedo

Best First Person Version of USG Betrayal of POWs in VN
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-28
Orin Deforest titled his book on Viet-Nam failures in intelligence Slow Burn: The Rise and Bitter Fall of American Intelligence in Vietnam. George Allen wrote the definite story in None So Blind: A Personal Account of the Intelligence Failure in Vietnam. Michael Hiam illuminated the "reasonable dishonesty" of our intelligence process in Who the Hell Are We Fighting?: The Story of Sam Adams and the Vietnam Intelligence Wars.

I have read one previous book on the POWs, Kiss the Boys Goodbye: How the United States Betrayed Its Own POWs in Vietnam but this book, in combination with An Enormous Crime: The Definitive Account of American POWs Abandoned in Southeast Asia makes me very very very angry.

This book is a heart-breaking contrast between the loyalty and love of a woman for her man, and the pathological betrayal by the U.S. Government. We now know that Henry Kissinger is a war criminal (see The Trial of Henry Kissinger, that Johsnon covered up the assassination of Kennedy by CIA-trained Cuban exiles (see Someone Would Have Talked: The Assassination of President John F. Kennedy and the Conspiracy to Mislead History and I am personally persuaded that 9-11 was, as Webster Tarpley tells us 9/11 Synthetic Terror: Made in USA, Fourth Edition.

I recommend all these books to those who would wish to restore the Constitution, smash the corruption of both the Congress (see Running on Empty: How the Democratic and Republican Parties Are Bankrupting Our Future and What Americans Can Do About It) and the Executive (see Vice: Dick Cheney and the Hijacking of the American Presidency).

Our government, at the political level and with the complicity of our craven flag officers--generals and admirals--is murdering and abandoning American warriors and citizens. ENOUGH! We need complete transparency, and several truth and reconciliation commissions: on the genociding of the Native Americans, on the continued discrimination against people of color, on the virtual colonialism, unilateral militarism, and predatory immoral capitalism that our government embraces "in our name."

ENOUGH. This book had really frightened, and empowered me. ENOUGH.

See also:
Why We Fight
The Fog of War - Eleven Lessons from the Life of Robert S. McNamara
Weapons of Mass Deception: The Uses of Propaganda in Bush's War on Iraq
Lost History: Contras, Cocaine, the Press & 'Project Truth'
Fog Facts: Searching for Truth in the Land of Spin

A REVEIW FROM OUR PAST
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-28
PEOPLE OF THE US PLEASE LISTEN. IV SPOKEN TO ALOT OF VETS-INTERVIEWED THEM AND THEYRE VERY UPSET ABOUT HOW THE US GOVERNMENT LEFT ALOT OF VETS BEHIND. AND TO THE VETS WHO GOT AWAY, THE VERY SAME GOVERNMENT GAVE UP ON THEM ALSO- WHEN THEY REACHED THESE SHORES IN THE US. JOHN MCCAIN IS A CROOK. GEORGE BUSH IS A CROOK. AND A LIST OF OTHERS. GET THE BOOK AN ENORMOUS CRIME. QUESTAIN? WHY DIDNT ANY OF BUSH'S FAMILY FIGHT IN THIS MOST RECENT WAR? WHEN HE WAGED IT?

POW AFFAIRS S.E. ASIA
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-08
I HAVE READ A NUMBER OF BOOKS ON VIETNAM POW ACCOUNTS: COL NICK ROWES' 5 YEARS TO FREEDOM, FRANK ANTON- WHY DIDN'T YOU GET ME OUT? KISS THE BOYS GOODBYE & SPITE HOUSE BY MONIKA JENSEN- STEVENSON, AND THE MEN WE LEFT BEHIND. This is a heart breaking account of seeking the truth through the govt. red tape. Evidence supports the fact that we left servicemen behind in Laos and Cambodia. As former military, I am deeply saddened by what appears to be true. Through the pipeline, President Reagan was the last Commander in Chief to sanction rescue missions into S.E. Asia to search for POW s. Former SPEC OP WARRIORS are very tight lipped on this subject. Former Special Forces Sgt. Isaac Camacho escaped from Laos in 1965 and was never debriefed until the early seventies. Only a handful of military men escaped from captivity during the Vietnam War. Why did the govt. never utilize their knowledge? General Tighe, former director of the Defense Intell. Agency 1974 - 1981 has stated that he believed we had indeed left servicemen behind.

Be prepared, reading these books can hit you with emotion, I believe you will learn of a sad chapter in U.S. history- servicemen who deserved better from their government for their efforts during the Vietnam War.


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