E Books
Related Subjects: Edward Evans Edwards Elliott
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Used price: $15.32

Brillance!!Review Date: 2008-07-03
Interesting but dryReview Date: 2007-11-05
A baby is almost guaranteed if you read this bookReview Date: 2007-12-03
Finally some answers!Review Date: 2007-07-11
Hope for families without answersReview Date: 2007-06-27

Used price: $3.93

Enjoyable reading meets meaningful learningReview Date: 2008-01-25
More Than I Needed To KnowReview Date: 2007-09-17
InformativeReview Date: 2006-03-08
Great BookReview Date: 2004-03-09
Informative and fun to readReview Date: 2005-07-25
This is by no means a detailed book about any particular disease, bacteria, or virus. However, it is the perfect book for somebody who has never taken an interest in diseases or epidemics. It is very easy to read and entertaining.

Used price: $46.72

The Last HookersReview Date: 2002-07-16
A compelling look inside the Vietnam WarReview Date: 2002-04-19
While this is a work of fiction the historical facts woven throughout the story really bring the characters to life. This realistic book was a thoroughly enjoyable read that gave me insights into the events leading up to and including the war itself that I had not even considered before.
I highly recommend this book to anyone who is even remotely interested in the Vietnam War! You will come away with a much deeper understanding of the conflict and respect for those individuals and their families who were directly involved. Great stuff!
A Great book of history! Review Date: 2006-06-06
If you only could get your hands on one book about the history of the Vietnam War, this would be a good book to start with. You certainly get your money worth of information in 658 pages. The author shows his skills at putting together facts and data and connecting the dots to see the results on how it all fueled the fire for the decade's long problems in Asia.
This book is a history classic already; make sure that you get to read it.
One of the finest historical novels of VietNamReview Date: 2002-01-15
The Last HookersReview Date: 2002-04-21
Carle clearly separates a bad war from the good warriors who faught it. The Last Hookers suggest a much more positive view of not just the outcome of the war, but also of American morale, competence, and performance. A must read.
Ex Hooker, (Recovery)
Used price: $19.88

Vietnam start to finishReview Date: 2008-02-12
Parker never wavers from believing that the cause - keeping a country free from a ferocious invader - was noble. He hangs the war's failure on a corrupt and inept South Vietnamese government and failed U.S. decision-making. If some readers find that thesis too uncomplicated, it hardly detracts from Parker's unflinching prose and relentless focus on the people that are the power of this book - youngsters he led who fought and died, fellow officers he loved as brothers, superiors good and not so good, tough and honorable South Vietnamese generals, officious Saigon bureaucrats and ordinary traumatized Vietnamese.
Parker captures the sense of fear and menace, the unreality and futility that are a soldier's daily grind, and in many instances what he calls the "randomness of war." A single misstep off a path and an officer friend is blown to bits by a mine. A fine tank commander laid into a body bag as his tour is soon to end. A fresh young private shot mistakenly by comrades. A stone-faced villager who trips a deadly explosion. Naked terror squirming through tunnels chasing wounded Vietcong. A trusted Vietnamese bodyguard left to fate unknown as the enemy tightens a noose around Saigon.
Parker's straightforward chronology makes compelling structure: unfocused young Southerner joins the Army, finds he has the stuff of an officer, earns medals and manhood in the jungle, survives his one-year tour, comes home to a strangely discordant nation, marries and goes back to college, joins the CIA, returns to Indochina for the end game of the "secret" war in Laos, then finally helps the frenzied exodus from crumbling, beaten South Vietnam - and from a spent and discredited policy.
The men stalking the jungle, firing the artillery, driving the tanks and piloting the jets and choppers will always be heroes to Parker, an unabashed fan of the concept of duty and country. When you meet the men in these pages - Peterson, Dunn, Woolley, Bratcher, Crash, McCoy, Castro, Ayers, Slippery Clunker Six, Duckett, Spencer and many more, it is hard not to buy into Parker's idea that there were indeed good and honorable aspects of this war.
Last Man Out: A Personal Account of the Vietnam WarReview Date: 2007-01-22
Essential ReadingReview Date: 2001-08-14
SuperiorReview Date: 2001-07-09
More than just a war story, this is more or less a biography of James Parker. Since the Vietnam conflict was so lengthy and controversial, it's worthwhile to see how it affected his life after James left combat. This is a guy who saw it all: he hit the beach in knee deep water in the early years, and was one of the last CIA guys to leave the island nation years after the U.S. had abandoned the country militarily.
The best features of this book are James' crystal clear recollections of his war buddies and his involvment in the CIA effort. What other book out there has a detailed personal account of the positively heroic efforts of the secret combat operations after the Army left? Also excellent is James' tense telling of a huge operation to lure the VC into attacking a dummy convoy.
This is a man who has done it all. If you're interested in the Vietnam War, this is requred reading.
A true accounting of his time in the military!Review Date: 2001-02-03

Used price: $4.94
Collectible price: $14.95

Great seriesReview Date: 2007-06-27
Pick up the series if you want a great summer read!
Don't answer the phone!Review Date: 2004-04-29
Excellent BookReview Date: 2004-02-18
Check this one out, it was a rollercoaster ride.
Keeps getting better and better!Review Date: 2004-11-01
A Great Scary ReadReview Date: 2003-12-06

wonderful bookReview Date: 2008-06-16
great afghanReview Date: 2008-06-03
Barbara Walker's Lean to Knit Afghan BookReview Date: 2008-03-30
Verna J. LGreenan
Learn to Knit AfghanReview Date: 2008-02-23
Clear instructions and pictures.
Thanks to Barbara G Walker, I can knit!Review Date: 2007-03-09
This book has been sitting on my bookshelf for several years now, but I never seemed to have the time or nerve to begin. Finally determined to master the craft, a few weeks ago I obtained a few pounds of yarn, a pair of short #8 needles, and I finally began to work my way through. I have just finished square 21, the gorgeous 'Florentine Frieze', and I can feel my skills and confidence improve with each square. The knit-purl combination, slip stitch and mosaic patterned squares have each turned out beautifully and I am eager to get to twisted stitch paterns, cables, and lace. There is even a square to teach short-rowing.
My goal is to finish this afghan over the next two or three months. By then I believe I'll have the skills to complete any project, including a number of one of a kind sweaters that I plan to design and knit with the aid of Knitware software, this book, and/or Ms Walker's other stitch treasuries, all of which are indispensible to any serious knitting student's library.

Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $15.00

A Gem and an Eye OpenerReview Date: 2008-02-29
Life ChangingReview Date: 2008-02-13
This book really allowed me to take a good look at myself and my life. It helped me choose what parts I wanted to keep, what I wanted to let go of and how to begin to live deliberately. This book was inspiring to my wanting to contribute to Harry's dream of an enlightened planetary civilisation®.
All content copyright 2008, Star's Edge, Inc.
Avatar®, Enlightened Planetary Civilization® are registered trademarks of Star's Edge, Inc.
All rights reserved.
Interesting book, but readers need to explore other works for smoother & better understanding!Review Date: 2006-06-02
At that point in time, I found it to be somewhat esoteric.
In a nut shell, there are actually three important parts in the book:
- the first part deals with the author's personal awakening & transformation;
- the second part outlines the working philosophy behind the proprietary & expensive AVATAR training, which the author has created based on his personal awakening & transformation;
- the final part covers belief system, experiencing reality & creating thoughtforms; to be more precise, about how our beliefs create our thoughts, in turn, how our thoughts create our experiences (& how we can discreate them at will); these aspects form the philosophical foundation of the AVATAR training;
Frankly, I didn't quite enjoy reading the book in the beginning, although it introduced me to the 'working mechanism' behind belief engineering. I was hooked & went on to read & explore other works, especially Bruce Doyle's 'Before You Think Another Thought'. To me, the author of this book did a much better job in explaining the many aspects of belief engineering. Many thanks to you, Bruce!
For readers who are still interested in reading 'Living Deliberately', I would suggest a companion book to go along, i.e. 'Resurfacing: Techniques for Exploring Consciousness' (also by Harry Palmer), which has a series of 30 practical exercises. These specially tailored exercises will give readers the 'world experience' of being in control, rather than absorbing more 'word experience.' It is definitely worth exploring! [Let me explain: 'Word experience' refers to the initial & reflective responses you have when you are just reading a book; 'world experience' refers to the assimilating responses you have when you put all or some of the ideas you have learned from the book to work in your own life!]
Alternatively, readers can access the Star Edge (the people behind the AVATAR training) website to explore more e-material at no cost.
My final advice to readers: Approach all AVATAR related books & other resources with an open mind. Don't reject their ideas prejudicially. Play, explore & experiment with them!
An APPETIZER before the rest of OUR LIVESReview Date: 2006-07-18
the gateway to the most inspiring adventure you'll ever takeReview Date: 2004-02-03


Haunting, realistically ambivalentReview Date: 2008-04-09
FantasticReview Date: 2008-01-01
All in all, this was a fantastic book. I look forward to more by Alarcon. Readers who enjoyed this book are encouraged to try Nathan Englander's "The Ministry of Special Cases" - an equally engaging, impecabbly written and emotionally gripping novel set in somewhat similar context of Latin American political instability.
Totalitarianism in Peru?Review Date: 2007-11-12
Great Book!Review Date: 2007-08-23
When you have lived in Peru during those years, you get the feeling of this story, it has also used an actual radio program as a model but the mastership of the author is to join all those stories and create a new one that have a little bit of multiple stories but is in itself different but very nice. I highly recommend it.
"What does the end of a war mean, if not that one side ran out of men willing to die?"Review Date: 2007-08-20
Set in an unspecified South American country, "a nation at the edge of the world, a make-believe country outside history", people are still reeling after ten years of war between the government and guerillas, their spirits broken by incessant violence, legions of the disappeared unaccounted for. In one small place of hope, the Indians in the mountains and the poor of the barrio listen with rapt attention to Lost City Radio. The voice of consolation to her devastated listeners, Norma reads lists, the endless names of the missing, hopeful that some may be reunited with their families. But in the last year of the long absence of her husband, Rey, one of the missing, Norma's advancing grief and impending hopelessness has grown burdensome, the expectations of the audience weighing on her every waking moment.
Hugely popular, Lost City Radio flourishes in spite of a repressive government, spies everywhere, questions rebuffed by officials who allow no independence of thought. The prisons are filled with the captured insurrectionists, their leaders all but buried in the smothering confines of underground cells. Norma hopes to find Rey in one of these prisons, but it is impossible to discern him in a sea of gaunt, determined faces. Other than his profession as an ethnobiologist, Norma has no idea of Rey's other interests, his life carefully compartmentalized. They met under romantic, mysterious conditions, Rey hinting at a more obscure identity. By the time they are married, Norma accepts her husband's eccentricities; but when he fails to return from the jungle village 1797 (names have been replaced by numbers), Norma has no way to track his activities or learn of his fate.
Then one day, ten years after the end of the war, his teacher delivers a young boy to the radio station, eleven-year-old Vincent from village 1787, perhaps a key to Rey's location. Certainly, as time and events unfold, Norma is confronted with the unthinkable: "She had a husband, he was dead or gone... the war had ended, or perhaps it had never begun." Norma's memories are fresh, alive with the spirits of the lost, some of the names still too dangerous to mention on the air. Wracked by loss, clinging to the child, Norma blindly navigates the present, the forbidden names whispered into the dark night. The emotional journey of a grieving wife and an innocent orphan permeate the novel, their stories shadowed by Rey's duplicitous past and devotion to his wife. This otherworldly tale of strength in the face of a confusing war speaks to the vital issues of out time. Such a scenario no longer seems the stuff of fantasy, given the human faces of these poignant characters, Alarcon's novel a grim reminder: "People disappear, they vanish. And with them the history, so that new myths replace the old." Luan Gaines/2007.

Used price: $57.74

The Seminal Work in Information TheoryReview Date: 2008-01-28
The foundations of Information TheoryReview Date: 2007-02-20
With his fundamental theorem, in 1948, Shannon prooved that it was possible, under some conditions, to have reliable communication. Since that moment, the research on Information Theory has become more and more important and has continued to develop in many different ways.
So, this book is historically fundamental for all those people interested in Communications.
The one and onlyReview Date: 2006-07-19
6 stars. A gem.Review Date: 2006-01-14
The foundation for developments in electronics, telecommunications and computingReview Date: 2005-07-05
The basic premise of the book is that 'redundancy' or elimination of noise occurs at infinite time. 'Entropy' or shuffledness allows for some noise and produces more information because it requires reconstruction at the receiving end.
The authors support their arguments with simple statistical formulae which explain how entropy and redundancy are inverse of each other.
This book has been highly debated by both the people involved in the fields concerned and the people outside the field.
Most of the debate surrounds the controversial aspect of Shannon and Weaver's definition of information in engineering terms, which excludes issues like relevance, meaning etc.
A great deal of debate also got carried into social sciences and humanities where a new celebration of 'entropy' occured.
Collectible price: $124.97

Still great years later!Review Date: 2005-08-21
In any case, I read it out loud for the first time to my class of third graders and could hardly read it for laughing so hard. My class and I loved it. I read it to my own children in the 90's. I have the book and have thought of selling it on e-bay (as it fetches a great price), but my boys want to keep it to read to their own children one day. Now, that's a classic!
If you liked Me and Caleb, try...Review Date: 2002-09-21
Anyway, if you liked Me and Caleb by all means read the Penrod books by Boothe Tarkington!
POSTSCRIPT: THIS WONDERFUL BOOK AND THE FOLLOW-UP (ME AND CALEB AGAIN) ARE ONCE AGAIN IN PRINT! [...]
wonderful book -- why isn't is re-issued?Review Date: 2003-10-31
I really wish I could find this book again, not just for my own enjoyment, but that my own kids could read it, too. (and a PS -- all these years later, I still shiver when I remember the poisonous snake in the river!)
Me and CalebReview Date: 2001-09-11
It should be reprinted!Review Date: 2001-08-10
This is a timeless classic that is completly politically incorrect, and a total joy.
It needs another printing.
Related Subjects: Edward Evans Edwards Elliott
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