Francis Books


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Francis
In Conversation with God: Meditations for Each Day of the Year, Vol. 3: Ordinary Time, Weeks 1-12
Published in Paperback by Scepter Pubs (1989-07)
Author: Francis Fernandez
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Just as good as the others
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-30
As with the other volumes, this devotional really helps you focus on the readings for the Mass.

It's amazing to me that the author has been able to write such a large body of quality material.

Marvelous Meditation
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-08
This is a tremendous little book of marvelous meditations on the Gospel of the day. It doesn't take long to read but the thoughts stay with you throughout the day. Highly recommednded.

God is Merciful and Just...
Helpful Votes: 196 out of 196 total.
Review Date: 2004-12-11
For those seriously seeking to grow in holiness and bring some order to their daily prayer life, I strongly recommend this series. Drawing upon Sacred Scripture, the writings of the saints, and his own life experiences, the author brings together three daily meditations (about five to ten minutes each) that center around the Scripture readings of the Mass that day.

Imparted in these meditations are knowledge of the faith, advice on how to pray more fervently, and a clear understanding of virtue and its importance. It also inspires us to serve God faithfully. A good Catholic answer to the latest Protestant craze over "The Purpose Driven Life".

Keep connected with God
Helpful Votes: 21 out of 27 total.
Review Date: 2004-08-29
I always knew that there was a wealth of riches in the the Gospel readings, but this series of meditations brings out those riches like I never thought possible. None of the meditations simply ramble on. They evoke the scene, help you enter it and then draw out the honey by provokibg thoughts of generosity and correspondence to God's will, present in the everyday realities. Each meditation guides you to a freely assumed resolution to embrace sanctity and really gives you the sense that with God all is possible, even our holiness in todays world. Plus the wealth of quotations from the saints and the fathers of the Church help does underline that the Church is one multifaceted family. A worthwhile investment.

Amazing
Helpful Votes: 274 out of 282 total.
Review Date: 2006-05-05
This is an amazing Catholic meditation and daily reflection series. The seven volumes have daily readings for each day of the church year as well as volume 6 & 7 being special Feast Days. The readings draw heavily upon the writings of Josemaria Escriva the founder of Opus Dei, Pope John Paul II, and the daily readings from the common liturgy for that day. The Sundays have three sets of readings depending on if we are in year A, B, or C in the church readings. These devotions are all about 6 pages long and divided into 3 sections. They can be read all as a lump or part in the morning, midday and evening. I find that with every day there is so much meat in these devotions that I am already planning on reading them again next year.

"We have a duty to rest. Resting in order to serve God and other people better.
We should learn to rest. If we can avoid becoming totally exhausted we should not fail to do so. God wants us to look after our health, and to know how to recover our strength. It is part of the fifth commandment. We need to rest in order to be fit, to restore lost energy, and so that our work may be all the more effective. Above all, we need it so as to serve God and other people better."
Francis Fernandez
In Conversation With God Volume #3 p.217

"For this reason asking advice about reading is an important part of the virtue of prudence, very especially if it is a question of theological or philosophical books, which can radically affect our formation and even our faith itself. How important it is to be right about books! It is still more important to consult our spiritual director about books specifically destined to aid the formation of our soul."
Francis Fernandez
In Conversation With God - Volume #3 p.117

Are but two samplings of what I have already copied out into my journal this year. There is a complete subject, and biblical reference index in volume 7, unfortunately the earlier volumes indexes only go as far as that volume #. The indexes are subject, and reference quoted by church Fathers, Popes and Saints. These books will draw anyone deeper into a faith and a life of action based upon that faith.

Francis
In Conversation with God: Meditations for Each Day of the Year, Vol. 4: Ordinary Time, Weeks 13-23
Published in Paperback by Scepter Pubs (1991-10)
Author: Francis Fernandez
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Its that time of Year - Ordinary Time Week 13 -
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-15
As we entered the 13th week of Ordinary Time in the Church's liturgical calendar, I found I did not have the Daily Meditations Volume for this period of time in the Church's Liturgical Year. Soooo, I had it sent on by Amazon because these Daily Meditations are important to my prayer life.

It has taken me awhile to complete my set of this 7 volume set of daily meditations. But, it is well worth the time it has taken me to acquire and learn how to use this set of Daily Meditations......As a set of Daily Meditations, the idea is to read one Meditation for each day and thus, one does not read these books through at a few sittings, but, rather, one day at a time. The readings put one into their own Conversation with God and thus help one to spend some time with God.


The important thing to know about this set is that it is tied to the daily liturgy, specifically, the Daily Mass Readings. Therefore, one can get a lot more out of reading these under a couple of sets of circumstances or preconditions. Firstly, one must familiarize oneself with the liturgical year of the Church. There is a chart inside the volume that helps you to do this. For Example, is the Church in Year A, B, or C? Is it the 14th week in Ordinary Time or is it the Eastertide? One MUST be aware of the ebb and flow of the Liturgical year which is different than the calendar year to maximize the power of your Conversation with God. Secondly, if you are not a daily Mass attendee, you may want to learn how to ascertain the daily scriptural readings for the weekdays when you may not frequent Mass. The reason for knowing or prereading the Mass reading for any specific day is that these Meditations refer to the Mass readings for any given day and therefore, it helps if one has read the Mass readings for the day or alternatively, knows how to find them. One way of finding the Mass readings for the day is through a Sunday Bulletin of a Catholic Church. Most parishes list in their weekly Bulletin the Mass readings for each day of the week. If this doesn't work for you, the daily Mass readings are easily found on line in a number of locations including the United States Catholic Conference of Bishops web site or EWTN's (Eternal World Television Network) web site.

One can use the book without the daily Mass readings of course. The volumes are footnoted and referenced. Thus, a footnote can refer to a specific scripture in the Bible and one can refer to that Biblical location.

OTHER SOURCES: In addition to the Bible, the daily commentary includes many other sources that are footnoted including writing of JOSEMARIE Escriva, like the "FORGE", "FURROW" and "Friends of God". Also, many writings of the SAINTS are referred to in the footnotes. One does not need to pursue the footnote references however to obtain value from the volume. I mention the footnote references only because you can see that the commentary is grounded in the teachings and Tradition of the Magisterium.

Thus, your daily Conversation with God takes the Scripture reading for the day and EXPANDS upon it, and helps you to meditate upon its meaning for your life. This practice of "lectio divina" - reading, praying/conversing with our Lord will heighten your intimacy with Our Lord and bring you closer to Him. We are the ones, after all, who bear responsibility for our distance from Him. To draw closer is not all that difficult and before long, you will find, that you will thirst for the Living Water. If you miss a day or two of this practice for a while, a consciousness will come to you and you will seek to restore the practice to again drink of the living water.

Highly recommend for an aid in "Spiritual Growth"
Helpful Votes: 14 out of 20 total.
Review Date: 2001-10-25
This book is one volume of seven books titled "In Conversation with God". Their contents follow the complete liturgical year, that contain daily readings following the daily (and Sunday) Masses, plus solemnities and feasts of the saints. They are updated for today's culture, still full of writings from our favorite saints, quotes from the bible, Church documents, also quotes by Mother Teresa and Pope John Paul II. I don't believe another series can be this good. I have been reading them for six years. They are very fruitful for anyone's spiritual life, no matter what their vocation. Priests have been known to use theses to help them with their homilies. I find them useful for answering questions people ask me or that I seek out myself, as they have a great index of both subjects and quotations. They are a spiritual treasure!

spiritual reading
Helpful Votes: 16 out of 29 total.
Review Date: 2005-08-18
The book has daily readings that refer to the daily gospel passage, which is based on the liturgical year of the Catholic church. The readings are in the form of an essay, which typically expand on the theme of the gospel reading. As you read, you will want to have your Bible at hand to refer to the Gospel passage. The essays usually have references to the writings of other Christian authors, which the reader can use for future reference to expand on the ideas presented in the essay. The daily readings, though brief, are generally several pages long, and take about fifteen minutes to read. The book is an excellent supplement to daily Bible reading. I enjoy having it to stimulate my thoughts on different topics of spirituality and Christianity. Although the book is written to correspond with the readings in the Catholic Liturgical year, but it can be a useful guide for any Christian.

WOW!!!
Helpful Votes: 292 out of 301 total.
Review Date: 2006-05-05
This is an amazing Catholic meditation and daily reflection series. The seven volumes have daily readings for each day of the church year as well as volume 6 & 7 being special Feast Days. The readings draw heavily upon the writings of Josemaria Escriva the founder of Opus Dei, Pope John Paul II, and the daily readings from the common liturgy for that day. The Sundays have three sets of readings depending on if we are in year A, B, or C in the church readings. These devotions are all about 6 pages long and divided into 3 sections. They can be read all as a lump or part in the morning, midday and evening. I find that with every day there is so much meat in these devotions that I am already planning on reading them again next year.

"We have a duty to rest. Resting in order to serve God and other people better.
We should learn to rest. If we can avoid becoming totally exhausted we should not fail to do so. God wants us to look after our health, and to know how to recover our strength. It is part of the fifth commandment. We need to rest in order to be fit, to restore lost energy, and so that our work may be all the more effective. Above all, we need it so as to serve God and other people better."
Francis Fernandez
In Conversation With God Volume #3 p.217

"For this reason asking advice about reading is an important part of the virtue of prudence, very especially if it is a question of theological or philosophical books, which can radically affect our formation and even our faith itself. How important it is to be right about books! It is still more important to consult our spiritual director about books specifically destined to aid the formation of our soul."
Francis Fernandez
In Conversation With God - Volume #3 p.117

Are but two samplings of what I have already copied out into my journal this year. There is a complete subject, and biblical reference index in volume 7, unfortunately the earlier volumes indexes only go as far as that volume #. The indexes are subject, and reference quoted by church Fathers, Popes and Saints. These books will draw anyone deeper into a faith and a life of action based upon that faith.

For those looking to cooperate with God's grace
Helpful Votes: 59 out of 62 total.
Review Date: 2004-12-11
For those seriously seeking to grow in holiness and bring some order to their daily prayer life, I strongly recommend this series. Drawing upon Sacred Scripture, the writings of the saints, and his own life experiences, the author brings together three daily meditations (about five to ten minutes each) that center around the Scripture readings of the Mass that day.

Imparted in these meditations are knowledge of the faith, advice on how to pray more fervently, and a clear understanding of virtue and its importance. It also inspires us to serve God faithfully. A good Catholic answer to the latest Protestant craze over "The Purpose Driven Life".

Francis
Index To Brown Driver and Briggs Hebrew Lexicon
Published in Paperback by Moody Publishers (1982-06-01)
Author:
List price: $42.99
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Valiosa Herramienta
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-14
Con esta herramienta usted podrá hallar con facilidad la palabra hebrea que anda buscando, e ir directamente a la página del Lexicon Hebrew and English de Brown, Driver, and Briggs en donde está. Este libro le guiará versículo a versículo a travéz de la biblia con las palabras originales de la Biblia. Es un libro barato para la prestación que ofrece. Inseparable e indispensable para usar con el Hebrew and English Lexicon de Brown, Driver and Briggs.

A much needed tool.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-11
If you are studying a Hebrew passage using BDB then you need this book. This book makes it a lot easier and faster to locate a particular word in BDB.

The print is on the small side, but if you are using BDB, you are dealing with that already.

Some use this book without BDB, because they are attempting to make a rough translation. This will work well, but there are times when the English equivalent given is more appropriate the Hebrew word in general rather than the particular usage.

While there are some mistakes in this book, this is not much of a problem when you consider the scope of this book.

Excellent
Helpful Votes: 12 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 2004-10-14
Ancient Hebrew is not an easy language to master, and so it is often useful to have a BDB Hebrew Lexicon at hand. But that too can be difficult to use (especially if you are relatively new to Hebrew). This Index is the link between the text you are working on, and the detailed knowledge "hidden" in the Lexicon. The trouble is, the Index is so helpful I feel almost guilty using it. (Hebrew shouldn't be easy!) Just one provision, if you are over 45 you will probably want to go out and buy a magnifying glass, the print is extremely small, and can be difficult to see.

soooo helpful for using BDB
Helpful Votes: 65 out of 65 total.
Review Date: 1999-12-27
This index is so very helpful that it verges on cheating. Anyone who has translated Torah knows how very difficult it can be to strip out the grammatical parts of the word to get to the right root. BDB is useful and interesting, but my havurah still sometimes had difficulty getting to the right entry. I found this Index to BDB at a used book store, and it has really speeded up our translation! It lists each BDB reference in chapter-verse order. You can instantly see which words in the passage you are translating are defined in BDB, including page number and definition number. There are still difficult words that are not indexed (because they are not referred to in BDB), so we still get some practice in figuring out the roots! But the Index to BDB (along with the BDB, of course) is very useful in getting the surface translation so that we can start looking at the meaning of the text.

A big help
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2006-01-06
Brown Driver & Briggs (BDB) contains a lot of information, but its arrangement can cause a person to tear one's hair out in clumps, especially for those of us who do not use our Hebrew every day. Einspahr helps you find the listing and discussion on a particular vocable quickly and easily. Unfortunately, this volume list only words used ten times or more. I found myself making notes for words used less often. There are errors in the volume and I also found myself writing to the publisher to make them aware of the mistakes I found. On balance, this volume makes Hebrew less frustrating. I wish it had been available when I took my first year Hebrew course.

Francis
Inside the Army of the Potomac: The Civil War Experience of Captain Francis Adams Donaldson
Published in Hardcover by Stackpole Books (1998-07)
Author: J. Gregory Acken
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Refreshing look at Civil War history
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2004-01-26
Civil War memoirs seem to have taken off since the Ken Burns miniseries aired on PBS. The writings collected in this book provide amazing insight into the day-to-day concerns of an average Army officer, and bring the humanity of a Civil War soldier to the forefront. I've been a Civil War buff my whole life, but I never knew the extent of petty politics and personal grudges that went on until I read this book. Thanks to Greg Acken for helping us walk alongside a soldier as he tramps through one of America's most pivotal conflicts -- and go 'Cats!

The absolutely best description of Civil War life
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2004-10-26
What I love about this book is that it is so much more than stories about battles. It's an incredibly well written account of the everyday life of an average Civil War soldier. You get a great idea of the politics of rank back then, along with great descriptions of everything from marches, to camping, to of course the battles. It's also amazing to me what he experienced....from the Battle of Fredericksburg, to Gettysburg, and Antietam, there is definetly no lack of detailed battle descriptions too. I guess my favorite part is that he continually asks his brother to not publish his writings and for that reason he writes honestly, and you get a true account of what military life was like back then. I highly recommend this book.

The standard for Civil War memoirs.
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2001-08-26
In letters to his brother and aunt, Francis Adams Donaldson chronicled his daily experiences during three years in the infantry of the Army of the Potomac. Not intending that his words would find their way into publication, he used his letters home to express his hopes, ventilate his frustrations, and convey to his family some sense of the tedium, grandeur and horror he was experiencing. Presented almost as written, this collection of correspondence brings an honesty and immediacy not found in the often sanitized volumes of other Civil War memoirs. Donaldson was a very young man when he began his service as a volunteer in a Pennsylvania regiment. Enduring the intensity of combat, called upon to lead but not trained as a professional soldier, craving recognition and promotion, his often bitter criticisms of the abilities and personal qualities of his peers and superiors reflect his own inevitable stress and insecurity. There are other collections of such letters from Civil War combatants. What sets this book apart is J. Gregory Acken's remarkable editing and research. Almost every individual and place name mentioned by Donaldson, even if only in passing, is referenced by a footnote. Where available, photographs of the soldiers are provided. You won't be left wondering what happened to these men, whether they survived the wounds which result in their passing from the pages of the memoir, or the course of their careers as they leave the unit; their fate is there in the footnotes. Each chapter is headed by a brief section placing the subsequent letters in historical context. My only criticism of the book comes in these sections, which introduce some jarring redundancies by quoting passages later contained within the letters, themselves. The book comes most alive in the letters describing the battles of Gettysburg and Mills Run. Though it can be a long read at times, you will finish it with the feeling of having shared, in the words of the subtitle, the Civil War experience of Captain Francis Adams Donaldson.

The second best Civil War narrative I have ever read
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 1999-02-05
After E.P.Alexander's Fighting for the Confederacy (edited by Gary Gallagher) this is the best Civil War officer's narrative in existence. Want a real treat? Read it. You Confederates will love it too.

One of the best collections of soldier letters
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 1998-12-12
This is an outstanding set of letters by a perceptive officer in the 118th Pennsylvania Infantry. It certainly ranks in the top five of Army of the Potomac letter collections published in the last decade. Donaldson was opinionated, but also intent on description, not chat. He provides excellent narratives of most of the major campaigns, but more importantly he offers insights into ordeals and events often overlooked--everyday struggles lost to history. Gregory Acken has done an outstanding job of introducing, annotating, and editing the missives, offering the reader cues to the important themes that course through the correspondence. For the serious researcher of the Army of the Potomac, this book will become an oft-cited source. For the more casual student, these letters are a vivid, first-rate look at the experience of America's Civil War.

Francis
Interviews with Francis Bacon
Published in Paperback by Thames & Hudson Ltd (1975-03-24)
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Invaluable Chronicle of a Tortured Artist
Helpful Votes: 15 out of 16 total.
Review Date: 2003-09-29
"Interviews with Francis Bacon" (1987) captures remarkably on paper the tortured mind of the famous British painter (1909-1992). It belongs on the shelf of every Bacon fan and artist, regardless of medium. Nine interviews range from 1962 to 1986, Bacon's fifties through his seventies, in the form of interactive conversations with art historian David Sylvester (British, 1924-2001), ranging from Bacon's frustrated youth to his unique artistic techniques, the meaning of art to the meaning of life. Sylvester cleverly steers toward topics Bacon finds interesting, allowing him to discuss them at length. (Some of the original audio may be sampled at BBC4's website, though this book's text was heavily edited and re-manipulated from those recordings.)

The final chapter is the most biographical. Bacon, 77, recaps his life and career in detail, including his "coming out," at a time homosexuality was illegal in Britain, the relationship with his intolerant father coming to an end as a result. Overall, the book forms a clear portrait of an intellectually restless artist, demonized by the struggle to express satisfactorily the horrific images which constantly stream into his head. There is no overarching structure to the book, thus many interviews cover the same ground different ways, with illuminating results. Bacon's answers usually reinforce or embellish what was said earlier, but he sometimes answers the same question differently over time, demonstrated for example by his increasing dislike for "drink and drugs."

Some themes persist throughout. Chronically anxious and hypertensive, he can never sit still, never relax. Not religious, Bacon believes "man is an accident, a futile being, he must play out the game without reason," and life has only whatever meaning we give it, yet his haunted soul clearly identifies with the tragedy of the Crucifixion, which he considers the perfect narrative of the mythic "tragic hero," and the ultimate symbol of human devotion despite life's vicissitudes. (One famous Bacon work metaphorically depicts a hypodermic syringe stuck into the subject's arm, representing a nail stuck into the hand). He is similarly affected by the open-mouthed cry of human agony, which he expresses in perhaps his most famous and retold obsession, the many horrifying studies of Velazquez's portrait of Pope Innocent X.

Too human, he is concerned with posterity, and denies himself the comfort of calling himself a "painter." He believes an artist must "solve the problem" of art to be a success, which to him means they must render the known through the unknown, or create the "illustrative" and "narrative" through the use of the "irrational." Discussing Picasso in this light, he says he finds surrealism "more real" than realism, probably meaning he finds surrealism more directly communicates the human condition. He also believes strongly in figuration, slaying abstract art with one devastating word: "Fashion!" He seems burdened by a lack of proper training, having started his career as an interior designer, especially when discussing the trials of his studio work, describing the way he tosses paint at the canvas, the way he tries not to work a canvas too much, potentially ruining it, and the conflicted feelings he holds toward works he has already painted, or those he is still painting.

The book usefully reproduces many works in small black-and-white images at times when the conversation turns to them, both Bacon's works and those of others, like Picasso and Rembrandt. The lack of color is entirely unnoticed, as the book focuses on the artist's psychology and opinion, which these plates illustrate perfectly. (Full-color reproduction would probably also have made the book needlessly expensive). Most remarkably, of all the photographs and self-portraits in the book, Bacon never looks directly at the viewer, illustrating most strikingly his natural over-sensitivity and tortured self-denial.

Bacon has said "art is completely a game by which man distracts himself," and "the artist must really deepen the game in order to be worth anything at all." If anyone feels Bacon "played the game" well, and "distracts" successfully his audience, or that he was "worth anything at all," then this book belongs in that person's library.

Absolute MUST for any artist; especially: 'fine artists'
Helpful Votes: 19 out of 19 total.
Review Date: 1998-10-06
The most fascinating art related book I have yet read. Never had I expected Bacon to be so open and Frank about his own work. I've read and re-read it and will no doubt do so again. There were obviously very few people Bacon would consider worth speaking to in depth about his art and I'm grateful that David Sylvester was of sufficient calibre in Francis' mind otherwise there would be very little written material other than entertaining anecdotes and misinterpretive reviews etc. I'd like to know if the complete interviews have been published yet?

John White

A fly on the wall
Helpful Votes: 35 out of 35 total.
Review Date: 2001-06-13
There are some writers who are able to capture the essence of an artist through the interview format (James Lord's sitting for Giocometti is one) and in this book David Sylvester plumbs the depths of Francis Bacon's psyche like no other writer to date. Not only is his short book brilliantly executed in drawing out the artistic temperament and the especial qualities that chewed every aspect of Bacon's rich brain, it also allows us to sit back and hear the very personal aspects of Bacon's life, aspects that are occult in his cryptic paintings. This is reportage at its zenith. The big difference here is that Sylvester writes so well that the atmosphere is palpable - as though we were the fly on the wall. Brilliant, just brilliant.

Still one of the most fascinating books on the nature of creativity ever published.
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2005-11-13
This is the most recent and expanded edition of the book, which by now has become a classic work that really transcends the "interview with a famous artist" label. I own an earlier edition of the book that I have virtually memorized, so the new additions and expansions David Sylvester has included stand out for me, and amplify the original edition considerably. Whether or not you are a fan of Francis Bacon's painting, the book offers Bacon's insights (as well as Sylvester's) on the very nature of creativity, obsession, and what drives artists of any kind (painter, poet, composer, etc.) to devote their lives to their chosen pursuits. Plus, Bacon's rather sulphurous personality and opinions are captured vividly on the page, through Sylvester's obvious freindship and fascination with the man. An absolutely essential, and rather unique book...over the years, I have been amazed at how many people I have met, from all areas of the arts, who have found this work a source of inspiration and endless fascination.

Only the Best
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2002-10-05
The best book by any artist I have read....utterly inspirational for anyone involved in creative endeavors. What's more, you don't have to agree with all of Bacon's forthright opinions. It probably helps to have seen some of his best work in color, as all the reproductions are monochrome. No matter...I have given away more cpoies of this book than I care to remember. Essential.

Francis
Irish Fairy and Folk Tales
Published in Hardcover by Taylor Francis ()
Author: W B Yeats
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Lightning
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-24
JPII was a man that knew what was going on. His mind pierces through much of the nowadays rubbish that soils our world. In the name of Faith and Reason, the late pope's work comes forth like lightning from heaven.

From a World Long Forgotten
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-10
This is a new and expanded version of the original volume published by in 1892 under the title "Fairy and Folk Tales of the Irish Peasantry." It was subsequently re-titled, "Irish Fairy and Folk Tales," and has seen several editions from different publishers.
This edition, with an illuminating forward by Paul Muldoon, also has other additions that help the reader penetrate the sometimes dense and archaic language. If I had to choose between the original edition and this one, I would definitely choose this one. The main body of the book is identical to the original.
Both Yeats and Lady Gregory were especially concerned that the best of the tales from the Irish countryside be preserved before their main purveyors, the Shenaches (storytellers) vanished. Those collected here are a varied lot, and not all of them will appeal to every reader. That, however, does not affect their value at all, for here a way of life is preserved and we can look through a small window into the beliefs and habits of the Irish people in the days when the "Fairy Faith" was still common amongst them. It is probably best not to read the collection straight through, but rather peruse it, selecting from it that which most appeals.
Yeats's singular contribution is the dividing the denizens of the Irish Enchanted Countryside into categories: The Trooping Fairy, The Solitary Fairy, the Sociable Fairy, etc, together with Ghosts, Witches, Giants and the like. Within each "type" there are essays, songs, poems, hearsay, histories ... in short, something to appeal to every taste, as long as that taste has a goodly sampling of fancy about it.
These fairies are not the gossamer winged, luminous beings of Victorian paintings. These fairies are as likely to curse as to bless and it does not benefit the unwary or skeptical to offend them. Here are pookas, leprechauns, far darrig, Ban-Shees, and lanawn-shees.
These creatures were ever present to the Irish peasantry, and were forgotten with the industrialization of modern times. Fortunately, thanks to the efforts of Yeats and others like him, much of this world was preserved for us.
Some of the stories and poems retain their Irish intonation and syntax and may be difficult for some to follow, but patience will be rewarded; One can almost "hear" the storyteller and the bard.
This is a volume well worth going back to again and again.

A fascinating look at the tradition of folklore in Ireland.
Helpful Votes: 15 out of 16 total.
Review Date: 2004-05-20
In this delightful volume, first published in 1892, William Butler Yeats has collected all manner of Irish folklore (mostly short stories, with a few poems) from a wide variety sources. He has divided the works into categories as follows: the "Trooping Fairies" (fairies, changelings, and the "merrow" or mermaids); the "Solitary Fairies" (the lepracaun, the pooka - an animal spirit, and the banshee); "Ghosts"; "Witches & Fairy Doctors"; "T'yeer-na-n-Oge" or "Tir-na-n-Og" (a legendary island said to appear and disappear); "Saints & Priests"; "The Devil"; "Giants"; and "Kings / Queens / Princesses / Earls / Robbers." Yeats introduces each section with background information on the creature the stories in that category will concern. He also includes numerous footnotes of interest, making this book a valuable resource for anyone seeking to learn about the tradition of Irish folklore.

While I have given this anthology a five-star rating based on it's value as a source of information on Irish mythology, it would probably be worth only four stars for entertainment value alone. Some of the stories are very short and/or don't have much of a point, and are less interesting. These tend to serve more as testimony to the nature of a particular mythical being rather than being an actual story with a plot and message for the reader. Nevertheless, the book as a whole offers a very comprehensive look at just what defines Irish folk culture. The stories that do have a point sometimes take the form of "how things came to be this way" tales, or provide a moral lesson, etc. Many of the stories are rather dark, as that tends to be the nature of lore from this region, but there are also some lighthearted and cheerful pieces.

Despite the book having been compiled more than one hundred years ago, most of the stories are quite easy to read. Yeats makes things even more simple for the reader by making footnotes where old Irish words or phrases are used, giving us their meaning. However, there are a few stories that have been left in a more archaic form, which is distracting and a bit harder to decipher. Take, for example, the following excerpt:

". . . the minit he puts his knife into the fish, there was a murtherin' screech, that you'd the life id lave you if you hurd it, and away jumps the throut out av the fryin'-pan into the middle o' the flure; and an the spot where it fell, up riz a lovely lady - the beautifullest crathur that eyes ever seen, dressed in white, and a band o' goold in her hair, and a sthrame o' blood runnin' down her arm" (pg. 46).

I should probably make note of the fact, for those whom it might interest, that although the title page says the book is "profusely illustrated," there are actually only a few pictures. I believe only six of the over seventy stories are illustrated, and these with simple (but nice), old-fashioned line drawings in black and white. However this is not really a criticism as I view it, since I like the book for its literary content and wouldn't really care if it had no pictures at all.

One of the things I enjoy most about literature is finding connections with other works I've read, and "Irish Fairy & Folk Tales" does not disappoint in this regard. Many of the pieces are derivations of other, more common fairy tales. For instance, "Smallhead and the King's Sons" (Ghosts / pg. 194) incorporates some elements from both "Cinderella" and "Hansel and Gretel," while "The Giant's Stairs" (Giants / pg. 355) has some similarities to the story of "Jack and the Beanstalk." There are more connections like this. On the whole I found this book to be very enjoyable, and also a valuable read from a literary / academic standpoint. I'd certainly recommend it to anyone interesting in the history of Irish culture, the study of fairy tales and folklore, or both.

Absolutely charming!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-11-02
This absolutely charming collection of stories truly represents the best of "fairy" tales in which the fairy folk feature prominantly as well as a number of other folk beasties. WB Yeats has managed to capture all of the humor, fright, and love involved in the fairy world and it is a joy to follow him around in a world he seems to know so well.

I loved this book!
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2005-07-07
Yeats has long been one of my favorite poets; however, I did not expect his re-telling of Irish Fairy and Folk Tales to be up to his poetry standard. With that said, let me say he does an excellent job re-telling these old stories and if you have any interest whatsoever in fairy tales or Irish Mythology, read this book. "The Trooping Fairies" and "Witches, Fairy Doctors" were 2 of my favorite chapters but overall the whole book is a delight to read. It's an easy read, some stories are funny, some are scary, but most are just entertaining. Also there are some poems mixed in with the stories which add to the story-telling. I thoroughly enjoyed this book.

Francis
King Solomon's Ring
Published in Kindle Edition by Taylor & Francis (2007-03-14)
Author: Konrad Lorenz
List price: $19.95
New price: $9.99

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Reader's review
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-08
I had the very good fortune to meet Konrad Lorenz at Duke University in 1961. He was arguably the best student of animal behaviour in the 20th century and along with his students led his field to new heights. The book has popular appeal is highly instructive and is filled with humour. If nothing else everybody - and I mean everybody! - should read the chapter on laughing at (really with) animals. May he rest in peace.

A charming book...humourous, yet to the point
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2004-03-11
Konrad Lorenz, though I've never heard of him, captivated me from the first page. He relates himself to King Solomon, who talked to animals through the use of a magic ring. From there on, he goes to explain animals and their behaviour, how it has affected him, and the passion and joy they can bring into one's life.
His description of animal behaviour is also not solely for scientists. In fact, it is Lorenz's language that is the most astounding. He is able to convey all the complex ideas of animals behaviour into simple terms which all readers can understand.
This is a great book for everyone, willed with passion by a man who loved who and what he was.

A charming book...humourous, yet to the point
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2004-03-11
Konrad Lorenz, though I've never heard of him, captivated me from the first page. He relates himself to King Solomon, who talked to animals through the use of a magic ring. From there on, he goes to explain animals and their behaviour, how it has affected him, and the passion and joy they can bring into one's life.
His description of animal behaviour is also not solely for scientists. In fact, it is Lorenz's language that is the most astounding. He is able to convey all the complex ideas of animals behaviour into simple terms which all readers can understand.
This is a great book for everyone, filled with passion by a man who loved who and what he was.

A beautiful book for all who love nature
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2004-01-20
Confession - I'd never heard of Konrad Lorenz (even though he won the Nobel Prize in 1973), and I don't usually read books by Naturalists.

I was driving between business meetings during the day, when I happened to tune in to BBC Radio 4 (same as National Public Radio in the USA), and by accident caught a book reading of Chapter 10 regarding Dogs. Then on another day I caught Chapter 11 on Birds. Captivated, I actually pulled over so that I could hear the whole chapter & find out what the book was and who the Author was.

Then I ordered the book as a treat to myself for Christmas.

Fantastic! With some abridging 'on the fly', this book could even be read to/by a younger audience say down to 8 years old, who would enjoy, laugh & cry at some of the stories contained herein.

I wish my science teacher had read this to me when I was 8, rather than do some silly experiments with boring pond life (Chapter 2 would have taught me more about Pond Life)!

A must have book for everyone, anyone.
Helpful Votes: 12 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 2003-11-29
A rare 5 stars for this one, simply delightful, a joy to read. Lorenz is so full of love for his craft, yes I say craft because that is the way he treats his study of animal behaviour. Not an average scientist but rather somehow he has that rare ability to both love his work and be able to write about it to a lay audience with wonderful wit, charm, wisdom and grace. He's a little like Adolf Portmann except with more humour but the same love.

I mentioned that he writes this book for lay readers, not scientists, and unlike the contemporary crowd, who often write in a more condescending way he manages to get across the animals and their complex behaviour without ever at any stage making the reader think himself inadequate to the task. He writes as a human being experiencing the wonders of the natural world and does not artificially reduce it to ashes and leache the life out of it as others do. Here he actually makes people want to become naturalists or biologists. There is no finer writer in the sciences.

In the book, a little tome of 190 pages, he discusses a whole range of animals he studies notably, often from his own home where he keeps an entire managerie of ducks, geese, jackdaws, parrots, dogs, hamsters, water shrews etc etc. The whole house is alive with the raucous cries and crazy comings and goings of his companions. He gives much to the reader such as how to manage an aquarium properly, how to look after animals correctly so their lives are well lived and the book is chocka-block full of animal tales. The kind of tales myths and legends are grown from. I mean that the tales are often so remarkable, e.g. the intelligence shown by his pet raven or the story of two men carrying a canoe followed by several goslings, a large red dog and some ducklings. Its droll and humouress and full of joy. And, in it all the way through are his wondrous drawings portraying everything he tells of in the book.

A must have book for everyone, anyone.

Francis
Leaves of Gold: An Anthology of Prayers, Memorable Phrases, Inspirational Verse, and Prose (Standard Edition)
Published in Hardcover by Brownlow Publishing Company (1995-09)
Author:
List price: $22.99
New price: $16.41
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GOLDEN REVIEW
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-21
THE LEAVES OF GOLD BOOKS WERE JUST LIKE THE ONE I'VE HAD FOR YEARS. THE TREASURED STORIES AND POEMS NEVER LOSE THEIR APPEAL. THESE WILL MAKE GREAT GIFTS FOR GOLDEN WEDDING ANNIVERSARY PRESENTS.

reflective
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-18
This book speaks deeply to the soul. It's topics hold a splendor of variation ranging from courage to happiness. Sitting reading it is like having a grandfather at your side, teaching and training in soundness of mind. It reaches into today's realities with the, almost lost, wisdom of yesteryear. This book is one of my treasures.

Leaves of Gold
Helpful Votes: 12 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 2000-03-06
I have had this book in my possesion for at least twenty years and referred to it countless times for inspiration. I've used quotes from this book when speaking to thousands of people over the past five years and always received an overwhelming response. I recommend it to anyone who enjoys beautiful inspirational and educational writing.

just like grandma and grandpa's
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-16
In 1969, my grandparents received Leaves of Gold for their 50th wedding anniversary. I was 5 years old. When I was about 8 years old, every time I would go to my grandparents home, I would read this book. My older sister ended up with this book after my grandfather died, and I looked for years to find one like it. I found it on amazon and ordered it. It was just like the one that they had. My little sister never knew my grandparents, so I ordered a copy of this book for her birthday so she
can have a part of their history. I am going to write up a story about why I wanted this book. A friend of mine, who is no longer with us, gave me a book that was similar to this that someone gave her in 1943. She was ninety years old when she gave me this book at church one day because she knew I would appreciate this. It is in a fire safe under lock and key. Highly recommend this book.

Wonderful book for all occasions!
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 1999-10-06
A wonderful book of inspirational and thought provoking quotes, pieces of poetry, etc. Great just for yourself or to give as a gift. Giving a speech and need ideas? A terrific resource with subjects covering topics from attitude to weddings! Some serious, some humorous, includes famous as well as unknown authors.

Francis
The life of St. Francis of Assisi
Published in Unknown Binding by Benziger (1898)
Author: Bonaventure
List price:

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informative
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-05
I enjoyed reading this book. it adds greatly to my library if religion,
it brought back some interesting research.
Thank you. it was in great condition.
Monica C. Coleman

Beautiful portrait of a very special man
Helpful Votes: 13 out of 13 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-15
This book goes over the life of St Francis of Assisi about 15 times, each chapter reflecting a different aspect of his life. I found the format very easy to understand and I think if it were to be written any other way it would not have done this Saint justice because we would not have been able to concentrate each and every one of his virtues.
It is written by another Saint, St Bonaventure, so it is highly impressive in it's credentials. I chose St Francis as my confirmation Saint after reading this book. He was a humble Christian who took God's Word very seriously and he is a perfect example of God's love to be seen here on earth. It is impossible to read this book and not be touched by it. My life has literally changed by St Francis, the poor servant of Christ who's love for Christ sets a new standard for us all.

A Saint's Biography of A Saint
Helpful Votes: 19 out of 21 total.
Review Date: 2001-02-12
St. Bonaventure, cured of a childhood illness by St. Francis, writes a vivid biography of St. Francis.

I think because it is written by a great Saint, this biography perceptively considers St. Francis through his spirituality above all. It is not the most complete memoir of anecdotes about St. Francis' life, but a compendium of anecdotes about St. Francis is not St. Bonaventure's purpose.

St. Francis is perceived through his faith in God; in going from Gospel to life and life to Gospel. He is portrayed as the man who gave all to attain the pearl of great price. He was all of these things.

As far as biographies go, this one can be classified as not only a chronicle of St. Francis' life, but also spiritual reading which will edify the reader and draw him or her closer to Christ.

As St. Francis said, "What a man is in the eyes of God, that he is and no more." St. Bonaventure portrays this truth of St. Francis exeedingly well. Buy this book and, perhaps, it will assist you in going from the Gospel to life and life to the Gospel.

Review from the Publisher
Helpful Votes: 22 out of 23 total.
Review Date: 2001-03-08
Taken from the Legenda Sancti Francisci and edited, with a preface, by Henry Edward Cardinal Manning. The life of a Saint, written by a Saint, speaks to the heart with a vital power which no work of merely natural genius can command. It has a twofold operation of the Spirit of God with it, both in the subject and in the writer. Among uninspired books there are few that breathe more sensibly the love of God than this famous work. "There is a light and a sweetness about it which is not of this world," says Cardinal Manning. St. Thomas writes about finding St. Bonaventure in his cell writing this work in ecstasy, and drawing back from the door exclaiming, "Let us leave a Saint to work for a Saint." St. Bonaventure conveys a picture of St. Francis through his miracles (including turning water into wine, raising people from the dead, commanding water to flow from bare rock and even curing the author of a childhood illness), his sayings (even the animals were exulted at the sound of his voice) and his holy life that renders an indelible impression of a man totally transformed in God and by God. In short, St. Bonaventure presents the life of a man who was like a seraph - an angel in human form - for no other word but "angel" can truly describe the beloved St. Francis of Assisi.

Attracts to Faith
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-25
From St. Bonaventure's 13th century "Legenda Sancti Francisci" Cardinal Henry Manning translated into English the "Life of St. Francis" (1867). The current 1988 edition is a 187-page paperback. Fifteen chapters, over 140 pages, present Francis' life, ministry, humility, poverty, piety and fervor. The remaining 47-unchaptered pages present several vignettes from Francis' life (1181-1226) including his Romagna imprisonment (page 164-165) and his saving various shipwrecked monks off Baruti (page162-163).

This absorbing book also witnesses the saint's austerity (almost catatonic at times), founding the Franciscan order, Francis' stigmata, his regular church attendance (often sleeping is churches between worships), his death and canonization. Readers hear of Francis' views on preachers (page 74), his love for animals (page 78-85), and his distain for property and money (page 67-68).

Bonaventure tells the hair-raising story of Francis' pilgrimage to Africa and his capture by Saracens. Deported to Babylon, the saint is taken before the Sultan. Francis witnesses Christ to the Muslim leader and is later released (Bonaventure presents it with almost miraculous proportions) as the Sultan realizes the man of Assisi to be a "blessed" holy man.

Although St. Bonaventure is prone to mystical overstatement (there are several blatant parallels between his Francis and the Gospels' Jesus), Cardinal Manning translates the saint's story into a very good read. Francis' life is profoundly significant as Christian witness. His life will attract readers to faith. This informative and interesting book is recommended to everyone.

Francis
Lincoln's Tragic Admiral: The Life Of Samuel Francis Du Pont (Nation Divided)
Published in Hardcover by University of Virginia Press (2005-05-26)
Author: Kevin J. Weddle
List price: $35.00
New price: $19.98
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For lovers of history, a marvelous book!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-02-19
A fascinating book! I particularly appreciate the way the author integrates Du Pont's human strengths and frailties with the bureaucratic, logistical, and armament systems of the time. He provided just enough background information on Du Pont's family, peers, and related events for readers to appreciate their impact without being taken off track. Ultimately the reader sees the guy as very much a real man with skills, challenges, successes and failures that are just as relevant today as 150 years ago. (Anyone who doubts the relevance of history to modern events need only read this book.) Finally, I greatly enjoyed learning about the technological advances of the day in the context of the times. It's easy for us today to look back at the Civil War as being an "old-style war" like that of 1812, but in reading Weddle's book I was enlightened to the fact that from a technological attitudes standpoint, the Civil War was much more of a "modern" war than I had previously realized. What kid isn't fascinated by the battle of the Monitor and the Virginia (Merrimack), for example? In history books that event is always presented as an isolated incident, but thanks to this book I now realize that steam-powered vessels and ironclads were the wonder weapons of their day -- they captured the public imagination (and those of military planners) just as tanks, jets, and nuclear weapons have in more recent times. It has been a truly delightful read and I've learned a lot. Incredible the peers Du Pont rubbed elbows with at the time -- legendary heroes like Stephen Decatur and Matthew Perry. If you like history, you will love this book. Not only does it offer fascinating facts and insights into a man and his times, but it reads like a novel. Don't miss it!

A Wealth of Personal and Naval History
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-08-31
Great read! Easy, smooth flowing syntax and text. Almost reads like a novel. A nice mixture of text, maps, and images. Substantial research has brought together the personal man as well as the public man and his concern for United States protection and the well being of his naval forces.
Coming from a naval family, I was very interested in seeing the evolving history of the US Navy. I was also interested to follow the interaction of husband and wife and her influence on DuPont. Highly recommend this book.

Naval biography at its best!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-08-29
Kevin Weddle has blazed new trails in this long-overdue look at one of the U.S. Navy's most important but little-known leaders. He has tapped into the extensive resources of the Du Pont family to capture the essence of a complex figure who stood tall at the cusp of a critical period of American history. The book is a quick read and Samuel Francis Du Pont's story is told with balance, style, and accuracy.
The best biographies hold relevance for for present and future leaders - and this one is no exception. Du Pont plays key roles as mariner, technological innovator, personnel reformer, diplomat, strategist, combat commander, and family man. Through it all, he remains a man of steadfast principle.
Kevin Weddle has spun a superb yarn and created an impressive work that shines a contemporary lamp on a long-neglected giant of the U.S. Navy. This volume is a worthy addition to the library of those with an interest in naval history, the Civil War, or leadership.

A review of Lincoln's Tragic Admiral
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-08-14
Before I read this book, I didn't know alot about this period of our nation's history. What I especially enjoyed was learning about Samual DuPont's personal life and how it affected some of his decisions in war time. I can now say I have learned something and was entertained in the meantime.

Much More Than a Great Biography
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2005-10-03
For those of you who eagerly await the one book on Civil War naval history for every fifty released concerning the land war, you will not be disappointed. Not only is this book an exceptional biography of Admiral Du Pont, but it also provides a thorough look at the Navy during the service's formative years prior to the Civil War. This is possible because Du Pont's influence proved instrumental during this period; he authored the first comprehensive national maritime strategy (which provided guidance for transforming the Navy from a coastal defense force into a "Blue Water" service with offensive capability), as well as catalyzed much-needed personnel reform. Du Pont's at-sea adventures in the Mexican War and during a hazardous voyage to the Far East also make for great reading. What sets this book apart from any good biography, however, is the insightful discussion of civil-military friction and ill-conceived reliance on technology that characterize Du Pont's 1863 attack on Charleston, SC. Du Pont was against this operation (believing it to be an unnecessary peripheral enterprise that would siphon off valuable - and limited - resources from the all-important blockade), but Lincoln, Navy Secretary Welles, and Assistant Secretary Fox all though the capture of Charleston had important symbolic value. Since civilian leadership sets policy and related strategic objectives, Du Pont saluted smartly and began planning the operation. Friction arose when the admiral tried to persuade Welles and Fox that Charleston could only be captured via a joint Army-Navy operation. Welles and Fox (demonstrating blatant service parochialism) favored an all-Navy operation, and instructed Du Pont to proceed without Army assistance. Despite evidence to the contrary (Drewry's Bluff, VA and Fort McAllister, GA), Welles and Fox were convinced that monitor ironclads alone could destroy Charleston's forts and capture the city; as a result, they confidently assured Lincoln that the monitor technology would prevail. Of course, Du Pont was correct and the operation tragically ended in failure. Civil-military friction and technology as a military panacea are familiar themes throughout American military history - and we see them still in the current global war on terrorism. Colonel Weddle, therefore, does the reader a great service by providing such a thought-provoking discussion and analysis of these crucial issues. Superbly written, thoroughly researched, and well organized, this book was a pleasure to read and I highly recommend it.


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