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

George
Stories in His Own Hand: The Everyday Wisdom of Ronald Reagan
Published in Hardcover by Free Press (2001-10-09)
Author:
List price: $21.00
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Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $21.00

Average review score:

Reagan's America, Our America
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-11
This is a companion book to Reagan, In His Own Hand: The Writings of Ronald Reagan that Reveal His Revolutionary Vision for America, both of which are transcriptions of Reagan's radio addressees delivered during his interregnum from governor to president. This slim tome, however, focuses more on Reagan's philosophical and spiritual side, as opposed to policy.

Indeed, it is more of a devotional book than anything else. You feel Reagan's faith in God, and his love for the down-to-earth people that make America great.

There are so many heartwarming stories. One of my favorites is his retelling of The Little Red Hen, which begins on page 86. On the surface, it has a new twist on an old fable. But once you think about the underlying tales, and the punch-line, you see this story ranks with Animal Farm: Centennial Edition and Atlas Shrugged.

Regan's America is our America. In this selection, Reagan gently reminds us who we we are, and our power as individuals to do good. Reagan was for small government simply because he believed that everyday people were so big.

A worthwhile quick read
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-05-13
Not earth-shattering or impressive, still this collection of stories written by President Ronald Reagan is a worthwhile glimpse into the thinking of our former president. Each story is brief, a format that lends itself well to a person whose habit is to read a book little bits at a time due to a busy schedule. I found the stories insightful and well done, further demonstrating to me the depth and integrity of someone I've admired for many years.

The great communicator tells a tale or two
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-02-26
For the most part, this little book consists of brief, non-political, stories written by Ronald Reagan for delivery on his five minute radio program in the 1970's. Some are his own. Others are based on stories which he had read or heard and which apparently touched him in some way and which he felt were worthy of repeating to a broader audience. My expectations weren't very high when I began reading the book; probably because there have just been too many such books compiled in recent years. If I'd noticed that the book was produced by the same people who earlier produced "Reagan, In His Own Hand..." they wouldn't have been quite so low.

In any case, this small book exceeded my expectations. Taken separately, its stories are quite topical and quite interesting. Taken together, they tell us a little bit more about our 40th president and it becomes clearer than ever that he was not only a great president and a great human being but also a master story teller. In my view, this book should be of interest to anyone who is interested in Ronald Reagan as well as those who simply appreciate a good story well told.

Disagree with? Sure. Dislike? Hard to do.
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-12-06
On Sept. 20, 1983 during my freshman year at the University of South Carolina, RR came to speak. When some students of the far left heckled him, he replied "Is there an echo out there?" and disarmed them. He also entertained the crowd with folksy anecdotes of his days at Eureka College that we as students could identify with. Most of the students (myself included) who disagreed with many of his policies and would never vote for him in susequent elections agreed that RR had a gift with a story and with an audience.

This is the RR that appears in this book. These are the folksy anecdotes that he shared mostly with radio audiences and a few are from his presidential days and some go as far back as his newspaper columns in the 1930s. Much of this makes for good light reading, such as his impressions of hollywood in the 30s and his joy of his parents coming out for a visit, the tale of his hosting a black fellow athlete at his home when a hotel refused to house him, and of the girl who braved a crowd of student demonstrators to shake his hand, as ell as his observations on death.

Unlike some other compliations of RR's writings, tales such as these transcend political opinion. This would make good bedside reading or on a short flight.

Excellent Compilation of True Reagan
Helpful Votes: 25 out of 25 total.
Review Date: 2002-02-03
This is a compilation of transcripts of Ronald Reagan's radio talk-show from the late 1970's. Reagan always loved to use stories to communicate ideas and give advice, and this collection is replete with perfect examples of that. I believe that the four components of leadership are:

1) A clear vision of a better future; 2) The ability to communicate that vision; 3) The ability to get others to want to listen to your ideas and to believe you; 4) The ability to translate your vision into action

Whatever you might think of Reagan's vision for America or of the actions he took, this book shows us how he excelled at communicating his vision and pulling people into it. He was not called "The Great Communicator" without reason, and this book shows you that reason clearly. This is a treasure for Reagan fans, and for anyone who wants ideas on how to be more charismatic.

George
Suicide
Published in Paperback by Free Press (1997-02-01)
Author: Emile Durkheim
List price: $18.95
New price: $6.98
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Average review score:

Great
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-10
This book is helpful to understand how suicide happens to people and understanding that there is nothing you can do to catch it, you realize its not your fault.

Start here sociology student
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-01-27
This is still considered the first book on sociological theory. Not only does Durkheim provide us with a working model to use social statistics to draw very strong inference but if one reads carefully between the lines, he provides us with theoretical rhetoric as well as the afore-mentioned practical design. Durkheim was overall pessimistic; he saw the forces of society as overwhelming to the individual and makes little or no provision for escape (unlike Marx). Suicide, in Durkheim's view, was merely a symptom of a greater sociological ill. But unlike those who had come before him, Durkheim based his sociological assertions on solid empirical evidence and helped create an entire new science, which like the "hard" sciences, was based on the collection of data and research. Next time you read a report which links household income to education attainment, or prison rates among African Americans to a never-ending drug war, remember Emile Durkheim. He was first.

Classic Sociology Text
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2003-02-16
Durkheim sometimes gets a bad rap for his politics, but this is a good book that laid the foundations for much of the sociological work that has followed it. Using the case study example of suicide rates, Durkheim undertakes to show that social structure has a profound and powerful influence on almost everything that individuals do. While the translation is sometimes awkward, Durkheim's work is impressive in its methods, ambitions, and execution. I'd recommend this book to anyone interested in the hstory of sociology or just the power of social structure.

The best and first tutorial to the sociology
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2004-02-06
Durkheim says at the beginning; the sociology is the current science, but nobody knows what it is. Even now, his words sound contemporary. This study aims at introducing the necessity and importance of the sociology to the public, but not at sophisticatedly professional people.
It matches the orientation of the primary students to study the sociology, because the preliminary knowledge isnft necessary. Actually, I could read this book at the first year of the university without any sociological knowledge. After finishing to read the first part, which proves that the suicide isnft the psychological phenomenon, but the sociological, you can investigate the present situation as he did in the 19th century by using the statistics of the international organization like WHO. You will find the manipulation of the statistics not only easy, but also important with Durkheimfs tutorial. It may be your first experience of the scientific study at the society.
I can recommend it to the youth.

PIONEERING WORK IN SOCIOLOGY
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2003-11-15
This is the work considered the pioneer of modern sociology, with its author hailed the father of sociology. The innovative nature of the work lies in putting together all the methods of social analysis available at his time and providing a comprehensive view of the nature of suicide in society.

Mixing quantitative and qualitative methods, Durkheim provides the basis for the future development of sociology. He brings science to the study of society, by developing a hypothesis, gathering data and testing the hypothesis. He proves the powerful influence of society on the behavior of individuals, which, though obvious today, was not a clear conclusion at the time.

This is a basic reading for anyone interested in sociology. However, anyone interested in the application of scientific methods to society and other non-traditional fields for science would also find it very useful.

George
Teutonic mythology
Published in Unknown Binding by George Bell ; (1882)
Author: Jacob Grimm
List price:

Average review score:

Very Laborious - Not for Casual Readers
Helpful Votes: 12 out of 13 total.
Review Date: 2005-01-18
This review pertains to the 2004 hardcover "Phoenix Edition" reprint. I must also confess that at this moment I have only made my way through half of volume 1. I feel it necessary to give potential buyers a "heads up" about this set: it is, as described, a massive work of mid-1800s scholarship. It was assumed at that time that anyone who would be reading such a work would be able to read Latin as well as Old High German, Old Norse, Anglo-Saxon, and a smattering of other medeival languages.
The author spends most of his time NOT telling mythical stories as the curious dabbler might expect, but instead chasing down obscure linguistic clues imbedded in medeival texts, place names, and quaint figures of speech in an attempt to reconstruct some sort of Germanic mythology (for which documentation is lacking) from its hypothetical parallels in Norse mythology (for which documentation is abundant) and the mythologies / religious beliefs / superstitions of surrounding races such as the Saxons, the Gauls, even the Greeks and Romans. This process is dull, dry, tedious, and to someone not fluent in Classical and Germanic languages, incomprehensible. If you love philology you will love these books, but if you want to be thrilled by tales of the Old Gods, stay away!! Herr Grimm does not tell many stories; all the cool stuff is quoted from his sources, and whatever of that isn't in Old High German is in Latin. _Untranslated_ Latin. BEWARE!!
Don't get me wrong; I do not regret owning this set, and I have every intention of finishing it - I'm just saying it's going to be unexpectedly difficult for me, and I can only recommend it for those with a Serious Interest in the subject. The information Grimm presents here is dense and staggeringly thorough - and it is, in a way, a very enjoyable read: the book has its own soporific charm which provides an almost physical pleasure from reading it. An entire mysterious world of unknown language and dimly-comprehended episodes from Latin chroniclers yawns before me. Should be a fun trip.
Nevertheless, my review must bear a mere 3 stars as a warning to those who only want to be thrilled by the mighty adventures of Thor: look elsewhere. This is not the right book for you to start.

Just excellent
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-09-07
This is thoroughful and extremely good edition of the phenomenal book. Naturally, several scolars later made some corrections on some subjects. Nevertheless Jacob Grimm's work inspired H.Heine, R.Wagner and many other men of genius. One cannot overestimate the 'Teutonic Mythology' even now. In a way it's a monument of human imagination, of both oral and written creations made during the centuries by the individuals as well as by the folks. And it still be and will be an inexhaustible source for our both knowledge and imagination as well.
Only one thing I would dare to suggest. Many fragments J.Grimm quotes in Latin, Greek etc... For the future editions I would translate all of them even it could take much space - up to an additional small volume. So, this unique book would be understood by much wider circle of the readers.

Must have for any serious student of northern European culture, folklore or Odinsim!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-29
Yes, a few years ago I plunked down the over a $100 cost for this recently put back in print four volume set. I don't regret spending the money. Criticisms I have you have to wade through a lot of linguistics/philology stuff and for whatever reason, even though this is supposed to be the English translation, there is still a fair amount of material in German and Latin. But there is all kinds of great stuff in this. Not for the beginner or someone with just a casual interest in the subject matter but this is a must have for any serious student of northern European culture, folklore or Odinsim. What is it about so many books written in the 1800's being superior to 99% of whats been published in the past 50 years?

The Bible?
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2005-08-29
This is required reading for the true student! Can be a difficult read at times, but the knowledge and world view contained therein make it a treasure!

Ian Myles Slater on: Invaluable, but Handle with Care!
Helpful Votes: 37 out of 37 total.
Review Date: 2004-11-22
So Dover Publications has now (2004) reprinted "Teutonic Mythology" under the "Phoenix" imprint, apparently in two formats (bindings). I look at my copies of the previous (1966) Dover paperback edition of James Stallybrass's 1883-1888 translation of Jakob Grimm's "Deutsche Mythologie," with the four volumes bound in different colors, and I feel terribly old.

They were purchased at less than a tenth of the publisher's current asking price (well, one volume was a gift, but I'm looking at the cover prices), and I feel grateful that I bought (three of) them in the early 1970s. At the time, that still seemed a lot of money for paperbacks, even trade paperbacks, but I have had decades of use out of the set, which is still holding up well. (Dover then still used signature-stitched bindings and high-quality paper; their claim that their paperback books would last as well as hardcover editions was well founded. If Dover does reissue them in paperback, they will probably be less durable and, inevitably, more expensive.)

Read with care, and with frequent reference to modern text editions, translations, and studies, the "Teutonic Mythology" is still a mine of information on the religious ideas, customs, and common metaphors and figures of speech (supposed to be fossilized beliefs) of the ancient and early medieval Germanic peoples (the continental Germans, the Dutch and Flemings, the Scandinavians, and the Anglo-Saxons), and much else in medieval literature. Everyone knows the Grimms from the fairy-tale collection, but individually and together they wrote and edited much more. (For some reason, Jakob Grimm [1785-1863] almost always appears in English as Jacob, but his brother Wilhelm [1786-1859] never seems to become William.)

The "Mythology" in particular is constantly cited in the older secondary literature, so it is nice to be able to find such references. On many occasion it has clarified for me an obscure argument carried out by long-dead scholars with page-references to Grimm's then-definitive treatment of the issue (although sometimes I have had to work out the relation of the pagination of an unseen German edition to the English text -- not fun).

More important, for my purposes, it was a handy reference for what would have been readily available knowledge in the latter part of the nineteenth century, and the early twentieth. They are very useful indeed, if you are interested in Richard Wagner's versions of Germanic myth and legend, or those of William Morris. Or, particularly since this is a translation, if you want to see what was available to the young E.R. Eddison, C.S. Lewis and J.R.R. Tolkien, among many others.

(For that specific purpose, the only thing really comparable in scope they might have read was Benjamin Thorpe's three-volume "Northern Mythology" of 1851, which was briefly available in a one-volume omnibus paperback from Wordsworth a few years ago. In terms of information available to its learned author, Thorpe's book, which I have reviewed, was largely a less systematic English Grimm, with more extensive summaries of Norse sources, and some excellent additional evidence from folktales. It is not quite so dated, but mainly because it was not so ambitious; whole topics aren't even mentioned, so Thorpe couldn't have made any mistakes about them. For the intellectual and cultural background, Andew Wawn's recent (2000) "The Vikings and the Victorians: Inventing the Old North in 19th-Century Britain" may become the standard reference.)

Thomas Shippey in particular has pointed out several places where Tolkien invented Middle-earth "solutions" to passages where Grimm expressed confusion over contradictory data. Tolkien would eventually have gone directly to the German text; Lewis mentions reading Grimm in German, but seems to mean the Fairy Tales ("Kinder- und Hausmaerchen").

In addition, Grimm's appendices (in the fourth volume of the translation) assemble an extraordinary number of important non-literary medieval (and later) texts in one place; genealogies, spells, penitential guides, lists of superstitions, dialect terms. Although as editions they are antiquated, having them in one place proved convenient on a great many occasions. (For example, Valerie Flint's 1991 "The Rise of Magic in Early Medieval Europe" cites later editions of several of them, none readily accessible to me.)

Given the present price, although I'm delighted that Dover has brought the whole set back into print simultaneously for the first time in years, I'm not urging everyone interested in Germanic myth and folklore to rush to buy it. (Even with the current -- November 2004 -- Amazon discount.)

And not just because of the price. This is a monument of scholarship from the first half of the nineteenth century (1835; second edition 1844); almost everything in it has to be viewed with at least a little suspicion. Grimm already recognized that there were problems. A good part of volume four consists of additions and corrections to the text, which he had hoped to incorporate in a third, and fully revised, edition. (His publisher instead reprinted the three-volume second edition text in 1854, and called it the "Third Edition." A posthumous editor arranged the notes in order, to be printed as a supplement in a "Fourth Ediiton," and Stallybrass followed this practice, instead of tampering with the original.)

Throw in the expense, and there is reason for suggesting other places to start. I mention this age factor because the amount of antique misinformation I have seen gleaned from it, and presented as current, sometimes explicitly dated 1966, is a little frightening. And I expect to see more examples, with the 2004 date of the Dover Phoenix edition in the citation.

Stallybrass called his translation "Teutonic Mythology" to reflect that Grimm was using "Deutsche" in the widest possible sense, instead of a nationalistic one; the more recent term would be "Germanic." But for almost a century, beginning not long after after Jacob Grimm completed his work treating *all* the Germanic-speaking peoples as a continuum, the best surveys and handbooks, and almost all serious scholarship, carefully distinguished Northern (Scandinavian) from Southern (continental German) evidence. Surveys in particular were generally restricted to one or the other; usually "Norse Mythology," with a few citations from the continent. While some of Grimm's comparisons -- or the conclusions drawn from them -- were of dubious legitimacy, denying the validity of such comparisons *in advance* pre-determined the nature of the argument. Apparent exceptions generally quickly reveal themselves as second-hand Grimm. Those scholars who did survey the whole field were often concerned to prove that the medieval Scandinavian texts were late and unreliable compared to nineteenth-century German folklore. (If it looks "primitive" [crude], it must *be* primitive [early].)

The closest thing to a scholarly modern successor, the two-volume "Altgermanische Religionsgeschichte" by Jan de Vries, was severely criticized when it appeared in the mid-twentieth-century for returning to Grimm's comprehensive approach. (The author was under the influence of Dumezil's then-recent work on the original unity of Indo-European mythic and religious concepts, and the controversy has moderated with time and familiarity.) Unhappily, de Vries's "History of Old-Germanic Religion" is still not available in English. But there are substitutes in English which, taken together, are almost as comprehensive, as well as much more reliable than Grimm alone.

For the serious-minded beginner, John Lindow's "Norse Mythology: A Guide to the Gods, Heroes, Rituals, and Beliefs" or Andy Orchard's "Cassell's Dictionary of Norse Myth & Legend" (and variant titles) are far better and more reliable guides to the Scandinavian evidence, with Rudolf Simek's "Dictionary of Northern Mythology" filling in some of the continental material, along with copious linguistic information reflecting an additional century and a half of research. I would strongly urge anyone new to the field to have at least one or two of these at hand whenever Grimm is being consulted; definitely Simek on matters linguistic, if possible (the book is currently out of print, although a reprinting of the paperback is scheduled for Spring 2006). All three (which I have reviewed separately; I call attention to some of Simek's shortcomings, but his book is mostly first-rate) have extensive bibliographies. Some of Lindow's extended articles come closest to Grimm's chapter-length treatises.

However, when all is said and done, there is something to be said for these four antiquated volumes. Like Aristotle, Jakob Grimm produced a "premature synthesis" of knowledge, and, as with Aristotle, even the errors of a first-class mind are worth pondering. And a lot of it *is* dead on right.

At some point "Teutonic Mythology" should be consulted by anyone interested in Germanic studies, or medieval literature, or folklore studies, or comparative mythology -- if only as an act of piety. Having hardcover and library-bound editions available may make this effort more likely than it has been in recent years. And maybe it will, sooner or later, be back in paperback form.

George
A Thomas Jefferson Education Home Companion
Published in Paperback by George Wythe College Press (2006-10-01)
Author: Oliver DeMille; Rachel DeMille; Diann Jeppson
List price: $21.95
New price: $21.85
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Average review score:

TJ Ed broken down
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-10
What I love about this book is that it really breaks down HOW to do TJ Ed by letting you look into the lives of a TJ Ed family and see how all the components are implemented. I HIGHLY recommend this book if you are serious about integrating the TJ Ed lifestyle into your family/homeschool life. It gives descriptions of everything from how to integrate chores into your daily life with your kids to transitioning to practice scholar to spelling and more.

All these examples have really helped me give over more to my kids and allow them the opportunities to really take charge of their education and life.

A practical handbook for applying Thomas Jefferson Education Principles
Helpful Votes: 13 out of 14 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-31
Save yourself some time and get this book to start applying principles and techniques of Thomas Jefferson Education that took me ten years to figure out! I first read A Thomas Jefferson Education almost ten years ago and since then have been incorporating techniques to apply it into my everyday homeschooling and personal education. Suffice it to say when I read this book I was nodding my head in agreement in several places. I love Dr. DeMille's answer to the overwhelmed mom that empathizes with her and then inspires her(and the rest of us) in his response. Rachel DeMille and Diane Jeppson are inspiring and knowledgeable in their writing as well. The chore chart that Dianne suggests has worked well for my cousin who uses it while I work from the motivatedmoms.com chore list.

Answers the "But How do I DO it?" Question
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-19
This book completely changed the way I think about education, both for me and my children (and my husband, come to that). It describes the "factory model" on which the modern American educational system is built, and explains that this way of thinking about education was designed only to provide basic literacy to those who could not afford a better, classically based education. We have substituted the inferior for the superior as a culture, and are paying the price in every aspect of our lives.
Because of the brilliant and clear, well reasoned writing by Mr. De Mille, I have been inspired to turn off the dreaded TV, organize my home, and return to the study of the great works of Western Civilization, from Euclid to Hugo (and beyond)in the hopes of becoming a better citizen and inspiring my family to follow suit in becoming the stewards of their own educational destinies. Every homeschooling parent must read this book, but I would go further and say that every parent must read this book, and perhaps every individual committed to a functioning democracy - because that is what this book is really about. I was not inclined to homeschool my children (who are not yet school-aged) before I read this book, and although I am now considering it, I know that they will benefit from a Thomas Jefferson Education in their lives regardless of where they spend their days. If you enjoy this book, buy and read Mr. De Mille's other works, including the Home Companion, which is a practical application of the Thomas Jefferson Education ideology in a family, and the Core and Love of Learning audio series, which is also excellent in that it provides even more detail for those stages of development.

For the highly organized and family of TEN!!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 40 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-04
While I think it is highly desirable for the family unit to be the main source for each child's education, I found this book to be a bit simplistic. My daughter was sent to public school today for the first time and I know I'm more nervous about the experience she'll have than she is. Of all the books that I've read on alternatives to NoChildLeftBehind public school, the best have been by John Taylor Gatto and Grace Llewellyn. Both of them offer ways to incorporate enrichment outside of public school, and in fact, say that you will HAVE TO practically have a "curriculum" to allow your child to feel free to seek out the experiences they wish to explore. I have alot to learn and look forward to working with the system until I feel that is more of a detriment than not.

A very helpful resource
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-05
I was floundering, trying to get my TJEd homeschool organized. That effort is still in progress; but I don't think I could have even attempted it without this book, especially Chapter 8, to guide and encourage me. Thanks especially to author Diann Jeppson!

George
Tucker's Countryside
Published in Paperback by Avon Books (1982-10)
Author: George Selden
List price: $2.50
Used price: $0.50
Collectible price: $15.00

Average review score:

a booki boys will read
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-06
After I finally convinced my 9 y/o son to read The Cricket in Times Square, he was hooked on Harry, Tucker and Chester. He read this book and was sad it was over. Get the whole series, plus Oscar Lobster's Fair Exchange if you have a boy who doesn't like to read too much because these characters are all interesting to boys. Girls love them too, but it is hard to find books that appeal to boys, besides Captain Underpants that is.

The Best Book I Ever Read !!!!!!!!!!!!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2003-03-14
This was the best book I ever read! The book was about were Tucker (a mouse) and Harry (a cat) to go to help their friend Chester (a cricket) save his home and the home of other animals on the countryside. My farviote character was Tucker a very nice and smart This is a great book it got me to read all the other books in this series and I never read. You won't be disapointed!!!!!!!!!!

The Best Book I Ever Read !![.]
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2003-03-14
This was the best book I ever read! The book was about were Tucker (a mouse) and Harry (a cat) to go to help their friend Chester (a cricket) save his home and the home of other animals on the countryside. My farviote character was Tucker a very nice and smart This is a great book it got me to read all the other books in this series and I never read. You won't be disapointed!!![.]

Awesome work
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2004-02-10
Except for Charlotte's Web, this is perhaps the best young person's book in existence. The narrative makes you visualize so thoroughly you will be left with the feeling that you have seen a movie. Don't miss this book!

Tucker's Countryside
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2002-03-27
I wanted to read this book because the book I read before Tucker's Countryside was the Cricket in Time Square. This book is the sequel to the Cricket in Time Square. When I read that there was a sequel to the Cricket in Time Square I looked for it in my bookcase to see if I had it. When I found it I began to read the back of the book and it seemed interesting to me.

The book was about a bird named Robin took Tucker mouse and Harry cat to Connecticut where their old friend Chester cricket lived. They found each other and Chester showed them around the countryside. They found out that his home was going to be destroyed by the bulldosers to make room for the new homes. The towns people won't have a place to play either. Now it is up to Tucker mouse and Harry cat to save the land.

My favorite part of the book was when Harry cat found this girl that would take care of him. This part is my favorite because the girl reminds me of myself because I have five cats and three of them are strays. Harry cat was going to stay at the little girl's house, but he decided to go back to Time Square with Tucker mouse towards the end of the book.

George
The Voice of the Silence
Published in Kindle Edition by Sufi George Books (2007-08-06)
Author: Helena P. Blavatsky
List price: $7.99
New price: $6.39

Average review score:

The Voice Of The Silence
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-17
It is what I ordered I guess. The book does have some intersting statements. Buy it if you know this is the book your looking for.

Astute!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-09-19
HPB is a pioneer in illuminating the spiritual and mystical themes behind the everyday sacred and profane. A stunning accomplishment for it's time and for today!

Pure hidden wisdom
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2005-02-09
Publisher's note:

"The Voice of the Silence was the last major work to come from the pen of H.P. Blavatsky before her death in 1891. It is also one of her most important writings, being a guidebook for those dedicated to achieving enlightenment through atruistic service to humanity."

It may well take years to comprehend the profound wisdom contained in this sacred book. The Voice of the Silence was and is intended for daily use in meditation by disciples and students of the spirit, not for intellectual study!

It would be a good idea to be well versed in Buddhism and esoterism before venturing with this book (try reading Blavatsky's Secret Doctrine & Isis Unveiled first, and the works of Rudolf Steiner and Samael Aun Weor etc).
It might also help to be well versed in self-knowledge as well.

It is divided into three sections:
1) The Voice of the Silence
2) The Two Paths
3) The Seven Portals

This hand-sized Centenary Edition contains a three-part glossary, an index and an introduction including excerpts from mysterious letters by Blavatsky and others from the time when The Voice of the Silence was written.

"I believe that this book has strongly influenced many sincere seekers and aspirants to the wisdom and compassion of the Bodhisattva Path."
-His Holiness, The Dalai Lama

Dedicated to the Few
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2004-11-03
After Madam Blavatsky reintroduced the esoteric, perennial, spiritual wisdom back into mainstream western consciousness, she realized that there were two very different types of seekers who would make use of such knowledge. There were those who would seek it for personal power and selfish benefit, and those who would seek it to attempt to educate and liberate all of humanity. The difference between these paths was transcendence of the personal ego to reach the realm of the Higher Self. This book was an attempt to see that her gift of esoteric knowledge would not be passed unquestioned and unchallenged to those who were not fit to receive it.

The first thing that strikes the reader familiar with _Isis Unveiled_ and _The Secret Doctrine_ is the Buddhist emphasis of this volume. While it is based on the same archaic sources as the other works (some of which are pre-Buddhist in origin) it is the true Buddhist path of the heart that clearly shines through again and again. In fact, you have the admonishment: "But even ignorance is better than Head-learning, with no Soul-wisdom to illuminate and guide it." The Soul-wisdom is clearly present here on every page. This depth of understanding of the highest form of Buddhist thought is indeed remarkable for a book written in the 1880's by a westerner. In writing this book the Madam ensured that the spirit of true enlightenment would forever be welded to the Theosophical movement.

This particular edition is a verbatim copy of the original of 1889. As carefully as Madam Blavatsky chose her words, it would be unthinkable to edit them to be more "accessible" to a modern audience. If the reader has difficulty with the technical Sanskrit terms there are detailed glossaries included for all three sections.

The Verb of the Logos
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2003-05-29
This book is an authentic treatise about the many stages upon the ancient, universal initiatic path into the mysteries.
His Holiness the Dalai Lama recommends this arcane book on the back cover of the book itself.
This book can be easily misunderstood or not understood at all. What one needs is the keys of the path, the factors of the revolution of the consciousness. Otherwise, how can we listen to the "VOICE OF THE SILENCE". It is the Voice, the Verb, the LOGOS, the supra-Monad... We need the steps in order to do the "Will of the Father", here, as it is in heaven.
We must read and re-read and meditate on this book. It is profound, exact and terribly magical!
gnosticinstitute.org

George
The Waiting Room
Published in Paperback by Xulon Press (2005-01-20)
Author: Carrie George
List price: $13.99
New price: $6.99
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Average review score:

Never Alone
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-04-25
This book "The Waiting Room" humbles me, it's not all about the "woe is me" factor. We all go through "difficult" times; each in our own way; feeling it can't get any worse, but we forget other people could be going through something much worse. The great thing about this book is that it tells us God is always with us in our own "waiting room". Not to look at the difficulty but look towards Christ and in doing that we become sensitive to God's heart; which is giving "HOPE" to others in hopeless situations.

Awesome!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-04-15
This book is an awesome display of faith. It makes my trials seem trivial in comparison. Reading this book will increase anyone's faith and minister to the spirit. Several members of my family and church have purchased and read "The Waiting Room" and all have been blessed by the experience. Thanks Carrie for a labor of love!!

A UNIQUELY POWERFUL INSPIRATIONAL BOOK
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-04-15
Once I began to read this wonderful book about faith and trust in God, I literally could not put it down until I had read every word. It was gripping and compelling from the first page to the last. The author's absolutely fascinating story is told in an extremely personal and highly readable style. This is a very special inspirational work which I highly recommend!

A must read!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-04-10
I had never thought before about the "waiting rooms" that we all eventually encounter in life, those situations where we must rest and wait. After reading "The Waiting Room" however, I have become more aware of how God indeed is working in these circumstances and how it is in the waiting room where we are changed and molded into his likeness. Carrie George bravely shares her very personal experiences in waiting rooms, both literally (hospital settings) and figuratively (those waiting places we experience). It is very encouraging to actually see how God worked in situations which on the surface would appear quite bleak, but which in reality were filled with his presence. "The Waiting Room" is inspiring and increased my faith tremendously as Ms. George, with honesty and openness, told of God's wonderous works in her family's waiting rooms. I highly recommend it.

Inspirational
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-04-17
The Waiting Room is a guidebook for every wife and mother. An inspirational look at dealing with, and overcoming hardship. I was personally really blessed in my relationship with my kids and husband after reading this.

George
Woodbine Red Leader: A P-51 Mustang Ace in the Mediterranean Theater
Published in Mass Market Paperback by Presidio Press (2003-07-01)
Author: George Loving
List price: $7.99
New price: $4.14
Used price: $0.49
Collectible price: $10.00

Average review score:

From Homeroom to Homecoming
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2003-09-07
December 7, 1941, Pearl Harbor Day, occurred as George Loving,Jr. and I were hitch-hiking to see our lady friends at Farmville State Teacher's College. We were students at E.C.Glass High School in Lynchburg. That was the first day of the war for us.

As I read his book of experiences in the air over Italy, I felt as though I was right at his side reliving the events and feeling the goose bumps as things became sticky from time to time. I cleaned my plate by reading this saga from cover to cover in a short time, wanting it to go on and on.

Rockstar
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2005-07-08
I'm a very big WWII buff. I can't seem to get enough information on the history of the war. The individual accounts of ground and aerial combat are very riveting. This book is no exception. Awesome! I couldn't put it down.

A look inside the head of Americas WWII fighter pilots
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2003-12-15
The thing that intrigued me most in reading this book was the mindset of these brave men. From their days as cadets till their discharge, the pilots who succeeded had a lust for victory. The matter of fact style of writing conveys this mindset, this "failure is not an option" mentality that made pilots pray nothing would keep them from participating in the next mission. It would be incorrect to say that fear is not addressed here, but it would be totally accurate to say that, in their pursuit of victory, these men were fearless. I could not help thinking, while reading the day-to-day story of becoming a pilot, that I would have wanted to be a cadet too. Mr. Loving doesn't make it sound easy, but he does show that it was an age of heroes, where the workingman could have the chance of becoming a fighter ace. In the end though, it is evident that, just like today, it takes a special breed of men to rise to this level, and many, then as now, washed out. On the lighter side, it was also very refreshing to hear tales of quick pleasure trips to exotic cities and nights out on the town to take the edge off the pressures of combat. All in all, the book gave me a much more realistic impression of what America's fighter pilots went through, alone but together, one plane, but a member of an indomitable force. The drive and adherence to honor and truth are values that stick with you long after the book has been read. A patriotic Thumbs Up!

From Homeroom to Homecoming
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2003-09-06
December 7, 1941, Pearl Harbor Day, occurred as George Loving,Jr. and I were hitch-hiking to see our lady friends at Farmville State Teacher's College. We were students at E.C.Glass High School in Lynchburg. That was the first day of the war for us.

As I read his book of experiences in the air over Italy, I felt as though I was right at his side reliving the events and feeling the goose bumps as things became sticky from time to time. I cleaned my plate by reading this saga from cover to cover in a short time, wanting it to go on and on.

Probably good history but not a lot of action
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2004-11-01
George Loving's memoir of his time as a fighter pilot in the Mediterranean Theater, first in Spitfires and then in the famed P-51 Mustang, ring true. He seems to have kept a meticulous diary during his time in Italy and one gets a good feel for the long periods of dull routine broken up by occasional hot combat. You see how long it could take for a pilot to achieve the status of ace, i.e., the weeks or months needed to shoot down five enemy planes. And you also see how many pilots fell to mechanical problems and bad weather, rather than enemy fire. Unfortunately, while that probably makes for good history, it's not the most compelling reading. Still, one can't help but be amazed at the courage of these pilots, and especially of the bomber pilots they escorted.

George
ADAPTAGENICS: TEN NUTRITIONAL SUPPLEMENTS THAT COULD SAVE YOUR LIFE
Published in Paperback by 1st Books Library (2004-01-29)
Authors: Meredith Tuttle and George Tuttle
List price: $11.45
New price: $4.99
Used price: $1.90

Average review score:

Why take vitamin & mineral supplements?
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-09-29
This book is just more than understanding what vitamin & mineral supplements do. Basic information as to why we all need to take supplements to enhance ones life.

WHAT A SURPRISE!!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-06-29
My sister sent me this book for my birthday. She heard the Tuttle's speak at a book signing and bought at least ten copies to distribute throughout our family. I have to admit,initially I did not think I would enjoy the book. I mean, I'm young, healthy--What do I need with a book like this?
Was I wrong! I do need a book like this. First off, I am a college graduate, gainfully employed but without any healthcare. Not one scrap of it. Every visit to a doctor is strictly out of pocket. So you can probably guess that I do not get to the doc's too often. This book explained to me how to help prevent visits to the doc's--nutrition, nutrition, nutrition!!
This book gave me a simple, complete guide how to protect my health; how to minimize the effects of stress in my life. Let's face it,like too many men and women in my generation, I just cannot afford to get sick! It's as simple as that!
My sister tells me there's a second book by the Tuttle's due out soon. Well, they have at least one advanced order.

Adaptagenics is an informative guide to wellness
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2004-10-31
As a talk radio host, I had the pleasure to meet Meredith and George Tuttle when they were my guests on Thenewtalkofthetown.com A.M. 1570 WANR "Life with Lori!" (airs 3 -4 p.m. weekdays. ) I had read my copy of Adaptagenics prior to the show, and found it to be a wonderful guide to staying well and fending off free radicals and toxins, which cause most cancers. The wellness model is a preventative guide to fight diseases, which we should all live by instead of waiting to live with the sickness model, and deal with how to correct or try to cure an illness or disease once it has invaded our system. I highly recommend Adaptagenics for everyone to read and follow the ten nutritional supplements suggested to obtain the full benefits thereof. I have purchased 5 books thus far and given them as gifts. Christmas is coming and this would make a fantastic gift for those you care about, especially if they are taking a statin drug for cholesterol. I thank the Tuttles for their time and expertise in writing this book and I am looking forward to their next 2 books in the making!
Lori DePaul

My VA Man!
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2004-07-17
I'm a Vietnam Vet and like a lot of my fellow vets, my health is not so good. I depend on the VA Hospital system for all of my health care, including my prescriptions. Over the years I've come to trust my VA pharmacist (my VA MAN) MUCH MORE than the docs. MY VA MAN, it just so happens, is the co-author of this book! And on more than one occasion he has helped me out. In all my years going to the PITT VA, this man has never failed to tell me the truth about the meds I take--side effects, drug interactions, you name it and he knows it! SO you can pretty much guess that when I found out that him and his daughter wrote a book I was the first in line to buy it! And boy am I glad I did! Mr. Tuttle is always warning me that the meds I take remove vitamins from my body and in this book he explains HOW, WHY AND WHAT I CAN DO ABOUT IT.

No doctor has ever told me that I needed to take CO-Q beacuse I also take Zocor. And no doctor has ever told my wife about flaxseed for degenerative joint disease. And no doctor has ever asked me about my Agent Orange exposure. It wasn't until I read ADAPTAGENICS and found out my IF number that I finally understood the toll Agent Orange, etc. has had on my health. My wife used to be a hairdresser and until we did her IF number we had no idea about what her chemical exposure has been and how it has affected her health. This book has made believers out of me and my wife--the day I finished reading this book is the day we started buying vitamins and herbals.We haven't looked back since!
EVERYONE SHOULD KNOW WHAT'S IN THIS BOOK! (including the VA docs)

Adaptagenics
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2004-06-13
As an avid health nut and concerned father I found this book to be of invaluable use to me and my family. Not only does it set forth an easy to understand nutritional gameplan for heathly living it provides insight into the environmental dangers challenging us as consumers everyday. While there are a lot of nutritional supplement books on the market today, (I should know-I've read a ton), I am unable to name another that so succintly communicates the totality of healthy living like Adaptagenics. This book also reassured me about my decisions concerning my children's health, like my hesitance to allow them to buy their lunches in the school's cafeteria. Adaptagenics is a must for any concerned parent or conscientious consumer.

George
The Adventures of Colonel Bob B. Beagle US Army Canine Corp: The Adventures of Colonel Bob
Published in Hardcover by 1st Books Library (2004-02-24)
Author: George J Strnad
List price: $21.95
New price: $19.68
Used price: $18.70

Average review score:

There is much wisdom displayed by this creature
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2004-05-06
This is a straightforward book about an attitude that just won't go away. Nohing succeds like persistance and Colonel Bob is persistant. Easy reading and a lot of fun. The author captures something that makes you admire the methods used by this little dog. I strongly reccomeend this book if you want to feel good. Much like the book "The Five People You Meet In Heaven." it's a feel good book.

Nothing succeeds like persistance, and thats Colonel Bob.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2004-05-02
A combination of sensitivity, ambition and an unyielding belief in success is this authors description of Colonel Bob B Beagle. In some ways it remind me of the best seller " Life of Pi. Personal beliefs and attitudes change with time and experience. Journey through life with this little dog and you will laugh until it hurts.

Only a fur person could have done all these things.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2004-04-11
Colonel Bob Beagle reminds me of many people I have had the pleasure of meeting. Colonel Bobs resolve and determination is truly inspiring. The thought process this dog uses is greater than many of the professors I have had in college.

It amazing how quickly and easily my children read this book. They enjoyed Colonel Bob's Adventures so much they begged me to take them to the bookstore to find another book like this.

I have since purchased several of the paperback copies and given them to the secondary school in my neighborhood. I have received many calls from the teachers telling me how much the children enjoyed the book.

If nothig else buy it, read it and give to the school of your choice so the children can laugh at the antics of this ego enlfated dog.

Only a beagle could have this kind of attitude.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2004-03-22
Finally a book that can be read to kids of all ages. Clean, fun and appealing. The author must be a grandfather with lots of experience because it was obviously done for love and nothing else. Bravo to the author.

If you don't read this book you are cheating yourself out of great reading pleasure. Great at any price.

I laughed until I cried
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2004-03-17
An absolute pleasure to laugh through an entire book. The humor displayed and the arrogance of this little dog can only be summed up as WOW.. Children of all ages will enjoy this book and, hope like me more will be forthcoming. Having served in the military for over 30 years I understand why the little guy is paranoid. My grandchildren wouldn't let me put the book down until I read the whole thing to them. They wanted me to read it again. Great book. The laughs are worth every penny spent buying this book.


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