Gilbert Books
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OK - I admit it. I'm a self-help book junkie. Review Date: 2006-06-02
ONE WORDReview Date: 2005-11-21
Success Bound is TerrificReview Date: 2006-02-12
To fail is to be human - to succeed with failure is divine.Review Date: 2005-04-18
The only other book I have read on the subject of using failure to gain success is in John Maxwell's book. "Failing Forward." I keep this book by my bed. In "Success Bound," there are many personal stories from the author that are heartwarming and come from a genuine place of experience and knowledge. The book is filled with advice and excerpts from people like Napoleon Hill, Bill Cosby, Anthony Robbins, and John Maxwell, just to name a few.
In the bible, King Solomon asked for wisdom. Randy Gilbert has so many inspirational and wonderfully wise quotes from the bible, that he must be following in King Solomon's footsteps. Rkandy's integrity and humbleness in achieving human success on this planet is a true indication of a capable leader. He gives credit where credit is due. "Work to rid yourself of the feeling of having to be perfect when you launch into a project. This type of fear will drive you away from those who want to help you accomplish your goals." This statement speaks volumes to the reader, just as many of the lessons in this wonderful book speak to you on the journey to success. I will keep a copy of this book by my nightstand for the times I feel that insatiable need to be perfect, which makes me limit myself in the process.
The end of the book is about freedom to live and to love. There is even a bonus section at the end of the book that is priceless and gives me faith, not just in this book and its words, but also in Randy Gilbert's character. I am motivated to pass this book on to others and to follow the steps of this great leader in our world today!
Nicole Biggs, Author of "The Single Mothers Journey to Wholeness"
A Smooth Sea Never Made a Skillful MarinerReview Date: 2008-04-16
The book is broken into four parts; (1) Rainbows After the Rain addresses the problem so many people have of giving up too soon. They encounter failure a few times and pin the label on themselves rather than on the action plan they used. These first five chapters teach the reader how to overcome this failure mentality. (2.) Wisdom for Young and Old focuses on learning from failures, both yours and the failures of others. Here we begin examining some of the natural laws dealing with success and failure such as the Law of Cause and Effect. (3) Shatter the Glass Ceiling instructs readers on how to overcome self-imposed restrictions we place on ourselves. There is a good bit of detail here on overcoming fear of failure. (4) Free to Live and Love covers familial relationships, both spousal and parenting. This section alone is worth the price of this book.
Society today says it's wrong to keep score in children's games. Gilbert correctly illustrates how this type of political correctness is condemning a generation to life of mediocrity because they never learn how to fail. If you never learn how to fail, you will never learn how to succeed. Gilbert encourages parents to allow their children to fail and he does so in a constructive manor that reminds parents to always show love and support regardless of the result. These chapters alone make this a great book for parents.
There is a ton of information packed into 200-pages. I also love the quotes scattered throughout the book. This is one of the best success focused books you ever read. I did have one disappointment. Gilbert mentions in the book that he had at least two other books in progress, but I have been unable to find any indication that they ever went to print. He does have several books available that are business interviews that he apparently did in a radio show format. I have never read any of these, but they could be worth a look.

Used price: $35.00

InvaluableReview Date: 2007-02-21
Is there going to be a 2007 version?
ExcellentReview Date: 2007-01-05
Highly OverratedReview Date: 2004-04-21
Kudos to the AuthorsReview Date: 2004-04-15
The ShellBrowse functions alone to be extremely helpful.
Thanks to Ken, Paul, and Mike
Paid for themselves in a dayReview Date: 2003-10-01

Still the best Review Date: 2005-09-13
The texts of the plays are well foot-noted and the type is easy on the eyes. Well worth the investment.
Almost the best complete Shakespeare CollectionReview Date: 2004-10-21
A dissenting opinion...Review Date: 2008-01-15
"Re-writing Shakespeare is nothing new. The Nahum Tate version of King Lear--with the happy ending--held the stage for nearly a century and a half. The great actors of the romantic age, Kean and Booth and Macready, not only spotlighted the heroes in the tragedies but felt free to beef up their roles. Directors began more than 50 years ago to monkey with the historical settings of the play, often with imaginative and instructive results. Scholars, critics, and directors have ridden various hobbyhorses through the plays for years, introducing us to Freudian Hamlets and Marxist King Lears and feminist Tamings of the Shrew.
"Recent Shakespeare production and scholarship, however, add a perverse twist to this long tradition. We no longer care what the Bard actually wrote. Years of deconstructionist theorizing have taught us that words are needy and we, readers or actors or scholars, have the right, indeed the obligation, to give them the gift of meaning--our meaning, the more bizarre the better.
"For the 23 years that I've taught Shakespeare at the United States Naval Academy, I have always used the same text, The Complete Works of Shakespeare, edited by David Bevington of the University of Chicago. Professor Bevington is an old-school scholar with a distinguished career. The book he edited had many advantages: large print, full character names before each speech, specific indications of settings, modernized spellings, solid introductions that connected the plays to the students' experience of love and politics, morality and order, passion and faith, and comprehensive but not overwhelming notes. Every few years a new edition would appear, and I would open it with interest and a little apprehension. But the changes would be minor--thinner paper (approaching the substance of tissue, a malady afflicting many recent books), hints here and there of encroaching academic perversity in the notes--nothing sufficient to make me seek another text. The 4th edition's introduction to The Tempest caused me to swallow hard: We learn there that Prospero's authority "is problematic to us because he seems so patriarchal, colonialist, even sexist and racist in his arrogating to himself the right and responsibility to control others in the name of Western and Christian values." But this is an imperfect world, and I soldiered on.
"Notified that a 5th Edition would appear this fall, I took time to examine it closely. Many of the introductions remain the same; but new editors and commentators have significantly altered others. Despite the myth of progress that reigns in all the disciplines of modern academia, "new" is often far from "improved." Apparently, Professor Bevington has either ignored the changes or allowed the young scholar-colts to have a romp. In some of the new introductory essays, especially under the guise of new brief histories of stage performance, questionable judgment, to put it mildly, has crept in. For example, the introduction to Othello ends with the following observation:
'In another recent development, Emilia has stood out in several productions as the raissoneur and heroic figure in the play, speaking as she does on behalf of maltreated women, urging Desdemona to stand up for her rights. One recent Chicago production went so far as to rewrite the ending: Othello and Iago both survive unpunished for what they have done, while Desdemona and Emilia lie dead as their innocent victims. This deliberate and provocative overstatement might seem extreme to some viewers, but unquestionably did signal the direction of recent performance history of the profoundly disturbing play.'
"It may be time to stop buying tickets to that great play.
"The current obsession in academia is "queer theory," and the homoerotic is everywhere, not just in Shakespeare studies. But this particular perversity fills the introductions to the new Bevington, especially the introductions to the comedies. Compare the following passages, the first from the introduction to As You Like It in the 4th Edition, essentially a carry-over from earlier editions:
'Rosalind's disguise name, Ganymede, taken from Jove's amorous cupbearer, has homoerotic connotations that are easily misinterpreted today. Shakespeare delicately acknowledges the suggestion, to be sure, both in Phoebe's pursuit of a young lady (but really a boy actor) in male attire, and in Orlando's courtship of "Ganymede" as though addressed to Rosalind. Yet this innocent titillation, found also in Shakespeare's source, is not meant to hint at homosexual attraction as we understand it. On the contrary, the point is that Orlando can speak frankly and personally to "Ganymede" as to a perfect friend, one to whom he can relate in platonically spiritual terms without the distracting note of sexual interest.'
"These are eminently sane and sensible remarks. Now from the Introduction to As You Like It in the 5th Edition:
'Rosalind's disguise name, Ganymede, has connotations that suggest ways in which human sexuality can be partly understood as socially constructed. If Rosalind in disguise as Ganymede wins the affection and eventually the love of Orlando, while her father and the others are equally taken in by the disguise, are maleness and femaleness chiefly matters of sartorial convention and superficial appearance? When Phoebe falls in love with Ganymede, is not her infatuation a way of showing that the roles of the sexes can be put on and off? Theatrically, the device of having a young male actor play Rosalind who then disguises him/herself as a young man adds to the witty confusion of sexual identities by introducing homoerotic possibilities. Not only can the roles of the sexes be put on and off, sexual desire itself is unstable...'
"This is ideology masquerading as interpretation.
"To be sure, the range of possible interpretations of Shakespeare's work is wide, for he encompasses all of humanity and tells profound and mysterious truths about human life. Such inexhaustible expansiveness invites discussion and dispute and differences. At the end of the Introduction to Richard II in this volume, for example, there is a brief but superb account of various interpretations of that rich role by leading actors. Professor Charles Forker of Indiana University provides that account; another old-school scholar, he knows more about that play than any other living soul. Too many of the revised introductions, however, are more interested in advancing the latest academic-political orthodoxy than in discovering and illuminating the natural and conventional moral order so abundantly on display in Shakespeare's works. Nothing is more orthodox--still--among contemporary literary critics than the alleged truth that there is no truth, that all interpretations are valid except the author's own.
"Thus Puck in A Midsummer Night's Dream can be presented as "the denizen of a drug culture, with the love potion as the weed he gleefully distributes. The experience of the forest becomes a drug-induced 'high,' for audiences as for the actors. The fairies, sometimes played by adult and hairy males, can exhibit a streak of cruelty." And, indeed, in a recent production at the Shakespeare Theater in Washington, D.C., the fairies were hairy males who carried something like miners' lights. So much for lightness and charm and magic. This same Dream introduction gives the game away in words that are echoed in many of the other essays: "These modern interpretations are arguably neither more nor less 'true' to Shakespeare's text than earlier or more 'traditional' versions. What they do demonstrate is the play's remarkable permeability and openness to differing views."
"The new Bevington retails for $90; in good conscience, I cannot ask students to fork over such a sum of cash for a book that is now rife with nonsense. So next fall I'll assign The Riverside Shakespeare, which fortunately is still in its 2nd edition. I fervently hope it is not soon updated.
"Of course, the Bevington volume has come to reflect the universities it serves, where young students pay small fortunes to be taught that there is no enduring meaning or beauty to be found in the poetry of Shakespeare, no tradition worth preserving, no "truth" other than personal whim and innovative foolery. If the price of the new Bevington is petty theft, the tuitions charged by these institutions have become, at least for the study of the humanities, highway robbery.
"I know a father who gave his son the equivalent of a year's tuition and told the lad to go to Europe, to travel, to observe, to learn for as long as the money would hold out. The young man came back after two-and-a-half years, mature and educated, and instantly found a good job. The time has come for imaginative, alternative learning. I talked recently with a very intelligent young woman who loves literature; she is completing her sophomore year at Yale, where she had hoped to pursue an English Literature major. She informed me with sorrow that she was abandoning that plan. Her reason was quite simple: she had already sat through too many classes where lunacy prevailed. She mentioned the possibility of looking at traditional Catholic convents. Could this be the first refreshing drop of a wave of the future? It would not be the first time that civilization was preserved in the convents and the monasteries. Nymph, in thy orisons, be all of Academia's sins remembered."
(Allen, David White, "An Unweeded Garden," The Claremont Institute, http://claremont.org/publications/crb/id.959/article_detail.asp [originally published March 22, 2004])
I guess it's safe to say that, based on his review, Professor Allen'd give this edition 1 star...right?
Bevington's Fifth Edition of Shakespeare is outstandingReview Date: 2007-03-18
This volume has a lot to offer to both students and casual readers. In addition to very readable text of all the plays and sonnets, the fifth edition provides historical and literary context, including drawings and photos, as well as insightful essays on each of the plays. The essays include background, plot summaries and discussion of major themes and would be very useful to anyone seeing a play, especially for the first time. The helpful glossary is extensive, so the reader doesn't have to look up unfamiliar words or feel intimidated by the language. Professor Bevington's fifth edition of the Complete Works is a gem, authoritative and attractive. The birthday girl thinks so, too-- she gives it an A+.
Shakespeare Complete Review Date: 2005-02-18

Best Loved DollReview Date: 2008-01-11
Excellent timeless book highly recommendedReview Date: 2007-10-05
What a memory!Review Date: 2007-06-11
Best Loved BookReview Date: 2007-01-13
A story that stays with you....Review Date: 2006-07-18


Gripping War Novel Not for the Feint of HeartReview Date: 2008-02-23
Michael P. Gilbert writes with such authority that the book's details ring absolutely true. His descriptions paint a vivid picture of war-torn Iraq; I felt as if it was me out there sweating in the desert heat, my heart pounding with fear. Gilbert also knows how to write solid action scenes and realistic dialogue. Thus, the story is already gripping, despite the fact that an actual plot has yet to emerge.
Giving Shelter is not for the feint of heart - it's honest and angry, so the language and details are unsparing. For this reason alone, I wouldn't finish reading it, but I'm sure fans of war fiction will devour it completely.
Honest View.Review Date: 2008-02-18
Knowing someone who has been to Iraq twice now, I can say the author does a great job in describing the emotions and experiences faced by our troops.
The writing is clear, crisp, and at times very poetic. The characters are well drawn.
I really enjoyed this piece and look forward to reading the rest when it's published.
Beautifully writtenReview Date: 2008-02-19
With respect, I completely disagree with this comment. Gilbert's writing is beautiful! Like the waves he describes in the opening scene the sentences rise and fall with a comforting rhythm. Sometimes they are long and full of intelligent and wonderful words. Then they are short and philosophical. And then suddenly they come at you like bullets - full of curses and exclamation points. This is writing that evokes the action of the scene.
As a fellow top 100 semi-finalist I can say without reservation that if Gilbert's manuscript is consistent with this excerpt it deserves to go even further in this competition.
Riding the wavesReview Date: 2008-02-20
And--what was the war really about? They didn't find the weapons of mass destruction that sent them into Iraq. And he's angry about that--angry because bad intelligence cost soldiers' lives:
"But what really ### me off was that every one of us had to hump extra gear because they got it wrong. Had to wear layers of protective clothing and sweat more, and in that ### desert more than a few of us went down as heat casualties because of it."
What the war was really about--for him, and for others in his platoon was 'giving shelter':
"The men from that village walked into the night for one reason, for shelter. That's right, it's that simple. Shelter. Not their own, they were like you-unselfish-but shelter for the ones they loved...."
He and the Marines in his platoon fought for the Iraqis shelter and for that of the American people as well. A good sound reason and one the whole Marine platoon could call out a healthy "OORAH" when their CO gave them the pep talk.
Yes, this is a fictional account, but Michael P. Gilbert really does have a Marine voice down solid. His guy's a decent person, the kind of person who'd lay his life down to 'give shelter' for strangers and for the people he cared about, too.
The excerpt is well-written and well worth a read. The only nit this reviewer could pick is sound 'bytes'. Congratulations to Mr. Gilbert on his ABNA Top 100 and I wish him much success with his future.
Life's a beachReview Date: 2008-02-19
This excerpt tells the story of a surfer dude who joins the Marines, survives boot camp, and then gets sent to Iraq via Kuwait.
The rather irreverent Marine shares his experiences of wearing ill-advised, ill-fitting, heavy and ugly protective clothing while dodging snipers and making like a sardine in the cast-iron interior of their transport vehicles.
From rousing speeches to invisible weapons of mass destruction, this story, although fictional, feels real enough for the sand to seep through the pages.
I'd be very interested in seeing how this one ends. Rated: 4.5 stars
Note: This review is based on the excerpt submitted for the Amazon
Breakthrough Novel Award, and awarded a place in the Top 100.
Amanda Richards, February 19, 2008

Used price: $4.99

TouchPoint Bible ReviewReview Date: 2008-05-15
Wonderful guide!!Review Date: 2008-02-03
Fantastic translationReview Date: 2007-12-08
Reads like a Novel...."A Real Page-Turner!" Review Date: 2007-10-06
I purchased one from Guideposts and was surprised and pleased, to find it on Amazon.com! I want to give a copy, to each of my families, for Christmas. It's written in a way which is understandable for all ages and I believe it will be the version, most likely to be read on a regular basis, by all of them.
It is riveting and hard to put down!
Each of the books of this Bible, is prefaced by an interesting introduction, putting it into perspective, telling something about the author, etc.; establishing the timeline and historical backdrop, for the characters portrayed. Each book of the Bible is a little novella in itself, which can be picked up and read alone; or, as a running narrative, in context with the other books. I would recommend this Bible, to anyone. Either as a lst read, or quick reference, or a stand-alone Bible, it can fill the need for all these purposes and more.
I am just so favorably impressed, it's difficult to express. It may be one of those things, which has to be experienced, to be believed...and even better, yet, than that. If you've never, before, been able to understand the Bible; when you read this one, you will finally, definately, "Get It".
I'm getting another one for myself, as a spare...I don't ever want to be without it, again.
It's THAT Good.
Can't put it downReview Date: 2007-05-26
Collectible price: $35.00

Love it!Review Date: 2005-07-05
The only drawback to my book: it was the English translation; not the American one.
John
Don Camillo's Little World is MagicalReview Date: 2004-01-15
The line drawings of the angel Don Camillo and the devil Peppone are, of course, priceless. Simple and to the point, they are the icing on the Don Camillo cake, and probably the reason why I draw cartoons on everything from greeting cards to my books on China--Amoy Magic, Fujian Adventure, Mystic Quanzhou, deng deng (which is Chinese for "etcetera"). I highly recommend not only Little World but all of the Don Camillo books in print.
A little piece of the world . . .Review Date: 2008-03-15
The story format is short tales in the ongoing feud between village priest Don Camillo and communist mayor Peppone. One of them often ends up bruised (literally or figuratively). At first blush it would seem like a good vs evil scenario, but really they are very much alike, and secretly sympathize with (even love)one another. Each struggles through life's choices from the perspective of his own situation.
One of the best parts, for me, is that each battle-du-jour includes Camillo's "consultation" with and reception of "advice" from the Christ image at the church altar. Rich stuff. Of course the image is not really speaking, and this technique is the author's metaphor for the working of the Holy Spirit in Camillo (or "his conscience", depending on your own theological perspective).
The theme runs throughout the book. Each chapter in pretty much a stand-alone story, although a few chapters are coupled, dealing with an ongoing incident. An entertaining little read that is a superior choice to those "thought-for-the-day" motivational/religious pamphlets. I read mine a chapter at a time when going to bed for the night. It gave me a truth to ponder as I dropped off . . . zzzzzzzz. Or maybe install a copy in your bathroom book rack. This book is very Italian and very Catholic . . . but you needn't be either to enjoy it (I'm not).
What a Find!!Review Date: 2002-07-12
A Masterpiece of Humor and FaithReview Date: 2002-03-13

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courageous and insightfulReview Date: 2007-04-03
A Real Eye Opener!Review Date: 2008-03-07
Dr. Welch explains brilliantly, in my opinion, what these cancer screenings really mean. He argues that we are taking healthy symptom-free individuals and looking for cancer.
What most people do not know and I did not before reading his book is that:
1-There is no evidence that these screenings have actually saved lives. In fact despite increased detection of early stages of prostate cancer and breast cancer, the death rate for prostate cancer has stayed the same and the rate of late stage breast cancer has increased over a 25 year period.
2-Autopsies of people who have NOT died from cancer have shown cancer in the lungs, thyroid, kidney, etc. This means millions of people are living with cancer and die of other causes and not even know they had cancer.
3-If the screening finds cancer, it does not necessarily mean that it is the type that will grow rapidly.
a-It could regress on its own as our immune system eliminated abnormal cells, including cancers regularly.
b-It may stay the same for many years and never cause a problem
c-It may grow so slowly that cause no health problems and the person dies of something else before it does
4-Studies conducted by John Hopkins, Harvard, and others have shown that different pathologist give different diagnosis for the same tissues. They may look at the same tissue and some think it is cancer while others think it is not. Especially when it comes to the a few abnormal tissues found from screening a healthy individual.
5-Also between screenings it is possible to develop a fast growing cancer. So how often do we need to do mammograms and colonoscopies?
6-The statistics, such as the five year survival rate, are not always reliable and maybe calculated in a misleading manner.
So you have a mammogram, PSA test, colonoscopy, fecal occult test, etc done. This is what may happen:
1-You end up with a false positive, depending on the test, 10 percent false positive is the average.
2-You get the cancer scare unnecessarily.
3-This can begin a cycle of retesting, biopsies and other tests. Some can be very unpleasant and have side effects.
4-If they find an abnormal tissue, what does it mean it mean? May the pathologist made a mistake; maybe it has been there for many years; maybe it is a slow growing one; maybe it will go away on its own; maybe it is a fast growing one! Of course, your doctor can't take a chance with your health, and also does not want to get sued for malpractice, so most likely she recommends the most safest (which could be the most aggressive) course of action!
Here you were living a relatively healthy symptom-free life and now you are told you need surgery, radiation, and/or chemotherapy.
BUT once you or I know about they have found cancer, it is hard to know what to do, not to speak of the emotional toll. That's why Dr. Welch believes sometimes it is better not to know. However, as Dr. Welch cautions: If you have any unusual symptoms and your doctor recommends screening for cancer, make sure you are screened.
After reading the book I decided I do not need any screening. As long as I am symptom free and healthy, why put myself through tests that may or may not extend or save my life. I think as long as we don't do anything to harm our immune system, such as smoking, and do the things that enhance the immune system, such as exercise, there is no need to become a patient.
We all need to make the decision for cancer screening based on our priorities, family history of cancer, and other factors. Perhaps a good course of action is to read the book and consult your doctor for best options.
Thank you Dr.Welch for an excellent expose: Well researched and well written.
Cancer screening probably does more harm than goodReview Date: 2007-09-28
The main justification for cancer screening is the belief that a cancer caught early is not lethal. The problem is that a lethal cancer is in general not caught early. A lethal cancer is usually very aggressive and by screening time it has already spread (unless as Welch points out you are willing to be screened every other day...).
What screening is very good at is catch cancers (and Welch explains that the definition of cancer is not clear cut) that are growing slowly if at all and will probably never kill you... Have you noticed the epidemic of breast cancers or is it just me?
The only thing missing from the book is the broader implication of generalizing cancer screening. By devoting so much money to an irrational health policy the general population is deprived of many services that could really impact its health and improve the sorry health statistics of the United States.
A different idea about cancer testingReview Date: 2007-05-26
Buy this today!Review Date: 2007-04-08
Of particular importance to this 53 year old woman is his detailed analysis of mammography and breast cancer. He completely debunks the hysterical coercion of women to have this test, and points out why declining to have one is a completely reasonable decision. This is of particular importance now in light of Elizabeth Edwards doing public penance for "letting down" the country and her family by skipping a mammogram! Elizabeth, honey, read this book! It is doubtful that mammography would have made any difference in your outcome.
Welch's dicsussion of DCIS, which is probably the most horribly overtreated fake "disease" in the history of modern medicine should be required reading for every woman over the age of 20.
Just buy it - I plan to give a copy to every person I love. It's that good.

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Recommended with reservationsReview Date: 2006-03-11
This book is . . . nice. Not especially challenging, thought provoking, or whatnot, but nice. I like history, don't mind the religious undertone, good times had by all. Morris is a Christian author, but I've found that his stuff is generally not the `religion shoved down your throat repeatedly" variety, and since I'm a sucker for the nice romantic stories it's a win-win situation. So I would recommend it with reservations
Don't Start Unless You Wanna Be Hooked for LifeReview Date: 2006-03-02
Gilbert Winslow sets out to spy on the Puritans, loses his heart and more to a Puritan and becomes a better man for it.
misinformationReview Date: 2000-06-01
This is a great book...Review Date: 2003-05-18
Must Read for History Buffs!Review Date: 2000-03-27

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"The Boys"ΓΏReview Date: 1999-12-07
a must readReview Date: 2000-06-20
But as with all Holocaust stories, if these fortunate, brave and lucky souls, could have survived and lived to tell the horrors that still invade their minds, the least I owe them and especially those that perished, is that I should read the account.
Inspiring, very well written, and everlasting impact.
NeighborsReview Date: 2001-07-24
Martin provides two statistics I find particularly haunting. While 6 million Jews died in the Holocaust--including victims of pre-war pogroms, ghettos, concentration and death camps and death marches--only 100,000 survived the camps. And while Britain agreed to take in 1,000 Jewish "children" under the age of 16 after the war, only 732 could be found alive.
But for me, the most fascinating part of the book is the repeated confirmation that those who returned to their homes after the war found the same kind of murderous hatred among their former neighbors as Jan Tomasz Gross describes in Neighbors.
In other words, Jedwabne was not unique. Gross has himself said as much and plans to write more on the subject. But Gilbert also confirms that murders of Jews by locals happened during the war all over Poland, Lithuania and Latvia, and to a lesser extent, in Hungary. It also happened after the war all over Europe--especially in the East. Returning Jews found neighbors who wished them dead, and in thousands of cases killed them. The "boys", obviously, survived. But many lost brothers, parents, friends, after the war, in Poland, Hungary, and elsewhere. Sir Martin Gilbert gives us the living proof. Alyssa A. Lappen
Important testament to holocaust remembranceReview Date: 2006-03-08
These young people-both boys and girls-where settled in Britain after World War II , some stayed and made lives in Britain , while others immigrated to the USA , Australia , Canada and Israel.
Some of the boys made their mark in the Israel War of Independence defending the fledgling Jewish State after it was attacked by five Arab armies , aiming to anihilate all Jews in Israel (as the Arabs and anti-Zionists of the world aim for today i.e a second holocaust.)
Part of the book consists of harrowing eyewitness accounts of the survivors , hence an important testament to holocaust remembrance. The accounts are often graphic and bring the grim reality of what happened to the Jewish people during world War II to bear on us.
It is important to remember the holocaust again , at times when some , like Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and others , deny it's existance.
It is important to remember the holocaust , at a time when the Islamic world and their far-left allies wish to destroy Israel , the phoenix that arose from the ashes of the Jewish people , and subject the Jews of Israel to a second holocaust.
It is interesting to see how for most of the survivors Israel and Zionism where an important part of their consciousness.
Anti-Zionist propaganda aims to prepare for genocide of Jews , in the same way as Nazi propaganda did , and therefore all Anti-Zionist and anti-Israel propaganda should be treated the same as Nazism-with no tolerance.
Most holocaust survivors and their descendants today live in Israel.
The future of the descendants of the survivors needs to be preserved , and therefore Israel must prevail.
That is what we must fight for when we say 'Never Again!'
Senseless hate and murder once again capture our attentionReview Date: 1999-06-11
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Brian E. Walsh PhD, author "Unleashing Your Brilliance"