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

Hill
The Road to Organic Growth
Published in Hardcover by McGraw-Hill (2006-12-13)
Author: Edward D. Hess
List price: $22.95
New price: $9.95
Used price: $5.32

Average review score:

Great for every entrepreneur
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-01
Ed Hess' book helped me a great deal. I own/run a small business that espouses similar values that can be found in this book, but it also taught me that in our quest for growth that some of our priorities have clearly been wrong. As a result of this fine, easy to read book, I feel more confident that our company will be kept firmly on the growth curve.

G.M. Ball
[...]

Back to the Basics
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-28
This is a phenomenal work. This book provides the attributes and tools of what it really means to "grow" a business. Hess brilliantly reveals some of the most fundamental concepts that make a "great" business great. Pages full of evidence and stories about engaged and loyal people, humble servanthood leadership, dynamic client service, and clear and conscise business models will stir entreprenuers as they read this excellent volume.

A must-read for all executives who want to win.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-24
Hess has done it again. The Six Keys to Organic Growth
cuts through traditional leadership thought to show what great organic
growth leaders really do - execute. This book offers terrific insight into
some of the great organic growth companies. The Six Keys to Organic
Growth should be required reading for all young executives and MBA students who want to win.

A Practical Road Map...With Soul
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-23
Ed Hess has written a book with strikingly original research, compelling analysis, and real soul. This is an inspiring, challenging, and practical book for executives, consultants, and other business leaders (present and future) who believe that the best, most satisfying, and most sustainable kind of growth comes from within. For the good of their businesses and people--as well as the larger economy and society--organizations would do well to follow Ed Hess' road to organic growth.

This book is about building a sustainable and successful biz the old-fashioned way - by growing from within.
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-05

A great book! I loved it. It is broken into nine chapters as follows:

1. Why is organic growth important?
2. Discovering the DNA of organic growth.
3. The organic growth winners: Interesting Facts.
4. An elevator-pitch business model.
5. Instill a "small-company soul" into a "big-company body."
6. Measure everything.
7. Build a people pipeline.
8. Leaders: humble, passionate, focused operators.
9. Be an execution and technology champion.

Chapters 4 - 9 are the ingredients to building a company through organic growth. If a biz can be explained in a just a few words while riding up an elevator, then it's leaders/managers can probably focus well on growing the business from within. If a biz is comprised of workers who care about the company instead of just showing up to work and collecting a paycheck, then the business will probably grow from within. The business will probably also have a pipeline of new managers if the employees care about coming to work for reasons other than just collecting a paycheck. These are the types of things discussed in the last six chapters of the book.

Generally speaking, companies either grow through "organic growth" or by "mergers and acquisitions." Many companies grow by using both methods, but the author only discusses the organic growth method in this book. There is talk that growth may take place by playing accounting games and engaging in financial manipulations. However, this really is not a method to create growth. Manipulations are just that - shifts of revenues and expenses from one accounting period to another. If there is gain today via manipulation, then there is going to be a loss next week or next month - guaranteed.

A small company soul is what this book is about. And I really enjoyed reading it. I liked the list of "Growth Questions" at the end of each chapter. They helped pull the chapters together for me. If you are putting together a business plan for a start up company, then I recommend you read this book. You will want to incorporate many of the ideas and concepts discussed here into your business plan and your implementation of your business plan.

I would have liked the book better if the print had not been so large. And since the spine of the book was not all that thick I got the feeling that the book was padded by increasing the font size of the text. The book could have been longer if there had been more examples of real world situations regarding what was being discussed. And I would have liked a chapter comparing organic growth to mergers and acquisitions. To discuss organic growth as the best way to grow a company, and to ignore M&A's as though they were a bad way, just didn't feel right to me. In fact, M&A's are a great way to grow a business. But the book was well-written and informative. 5 stars!

Hill
Rosalie's Guide to Restaurants in the North End of Boston
Published in Paperback by Falcon Hill Press (2001-01)
Author: Rosalie T. Masella
List price: $9.95
New price: $2.47
Used price: $0.10

Average review score:

He loved it!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-10
Gave as stocking stuffer at Christmas. We frequently visit the North End for dinner and this works perfect to keep track of the places we like and to check out new places to eat!

Terrific!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2000-07-21
My parents and I just got home from a trip to Boston and Cape Cod. My big sister had a copy of Rosalie's Guide and we walked around the North End. We found the best lasagna place ever using Rosalie's Guide. I loved Boston and I loved this book. It made our vacation even greater! My pparents said the book was really cool too.

A Perfect Guide for the Business Traveler
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2000-03-07
"Rosalie's Guide" is a terrific resource. I bought the 1999 edition last year during a business trip to Boston and found it extremely helpful. The 2000 edition is even more inciteful, and is packed with suggestions for everything ranging from a casual lunch to a formal meal with clients. I strongly recommend this guide to anyone planning a trip to Boston.

Phil in Northern California
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2000-02-19
"Restaurants in the North End of Boston" is an excellent guide to those out-of-the way places we love to find all by ourselves, but usually don't have the time. Perhaps we can talk her into compiling a similar guide for North Beach in San Francisco. What a treasure this book will be for our next trip to Boston. The restaurants are organized by street and the guide also includes parking information, price ranges, and a map of the area. This guide is a must for anyone who loves to explore new and out of the way places.

Thoughtful, descriptive and highly relevant!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 1999-06-25
A well-written, concise and descriptive pocket guide, Rosalie's Guide is a must for the business traveler and occasional tourist who finds him/herself in the Boston area. Capturing the essence of the very best the North End has to offer - from bakeries to cafes to trattorias - Rosalie's Guide will ensure the very best dining experience! Bon Appetit!

Hill
Scandalous
Published in Paperback by Kensington Pub Corp (Mm) (1995-06)
Author: Donna Hill
List price: $4.99

Average review score:

GOOD TO THE LAST DROP
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2002-06-07
Out of all the books I've read by Donna, so far, this one was my favorite. There was something happening in every page and every chapter. Not a boring moment. I couldn't put the book down.

I highly recommend this for those in lovers.

Cover Up
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2003-04-07
Oh, the price of scandal and to cover it up. For Vaughn Hamilton the price was very high. It cost Vaughn to miss out on her precious child's childhood and all the memories a mother cherishes. It also almost cost Vaughn the love of a man, who would cherish her forever -- Justin Montgomery.

Vaughn's and Justin's love and life saw some rocky times, due mostly to Vaughn's father, who thought he was doing the right thing -- trying to protect Vaughn, her reputation, and her political career. But was this what Vaughn wanted? Were the choices her father made to affect her life, choices that Vaughn would have made on her own? Vaughn's life changed dramatically when she realized that her life was her own and not that of her meddlesome father. Vaughn realized she had to make choices for herself and own up to any past mistakes she had made. The choices Vaughn made would not only affect Vaughn, but also the lives of Justin, her true love, her parents, and that of her unknown child.

Scandalous is a wonderful book from the beginning to the end. After starting to read, the pages magically keep turning as the plot unfolds. Ms. Hill has definitely written another good book and its sequel, A Scandalous Affair, is just as awesome.

Keep up the good work and keep the books coming, Ms. Hill. Love ya!!

Good
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2000-12-05
Vaughn Hamilton was a political wonder. She grew up in the political arena because her father was a judge. All her father ever wanted was for her to make it in the big leagues in politics. Vaughn decided to run for congresswoman. She was running against a despicable man who would do anything to win.

Her parents held a fundraiser in her honor and this is where she meets Justin Montgomery. Justin is instantly taken with Vaughn when he is introduced to her by her father Judge Hamilton.

Vaughn and Justin literally go through the fire. Justin wants to keep no secrets between them, but Vaughn is determined not to let Justin get to close to her.

This was a wonderful story that I have already twice. I re-read it this time to be refreshed for the Sequel Scandalous Affair which I will read next. You can't go wrong with a book written by Donna Hill.

If you like this one make sure you get A Private Affair and Pieces of Dreams.

ROMANCE/INTRIGUE TAKEN TO ANOTHER LEVEL!
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2000-04-23
Ms. Hill is definitely at the top of her game in this suspenseful laden romance novel.

Everytime you think you're read the best from the best,she proves you a liar again. "Poetry in Motion" is the only way to describe the way this author takes her readers along for the ride of their romance lives.

I love a take charge man, and Ms Hill certainly fulfills that need in the character of Justin Montgomery and the straightforward manner he involves himself in the life of the reluctant heroine, Vaughn Hamilton. The many unfortunate romances that Vaugh had previously experienced justifies this reluctance. But oh! how Justin breaks down those barriers of reluctance. And fellow romance readers, Ms. Hill doesn't disappoint her constant fans in the intrigue either. You think you've figured out the ending but then you second guess yourself until you want to just end the suspense and read the ending before finishing what's between. Thank goodness I restrained myself ths time, but the ending is fantastic.

Go out and get the book and enjoy all the emotions which Ms. Hill evokes!

Yes, Scandalous
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2001-05-06
This is the first book that I have read by Donna Hill and after reading it I will definitely read more by her. This story was one of intrigue and while some areas were predictable others were not and were down right Scandalous.

Vaughn and Justin's love affair was one of true love with trust and distrust knocking at the same time. I could feel Vaughn's pain, anguish and confusion, but I could also feel her need for love from Justin. Justin was her knight in shining armor and he truly loved Vaughn. He helped release her pain of the past and taught her how to love again. Reading about Elliot, Vaughn's father, helped this reader understand Vaughn. Vaughn lived her father's dream at the expense of her own. Poppa Elliot was as ruthless as they come and I was totally surprised by his actions. Her mother Sheila, was a typical politician's wife who assisted in keeping secrets at the expense of her daughter's love and devotion.

Donna Hill writes very descriptively and you can see and feel the emotions with every turn of the page. The storyline was great with enough drama to keep your interest until the end. Now I'm ready to begin A Scandalous Affair. I loved this book and it will go down as one of my favorite reads.

Hill
Schaum's Outline of Basic Circuit Analysis
Published in Paperback by McGraw-Hill (1992-01-01)
Author: John O'Malley
List price: $16.95
New price: $7.99
Used price: $5.46

Average review score:

Great, but whats with the units??
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-13
Going to an engineering school, we deal strickly with SI units. For the most part the book deals with them too. But often, it seems like the problems that would be good for me to try, are in inchs and mils and lbs and all the imperical crap.

Now i only gave it 1 star less. Considering most of the engineering world laughs at imperical crap, which i dont blame them.

Besides for that, the rest of the book is pretty good. The lack of explanations could be worked on. (not in the problems, but in the information prior to the questions). I luckily took a physics on electricity before i got this. Which helped me alot, especially when dealing with OhmMeters.


I would by this book if you want to great in your EE classes. But you may want to have someone who can explain some things. Or just do some demensional analysis to figure out why things are the way they are. And resistance and others like that will make sense.

Great Book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-30
If your having trouble with an EE Intro class - this is a good book to get

Great study tool
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-11
Great explanations and fully worked out problems makes it a great study aid

Excellent Textbook Companion
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-10-29
I initially picked up this book to do remediation on my first circuit analysis course, and have continued to use it through the second course. I call the Shaum Series my "secret weapon" for doing well in EE classes (and physics too, actually). The few pages of exposition at the beginning of each chapter are clear, concise, and mostly complete (Electric Circuits by Nahvi is more rigorous), and the problems, half with detailed solutions and half with just answers, are on-topic, perfectly-tailored, and numerous.

If you are taking circuit analysis courses, EE or not, you would be a fool to not have this book in your bag.

Excellent supplement on the topic of circuit analysis
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-06-02
This is an excellent supplement for electrical technology and electrical engineering students taking a first course on circuit analysis. It is a particularly good companion to Boylestad's "Introductory Circuit Analysis", which is a standard circuit analysis text that has insufficient examples on several subjects. This outline starts with the analysis of DC resistive circuits, goes on to AC circuits, and also covers power circuits, transformers, and op-amps. There is a good chapter on complex numbers and phasors, an understanding of which is essential for the study of circuit analysis. There is no need of differential or integral calculus although the book uses derivatives in the chapters on capicitors, inductors, and transformers as needed for voltage-current relations. Even though there is not one integral shown in the book, the outline is still useful to engineers since circuit analysis courses mainly use only algebra.
This book also presents necessary tools such as PSPICE, the computer circuit analysis and simulation program for PC's. SPICE is the standard for analog circuit simulation across the electronics industry, and knowledge of its syntax is essential. The outline also covers the use of advanced scientific calculators in the context of solving actual problems.
Besides being a good source of examples and solved problems, this outline does a pretty good job of outlining the basic theory of circuit analysis. I highly recommend it.

Hill
Schaum's Outline of College Physics, 10th edition (Schaum's Outlines)
Published in Paperback by McGraw-Hill (2005-11-15)
Authors: Frederick J. Bueche and Eugene Hecht
List price: $17.95
New price: $10.48
Used price: $8.08

Average review score:

Terrific review book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-07
I didn't buy the textbook b/c it sucks and it's too expensive. So, I use this book as a reference to learn how to solve College physics (non-calculus based physics), and it helps a lot, esp. for my Online homework. This book is so clear and step-by-step. I would recommend for anyone who is taking College physics

Great supplement
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-01
This is a great supplement to any basic physics course. I really found it useful that it contained several problems with solutions to help you work problems out.

Great Calculus based supplementary book
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-04
Our school uses "Physics for Scientists and Engineers" by Serway and Jewett. The Schaum book of problems teaches some tougher concepts in a less complicated way. It's a "worth-your-time & effort" supplement to any calc-based physics book.

Get this book, study it, and you will be confident in solving physics problems and do well in class!!
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-18
Oh my,I absolutely love this book!! It is by far the most useful supplementary book I've ever used! I had a horrible AP physics teacher and textbook in high school, but this book saved me. The example problems in the book show us almost all the techniques we will ever need to know for introductory physics. It's easy-to-understand, yet sophisticated enough to be useful for college physics. It covers just the right material. I've personally found that in order to do well in physics, one has to be very good at recognizing what strategies are needed for a problem and then knowing how to apply thosee techniques; studying this book helps us with just that.

The way I do it is, for each chapter first I read through the summary (not long; just about a page), then I carefully read through most of the problems, and then put the word "key" next to the few problems that I know I must absolutely internalize because they contain crucial techniques. When tests roll around, I will study those "key" problems and if time allows, the other ones as well. And if you want to do really really well on tests, make sure you take a look at the last few advanced problems as well.

I am in an intro physics course in college right now, and I still find this book useful. This book helped me aced the AP, and is helping me stay in the top portion of my class right now. And, it's helping me appreciate physics more because I have the confidence to tackle problems. It takes some time to get stuff out of it. But if you put the time into it, this book will be soooo helpful to you!! :)

Good supplement
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-22
This book is meant as an aid for a student taking a College Physics course based on Algebra, and not on Calculus. It covers all of the major topics for General Physics I and II, from Classical Physics, including vectors, kinematics, and dynamics all the way through Modern Physics, including Relativity and Nuclear Physics.

As is the case with all of the books of the Schaum's Outline series, this particular volume is a supplement and is not intended to replace your textbook or your professor. It is really meant for someone who has already grappled with the material from a textbook and has some idea of the concepts already. If you are approaching the material for the first time, I would advise you to steer clear of this book until you have approached it from another source. Also, if you are searching for a book with a really qualitative or intuitive approach to Physics, or one with lengthy explanations, I would recommend looking for another book. If you are looking for a supplement that you can read prior to your textbook, or for a supplement that doesn't read like a condensed textbook (as this one does), I would recommend something like Physics for Dummies.

That said, the book is divided up into various short chapters. I like that the chapters are not especially long and that while most conventional textbooks would group them into one giant chapter, this book breaks them down. For example, Coloumb's Law and Capacitance are divided into two chapters. There is a terse run-through of the material pertaining to the concept (usually they are about 1-2 pages long). If you already have tried to read your textbook, this book will probably help you, as it hits the highlights and gives you a better idea of the broad picture, allowing you to integrate your information. There are some helpful figures as well.

While the summary is useful, it does miss out on some details and does not go into proofs of equations, and it does not offer a deep, intuitive break down of the concepts. For example, it may say something in the vein of "the equations of motion are related graphically," but they will not include or explain the graphs in the text. The authors assume that you have a textbook to explain those details. In short, I can see this being particularly useful right before an exam as a quick review, but not as a primary learning source.

After the summary of the concepts, there is a section of worked problems, and a section of supplementary problems that are not worked, but to which answers are provided. The book has a plethora of problems that will test your understanding of the subject matter. The best way to learn Physics is to do problems constantly, and this book really forces you to figure out how to problem solve. The questions range from easy to difficult, and many problems are likely to challenge you.

While the problems are very helpful in reinforcing what you have learned, I do have a few minor issues. Sometimes the explanations of the worked problems can be a little too brief, and can be a little confusing. I would also have liked to see all of the problems worked through (but I do believe Schaum's has a book of 3000 fully worked problems). My biggest problem is with the formatting of the Supplemental Problems, as the editors have placed the answers right next to the questions! It is impossible not to see them. I think they should have put the answers in the back of the book.

I would say that this is an excellent resource for quick brush-ups and for problem solving help. I wish that some of the explanations of the concepts had been a little more detailed, but this is one of the best General Physics aids that I have found. I must stress once again that this book is NOT a replacement for your textbook, and that it is not some sort of shortcut or miracle book. You will have to put in a lot of work to understand Physics, and studying the summaries and problems in this book will certainly give you more confidence, and will allow you to tackle the problems set by your teacher with greater ease. This book has really helped me out.

Thank you for reading my review! Please rate, so I know whether it was of any help to you.

Hill
Self-Liberation Through Seeing With Naked Awareness
Published in Hardcover by Station Hill Press (1998-04)
Author: Namkhai Norbu
List price: $29.95

Average review score:

Great Instruction.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-12-21
There are multiple viewpoints about the utility of including the Evans-Wetz controversy. However, reader, please be aware that this is actually an Apendix and not the main part of the book. Therefore, the author/scholar has no obligation to the reader, imo, as to whether to include or not. As an aside, I found the appendix quite interesting.

As to the main part of the book; ASTOUNDING. Some of the best, most lucid, crystal clear instruction on the topic.

Ian Myles Slater on: Identifying the Text
Helpful Votes: 18 out of 21 total.
Review Date: 2003-10-10
Prospective readers of this work may wish to know that it has a descriptive subtitle -- "An Introduction to the Nature of One's Own Mind from *The Profound Teaching of Self-Liberation in the Primordial State of the Peaceful and Wrathful Deities* A terma text of Guru Padmasambhava expounding the view of Dzogchen, rediscovered by Rigdzin Karma Lingpa." In other words, it offers itself as a "postponed revelation," a terma (treasure) re-discovered and offered to the world centuries after its composition. As such it is part of a large class of Tibetan Buddhist works.

The text had previously been translated into English at the instigation of W.Y. Evans-Wentz, who published that version in "The Tibetan Book of the Great Liberation" which appeared in 1954 as the last of four volumes in the pioneering "Oxford Tibetan Series," which had begun in 1927 with another terma text, the "Tibetan Book of the Dead."

The "Self-Liberation" treatise there followed an abridged translation of one of the traditional biographies of Padmasambhava, the legendary "Apostle to the Tibetans," and one of their patron Bodhisattvas, who is regarded as the real author of this and other works. These texts were surrounded by commentaries by Evans-Wentz and C.G. Jung. The latter is probably important for students of Jung. Evans-Wentz's contributions generally reflect a lack of information about esoteric Buddhism, and a tendency to substitute material from Hindu and Theosophical sources.

Having compared the present translation (pages 9-28) with that offered by Evans-Wentz, I can say that it appears to be superior in clarity. Given the present, far more advanced state of Tibetan studies, it is certainly more likely to be accurate than the ad-hoc attempt provided by Evans-Wentz's translators. Additional features include the Tibetan text in transliteration, a glossary of Tibetan Buddhist terms, and an extended commentary. This is undoubtedly an advance on Evans-Wentz, although its devotional tone may seem cloying to some readers (including this one)

There are also extended discussions of the Evans-Wentz and Jung interpretations. The dismissal of Jung is particularly interesting; although I don't much care for Jung myself, I felt that he was not being given sufficient credit for trying to take Asian traditions as seriously as he took those closer to home. (Of course, given Jung's reductionist approach to religion, this may amount to 0 = 0.)

Very Best Of Its Kind
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2006-04-17
Of all the myriad Dzogchen texts I've read, this is the very best. It is clear, the translation is understandable (he doesn't use weird made-up circumloqutions for terms like rigpa, yeshe, rigpai tsal, etc, like some translators do), and really and truly Self-Liberation is a text which is introduces the reader to the nature of mind every time it is read.

I haven't seen John since way back 1981, when at Lama Gonpo's I loaned him a text of the Hevajra Tantra before he left for India to receive the empowerments. He's gone on to bigger and better things since then, but this early translation of his will never be bettered.

For me, one of the better Dzogchen texts...
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2005-02-03
John Reynolds (aka Vajranatha) exposed me to Dzogchen thru this book. He associated himself with Namkai Norbu (who wrote the foreword) and had the assistance for this translation on others who know Dzogchen, including Lama Tharchin who I had the great fortune to hear speak once.

If Dzogchen can be applied successfully, then it must be through reading books like this one that one "reaches" that understanding.

When I was new to Dzogchen, Vayranathra's commentary was helpful. It remains so, but to a lesser degree today, but that may be due to overfamiliarity with it on my part. The appendix, which discusses how Evan-Wentz and Jung viewed Dzogchen, was never very helpful to me and I am not clear that it would benefit anyone but scholars. My assumption is to ignore Evan-Wentz translation and go with Vayrarathra's, since it was the first I encountered, it was supported by some Dzogchen teachers, and it excited me about Dzogchen.

Since that time, having read "You aee the Eyes of the World" from Longchenpa, Self-Liberation is no longer my "favorite" Dzogchen text but it continues to seem to be one of the three most important I know of, these two and the other one being the Bon text "Heart Drops of the Dharmakaya". I confess that my practical understanding of these texts remains small after about 10 years of studying Dzogchen on and off, but it does seem to me to remain one of the more important possible ways of facing the world constructively.

Vajranathana has continued his studies of Dzogchen (both in Tibetan Buddhism and Bon) and remained closely associated with
Namkai Norbu. My impression is that he is one of the most, if not the most, reputable scholar/translator of Dzogchen. His other translations include "The Golden Letters" and "The Cycle of Day and Night". I'd suggest reading "You are the eyes of the world" postponing the introduction and commentary but rather reading first the main text of "Self-liberation through seeing with naked awareness", also postponing its commentary and seeing what effect they have on you. If they make sense, you may be on your way to being benefited by Dzogchen in a way you could never have anticipated either yourself or by what modern day writers try to tell you. My bias is to trust the modern translators and ancient text writers for the time being and see where that leads me, because the translators may be constrained by the ancient texts and the ancient text writers may be had less to gain in worldly ways then some modern teachers.

Well, that's just my two cents on how I have approached Dzogchen. It isn't certain to me yet that anyone at any time has really applied these teachings constructively: it may be a well-meaning comfort system and it may be a long-lived deception. That it means something to indicate I am conscious in a way that seems incredibly creative, without boundaries, and with staggering presence I won't argue with, but that may be natural aspects of what we find as our consciousness and being in the world, it doesn't mean that anyone is a master of it or that it is some great perfection that already exists but for which I should pay people to confirm. Be wary and enjoy this creative ride and be glad, as "Self-Liberation through seeing with naked awareness" points out that your present thoughts will liberate of their own accord and not clutter your mind for too long.

Fantastic Text with flawed commentary
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 13 total.
Review Date: 2005-01-21
This book is a commentary on the titled Terma text. The text is terrific (worth 5 stars), reminiscent of Norbu's "The Supreme Source" or Longchenpa's "Precious Treasury of the Basic Space of Phenomena." While addressing Dzogchen's Trekchö view, it includes very interesting & refreshing statements. It uses "empty" differently than other books & Mr. Reynolds commentary--not signifying dependent-arising (or interdependent) but actual emptiness (page 13, stanza 8): "Since it is empty and not created anywhere whatsoever, it is the Dharmakaya" and (page 14, stanza 10) "It is certain that the nature of the mind is empty and without any foundation whatsoever. Your own mind is insubstantial like the empty sky...It is certain that self-originated primal awareness has been clear (and luminous) from the very beginning."

Per most Tibetan to English translations, it seems literal vs. figurative (i.e. concerned with an "accurate" translation rather than with reader understanding). Mr. Reynolds states (page 115) "what is important at this primary level is to discover what the masters of the Dzogchen tradition actually say about their own tradition." I disagree. The most important thing is for the reader to UNDERSTAND Dzogchen and be enabled to practice it. For example, "nature of the mind" and "mind" are intermixed in a confusing manner. The author's explanation of his choice (pages 47-8, stanza 6) is unconvincing vs. his alternative, "Mind Itself," Padmasambhava's term "intrinsic awareness," or the commonly used "ground of being." Per other texts, "meditate" is translated as meditate upon (transitive), so Mr. Reynolds uses "contemplate" in stanza 8. That's fine, but in English "meditate" is a dual verb, it can be either transitive or intransitive (check your dictionary). Indeed, Padmasambhava states (page 13, stanza 8) "you are meditating without finding anything there to meditate on" (inferring intransitive meditation).

In his commentary, appendix, and notes, Mr. Reynolds provides concise and precise explications of standard Dzogchen, Vajrayana, and Buddhist doctrines-though scattered in location and more like Apologetic vs. explanation-largely to justify extensive criticism of Evans-Wentz' (E-W) prior translation, in "The Tibetan Book of the Great Liberation" with Jung's Introduction. Some criticisms are well-founded. Mr. Reynolds greatly details Evans-Wentz' life, Vedanta, & Theosophy. He seems to take a Sensate view (Myers-Briggs Type "S": preference for details, low level of abstraction, past vs. future). Strangely, several of Mr. Reynolds' criticisms appear to conflict with the Terma! The text is VERY interesting in that (page 12, stanza 6) Padmasambhava provides many synonyms for intrinsic awareness such as--the Self, the Mind, Alaya, etc. Yet, Mr. Reynolds criticizes E-W for using virtually the same terms.

But, Mr. Reynolds rightly criticizes some E-W excesses (e.g. implying that Rigpa as "the dew drop slips into the Shining Sea", poetic but not entirely accurate) and claims E-W inserts Hindu, Vedanta, and Theosophist views into Dzogchen (ignoring the possible influences of Western mysticism). But most Westerner readers must translate Eastern terms into understandable language-not just English, and analogy facilitates communication. Any differences (e.g. between Cosmic Consciousness and Rigpa, page 103) would need explication, but differences among Brahman (Upanishads), ground of being (Dzogchen), and Ein Sof (Kabbalah) seem elusive. IMHO, Mr. Reynolds overrates such differences due to his low level of abstraction viewpoint. He writes as an historian, not a scientist. He seems unable to comprehend that there are differing perspectives-like the colors coming from a prism or facets of a diamond (Vajra). A true master can step out of his/her culture to see the pristine truth sans bias. I'd recommend reading "Mind at Ease" a Mahamudra text by the English-speaking Tibetan Traleg Kyabgon.

Mr. Reynolds points out several real errors in Jung's Introduction (e.g. the asserted lack of Buddhist critical psychology & philosophy--page 148, note 53), but his grasp of Jungian psychology is deficient: he misinterprets Jung's mapping of Buddhist deities/Samboghakaya onto the unconscious when Jung clearly refers to their peaceful/wrathful duality (e.g. Manjushri/Yamantaka) vs. Mr. Reynolds realm-gods. Mr. Reynolds misunderstands active imagination and the difference between psychotherapy & individuation. Contemporary Tibetan masters (e.g. Thrangu Rinpoche, Tulku Urgyen Rinpoche) admit such deities can be/are mental. Mr. Reynolds seems oblivious to the mythological, allegorical, symbolical, and sometimes anachronistic aspects of Tibetan Buddhism which are normal components of religions--Mt. Meru is not the center of 4 continents (page 106), whether the Buddha knew it or not (who knows?). Also, Mr. Reynolds strongly objects to Jung's "a slavish initiation of Buddhist practices by Westerners is bound to be fruitless, if not dangerous" which seems self-evident to me. What's oddest about this book is what's missing:
-- the differences between Christian Bhakti Yoga (of devotion) vs. Dzogchen Jnana Yoga (of wisdom)
--the connection between the "other shore" (pages 145-6, note 47) with the standard Buddhist simile of the Yanas as boats across the sea of Samsara, not to mention Jung's night-sea journey.
--the differences between Gelugpa (to which Mr. Reynolds seems to refer) and Kagyu Mahamudra.
--that the Buddha's era has been reevaluated into the 5th century BCE instead of the 6th or 7th
--the similarities of some of E-W's statements to Vipashyana meditation
--that E-W/Jung's use of "Alaya" could refer to Absolute Alaya (as in the Terma)-page 113.
--that symbols are psychological in both East and West-page 146.
--the openness of Vajrayana (e.g. the Lojong mind training a la Pema Chödrön's many books/tapes)
--the Maitri and compassion at the heart of Mahayana Buddhism-including Dzogchen
--the awesome mind-expanding view of Dzogchen vs. (page 113)-seeing the forest vs. the bark of a tree
--the simple beauty of Mr. Reynolds prior (wonderful) book, "The Golden Letters"

Hill
Ships-In-Bottles: A Step-By-Step Guide to a Venerable Nautical Craft
Published in Hardcover by McGraw-Hill (1971)
Author: Don Hubbard
List price:
Used price: $6.99

Average review score:

The book I learned from.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-15
I bought this book for my comprehensive ship-in-bottle book collection. I learned from an earlier edition of this book and now the author is my friend and mentor. I started out knowing NOTHING about this craft and now
less than 10 years later I find myself the first LADY President of the Ships-in-Bottles Association of America! This is a great book and highly recommended!

So ,that's how it's done!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-18

This is an excellent book to get you started if you ever thought you'd like to make one of those "Ships-In-Bottles".It tells you how to go about it,what materials ,tools and methods as well as "secrets"that are involved.
You will see they can be made with skills ranging from very simple to the utmost expertise and precision.The book shows how to construct a simple ship and gives plans for more complicated ones.
This would be a great gift for anyone ,young or old,who would like to start a hobby of model building.
My interests are more along the line of puzzles, and that was more what drew my attention to this book; to learn how "it was done" . The basic concept is simple ,but once understood,can be applied to as difficult model as you wish.
Just in case you are interested,placing things in bottles can be taken to very unusual levels. If you want to see some real challenges ,go search under Harry Eng Impossible Bottles,and you will be amazed at some of the things he has managed to put in bottles.Golf balls,baseballs,deck of cards in its case, a pair of sissors,sneekers, rubik's cube,etc.You'll be blown away when you see a gallon jug filled with objects all much larger than the opening. And yes,even some fancy ship models.

Good all around guide
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-03
This book was my introduction to the hobby and it has served me well. Commander Hubbard has written an inspiring and useful book.

If you have never built a ship-in-a-bottle before this book should guide you to success.

Incuded are many photographs and line drawings of completed models, tools, ship plans, etc.

While not the definitive work for the expert it is a useful guide full of information.

Ships in a Bottle Primer
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2005-09-26
This is a wonderful small book about the craft of building ship models in bottles. Highly recommended to anyone looking for an introduction to this art.

A well written book
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-06
A well written book by a respected bottle shipwright. However as a collector of books on ships in bottles, although very good, this is far from the best. For real enthusiasts of building ships in bottles I would recommend a book called Ship Models in Glass which in my mind is the most authorative book ever written on the subject, a little pricey but well worth it.

Hill
Short Stories of Langston Hughes
Published in Hardcover by Hill & Wang Pub (1996-06)
Authors: Langston Hughes and Donna Sullivan Harper
List price:
Used price: $75.00

Average review score:

Yum
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-14
I'm not usually a big fan of short stories but I love these. They are insightful, attention grabbing and always interesting. I got this book as a gift when I was 15 still come back to it frequently years later.

Wonderful Collection of Hughes' Works
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-04-21
The book contains over 40 short stories and 4 early works by Langston Hughes. As a high school student, I have enjoyed each and every work of Hughes and am fond of his writings.

WONDERFUL!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2001-12-26
THIS BOOK IS TRULY A MASTERPIECE!I HAVE ALWAYS LOVED LANGSTON HUGHES WHETHER IT WAS HIS POETRY OR HIS SHORT STORIES. HE WAS A VERY INTELLIGIENT MIND(WHAT A BRILLIANT MAN). R.I.P. MY DEAR LANGSTON!

The BEST insight in the human condition
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2002-03-08
If you want to read some really deep and powerful insights into the human condition, check out "Mary Winowsky" (written when LH was in HIGH SCHOOL!), "The Gun," Fine Accomodations," "One Friday Morning," "The Little Virgin," "The Young Glory of Him." These stories will make you weep and think about the everyday people you pass in the street and wonder about the stories they may have inside of them. This book should be in EVERY literature class!

This book tells more than just what it is to be Black, it says a lot about being human.

The Dean of Black American Literature & American Lit
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2005-02-25
Langston Hughes entire body of work is a testament to his love and pride of being a black American. Though he never excluded his common bond of brotherhood with other people of non-African decent, black Americans occupied first place in his affections and concerns. He never turned his back to them to win the approbation of a larger audience by catering to stereotypes. He had a profound dislike for blacks ashamed of being black,ashamed or who denied their African heritage, ashamed of their skin, and who catered to the worst prejudices of the larger audience in any medium for profit and fame or just to be liked and accepted--like a worrisome number today.

Like his poetry, Hughes short stories reflected much of his philosophy about being proudly black and the shared commonality of all people. Here in LANGSTON HUGHES: SHORT STORIES, edited by Akiba Sullivan Harper with and introduction by Arnold Rampersad, is the proof. Many of the stories presented here are those that have been out of print for some time ,or, are being printed for the first time since they were created. Much like the COLLECTED POEMS by Rampersad, an effort has been made to put the stories in chronological order by the date they were written or published. In all the stories represent a brief overview of specific short stories, not "all" Hughes short stories, and are different in tone and universal in some topics while still embracing black identity. My favorites are "Blessed Assurance" (protesting homophobia in the black community and black church in Hughes's own understandably gay closeted way) and those inspired by his early sea travels. The appendix of this book contains those stories written when Hughes was still in high school.

Like much of Hughes body of work, what he produced is still relevant today in one way or another as in the day he first put pen to paper or struck the keys of a typewriter to entertain and make a statement.

Hill
Sleep Talk: A Breakthrough Technique for Helping Your Child Cope With Stress and Thrive Through Difficult Transitions
Published in Hardcover by McGraw-Hill (1999-10-11)
Authors: Lois V. Haddad, Patricia Wilson, and Judith Searle
List price: $21.95
New price: $75.00
Used price: $0.95
Collectible price: $72.85

Average review score:

A new Father's thoughts.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2001-02-02
I could only image what my two month old daughter thinks as she smiles at me,"I know this man; he is my father, who loves me and cherishes me, and he will protect me. I know his voice because before I was even born, he spoke to me and comforted me. I know that I already love him, even though I can only let him know this with my little smile." Phoebe is at peace with her mother and me because we used the Sleep Talk scripts. And, we are convinced that Phoebe sleeps all night because we continue to use Sleep Talk today.

A Wonderful Tool for Childrearing
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2000-08-01
How I wish I'd had this book when raising my children! It's now at the top of my list for new parents. Not only does the author give specific scripts to use with children as they sleep (with impressive results from clients), she offers wonderful little tidbits on dealing with issues that arise in all families. All of this is presented in a loving, thoughtful, intelligent and logical manner. One of my favorites is the "one-finger" technique. Instead of saying, "No, don't touch that!", she suggests, "You may touch that with one finger." When I'm fortunate enough to have grandchildren, much of what is presented in this gem of a book will be put to good use.

Sleep Talk works
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2000-11-20
What this book does is provide words (scripts) of encouragement to read to your child while they sleep to help with problems they might be experiencing. For example, my son wouldn't go to sleep easy AND would wake up more that once during the night. Getting him back to sleep took some time. This went on for two years. We tried everything including the Ferber method. Within three days of using one of the scripts in the book it was easy to get him to sleep. If he did wake during the night he would go back to sleep on his own or be easy to sooth and fall asleep. This was using a script right from the book. Even more amazing was when we would fight with him to give nebulizer treatments. As I fought with him through a treatment I made sure he knew what the nebulizer was and it was good medicine. That night I read a script I wrote using the same words I used during his treatment. The next day he was calm and took the "good medicine." This book provides scripts for many situations and gives you the tools to write your own scripts. It is easy to understand and you can be using the method in short time.

Sleep Talk
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2000-03-29
I cannot say enough about this book! I, too, am an author and met the author of Sleep Talk through our work. I tried the techniques on my eight-year-old son because I was having trouble getting him ready for school in the mornings. He was always grumpy and would wait until the last minute to put his shoes on and get his backpack ready. I hated fighting in the morning and was desperate to have the harmony we used to enjoy before he started school.

Even though I believed in the book, I was shocked by the results. The first night I told my son (after he feel asleep) how proud his father and I were at his ability to wake up with a smile and get ready for school with a great attitude. Sure enough, the next morning he woke up smiling, got dressed right away and had his shoes and backpack on... an hour before we even had to leave! It was unbelievable. And, our mornings are still great, over a year later. I still use the techniques in Sleep Talk regularly and probably always will!

Help Your Child Thrive!
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 1999-12-10
Using the techniques offered in this book can change your child's life! It clearly tells parents how, through the use of nightly Sleep talk, childern can receive messages of a parent's love and acceptance. The book contains numerous scripts and clear instructions on how to use this method to bond with your child and offer him or her age appropriate suggestions to assist in decision making and the development of self-confidence. A master index to the Sleep Talk scripts is found at the end of the book, making this book an easy-to-use resource throughout your child's development. It would be wonderful if every parent, grandparent and caregiver were given a copy of this book and used the techniques so respectully offered by the author. This is a simple and loving way to bond with your child and positively impact his or her development. This book will enrich your life and the life of your child.

Hill
SNMP: A Guide to Network Management
Published in Hardcover by McGraw-Hill Companies (1993-03-19)
Author: Sidnie M. Feit
List price: $65.00
New price: $63.79
Used price: $18.00

Average review score:

Very well written
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-05-10
This book is a classic. It is well written and easy to understand and follow. This book is able to describe the protocol details in a very lucid manner. Other books tend to be nothing more than dumps of the RFCs. I only wish the author (or publisher) would update this classic text.

A very good book!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2000-06-13
An excellent source of information for readers at all levels. Explains SNMP in the simplest terms for novice readers and provides pointers for the more experienced ones.

An Easy to Understand SNMP Book
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2000-01-14
Dr. Sidnie Feit's SNMP: A Guide to Network Management has been my bible in creating a SNMP program from scratch. Feit brings you step by step through what SNMP is, how it works, encoding, packet creation, and common MIBs. This SNMP book did not put me to sleep like some others I have read...

The Simplest way to get friendly with SNMP
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2000-09-23
SNMP was something completely new for me and i was struggling to understand it reading various RFC's. Althoug they helped but it was not unless i started reading this book that SNMP seemed something really interesting to work with.Sincere thanks to Dr Feit.

This book rocks
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2000-08-28
This book has been my SNMP bible while building an HP OpenView NMS. Is has been the guide to SNMP that the vendors forgot to include.


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