Lewis Books


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

Lewis
Knitting Lace: A Workshop with Patterns and Projects (Threads Books)
Published in Paperback by Taunton Press (1992-07-01)
Author: Susanna E. Lewis
List price: $24.95
New price: $189.94
Used price: $114.94

Average review score:

Brooklyn Museum may be reprinting
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-09
I checked this book out from the library and it is wonderful. The workshop (2nd half of the book) teaches you so much about lace knitting - designing your own, looking at other lace and recreating it, etc. It is an invaluable book but for the prices people are charging on here and other used book resellers, it is highway robbery!! I saw one copy going for over $200 and it probably was just a library copy.

I just read a thread somewhere about it getting reprinted. Brooklyn Museum owns the copyright (or something like that) and they are planning on a reprint. Not sure of any other details. I did email them but haven't heard back yet. Let's hope it happens and in the near future. :)

Please contact the Brooklyn Museum re: reprint
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2006-12-01
Meg Swansen of Schoolhouse Press is trying to get this book reprinted but has not been able to get a meeting with Brooklyn Museum officials so if you'd like to see this reprinted as much as I would, please send a letter (I never got any response to emails) to the Director of the Brooklyn Museum at at 200 Eastern Parkway, Brooklyn, NY 11238-6052 asking him to consider Ms. Swansen's request.

This is a immensely valuable resource for lace knitters and should not be available only to collectors.

Plea to reprint this
Helpful Votes: 16 out of 16 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-02
If you are a lace knitter and would like to have a copy of this publication, please contact the Dover Books (Customer Service) and request them to reprint this book. The more people making the request increases the probability of it getting back into print. The book is an excellent resource for learning to understand the process of lace knitting but the resale amount is utterly beyond reason. Check your local library for a copy and if they do not have one, ask the reference librarian to do an interlibrary loan, it may take a few weeks before you get it but you have not spend hundreds of dollars on it.

No Thoughts On Reprinting the Book
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-16
I contacted the publisher and received an e-mail reply on Nov 15, 2006. The publisher said they had no plans to reprint this book at this time. I guess, if we want the book, we are stuck finding an affordable copy. Joy.

A Wonderful Book, but for $100++?
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-20
I have checked this book from my public library and found it clearly written, complete (in terms of how many lace patterns were reviewed), and the project, knitting a strip of dozens of lace patterns, intriguing and educational. I would like to have a copy of this book for my knitting library, to use as a reference when checking on the correct technique for a particular type of lace, for browsing for ideas for my own designs, and to have information that I need available at my fingertips.

However, the asking prices by various parties offering the book for sale seem way out of line for a book that retailed (I believe) at around $25 when it was published.

I have contacted the publisher, Taunton Press, begging them to consider re-publishing this book which is obviously in great demand. With the current situation, the used book prices are completely out of reach for a person living on disability with continuous medical bills, a mortgage, and a child for whom college looms closer every day.

Is there some way bring this situation back to reality? Paying over $100 for a book not even 25 years old is a really sorry state of affairs.

Lewis
Lewis and Clark for Kids
Published in School & Library Binding by Topeka Bindery (2003-12)
Author: Janis Herbert
List price: $27.35
New price: $20.79

Average review score:

Kept my interest
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-13
The book has many fun and interesting facts about Lewis and Clark. If you're using it for the classroom...the activities are creative and easy to do.

Lewis and Clark for kids
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-13
This is a perfect book for kids to learn about Lewis and Clark. Not only is it informative but also holds their attention by giving them useful and entertaining activites. A must for those not in the standard school system in the states.

Four stars and a half!
Helpful Votes: 12 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 2002-04-03
I would have given this book five stars if there had been just a few more activities in it.

The book reads as non-fiction literature and is interspersed with good photos and interesting sidebars. There are also some useful activities for the child to do within the text to reinforce what is learned.

This book would be useful for all grades but can be read independently in the middle school grades. The book contains a glossary, index, web site suggestions, bibliography, listings of museums and parks and other handy references.

Lewis and Clark Bicentennial
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2003-07-24
The Lewis and Clark Bicentennial is here, finally! If you are still on your own undaunted journey of discovery or plan to teach children about these two courageous men and their corps, then you NEED this book. It will be invaluable to any teacher of intermediate students.

A great resource for lesson plans
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2003-11-04
I found "Lewis and Clark for Kids" to be an excellent source of information and activities for both children, parents and teachers. There is an abundance of information about the actual journey plus there are great activities for children to engage in to learn more about the various indian cultures that Lewis and Clark interacted with on their journey of discovery.

Lewis
The Marinolli Treasure
Published in Hardcover by Lulu.com (2007-08-02)
Author: Hal Lewis
List price: $29.96
New price: $29.70
Used price: $29.58

Average review score:

Lawyers, Guns, and Money---Warren Zevon 1978
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-12
The Marinolli Treasure will keep you turning the pages, while at the same time, reminiscing of those one-hit wonders you completely forgot about while trying not to step on your girlfriend's toes at your High School dance. The plot is simple---What do you get when you cross a baseball card with a lawyer? Money For Nothing---Dire Straits 1984.
A well-written, fast-paced, and easy-to-read novel surrounded by suspense, humor, and......music! Mr. Lewis hits a home-run with his first publication. He easily gets my vote for "Rookie of the Year."

Jerry H.
Dirty Water---Standells 1966

Most enjoyable read in a long time!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-13
I must honestly say this is one of the most enjoyable books I have read in quite some time, and I read a lot! I read it in one sitting, which I never do. The whole time I read it I was picturing an Elmore Leonard like screen adaptation... a cute girl, some thug kidnappers, neat plot twists, and some good testosterone laden Malenglish!

Think of a cross between Carl Hiaasen, Elmore Leonard, and John Grisham. And don't worry if you aren't a baseball card collector... sure, baseball cards play a big part of the story, but I could care less about them and loved the book.

Great read
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-03
I never in a million years would have thought that this book would appeal to me, but once I got started I couldn't put it down. What fun!!

Fast moving and Fun
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-23
Mr. Lewis' knowledge of the baseball card collection industry really comes through in this quick paced book. It is extremely entertaining for sports fans, as well as, fans of lawyer based intrigue stories.

His style of writing, Malenglish, is built for the generation that came of age in the 80's. Or, for that matter, anyone that enjoyed or still enjoys, music and movies from that wonderful era.

I highly recommend this book and can't wait for his next one.

Funny and Entertaining
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-05
I bought the book to support my fellow Gator (the author), but ended up really enjoying it! I knew nothing about baseball or baseball cards before reading the book, so I was fascinated with all the detail that was provided in a fun way. But really, the book is a thriller about the hunt for "something" - so it could have been a baseball card or a pot of gold and the story would have been the same: suspenseful and funny. I recommend this book to anyone who likes to read first-person narratives and really see inside the main character and what makes him tick. I also recommend it to anyone who wants to take a break from serious literature and really laugh. Job well done, Gator!

Lewis
A Masterful Retreat: The Story of the 7th Divisions Retreat Across Eastern Kentucky
Published in Paperback by AvantGarde Publishing (2006-03-22)
Author: Lewis D. Nicholls
List price: $14.95
New price: $14.95
Used price: $12.00

Average review score:

I live in these regions, events I did not know about !
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-30
I am half way through and am pleased with the connection the author allows me to have with the historic characters, filling in details about clothes, pilaging, caches, romances, personal battle habits and effectiveness. Exciting for me, I live in the region of this retreat. Civil war buffs, metal detectorist, American history enthusiast...add it to your library.

This book is Great!!!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-05
I began reading this book and could not put it down. This book really
made pieces of the puzzle fall together. If you are into Civil War History---you have to have this book. If you are into Kentucky History--
you have to have this book.

Great narrative on Kentucky's role in the Civil War
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-30
Lewis Nicholls' book "A Masterful Retreat" is a fascinating and revealing account of a little-known but significant aspect of the American Civil War: the Union Seventh Army's retreat, and ultimate survival, across the southeast wilderness of Kentucky in 1862. Others have already given a more than satisfactory synopsis of the book, so I will only say this: reading "Retreat" filled a gaping hole in my knowledge of the Civil War. The book focuses on US General George Morgan's withdrawal from Cumberland Gap, his strategic and tactical reasons for doing so in the face of ambiguous orders from superiors, and CSA General John Hunt Morgan's (of Morgan's Raiders fame) attempts to harass and delay the Union's retreat. This story in itself is riveting; however, what really makes the story and binds it into a cohesive, relevant whole is the background behind both Armies' presence in Kentucky, and Kentucky's under-appreciated role in the Civil War. The story gives us snapshot after snapshot of a conflicted state, a borderland with sympathies on both sides. Reading this made me realize how, but for the grace of God and a few missteps on the Union's side - or fewer on the Confederate's side - Kentucky could have been lost, or even torn apart, as ultimately was the case for Virginia.
There is only one potential flaw in this otherwise brilliant study of Civil War history, and that is the absence of maps. A few more would help the reader follow the retreat. But even this lone complaint is mitigated by Lewis Nicholls' wonderfully descriptive account. One feels that he or she is actually with the the Seventh as it marched along the hot, dusty trail along the Little Sandy River. It is easy to empathize with the soldiers, to sense the dryness of the throat, and fatigue in the aching muscles as they struggle with their cannons; one also feels the overwhelming sense of relief as they approach Greenup and the scouts send word back: "Ten miles to the Ohio River!" Maps become unnecessary in light of such descriptive narrative.
Finally, one must be inspired with Lewis Nicholls' decision to write this book. In the introduction, Nicholls describes the historical marker near the Greenup Courthouse that notes the event of the retreat. He tells how he tried to research the retreat, but found that no books seem to address the subject, even in Kentucky. So he decided to write it himself. Its this sort of intellectual curiosity that enables such obscure but vitally important aspects of American history come to life. Now I feel like going out and writing a book of my own. Great book!

A compelling presentation of a dangerous and ambiguous period
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-07-25
The author does a masterful job of weaving a remarkable lesson in history. Throughout the book, Judge Nicholls evaluates all command decisions against the "Nine Principles of War":

Mass (concentrate combat power at the decisive place and time)

Objective (direct every military operation towards a clearly defined, decisive, and attainable objective)

Offensive (seize, retain, and exploit the initiative)

Surprise (strike the enemy at a time, at a place, or in a manner for which he is unprepared)

Economy of force (allocate minimum essential combat power to secondary efforts)

Maneuver (place the enemy in a position of disadvantage through the flexible application of combat power)

Unity of command (for every objective, ensure unity of effort under one responsible commander)

Security (never permit the enemy to acquire an unexpected advantage)

Simplicity (prepare clear, uncomplicated plans and clear, concise orders to ensure thorough understanding)

The crisis chronicled in this book resulted from the Union's decision to seize and hold the Cumberland Gap, followed by the Confederate commander's decision to exercise the principle of manuever. I am reminded of the Patton quote, "Fixed fortifications are monuments to the stupidity of man." After the Union 7th Division captured the Cumberland Gap, they were quickly surrounded and cut-off from the south, west, and north; and the east was never considered a realistic route of escape because the terrain was judged to be impassable.

The author does an excellent job of presenting how conflicted, ambiguous, and dangerous life in Kentucky was during the Civil War. Even though the state officially aligned itself with the Union, "the central bluegrass region was strongly sympathetic to the South." Kentucky was a slave state in the non-slave North. He argues that Kentucky was simultaneously pulled toward the North and the South because of historic economic ties. Additionally, "Kentuckians were pulled toward the North as a direct result of more family and friends residing in the Northern states."

President Lincoln is reported to have said that he hoped to have God on his side, but he had to have Kentucky. "Kentucky's unique geographic position in the Union made it necessary for the Union to station thousands of troops in the Bluegrass State during the war. However, these troops treated the Kentuckians like a conquered nation instead of a loyal state ... the shabby Federal treatment of so many Kentuckians sympathetic to the South drove many Kentuckians into the Confederate camp."

The author's presentation of a wealth of ancillary insight added significant depth to the reader's experience. One such interlude is how Confederate General John Hunt Morgan was assigned the mission of finding Union General George Washington Morgan, and delaying him until the Confederate main force could converge and destroy the 7th Division ... "John Hunt Morgan was a free spirit and allowed his men to plunder Kentuckians suspected of supporting the Union ... What better way to keep Morgan from infuriating the Kentuckians than by sending him to eastern Kentucky where there were fewer populated areas, and thus, fewer civilians to infuriate."

The collection and collation of eye-witness accounts, maps, and re-enactment photographs was obviously a labor of love for Judge Nicholls. The volume of personal correspondence, embedded reporter dispatches, and commander reports used to demonstrate the flow and character of events was invaluable. One such account described the hot dusty march - "These sands and these rocks and hills had drunk no water for near two months. Columns and clouds of dust - finer than the finest flour, rise at every foot-fall. It covers you - it fills your eyes and they burn and itch - you wipe and rub them and you add more dust. It fills your nose and mouth and throat - you thirst and get nothing but stagnant, tepid water; but on you tramp, tramp, tramp."

The book presents a key decision by Union General George Washington Morgan that continues to haunt me. "Morgan ordered ... a young officer with two or three men on a mission of deception. Morgan composed a bogus message authorizing the officer to purchase food for the entire 7th Division. Morgan stated in the message that it was his intention to cross the Ohio River at Maysville, Kentucky. [The officer and his men were dispatched towards Maysville] ... Morgan figured the Confederates would capture the officer, and his detail, along this route. In fact, Morgan counted on it! The Confederates did, in fact, capture the small detachment and they studied the bogus message."

The answer to whether this ruse worked is on page 80.

I wonder how this decision would be treated today by the Main Stream Media? Perhaps ... "General Lies, Troops Suffer ... General Morgan intentionally sent a detachment of his men to their operational demise. With misanthropic intent, they were condemned to spend the remainer of the conflict fighting deprivation and disease at internment camps like Andersonville."

Fantastic
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-07-04
I thoroughly enjoyed this book. As a history teacher, I highly recommend this book. The author's knowledge and understanding of the area adds to the tone of the book. Even if you are not from Kentucky, you will enjoy this story!

Lewis
Michael Jackson, the King of Pop: The Big Picture--The Music! The Man! The Legend! The Interviews: An Anthology
Published in Paperback by Amber Communications Group, Inc. (2005-04)
Author: Jel Lewis Jones
List price: $29.95
New price: $8.90
Used price: $6.37
Collectible price: $29.95

Average review score:

Brilliantly Written
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-01
I purchased this book for my sister for her birthday because is is a Die-Hard MJ fan and she just loves everything about this book!!, The pictures, The Interviews she says that it even has MJ opinion about how he felt about the his earlier hits. So I say this is a very excellent book to purchase for yourself if you too are a die-hard fan of MJ'S or even if you know someonre who is they won't be disappointed.

P.S. It even has his lyrics to certain songs. So how can you go wrong? this book was worth every cent I sent to it knowing how happy it made my sister.

a great book to have for refernce
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2005-12-20
this book is basicaly a bunch of facts on the star with itntrevew tranacriptions and some nice pictures thown in although the way the book is set up is a little odd and the typing errors in the first few chapters lead me to belive that it was rushed to prir This book iss not a bio it was a book put togther by a big fan that becaily said michael jackson is cool and heres why after quickly going over his personal life (and not in much detail) it basicaly breaks down what hes done with somerarelly seen at least in some areas of the word intervieews printed

Michael Jackson - The Only King of Pop
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2004-06-16
This is a beautiful book from the front cover to the back. It's a down-to-earth, no-non sense read on the entertainer. It's a keepsake for the bookself.

Left Behind
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2006-01-22
This 300 page book is not just another book on Michael Jackson! This book is unique and a mile from the rest! It's packed with detailed information on the life and career of the entertainer. It's a well-written book that can be housed in any public library or on any high school bookshelf. Yet, I have noticed that this clean book on Michael Jackson doesn't appear to be selling as well as all the other books that are on the market about him. What a pity! This book is more of a literary work on the Superstar life and career than any of the others that I have read. But it's missing one main ingredient - Trash! It doesn't really get into throwing stones and pulling what-ifs opinions out of the wind.
But that's the world we're living in. Give the people what they want, and what they want is dirty laundry over good writing! Decent works like this one get left behind!

Great Book&the world Owes Him Big time
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2005-06-20
this Book is very Detailed&the world Owes Michael Jackson as does the Media a Big saying they are Sorry.He is One o fthe Greatest Musicians Ever. He has Broken down many barriers.Michael Jackson is a Civil Rights leader&Strogn Pressence that will never be denied.almost 40 year career.He is the King of Pop&this Book goes into many areas acknowledging His Genius&timeless Musical Qualitys.

Lewis
Oh My Goddess!: Wrong Number (Oh My Goddess)
Published in Library Binding by (2007-10)
Author: Kosuke Fujishima
List price: $22.95

Average review score:

Confused...
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-04-04
I have seen the Ah! My Goddess anime, so naturally I wanted to read the manga as well. I just have one question.

Which first volume of the manga should I get? I see this one, "Oh My Goddess: Wrong Number", but I also see "Oh My Goddess tome 1", and "Oh My Goddess Volume 1". Is there a difference between them all? And if there is, which is the best one to get?

great book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-06-02
I'd heard of this before, but I didn't know any details. Keiichi Morisato dials a wrong number and ends up magically bound to the goddess Belldandy. The art in this book is lovely, and many of the stories are hilarious. Belldandy is probably the nicest person/celestial being I've ever seen in a comic, and the way people reacted to her was really funny. I can't wait to get my hands on more "Oh My Goddess" books.

A Great visual novel. Belldandy is a delight!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2003-01-06
Reading this visual novel by Kosuke Fujishima was a treat, indeed! Consider its beginning: Keiichi Morisato, a loser student phones for a pizza, but gets the goddess help line instead and is offered a single wish. His choice: for a goddess to stay with him always! He thus is paired with the goddess Belldandy, and experiences a series of hilarious misadventures beginning with their being kicked out of his dorm room. However, this allowed him to leave the company of his loutish housemates in preference for the company of a real goddess.

Belldandy and Keiichi encounter some surprising characters: an otaku (obsessive anime fan), a priest with an unusual mastery, a feckless, forlorn lover, a queen bee of a university scene, and the manipulative little sister! These episodes set the stage for explaining circumstances that were unclear in previously-published works. We find out more about our two main characters, including the abilities of Belldandy.

The motif of a girl or woman with preternatural or magical capacities is found in other Japanese manga works, notably the equally delightful Lum Urusei Yatsura. But Belldandy is unfailingly pleasant and serene: a true goddess in her patience with Keiichi and with the sometimes difficult ways of humans. This provides an effective device for critiquing the ways of humanity and for exploring philosophical questions.

While Fujishima did change his style in later episodes, I found that his style in these early stories was also engaging. Belldandy is beautiful, and sweet. The artwork is interesting and dynamic: worth the price of the book in itself. I recommend this book 100% and suspect that it might serve to lift up the spirits of someone who is having a bad day. It does for me!

Wrong number...I don't think so
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2002-12-29
If you have seen the 5 episode OAV series, then you will love this. As it starts of, Keichi Morisato is a college student who doesn't really have any luck with women, until one day he calls a beautiful goddess of the name Belldandy. She says she can grant him anything he desires and Keichi of course, thinks this is a joke by his mates wishes that a girl like her would be with him forever. Their life from then on continues through the series.


As you know, this is contains previous material from 1-555-GODDESS but also contains the lost stories which will answer many a question you might have.If you see this book for the first time and see it isn't as great as it looks on the OAV series, Dont Worry! Because at this time, Fujishima was just getting use to drawing the characters and throughout the series gets to look better and better.


If you are wondering if you should get this or not, the answer is obviously yes! The humour in this book is funny as but if you already own 1-555-GODDESS and are a bit worried if you should waste your money on this, you're not. Because 7 of the 8 chapters are lost and new.


1st Chapter: Wrong number
2nd Chapter: Into the lair of the Anime Otaki
3rd Chapter: A man's home is his....temple?
4th Chapter: College exchange Goddess
5th Chapter: Those whom goddess has jointed together, let not woman put asunder
6th Chapter: SLP Camera- Mission Accomplished!
7th Chapter: The lullaby of love
8th Chapter: The Megumi Problem

I Recommend this book for manga collectors, OMG! Fans and all newbies!

Start With This Book
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2003-02-06
I saw the 5-part OAV (original animation video) "Oh My Goddess" DVD's and was very impressed. However, because the series was so short, I went online to see if there was a manga (Japanese comic book) series since most anime is from manga.

Enter "Wrong Number" done by Dark Horse Comics. This should replace the "555-Goddess" book previously done since this contains the chapters that were not included in that original book 1. People who've watched the OAV's will see the major elements from the first and second videos done in this book. However, there are notable differences such as a monk that lived in the temple that Belldandy and Keiichi end up living in. We are introduced to the following characters:

Keiichi (the guy with the wish), Belldandy (the goddess), Tamiya (large classmate), Aoyama (cool classmate), Sayoko (the girl jealous of Belldandy), and Megumi (Keiichi's sister).

One thing people who've seen the OAV will be surprised at is the art. Belldandy doesn't look like she does in the OAV. Much like many other comic strips or comic books, Fujuishima-san had not yet refined the artwork. Don't worry, the artwork gets better with each volume.

Story-wise, this volume mainly focuses on Keiichi and Belldandy getting to know each other and their life at college.

Bottom line: If you loved the "Oh My Goddess" DVD set, you will REALLY enjoy this manga and all of the manga's in this series. If you've never seen the OAV's but want wholesome, light reading material, get this book!

Lewis
Or Perish in the Attempt: Wilderness Medicine in the Lewis and Clark Expedition
Published in Paperback by Farcountry Press (2003-06)
Author: David J. Peck
List price: $18.95
New price: $3.99
Used price: $2.22
Collectible price: $79.98

Average review score:

Lively Well Written Account of the Medical Practices of the Captains
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-02-26
Physician Peck writes a well-written lively account, in an almost conversational method wrought with humor, of the adventures of the Corps of Discovery and the medical obstacles they encountered along with the medical practices utilized by the good captains. Peck provides a background of medical practices that were practiced in that day as well as a brief summation of how medicine was practiced from the ages up through the early 1800s, that latter being in an appendix. As Peck states quite clearly, Lewis is armed with limited medical knowledge from a two-week crash-training course from the eminent physician at that time, Dr. Rush. As Peck points out, limited knowledge may have been the best since such familiar practices of bleed and purging the stomach were thought as primary cures at that time. Peck provides an excellent detailed history of the adventure while analyzing in friendly to the reader detail, the symptoms of the members and Native American injuries and illnesses that Lewis and Clark treated along their journey. Everything from stomach illnesses caused by under cooked game to bacteria and protozoa that may inhabit the water they drank from. What is truly amazing, with exposure to mosquitoes and possible yellow fever, frostbite, hypothermia, snake bites, back ailments, eye injuries and ghastly wounds including Lewis' shot in the buttocks by their near sighted fiddler, they all survive. They suffer only one casualty and that is in the early goings, Sergeant Floyd who appears to have died from an appendicitis that may have been connected to complications caused by parasites. With the use of opiates for pain, the Captains may have provided comfort while treating patients who fortunately survive treatments that may actually have made them worse. However, a lot of the Captains commons sense treatments were successful, particularly among the Indians where Captain Clark's reputation as a man of great medicine helped the corps survive as they received rations that helped them exist while on their return journey. Peck's humor is evident as he describes an illness that pursues the corps along their journey as an unwelcomed guest and while using the term of that period for the illness, it takes one a few paragraphs to catch on. In addition, young Shannon seems to be always getting lost or losing something and Peck notes that he may have been a good candidate for riddlin. Peck also offers a chapter that discusses what became of the members after their return with an excellent analysis of the arguments surrounding Lewis' death. Many argue that it was syphilis related or depression, Peck offers the latter noting that physicians that treat themselves make gross errors. Peck also includes an anatomy diagram of Lewis' possible wounds and a glossary of 1800 medical terms and treatments. I would have liked a little more detail on Lewis' state of mind as he performed at high levels but during periods of stress seemed to possess a mercurial temperament that could explode at times. As Peck notes, one Indian that was teasing the corps about their dog preference eating habits picked the wrong guy to throw a puppy at almost resulting in his death. All the explanation of medical ailments and treatments are compared to today's standards in layman's terms. After reading this book, I will always order my meat well done and even more fervently wash my hands after handling anything.

A new American classic
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2005-12-02
"Or Perish in the Attempt: Wilderness Medicine in the Lewis and Clark Expedition" brings the journey of exploration through the Louisiana purchase vibrantly alive. Dr. Peck's writing is easy-to-read, yet technically thorough, examining the 1803-1805 expedition through his perspective as a medical doctor.

He begins by assessing the state of medical knowledge of the time, and explains the initial provisioning for the mission in Philadelphia. It was fascinating to learn which treatments were beneficial (Peruvian bark, opium and laudanum, for example), and which ones are now known to be harmful (blood-letting, immersion in cold water for frostbite). As he explains incidents requiring medical intervention, we are treated to wistful musings of how much value a modern technique or product would have been, such as a simple bottle of antisceptic eye drops for snow blindness or corneal irritation. The descriptions of how the men must have reacted to the proposed treatments for venereal diseases are hilarious.

The social aspects of the book are also well-detailed. No one's contribution is left out, from the "black white man", York, to Sacajawea, the Shoshone wife of the Frenchman Toussaint Charbonneau who acted as guide, food finder and interpreter. The beautifully written chapters make it clear that it took the strength and talents of every member of the team to cross mountain ranges, fight bears and hostile tribes, obtain food and shelter, document species, peoples and geography. And return safely, with only one exception, harboring vivid memories of having made it through rain, snow, hail, water swimming with gut-busting bacteria, malaria, injuries, spoiled meat, and the original "Low Carbohydrate Diet of the Plains." The fact that they brought the mission off successfully was due to luck, as the author points out. But also important were their abilities to adapt, endure hardships together, and devise on-the-spot medical solutions (which the men managed somehow to survive!) This new American classic makes a fascinating read - an excellent gift that you will want to read yourself, too.

An exhilarating view!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2004-06-21
To say that Dr. Peck has given light to another side of the journey of the Corp isn't enough; this is more than a fresh perspective. Or Perish in the Attempt earns its place among the great books about this journey of the Corp of Discovery. While reading this book the reader will feel the dust on the trail, the sweat from a day in the canoe, the fear of facing down a grizzly, and the curiosity as Lewis and Clark disperse liberal doses of "Thunderclappers." Dr. Peck has given us a well researched account of the Lewis and Clark expedition, and taught us crucial lessons in wilderness medicine at the beginning of the 19th century. I can't wait to go back to these dog-eared pages and retrace the steps again. Thank you for the well written book, thank you for the medical insights with the explanation that I can understand, and thank you for bringing these stories to light.

A Modern Classic
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2002-10-02
Dr. Peck has rewarded us all with his thorough research and clear explanations. Since first reading Ambrose's book, Undaunted Courage, two years ago, I have steadily digested everything that I could get my hands on that dealt with the Lewis & Clark Expedition. Last year, I remarked to a friend that someone needed to write a book that filled in the gaps that Dr. Chuinard left regarding the medical aspects of the journey. Fortunately, Dr. Peck has saved someone the toil.
I have only three criticisms of the book. First, some of the expressions may be a little too ecclectic for a non-medical person or the person who reads the book 100 years from now. Examples are the referring to phlebotomists as "vampires" and his reference to Pompey being born at 3 or 4 AM. Second, I am curious as to why Peck did not cover the Lewis & Clark's medical study done during the winter spent near St. Louis. Dr. Chuinard covered this extensively, but Dr. Peck does not mention it. Third, I disagree with the conclusion that Lewis committed suicide. Perhaps it is a matter of denial, but there are too many suspicious factors for me to conclude that Lewis killed himself.
When I picked this book up, my most pressing question about the author was regarding the way in which he dealt with Dr. Benjamin Rush. I have found (in 20 years of medical experience) that it is hard to judge the quality of care rendered a few years ago, and that 200 years is a nearly impossible breach of time. Dr. Peck has dealt with Dr. Rush honestly, and does not judge him by today's standard of care. Dr. Chuinard was too critical of Dr. Rush, and Dr. Peck has helped clear Dr. Rush's reputation: Dr. Rush was one of the soundest physicians that America would know before 1900. Dr. Rush helped bring the dawn from the "Dark Ages" of medicine.
Ambrose and Peck are the authors that every student of the Corps of Discovery should start with. Thank you, Dr. Peck.

The Rest of the Lewis and Clark Story
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2003-03-08
The story of Lewis and Clark is fascinating ý one of the original legendary American expeditions with extraordinary implications. The historical record and the many books available to us that interpret this journey into the unknown let us relive the excitement of exploration of the American frontier. However, until Or Perish in the Attempt by Dr. David Peck was written and published, only half of the legendary story of Lewis and Clark has been told. Now you can experience the ýrest of the storyý through the eyes of an articulate, practicing modern physician who unveils the medical threat that the Corps of Discovery was under during the few years it took them to get to the Pacific northwest and back. Dr. Peck sets the foundation by first explaining the prevailing medical philosophy of the times by leading physicians, including Dr. B. Rush ý a leading advocate of blood letting. Then, we follow Lewis as he gets his guidance in person from Dr. Rush for the perceived medical threat and heads off up the Missouri with Clark and all their men, materials and supplies into the heart of darkness. While the Corps of Discovery went about their business meeting their basic survival and occasional life enhancement needs, Dr. Peck takes the story to a much deeper and scarier level. While Lewis and Clark and their men worried about Indians, snakes, bears around the bend, the medical threat loomed all around them in the form of mosquitoes carrying deadly malaria and all sorts of bugs and germs that the men ingested from drinking river water and eating inordinate amounts of meat from all kinds of critters that were available to them for life sustaining food. Dr. Peck shows that these guys were very rough and tough. However, they got sick and were often very sick along the way and didnýt have an emergency room to run to for help. Everyone turned to Lewis for help as he handed out the Thunder Clappers and other drugs from his supplies. Dr. Peck takes these complex ideas and concepts from the medical world and breaks them down so we can understand them thoroughly. In so doing, the story of Lewis and Clark becomes more real than ever before. As a result, the reader comes away with a serious education about health care and the awesome power of the human body to heal itself ý if things are done correct. The ending of Or Perish in the Attempt was the high point of the book because Dr. Peck clearly shows why Lewis died shortly after returning from the expedition. That explanation alone is worth the price of admission. So, if you want to take a ride, then get in line for your E-Ticket on the Or Perish in the Attempt roller coaster ride by Dr. David Peck. This is a must read for anyone who thinks they already know the story of Lewis and Clark or for anyone who might think they know how to take care of themselves in the wilderness or their own backyard.

Lewis
A Preparation Guide for the Assessment Center Method
Published in Plastic Comb by Charles C. Thomas Publisher (2006-04-26)
Author: Tina Lewis Rowe
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Amazing book
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-16
A Preparation Guide for the Assessment Center Method
This book is a great tool for not only preparing for promotional exams but also for becoming a better supevisor or manager. The examples and guidelines given are helpful in addressing every day situations. The acronym PACTSFID assists in ensuring every step in the process has been addressed. The author has an amazing writing style that makes this book an easy read. I refer back to it again and again.

If you only buy one book, make it this one.
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-07
I bought this book after looking for something to assist me in a police lieutenant's exam. I picked this one over the other books after reading the positive reviews.
This book was well written and easy to follow. The way it is laid out makes it easy to skip around later after it has been read. The author was careful to keep the text in chronological order leading up to the day of the assessment center. The author gives the reader several easy to remember tools to assist on the day of the assessment center. I feel fortunate to have purchased this book because I think it was the main factor in my own successful assessment center. I would not buy anything else and I have recommended it to several people so far.
Just a side note; after finishing the book, i e-mailed the author with a few follow up questions. She replied the following day with a personal e-mail and a lot of additional examples. I doubt she will be able to do this for everybody, but it shows her dedication to her product.

Great help!!!!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-14
Very helpfull!!! made the assessment center understandable for fire officer testing as well. Thank you!!

Works
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-31
This book gives you what you need. I made the first spot on my assessment center after scoring mid range in two previous ones.

Study it and know it!!

An Assessor's Viewpoint: Excellent Information
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-19
I have had the opportunity to do a lot of assessing, and have also been a candidate for promotion. I think this book is the best I've seen for helping a candidate get inside the process, really understand it and prepare for it. It would also be useful for assessors and those who are developing an assessment center without professional help. I'm going to use it as a general reference.

This is not a book to skim, because it is jam-packed with information, without the excess white space and big margins so many of these kind of books seem to have. I would suggest reading it one time for an overview, then slowly re-reading it from the very beginning. You will miss out on a lot of good material if you skip chapters or don't read them in order.

One of the things that stands out about this book is that the author uses many footnotes, quotations, and real-life examples, which always increases the credibility of a book for me. Not only did I find useful information, I found the titles of many other books I can use. It was obviously well researched, which I thought was impressive considering that you're lucky if you find even one or two validating footnotes in most of the other books on the subject. And the behind-the-scenes stories were so true, there is no doubt she has been there and done that.

This book is not only interesting to read...it would be worth reading even if you aren't taking a test...but I thought it was inspirational. Most books on promotional processes only talk about how to get promoted. This one talks about how to be your best after you are promoted, or even if you don't make it to the top of a list. I would like to read more books by this author.

Lewis
Sex and Bacon: Why I Love Things That Are Very, Very Bad for Me
Published in Paperback by Seal Press (2008-05-01)
Author: Sarah Katherine Lewis
List price: $14.95
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A delight for the senses!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-29
Today, I walked through my front door after work, my feet aching from 8 hours of being crammed into my too-tight but damn sexy black Mary Jane stilettos. I couldn't wait to kick them off and throw on some old sweats and pull my hair up off my face.

Then I saw a small package sticking up through the mailbox, and inside, a brand new shiny copy of Sarah Katherine Lewis's newest book.

I curled up on the couch and was instantly absorbed. It took me a full hour and half to finally notice the increasingly angry and urgent growls from my stomach. I knew that I should have started dinner ages ago, so I got up and that's when I realized that I hadn't even taken my cruel, pretty shoes off yet.

Her book is THAT good.

I enthusiastically recommend this book, not only for its stellar writing, but because you will laugh and ache and rejoice with Sarah as she takes you on her journey of EXPERIENCE. Relax, kick off your shoes, and turn yourself over to one hell of a good story.

Food = love
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-05
Reading this book was like a little feminazi epiphany for me.

Sometimes you just need to be told that it's okay to enjoy sex, and it's okay to enjoy food.
Logically, we should know this already, but there are times when hearing it from an outside source just drives it home.

I really and truly think I am in love, and it's not often that the object of my affection is a mass of bound paper and ink.

Devour it.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-02
Imagine your favorite cooking show hostess. Now imagine her in your kitchen, wearing plastic hot pants and a smile, pouring you a glass of red wine and telling anecdotes from her previous life as a sex worker.

That was what I pictured, anyway, while reading Sarah Katherine's new book, Sex and Bacon. Her collection of short essays explores a variety of topics, including body image, Britney Spears and, of course, the ultimate question: How much bacon is enough? I loved the way Sarah interspersed tales of heartache and tips on how to get laid (hint: it involves pumpkin pie) with recipes that even the most kitchen-impaired can follow. Her book is honest, smart and open - just like the lovely author herself.

More!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-01
There is only one word to sum up this book - MORE. Sarah Katherine wants more. More sex, more pleasure from food, more love, more of life. Her unflinching essays pour out of this book and hold nothing back. Emotion, raunch, lust.

I wanted each essay to keep going. I wanted the book to keep going. I devoured this book, and I do believe that is exactly what SK is doing with life.

incredibly entertaining
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-02
The funny parts of this book are literally laugh-out-loud funny. The foody parts are enticing. The gross parts are pretty damn gross. And the sad parts are sad, but tempered by the tenderness and good humor and intelligence of the author. Ms. Lewis transcends her genre(s) in a big way. Like her first book, this one is impossible to put down until it's finished because the author's voice is so compelling. I always want to hear more of what she has to say.

Lewis
Six by Lewis: The Abolition of Man, the Great Divorce, Mere Christianity, Miracles, the Problem of Pain, the Screwtape Letters
Published in Paperback by Simon & Schuster (Paper) (1996-06)
Author: C. S. Lewis
List price: $42.00
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Average review score:

True Classic
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-12
"The Screwtape Letters" and "Mere Christianity" are two of the best selling Christian books of all time. Lewis is a magnificently deep thinker who will expand your mind. He understands God and Man so well it's scary. "The Abolition of Man" makes a very important point which is well followed up by Bloom's "The Closing of the American Mind." "The Great Divorce" gave me a chilling vision of Hell that I can't shake (and would like to). "Miracles" explains people's closed mindedness about miracles. "The Problem of Pain" answers important questions that trouble many of us. This set contains the best version of Screwtape; others are less complete.

In addition to all this, you can learn to write from studying Lewis. It just seems to come naturally to him.

Outstanding Christian Apologetics!
Helpful Votes: 15 out of 15 total.
Review Date: 2001-02-15
I bought an older edition of these works, when the paperbacks were $3.95 and the overall set was $27.95 in U. S. currency. Its one of the best overall sets I have bought.

These books are central to understanding Lewis as a Christian writer, and especially as an apologist. Most people may know him from NARNIA or one of these volumes, and it is a good place for introduction into the mind and works of C. S. Lewis. All the classics are here, from SCREWTAPE and MERE CHRISTIANITY along with ABOLITION OF MAN and three other works, all of which range from profound (the majority) to beautiful (THE GREAT DIVORCE).

THE SCREWTAPE LETTERS are a series of letters written from one devil to another, and present a very interesting point of view not often heard.

THE GREAT DIVORCE explores the doctrine of love and how without free choice there would be no hell. You either say "Thy will be done," to God, or God says "Thy will be done" to you. Its yr choice. The framing device is a bus trip from hell to heaven.

THE PROBLEM OF PAIN deals with why would a benevolent and loving God include pain in his universe, and the theological ramifications that pain brings into any dicussion of God or religion. Especially interesting, although admittedly speculative, is the chapter on animal pain. Lewis vehemently opposed vivesection, which comes out rather strongly in his novels THAT HIDEOUS STRENGTH and THE VOYAGE OF THE DAWN TREADER.

MERE CHRISTIANITY stands as one of the best apologetic works for Christianity ever written. This is a book written for the lay person, and is one of the best tools for making it accessible to nonbelievers.

MIRACLES, the last apologetic book he ever wrote (there are religious works by Lewis after this, but they are more relaxed and do not have a rigid central arguement), deals with the subject of miracles in the universe.

THE ABOLITION OF MAN is a book length essay, devided into three parts, concerning the universal code of morality which MERE CHRISTIANITY talks about in its first two books.

Lewis was a very versatile writer, and along with THE ESSENTIAL C. S. LEWIS you have a good start into this wonderful writer. I have been a long time reader of him, and have only recently gotten into his literary criticism, of which none is represented here, although some in THE ESSENTIAL C. S. LEWIS. Although some are more for the specialists, it is a particulary rewarding experience, and he is a well trained guide in the field of literature. I highly recommend AN EXPERIMENT IN CRITICISM, which for me is his central work concerning literature.

The Intellectual's Christian
Helpful Votes: 18 out of 18 total.
Review Date: 2000-02-15
If not one of the greatest Christian philosophers of the 20th century (perhaps of all time), C. S. Lewis was certainly among the most accessible to the lay reader not deeply conversant with theology or metaphysics. And as a professor of Mediaeval and Renaissance Literature at Cambridge, and friend and confidant to T. S. Eliot, J.R.R. Tolkien, Dorothy Sayers and many other major literary figures of the early to mid-1900's, his thoughts were constantly refined in discourse with the best minds of his day. This collection is an excellent introduction to Lewis' exceedingly broad range of thought. Mere Christianity was originally presented on BBC as broadcast lectures on the basic teachings of Christianity, which are, as presented by Lewis, quite though-provoking and compelling. The Great Divorce and The Screwtape letters deal fictionally and humorously with, respectively, the mind-set of heaven and hell, as well as the tendencies in human nature which provide both with their denizens. The Abolition of Man seriously tackles the role of the educational process in the development of character (or lack thereof) in its subjects, something quite relevant in a day of increasing mayhem in the schools. And Miracles and The Problem of Pain deal with fundamental philosophical issues that transcend denominational perspectives. These extremely challenging books are recommended, not only as a sampler of Lewis' unique perspective, but as an introduction to a pious life for readers who heretofore have seen faith only from a secular viewpoint.

A great introduction to a great writer.
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2003-03-26
This set collects together some of the more famous writings of C.S. Lewis, a man seemingly at ease talking philosophy, or just spinning fanciful yarns. Both are offered here for the reader's enjoyment.

THE ABOLITION OF MAN is a series of lectures on how, without a firm understanding of right and wrong, or plain old good and evil, humanity is destined to destroy itself.

THE GREAT DIVORCE is a lush phantasm about a spirit's journey to Heaven and what he sees and learns from the spirits there.

MERE CHRISTIANITY, what can I say about this brilliant study of the very core of what Christians believe and what the religion teaches. Just read it, it's beautiful.

Also included in the set are MIRACLES, THE PROBLEM WITH PAIN, and THE SCREWTAPE LETTERS.

A DEFINITE 'MUST HAVE'!
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2000-06-29
C.S. Lewis' essays are a MUST for everyone and anyone who is interested in good literature and/or wishes to think about things as we know them. His reflections, although deep and thorough, are also easily grasped and understood; the beauty and simplicity of his words makes these essays accessible to whomever is interested in them, both Christian and non-Christian (I'm an atheist myself). It is impossible for one to read them and not feel 'touched' by something which might be beyond our comprehension...


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