Nicholson Books


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

Nicholson
Everything in This Country Must: A Novella and Two Stories
Published in Hardcover by London: Phoenix House/Weidenfeld & Nicholson (2000-02-29)
Author: Colum McCann
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Adult conflicts through children's eyes
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2001-06-17
If you are looking for a fresh, new look at "The Troubles," this is the book. I found the book to be disturbing because all three of the stories centered on children and their peripheral involvement in the North. In each of the stories the adults were too caught-up in the day-to-day difficulties they encountered due to the circumstances. None of the children written about were understood nor were their feelings and concerns acknowledged. It is heart-breaking to watch how these children suffer without the parental-figures in their lives even realizing the impact the war is having on the children.

Everything in this Country Must a Must
Helpful Votes: 17 out of 18 total.
Review Date: 2000-03-15
Colum McCann, one of the finest young writers in Ireland & Amreica continues to grace us with this corageous book. Not just corageous for the obvious subject, the Troubles in Northern Ireland, but its deeper one -- the connections between the life around us (political and otherwise) and the life inside us. At its center is not so much the Troubles but the depths and power of love -- love for country, for God, for family and for one's self. These loves are at odds with one another. The narrator of the title story loves her father and lost mother and brother, yet she feels drawn to the young English soldier who helps them save their horse, and very well may have caused the accident that killed her mother and brother. The mother in "Wood" must decide between her love for her invalid husband and her Protestant identity, and tries to balance them. And in "Hunger Strike" a boy's coming of age through his uncle's and country's political strife is guided and challenged by adults who wish to protect him and soothe his rage. This is not the "All You Need is Love" kind of love. This is deep, spritual, love -- the thing binds us and breaks us, and McCann is brave for tackling this within a political context and a world that often values surface issues instead of, to paraphrase Norman McClean, the river that runs through us.

heartbreaking and stunning work on youth in northern ireland
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2001-08-26
McCann's work is filled with subtlety and original crisp images that are culled with attention to detail. The novella and two short stories here feature experiences of youth affected by political turmoil in Northern Ireland. Yet the stories are not heavyhanded about the politics; they explore the lives of three adolescents while integrating the colonial frustrations into the narrative. This ie easily one of my favorite reads from the past year. The stories read quickly, but they have a density to them and a richness in language and emotion. While the tone seems brooding, there is still something to celebrate about the well written characters and insights that McCann offers in this work

A little great book!
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2001-03-03
Northern Ireland, with its troubled history and its extreme enviroment, is an easy subject for second-rate writers, and actually you can find a lot of would-be thrillers, unlikely to get a second edition.

For the same reason, Northern Ireland is a difficoult subject for good writers. That's why you can find many interesting non-fiction books, but really few good novels.

With "Everything in this country must" Colum McCann proves once again to be a great writer. While reading it, I was nearly overwhelmed by emotions. And I was amazed by both the simplicity and the effectivness of his writing.

It's a little book, just 150 pages. You could read it in two hours. But because it's a great book I would suggest you to read it very, very slowly, enjoying every word, every line, every emotion. And in so doing, may be you happen to realize that McCann is deceiving all of us: he writes poems disguised as short stories.

Purchase this book now!
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2000-03-26
This is one of the few books of its genre that I actually enjoyed. The characters and settings simply jump out of the pages at you and make you see so vidly everything that the author is attempting to convey.

I can't think of a single part of this book where I wasn't completely mesmerized by both the intelligent way the characters and plots weren't handling in an intelligent and poignant manner.

BRAVO!

Nicholson
Matri, Letters from the Mother
Published in Paperback by Lune Soleil Press (2003-01-15)
Author: Zoe Ann Nicholson
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Graceful and Profound
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-02-05
Matri, Letters from the Mother, is a beautifully written little book that takes the reader into the world of the feminine aspect of God. Profound, yet easy to read with its elegant and simple writing style, it is a book which brings forth quiet knowledge, inspiration, and stillness in the reader. A beautiful book that can be carried with you, to be read, reread, and reflected upon as you go through the activities of the day. This book will be inspiring for both men and women who work to bring clarity, compassion, and balance into their hearts and lives.

A spiritual classic
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-01-20
Timeless wisdom. Zoe breathes a beautiful life into the words of the Mother. There is something for everyone in this beautiful little book. I particularly love the section on meditation. It is always wonderful to hear timeless truths spoken in a fresh new voice.

The Four Agreements Especially for Women
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-02-21
For women who have been inspired by "The Four Agreements" by Don Miguel Ruiz, this concise work provides a blueprint that is soothing and empowering. Zoe Nicholson has written a poetic piece that speaks from the heart to help all women find their spirtual center.

In the words of the Mother...
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2003-03-10
This small, but powerful book reinforces the necessity of balance, shakti, chi, grace: the life-giving, life-sustaining energy contained in the feminine principle in a world of duality. A call for balance and harmony, this series of "Letters from the Mother" of all is a wonderful compendium of brief, yet potent meditations for women who seek balance and empowerment through increased spiritual awareness.

To read Matri is to begin a journey toward reaffirming and regaining our lives and contributing to a refreshed world without dissembling or rationalization. Step by step, we are led through a daily practice of clarity and renewal, beginning with the interior self. As daughters, we are reminded to occupy our personal space respectfully, enjoy harmonious unions based on the renewal of spiritual energy and respond appropriately to the needs of the world we inhabit.

Like the soothing rhythm of the ocean breaking upon the shore, the key to a balanced and fruitful life lies in the most subtle nuances, the calm voice of the Mother urging us to our better selves that we might begin to infuse the world with peace. Listen carefully, not for answers, but understanding. Luan Gaines/2003.

MATRI --Letters from the Mother
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2003-01-24
I found "Matri" to be a gentle but profound and poetic guide for women and men on a spiritual path. Zoe Ann Nicholson draws upon the wisdom of saints and seekers from many cultures, many times, and suggests a practice by which today's women and men might weave a new and unique tapestry of harmony and balance from today's chaotic and fragmented energies.

"Matri" points out that we need look no further than our own heart to courageously participate with all of creation in sourcing a harmonious world. I highly recommend this little book. It is indeed inspired.

Nicholson
The Mughal Throne: The Saga of India's Great Emperors
Published in Hardcover by George Weidenfeld & Nicholson (2003-01)
Author: Abraham Eraly
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"Uneasy lies a head that wears a crown."
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2005-05-06
Arguably India's Golden Age, the near two-hundred years of the Mughal Empire from Babur to Aurangzeb was a time when the richest got richer, conquered and ruled SE Asia from Kabul to Konyakumari, built cities, forts, and fabulous tombs, lived fairly short lives, wept over trivialities, warred amongst themselves, blinded, maimed, and executed family members; and, after Aurangzeb, lost it all except in name.

"The Mughal Throne: The Saga of India's Great Emperors," is the first released third volume of a four part history of India, and though it is far from the definitive work on the Mughals it is a well written, and exciting saga - just what the title says it would be - a narrative that hits all the high points, and delves into just enough detail not to loose the casual historian or India-phile.

If you want to know India, especially Northern India, you must know the Mughals, and they're a family worth knowing. (If you like the Medici's, you'll love the Mughals.) Their reign was short in the scheme of Indian history, but stamped the country for all time.

Mughal History Made Readable and Fascinating
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-10-31
The Mughal Throne is a well-researched, highly readable, extremely informative and detailed account of the great Mughal emperors from Babur through Aurangzeb. Abraham Eraly is a first-rate historian; he sets out his view of the historian's task in the erudite but readable "Preface" to the book. But not only is Eraly a first-rate historian - he is a first-rate storyteller, as well. Even the sections on military history (which I normally avoid) are written in a detailed but fascinating manner. I particularly like the way in which the various emperors' unique personalities come alive for the reader. The Mughal Throne is as engrossing and lively as any of the several historical novels set in Mughal times that I have recently read. I highly recommend this book not only for those interested in Islamic or Indian history, but for any tourist planning to visit Delhi, Agra, and/or Lahore. The many Mughal historical monuments in these cities will be enlivened for them because of their having read this excellent book.

An excellent read.
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2004-04-12
This is an excellent book for anyone who is interested in the events in India just before the British came a'colonizing.
It is an excellent mixture of vivid story telling and clear factual progression. Eraly does more than simply recount dates and facts; he makes the people who moved these events come alive like the characters in a good novel.
I hadn't read any histories of India before this one, and I found it very easy to jump in and follow what was going on.

I believe this book is pretty much the same as Emperors of the Peacock Throne, just with a different title, so if this one remains unavailable Peacock Throne would be a good option.

Enjoy!

How the Mughals made India
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-18
This is a fascinating book involving a fascintating period in the history of India. During the heyday of Mughal rule, India was one of the world's leading civilizations. Here was an elite that ruled intelligently (at least at first), allowing Moslem and Hindu worship freely and equally and producing some of the great monuments of civilization, the Taj Mahal, the Red Fort, and the city constructed by one of the emperors, Akbar, Fatehpur Sikri.

The focus of the book is the emperors themselves. It begins with Babur, who came out of Central Asia, a descendent of Tamerlane, who established the dynasty in North India. Babur also wrote an autobiography which detailed the principle events of his life which makes fascinating reading even today (Modern Library has recently reissued it in paperback).

Babur was succeded by his son Humayun, who has to be one of the most unlucky rulers of the 16th century. There was the usual strife between him and his siblings (which became the standard way of doing business as time progressed) which undermined the stability of the throne. Humayan spent a lengthy period in Persia which had longstanding cultural implications for the Mughals.

Fortunately for the dynasty,during its exile Sher Khan, whose 5 year rule allowed for certain administrative reforms that allowed the restored Mughal dynasty a certain degree of financial independence and the resources to build the great monuments and to extend its control from the north of India down to south. Many historians have downplayed Sher Khan's legacy, but Eraly is quite thorough in addressing this point.

Humayan died of a freak accident while pursuing his hobby of astonomy. His son Akbar assumed the throne and with him, his son, Jahangir, and grandson, Shah Jahan were the great days of the Mughals. It is the successes of that these remarkable rulers enjoyed, ruling much of modern India, that we remember this dynasty. Here Eraly handles the variety of court intrigues, building marvels, and sensual pleasures that made up the day to day life of an Indian Mughal emperor. The section on Akbar is particularly well-done, dealing with the cultured, yet illiterate emperor's wise appreciation of the religious questions.

Akbar's ability to understand the need to balance the Moslem religion of the rulers with the Hiduism of the ruled is in marked contrast with the final emperor detailed in the book, Aurangzeb. Embarking on a policy of religious intolerance and military expeditions lead to isolation from his Rajput allies and ultimately the demise of the empire in 1857 and the establishment of British rule in India.

This is an excellent work which shows how the the Mughals were able to achieve all that they did and how they were undone by one of their own.

informative but long
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2005-08-01
This is a very informative book, but I feel like it's a bit too long. I also felt like there was a huge emphasis on wars, but I wished there was more information about the culture of Mughal India, especially the lives of women. There were also references to some political figures (not the emperors) without a full description of who these people were. Without a background knowledge of Mughal history, it's hard to figure out who these people are. Despite these negative points, the history of Mughal India is presented in great detail so I'm glad I purchased the book because I learned a lot.

Nicholson
Native Treasure
Published in Hardcover by Dorrance Publishing Co. Inc. (2006-07-17)
Author: Rita K. Nicholson
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Native Treasure
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-17
Native Treasure This is a beautiful illistrated book dedicated to the Appaloosa horse. The pictures are gorgeous and capture the Appaloosa as he is....natural, colorful and beautiful! This is a book for Appaloosa lovers, owners and breeders. A must have if you love this breed.

Great Photographs
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-21
A really lovely collection of photos. No Appaloosa information or stories, but a nice book to put on the coffee table.

Keep it on the table for everyone to see.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-31
This is a beautiful book to browse through while enjoying the photographs and inspirational verses. Though it features Appaloosas, it is enjoyable for anyone that loves horses. It is great for those quiet times when you just want to relax and reflect.

Nicholson and Wilson are perfection in Native Treasure.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-12-22
The book is much more than a just an attractive addition to our coffee table. Our entire family loves the rich photos and eloquent verse. Many thanks to Ms. Nicholson and Mr. Wilson for their extraordinary work in documenting and preserving an important part of American history.

native treasure
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-13
The book is not as good as I would have liked it to be; the photos are mediocre and the quotes are ofter inane or sophomoric.

Nicholson
The Oxford Book of English Mystical Verse
Published in Paperback by Dickens Press (2007-11-16)
Author: D.H.S Nicholson
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Essential for a Basic Christian Library
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-23
A compendium of English mystical verse that can enrich one's literary and devotional experience. I consider it a one of the basic books in my Christian library and refer to it often.

Some great stuff on a thought-provoking theme
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 1999-08-20
The editors tell you right off, "that this anthology makes no claim to be representative even of any poet whose work is included, since the great mass of writing by which he or she is commonly known may fall without our limits, and some little known poem or poems may have seemed to answer our requirements." (the introduction)

So there is some wonderful work in this volume by many well-known poets, including selections less often anthologized. Among the poets included are Southwell, Donne, Marvell, Traherne, Blake, Wordsworth, Ralph Waldo Emerson, both Brownings, Poe, Tennyson, Emily Bronte, Walt Whitman, Francis Thompson, Oscar Wilde, W. B. Yeats, and many more, some of whom I never heard of (but then, I avoided literature courses like the plague). Milton is, however, conspicuously absent.

For a book originally published in 1917, the volume's scope is pretty wide. There are lots of women poets. Selections are mostly Christian, but not exclusively: Sarojini Nayadu contributes "To a Buddha Seated on a Lotus," and two others. And who knows what to make of Aleister Crowley?

It's beautifully printed and bound, with a nice ribbon marker. There's a lot in this book to truly move you, when the world is too much with you.

Mist-ical Verse
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2003-06-07
This book contains a few gems I had not read before, so I would like to give it a higher rating. However, the literary quality of most of the last half of the book is extremely low, full of tired rhymes and cliches. Much of the "mysticism" is of the misty variety, the sort the great mystics are constantly warning against. I would like to have seen the seventeenth century better represented (only two poems by Francis Quarles!). Also, fewer poems than I expected demonstrated a definite religious commitment, Christian or otherwise. I was, however, glad for the token representations of Jewish, Islamic, Hindu & Buddhist perspectives, little as they were.

If you want to own just one book,this is the one!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2000-09-07
The fiery passion of mystical experience in all of its varieties is in every poem!

An important, memorable book
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2000-06-15
I am thrilled to know that this book is back in print. I read it back in the early 70s. It was a library copy and already out of print, so I hand-copied all the poems I could. I've missed the rest ever since. Getting this new copy is like meeting an old friend--no, more than a friend, a mentor on my spiritual path. Don't miss this: it's the real thing.

Nicholson
Richard and Adolf: Did Richard Wagner Incite Adolf Hitler to Commit the Holocaust?
Published in Hardcover by Gefen Publishing House (2007-02-28)
Author: Christopher Nicholson
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Appreciation depends on your reason for reading.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-23
This book will leave you with a different impression depending on your purpose in reading it.

If you want to begin a serious scholarly inquiry on the subject, you will be disappointed.

There are plenty of footnotes and citations, but I don't think I found any that cited primary sources.
Most were references to various biographies of Wagner--many of which undoubtedly begin with the phrase "Richard Wagner was born..." This author reserves this phrase for the beginning of the third chapter.

Even easy to find primary sources were not researched or cited.
Nicholson quotes an English translation from "Zur Geschichte der Religion und Philosophie in Deutschland" by Heinrich Heine, however he cites "Newman, Life of Richard Wagner, vol.2, 261" for the quote.

The book almost reads like something Novosti Press might have published in English during the Cold War. Here is an example:
"Did Heine know that his own works would be...thrown on the great fires...when the nation threw its soul at the devil?"
This is typical of the writing style of the entire work.

There are also statements I wish had a footnote; e.g. "Hitler's fear arose from specters of those he had killed, visiting him--principally his erstwhile comrade-at-arms and lover Ernst Rölm..." This statement had no source or footnote, not even something like: "Patton, George C, On Hitler and his relationship with Rölm, Speech given to the US Third Army, Oppenheim, March 22, 1945."--except Nicholson would have cited "Wallace, The Intimate Sex Lives of Famous People". Wallace in turn might have gotten the information from Patton's speech. In all fairness, Nicholson cites Machtan, "Hidden Hitler" for most of his innuendo that Hitler was a closet homosexual.

In fact, huge portions of the book are devoted to Nietzsche, Ludwig II Siegfried Wagner, Hitler, and Richard Wagner's trysts, perversions, or sexual liaisons. While these would be necessary in a biography, I didn't see how they help answer the question asked in the title.

HOWEVER

If you are looking for an overview of Wagner's life and anti-Semitism written in easy to understand language without having to read seventeen different biographies of Wagner written in Universitese with long quotes in French or German this will probably fit the bill nicely.

It does a good job of describing the roots of Wagner's anti-Semitism in his own personal life, his anti-Semitic essays and innuendo in his operas, his relationship with Nietzsche, Chamberlain, etc.

It reads like a History Channel special- and does have a lot of good information. I never knew about the Spear of Longinus before reading this book, and found it fascinating!

I found the last chapter, "Wagner in Israel," very interesting and definitely worth reading.

The binding, paper type, printing and typeset are excellent.

I hope this review has been helpful to both types of readers

Patriotism is the last refuge of a scoundrel.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-14
Richard and Adolf
By
Christopher Nicholson

A Review
By
Colin J. Edwards

"Patriotism is the last refuge of a scoundrel". (Samuel Johnson 1775)

Patriotism seems a rather pedestrian word to use when considering the activities of Richard Wagner and Adolf Hitler in Germany during the first half of the 20th century. It was extreme patriotism, amplified by mental instability that created these monsters. They were not alone of course; Japan demonstrated similar traits in the same period.

Christopher Nicholson's book, `Richard and Adolf', records in the minutest detail the manifestations of Wagner's and Hitler's obsessions, and the impact they had on European Jewry. He postulates that Wagners anti-Semitism as demonstrated in his major musical works provided the launch pad for Hitler's excesses.

The book is beautifully produced. It is well bound and the pages are fine quality paper that will accommodate many readings.

The work is catalogued as a Holocaust book, but it is more than that. It is a detailed expose of how two disturbed people are hypnotized by an 800 year old poem, and use that as a justification for the calculated murder of 5 million innocent people. That is not to mention the millions that died as a result of their dementia.

Nicholson's book is a scholarly tome. All facts are annotated, and his bibliography runs to 7 pages.

However, Mr. Nicholson is a lawyer - a High Court Judge in fact, and his book reads rather like a brief. That does not in any way detract from the value of this work, but I did have the feeling that `Richard and Adolf' read like 2 briefs presented to condemn these individuals. That is not to suggest that these indefensible lunatics shouldn't be condemned, but I didn't think the numerous abusive after-thoughts at the end of paragraphs was appropriate. Facts alone are sufficient to condemn Wagner and Hitler, and personal evaluations serve little purpose.


I heartily recommend this book to anyone who wants a greater understanding of why someone would want to legislate to harass, hound and murder innocent families. But be prepared for the realization that Hitler didn't do it alone - indeed, he didn't do it at all. Nicholson doesn't site one incident of any resistance movement in Germany or anywhere else against Germany's attempt to exterminate European Jews.

This is an important work particularly for a generation to whom World War II was something someone mentioned during a history lesson. `Richard and Adolf', describes how a population with exaggerated patriotic zeal, can be manipulated by one individual to destroy their own people, the people in the continent around them and ultimately themselves.

Everyone should read this book to remind themselves of the cataclysmic dangers of Nationalism.


A Master Work
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-25
This great master work deserves to be greatly admired and applauded. Rarely had I read a book which was so thoroughly researched as this was. Rarely have I read such wonderful English. And rarely has an author produced such a powerful, incontrovertible case.
How I hope those who have insisted on playing Wagner's music will read your book from start to finish.

The ugliness of Richard Wagner
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-12
This is a very valuable book. Music lovers have long argued about the merits of Wagner's operas, their artistic versus contextual values and liabilities. Many have stated that the fact, that Hitler liked this composer's music and that they actually played them in the death camps, should not be used as an argument against Wagner, long dead at the time, or his music. Mr. Nicholson rightly points out the uglier sides of Richard Wagner's psyche, and the fact that he actually developed many of the theories about the "final solution of the Jewish question", namely mass murder. Adolf Hitler enthusiastically put his theories into practice. The book should be a compulsory read for musicologists.

An interesting and meticulous work
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-22
It has long been known that Richard Wagner's operas were influential in Nazi ideology and thus the name Wagner has become controversial to this day. However it has been some time since the philosophies and ideologies underpinning Nazism have been explored in depth, especially in relation to Hitler and Wagner. This thoroughly enlightening and well researched text fills a gap in this literature and provides a number of important and interesting contributions and insights into the history of Nazi ideology and its Wagnerian influence.

Wagner lived from 1813 to 1883 while Hitler was born in 1889 and died in his bunker in 1945. What is truly fascinating about this book is the way in which it paints a picture of a family tree of hate for Nazi ideology stretching back to Wagner, explaining in detail the power that Wagner's operas and racial manifestos cast over a generation or more. The cast of characters is grand, from Thomas Mann to Renoir and Nietzsche. The period 1850-1950 is one of the most fascinating in showing the underpinnings of modernity and modern philosophy and this author is brilliantly familiar with the period.

Wagner toyed with ideas of Nordic mythology and he weaved Jewish-like characters into many of his works, from the dwarfs in `The Ring of the Nibelungs' to the `Flying Dutchman'. The mythology of Barbaroosa and the return to an Aryan paganism were found in Wagner. In addition the mythology surrounding the Spear that was reputed to have pierced the side of Christ was woven into this story. Amazingly we are told of how Nietzsche called Wagner a `disease' and condemned in later in life. The text moves from a biography of Wagner and his works to an examination of his anti-Semitism, his Beyrouth festival and then Hitler's own connection to Wagner and his motif's. Amazingly we see that Wagner's own family had connections with Henry Ford who was a rabid anti-Semite.

The only thing that detracts from this study is a preoccupation with the rumored `sexual depravity' of Hitler and Wagner with allegations that Hitler was both involved in incest and homosexuality. This detracts from an overall fascinating book and takes away from the central theme of the development of anti-Semitism in Germany and the ethos of Wagner.

Seth J. Frantzman

Nicholson
The Velveteen Collection: The Velveteen Principles & The Velveteen Rabbit
Published in Hardcover by HCI (2005-10-05)
Authors: Toni Raiten-D'Antonio and Margery Williams
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Life-Changing
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-11
This book speaks for itself. GET IT GET IT GET IT!!!!!!!!!!! It was recommended to me by a friend when I was going through a difficult time. It is absolutely one of the best books I've ever read.

When I first picked it up I thought, "Oh great, another book that is going to offer complete perfection in my life, and actually just leave me feeling guilty". This was not the case at all. The first chapters were really slow, but then it just got phenomenal.

Get a little notebook to keep with the book as you read it, and do the exercises she assigns. You will walk away with a new outlook on yourself and on those around you.

The Velveteen Principles
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-09
I was disappointed in the content. I had purchased 6 sets hoping to give the books as gifts at Christmas. After reading the Velveteen Prinicples, I returned 5 sets.

We all need to aspire to be Real
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-02-17
This is a quick and easy read on complex subjects that leaves the reader with a compass for continued thought and development. The table of contents speaks for itself. Life has little meaning without values.

The power of being real!
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2005-10-03
I found this book almost by mistake, and when it arrived I began reading immediately. It is one of the first books in a long time that I was compelled to read in one sitting. Author Toni Raiten-D'Antonio's writing is clear, compassionate, accessible and stimulating. It didn't hurt that the text was crafted around the children's story, 'The Velveteen Rabbit', one of the stories from my childhood that I loved dearly. I recall both the book and the film, and being moved to tears each time, both with the rabbit's becoming real, and the realisation that this reality came with a heavy cost.

'The Velveteen Rabbit' is a short children's story written in 1922 by Margery Williams. Simple in plot and idea, it nonetheless contains wisdom beyond its seeming simplicity. The issues brought up are those that concern children and adults in many ways, and Toni Raiten-D'Antonio taps into the key issue - living a life that is real, not fake or phony. Some authors in the area of vocational discernment and personal fulfillment talk about living an authentic life; this is another term for what is here meant to as being real.

What does being real mean? For the Velveteen Rabbit, being real was a goal to strive for, not in a material sense (the rabbit did exist), but in a spiritual and emotional sense. The rabbit was one of many toys in the boy's room, many of which were flashier, more complex, brighter, shinier, or just 'more' in some way than the seemingly cheaply constructed Velveteen Rabbit. Yet the wise old horse, the Skin Horse, loved so much that his fur had rubbed off, inspired the rabbit by his acceptance, sense of self, and grace he extended, even sometimes to other toys that did not seem to deserve it.

One of the key concepts in the story that Raiten-D'Antonio highlights is that 'real' isn't a product, but rather a process. 'It doesn't happen all at once,' the Skin Horse tells the rabbit. It is a process that can be slow, it can be painful, and it can lead where one doesn't expect. But the first concept is that being real is possible - Raiten-D'Antonio states that from the moment the rabbit realised that `real' was a possibility, the rabbit was on the road to becoming real.

For us as human beings, becoming real is not something we're likely to find in a self-help video or encounter workshop, going in as one thing and coming out as another. There is no `eight-minute abs' variant for becoming real. Nor is being real always pretty. Again, according to the Skin Horse, 'It doesn't happen to people who break easily, or have sharp edges or who have to be carefully kept. Generally, by the time you are Real, most of your hair has been loved off, and your eyes drop out and you get loose in the joints and very shabby.' However, these are things that matter only to those who don't understand (which, unfortunately, is much of our society). Raiten-D'Antonio coins the term 'United States of Generica' (U.S. of G., for short) for the kind of plastic, flashy society that runs on media-hyped images of what good and desirable should be.

Raiten-D'Antonio is a therapist, having left the more glitzy world of television behind - once a mover on the corporate ladder (even if the intention was to produce PBS/educational 'worthwhile' television), she found herself in a place personally and vocationally that was inauthentic, and worried that by the time she would be permitted to do what she wanted to do, she might not be herself any longer. The culture in which we live has misplaced values (she highlights the fact that we pay more attention to models than to Nobel Prize winners; even the term 'model' has implications beyond what in fact they are), and it is a struggle, a process, to become real - real to oneself and real to what is truly important in life.

One of the tasks toward becoming real, according to Raiten-D'Antonio, is to learn empathy, and in particular self-empathy. The Skin Horse had great powers of empathy. The rabbit grew in this during the course of the story. Empathy and self-empathy an important principle, as are all twelve principles gleaned from the story. Being real is meaningful, as Raiten-D'Antonio describes in her epilogue, and leaves a legacy more lasting and real than stocks, bonds, real estate, etc. 'If you become more Real in your own life and bring that to your relationships, you are practically guaranteed to leave behind an inspiring example for others.'

The transformation of the rabbit from toy to real is dramatic and poignant, and has lessons that can help transform our lives, too. This is a remarkable book, one that will stay with me for a long time to come, long after the whiskers have faded, the tail has become unsewn, and the fur has been loved off.

This wonderful book, paired with the original 'Velveteen Rabbit', makes a wonderful gift for oneself as well as a special someone.

A children's classic that can shape your life.
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-11-20
I first came upon Toni's book one day by accident. Intrigued after looking through the chapter content, I purchased the book and found myself deeply effected by the author's observations. I have to confess, I wasn't really familiar with the story of the "Velveteen Rabbit", as I never had that story introduced to me as a child. I wish I had, as there is some real power behind the story's message. Toni Raiten-D'Antonio does a great job in the book illustrating how this children's classic has a great message for children and adults alike. I highly recommend this book.

Nicholson
Who's Who in Classical Mythology
Published in Paperback by Weidenfeld & Nicholson (1973-10-11)
Authors: Michael Grant and John Hazel
List price:
New price: $15.98
Used price: $3.39

Average review score:

Drawsbacks on Kindle Version
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-18
The book itself is great. It's probably the best in its subject area. But the Kindle version is extremely difficult to navigate. The mythological characters are listed in alphabetical order with no efficient way of finding the character you want. There is no click-able list of A-Z to access the section you want, nor is there a list of just each character's name or any kind of index to get you to the person you want. So if you want to find the entry for, say, Zeus, you can't just click on "Z" or find a list and click on "Zeus." You can search for his name, but it results in 680 results in the book, or over 114 "pages" of search results. You could try randomly typing in location areas trying to find the "Z" section, but that's not easy either. Even a lesser-known character search brings up several hits and it's not easy from the little blurbs to determine which one is the entry you want, so it takes several tries to find exactly what you're looking for.

Also, many of the genealogy charts are impossible to read because they have been shrunken down too much to fit the screen. There is no way to change the font size on the charts. It's a minor thing, but there you go.

This isn't a problem with just this Kindle edition book, but it's a big problem. The book itself I'd give 5 stars, but the Kindle edition only 2 because of its major flaws.

Resource Only
Helpful Votes: 18 out of 20 total.
Review Date: 2001-07-24
Who's Who is an excellent resource, but it is not meant for those who wish to sit down and read Greek myths. The book is set up in an encyclopedic fashion. References to specific Greek mythological figures are easy to locate. However if you are looking for Greek myths in story form, this is not the text for you.

Excellent resource and excellent fun
Helpful Votes: 23 out of 25 total.
Review Date: 2000-06-26
I bought this book as preparation for a Mediterranean study-cruise. It is a sort of encyclopedia of Greek and Roman mythology. Any classical mythological name can be found here with a synopsis of their major stories Just be warned: each character's story tends to be so interesting as to lead you to look up all the other characters that appear, and you will find yourself reading for hours.

one of the best
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2002-10-05
This book is one of the best i've ever read on Greek/Roman myth, and i've read many in my life. This book contains entries on characters rarely found anywhere else such as Nox, the Greek personification of night. As such i often use this book as a measuring stick against other books in this area.

Great Reference On-The-Fly
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2002-05-01
Grant and Hazel have provided a finely grained and authoritative dictionary-style reference that is quite handy for identification of any figure from classical mythology. The book will prove useful for keeping at one's side when reading Homer, Hesiod, Sophocles, Euripides and company. Very helpful appendices include genealogical trees, alphabetical list of classical authors referred to, and clear and informative maps.

Nicholson
The British Museum Dictionary of Ancient Egypt
Published in Paperback by British Museum Press (1997-09)
Authors: Ian Shaw and Paul T. Nicholson
List price:
Used price: $102.33

Average review score:

Brief but interesting
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2002-03-01
About 300 pages long with 2-3 articles per page. It is probably not useful for highly knowledgeable Egyptologists (for example, the stunning site of Abu Simbal gets about half a page - whereas a book could be written on it) but is a very compact resource for those who know a little and want to find out about particular topics. Or you can just flick through it and read about particular topics as they catch your eye - the maps, illustrations and photos are well selected and quite attractive. Also, since it is written by Englishmen it is mercifully quite free of the tedious P.C. stuff that is so prevalent in the academy today.
...

Brief but interesting
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2002-03-01
About 300 pages long with 2-3 articles per page. It is probably not useful for highly knowledgeable Egyptologists (for example, the stunning site of Abu Simbal gets about half a page - whereas a book could be written on it) but is a very compact resource for those who know a little and want to find out about particular topics. Or you can just flick through it and read about particular topics as they catch your eye - the maps, illustrations and photos are well selected and quite attractive. Also, since it is written by Englishmen it is mercifully quite free of the tedious P.C. stuff that is so prevalent in the academy today.

Easy to read with very minor complications
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 1999-11-19
This is a fantastic book! It helped my kids with their projects about Egypt. I reccomend this book to everyone!

An indespensable title
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 1999-06-21
A well thought out and comprehensive dictionary. Includes a wealth of information and photographs and should be on the bookshelf of anyone interested in Ancient Egypt

Nicholson
DK Big Readers: A Day at Greenhill Farm (Level 1: Beginning to Read)
Published in Paperback by DK CHILDREN (2001-08-01)
Author: Sue Nicholson
List price: $19.95
Used price: $54.10

Average review score:

Great for Science... But No Way It's for Beginning Readers - a review of 'A Day at Greenhill Farm"
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-02-15
This is another good book from Scholastic. It deals with the many animals one might find on a farm. Cows, ducks, pigs, chickens, horses, geese, sheep and more, are all here and presented with eye pleasing photos.

We see babies with their mothers, and have a chance to see what types of food they eat. (Baby animals nurse, of course.) We also get to see what a sheep looks like before, during, and after it is shorn.

That said, there is no way that this is a book for just beginning readers. First there are too many words on some of the pages and some of the vocabulary is a bit sophisticated. Words like : orange, goslings, milking, through, webbed, oily, and noise.

Three Stars. Good book with attractive pictures of farm animals. Should be of interest to older babies thru 1st Graders. I wouldn't purchase it as a beginning reader though

Beautiful little book
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2002-07-01
Small children are fascinated by farm animals and this book has beautiful pictures of these animals along with very nice text for when they are older. Our one year old loves it now and "reads" it to herself.

Great book
Helpful Votes: 15 out of 15 total.
Review Date: 2000-04-23
a must have for your classroom if you are studying farms! my students chose to read this book over and over again during SSR. You will be impressed - buy it today!

Greenhill Farm
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2000-04-24
i grew up on a farm, and this book brought back a lot of those childhood memories for me. i really thought this book had some great content, and i enjoyed it thouroughly.


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