Phillips Books


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

Phillips
Morningstar 500: 1998-99 (Morningstar Funds 500)
Published in Paperback by Morningstar (1998-02)
Author: Don Phillips
List price: $35.00
New price: $26.90
Used price: $1.16

Average review score:

An outstanding reference tool
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 1999-09-10
This is a great reference tool. I was somewhat disappointed that some smaller funds with outstanding track records were excluded; however, with over 9,000 funds available the authors had to draw the line somewhere.

WONDERFUL!
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 1999-06-13
This book is a wonderful source of mutual fund data. I am just a an average joe who needed some help in the investment world. With this book, I was able to avoid those money grubbing brokers and get business handled on my own terms. I have told all my family and friends about this book and they are just as pleased as I am. I suggest that you let Morningstar do the hard research and number crunching for you, too.

Simply indispensable!
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 1999-06-13
Morningstar is the reason that I have been able to retire early. Much earlier than I ever thought possible. I have recommended their various publications to friends of mine, who have all come up to thank me later on. And the folks at Morningstar are just beautiful people.

Phillips
Most of the Good Stuff: Memories of Richard Feynman
Published in Kindle Edition by American Institute of Physics (1993-10-12)
Author:
List price: $44.95
New price: $35.96

Average review score:

quintessential Feynman
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-29
This is probably not the first book to read about Feynman. I think the best introductory read is Surely You're Joking Mr. Feynman. However, this one is unique in that it gives a first hand objective account of his life, personality and achievements (particularly in Physics). It's unfortunate that I have had to skip parts of certain essays (written originally for Physics Today) because they required the kind of Physics knowledge that I do not have, in order to understand and appreciate what Feynman's contribution was to the problem. Nonetheless, the book is a pleasure to read, and some essays are gems in that respect. I especially liked Richard Feynman and the Connection Machine by W. Daniel Hillis. Just when I'm thinking I've learned all of the interesting Feynman stories that I will ever get to know, I come across yet another one that makes me smile and shake my head. I wonder if there are any left after reading this book :)

Anyone who has followed Feynman should read this
Helpful Votes: 22 out of 23 total.
Review Date: 1999-01-16
Fascinating and insiteful lectures from many of the great people in the world of physics. Amusing anecdotes, touching tributes, and glimpses into the private life of a genius who was also extremely human and persevered through very painful personal problems to help create the atomic bomb while his wife was seriously ill, yet keeping his spirits up and his sense of humor. Never a person to rest on his laurels Feynman is shown in this book as a person who listened intently to other people's theories, no matter how odd they sounded and never assumed anything was right or wrong until he worked it out for himself from first principles. It's all here, his life, his work, his friends, family and colleagues - but most of all his spirit.

The Most Personally Satisfying of All the Feynman Books
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2002-08-06
Divided into seven sections (The Early Years, At Los Alamos, The Cornell Years, The Research Physicist at Caltech, The Teacher at Caltech, The Public Physicist and Consultant, and Feynman--The Man), this fine book presents Richard Feynman as he was seen by those closest to him--his friends and colleagues. To their credit, they present him as they knew him, the qualities with the flaws.

The book is especially successful in communicating Feynman's way of thinking, the processes he used in attacking problems. The essay entitled "Richard Feynman and the Connection Machine" by W. Daniel Hills is notably successful in this regard, and by itself justifies the purchase of the book. I found it especially interesting that Feynman was fascinated, as I am, by the potential of cellular automata for modeling fluids. Readers with the same interest should also consider purchasing Seek! Selected Nonfiction by Rudy Rucker.

Five or so essays by other physicists who knew Feynman contain mathematics that is proably beyond the ability of the average reader (certainly mine), but even these contain gems of insight that reward readers who wade through them.

All in all, a most satisfying experience.

Also recommended: Feynman's Rainbow: A Search for Beauty in Physics and in Life

Phillips
Myths & Facts About Ovarian Cancer: What You Need to Know
Published in Paperback by PRR (2002-01)
Authors: M. Steven Piver, Gamal Abbakh, Harriet Phillips, and Gamal Eltabbakh
List price: $9.95
Used price: $177.29

Average review score:

This book IS IN PRINT.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2004-03-06
This book is available from CMP Media, 30th Floor, 3 Park Avenue, N.Y., N.Y. 10016, Attention: Kristin Kazanowski, Phone: 212-600-3192. Price is $7.95 plus $4.00 s&h.

Myths and Facts about Ovarian Cancer: M.S.Piver
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2000-04-25
Very Informative. Easy to read and understand

There should be more books like this!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2002-04-15
This is a well needed reference. It's rather small, about the size of a large pamphlet, but it's got an amazing amount of information packed into it. There aren't enough books out there describing this form of cancer. This one is very well written and I would recommend it for anyone diagnosed with ovarian cancer or anyone who knows and loves someone with ovarian cancer. It answers all the questions you might have and takes a serious look at the myths out there. It's very informative and easy to understand.

Phillips
Napoleon's Lost Fleet: Bonaparte, Nelson, and the Battle of the Nile
Published in Hardcover by Discovery Books (1999-08-29)
Authors: Laura Foreman and Ellen Blue Phillips
List price: $35.00
New price: $25.24
Used price: $5.44

Average review score:

A wonderful book!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-04-08
This large and attractive book was created by the Discovery Channel, to tell the story of the Battle of the Nile. Brimming with details, the book tells the story of the French Revolution and the life of Napoleon Bonaparte, followed by the life of Horatio Nelson, and the exciting finale: a minute-by-minute retelling of the Battle of the Nile in 1798. Along the way, the reader is treated to many excellent pictures, charts and graphs, not to mention a plethora of highly informative sidebars.

This is a wonderful book, one that will please readers that know nothing about the subject, and those that know a lot. I am very glad that I was able to get ahold of it, and highly recommend it to you!

Napoleon in Egypt makes wonderful history reading for all
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2000-08-23
Accompanying a Discovery episode, the book tells the story of Napoleon's conquest of Egypt, and his Battle of the Nile with Lord Nelson. Beautifully illustrated, the authors dramatically relate the surrounding events in a detailed and clear style. A final chapter about excavations by Frank Goddio and his underwater team has provided marvelous photographs and much information about recent discoveries. Definitely a must-read for all interested in historical events, Napoleon, marine archaeology and Egypt.

Great Book!
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 1999-09-15
As a history buff and Discovery Channel fan, I really loved this book

Phillips
Never Too Late to Learn: The Adult Student's Guide to College
Published in Paperback by Princeton Review (2000-04-18)
Author: Vicky Phillips
List price: $13.95
Used price: $1.62

Average review score:

I went to college at the age of 20
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-07-25
This is a book for a student who just finished HIgh school at 20 yrs. old like I did or have gotten a GED. My mom says it's never too late to learn and go to college. YOu could be young or old and still earn a diploma late in HIgh School and a GED.

April Ann

Great guide
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2005-09-05
This was featured in the Boston Globe in a section for adults going back to school. I found it very concise and useful!

The best guide for adult college students
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2004-05-12
This book is an excellent resource for adults, especially full-time working adults, preparing to return to or start higher education programs. The author does a wonderful job of helping potential students "shop around" for the schools and programs that will meet specific goals of each student. Admissions recruiters' job is to sell the school they work for, this book helps shoppers look at options available in a non-bias way.
Explaining the difference in accreditation, in degrees, certificates, continuing education, and training programs, traditional and non-traditional, format and delivery of courses, etc. is extremely helpful for individuals to discern the differences between the countless options available to adult learners.

Phillips
The New Harp of Columbia (Tennesseana Editions Series)
Published in Paperback by Univ of Tennessee Pr (1989-07)
Authors: M. L. Swan, Dorothy D. Horn, Ron Petersen, and Candra Phillips
List price: $16.95
Collectible price: $27.99

Average review score:

An essential for the east Tennessean Harp Singer!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2000-08-01
I have gotten many hour of enjoyment for this book.

Old Harp- The New Harp of Columbia
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2003-10-11
The New Harp of Columbia is a repository of Odes, Anthems, Fuging pieces, Marching Tunes, Sea Chanteys, Dirges, Folk Tunes, Calvary Tunes put to meter and matched to the prime sermons of the day and written by the tune smiths into hymns.
(The Hymn "Amazing Grace," was mixed and matched to a tune New Britain or Middleton is contained therein but not to J. Cowper's Hymn of John Newton's sermon.) This singing school manual breaks the music into separate parts for easy reading and written into character notes or shapes to help distinguish the notes for a people in a time who could not read let a lone read music.
It is part of a two hundred year plus ongoing American social community and spiritual tradition. More information can be found www.oldharp.org or www.fasola.org.

Larry Olszewski- Old Harp Singer

new edition of the NHoC
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2001-03-17
The New Harp of Columbia is the seven-note "old harp" tune book for shape note singers in and around Knoxville in east Tennessee. The 1975 University of Tennessee Press reprinting is probably out of print (though we have a few extra copies) as of March 2001. A new edition, scheduled for publication by the University of Tennessee Press in July 2001, will include the present (1867) New Harp of Columbia, with about 40 additional tunes from the earlier (1848) Harp of Columbia which M.L. Swan omitted from the new book in 1867. Meanwhile, come sing with us! - Bob Richmond (RSRICHMOND@aol.com)

Phillips
New York Contemporary Art Galleries : The Complete Annual Guide
Published in Paperback by Manhattan Arts Intl (2000-11-20)
Author: Renee Phillips
List price: $18.95
Used price: $12.54

Average review score:

The entire NYC Art World in the palm of your hands!!!!!!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2001-01-31
As a newcomer to New York City this book gave me immediate access to the entire NYC Art World and everthing that happens behind the scenes. It is my most valuable Art Resource Book and I always find what I am looking for.

Vital NYC Gallery guide!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2000-10-29
Everything you ever wanted to know about New York City galleries, but were afraid to ask. There is no other book like this that I've seen. It's up-to-date, which is very important in the dynamic NYC art world, yet also easy-to-use - I found what I was looking for. Other artists, in NYC and elsewhere - it's essential.

THE BEST BOOK ON NEW YORK GALLERIES
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2000-10-28
This is the book every artist and art lover has been waiting for. It lays out the complete map to find out about every art gallery and museum in the city -- more than 800 detailed listings -- and the kind of art work you can find there. I know of artists who have found galleries for their work from reading this book and they don't even live in New York City. In addition to providing the hundreds of listings Renee Phillips offers guidance to artists in the introduction and professional resources in the back of the book.

Phillips
Noel's miracle
Published in Paperback by CPID Books (1997)
Author: G. Phillip Ungricht
List price:
New price: $5.99
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $10.00

Average review score:

A Touching Story.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-12-28
This story touched my heart. It tells you about the troubles and triumph of Christmas. The first minute I cried, the next I laughed. Phillip Ungricht is an amazing man and I am so touched by the way he can make you get so involved into the story. I have passed it to my friends and they all enjoyed it. I hope I helped you. Read this book and Christmas will mean more to you and all the people around you.

A Pulitzer prize winner
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2001-10-20
This is one book you can't put down once you start reading it.
This book is so dynamic that you have to keep turning the pages to find out what happens.
You become so involved with the characters, one minute you are crying the next minute you are laughing. A very heart felt and warming story. (I believe this is a true story)
This is the TRUE meaning of Christmas.

A must read for everyone.

Favorite Christmas story!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2001-08-15
I loved this book! The story is so intriguing, and it made me love Christmas even more than I already did. It is the perfect stocking-stuffer: it is both meaningful and affordable! I am going to give copies to my neighbors and relatives this year.

Phillips
On the Laps of Gods: The Red Summer of 1919 and the Struggle for Justice That Remade a Nation
Published in Kindle Edition by Crown (2008-06-10)
Author: Robert Whitaker
List price: $24.95
New price: $9.99

Average review score:

Riveting--and timely
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-17
This book is heartrending but also uplifting. It brings into focus a national hero, Scipio Jones, who was born a slave but rose to prominence. Now forgotten, he brought about--through his deft legal work--changes in our national law that we would do well to remember now in these days when habeous corpus seems to have gone by the wayside. Truly this book can be seen as examining the changes in our law that made it possible for the civil rights movement to emerge. It really is a great book and a great read. It can be hard to get through some of the gripping--but painful--accounts of the killings in the beginning of the book--but the end is worth it.

A MUST READ book
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-23
On the Laps of Gods by Robert Whitaker: This is a MUST READ book by a jornalist formerly with the Wall Street Journal. It focuses on an attempt by tenant farmers in Southeastern Arkansas to organize and collectively confront the land owners with theft of profits due the tem. Land owners learned of the cooperative meeting and ambushed them in their local church, beginning a trail of killing that eventually took the lives of 100 black tenant farmers and their families. They were assisted by Federal Troops from a local barracks who used machine guns on the tenant farmers. Whitaker pictures this confrontation in the larger picture of consistent and planned disenfrantisement of the black in all of the the states of the Confederate south by agreement with the local law officers and the local court systems as they passed law after law diminishing the rights of blacks. The Supreme Court USA of the time looked the other way arguing states rights dispite abuse of the 14th Amendment to the Constitution.

Whitaker paints a lesson for us all. In a day when the US government easily condemns lack of freedom for citizens of other countries, we must look back on our own recent past. It is an agonizing moral dilemma and should tax our own moral code. The hero here is Scipio Africanus Jones, born a slave who rose to practice law and free the 87 Arkansas prisoners falsely accused of murder by collusion of the courts and the law and who faced either long prison sentences or execution. WHAT A STORY.

A Script Worthy of a Movie?
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-17
The very title of the book suggests that a great deal of help was needed in overcoming one of the most shameful events in the annals of America's very dark racial history. The events in question have to do with Robert Whitaker's award winning story about what happened to a group of black sharecroppers in the Mississippi Delta, in Elaine, Arkansas, just up the street from Helena, about a 4 hours drive from my own hometown of Pine Bluff, Arkansas.

What happened on the night of September 30, 1919 has been seared into the collective memory of all blacks affiliated with the Helena area. On that night, a group of Black sharecroppers, who had gotten tired of years of being cheated out of their fair share of their cotton crops, decided to take matters into their own hands by forming a union with the intention of petitioning and eventually suing their landowners to redress this long-running economic inequity and injustice.

This injustice, incidentally was common practice used against black farmers, whether sharecroppers or not, and existed all over not just Arkansas, but all over the South. As a small boy, I can distinctly remember my grandfather, Silas Brown, who was not a sharecropper, but happened to own his own proverbial "forty acres and two mules (Blue and Cake)," bitterly complaining about how he too was being cheated out of his cotton crop by the unscrupulous "buyers and ginners of cotton."

In any case, the group didn't get very far along in their plans to form a union, as a car pulled up to the wooden church where the meeting was taking place and with a posse of "federalized concerned white citizens" began a four day massacre that ended up killing more than 100 black men, women and children, and was also coincidentally responsible for the death of a solitary white man.

This "white instigated vigilante action," as is customary in the U.S., was of course referred to as a "race riot." Meaning of course that the blacks inside the church, and not the white terrorists outside, were responsible for the occurrence of the incident. In the "mop up operation," following this clear white vigilante action, massacring more than 100 blacks, more than 300 black farmers were also arrested and charged with a variety of crimes ranging from illegal assembly, rioting, resisting arrest, carrying concealed weapons, to the murder of the lone white man.

In the "kangaroo court" that followed, the court-appointed defense attorneys refused to call any witnesses; prosecution witnesses were whipped if they didn't lie; and a mob held sway outside the courthouse, threatening to burn it down if there were no convictions. Some of the defendants were sentenced to die in the electric chair in less than two minutes; the rest in no more than a few hours. The all-white jury consisting of the normal cast of characters, of local leaders and "distinguished concerned white citizens" sentenced the "so-called union ring leaders" to death in the electric chair.

In 1919, this was American justice in its fullest racial glory.

The book however, is not about the "so-called race riot" per se, but is about the heroic legal efforts of a black Little Rock attorney named Scipio Africanus Jones, an about how he succeeded in taking the case (Moore vv. Dempsey) all the way to the Supreme Court and getting six of the death sentences overturned. And while the author readily admits that many of those involved in the legal victory were white, for obvious reasons his focus was on the bravery, courage and skill of this lone black lawyer, who risked his life in taking up the cause of the defense.

Since the context and circumstances of the story constituted a virtual leitmotif of small town southern racial injustice, it is puzzling how some Arkansas white historians (especially the author of Blood in Their Eyes, which is "a decidedly white account" of the same set of events) can call the incident controversial? It is also difficult to see why they chafe over the fact that Scipio Jones was made into a black legal hero. It is a black hero story, told about black people. Do whites have to always steal all black narratives, when American history is written? Why not just leave it alone?

As a footnote, there was once a black High School in North Little Rock, Arkansas, in the same AA Conference as my own Merrill High, name Scipio Jones High School. Until reading this book, I had never known who Scipio Jone was.

Worthy of a movie for sure! Five stars

Phillips
Parenting Well When You're Depressed: A Complete Resource for Maintaining a Healthy Family
Published in Paperback by New Harbinger Publications (2001-09-09)
Authors: Alexis D. Henry, Jonathan C. Clayfield, and Susan M. Phillips
List price: $17.95
New price: $69.17
Used price: $16.74

Average review score:

Essential! Only one of its kind!
Helpful Votes: 15 out of 15 total.
Review Date: 2001-08-02
I recently received a copy of this book from one of the authors. It is not only extraordinary in its focus and scope, but exceptional in that it addresses such issues at all. The challenges of parenting are well known, but undertaking them while experiencing depression is hardly ever discussed - despite the fact that depression is one of the most common health complaints in our nation. Learning to cope with the negative emotions, and still be the best parent you can, involves recognizing behaviors and developing skills - and this book shows you how. I highly recommend this to any parent who feels the burdens of their life are impinging on their ability to parent. If you think you might need help, this is a good place to start.

Great resource for parents and service providers
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2002-05-17
I found this book to be an excellent resource for my practice as a mental health attorney. This book is written in an easy to read format with helpful pointers for parents with depression and those who work with these parents and families. In addition to its useful hints, the book also lets parents with depression and other mental health issues realize that they are not alone. I highly recommend this book to parents, families, and mental health providers.

Bi-Polar But Not A Parent
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2001-10-23
I found this book to be extremly helpful and insightful. I am not a parent but do have a bi-polar mental illness.
The book has shown me a way to better manage my illness. Most of the chapters deal with subjects such as how to put together a self-care plan,a crisis plan (such as going into the hospital),how to make better use of finances as well as the importance of keeping a balanced life.
I believe very strongly that not only parents with a mental illness but parents without a mental illness and childless couples with or without an illness can also benefit from reading this book.
This is a must read book for anyone who wants to improve any area of their life.


Books-Under-Review-->Reference-->Biography-->P-->Phillips-->34
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