Phillips Books
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An outstanding reference toolReview Date: 1999-09-10
WONDERFUL!Review Date: 1999-06-13
Simply indispensable!Review Date: 1999-06-13

quintessential FeynmanReview Date: 2007-01-29
Anyone who has followed Feynman should read thisReview Date: 1999-01-16
The Most Personally Satisfying of All the Feynman BooksReview Date: 2002-08-06
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

This book IS IN PRINT.Review Date: 2004-03-06
Myths and Facts about Ovarian Cancer: M.S.PiverReview Date: 2000-04-25
There should be more books like this!Review Date: 2002-04-15

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A wonderful book!Review Date: 2003-04-08
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 allReview Date: 2000-08-23
Great Book!Review Date: 1999-09-15


I went to college at the age of 20Review Date: 2006-07-25
April Ann
Great guideReview Date: 2005-09-05
The best guide for adult college studentsReview Date: 2004-05-12
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.

An essential for the east Tennessean Harp Singer!Review Date: 2000-08-01
Old Harp- The New Harp of ColumbiaReview Date: 2003-10-11
(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 NHoCReview Date: 2001-03-17


The entire NYC Art World in the palm of your hands!!!!!!Review Date: 2001-01-31
Vital NYC Gallery guide!Review Date: 2000-10-29
THE BEST BOOK ON NEW YORK GALLERIESReview Date: 2000-10-28
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Collectible price: $10.00

A Touching Story.Review Date: 2003-12-28
A Pulitzer prize winnerReview Date: 2001-10-20
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!Review Date: 2001-08-15


Riveting--and timelyReview Date: 2008-07-17
A MUST READ bookReview Date: 2008-08-23
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?Review Date: 2008-06-17
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

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Essential! Only one of its kind!Review Date: 2001-08-02
Great resource for parents and service providersReview Date: 2002-05-17
Bi-Polar But Not A ParentReview Date: 2001-10-23
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.
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