Richardson Books
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Who Can Beat A Classic!Review Date: 2008-09-20
Horton, My HeroReview Date: 2008-05-12
Horton ! Review Date: 2008-05-05
The Kids Love it Review Date: 2008-04-29
A timeless masterpiece for children of all agesReview Date: 2008-06-01


Great BookReview Date: 2008-11-11
Great use for social emotional literacyReview Date: 2008-09-21
Dr. Suess is the bestReview Date: 2008-07-01
LESSONS LEARNED FOR LIFEReview Date: 2008-05-15
Wonderful collection of storiesReview Date: 2008-04-29

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Business is a Contact SportReview Date: 2002-11-12
"Contact Sport" helped me - now I give it to my clientsReview Date: 2002-10-04
Relationship management taken seriouslyReview Date: 2002-06-20
What Vidaurreta and Richardson do so well is provide an effective framework for organizing and harvesting a company's relationship management techniques - techniques that we all tend to use, but only in a haphazard and slipshod fashion. The book, in a practical "what to do on Monday morning" fashion, outlines how, with a little thinking and organization, you can vastly increase return on the relationship management techniques that you may already have in place. It then goes on to point out techniques you probably never thought of...
In my opinion a lotta bang for very little buck!!
Not just for the top execsReview Date: 2002-09-30
I recently discovered that Gus and Tom had written, "Business is a Contact Sport" so I rushed to Amazon[.com] and purchased it...more from curiosity than anything else. What I never would have realized had I not read the book was just how much I had gleaned from my time with them. I've actually been using many of their principles for more than a dozen years and greatly benefiting from them. I've had numerous long-termed engagements as I watched people with more expertise and more years of experience than myself being laid off. I've been able to cultivated relationships with key individuals at many of the clients I've worked at and have frequently been able to leverage these relationships into longer term or repeat engagements. Along the way I've always tried to help people in every way I could, even when I knew there would be no chance for reciprocation.
Maybe you're like me, you're not CEO material (or CRO for that matter) and you don't have the desire to IPO new companies, you're happy with your career but want a edge at being able to land the longer term or more lucrative job assignments. This new book is not just for the top executives, it's for the average person like myself who just wants a leg up in this new economy.
By the way, my wife and I attended the first Christmas party that SCG gave back in 1988, the one that cost 10% of that year's profits. They didn't have to invite me, they knew I'd never be a large source of income for the business, but they cultivated the relationship anyway. Relationships truly are circular aren't they...here I am fourteen years later giving a rave review on their book!
Of course you don't have to buy the book to benefit from their knowledge, you could begin your career under their tutelage
like I did!
Kurt Sligh
Software Consultant
12 Principles to greater success!Review Date: 2002-09-21

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Relieve the pain of being forced to use Windows!Review Date: 2006-03-28
Just the tips, manReview Date: 2001-01-18
Not what I wantedReview Date: 2001-12-31
Just the tips, manReview Date: 2001-01-18
Develop Control Over Word's Automatic Formats!Review Date: 2001-02-01
If you are like me, Microsoft Word has two major drawbacks:
(1) Automatic formats that change things from what you want to what you don't want, and are hard to disable
(2) A manual that would cause a hernia to lift (and is daunting to contemplate opening).
This book overcomes both of those problems.
Let me explain a little about why this book is valuable before describing it.
First, the authors clearly have a lot of experience with Word because they had tips for every problem I have ever had using the program. Soon, I found myself racing through to find the sections that would help me.
Second, this book will be especially valuable to authors and others who need to create long text files. I knew there had to be ways to automatically do a universal change of one word for another. Now I know how to do it! Wow! Can you imagine how much time that will save?
Third, I suspect this book will be even more valuable to those who would like to add a lot of snazzy graphics to their Word documents. I don't plan to, but I was impressed to see how to do that.
The book is spiral bound and comes with a cardboard stand, so I can leave it on the top of my word processing station and flip through it easily without having to clear a lot of space.
The structure is logical in that it begins with simple subjects and moves on to more specialized ones. Here are the topics:
Documents, documents, documents
Navigating a document
Selecting and navigating text
Character and paragraph formatting
Changing fonts and point sizes
Special characters
Paragraph stuff
Lists?
Creating, editing and applying styles
Undo, cut, copy and paste
Lost something?
Page breaks, section breaks and columns
AutoCorrect, AutoText and the Spike
Creating and using forms and mail merge
Spell check and the Thesaurus
Out in the field
Those nasty tabs
Tables, rows and columns
Making templates
Headers, footers and cool page stuff
Squares, circles, stars, lines, autoshapes and more!
Selecting, moving and duplicating objects
Fills, lines, colors and shadows
Inserting objects and clip art
Hyperlinks
Toolbars
Menus
Help
Each tip page has more than one tip on it. The main one is presented in straightforward fashion. "#88 To paste the contents of the clipboard Press Ctrl + V." Then there is a comical cartoon figure (a surfer in this case) with another tip. These secondary tips vary in difficulty, with the type of character used indicating the complexity level. "The very happening thing is that I noted the last 4 shortcuts (Ctrl + Z, X, C and V) are in a row on the keyboard."
This page format works very well for breaking up the text, and making it more interesting. The shift in style allows the mind a break from one complicated item to another. It also creates a dialogue on the page that makes it easier to remember the idea.
It turns out that these ideas work on almost all versions of Word, so even if you do not have Word 2000, you will get benefit from this book. I use Word 6.0, and almost everything applies. A number of the directions apply to Excel and Powerpoint, as well.
What I had not realized is that Word is not well enabled for those who only use the mouse. The more sophisticated adjustments almost always require using the keyboard, instead. So that insight was worth the price of the book alone. I had found myself using the keyboard more and more with Word, and did not know why. Now I understand. It's because I can get my results faster and easier that way.
Let me give you one word of caution. Because the book starts with the simplest and works towards the most complex applications, you may already know most of the first 50 tips. Keep going. At some point, almost everything will be something that you did not know before.
I wish I could give you an idea of how to go right to the place where you will find exactly the right material to solve your own issues. I don't know how to do that. I suggest that you flip pages so that you can scanned everything once. Then you can come back when you want to use an item. You might add colored Post-It notes to mark the places with a note jotted on them about how you want to use the advice.
The only drawback I found in the book is that sometimes I did not understand the terms used, so the advice did not mean anything to me. A glossary of terms would have helped. Perhaps the "Help" feature in Word can get me through those.
I think there is also a potential benefit in seeing other ways to use Word. I did not realize that the 2000 version has list and mail merging features. That may be something we can use in our office.
After you have finished finding great nuggets of knowledge here, I suggest that you take something that you do for others. Ask them what difficulties they have in using what you provide. See if you can boil down what they need into easier-to-use formats, as well.
Go straight to the solution!

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Great BookReview Date: 2006-11-03
The Best of Its KindReview Date: 2006-01-21
a rare gemReview Date: 2003-09-10
a rare gemReview Date: 2003-09-10
You'll love this book.Review Date: 2003-05-24
This book offers a history of "in the know" type stories about specific toys and the personalities who created and purchased them. There's the Buck Rogers XZ-31 rocket pistol that led Macy's and Gimbels into their most vicious price war ever, dropping prices by the hour to support the most successful toy promotion the world had ever seen. And there's the collector Bob Lesser who pays double the sticker price to win dealer loyalty. And there's a never-been-published story of the untimely death of Flash Gordon creator Alex Raymond. Plus the authors offer insight into how toys have affected history, entertainment, and the space program.
If you're a fan of Buck Rogers like I am, you should also check out Blast Off! author S. Mark Young's interviews with Erin Grey in Filmfax (Oct/Nov 2002 and Feb/Mar 2003) for a sensitive rendering of a sensational story.

Used price: $11.48

Perennial Philosophy in the Key of AmericanaReview Date: 2005-09-16
Firing the MindReview Date: 2004-08-31
The Value of This BookReview Date: 2006-11-29
This biographer, Richardson, really did his homework and any who want to understand Emerson better should appreciate this work. Emerson kept exhaustive journals and collections of his thoughts for many years. He read widely and deeply, kept detailed notes, and thoroughly indexed the notes. What perfect material to access for writing a biography! Apparently Richardson went back and studied much of the source material that Emerson references in his journals and brings into this biography an understanding of who Emerson was reading and what it meant to Emerson, so we receive the pleasure of following along on a journey in the development of a powerful mind. Then Richardson is able to write about this development so that it is easily readable to us moderns. It's quite a remarkable achievement.
"Mind on Fire" shows me that Richardson is certain that studying Emerson and his message is worthwhile. So much consideration has gone into this biography that when I laid it down after almost non-stop reading for several days over the holidays, I felt like I really understood Emerson for the first time, and now have much better insight. I plan to let this book simmer in my mind a few more months, then pick it up and read it again.
If Richardson could also write something as lucid and detailed to help me understand the Tao Te Ching, I wouldn't have 10,000 questions about the 10,000 things. ;-)
When the genius of biography meets the genius of literatureReview Date: 2005-09-23
There are times you feel that you're intruding upon Waldo and Henry on one of their walks. It was an endless stroll of two intellectuals and humanists on the path of being very human. Each of the one hundred chapters (both books) are kept short, which helps move the reader from topic to topic without ever feeling put upon (too much detail can drag what is otherwise very interesting.) Though, for me personally, I would love to savor every moment these two great men shared. I don't think I could ever get bored.
Emerson has many close friends with whom one gets to know intimately. His personal address book was a whose whose of literary and intellectual greats.
The relationship between Emerson and his second wife, Lidian, is of great interest. She was also intellectual and as much a partner in life as she was a wife. Her presence is everywhere in Emerson's life.
Emerson's essays are pure poetry. And the behind the scene snippets into how they became a part of his legacy was both insightful and relevant to the day to day interactions and causes he committed himself. His transformation from the unremarkable child into the neverending 'student' of self-education and commitment to social conscience throughout his entire adult life is one to be admired.
Mr. Richardson is one of the best biographers of nineteenth century literaries. He is truly one with his topic.
The Best of the BestReview Date: 2003-06-19
The book is also superbly written. Each short chapter offers enough substantive insight to urge the reader into the next. It is a long book, but not long-winded. Richardson provides the reader with some morsel of insight in a few pages of narrative, and then offers a rest to digest what has been said. His placement of quotations from Emerson's journals, essays and other works is brilliant, offering the reader a useful sketch of Emerson's metaphysics and ethics. In my own case, this has allowed time to reach for other literature more fully descriptive of the events or scenes offered in a particular chapter, or to reread chunks of Emerson's writings while moving through the biography. The book is a useful tool not merely for a study of Emerson's life but for a study of Transcendentalism and of the interplay of ideas across the Atlantic that shaped American thought in so many ways. One sees more clearly where and how such writers as Nietzsche and Thoreau obtained the seeds of their own truths from Emerson's works and thoughts.
Richardson has set the standard for the writing of future biographies. Again, simply superb.

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William James back from the dead!Review Date: 2008-08-31
If you want to see American psychology at its roots, there's no one else to start with than James. He's the most colorful, most quoted and most brilliant early psychologist in America and yet one of the least known and most under-rated.
This 500-page breathtaking tour de force of James sets the standard for the life of William James. For me, Richardson brought James back to life for as long as this book continues to be in print!
I highly recommend this book to anyone interested in the history of psychology, especially the history of psychology in America. Also recommended to anyone who enjoys reading about the lives of great men and women of the past.
James isn't just for academics. He was a staunch advocate for psychology as a practical field to help us live richer and fuller lives. He didn't just study psychology (and medicine, and philosophy) - he lived psychology at a time when the field was only being born.
Don't Read This In Public.Review Date: 2008-02-26
I wish I could explain why Richardson's biographies are different from anyone else's. It's not just an artful piling up of delightful and distressing facts. Instead it's like the doorbell rings and you have a new best friend: William James. There's something magical and occult about this. It's not like he went to the research library, it's like he drew mystic diagrams on the floor.
Richardson writes that one of James' gifts was "his uncanny ability to pick up redemptive ideas from his reading." And it is Richardson's gift too, to fill each page with life-giving ideas. These biographies are as purely inspirational as a strong Lao coffee with sweetened condensed milk. Reading them makes me prone to fits of euphoria.
Richardson points toward the sources of James' genius-- one of the most important of which was James' own depression and heartbreak. He writes, "James had a remarkable capacity to convert misery and unhappiness into intellectual and emotional openness and growth. It is almost as though trouble was for him a precondition for insight." How hopeful that is!
Richardson's compassion for his subject spills out, somehow, to the reader, and makes one feel that one's own nonsense and bleakness do not render one disqualified for a whole human life. What more can I ask for?
A biography as close to a page turner as possibleReview Date: 2007-12-10
A very intellectual readReview Date: 2007-12-09
For A Popular Audience, TooReview Date: 2007-10-08
I had not read James for many years but, since reading this biography, have purchased a collection of his writings and am re-reading many of his works. You will come away from "In the Maelstrom of American Modernism" with a better understanding of both American values and ideals, and the history of U.S. higher education. Most importantly, however, you will come away with enormous admiration for the radiant personality that was William James, or as Richardson exclaims (using italics, not caps) at the end of this great work, for "the SPIRIT the man." When I finished reading, I not only wanted to read William James; I was sorry that I had not known him or had him as a teacher. That's how good this book is -- for every reader.

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The author is a hoot!Review Date: 2008-06-23
Hail to the Queen!Review Date: 2008-02-18
Lucy Adams is the author of If Mama Don't Laugh, It Ain't Funny
Tee Hee...Hahahaaaa...GuffawReview Date: 2007-08-13
Keep laughing, you're not alone!Review Date: 2007-03-25
Enter Laughing . . . Leave Wanting More . . .Review Date: 2006-12-09

Same as Fox in SocksReview Date: 2008-04-10
Great to have if your trying to collect all Dr Seuss books. If completing the collection is not important to you, I would only chose this if you don't already have Fox in Socks
Oh Say Can You SayReview Date: 2007-01-18
My favorite children's book to read aloud!Review Date: 2006-03-09
Oh, Say I Can't SayReview Date: 2005-09-15
What a fun book!Review Date: 2004-10-27

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Tea in the City: New York CityReview Date: 2008-02-02
Take a Tea Trip!Review Date: 2006-11-16
A unique perspective on NYCReview Date: 2006-10-26
Perfect New York City tea guideReview Date: 2006-08-20
Worth every penny!Review Date: 2008-01-04
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