Richardson Books


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

Richardson
More Java Pitfalls: 50 New Time-Saving Solutions and Workarounds
Published in Paperback by Wiley (2003-02-03)
Authors: Michael C. Daconta, Kevin T. Smith, Donald Avondolio, and W. Clay Richardson
List price: $40.00
New price: $11.60
Used price: $9.74

Average review score:

buy the hardcopy, not the kindle version
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-06
Displayed code examples are barely legible in the kindle version of this book. They appear as low resolution images and cannot be enlarged. Other kindle books format programming code fragments as text which is resizable, but not this book.

Excellent, well-organized book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-08-27
These guys put together a wonderful book; I've find it an ideal guide to solving pitfalls in the Java language and related J2EE™ technologies. Having this book on my desktop help me in preventing potential problems with my code and saving countless hours of time tracking down issues that aren't initially apparent.

Java Pitfalls points out a lot of common mistakes made in Java development as well as providing optimization and means of producing much cleaner code that runs faster and uses less memory. This book provides vital information for J2EE Architects and JDK1.4 specifications and lead Developers by showing how to avoid making mistakes that have critical impact on design and implementation of enterprise Java software.
The book covers Java NIO, which is a pretty formidable subject. The author does a decent job with this material. With JAXP, JAXR and JAXP, he provides you with instant access to critical, drill-down information on APIs and the foundation for you to proceed into any region of APIs usage and technology and have secure knowledge of the basics.
Besides being well written, the book is fun. I found myself trying to figure out along with the author how to improve the performance of the various examples demonstrated in the book. In addition to containing excellent advice; it's the most up to date publication dealing specifically with performance of Java applications.

Another good Java book...
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-07-09
This book is chock full of Java programming and architecture goodies. No Java programmer or architect should be without it. It hits on some of the subtleties of the paradigm and makes some great suggestions for solutions to common problems. I've already used several since I read the book three months ago. It covers the full range of the Java paradigm from EJBs to Servelts and JSPs. It also covers many Java Web service APIs such as JAXP, JAXR and JAXM. Unlike many other books, it also address J2ME, GUI programming and several utilities. Readers should also check out the web site that goes along with the book. It provides sample code, corrections to the text and links to additional resources.

Excellent Reference Book
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-05-12
The book is easy to read and well organized with excellent "how-to-fix" information about the "hard-to-figured out" problems. We found many of our Java servlets problems in this book and wished that we had this book earlier when we struggled to solve the instance concurrency problems in our web-based Java/Servlet application. This book is definitely the first book that we will refer too when we have any difficult Java related problems in the future.

Good resource, very relevant to problem solving
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2003-05-12
This book is full of valuable information, and something that I believe I can use for my team of Java developers on our projects. I have enjoyed this entire book, but here are my comments on a few of my favorite "articles" from this book.

#1 - When Runtime.exec() won't. An excellent 13 page discussion of how things can go wrong with the famous Runtime.exec(). There are so many ways to mess up when running OS processes from Java, and this article discusses most of them, and more importantly, the right way to go about using Runtime.exec().

#5 - Avoid Granularity Pitfalls in java.util.logging. This is a well-written discussion of the java.util.logging API, and helps programmers avoid using it in the wrong way. This is a good tutorial, but I really like the pictures that show the relationship between the logger and the handler - it is much easier for people to understand that way.

#15 - Avoiding singleton pitfalls - This is a great discussion of how multiple "singletons" can happen in your VM, if you don't set them up the right way... My company has seen this happen a lot, but I have seen few discussions on it before this book.

#24 - JSP design errors. This is something that I don't believe many other books talk about, and is very valuable. A lot of the JSPs that I have seen out there look bad, and this shows how they should be developed. The examples are good, and this is short and to the point and conveys the points well.

#41 - The problem with multiple concurrent ResultSets. This shows an example of having 2 ResultSet objects open at the same time in an iteration, and showing the results in Sybase, Oracle, MySQL, Access, and SQLServer. It shows how, depending on the implementation of the driver & database, different behavior can be seen, and shows how to fix it. This is an excellent article - most examples I have seen before do not take the time to show behavior from multiple databases.

These are only a few of the articles from this book. I like the book because it is full of self-contained articles that discuss aspects of the Java programming language that are tricky - or are often misunderstood and misused. I also like it because it covers performance, design, and in many cases, gives metrics. Some of the APIs discussed in the book I have not used yet (j2me, jaxrpc, jaxr), but probably will in the future. This is an extremely relevant resources.

I can't say enough good things about this book. I give this an excellent rating, and recommend it highly.

Richardson
Queen Zixi of IX: Or, the Story of the Magic Cloak
Published in Hardcover by Tandem Library (1971-06)
Author: L. Frank Baum
List price: $17.60

Average review score:

Fabulous Fantasy!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2005-12-20
My kids loved this book and had me read it to them 6 times! Yours will too!

My daughter Paige's opinion
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-09-25
This is a very good book. It is about two young children with no mother and then their father dies and they are very poor. They are forced to live with their aunt. (She is very mean and she doesn't care about anything but money.) Once the king of Noland died they decided for Bud to be the new king. It is really about their adventures with Bud being king. At the same time a magic cloak is going around and nobody knows that it is magical. People keep on accidentally making wishes and they don't know it until later when their wishes come true. Once they notice that it is magical everybody wants it. Soon there is a war against queen Zixi of Ix for the cloak.
This book is cool in very weird ways. It is also one of the books in the series of the Wizard of Oz, by L. Frank Baum. I like this book because the plot is fiction and I have read and liked most of the books that this author has written. I think that he is a very good author. He is very creative and I like that and how he uses his creativity to write his books.
I strongly recommend this book to whoever has it. I don't really think it belongs in a specific age group. I think that every body could read it and understand what is going in the book. I also think that whoever reads this book will really like this book.

A Fairy Tale for all ages.
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2005-06-16
Queen Zixi of Ix is far and away my favorite non-Oz Baum book, and actually is high on the list for my favorite Baum books in general. In the interesting and informative introduction to the Dover edition, Martin Gardner cites Baum himself (from a letter to his son) about the book.

Baum wrote: "In some ways Queen Zixi is my best effort, and nearer to the 'old-fashioned' fairy tale than anything I have yet accomplished."

In fact, one of the reasons that this book has stayed with me so strongly over the years (I have been re-reading it on and off since I was eight) is that pure fairy tale quality. The issues between Ix and Noland have less of the sly contemporary humor that Baum used in the Oz books. He instead revisits the classical fairy tale characters of the ruling innocents (Bud and Fluff), the tragic "evil" queen (Zixi), and the wicked step-parent (Aunt Rivette). What makes Queen Zixi so wonderful is that while the archetypes are recognizable in the characters, they are also vibrant and real people in their own right. The tension and the flow of the story relies on the fact that these characters are much more than their fairy tale ancestors.

I find that the Richardson illustrations work well with the book (it was the only Baum book that he illustrated). His style is memorable and works well with the text.

Expect the always reliable Baum humor and wordplay. Expect to be engaged and amused and moved.

Recommended for readers of any age.

I loved this book when I was about 10
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2005-05-31
I first read Queen Zixi of Ix when I was in fourth grade. I loved it then and got really into it. The story concerns a magic cloak that grants wishes (one wish only per person). For entertainment fairies weave the magic cloak and release it to the people of Nopland. The recipient is a little girl, Fluff. Through absurd circumstances her brother, Bud is crowned king of Noland.

Ironically only one person in the story ends up intentionally making a wish on the cloak. The others either forget that they are wearing the cloak or don't know about the cloak's magic properties, and so are granted the first wish that they state as they absently talk to themselves. Because the cloak takes things literally this leads to some absurd consequences as people is Bud's palace find their idle wishes come true.

Queen Zixi in the neighboring land of Ix has heard about the cloak. She decides to steal it and after a few tries succeeds. However the wish will not be granted if the cloak has been stolen. Queen Zixi doesn't get her wish and discards the cloak without knowing why.

Meanwhile Bud's country of Noland is invaded by very round rude people called Roly-Rouges. He and Fluff don't have the cloak to help them and appeal to Zixi for help. She took the cloak while in disguise and switched it for a fake so the kids don't know that the cloak is missing. They only know that it won't work. The rest of the book follows Zixi helping the children as they hunt down the cloak and deal with the Roly-Rouges. Naturally this happens in unexpected ways.

As an adult rereading this book I still liked it, but the pacing felt kind of funny. This is a fairly short book and lots happens (more than I can summarize here). When I read this as a child the pacing felt perfect so I probably read faster now. There are still little jokes included here for adults, though. At one point a character muses that this would be the way things work "in a fairytale, but not here in the real world of Noland". So there are little jokes and ways in which things are worded that adults will get but children will likely overlook as they think about fairies, wishes and magic. This book is written more for children, but if you read it as an adult or if you read it aloud to kids there is something for you too.

If you have younger children then this book is definitely a good choice for them. I remember it well from my childhood and I loved it. For a child it is a must read. For an adult it is a quick entertaining read.

As Good as the Wizard!
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2006-01-04
L. Frank Baum is best known for THE WIZARD OF OZ and the sequels he wrote to that series. All of them are good but, of course, some are better than others. He wrote other stories as well and most of them take place in the same general locale as the Oz stories. The kingdoms and personages may vary but the "feel" remains the same. This book is one such.

This is an original fairy tale and has many of the familiar aspects of the classical genre. It is fun and well written and is as fully deserving of respect as the OZ books. Some say it was Baum's best work; Baum himself certainly ranked it among his best. I had heard of this book when I was a child in love with all things Oz but it was out of print at that time. Thankfully, it is available now.

The story centers around a magic cloak created by a fairy queen. The possessor of the cloak will be granted one wish. Many of those wishes turn out to be foolish or wasteful. The cloak is originally given to a young orphan girl, Fluff. Her brother is soon proclaimed King of Noland and turns out to be an enlightened ruler, even if he is full of the follies of youth. The cloak provokes jealousies, however, and Noland soon finds itself at war with Ix and ultimately conquered by a bunch of strange beings foreign to both Noland and Ix. The cloak turns out to be a source of trouble as well as a blessing.

Richardson
The Story and Its Writer: An Introduction to Short Fiction, Compact Sixth Edition
Published in Paperback by Bedford/St. Martin's (2002-08-12)
Author: Ann Charters
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New price: $19.69
Used price: $0.10

Average review score:

Great!!!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2006-07-16
My book arrived when it said it would and it was in perfect condition. Thanks.

Teaching manual at its best
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2005-11-30
Charters' book is both a great read and a valuable teaching tool. The book lives up to its title: it successfully places the emphasis on the story and its writer rather than on the story and its editor or the story and its teacher. As a textbook/anthology this is sure to be more helpful - and interesting - to students than to read a lot of pedagogical and prescriptive information from a secondhand source. Whether you are a teacher or a student, new to the short story or old hand, the opportunity to read about writers' processes and intentions firsthand is invaluable, and Charters' selection of short stories is exceptional. Charters obviously cares about the project of teaching the short story well, and her dedication shines through in this volume.

An Outstanding Collection of Stories and Writers
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-18
This anthology was something I stumbled upon in college and completely changed the way I approached reading and writing. The stories are a wide variety and the writers writing about writing is a fantastic resource. This is one of the most precious pieces to my library and a must for any serious reader and writer.

Course Book I Actually Want to Keep Reading
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2006-05-29
This compilation of short stories was used for my Intro. to the Short Story college course. Our professor only picked out certain stories but I found myself reading unassigned stories myself. Some of these stories are wonderful. My favorite was "The Widow's Son" by Mary Lavin. Some other noteworthy stories: "Hills Like White Elephants" Hemingway, "Girl" by J. Kincaid. Too many more to list, a course book I am actually keeping so I can finish reading it. Usually I can't wait to close them after the course and not see them anymore! :)

Nice Job
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2006-02-28
This is a very comprehensive compilation of the most important classic short stories as well as some newer stories from today's writers. I thought the book was very well organized, especially with the case files and interviews that accompany several of the stories.

There are a few omissions of some classics but nonetheless I felt it was a very good collection.

A must have if studying Fiction.

Richardson
After Hamelin
Published in Hardcover by Annick Press (2000-09-02)
Author: Bill Richardson
List price: $19.95
New price: $1.00
Used price: $0.35

Average review score:

Create Your Own Review
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-27
Leanne D. review of After Hamelin by Bill Richardson, March 12, 2008. This book was an interesting account of what happened to the one child left after the Pied Piper piped all of the children of Hamelin away for revenge. The majority of the story is in the leftover child's, Penelope, who is capable of "deep dreaming", dream in which she goes on the quest to rescue the children of Hamelin. She is accompanied by her cat, Scallywaggle, and is guided along the way by a very old man named Cuthbert. Along the way to the Piper's palace, Penelope makes friends with the Trolavians and with a dragon. Once she and her newfound friends find their way to the Piper's palace, they get locked up with Penelope's sister, Sophy, who appears to be the only child around. Sophy proves them right once she explains that the piper has turned all of the children into rats. As Penelope's friend, Alloway, gets turned into a rat by the piper, Penelope catches the words to the spell and turns it on herself in an attempt to save the other children. She does so, only to chase the Piper and the other children over the border between dream and waking. Penelope manages to free the children and restore the spell that bound the Piper to the land of dreaming.

Um....eheh
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-07-28
What was THAT?!
That was the strangest book I ever read, that's what. Very...interesting. It left you with a few unanswered questions, but it wasn't a half bad book.

Very...um...interestingly....strange....though...

An amazing book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-04-14
This book is a newer version of an old story.I myself a 12 loved this book my mom a well... older than twelve year old also loved this book. It was great and I thought Penelope was a very brave herione. I also loved Quentin and his unusal habits.Most of the people who went on the journey and some sort of disablity, take for example Alloway a blind harper, it just made the story a little more intersting on how it showed us that even if we are disabled we can do great things. I recomend this book to boys and girls of all ages.

Pipe, Pipe, Pipe away Piper!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2003-12-04
In this woderfully weaved tale of a girl, Penelope who is 101 years recalls upon her childhood adventure in saving the children of Hamelin. Once you read this book you will want to know more and more until the book ends. But imagination doesn't only end at the last pages for some. Many may want to make a tale of their own. Penelope recalls in extraordinary detail and Bill Richardson has done a wonderful job of making the pipers music in this book turn you eyes to look at the story. The cover speaks alot itself and one look can tell you the meaning " a picture is worth a thousand words." You may get annoyed with the repeating parts where she always says she's 101, but other than that its a good story.
Penelope is a skipper. Not any ordinary skipper, she's a skipping harpers daughter. Ever since she was little there has always had music in her life. Then on the day of her elevening, she goes deaf. The same day the piper comes to pipe away the children with his magical net of music from his pipe. All children but two. Alloway, a blind apprentice who stays with Govan, Penelope's father and of course our heroine, Penelope. To save the children of Hamelin she must go to a world both seen and unseen. Where anything can happen, into a land of dreaming. The stakes are high and in this dream world you just can't wish yourself away from danger.With a wacky group of companions she embarks on her journey... the rest is for you to find out...

Gets better with time
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2005-03-20
After Hamelin might be marketed as children's lit, but that demeans it. The characters are real and alive. Even the cat. How many authors have tried to make an animal into a character and failed? But Scallywaggle is a full-fledged character. And who ever thought of a flower-arranging dragon? I'm still working on my re-read, so some of the details that I have aren't great. Though I hate the children's sections, I love fairy tales, and wish everyone would remember C.S. Lewis's dedication of The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe. Children's lit is often an incompetent author trying to sell to kids who don't care about quality. After Hamelin, though, should go to the fairy tale section. I hate Disney retellings: they make fairy tales cheap and simplistic happily-ever-afters. Richardson knows his story of the Pied Piper well, and does with it exactly what everyone should do with fairy tales: he takes it, adds some stuff, changes some characters, adds events, and puts in beautifully handled prose. He reinvents the story for a more modern reader, and makes it more accessible. Penelope isn't "charming" in the sense that she isn't the sweet, adorable little girl, nor is she the tomboyish one who defies the rules. There's no title on the list of character cliches to fit her, or any characters in this book. They're all their own selfs, and that's what makes this book stand above the masses of fairy-tale takeoffs that plague book stores. There's not much else to say. I read this first when I was 10, and now at 14, and will keep reading it throughout my life. Read this book, and remember, above all things, one: we are never too old for fairy tales, and fairy tales aren't for children alone. I'll spare the rant on that here, but read After Hamelin, regardless of your age, and rediscover the fact that we all have dreams and goals, and that no matter how fantastical they are, they are true.

Richardson
The Blue Fairy Book,
Published in Hardcover by John C. Winston Co (1930)
Author: Andrew Lang
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Used price: $17.50

Average review score:

BLue Fairy Book
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-13
The Blue Fairy book was a great book. I have read most of these fairy tales before, but Andrew Lang puts these stories in a new perspective. Most kids, are used to Disney Princesses and how all of them have happy endings, but in the Blue Fairy book there is a jappy ever after, but with a twist. My faveorite was East of the Sun and West of the Moon. It was about a poor man who has three daughters. They were all very pretty, but the youngest was the prettiest. a white bear came and asked the poor man fot the youngest and he will become very rich. The poor man excepted. the youngest daughter rode on the back of the white bear's back and came to castle. the white bear gave her a silver bell that if she rang it everything she wanted will appear. After that, he left. she survived for a few weeks, but she started getting lonley. When the white bear came, the youngest teacher asked to visit her family. The white bear said yes, but to not listen to anything her mother says. The youngest daughter went to her family. Her mother took her aside and asked if anything is going wrong. for awhile she said nothing, but then she told her mother about a strange noise she heard. Her mother told her to go to where she heard the noise, take a candle and see what is there. She took her mother aadvice and when she did it she found a prince. The candle wax fell on her shirt. The youngest daughter looked suprised. She saw a white fuzzy cloth on the floor. he said that now she saw him in his real self, he now has to marry a troll. He left in a vanish, but saying "I am going east of the sun and west of the moon." She the north wind to go to the place the prince had said. She found a big mountain. she climbed it. She saw the troll and asked her to see the prince for one night for a special gift for their wedding. The troll excepted, but gave the prince a sleeping drinmk. the youngest daughter went up to the prince's bedroom. She couldn't wake him up. She was yelling and crying. Morning came and the troll kicked her out. She offered another gift. The troll excepted. The same thing happened that night, but on the third night, a servant heard the daughter crying. The prince pretented to drink the sleeping drink. When the daughter came they had a very nice night together. In the day the prince said that the lady who can get the stain off the the wax from the candle stick. The troll tried to get the stain out, but it just got bigger. Other trolls tried too, but the stain got bigger. The youngest daughter tried and the stain came off. The prince and the youngest daughter got married and lived happily ever after.

spectacular as always
Helpful Votes: 14 out of 18 total.
Review Date: 2004-01-11
Andrew Lang's Blue Fairy Book is just as god as any of the other fairy books, it just has different stories. This book has 37 short fairy tales and black and white pictures on 7 different pages. Some of the fairy tales that this book has include:The Bronze Ring,The Yyellow Dwarf,Little Red Riding Hood,The Sleeping Beauty in the Wood,Cinderella,Aladin,Rumpelstiltzkin,Beauty and the Beast,Han sel and Grettel,Snow White,and many more.
In my opinion this book has the biggest collection of classic Disney fairy tales, the ones most people know.

The Blue Fairy Book is a must for Charlotte Mason families!
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-10-07
This book is amazing! We are blessed to have an older hardcover copy of this book in our public library that is so lovingly worn, it's a treat to borrow it and read it as a family! My boys adore these stories and I plan to share these with my grandchildren one day...if my boys don't beat me to it! Wonderful book! Check it out for yourself and see! :o)

Excellent
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2005-10-07
The Fairy Book series by Andrew Lang is not politically correct. I don't think these will be around for long or they'll be "fixed" such as is emerging with Irish fairy tales.
(The American Druidic folk discovered the PC "fixing" going on with the Irish fairy tales some years back.) The books in the series are replicas of the originals. The artwork is magnificent.

The best book of fairy-tales !
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2005-12-03
I grew up with my great-grandmother's first-edition, from the early 1890's. The stories are lush and eloquent, unequivocally imaginative. Recently, I bought my niece a current copy. I am overjoyed to see the gorgeous original illustrations which, I had fallen in love with, are included in the later editions. If you are able, I do highly recommend purchasing the rest of the books in the series. Any child will be thoroughly delighted. You will happily discover your child's vocabulary considerably enhanced.

Richardson
Domestic pleasures
Published in Unknown Binding by Perennial (2001)
Author: Beth Richardson Gutcheon
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Used price: $14.74

Average review score:

Very pleasurable indeed
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-10
Beth Gutcheon creates attractive, compelling characters and she writes beautifully. This is a story of finding the right love at the wrong time, and about the sacrifices adults must make sometimes for the sake of their children.

I'm hooked!
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 2003-09-12
Wow. That's all I have to say. DOMESTIC PLEASURES is one of the best books I've read this year. I'm ashamed to say it's my first by Gutcheon, but it won't be the last. I've just now ordered all the rest of her books and am looking forward to many hours of reading pleasure, although how she can top PLEASURES, I don't know. As an author myself, I know how difficult it is to handle as many story lines, characters, and relationships as Gutcheon gave us in this book. Not to mention writing from the point of view of such different ages. And Gutcheon has done both so beautifully. From page one, I was hooked by the characters and their lives. Martha and Charlie, Sophie and Connie, Phoebe and Jack, baby Fred and Gillis, Patsy and Molly and Ruth and William and Dave. I don't think I'll ever forget them. I was so caught up in their lives, I didn't want the book to end. Gutcheon is a marvelous writer. Not only did she make me cry a few times, she made me laugh over and over again. Her dialogue is so good, I wanted to smack her! Okay, that's because I am jealous. I'd love to be able to write dialogue that clever and witty and real. Bravo, Ms. Gutcheon. I am in awe of your talent.

More please
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2005-03-24
This is the first of Beth Gutcheon's books that I've read. I was inspired to pick it up by all the positive reviews of it here, (another first for me) and I was so pleased! I'm not the only one either, the hardcover edition I read has glowing reviews from Pat Conroy, Rosamunde Pilcher, and Rita Mae Brown on the back cover. This is quality writing. The characterization, dialogue, the various complex story lines are all very well done. I look forward to reading more by this author (and maybe I should take more suggestions from amazon reviewers!)

As always... excellent
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2003-11-12
An excellent book, surpassed only by Gutcheon's More Than You Know. I feel safe saying pick up anything by her and enjoy!

A bit disappointing considering the number of stars
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2004-06-28
I read this book for two reasons, first it was favorably mentioned on someone's listmania list and two because it had a high star rating. Of course, it wasn't until after I finished the book that I realized that the star rating was based on only 8 reviews.

I found this book to be a fine read. Something you bring to the beach. Usually I bring to the beach either
a. a good who-done-it / lawyer type book (think Grisham, Patterson, or Scottline) or
b. something I would deem a chick book. A novel with interesting characters and a decently amusing plot where the main character is usually a woman I can relate to and a potential romance will most definitely be covered somewhere in the story.

This book falls under category b., the characters are easy to like and are interesting enough that you want to know what happens to them next, and there is a romance, but the overall plot I found to be somewhat boring making me wonder, "why I am still reading this". If you do read this book, it won't be a complete waste of time. You will like it enough, but there are just a lot of better choices out there for the beach.

Richardson
Evangelism Outside the Box: New Ways to Help People Experience the Good News
Published in Paperback by IVP Books (2000-12)
Author: Rick Richardson
List price: $15.00
New price: $4.27
Used price: $1.47
Collectible price: $13.00

Average review score:

Postmodern must not stray from biblical methods
Helpful Votes: 13 out of 21 total.
Review Date: 2004-02-03
While it may be true that some have been saved by this method of evangelism, and have continued to be saved throughout their lives, the end result is usually not that happy. Statistics show that there is an 80-90% fall away rate from decisions in our churches, and nearly a 100% fall away rate from Crusades. Bill Bright himself, in one of his later interviews, admits that he was wrong for using and promoting this method because of the tragic results it produces (Revivals Golden Key, p.83). Rather than producing real conversions, the "love, joy, peace" gospel seems to only produce stoney-ground hearers and bitter backsliders who are innoculated to the gospel message.
Martin Luther called the ones in his day who used the same love-joy-peace gospel message that the majority of modern evangelists use a "sect" that was "stirred up by Satan"

I would not recommend these tracts or this method, but rather the method that Jesus, Paul, all of the great preachers in history (including C.H. Spurgeon, Wesley, Finney, Edwards, Moody etc) have used and promoted vigorously. This is the biblical method that is timeless, was shown to us by Jesus and expounded upon by Paul. I think we can mix this method with post-modern ideas, but we cant stray from the core of it, for if we do that we are straying from the method the Bible teaches us.
It is the use of the law to bring men to Christ. For a good book on this, i recommend reading "Hells Best Kept Secret" by Ray Comfort, or "Revivals Golden Key" by ray comfort.

Solid, but poorly titled...
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2006-10-29
Richardson's book is a very readable and accessible approach to contemporary evangelism. He does a good job of describing the difference between the Roman and Celtic ways of thinking about evangelism and all of life, and the implications of this philosophical shift in society. This is just another way, though very useful, to express some of the key differences between modernity and postmodernism. I appreciated his references to the historical underpinnings of our theology of conversion.

He also includes several useful appendices with information about the Alpha Course, Groups Investigating God, and his Circles of Belonging illustration.

My primary complaint is that this book didn't seem as "outside the box" as the title would suggest. Though he certainly provides a few new paradigms for us to consider, much of this book is nothing more than the prevailing approach to evangelism across American Christianity. He seems to think that his Circles of Belonging illustration is profoundly unique, but it seems to me to be another permutation of the Bridge diagram.

To be clear, I found all of this information to be helpful and well-written. And I recommend the book as a useful resource for anyone interested in learning more about effective evangelism. I simply suggest that is really isn't sufficiently "outside the box" to justify the title. If you really want to read some challenging ideas about evangelism, read Brian McLaren's "More Ready Than You Realize" instead.

Biblical, Innovative and Practical
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2003-09-19
Rick Richardson does a good job here of getting 21st century Christians to THINK about evangelism in new and innovative ways. He encourages readers to get a better understanding of today's society, emphasizing that we as a church can't provide Biblical answers if we don't take time to listen to the questions. The author stays true to his title and draws outside the lines to explore new means of bringing people to Christ.

Some people may misunderstand this book, thinking that Richardson is forsaking the time-honored gospel by substituting church growth gimmicks and man-made strategies. Actually Richardson is very conservative in his theology, but very progressive in his methodology. Unless the reader distinguishes between the two, he/she will have a difficult time benefiting from this work.

I recommend this book to all believers, especially church leaders, who are looking for new ways to cultivate relationships with the lost and to bring them to salvation in Christ.

Insightful and Thoughtful
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2006-01-14
Rick Richardson brings his experience in campus ministry and understanding of the current culture and helps readers come to a new understanding of how to communicate the message of the Gospel in relevant and meaningful ways. Key to Richardson's assessment is the fact that culture and society is changing. Many Evangelical Christians assume that there has always been one of way of presenting the Good News of Jesus. However, Richardson demonstrates that as culture changes, the delivery and presentation does as well. This does not mean that the content changes. Rather, the content remains the same... but it must be communicated in a relevant manner.

This book is a very helpful book in taking a fresh look at the issues surrounding Christian witness in a postmodern world. Rick makes use of comparisons between the kind of questions university students used to ask in generations past to the sort of questions being asked today. It is not that the old questions are never asked anymore. Rather, to get to those questions, Christians must first address the questions that people are asking today.

I highly recommend this book for anyone seeking to adjust how we relate and communicate the Gospel to postmoderns.

Evangelism Outside the Box
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2005-04-09
(...)I've been reading through Rick Richardson's Evangelism Outside the Box, and I thought I'd take a few moments to offer some reflections.

Here's the bottom line up front: parts of this book strike me as shallow and weak (especially in terms of application and practice), but in a number of places - particularly where he analyzes cultural shifts, and considers how our practices are perceived by unbelievers - Richardson is spot on. Where this book is good, its really good; fast-paced, easily accessible, it's definitely worth the price of admission.

I found Richardson's analysis of postmodernism (Ch 2, 3) very, very helpful. While I'm not sure I buy his division of history into intellectual epochs, he understands that strange things are afoot at our cultural Circle K's. He illustrates well how allegiances of modernism are shifting:

  • in truth - people are no longer interested in abstract, universal truth; they are looking for a truth that is "local, personal, experiential" - in a word: they want authenticity.

  • in community - people aren't looking for experts who have all the answers; they are looking for friends who can identify with their struggles - they want "a community to belong to rather than a message to believe in"

  • in imagination - people increasingly value art, beauty, heartfelt expression over sterile conformity to standards of "rightness" - its not so much what you say as how you say it.

Richardson offers a great summary of postmodern values:

"This generation of people understand that a picture can be worth a thousand words. They value authenticity as their highest ethic. They can't stand hypocrisy, or 'playing politics.' They tend to be inclusive, passionate for fairness, committed to reconciliation in relationships. They are highly motivated toward community and are very aware of actions that break trust and community. They honor the beliefs and choices of other people." (p. 83)

Anyone who has spent any time with unbelievers will recognize that Richardson knows that of which he speaks. This is where people outside our churches are at; this is where those leaving the church are headed. Heck - this is where I am!

Those of us left in the church had better figure out (soon) how to re-contextualize our message to speak to these people or we will render ourselves irrelevant.

Ch 10 is also a keeper, as Richardson wrestles with the importance of building community:

"Today people are looking for a community to belong to more than a message to believe in. Evangelism is about helping people belong so that they come to believe. Most people today do not 'decide' to believe. In community they 'discover' that they believe, and then they decide to affirm that publicly and to follow Christ intentionally." (p. 100)

I think Richardson is dangerously accurate in his analysis here: in my experience, this is precisely what unbelievers are looking for - a place where they can belong just as they are. I use the word 'dangerously' for a reason, however. You see, once we see a problem clearly, we naturally start thinking about the solution. In so doing, however, there are several potential pitfalls we must be careful to avoid.

(...) Overall, this book is definitely worth buying and reviewing. Just read it thoughtfully...

Richardson
Evidence Based Medicine (3rd Edition)
Published in Turtleback by Churchill Livingstone (2005-04-29)
Authors: Sharon E. Straus, W. Scott Richardson, Paul Glasziou, R. Brian Haynes, and Sharon E. Strauss
List price: $55.95
New price: $42.99
Used price: $32.00

Average review score:

Well done, but....
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-06
This book is well done from an educational perspective. You'll find nice diagrams, figures, a CD-ROM, and everything you need in order to assimilate it nicely. References are provided and well organized.

As usual when it comes to EBM (and paradoxically), it lacks a little bit in introspection, like for example when it claims that basically the only real limitation of EBM is that the physician needs to acquire new skills, while other criticisms (such as the "cookbook" approach or the fact that it might tend toward saving money against the benefit of the patients) are dismissed as "concerns" on how the method is (or will be) used. The authors genuinely sound like thinking EBM should always be applied everywhere to every problem, and that borders with black-vs-white thinking, which is dangerous in and of itself.

However, if you are interested in knowing EBM, how to apply it, where to find resources, etc, this book is most definitely for you.

Book Review
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-17
Excellent review of evidence based medicine. Concise and to the point. Have used it multiple times during residency and fellowship.

The first and still the best
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-12
Sackett's EBM is the Bible for anyone conducting systematic review. It is THE how-to guide for clinical medicine SR and a great starting point for thinking about SR in the social sciences. Thank you Dr. Sackett for bringing SR to the masses.

The standard for teaching EBM
Helpful Votes: 12 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 2004-05-24
As a physician-teacher of EBM to internal medicine residents, this is the best book I've run across for this purpose. We utilize the reader's guides, first published in the Canadian Medical Association Journal and later in JAMA, written by Guyatt, Sackett, and others, which are perfectly complemented by this volume. I recommend it to all of the residents and have purchased multiple copies for house staff use (although I can't seem to keep them on the shelf...) It makes learning EBM fun and highlights its usefulness and, most importantly for busy physicians, speed. Worth reading for every physician interested in practicing medicine based on only the best evidence.

Evidence Based Medicine
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-06
This is an excellent "how to" manual for those who are serious about learning how to apply evidence based medicine principles. Lots of folks talk about "evidence based medicine" but few really know what it means. This is obviously intended as a teaching tool for residents but is equally useful for any physician who is interested in learning the principles required to do the best job for his/her patient. The size and summary cards are handy for carrying with you wherever you may need them! Easy to read but with great substance.

Richardson
Living The Dream
Published in Hardcover by Kensington (1997-07-01)
Author: Dot Richardson
List price: $19.95
New price: $4.00
Used price: $0.41
Collectible price: $19.95

Average review score:

oh- come on now!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 14 total.
Review Date: 1999-06-16
The only reason that it took two days to read this book was because of how short and transparent it was. Yes, it was a very easy book to read, but it was an insult to all intellegent people out there. If you want to by a book for your child than this is it because no adult would find any joy in reading this boring book

This Book is AWESOME!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2000-09-20
I would recommend this book to any female that likes sports and softball in particular. It tells of the struggles that Dot and women around the country went through to play sports. She is one of the most inspirational people in sports today. I couldn't put this book down once I started reading it and i was finished in two days. Dot is an exceptional athlete and human being, and one of my heroes!

A MUST-READ FOR ANY FEMALE ATHLETE
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2000-07-04
I WOULD HIGHLY RECOMMEND THIS BOOK FOR ANY FEMALE ATHLETE, OR THE PARENTS OF ANY FEMALE ATHLETE. DOT RICHARDSON IS A PHENOMENAL SOFTBALL PLAYER, ATHLETE, AND PERSON. SHE HAS SUCCEEDED IN MANY ENDEAVORS WITH HARD WORK AND PERSEVERANCE. I HAVE A TEEN-AGE DAUGHTER INTERESTED IN SPORTS AND THIS BOOK EXPLAINS MUCH OF WHAT A FEMALE ATHLETE GOES THROUGH. A YOUNG GIRL READING THIS BOOK WOULD HAVE TO COME AWAY EDUCATED, REFRESHED AND READY TO TAKE ON THE WORLD! ASIDE FROM ALL THAT, IT WAS A VERY INTERESTING READ AND A GREAT SPORTS BOOK. I HAD A TEAR IN MY EYE WITH ALMOST EVERY CHAPTER. TO REPRESENT YOUR COUNTRY THE WAY DOT DID WOULD HAVE TO BE THE GREATEST HONOR IN SPORTS.

A very inspiring and excellent book!
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 1999-01-22
When I got this book, I read it in just a few days and I didn't want to put it down. It tells about Dot's struggles and all that she went through to be the awesome softball player she is today. It is the best book I have read in a long time. I think not only softball players, but anyone would enjoy reading it. I highly recommend it.

Dr. Dot is talented in both softball and writing!
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2001-01-18
This book is a must read for any aspiring softball player, or any female athlete! I knew who Dot Richardson was before, but reading this book really introduced me to her personal life, and i cold definetly relate. In this book, Dot tells of her journey to the top, and her struggles along the way, starting from when she was a little girl right up to winning the gold in atlanta. Her stories are inspiring, some funny, others very touching. Any serious softball player or athelete can relate to her experiences some way, and that, along with wonderfully entertaining stories are what makes this book a true 5 star must read!!

Richardson
Open Secrets (St. Martin's True Crime Library)
Published in Mass Market Paperback by St. Martin's True Crime (2002-03-15)
Author: Carlton Stowers
List price: $6.99
New price: $6.99
Used price: $16.50
Collectible price: $10.00

Average review score:

Everything Is Big In Texas....
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-11
...including your murder-for-hire defendant list!

Carlton Stowers does an excellent job of relaying the story of Joy Aylor, a Texas socialite sociopath, who has her husband's lover, Rozanne, murdered (and the REAL reason for the hit is only disclosed late in the story).

Though it takes almost a decade to solve the case of Rozanne Gailiunas' murder, readers are taken on a interesting trip with police detectives as the conspiracy ring keeps growing and growing; until it comes full circle with the capture of Joy Aylor in the south of France.

This is an absolute MUST read for any true crime fan. As an avid reader of this genre, I would rate this riveting story in my top 20 favorites!

Extremely detailed true crime
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-03
This is the second book I have read by Carlton Stowers and I must say, this author leaves nothing out. I don't think I have ever read a more detailed account of a true crime nor have I ever read one with such a huge cast of charecters! There are so many people involved in this case!

Joy Ayler is the hub of the wheel and is the one who the book is really all about. She is your typical sociopath, using and hurting people right and left with no remorse. It is very interesting to see how this book unfolds. For me, it really got going about half way through and then I found it hard to put down.

The writing style is excellent, although some people may become annoyed with all the details.

Full of twists & turns & unsavory characters
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-26
This is a fantastic book on a par with Tom Henderson's "Blood Justice". What a great writer! The relationship between Mike Wilson and Joy could be a book in itself. You will sympathize with the investigators, you'll get to know them and the families involved...I wish there was a book about the trial...the more you know, the more you want to know thanks to Carlton Stowers.

A MUST READ!!
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2006-06-03
I saw the movie before I read the book and the book of course tells so much more then the movie. Many things in the movie are put in there for glamor. This case is baffling with so many characters the list never stops growing. So many lives ruined from just one evil manipulating woman. I don't know what she did to lure these men in to her web or should I say bed first. Even when she looked her best she was not that attractive. Well looks like manipulation was a deadly art that came easy for this woman and so many people fell victim to her evil web.
Great read hard to put down

A fantastically detailed read
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2005-06-28
Carlton Stowers has always been one of my favorite true crime writers, and he really delivers with this book. This book and "Careless Whispers" by him are some of my favorite true crime books (and as you can tell by my other reviews I have quite a few favorites). Joy Aylor is a very sick woman who always had to have her way. I do not want to give out too many plot details, you really have to read this book.


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