Roberts Books


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

Roberts
We took to the woods
Published in Unknown Binding by Robert Hale Ltd (1944)
Author: Louise Dickinson Rich
List price:
Used price: $7.08

Average review score:

LOUISE D RICH
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-16
this IS truly a BOOK FOR ANYONE WHO LOVES AND RESPECTS nature as the majority of us do here in BEAUTIFUL MAINE!!

ALL of her books are super! This one tops them off!!

MACHIAS, MAINE!!

Superb!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2003-01-05
Louise Dickinson Rich is a star! A truly wonderful and gifted writer. You can't put her books down.

Good enough to make me move
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2004-12-30
A friend gave me this book when I was at a very low point in my life. My wife and I read it together, over a long weekend, and packed the car Monday morning. By Wednesday we had our old house listed and Friday we put in an offer on 40 acres with an old farm. We haven't looked back since; but we have given copies of this book to all of our old friends for Christmas.

Life in the Maine woods - a classic
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2005-11-02
This book is a great read for anyone who's ever had the desire to just chuck it all and head for the woods (a desire that seems to wax and wane like the tides, popular one decade [1970s, for example], totally passe the next). Today taking to the woods for many means building a $500,000 "rustic retreat" with pool, hot tub, and wine cellar included. For Louise Rich, back in the 1930s (the book was published in 1942), things were much different.

For one thing, her house had no plumbing. Water had to be hauled to the house in buckets. Supplies and the mail came by boat. Life was no picnic for her and her family. But, of course, there were trade offs. The beauty of the place, for one. The living as one with nature. The need to be resourceful, and the feeling of pride and accomplishment that goes with it. Trade offs worth the hardships, Rich makes perfectly clear.

Rich captures the flavor of her idyllic spot in the Maine woods a few miles east of Upton along the Rapid River (the swiftest river east of the Mississippi, even though it is only about four miles long). She describes what life is like there, how the busy summers are a prelude to the slow, long winters. She talks about her neighbors, the loggers, the animals they encounter, how one endures and enjoys life in the woods. She describes the effects of the hurricane of 1938 and the havoc is caused even there, so far inland. Her prose style is clear and direct, and she truly makes the reader jealous of her situation rather than sympathetic. It's an excellent book, one that I've read a number of times, always with an I-wish-I-was-there enthusiasm. Highly recommended.

Maine in the 1930s
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2005-07-06
"We Took to the Woods" is as charming and delightful a book as you will ever find. It's the story of a city woman living on a remote Maine river with her husband and children. She's not poor, nor a rube, nor does she display the eccentricities one associates with people who flee to the wilderness. Rather, she seems happy, well-adjusted, and full of sympathetic tales about the few -- very few -- people she comes into contact with in the course of her daily life. And she really did live in the woods --the nearest store was a long boat ride away and she didn't go "outside" for a four year stretch. Her township of Upton had a population of 182.

The book is set up in chapters that answer questions: "Isn't housekeeping difficult?" or "Aren't you ever frightened." One of the better stories in the chapter, "Aren't the Children a Problem" tells about her husband delivering the author's baby in the dead of winter -- and greasing it with olive oil which he kept to dress his trout flies. The new parents discuss what they are supposed to do with the hot water always called for when a baby is being born -- and they decide to make coffee.

For the modern reader, the highlights of the book are probably tales of the trials of living without conveniences. The Rich houses -- they had a winter and summer house -- had no plumbing. Heating and cooking were with wood. What you needed for groceries was delivered by boat once a month; the Sears catalog supplied the rest. For anyone who has ever thought wistfully of fleeing civilization, this is a humorous primer of both the rewards and hardships of such a life. It deserves a permanent place on the short shelf of Americana classics.

Smallchief



Roberts
Windows NT TCP/IP Network Administration
Published in Paperback by O'Reilly (1998-10-01)
Authors: Craig Hunt and Robert Bruce Thompson
List price: $37.95
New price: $1.89
Used price: $0.38

Average review score:

Les dio un poco de "flojera" a los amigos autores...
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2001-08-30
Parece que si, pues aunque el libro cubre la mayor parte de los temas relacionados a configuracion de servidores DHCP, WINS y DNS utilizando NT considero que el libro es pobre en ejemplos ilustrativos, graficos de flujo, consejos y trucos.
Honestamente no recomiendo el libro si es que tienes un serio proyecto en mente para crear un nodo internet y deseas desarrollar toda la infraestructura de soporte TCP/IP.
Este es un libro frio, una clase magistral distante de hace unos 50 años atras sobre un tema tan moderno como TCP/IP, que mantiene al lector muy lejos del autor.
Veamoslo de esta forma matematica:
Este libro + Más graficos + Trucos y Consejos = Que buen libro !!
Espero sinceramente que mi revision te ayude a hacer una buena decision. Saludos.
Piyux.

Now I know the fondamental concept about network computer
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2001-12-06
It's clear and simple. Very good and usefull to understand the network computer.

The definitive guide to Windows NT networking!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2001-03-31
If you're any way involved with the administration or planning of your NT network environment, this is a book you must have! I consider myself pretty good in networking, but still found myself referring back to this book every so often. A must have on any networking library!

Much better than the Microsoft Official Curriculm binders
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2001-03-10
I bought this book to use as a reference when I got my first IT job. Areas of TCP/IP I found confusing from the Microsoft course I took were cleared up nicely from reading this book.

I never found the need to buy a second TCP/IP book after reading this. You won't either.

The Real Source of Knwoledge
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2000-07-09
I had studied other resources, including a training course to get my knowledge to a good standard. This book was the first that was really worth the effort. So much so, I am now looking for titles by the same Publisher to complete my MCSE

Roberts
With Hostile Intent
Published in Paperback by Signet (2001-10-01)
Author: Robert Gandt
List price: $6.99
New price: $8.00
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Average review score:

You want action? You got it!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-26
First, let me say that the views I am expressing are strictly my opinions and I'm not looking to debate anyone. I have been an avid reader of action/adventure, military and WWII/aviation history as far back as I can remember. This is one of the best books I have read in a long time! I found it to be a fast-moving high-flying adventure. The characters were easy to identify with as they spoke and acted like people you would come across in your (almost) everyday life! As for the villian 'Killer' DeLancey, three-fourths of the way through this book I was so into this story that I was tempted to look in the phone book for someone named DeLancy and pop him a good one in the mouth! I knocked off this book in only 3 days. Bob Gandt's style of writing was, to me, reminiscent of early Tom Clancy (before he got verbose) and early Dale Brown and early Clive Cussler. He knows his military flying and weaponry. I was so impressed I immediately got online and ordered his other 5 books. If you like true fast-moving action/adventure then strap on 'With Hostile Intent' and hit the throttle! You won't be disappointed.

A quick, easy to understand story
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-07-29
Gandt starts his fiction career wonderfully. He takes his first hand knowledge of life for F/A-18 pilots, tactics and naval life in general and composes a great story with several subplots that allow for the story of Brick Maxwell to continue in future volumes.

Keeping it simple, the main character, Maxwell, returns to a carrier squadron after several years test piloting and as a NASA astronaut. He must deal with a hot-shot commanding officer with something bordering personal hatred for him, gender politics of the new Navy, and an Iraqi threat following the first Gulf War. Gandt neverloses focus despite having so much to contemplate.

If you like this one, try Punk's War and Punk's Wing by Ward Carroll for similar life and battle stories in the Navy.

A Great Start to a Stellar Series
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-03-06
Naval aviation thrillers aren't just for guys anymore. I'm a twentysomething woman, and a lot of my favorite books have to do with the men and women who fly high-performance jets off of U.S. Navy aircraft carriers.

'With Hostile Intent' is the first book in the Brick Maxwell series. Commander Sam "Brick" Maxwell, USN, is an F/A-18 Hornet pilot who is loathed by his commanding officer "Killer" DeLancey because Brick knows the truth about a kill that Killer claimed to get during the first Gulf War, has a mentor in the ship's CAG (Commander of the Air Group and the highest-ranking pilot aboard) Captain "Red" Boyce, and has to deal with two female pilots joining his squadron, Killer's attempts to get him transferred to shore duty, and the return to his life of his old flame Claire, now a journalist separated from her Australian journalist husband. (Brick was widowed when his wife Debbie died in a space shuttle launching accident.)

Killer is a pain in the six (or tail), but Brick juggles the demands of piloting the Hornet, Killer's rotten attitude, his seesawing emotions about Debbie and Claire, a tragic accident involving his friend and squadronmate Commander Steve "Devo" Davis, and the arrival of the two women pilots, one of whom is hellbent to cause as much trouble as possible and the other of whom just wants to fly Hornets for the Navy.

Brick is a great protagonist and likable hero. He is not infallable and doesn't pretend to be. He makes mistakes and owns up to them, but he's also not afraid to take charge and be accountable for his actions when necessary. The flying sequences are some of the best in-the-cockpit descriptions I've ever read, and they're understandable and make sense to civilian laypersons like myself. The aboard-ship actions and port calls provide just the right counterbalance to the aviation sequences.

And for my fellow romantics, Brick and Claire start to explore future possibilities in this book, and there's nothing rushed or phony about their issues, questions, and hopes.

Being a former naval aviator himself, Mr. Gandt knows whereof he speaks. If you're interested in naval aviation fiction and good, solid storytelling, pick up 'With Hostile Intent.' You won't be disappointed, and you'll be headed back to the store to get the rest of the Brick Maxwell books as soon as possible.

A spell-binding, " real-life" account of naval flying...
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2002-02-18
Robert Gandt takes us into the bowels of the USS Ronald Reagan where some of the ugliest of battles are played out between the best and worst of fellow Naval Aviators. Killer Delancey typifies the hotshot, blowhard pilot who ruthlessly works the promotion system and dares anyone to stand in his way. Spam Parker is like the unwanted, unsolicited piece of e-mail crammed into your mailbox, only she is the Navy's Poster Girl for Political Correctness post -Tailhook and she is not going to let anyone forget it! Gandt sets the stage perfectly for the reader to hate these black hats. An absolutely riveting account of air combat in the Persian Gulf and a behind-the-scenes look at the lives of fighter pilots. The lead-in for #2 in the series is palpable! Can't wait!

A great first novel in the "Top Gun" tradition
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2004-05-29
Robert Gandt's first fictional book is very good, and I'm looking forward to reading the other books about "Brick" Maxwell, the U.S. Navy pilot who is the hero of "With Hostile Intent". I'm a sucker for techno-thrillers that focus on naval aviation, and Robert Gandt does a great job of writing about life on an aircraft carrier and what it's like to be a pilot of an F/A-18 Hornet.

The story takes place in the Middle East, with the U.S. Navy (and U.S. and British Air Forces) enforcing the "no fly zone" over southern Iraq. The year is 2000, 10 years after Desert Storm but before the Iraq war in 2003, so Saddam Hussein is still in power and playing the role of super bad guy.

The major conflicts in "With Hostile Intent" are, however, not the ones between the U.S. and Iraqi forces. Instead, we have several members of the U.S. forces who are so egotistical and ruthless that they provide the greatest threat to the "good guys". (I don't know how realistic this is - for the sake of the U.S. Navy I would hope that people like that would be weeded out very early in their naval career.)

One of the things I liked best about this book were the descriptions of aerial dogfights between the F/A-18 Hornets and MiG-29 Fulcrums. Sidewinders are flying, high G turns being done to evade missiles, chaff and flares being ejected and there's lots of excited chatter between the pilots. "Fox two!" "Bandit on your six!" "Splash one!" Great stuff for us armchair warriors!

So why the lack of a fifth star?

Mostly because the plot is a bit too contrived and thus not very plausible. In order to maximize the conflict between "Brick" Maxwell and "Killer" DeLancey it's necessary for Brick to refuse to reveal something he knows about Killer, but without a reasonable ground for this refusal. Then at the end of the book there's an even more contrived situation, which I'll refrain from talking about here.

Also, the characterizations of the people in the book are rather "wooden", especially in the first part of the book.

Still, I'm definitely looking forward to following "Brick" Maxwell in his further adventures, as chronicled by Robert Gandt.

Rennie Petersen

Roberts
Your Life As Art
Published in Paperback by Newfane Press (2002-12-04)
Author: Robert Fritz
List price: $18.95
New price: $18.95
Used price: $16.49
Collectible price: $90.00

Average review score:

Life Changing Experience
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-11-17
Not only was this book an incredible tool for understanding the creative process, it led me to take Robert & Rosalind Fritz's 3 day workshop entitled, "Your Life As Art." The combination of the book and the workshop has given me the first real structure to create and attain what I want in my personal and professional life.

The principle of structural tension as presented by Robert Fritz is not just some lofty, zen-like premise. It is concrete, undeniably powerful and real. While I found Robert's book, "The Path of Least Resistance" easier to process, most of the people I know who have read both books found "YLAA" easier to comprehend and use.

If you are looking for hype, this book isn't it. If you are looking to create a life that is what you dream of...read on.

Your Life as art
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-14
This book is just the key to unlock what really matter to you - or your family in work, relationships - in fact every area of your life - it is not one of these motivational books but a truly life changing read
Paul Barton

Life as art
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-30
I have enjoyed Robert Fritz work in the past. This book does not dissappoint. It is down to earth practical. The beauty of structural tension it creates momentum toward the fullfillment of your goals. It leaves out all the emotion that can bog you down. Throw out all your beliefs about your life as art and get ready to create something that will last a lifetime.

Life changing book if you don't mind a paradigm shift or two
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-09
I have read this book twice and find Fritz's approach refreshing and not in conflict with my personal belief systems. It actually works along to enhance and in many cases, redirect my thinking. It's not your normal positive thinking book which is also refreshing. For too long authors have been telling us to "think positive" and Fritz actually talks about why this is self defeating. Interesting perspective.
This book is a slow read due to the processing of it as you go along. Have actually heard Fritz speak twice and he's into personal honesty. In a workshop setting he calls one into accountability if one's thinking is askew with reality. Good book.

The tools to change my life
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-12
Robert Fritz is the only self-help writer that makes any sense to me. If you want to pretend you're changing your life by changing your thinking, there are a thousand other books for you. If you want the tools to actually DO something, Fritz is your man. This book loses focus near the end, but by then he has given you everything you need. The title is a little misleading, this book isn't just for artists, it is for anyone who wants to live their life creatively, outside of the box and on their own terms.

Roberts
About Face
Published in Paperback by Llumina Press (2003-06)
Authors: Robert Edward Levin and Steve J. Weiss
List price: $14.95
New price: $10.03
Used price: $14.36
Collectible price: $14.95

Average review score:

Great reading...
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-11-17
About Face was a great book that was hard to put down, even for a minute.

Excellent, Excellent, Excellent!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-07-29
This book is, as I stated, excellent. The storyline good, the writing fabulous. Told in the distinctive voices of the two brothers, the book unfolds in a wonderfully unique way. About Face was recommended to me by someone on the internet. I was skeptical, but purchased it anyway. Am glad I did, because it is one solid read.

Voting Member of The Academy of Arts & Sciences
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-07-29
I couldn't put it down! I read the last half of the book in one sitting...it left me spellbound! The structure of alternating chapters from each of the two main character's perspective, is creatively done and pulls the reader in. As a result, the authors do an extraordinary job at building a connection between the characters and the reader, with vivid descriptions and tapping emotions that anyone who has siblings, will relate to emphatically. The story builds to an incredible conclusion that will leave you contemplating the realtionships of the characters for days. I highly recommend this book from these exceptionally talented authors...Bravo!!!

Great collaboration
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-07-17
This is a terrific piece of writing between Levin and Weiss. The story never slows up, and the flow between the two writers is great; there is no on-again off-again feel as the writers interchange. The two authors create one smooth read. Highly suggested!!

Powerful
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-07-04
About Face is an excellent book. Economically descriptive, the book is narrated via the distinctive voices of brothers Damion and Travis Face, two wonderful spirits that were easy to admire, feel sorry for, and at the same time, applaud in their efforts to escape a life many of us are lucky to have never known.

I would tell anyone interested in a fast-paced, beautiful story, to pick up a copy of this book.

And the ending? My God, hold on...

Roberts
Above New York
Published in Hardcover by Cameron & Company (1988-09-01)
Author: Paul Goldberger
List price: $29.50
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Used price: $11.49
Collectible price: $40.00

Average review score:

The Big Apple Never Looked So Good
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-05-14
Let me first say I love New York, it is quite simply the most energetic, vibrant, alive place on earth. This book does the city such a service, it is spectacular and photographs just amazing. Mr. Cameron is such a singular talent and he does it hanging out of a helicopter. This book really captures the city and lets the viewer see the hidden New York, that very few see. I love the photos of Central Park, you have no idea what an oasis it is until you see it from high above. Some photos are in summer some are in winter and you get to see the city in all its various incarnations. Mr. Cameron also includes some vintage photos to let the viewer see how much the city has changed. I only wish that Mr. Careron had been able to photograph my city of Houston, she would have welcomed him with opened arms. I highly recommend this book, you won't be disappointed.

Gorgeous pictures, a bit outdated
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-03-02
I haven't found any picture book of Manhattan that's as sharp, descriptive and beautiful as this one. Unfortunately, it is a bit outdated--for those seeking a realistic portrayal--because of new construction and destruction in New York City.

Glorious collection
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2004-04-21
Robert Cameron's "Above New York: A Collection of Historical and Original Aerial Photographs of New York City" sets itself apart from other similar books. In no particular order:

a) the photos are unbelieveably crisp and the printing is of top-notch quality;
b) don't ask me how, but Mr. Cameron makes the city look like a place where human beings actually live and work, rather than making the cityscape look like an architectural diorama;
c) other boroughs are represented! New York is not just Manhattan, as so many other books would have you think.

The contrast of the modern skyline with the older photographs is very effective, as others have mentioned. But what is also appealing is the changes of the skyline between the time these photos were taken (ca. 1988) and today, as we New Yorkers would notice. The images of the World Trade Center are poignant, but I'm glad that the publishers did not update the book, in order to remove them. As time takes its healing course, we can look back fondly on those buildings--still with pain, but now with some acceptance. "Above New York: A Collection of Historical and Original Aerial Photographs of New York City" remains a glorious collection that has yet to be eclipsed in quality.

Rocco Dormarunno
author of The Five Points

Great book
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2001-12-10
This book is really great. I recommend it to anyone who loves NY!

The Best Photographic Book
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2002-01-17
This is the best photographic book I have ever seen. Its pictures of The Big Apple are magnificent! Comparative pictures taken in years past, many in the 1920s, show how sections of the city have changed. Whether one is a fan of New York and who isn't, you will enjoy this book. It makes me want all the other "Above" books now.

Roberts
The African American Writer's Handbook: How to Get in Print and Stay in Print
Published in Paperback by One World/Ballantine (2000-04-04)
Author: Robert Fleming
List price: $12.00
New price: $6.70
Used price: $1.50

Average review score:

Every author should have this book!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2002-12-06
Mr. Fleming captures everything an author (especially self-published authors) needs to know to promote his/her book. He list bookstore throughout the US, hints for getting "picked up" by traditional publishers, and useful marketing information.

This book should be in the personal reference library of every author.

An Excellent Introduction
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2002-01-19
Robert Fleming has written an excellent beginners guide to publishing for novice writers. If I were teaching a creative writing or Afro American literature class this would most certainly be one of my text books. If you are a more experienced writer this purely introductory book won't be much concrete help toy your career but it is a worthy addition to any writers reference collection.

Powerhouse of Information!
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2001-05-18
For any African-American writer, published or unpublished, self-published or mainstream published, this book is priceless. It is a powerhouse of information that any writer can benefit from. From tips on writing and submitting book proposals, query letters, and manuscripts to advice on locating and obtaining an agent to interviews with some of the top people in the business, you can walk away with a ton of knowledge that will help you push your writing career forward.

The AA Writers Handbook can save you dozens of hours of research because everything you need to know is comprised in this one gem of a book. While there are a ton of writing handbooks, it is a breath of fresh air to see one completely dedicated to the plight of AA authors. This book should definitely be included on the reference shelf of any writer serious about their craft.

Essential Writing Tool
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2001-01-23
The African American Writers Handbook : How to Get in Print and Stay in Print by Robert Fleming is the most comprehensive book on writing and being African American in the publishing industry. This book gets beyond the promoting part of being a writer. This book delves into the real issues and explores serious questions such as agents and if and when race should be an issue. This book will soon be the standard for all writing courses worldwide.

...

A MUST-HAVE for any aspiring AFRICAN AMERICAN writer!
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2001-01-19
This book is a definite must for any aspiring African American writer! For the reader, it's as if you're a fly on the wall taking part of some top-secret information. The handbook is chock full of information regarding:

1. Tips on submitting proposals, query letters, and preparing manuscripts for submission; 2. Advice on finding an agent and negotiating contracts that launch careers; 3. Interviews with top editors, agents, publishing executives, and bookstore owners; 4. Updated information on copyrights, subsidiary rights, and sales and marketing; 5. The trials and tribulations of self-publishing; and 6. The art of promoting your work and yourself to a wider audience

Not only does this book provide a comprehensive guide to the OTHER side of writing (the okay, now I got a book, what do I need to know now?), but it provides inspiration as well to the number of aspiring writers out there who might feel they will never understand anything beyond the writing-a-book stage... now you have a great beginning lesson to read on the entire publishing process.

If you're a true writer, and want to know about all the facets of the publishing world, this is a book you NEED to have on your shelf.

Shonell Bacon, author

Roberts
Agile Java(TM): Crafting Code with Test-Driven Development (Robert C. Martin Series)
Published in Paperback by Prentice Hall PTR (2005-02-24)
Author: Jeff Langr
List price: $54.99
New price: $15.36
Used price: $17.99

Average review score:

Bought for my son, read it cover to cover!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-15
I had originally bought this book for son who was going to spend the summer working for my development team writing unit test for our database POJOs. I was so impressed way in which concepts were incrementally introduced I read the book cover to cover. It is now the only book I recommend to beginners and I introduce it as a 'must' read for all my new hires.

Don't Let the Title Fool You
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-31
This is my new favorite-book-to-give-to-anyone-who-is-learning-or-using-Java.

The title is misleading in that this book is about much more than just the Agile Programming stuff. While it does a great job talking about Agile techniques and always starts by creating a unit test, the book really is about all aspects of Java (specifically Java 5) programming. Anyone who takes the time to work through the examples will become a much better Java programmer.

OO patterns, collections, type safety and more are covered and explained in the context of a rich, in-depth example. And because the author has you construct a high-quality test suite around the example, you are free to experiment with different ways to implement each new feature - thus proving to yourself the benefits of Agile design.

Just like it says in one of the quotes on the cover, this book is now required reading for the Java programmers at our company.

I wanted to like it!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2006-02-16
I'm not a beginning programmer, or even an absolute Java novice, so maybe this book isn't really aimed at me. My biggest gripe is that the code snippets continue on and on making the book very poor for anything other than cover-to-cover reading.

Great Book
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-07-28
I've gotten about 6 chapters into this book and I love it. I've been developing Java for almost 7 years and am currently teaching myself Agile principles and this book comes as a great help.

Great whether you're learning Java or TDD
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2006-12-02
This book is primarily for new programmers who want to learn Java as their first programming language. The book can also be helpful for programmers familiar with test driven development (TDD) but new to Java, or vice versa. I am an experienced Java developer, and I found that going through Agile Java presented me with a new and better way of approaching Java code development. This book covers Java 2 Standard Edition (J2SE) version 5.0, but covers only a few of the additional APIs at an introductory level. Technologies that are used pervasively in the majority of enterprise applications, such as logging, JDBC, and Swing, are presented in Agile Java. Some of the information, such as that on logging, will teach you all you need to know for most purposes. Other lessons, such as those on Swing and JDBC, will give you a basic understanding of the technology and will tell you where to go when seeking further information.

The core of Agile Java is fifteen lessons of about 30 pages each. It starts with baby steps in Java, TDD, and OO. The book finishes with a strong foundation for professional Java development. The core lessons should be read sequentially since each lesson builds upon the previous ones. Once you have completed the core lessons, you should have a solid understanding of how to build robust Java code. If you haven't completed the fifteen core lessons, you should not assume you know how to write good Java code. Each of the fifteen core lessons in Agile Java has you build bits and pieces of a student information system for a university. This single common theme helps demonstrate how you can incrementally build upon and extend existing code. Each lesson also finishes with a series of exercises. Instead of the student information system, the bulk of the exercises have you build bits and pieces of a chess application. Some of the exercises are involved and quite challenging, but they are where learning the methodology really begins.

There are three additional lessons to cover a few more Java topics. Two of the lessons present an introduction to Swing. These two lessons will provide you with enough information to begin building robust user interface applications in Java. But the bigger intent is to give you some ideas for how to build them using TDD. The third additional lesson presents an overview for a number of Java topics that most Java developers will want to know such as JARs, regular expressions, cloning, JDBC, and internationalization.

I really liked how the author integrated the three concepts of Java programming, TDD, and object-oriented design without confusing matters. The book is very clear with good illustrations. I highly recommend it. The following is the table of contents:

Lesson 1. Getting Started
Lesson 2. Java Basics
Lesson 3. Strings and Packages
Lesson 4. Class Methods and Fields
Lesson 5. Interfaces and Polymorphism
Lesson 6. Inheritance
Lesson 7. Legacy Elements
Lesson 8. Exceptions and Logging
Lesson 9. Maps and Equality
Lesson 10. Mathematics
Lesson 11. IO
Lesson 12. Reflection and Other Advanced Topics
Lesson 13. Multithreading
Lesson 14. Generics
Lesson 15. Assertions and Annotations
Additional Lesson - Swing, Part 1
Additional Lesson II. Swing, Part 2
Additional Lesson III. Java Miscellany
Appendix A: An Agile Java Glossary
Appendix B: Java Operator Precedence Rules
Appendix C: Getting Started with IDEA
Agile Java References

Roberts
America Wide: In God We Trust
Published in Hardcover by America Wide (2002)
Author: Robert Schuller
List price:
New price: $7.76
Used price: $0.86
Collectible price: $17.50

Average review score:

Amazing Photography
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-07
This book will soon find its place next to your bed and near your heart. It is full of amazing images. Great Work!

Very satisfied
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-08
I was very pleased with the product, the time it took to get here and the over all experience of the Amazon system.

Thanks for being there.

Rich

Beautiful!
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2003-01-09
Ken Duncan has been Australia's foremost photographer, taking superb shots with his panograph camera. He has again produced a beautiful collection of photographs across this great land. Each picture is a work of art in itself! The book makes a great coffee table book - one to pick up and browse at any time.

Ken Duncan does it again with America Wide
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2003-09-18
This is an awesome book and covers the majesty and beauty of America from sea to shining sea.

Don't forget to check out his other book, Australia Wide. Another incredible collection of photographs.

Beautiful, Amazing Work
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2003-01-21
My whole family, teenagers included, keep looking at this book. We've been to many of these places, but the way Mr. Duncan presents them is beyond words.

Roberts
American Splendor: The Life and Times of Harvey Pekar - Stories
Published in Paperback by Titan Books Ltd (2004-01-23)
Author: Harvey Pekar
List price: $35.10
New price: $44.58
Used price: $44.57

Average review score:

A Slice of Life
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-10
A self-described "working class intellectual" with a passion for collecting jazz records and a "flunky gig" as a file clerk in a VA hospital, Harvey Pekar pioneered the literary comic genre. His long-running series American Splendor portrays not caped superheroes with bulging muscles, but the everyday life of an ordinary guy in Cleveland. Pekar's autobiographical vignettes are introspective, honest, and often funny, candidly revealing his flaws and failures as he pushes on heroically in pursuit of love, companionship, and creative fulfillment.

Pekar's realistic dialogue (the characters speak in different dialects, which helps you "hear" them in your head) accompanies a wide range of art styles by a number of comic artists, from the quirkiness of R. Crumb to the stark realism of Greg Budgett and Gary Dumm and the meticulous, photographic detail of Gerry Shamray.

For me, this book was a great introduction to an addictive series. Chock full of amusing anecdotes and musings on everything from race relations in Cleveland to the joy of a good pair of shoes, it's a slice of life in comic book form.

"Who IS Harvey Pekar?"
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-13
This collection of Pekar writings from the 1970s and 80s was issued on the heels of the film "American Splendor," and it collects some of the best of Pekar's earlier work. Although not exclusively chronological, the presentation of the material gives a good idea of Pekar's life from his post-high school days through his meeting and marrying Joyce Brabner. (For a strictly chronological memoir, see Pekar's recent The Quitter.)

In the later Pekar work, the centerpiece of much of it is Pekar's obsessive-compulsive anxiety. But a lot of this work focuses on what might be described as Pekar's existential anxiety: his terrible loneliness, his anger and alienation, his dark reflections on the meaning of life, his desire for recognition, his regret over wasted opportunities and adolescent hubris, and his worries about future contingencies (financial security, illness and death, old age). The Pekar who comes through in these pages isn't the lovable crank of the film. Rather, the person who comes through is the outsider, a self-educated man, extremely knowledgeable in literature and music, who disdains a "normal" lifestyle and seeks freedom through nonconformity. Perhaps the finest single piece Pekar has ever written, "I'll be Forty-three on Friday (How I'm Living Now)" speaks to all this. The collection's lead story, "The Harvey Pekar Name Story," in which Pekar winds up asking "Who IS Harvey Pekar?" is a perfect set-up.

Of course, there are also lighter moments in this collection. Mr. Boats (wonderfully illustrated by R. Crumb) appears here a couple of times, and he's always good for a bit of gently funny homespun wisdom. "Mrs. Roosevelt and the Young Queen of Greece" and "On the Corner: A Sequel, June 1976" are touching pieces about the bittersweetness of memory. And the penultimate story in the collection, "Common Sense," would make even a dyed-in-the-wool misanthrope love humanity.

Highly recommended.

A Humdrum Life Writ Large
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-09-07
I've been a fan of Harvey Pekar's work for over fifteen years. The first time I ever read his self-published comix, American Splendor, I was impressed by its examination of everyday life. His self-effacing humor grows on those who want more than mainstream comics starring spandex-clad teens with superpowers. Compared with Pekar, Spidey has it easy.

I was happy when this movie tie-in release of his early collected work was published. The everyday brilliance of the real life interactions between Pekar and his friends, co-workers and loved ones merit more attention by discerning readers. It would behoove anyone who cares about the comix medium to claim a copy for their personal reading enjoyment. This volume is not for collectors, but for fans of alternative graphic literature who want more meat and potatoes rather than the visual eye candy of more mainstream publishers.

Pekar has been described as a "working class intellectual" (The Comics Journal), and this label is respectfully accurate. He comes from a generation who grew up devouring a culture that had more respect for intelligence than is common today. Instead of just mourning this trend, Pekar rebels from it in true beatnik fashion. His long-time association with R. Crumb (who drew the very first American Splendor story, "The Harvey Pekar Name Story") attracted other artists within Cleveland as well as from other locations as the series has progressed.

The everyday heroism of Pekar working a civil service job in order to create his vision of the potential of graphic literature comes through in every page of this collection. I am glad that there are other collections and issues of American Splendor that are available. It would be grand if future generations of comix fans could gravitate around the work that Pekar has never tired from creating. Even at the worst of his lymphoma and chemo treatments, he has never quit observing and relating the drama of everyday life.

the best pekar collection
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-07-08
i own i think every american splendor collection book there is, and this one is my favorite. there's a few in particular that really blow me away (the one with pekar wondering around a park, reflecting on his past marriage, his present, and whether there is a God is spectacular). there are a wide variety of artists, from the goofy robert crumb drawings to more serious ones. there are certainly weak points IMO, but not as much as in the other collections. while "the quitter" is his most consistent i've read so far, there's no replacement for finding a really cool comic collection like this and reading through it, finding a bunch of random pekar stories and seeing which ones you enjoy best.

Splendid glimpse into the male mind in a comic book format
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-12-24
American Splendor: The Life and Times of Harvey Pekar is the largest published collection of the comic series, containing the complete text of American Splendor and More American Splendor. With an introduction by R. Crumb and art by Kevin Brown, Gregory Budgett, Sean Carroll, Sue Cavey, R. Crumb, Gary Drumm, Val Materick, and Gerry Shamray this is 320 pages of a classic American comic.

Pekar's work is a cerebral approach to the comic medium. Many of the panels have no dialog and only illustrate the external while the text reveals the thought stream of Pekar's mind. His ability to portray the inner workings of his thoughts, in a humorous and sympathetic manner, is the key to the success of his writings. The comic is a working class version of Seinfeld with a populist self-made intellectual as the leading character. Yet there is a Existentialist angst to this work that puts it in a class by itself.


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