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Related Subjects: Smith Shaw Sabatini Scott Sherman Spencer Stewart Stevens Simmons Stanley Strauss Stuart Stone Shepard Sachs Sheridan
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A Brilliant MemoirReview Date: 2006-07-27
We are all dreamersReview Date: 2003-07-24
A Memoir that Reads like a NovelReview Date: 2003-01-25
Rambling Reminisces about a Childhood in the BronxReview Date: 2002-12-30
On the positive note, Dreaming of Columbus would definitely stir memories of the neighborhood for those growing up in that part of New York. He does have some descriptive stories of people, places and landmarks in the book that are entertainingly delightful.
If you are a Bronx native, I would recommend this book so you can remember things you may never see again.
Familiar Themes in Dreaming of ColumbusReview Date: 2002-06-17

good pharmacy referenceReview Date: 2008-09-26
drg information handbookReview Date: 2008-02-13
THis is the book!Review Date: 2008-01-19
great resourceReview Date: 2007-11-16
wait, there's moreReview Date: 2008-07-10

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There is a reason this has ONLY received 5 stars...Review Date: 2008-09-19
The Zen of Catholicism, part IIReview Date: 2006-09-22
Needless to say Dr Biela's series of books has given me a radically different perspective as to what closeness to God means, and how God acts in our lives. Basically, we are nothing and God in us is and does everything. We come to this realization by removing the blinders in our lives which impede us from seeing this truth. Events which appear adverse to us can in fact be God's instrument to remove obstacles that separate us from Him. More than ever I seek to recognize how everything I do and everything that happens to me is God's action.
I could try to go on but, again, no words of mine "suffice". Read it and prepare to be overwhelmed.
GOD is in the eventsReview Date: 2004-07-13
God Alone SufficesReview Date: 2004-04-08
PLEASE READ THIS BOOK!Review Date: 2004-05-14

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Fun! Fun! Fun!Review Date: 2007-01-06
I was born in such a cool year!! 1966 Rules!!Review Date: 2006-12-17
The Swingin' 60's Strike Again!Review Date: 2005-01-15
Hal Lifson has collected photos, ads, album covers, toys, etc. that brings back a very cool, swingin' period in American culture. The Beatles, Batman, James Bond, Playboy, Nancy Sinatra--they're all here!
Definitely a book for anyone alive at the time. Or anyone interested in what that was like.
Unbelievable!Review Date: 2003-05-02
I recommend this book to anyone who wants to take that journey, even if you weren't born yet!
The Ultimate Time MachineReview Date: 2003-06-13


Mason's Favorite BookReview Date: 2008-04-10
Unique! A new style of R.L. stine!Review Date: 2008-01-30
One of the BEST Goosebumps....Review Date: 2007-12-04
My Favorite Goosebumps Book!Review Date: 2007-11-16
I loved the plot and thought that it was amazing. The story is basically about kids from the school from earlier years to when the book takes place who are trapped inside the wall! How original?
This is the best in the series, and everyone who love(s) this series will love this one.
Okay bookReview Date: 2007-09-23

My favorite book 37 years agoReview Date: 2006-07-14
Years later, great bookReview Date: 2006-05-15
My takeReview Date: 2005-10-19
Great for Homeschoolers too!Review Date: 2003-12-04
A New Generation of "ant" lovers!Review Date: 2004-08-18
A truly wonderful, joyful book about friends and teamwork.

Beyond the unassuming introductionReview Date: 2008-07-29
Father Ratzinger draws on unlikely philosophers and theologians such as Nietzsche and Luther to make his point. He finds and reveals truth in the Lutheran martyr Bonhoeffer and his passion. But Father Ratzinger takes us beyond simply finding deep philosophical truths and guides us to a passion and adoration of the personification of truth in Jesus. Father Ratzinger seems to echo Francis Bacon who said, "A little philosophy inclineth man's mind to atheism, but depth in philosophy bringeth men's minds about to religion." Only, the religion of Father Ratzinger is not a thing but a person. The book ends with the hope that is contained in that person, "A salvation of the world does exist - that is the confidence that supports the Christian and that still makes it rewarding even today to be a Christian."
There is enough philosophical insight here to challenge the most theoretical thinkers. But Father Ratzinger does not stop at mere theory but goes on to the concrete implications to the Christian found in that theory. There is perhaps no more thorough "introduction" than this to a vibrant faith. Well worth the investment of reading and re-reading to plumb the depths of philosophical truths contained in that faith. Very highly recommended for every Christian.
A Rare GemReview Date: 2008-07-11
NeatReview Date: 2008-09-19
To be read and re-readReview Date: 2008-03-05
Ratzinger first deals squarely with belief and points out that it is within the context of doubt that the theist and the atheist can enter into dialogue. After all, the Christian believes; he does not see. Likewise, the atheists "sees" what is optical and does not believe in what cannot be empirically verified. But, both the Christian and the atheist, if he is honest, must have doubts about the nature of his belief or non-belief. There must be times when the atheist says: "yet perhaps it is true (page 46).
For Ratzinger the word credo means:
"man does not regard seeing, hearing and touching as the totality of what concerns him, that he does not view the area of his world as marked off by what he can see and touch but seeks a second mode of access to reality, a mode he calls in fact belief, and in such a way that he finds in it the decisive enlargement of his whole view of the world" (page 50).
For Ratzinger the radicality of Christianity is that "God has come so near to us that we can kill him and that he thereby, so it seems, ceases to be God for us".
Ratzinger poses the question of whether "it would not have been much simpler to believe in the Mysterious Eternal... to leave us as at an infinite distance". (page 55)
Ratzinger notes that belief does not come "though the private search for truth but through a process of reception.. Faith cannot and should not be a mere product of reflection" (page 92). Faith demands unity and calls for the fellow believer; it is by nature related to a Church." (page 98).
On the nature of the Trinity, he noted that: "He is one, but at as the exceedingly great, entirely Other, he himself transcends the bounds of singular and plural; he lies beyond the" (page 125).
On the "I am who I am" scene in exodus, he notes that the words sound like a "rebuff","like a refusal to give a name than the pronouncement of a name (page 127) "I am" is as much as to say "I am here for you" " a Being-for". (page 129).
"The name is no longer merely a word, but a person: Jesus himself." (page 133) Ratzinger goes on to say that the meaning of a "name" is its invocability. God, by having a name, becomes accessible to me. "He is handing himself over to men in such a way that he can be called upon".
"And by doing this he enters into coexistence with them; he puts himself within reach; he is "there" for them". The name is no longer just a word at which we clutch; it is now flesh of our flesh, bone of our bone. God is one of us" (page 134/135).
Ratzinger notes the great saying by Tertullian: "Christ called himself truth, not custom". (page 141)
His thought then becomes even more metaphysical:
"Whoever looks thoroughly at matter will discover that it is being-thought objectivised thought. So it cannot be ultimate. All being is ultimately being-thought and can be traced back to
"Christian belief in God means that things are the being-thought of a creative consciousness of a creative freedom and that the creative conciousness that hears up all things has released what has been thought into the freedom of its own, independent existence". (page 137).
"The doctrine of the triune God, means at bottom renouncing any solution and remaining content with a mystery that cannot be plumbed by man (page 168)". "Faith consists of a series of contradictions held together by grace". (page 171).
"It now became clear that the dialogue, the relatio stands behind substance as an equally primordial form of being". I note here that Ratzinger preempts some of the philosophical work done by the great Jesuit Thomist, Norris Clarke and by the personalist, John F Crosby. "Father is purely a concept of relationship. Only in being for the other is he Father; in his own being in himself he is simply God". (page 183). "By calling the Lord "Son", John gives him a name that always points away from him and beyond him; he thus employs a term that denotes essentially a relatedness, He thereby puts his whole Christology into the context of the idea of relation" (page 185).
Moving on to focus of the office and nature of Christ, he notes that Christ "performs himself and gives himself; his work is the giving of himself" (page 204). "The person of Jesus is his teaching and his teaching is he himself" "message and person are identical" (page 206). "Jesus is his work" "His being is pure actualitas of "from" and "for"(page 228).
"For John, the picture of the pierced side forms the climax not only of the crucifixion scene but the whole story of Jesus... his existence is completely open. Now he is entirely "for"; now he is no longer a single individual but "Adam" from whose side, Eve, a new mankind is formed". (page 241) "The future of man hangs on the Criss - the redemption of Man is the Cross. And, he can only come to himself by letting the walls of his existence be broken down, by looking on him who has been pierced" (p242)
"Talk of original sin means no man can start from scratch any more (completely unimpaired by history" (page 249). "Last judgement, on the other hand is the answer to these collective entanglements" (page 249).
"Being a Christian means essentially changing over from being for oneself to being for one another". "Christ is the infinite self expenditure of God" (page 261).
"Love demands infinity, indestructibility; indeed it is, so to love demands, infinity, indestructibility; indeed, it is, so to speak, a call for infinity" (page 302).
Ratzinger's analysis of the resurrection and the Last judgement is deeply impressive, noting its deeply serious nature. Of hell, he notes that it "consists in man's being unwilling to receive anything, in his desire to be self sufficient. It is the expression of enclosure in one's own being alone."
Finally, on the Church, Ratzinger approaches the evil evident in the Church in a sober fashion. "At bottom there is always a hidden pride at work when criticism of the Church adopts that tone of rancorous bitterness which today is already becoming a fashionable habit"
He notes that Christ in his earthly ministry scandalised others; is is surprising that he does so again when he gives himself over to be broken sacramentally on his altars, ministered, at times, by deeply sinful ministers and consumed also by those whose lifes often contradict the gospel. Don't we all in our own way contradict the gospel in our daily lives?
Cardinal Ratzinger, Benedict XVIReview Date: 2007-11-15

Great book! Love it! Review Date: 2008-09-29
Still wonderful after all these years!Review Date: 2008-08-06
The MAGGIE B, by Irene Haas, I love, love this book!Review Date: 2008-06-11
You ought to see my copy! It isn't a hardback it is just a simple little well worn booklet. I still adore it, maybe even more 'because' of its worn pages.
The illustrations are so so wonderful. You feel like you are on a journey with little Margaret Barnstable and her little brother as they sail across the sea. Beautiful and charming little book.
The Maggie BReview Date: 2008-03-05
Bianca
A Timeless gift to be treasuredReview Date: 2008-01-06

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A family of slaveowners.Review Date: 2005-04-23
touching, fascinating, personal view of the Antebellum SouthReview Date: 2006-08-04
Mary's World: A ReviewReview Date: 2005-01-14
that is informative as well as enjoyable. By putting their lives
into context with the times Mr Cote has given the reader not only the opportunity to learn what they thought and felt but the ability to understand why they thought and felt the way they
did. This book will appeal to historians and the average reader
alike.
It took me only 2 days to read Mary's World and I found myself
so absorbed that when interrupted I was momentarily confused to find I wasn't in 19th century Charleston.
A MUST READReview Date: 2004-12-14
THE READER GETS TO WATCH WILLIAM BULL AND MARY ALSTON PRINGLE'S CHILDREN GROW UP. BY THE END OF THE BOOK YOU FEEL AS IF YOU HAVE KNOWN THEM ALL. I DREADED FINISHING THE BOOK BECAUSE I FELT AS IF I WAS LEAVING OLD FRIENDS.
DO YOURSELF A FAVOR AND MAKE TIME FOR THIS BOOK. REGARDLESS OF WHETHER YOU ARE AN "ANTEBELLUM-OPHILE" LIKE ME OR NOT, THIS IS AN EXCELLENT BOOK.
Great Book!Review Date: 2004-12-07

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Related Subjects: Smith Shaw Sabatini Scott Sherman Spencer Stewart Stevens Simmons Stanley Strauss Stuart Stone Shepard Sachs Sheridan
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