Shepard Books


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

Shepard
Brighten to Incandescence: 17 Stories
Published in Hardcover by Golden Gryphon Press (2003-06-01)
Author: Michael Bishop
List price: $24.95
New price: $15.00
Used price: $0.58
Collectible price: $37.00

Average review score:

For anyone who enjoys a deftly written short story
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2003-07-20
Brighten To Incandescence is an impressive anthology of seventeen short stories written by Nebula Award-winning author Michael Bishop. From a heart-touching piece on the life of a Hollywood B-movie actor; to a brutal murderer's self-destructive path and ultimate end; to a conversation with Mary Shelley's ghost, these involving, adroitly written stories-with-a-twist, are gathered largely from small-press publications and anthologies, are so good that it's extremely difficult to read just one. Brighten To Incandescence is highly recommended reading for anyone who enjoys a deftly written short story in general, and to the legions of Michael Bishop fans in particular!

Shepard
California Construction Law Manual
Published in Paperback by Shepards/Mcgraw-Hill (2001-01)
Author: James Acret
List price: $135.00

Average review score:

California Construction Law Manual (Construction Law Series;
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2000-07-27
It's a great law book for contractors, civil engineers and civil engineering student.

Shepard
Candle of Vision (Quest Book)
Published in Paperback by Theosophical Pub House (1974-06)
Author: Ae
List price: $2.25
New price: $6.95
Used price: $2.50
Collectible price: $19.95

Average review score:

Candle of Vision is the Light at the End of my Day!
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2000-07-27
Candle of Vision is not just a book that I enjoy reading. I actually forced myself to only read one chapter per night to spread the enjoyment out over a few weeks! Full of images and phrases of beauty. Thanks to AE (George William Russell)those of us who don't have second sight are finally allowed a glimpse into the many colored land of Celtic magic.

Shepard
Captain Ramsey's Daughter
Published in Hardcover by Lothrop Lee & Shepard (1953-06)
Author: Elizabeth Fraser Torjesen
List price:

Average review score:

The book was a very intresting book about the 1830's.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 1999-04-22
An intresting story about 12 year old Jeannie Ramseywho lived in the year 1834. Jeannie delivered a very important package to Boston after learning that her father's ship had been shipwrecked. Her brother Elihu had made it safely back home only to tell them the desparing news that out of the three ships, two were missing, along with Jeannie's father, Captain Ramsey.

Shepard
Carl Yastrzemski (Baseball Legends)
Published in Library Binding by Chelsea House Publications (1993-03)
Author: Shepard Long
List price: $16.95
New price: $12.16
Used price: $0.01

Average review score:

It's one of the best baseball biographies I have ever read.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 1997-09-27
Kudos to Mr. Long. This is a fine read. A must for Red Sox Fans. The perfect stocking stuffer for that baseball fan on your Christmas list.

Shepard
Cassie's village
Published in Unknown Binding by Lothrop, Lee & Shepard (1965)
Author: Frances Riker Duncombe
List price:
Used price: $5.64
Collectible price: $10.00

Average review score:

The Best book you could ever read!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2000-10-31
This story takes place in a little New York village in the 1980's. It's about a girl named Cassie and her two friends Emma, and Josie. They are all twelve years old but Emma is already starting to become a young lady and does not like to play with Cassie and Josie anymore. She thinks that Cassie and Josie are too babyish. Is this the end of their friendship?

This book was really interesting and I highly recommend it for 5th and 6th grade girls. The reason why I read this book was because my name is Cassie, but I'm really glad that I read it anyway!

Shepard
A Child From The Village (Middle East Literature in Translation)
Published in Hardcover by Syracuse University Press (2004-11-30)
Author: Sayyid Qutb
List price: $22.95
New price: $14.73
Used price: $8.00

Average review score:

menior of Important Islamicist Egyptian Writer
Helpful Votes: 25 out of 25 total.
Review Date: 2004-12-29
A Child From The Village by Sayyid Qutb, edited, translated, and with an introduction by John Calvert and William Shepard (Middle East Literature in Translation: Syracuse University Press) Although the Egyptian writer Sayyid Qutb is not a household name in the United States, he is well known throughout the Islamic World as a seminal thinker in the Islamist movement, influential as far away as Pakistan and Malaysia. A member of the Islamic Brotherhood, he was jailed by Gamal Abdul Nasser's government as early as 1954. He became one of the most uncompromising voices of the movement we now call Islamism and is best known perhaps for his book, Ma'lam fi al-tariq (Milestones, 1965), after publication of which he was accused of conspiring against Egyptian president Nasser and arrested. He was executed in 1966.
This memoir tells of Qutb's childhood in the village of Musha in Upper Egypt. Qutb documents the era between 1912 and 1918, a time immensely influencial in the creation of modern Egypt. Written with much tenderness toward childhood memories, it has become a classic in modern Arabic autobiography. Qutb offers a clear picture of Egyptian village life in the early twentieth century, its customs and lore, educational system, religious festivals, relations with the central government, and the struggle to modernize and retain its identity. In their rendering of the work into English, translators John Calvert and William Shepard capture the beauty and intensity of Qutb's prose.
A Child from the Village was written just prior to Qutb's conversion to the Islamist cause and reflects his concerns for social justice. Interest in Qutb's writing has increased in the West since Islamism has emerged as a power on the world scene.
message. Despite its tone of nostalgia, A Child from the Village paints a picture of the Egyptian countryside that is not entirely happy. The specter of peasant indebtedness and loss of land haunts the pages of the autobiography, as does disease caused by unhygienic conditions and the peasants' recourse to folk remedies and barber-surgeons rather than scientifically trained physicians. The joys of Ramadan, birth ceremonies, and other festive occasions are juxtaposed to death, tragedy, and the laments of women whose families patiently endure hard lives. Captives of poverty and ignorance, the peasants of Qutb's autobiography toil endlessly in their fields with little expectation that their lives will improve. They are the victims of the few large landowners and politicians who controlled Egypt's wealth. According to Tetz Rooke, who examined a wide range of Arabic childhood autobiographies, the critical portrayal of rural life found A Child from the Village represents a "break with the tendency towards pastoral idealization which dominated much of the first Egyptian creative writing concerned with country life." lt may thus be seen as a "precursor of the later Egyptian novel that embraces the subject of the village with a true-to-life, descriptive intent such as al-Ard [The earth, 1953] by 'Abd al-Rahman al-Sharqawi (1920-1987)."4 In the context of the mid-1940s, Qutb's book manifests a growing awareness among Egypt's intelligentsia of socioeconomic issues. It was during this period, for example, that dissident elements within the Wafd founded the Wafdist Vanguard in order to influence the party leadership in a leftist direction.
Implicitly and sometimes explicitly in the book, Qutb advocates the need for reform and modernization at the village level. Qutb believed that the introduction of modern schooling in Musha was a step in the right direction, but he also believed that there was need for many more improvements, especially in the areas of land reform and health care. In his view, the Egyptian government was the obvious agent to undertake the necessary reforms, but too often the state's ameliorative efforts were imposed with a heavy hand or else were ill conceived. Qutb provides a harrowing account of a government operation, probably staged shortly after World War I, to confiscate all weapons belonging to the villagers of Asyut Province as a precondition for its integration into the structure of the State on a more thorough basis. He describes how soldiers, having surrounded the village, brutally interrogated the peasants, at one point firing bullets over the heads of the assembled village elders. Events such as this reinforced the peasants' traditional distrust of a governmental authority that in the past periodically subjected them to corvée labor. Elsewhere in the book, Qutb documents, sometimes with humor, the unwelcome and often inexpert intrusions of various government officials into the affairs of the community. We are introduced to medical officials, coroners, judges, and others, all of whom attempt to order and police the countryside in ways that make sense to the State but not to the villagers. In much the same way as the Egyptian writer Tawfiq al-Hakim's novella Diary of a Country Prosecutor, A Child from the Village documents the gulf in understanding that existed between urban officialdom and the dwellers of the countryside, the difference being that in Qutb's book we are provided with the perspective of the peas-ants rather than that of a government official. Qutb appears to argue that if modernization in Egypt's countryside is to be effective, it must take into account the sensibilities and social and economic realities of its inhabitants.
Within two years of the publication of A Child from the Village, Qutb adopted the Islamist position upon which his fame rests. Whatever the exact reasons for his ideological change, the significant point is that Qutb's early Islamist writings display many of the same basic concerns for social justice and national community that figure in his secular writings, including A Child from the Village. A discussion of the ways in which Qutb grafted the symbols and doctrines of the Qur'an is beyond the scope of this introduction. What can be said is that A Child from the Village illuminates an important element of the context out of which Qutb's Islamism emerged.

Shepard
The Chocolate Chip Cookie Contest
Published in Hardcover by Lothrop Lee & Shepard (1985-06)
Author: Barbara Douglass
List price: $13.00
Used price: $34.99

Average review score:

Loved it when I was little
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-09-19
I must've checked this book out hundreds of times from the library when I was about 6 or 7. I just loved how all his neighbors added their own "secret" ingredients to his recipe and how he ended up with the best cookies of all. The book has the recipe at the end of it. I never tried the recipe out, I wish I had!

Shepard
Christ of the Gospels
Published in Paperback by Eerdmans Pub Co (1982-06)
Author: John W. Shepard
List price: $24.99
Used price: $4.85
Collectible price: $100.00

Average review score:

Excellent resource
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-20
I purchased this book on a friend's recommendation because I was writing a story set during the time of Jesus. It is one of the most thorough books on the subject and I would highly recommend it to anyone wishing to learn more about Jesus and the time he lived in.

Shepard
Christopher Robin Gives Pooh a Party Jewelry Book (Pooh Jewelry Book)
Published in Hardcover by Dutton Juvenile (1992-02-14)
Author: A. A. Milne
List price: $14.99
New price: $1.56
Used price: $0.01

Average review score:

The book is very interesting.
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 1999-04-21
The reason why i realy like this book is because i love every thing that has winnie the pooh.I liked when pooh had a realy nice time at his birthday party.


Books-Under-Review-->Reference-->Biography-->S-->Shepard-->23
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