Stewart Books


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

Stewart
Enchanted Ireland
Published in Hardcover by Stewart, Tabori and Chang (2000-02-15)
Author: Paul Lay
List price: $19.98
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Informative text and stunningly beautiful photographs.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2000-06-04
Paul Lay's informative text is a perfect accompaniment to Richard Turpin's stunning, lovely, full color, tour-de-force photographic excursion through the appealing beauty of Ireland's landscape, cities, architecture, and people. Enchanted Ireland is an outstanding compilation of Irish images and a pure celebration of the natural wonder and folk charm of a vibrant people in a land bustling with vigor and cultural legacy. Highly recommended!

Lovely!
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2000-06-16
Having just returned from a 2-week visit to Ireland I was eagerto get my hands on anything related to the places I saw. So, I took alook at several photography books on Ireland and was losing hope of finding the "right" one, when I started flipping through "Enchanted Ireland." I was stunned by the wonderful photographs, and the great range of both landscape and city/town pictures. There are also some beautful people pictures, including--to my astonishment--Paddy, an accordion player and resident of Inishmor, whom I saw on my trip to the Aran Islands. If you're looking for a wide range of photographs and a good idea of what parts of Ireland look like (and they're stunningly beautiful) then this is *the* book to have. You'll want to leave for Ireland tomorrow!

Stewart
Entering Space: An Astronaut's Odyssey
Published in Paperback by Stewart Tabori & Chang (1985-10)
Author: Joseph P. Allen
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Inspiring
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-11-09
I was browsing through a Half Price Books store a couple of years ago when this book caught my eye. The detail and insight astronaut Joseph Allen provides almost gives you the sensation that you're floating beside the astronauts on the shuttle, but he never dives too deep into minute technical details that would make the journey dull or boring. However, the photos are the book's real centerpiece; it features over 200 large, full-color photographs that document spaceflight from Project Mercury to the Space Shuttle.

I'm an Aerospace engineer, and I hope to become an astronaut one day. This is the book I reach for when I'm in need of some inspiration.

A Fabulous Collection of Photographs from Space
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2004-09-11
Joe Allen has a great eye and this inspiring collection of phototgraphs from space, many taken by Allen himself, is a treasure. His commentary is intelligent, human and humorous. A keeper for sure.

Stewart
Equity checking: Managing assumptions to achieve organizational success
Published in Unknown Binding by Barrington Press (1999)
Author: Mary L Stewart
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Average review score:

Equity Checking - Four Steps to Success
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2000-07-31
It's Sunday afternoon. Just finished reading "Equity Checking" and am anxious to apply what I have learned. "Equity Checking" is not only applicable to the corporate environment, but also applicable in every interpersonal relationship. How rarely we stop to think about the assumptions we make; why we make them; and the consequences of making them. Our assumptions about people, devoid of a factual foundation, have a powerful impact on our environments in general, especially our corporate environment. "Equity Checking" gives us information to help us recognize the "filters" through which we process information. These "filters" are at the root of the assumptions we make about people we meet. Bringing those filters into the work environment is unavoidable but manageable with the concepts outlined in "Equity Checking". Dr. Mary Stewart and Gary Topchik bring "Equity Checking" to the reader in an easy-to-understand and straightforward manner. Check it out!

Equity Checking
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2000-05-30
Equity Checking is about expanding communication skills by going beyond personal and/or organizational assumptions. This well organized, easy to read book examines the beliefs, biases and attitudes of the people that make up organizations or groups. Each chapter offers step by step discussion of each concept with plentiful examples that address difficult managerial situations and how to manage them. The examples include: hiring, selecting an employee for special assignment, planning career development, performance appraisal, performance problems and selecting an employee for promotion.

I found the concepts and skills taught basic to any human relationship. I think anyone wanting to take their communication to the next level will find this little primer helpful inspite of its strong business focus.

Stewart
Errol Flynn: The Movie Posters
Published in Paperback by Lawrence Bassoff Collection (1995-07)
Author: Lawrence Bassoff
List price: $35.00
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Average review score:

A masterpiece
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 1999-06-18
This is a prestigious classy book and it's handsomely put together. The book will be a great collector's item.

Errol Flynn is Hollywood's greatest legend because he is a nostalgic, handsome, dashing, daring action hero.

The Best Flynn Book
Helpful Votes: 12 out of 13 total.
Review Date: 2000-06-04
Although this large-scale art book focuses on Errol Flynn's movie posters, it manages to be the best book out there on Flynn's career. There is an evocative introduction by Stewart Granger, good essays on Flynn's bio and on the Warner Bros. poster style (which was, sadly, the weakest of the major U.S. studios in the movies' golden age). There are beautiful reproductions of the posters and lobby cards themselves, from an impressively detailed collection (with samples of other swashbuckling movie posters for comparison). And finally, there are essays on each of Flynn's films that are fond, witty, and succinct. Beyond all this, though, it's the best Flynn book because it provides a clear and objective look at the trajectory of a remarkable career. It's amazing to see Flynn's image placed front and center on the poster of his first starring film, "Captain Blood," and it's both hilarious and heartbreaking to see the Dorian Grey-like image on his last, "Cuban Rebel Girls." Bassoff is that rare thing: a committed fan who loves his subject and gives him his due, but is far from star-struck. A great book.

Stewart
Exploring phenomenology: A guide to the field and its literature
Published in Unknown Binding by American Library Association (1974)
Author: David Stewart
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Brilliant book
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2001-12-13
Exploring Phenomenology is the best work that I have seen on the market for a general introduction to pure and applied phenomenology. I have authored two technical works in phenomenology, and referred to this book time and again for general reference though it is for the general reader. I highly recommend it for everyone. I look forward to additional works by the co-authors for both general and scholarly readers.
Michael Kazanjian
Phenomenology and Education (1998)
Learning Values Lifelong (Forthcoming)

great intro and summary
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2001-08-18
This is the best text out there for an introduction to Husserl, Heidegger, and the various strands of phenomenology through the first half of the 20th century. Very readable with excellent bibliographies (at least until 1990). Highly recommended for college and graduate students, or anyone interested in continental philosophy.

Stewart
The Exquisite Life of Oscar Wilde
Published in Paperback by Stewart, Tabori, & Chang (1997-09)
Authors: Stephen Calloway and David Colvin
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A nice book about an interesting, superficial man
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 1998-11-27
This book is nicely done - lots of pictures and illustrations, with a narrative that moves well, and is plenty comprehensive - Wilde was an in interesting man, but - like Truman Capote - a superficial thing. One doesn't need more detail than this book offers.

Wonderful book about the life of England's greatest author.
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 1999-08-08
The book itself is nicely done. It has a lot of interestingpictures and facts. It is a must for anybody who is even mildlyinterested in Wilde. A wonderful account of his life, complete with quotes and photos.

Stewart
The Eye of Gehenna (Clan Saga 2) (Vampire, 2)
Published in Paperback by White Wolf Publishing (2003-11-17)
Author: Stewart Wieck
List price: $17.99
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Vampires Kinderd
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-07-09
Every thing you want in a Vampire book where even the so called heros are not so nice

Better then the original Clan Saga
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2004-07-06
Let me start by saying I love the original WoD and VtM. I read the whole Clan Novel Series (the 14 original books) many times. This is better. Adding in information from other sources (The Book of Nod) and a bit new stuff that is fun as well. By far the best feture of this book (as well as its brothers Eye of Gehenna, Bloody September and End Games) is the way the editors pulled out the chapters of the original books, time stamped so you know when the chapter happens, and put them all together in chronilogical order (Spelling...sorry). Fall of Atlanta is a great opeining and a must read for people who want a feel for the revisions between Vampire the Masquerade 2nd Edition and the 2nd Edition Revised. The characters are the best I have ever read and it leaves you wanting so much more.

Stewart
Fabulous Pugs
Published in Hardcover by "Stewart, Tabori and Chang" (2006-09-01)
Author: Lisa Knapp
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fabulous pugs
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-03
For anyone with a love all Pugs - this is a great picture book !

Fabulous, indeed!
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-05
This is a must-have for any pug-lover, especially pug lovers who love to buy their pugs outfits! Lisa creates all of her pug Charlie's outfits from scratch, which is amazing considering the elaborate nature of some of the costumes. The photos in this collection are fantastic, and Charlie is a great model. She is equally adept at tackling Marilyn Monroe or Genghis Khan! Even non-pug lovers will marvel at the beautiful photos and costumes and at the sweetness of Charlie.

Stewart
Faces of Power: Alexander's Image and Hellenistic Politics (Hellenistic Culture and Society)
Published in Hardcover by University of California Press (1994-01-24)
Author: Andrew Stewart
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Un magnífico trabajo académico
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-13
El Profesor Andrew Stewart ha hecho un magnífico trabajo que es ya una referencia inexcusable en lo que respecta a la iconografía de Alejandro Magno. Dado que la influencia de Alejandro en el ámbito de la cultura ha sido enorme, y su influencia en el campo de la estética de la representación aún relativamente poco estudiada (en relación con otros aspectos de su legado como son los sociales o políticos) este es un libro del que disfrutarán enormemente aquellos profesionales interesados en Alejandro desde cualesquiera que sean sus ámbitos de interés específico. Un espléndido libro para ver, leer y disfrutar.

Prof. Dr. P. Arcos, Universidad de Oviedo (España)

How to merge art and history
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2005-03-08
I'm currently self-studying Alexander, and I chose this rather pricey book because I really wanted to learn why there are so many images, so many different images, of Alexander that have survived from ancient history. I had read multiple biographies, but there is something about the face of any historical figure that teases and intrigues; yet Alexander's many faces are confusing rather than enlightening. I also wanted to understand why this world conqueror's image kept appearing on coins and many other artifacts for centuries after his death. I rather suspected, however, that I was getting an "art book" way over my head.

This book turned out to be one of the most percipient and fascinating books I've read on Alexander, precisely because Andrew Stewart brings not only the arcane expertise of a world-class art student to his task, but has the important facts of Alexander's life and the conflicting sources about it at his fingertips. My own personal way of making a note of perceptive comments I want to re-read, is to take that paragraph with a colored tab. The whole book is littered with tabs, and I now feel my perception of both Alexander the man, Alexander the man as he wished to appear to his world, and Alexander the man as he lived on in legend and accomplishment, is highly enhanced by Stewart's book.

This volume must contain every single image of Alexander in statuary, bust, painted pottery, rings, jewels, and coins that can be found; it has a description for each; it lists every source in ancient literature in which Alexander's image is discussed; it covers how he looked, how his image changed, how he controlled that image for political and social purposes, and much more. It is a treasure trove for those who want to learn more about this most fascinating mortal.

Highly recommended; I am most grateful for Stewart for sharing his expertise so well that even a learner can find multiple new impressions and a much clearer vision of both the face, and the man.

Stewart
A Far Cry From Freedom: Gradual Abolition (1799-1827): New York State's Crime Against Humanity
Published in Paperback by AuthorHouse (2006-01-05)
Author: L. Lloyd Stewart
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Review of A Far Cry From Freedom
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-04-23
A FAR CRY FROM FREEDOM: GRADUAL ABOLITION (1799-1827)
NEW YORK STATE'S CRIME AGAINST HUMANITY
________________________________________
Review by Deborah Williams-Muhammad

Local Historian, World Scholar and Author, L. Lloyd Stewart's book, A Far Cry From Freedom: Gradual Abolition (1799-1827) New York State's Crime Against Humanity is a well researched, well written, compelling book for anyone who places a value on truth. Using his family's history as the catalyst for the research that would become this book, it is clear that Mr. Stewart saw his family's history as the story of thousands of people of African descent in New York State. I noted that this book was unique in its content and focus; but also, that as it clearly illustrates a story. Complete with rare documents, actual records, maps, illustrations and pictures, one is reminded that this is not merely a thorough presentation of facts, but indeed the stories of people-families. Families whose lives were impacted in ways that permeated generations of existence.

In A Far Cry From Freedom, Mr. Stewart dispels the myth of a more humane enslavement in New York State as he compares New York State and its various localities to the South-Maryland, North Carolina and South Carolina. Reading the book reminded me that I have often referred the New York State as "Up South". Just as Cheikh Anta Diop and J.A. Rogers insisted through their writings on an uncompromising honesty, L. Lloyd Stewart demands the same accurate and critical look at history. In a world where so many play fast and loose with the facts and present revisionist history as fact, it is imperative that we have such honest accounts of history to inform, and when possible, ignite action.

The Gradual Abolition Act of 1799 essentially established a pattern of codifying statutory servitude, complete with the potential criminalization for failure to comply. Mr. Stewart outlines the profound and insidious legal provisions that would serve as the foundation for today's juvenile justice and child welfare systems' "disproportionate minority contact". A Far Cry From Freedom illustrates the reality of conspired benefit between lawmakers, slaveholders (often one and the same), and government; with total disregard for those enslaved and their families. The atmosphere of devaluation of the lives of people of African descent in New York State legally, socially and intellectually was arguably fundamental in these laws. This devaluation has given birth to a continued marginalization that remains evident now in 2006. Excavating legal history is a slow process, frequently resisted by those who fear its impact. I would hope that as Mr. Stewart's work is read, examined, quoted and discussed, that people would be compelled to truly understand the impact of New York State's gradual abolition both in New York State and throughout the nation.
The author presents to readers a section on Albany County that uncovers what at the very least can be characterized as a blatant disregard for the negative impact of slavery. However, such disregard was met with the powerful "attitude and arrogance" of local aristocrats who vehemently fought for continued enslavement and held onto it through gradual abolition in order to reap the economic and social benefits.

The book chronicles the participation of such recognized families as the Ten Eycks, Schuylers, Vandehydens, Van Rensselaers, Lansings and Bleekers, without being overly didactic. Mr. Stewart has what I would consider a strong but generous voice; while he presents this viewpoint unapologetically, he is never preachy or angry. This point of view lends a fresh outlook on an issue that is often mentioned, but rarely thoroughly explored. He encourages the reader to examine abolition from the framework of a longitudinal observer. As a reader I was led logically down a path to analysis development and fueled by the documentation of gradual abolition's impact as in the following passage.

"Despite the level of skill African descendants possessed, they were increasingly relegated to the most menial jobs and persistently forced to the bottom rung on the economic and social ladder. White immigration to the state made matters worse, but economic downturns were another factor. President Thomas Jefferson's Embargo of 1804, the depression that followed the War of 1812, and the Panic of 1819 all hit the African descendant community the hardest, as white immigrants flooded into the domestic service industry in the 1810s days. According to Herman Bloch in "The Circle of Discrimination" the number of Irish filing for employment with the New York Society for the Encouragement of Faithful Domestics in the late 1820swas more than three times that of African descendents. Even the number of other "whites" filing for employment surpassed African descendents."

As a social scientist and organizer I was motivated to use the information in the book to inform social change efforts. The danger and challenges posed to freedom and democracy by nullifying this history and by unchecked assumptions about slavery and abolition are the two great themes running through the history of the New York State and the United States.
What will be the impact and what will be done with this information remains to be seen; but this timely book begs a more public dialog about such issues as reparations, systemic racism, Black leadership and representation. In this post-Katrina world, I am reminded that there remains a need for education, analysis and discourse. A Far Cry From Freedom can and should serve as a catalytic tool in this process. The author writes in the Introduction,

"...This work is not meant to be a conversation between historical scholars. Neither is the substance and content of this work meant to be presented as some type historical novel. On the contrary, this work should be accepted and read as a documented representation of historical fact-designed to provide people of African descent with an accurate depiction of the periods of Enslavement and Gradual Abolition in New York State and further, it is designed to allow African descendents to examine how the political, social and economic policies of these periods impacted the growth and survival of families of African descent during New York's first two centuries of existence."

A CRITICAL REIVEW OF A FAR CRY FROM FREEDOM
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-04-20
A CRITICAL REIVEW OF
A FAR CRY FROM FREEDOM
By Lloyd Hogan


We think that history must be a precise description of a people's activities within the context of the political economy(economies) in which they subsisted and survived and maintained their defining characteristics as a distinctive population during a specified period of time in the past. The elements of such description cannot be randomly selected facts, nor results of a fishing expedition, nor deliberate choice of data to support a ruling class bias. The selection must be conditioned by a specific descriptive hypothesis which serves as a conceptual framework of the study and which therefore dictates the nature of the facts to be collected by the historian. It is to be emphasized, that the historian, in the spirit of the scientific method, must bend all his efforts towards uncovering critical data to disprove the conceptual hypothesis that frames his work.

Stewart "fesses" up to the challenge of the historian. He vows in his book to present a more accurate account of the facts that occurred to people of African American descent in New York State during the last two centuries. To accomplish his mission he postulates a two-pronged descriptive hypothesis to give conceptual framework and substance to his study as well as to dictate the facts that need to be uncovered:

The system of slavery as practiced in New York State
was more Humane than the system which prevailed in the
southern states of the United States.

New York State officially abolished its system of
slavery significantly earlier than its abolition in the
Southern United States.

The book is organized around three main topics. First it deals with the origin and promulgation of the enslavement of African Americans in New York State. He shows this to be a significant aspect of the same process of Western European slaving operations in Africa and the transport of the African captives across the Atlantic into slavery in the new world.

Second, he deals with the development of a system of slavery in New York under both the Dutch and the British colonial administrations. In both cases the system of slavery was imposed with all the canonical attributes of this sordid socio-economic mechanism.

Third, he deals with the process of abolition of slavery in New York. This topic takes up the greater part of the book. The upshot is that the process was not just gradual, but a rather prolonged agony for the black slave. Children were initially freed after 1799. However, the freedom was not to be experienced until the end of the greater part of their adult lives. And the resulting fate of the children was in jeopardy in perpetuity.
The book draws a number of implications of gradual emancipation. The fiscal impact on the State treasury was quite significant because of the compensation paid to slave owners for the loss of their private property in the manumission of the slaves. Moreover, "jim crow" status was imposed on the freed slaves. And, finally, the true state of affairs left the former slaves in practically the same condition as before freedom was enacted into law.

Stewart does an extremely scholarly job in documenting his case. He mines the archives for relevant documents to demonstrate with telling effect the disproof of his main hypothesis. Moreover, he does a very extraordinary thing. He puts human faces and in some cases he puts names on the faces of hundreds of blacks who bore the brunt of this vicious system of human degradation. The records, of individual slave owners, private associations, cities, villages, counties, state, and the nation, were all very well scrutinized. Great accolades must be accorded these efforts.

An important conclusion of the study is that the brutality of the system of slavery in New York had such a devastating effect on the black population that the consequences would have a significant impact on the future of that population. Of special concern is the effect on the children who technically remained enslaved throughout the entire period of Gradual Emancipation.

This conclusion is quite telling. The lowly status in which blacks now find themselves in the 21st century United States is a disgraceful commentary on the application of the Constitution. After all, this constitution was consistent with the system of slavery which prevailed in both the south as well as in New York and other northern territories and states. It acquiesced in enforcing the concept of private property rights in human beings so long as they were black Africans or of African descent; while at the same time it accepted the concept of private property in one's self (civil rights) so long as one is non-black African. It simultaneously codified the activities of reproducing two distinct populations-one black, the other non-black.

Stewart uses the conclusions of his study to call for a program of reparations to compensate for the deleterious effects of original slavery and Gradual Abolition that still plagues the black population of the United States.

In sum, Stewart is to be commended for producing a masterful work of history of black people in New York State. His methodology needs to be emulated by all historians who endeavor to write meaningful history of any people anywhere. Well done!


Edgewood, MD
February, 2006.

L.Lloyd Stewart, A Far Cry From Freedom: Gradual Abolition 1799-1827. New York State's Crime Against Humanity (Authorhouse, Bloomington, Indiana, 2005).


Books-Under-Review-->Reference-->Biography-->S-->Stewart-->57
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