Stuart Books
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the only reliable source on the ArkReview Date: 2005-11-04
Extraordinary Scholarly SourceReview Date: 2005-09-08


Terrific, Revolutionary and AstonishingReview Date: 1998-12-14
Pure Genius! A Work that Will Live!Review Date: 1999-01-03
Our profession (golf architecture) is indebted to the editors for their second volume of Tillinghast essays. It is to be followed by a third title within two years entitled GLEANINGS FROM THE WAYSIDE. (I think the first, THE COURSE BEAUTIFUL is still available.)
Frank Hannigan says in the foreword that golf architecture is an art form requiring engineering expertise mixed with 19th century principles of landscape design. Vision is also required in the creation of golf courses as it was in the creations by Olmstead and other 19th century landscape architects.
Somehow Tilly's essays demonstrate this. Reading them and studying the descriptive illustrations one reaches that conclusion.
REMINISCENCES...... IS A WORK WORTHY OF STUDY AND A PLACE IN ALL OUR LIBRARIES AND AS A GIFT TO CLIENTS AND OTHERS. We urge members to obtain it and if still available THE COURSE BEAUTIFUL. This trilogy will live and could influence our profession far into the future, because the three volumes will be studied by all seeking the upward progress of our profession which must be one of the most intriguing ever practiced. As Rees and Ben indicate, Tilly ranks among its most unique practioners.
-- Geoffrey S. Cornish, Historian, American Society of Golf Course Architects
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A GREAT Read for Every Pastor's WifeReview Date: 2002-04-25
ExcellentReview Date: 2000-04-04

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Toward a Ceiling at the TopReview Date: 2006-12-08
But the world doesn't necessarily always work that way, as Stewart Lansley helps us understand in his absorbing new book, Rich Britain: The rise and rise of the new super-wealthy. In the mid 20th century, Lansley relates, the British rich actually became distinctly less rich and the British poor distinctly less poor.
Now that situation has reversed, and that reversal raises a question that desperately needs asking: Was the "Great Compression" of the mid 20th century some sort of a never-to-be-repeated accident of history -- or an inspiring example of what any society, given a deep enough commitment to greater equality, can accomplish?
Rich Britain explores this question by focusing in on the economic, social, and political evolution of the contemporary UK.
Advocates for justice, Rich Britain contends, need to recognize that decency demands more than "a minimum living standard below which it would be socially unacceptable for people to have to live." Decency may well also demand a "ceiling at the top," a "norm" about what constitutes "an acceptable limit" of income and wealth.
Without such a limit, the wealthiest in Britain -- and any other deeply unequal society -- will continue "to lead segregated lives, unaware of the reality of everyday life, increasingly divorced from common experience and independent of the society that enabled them to build the wealth that gives them the choices denied to most of the population."
Rich Britain discusses, in its final pages, a variety of approaches that could impact this "issue of distribution." But Lansley offers his countrymen and women no guarantees for success should his specific policy initiatives be followed. Events may simply be moving too swiftly in the wrong direction.
"It may well be that we are already on course for creating a detached and insular super-class, a parallel at the top to the `underclass' at the bottom," he concludes. "That is certainly a strong and possibly irreversible trend in the United States, a society where the very rich exercise considerable political power for their own benefit."
For our own benefit, in the UK, the United States, and across the world, we need to expand the discussion Rich Britain so potently encourages.
[Excerpted from a longer review that originally appeared in Too Much, the online weekly newsletter on excess and inequality [...].
Very useful study of how the rich get ever richerReview Date: 2007-01-29
The richest 45,000 people, 0.1% of the population, now own a third of all liquid assets; the richest 1% own 62%. From 1979 to 1999, the richest 1%'s share of gross income doubled from 6.5% to 13%. While their share has risen, that of the bottom 5% has fallen, from 10% in 1986 to 6% in 2002. The rich stay rich, and get richer; the poor stay poor, and get poorer. This growing inequality makes British society less mobile. The USA, Britain and South Africa, the world's most unequal societies, have the least social mobility.
Stock markets boom, interest rates and tax rates fall, top salaries, land values and property values soar. The gainers are a few thousand chief executives, City dealers, property developers, investment fund managers, landowning aristocrats (80% of the EU's £36 billion Common Agricultural Policy funds go to the richest 20% of landowners), commercial lawyers and bankers. This whole process is part of the counter-revolution started by Thatcher and continued by Blair.
From 2000 to 2004, the pay, including bonuses and long-term incentive plans, of top executives at Britain's biggest companies more than doubled. By 2004, the average remuneration of a top 100 chief executive was £2.5 million - some 113 times that of the average British worker. They claim that their private greed benefits us all.
But this soaring pay is not due to greater entrepreneurialism, tightening global or national markets, exceptional skills, or better company performances. Over the same period, from 2000 to 2004, the FTSE 100 index fell by around a third while average earnings rose by only 13%. Britain has a lower rate of innovative activity within firms than France, Germany or Spain, and in productivity growth we are only 15th out of the 30 richest countries.
"Welcome to the City - the biggest crooked casino in the world." In the last 20 years, the City and Wall Street have creamed off £100 billion by rigging capital markets. In this a corporate cartel, the top 50 fund managers control three quarters of London's stock market. The best way to raise share prices is to sack staff. As the Daily Telegraph put it, "fat cats get fatter while the savers suffer." Financial firms' fees from mergers and acquisitions, which destroy value and jobs, are known as `the croupier's take'. A City `star' admitted, "I could not believe that anyone would want to pay me so much for creating nothing."
The capitalists' last line of defence is to claim that their tax contribution justifies their wealth. Yet Britain is a tax haven for the very rich. The revenue stolen from Britain through tax avoidance is possibly £85 billion a year. The accountancy firm KPMG has 400 off-the-shelf tax avoidance `products'. Only Britain and Ireland allow non-domiciliary status to the rich, whereby they only pay tax on domestically-derived income. Other countries collect tax on all their residents. Our tax system has been regressive since 1985. In 2002, the richest fifth of the population paid 35% of their income in tax, the poorest fifth 37.9%.
For the very rich, tax is voluntary. For example, the owner of Harrods, Mohamed Al-Fayed, made a secret tax deal with the Inland Revenue in 1985 that he would pay just £240,000 a year - he should pay £6 million! The state lets him steal £5,760,000 a year. On top of this, Al-Fayed arranged for £100 million to be paid him in dividends, between 1995 and 1998 alone, to a tax-free offshore trust in Bermuda.
There are millions of similar offshore companies designed to avoid tax. They hold an estimated $11 trillion. Rupert Murdoch, Richard Branson and Bill Gates all use them. A third of the world's entire GDP flows through them.
The working class produces all this wealth, creating the income of the rich. In return, the capitalists steal their cuts from every aspect of life - work, housing, saving.
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In their own wordsReview Date: 2004-02-14
Compulsive reading!Review Date: 2001-08-01

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Ordered several copiesReview Date: 2002-08-25
What fun!Review Date: 2002-10-23
This definitely my stocking-stuffer for the holidays.
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a delightful Stuart taleReview Date: 2004-07-02
The last thing Matthew wants is a romance, especially with a sassy little redhead who lives just down the beach. The minute he caught sight of Jeannie MacPherson standing in his kitchen, he knew she was going to be trouble. She is not his type.
He likes big, buxom blondes, not a pert little redhead that won't take the hint he does not want her TLC. In the following weeks on the island, she keeps invading his solitude, with baked bread, muffins and the mothering that he really resents,
though at times he really needs.
Jeannie is on retreat as well, but it has stretched to a two-year long sojourn, but at thirty-one, her biological clock is ticking. She wants kids to mother, a man to love her, and she figures after one look, Matthew is not the man for those dreams. Only, something keeps pulling her back. Unable to resist him, she has a torrid affair with him, hoping that it will turn into something more.
Very wealthy, she is co-partners of a national ice cream franchise, and when she is called away for a week on business, she tells Matthew she will be back on the island on the following Thursday. Instead, she rushes home on Monday to find Matthew sneaking off the island. Jeannie is devastated that he was not even going to tell her he was leaving. In a fit, she tossed a lobster trap at him breaking a couple ribs and his wrist.
Matthew accepts a temporary position as a Police Chief of a growing resort town in Colorado. He figures it will give him time to finish healing, and sort out what he wants to do with his life. Also, give him time to heal from his brush with Jeannie. He plans on giving it five months, to see if he can put the nightmare of being a cop behind him, before seeking out Jeannie again, and seeing if he can build a relationship with her. Only, Jeannie is not about to give him time. She comes to town under the guise of putting in an ice cream factory and proceeds to show Matt there is no escaping her. Jeannie does everything to get Matthews attention, even to stealing his police car, daring him to arrest her.
The story is a bit lighter than some Stuart's typical dark and deadly tales, with some charming humor tossed in the mix. Matthew and Jeannie are vivid characters that will enchant you from beginning to end.
One of my favourite Anne Stuart novelsReview Date: 2000-12-07

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Excellent assortment of readingsReview Date: 2004-12-22
just a starting pointReview Date: 2004-02-16
This book takes many point of views - some extremists that feel same-sex marriage will ruin their own heterosexual marriages. Lesbians who feel that the idea of marriage is outdated and repressive to the females involved in it. And some folks who seem to have given this issue a bit more thought and express their viewpoints well.
No matter where you stand on this important issue, you will find an essay that will reflect your view. I would suggest you also read the other essays to find out how other people feel about the issue so when it comes down to debating this hot topic, you will know the various opinions of your supporters as well as your opponents. You'll be able to state your case in a way that should be able to get your point across. I recommend this book highly.

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Collective Responsibility of ShameReview Date: 2004-04-09
Timely and ProvocativeReview Date: 1996-10-15

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Reg RiceReview Date: 2007-06-28
Amazing! Marvelous! Beautiful!Review Date: 2007-04-05
This well-researched and well-written book presents grace as you've probably never known it before - historically, spiritually, practically. Tyner traces grace from the eternity before the earth's creation, through the Biblical records, the early Christian church, and right up to and including the present.
He defines grace as "God doing for humans that which is impossible for us to do for ourselves." He understands grace as "a moment-by-moment reminder that God's role in our salvation is to save us, and our role is to quit trying to save ourselves." Here is another beautiful sample of his writing: "Grace is not the beginning point of the Christian journey; it is the road upon which journeying Christians walk day by day, moment by moment. Grace is not a robe Christians put on in order to be correctly dressed; it is the air Christians breathe in order to live." Wow!
A terrific individual read, Searching for the God of Grace can also serve Bible study groups well, as every chapter includes thought-provoking questions for thought and discussion. And there are still other aspects that recommend this book: a helpful glossary, a comprehensive bibliography, biographical notes, a scripture index, and a succinct subject index.
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The work covers much more than just Ark history, digging deep into Ethiopia's past, and as such is highly recommended for anyone in Ethiopian studies.