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Related Subjects: Travis Tate Taylor Thomas Thompson Thornton Turner Tyler Tudor Tucker
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This was a giftReview Date: 2008-01-24
Great study materialReview Date: 2007-12-21
This is an excellent book for immigrants to study for US citizenship tests. I would highly recommend it. It is not too childish and it goes to the core of what you should know.
I am very glad I purchased it.
EfficientReview Date: 2007-11-09
Definitely recommended.
Great for special educationReview Date: 2008-01-15
This book is right to the point, and is great for teaching students how to take notes. It has amazing spacing and large type that allows easier reading for students with reading disabilities. The fantastic use of color allows the reader to visualize a change in topic so that they may know that they are onto something new.
I would LOVE for this series to be modified into textbooks, with resources such as computer programs to enhance learning for visual and audio learners.
I DO NOT love the fact that it puts the grade level in BIG BOLD WORDS on the cover. That means that my 18 year old student is liable to tell me, "I'm not going to look at some middle school book. I'm in high school."
Concise and fun for allReview Date: 2007-11-21

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Experiencing GodReview Date: 2007-11-21
Happy ViewerReview Date: 2007-09-15
I am looking forward to reading my daily devotionals and making notes in my fantastic journal, that will assist me in experiencing God day by day!
EXCELLENTReview Date: 2007-09-05
i got the wrong bookReview Date: 2007-07-19
Experiencing God Day by DayReview Date: 2007-04-11

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Very good bookReview Date: 2007-06-17
Fantastic Figures: Ideas & Techniques Using the New ClaysReview Date: 2006-09-16
There are many lovely color photographs from exceptional doll artists, but most of the "learning techniques" are in black and white with a lot of text.
A beginning sculptor could learn from this book, it's an excellent tool, just not much of the "hand holding" through every step like other books of this type.
I thoroughly enjoyed this book, and feel it is worth having in your library.
Fantastic Book!!!Review Date: 2003-03-27
A Great Book, But For The Advanced Artist.Review Date: 2004-06-18
Good book, but I wish all of the pictures were in color.Review Date: 2005-12-10

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History That's NOT DullReview Date: 2003-06-06
More information than I thought possibleReview Date: 2003-01-18
Courtwright also doesn't fail to mention that, even though with best intentions, scientists around the 1800's and the turn of the century were also responsible for some of the most addictive substances. Your jaw will drop when you read who devolped heroin and what is was originally used for.
Fun, informative, and mind blowing reading.
Kitsch and being caught in a "trap baited with pleasure"Review Date: 2008-03-17
According to Courtwright, 3 "Drugs" have made the leap into mainstream use and have the rare distinction of being labeled the "big 3" (Courtwright 7-30). Once these "drugs" caught and eventually captured the European imagination - not in any spectacular way really - but in a quotidian sort of way, the rest was left to socio-historical forces. What the last statement speaks to is coupled with day to day use and entangled with the ocean crossing commerce, these drugs became so common use that mercantilists immediately caught on to the financial possibilities. Maybe the early mercantilists were or were not aware of the habit forming aspects of the use of these psychoactive drugs. No matter what the combination of use, availability, and habit forced discourse into making these three drugs legal, then illegal, and then legal again. No such luck would befall the "little 3" (Courtwright 31-52)
The ease of access to alcohol, caffeine, and tobacco would never be equaled by opium, cannabis, and coca Courtwright argues (Courtwright 42). However, the widespread use of opium in China, I would argue speaks to the contrary. Forced into China to pay for, ironically, the more lucrative teas, opium will see widespread use (despite its outright illegality) in China and beyond (Courtwright 135-136). The history of Asian America is littered with vilification of the Chinese as hedonistic and self destructive opium users. The popular literature is littered with images of sneaky Chinese in opium dens trying to trick white women into its use (Lui 19, 29, 78, 79, and 181). The historical irony is that opium made the English one of the greatest, if not the greatest "pushers" by any definition possible (Courtwright 31-36). Robbing from Peter to pay Paul, this circularity is actually more widespread then we imagine. Courtwright argues that the "little 3" either missed the historical opportunity or incurred to many social costs that made access to and distribution of these 3 elements less lucrative hence impractical.
According to Courtwright, alcohol is the most fascinating of the three (Courtwright 9-14). I argue conversely that caffeine is arguably the most interesting for what I see as its "kitsch" factor and class dynamic. When travelling in China, I was witness to one of the more interesting modes of westernization - consumerism. Consumerism, by that I mean the way Chinese see "Western" to be. In the US, McDonalds and Starbucks are pedestrian, on many levels, but Starbucks is distinct from McDonalds in that it provides access to a particular class. Walking around with a Starbucks cup in your hands gives one access to all the "sophistication" that coffee and in particular Starbucks coffee provides. In China, even if they have to pay US prices for these consumer items it seems like it is worth the price of admission. Arguably, in India, Starbucks knockoffs are taking over this lucrative business taking over from Masala chai the same way that coffee is taking over from Oolong or Jasmine tea in China. Caffeine, I argue will outlast alcohol because it is not perceived to not have the same social stigma and societal costs imbedded in its consumption.
The consumption of tobacco is now coming under severe attack with criticism being leveled against the tobacco manufacturers vis-à-vis cigarette's addictive nature and accompanying pulmonary complications as well as work stoppage statistics (Courtwright 59, 64, 72, 125-129, 132, 168, 180, 189-190, 195, 199, and 203-206). Moreover, alcohol also is coming under fire; arguably it has been for a long time, for its attack on the liver and other social effects (Courtwright 95, 100, 180-181). Little, if anything is said about caffeine's dehydrating effect and long term dependency. Moreover, even less is said about the lengths people will go through to get coffee. Moreover, caffeine is neither seen as dangerous to the user and his/her surrounding but consumed in responsible quantities actually makes one more alert and less prone to suicide, "Caffeine, to extend the metaphor, keeps the police away. Its antidepressant properties have prevented suicides; its awakening effects have prevented nighttime driving accidents" (Courtwright 189).
Caffeine is the real "trap baited with pleasure." Being without caffeine, as is the resulting effect of its addiction, a sense of unease that people swear can only be remedied by having their first cup. Coffee/caffeine addiction is really less about seeking pleasure but more about mitigating pain (Courtwright 97-100). In this sense, I argue that caffeine is the more insidious and fascinating drug. Legalized and controlled, it is actually even encouraged and consumed in copious amounts.
Since there is no law in the books that is called "DUIC" or driving under the influence of caffeine - strong arguments are made to legalize drugs that are seen, today, to be illegal. While alcohol, more than caffeine or tobacco has already been legalized and controlled, much of the revenue that funnels into government in taxes can and is channeled to it ameliorate the societal costs (Courtwright 64, 170, 176). Tobacco companies are now being sued to fix the problems as well as provide a palliative care for cancer carrying ex and current smokers.
A serious deterrent to the legalizing of the little 3 - opium, cannabis, and coca - is that they are immediately dangerous to the user and those around them. Driving and operating machinery at work under the influence of any of these three "drugs" is immediate and deadly. However, contrary argument can be made that if these drugs were indeed legalized, such incidents would be less commonplace and its societal effects can be ameliorated by the revenues generated through regulation. The challenge remains in terms of how this will be facilitated. As stated by Courtwright, the challenge will be to find that sense of balance (Courtwright 188-190, 199-207).
The malleability of the definition and use of these drugs from illegal, to lucrative, to regulated gives credence to the notion that these definitions work like a language. Depending on the time and place the criminality of these substances is either existent or not, its use medicinal or recreational, they are abused and used in controlled situations, but never, is the use of these substances - the little 3 more specifically, can be described as static. I argue that there is room for consideration to de-criminalize these drugs and to further regulate those that are already "out there." True enough, for one who loves the smell and taste of the bitter substance called coffee my self regulation is limited to the elasticity of demand and the ebb and flow of Starbucks prices and their less than kitschy substitutes. What this proves is that this issue is complex and with so much invested in the commerce and politics of these products we will not be able to free ourselves of them without incurring considerable cost.
Miguel Llora
Endnote
[1] Kitsch - All images of smiling workers, young children in grassy fields, the contented elderly, all the sentimental propaganda, Capitalist or Communist, which takes a sentimental view of human possibility, is the raw material for kitsch. Kitsch is romanticism, hypocrisy and the avoidance of the unpleasant truth of our existence. Artists are the enemy of kitsch because they poke and expose it for what it is - illusion (Kundera 19).
Works Cited
De Saussure, Ferdinand. Course in General Linguistics. Trans. R. Harris. Peru: Open Court Publishing Company, 1986.
Kundera, Milan. The Unbearable Lightness of Being. New York: HarperPerennial Publishers, 1991.
Lui, Mary Ting Yi. The Chinatown Trunk Mystery: Murder, Miscegenation, and Other Dangerous Encounters in Turn-of-the-Century New York City. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2005.
A worthy addition to the Monomaniacal School of historiographyReview Date: 2005-07-31
Courtwright's witty writing should appeal to those with a taste for black humor. The author possesses a seemingly infinite supply of vivid examples about the impact of drugs on humanity, and even upon the animal kingdom. Lions, he notes, "have learned to prey upon drunks staggering home at night from East African roadside bars."
"Forces of Habit" can help modern white-collar workers banned from smoking indoors reflect on the ferocious anti-smoking campaigns that earlier tobacco addicts endured. While American smokers are forced to risk pneumonia each winter while they puff away in the freezing doorways of office buildings, "Russian smokers suffered beatings and exile; snuff takers had their noses torn off. Chinese smokers had their heads impaled on pikes. Turkish smokers under the reign of Ahmed I endured pipe stems thrust through their noses."
Ironies abound in "Forces of Habit." Alcoholics Anonymous' co-founders, Bill Wilson and Dr. Bob Smith, "both smoked heavily and died of cigarette-related illnesses." (Today, AA chapters searching for meeting places are bedeviled by the new prohibitions on indoor smoking. Reformed alcoholics often want to smoke to relieve the tension of staying on the wagon.)
But Courtwright has serious ambitions as well.
"This book," he writes, "grew out of a broader curiosity about psychoactive commerce, a ubiquitous -- and, I now believe, defining -- feature of the modern world."
This leads Courtwright to rewrite much of human history from a, well, drugocentric viewpoint. "The domestication of fire," he informs us, "made widespread drug use possible in the first place." A few eons later, "The Apollo 11 astronauts," he notes, "were drinking coffee three hours after landing on the moon."
"Forces of Habit" is thus in the grand tradition of the Monomaniacal School of History. It stands comparison to such valuable works as William McNeill's "Plagues and Peoples" and Daniel Yergin's "The Prize," which explained the history of the world in terms of germs and oil, respectively.
Courtwright's vast goals are assisted by his defining "psychoactive drug" expansively enough to include coffee and chocolate. He even tentatively discusses sugar. I'm not sure why he didn't ultimately accept sugar as "psychoactive." Those of us with little kids have certainly seen sugar's impact on brain chemistry.
One problem with his semi-sprawling approach to defining "psychoactive drugs" is that it's not clear where to draw the line. If I drink a glass of warm milk to help me fall asleep, does that make milk psychoactive? Or would it be "psychodeactive?"
When going on a family outing, I always insist that we bring along some high-calorie, high-fat foods like cheese sticks. Few things end screaming tantrums faster than cheese. And it helps mellow out my kids, too. So, is cheese a psychoactive drug, just like crack and crank?
What about sunshine? The vitamin D it produces seldom fails to cheer me up.
Is a tan also a drug?
Evidently, Courtwright defines a drug as a chemical that wasn't around for most of human evolution. He takes a Darwinian perspective on the desire for drugs.
"Humans evolved in itinerant band societies. Life in the sedentary peasant societies that succeeded them was less varied, fulfilling, egalitarian and healthful. Taking drugs to get through the daily grind (or to treat the intestinal and parasitic diseases attendant to settled life) is peculiar to civilization. ... Such practices are further clues, if any are needed, that our social circumstances are out of sync with our evolved natures."
Drugs apparently produce artificially the pleasurable brain chemistry reactions that evolution devised to reward our distant caveman ancestors for engaging in hunting and other behaviors essential to survival. Perhaps this explains the terrible alcoholism problems currently suffered by the indigenous tribes -- such as American Indians, Eskimos and Australian aborigines -- who have only recently given up the primordial hunter-gatherer lifestyle.
Of course, New World Indians had their own native drugs to share with Columbus. According to Courtwright's bottomless bag of memorable quotes, the fanatically anti-smoking and anti-drinking Adolf Hitler called tobacco, "the wrath of the Red Man against the White Man, vengeance for having been given hard liquor." (Perhaps, though, Hitler showed that power is the most dangerous drug of all.)
Courtwright dislikes drugs, but what he really hates is capitalism. "The peculiar, vomitorious genius of modern capitalism," he expounds, "is its ability to betray our senses with one class of products or services and then sell us another to cope with the damage so that we can go back to consuming more of what caused the problem in the first place."
Rich merchants and Western European governments generally encouraged drug commerce well into the 19th century. The relatively recent growth of temperance movements and at least partially effective government controls on drugs, Courtwright asserts, were a response to the industrial revolution changing what capitalists required from workers. Before industrialization, landlords could keep fieldworkers in debt-slavery by getting them addicted to expensive alcohol or opium. Drunken factory workers, though, would break expensive machinery.
"The growing cost of the abuse of manufactured drugs turned out to be a fundamental contradiction of capitalism," claims Courtwright. On the other hand, one could also argue that the historically high level of sobriety reigning in today's hyper-capitalistic information economy -- where caffeine is the only acceptable drug -- demonstrates that free markets can encourage self-control.
Many economists, most notably Milton Friedman, have suggested legalizing all drugs. They point out that the outlawing of drugs generates crime, just as Prohibition did.
The historian Courtwright, however, believes these economists are living in a theoretical dreamland. The "dangers of exposing people to psychoactive substances for which, it is increasingly clear, they lack evolutionary preparation" means that the "answer, whatever it may be, is not a return to a minimally regulated drug market."
I fear this is true, but I would have liked to have seen Courtwright grapple more directly with the libertarian economists' arguments. Historians love facts, but distrust logic, while economists don't like to mess up their beautiful theories with too much reality. Perhaps someday, a thinker equally at home with both the history and theory of drugs will resolve this crucial quandary. Until then, "Forces of Habit" makes a fine introduction.
Interesting introduction to drugs and commerce.Review Date: 2002-08-13
The second half of the book, while still engrossing, is a less comprehensive historic analysis of drug use and prohibition. Courtwright concentrates on economics at the expense of culture, emphasizing production and commerce rather than demand and moral opposition. Given the enormous social influences in the modern world, such as the American cultural war against 60's drug use and the pervasive use of alcohol and tobacco as social tools, the emphasis on money and power over cultural forces in the past strikes me as an incomplete analysis. It leads the author to unconvincingly argue that American prohibition and its repeal were primarily the results of economic interests (a "contradiction of capitalism"). Oddly, the same events in the Soviet Union are attributed to "popular resistance", without any comparative discussion of the two nations. Finally, the value of pleasure and the concept of individual rights are generally neglected.
In the end, my main problem with is that Courtwright doesn't give culture the excellent and amusing treatment he gives commerce. I can think of worse things to say about a book.

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Eliot's Four QuartetsReview Date: 2008-01-14
All art ... approaches the condition of music.Review Date: 2006-06-19
The inspiration for these poems -- or reflections -- are the late string quartets of Beethoven, those numbered from 12 through 16. It is the 5-movement No.15 in A Minor,Op.132, that seems to have exerted the strongest influence, with it's famous adagio movement, which Beethoven inscribed as the thanksgiving song of a convalescent.
Actually, No.15 was the 13th in order, but the Quartets were published out of sequence, which was not uncommon in Beethoven's time. The Late Quartets progress from the classic 4-movement No.12 and add a movement to each work up to the 7-movement Op.131 in C-sharp Minor. The 16th and final quartet returns to the classic 4-movement form. There is an expansion of form concluding with a contraction and return over the course of 5 works.
Like Eliot's Four Quartets, Beethoven's Late Quartets reflect upon time and faith -- and the 'speech' is often plain: repeated phrases that appear stuck in a groove, hammered chords, cheap tunes that seem to be lifted from a band in a local inn; from long-breathed melodies that look beyond what Wagner and Mahler will eventually bring to music, to cell-like motivs not heard again till Bartok and Webern.
The 'learned' aspect of Eliot's verse can lead us astray, so that we are forever parsing the meaning of the lines. I am taken with the sounds he makes as I read the poems aloud, and the sounds he chose to convey what the poems mean are, in a sense, the essence of meaning. From the first I was struck by the sheer sound of 'time' in the context of these Quartets, which are Eliot's swan song.
T.S. Eliot for SikhsReview Date: 2005-01-04
I read some sections to my wife when we were first married, and she thought that it was an English translation of the Sikh holy texts.
"We shall not cease from exploration
And the end of all our exploring
Will be to arrive where we started
And know the place for the first time"
There is no better explanation of Eastern religion than this. I am eternally grateful for this work.
The Warrior and the God: T.S.Eliot and The Four QuartetsReview Date: 2004-10-29
Four QuartetsReview Date: 2005-09-21

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Great bookReview Date: 2007-01-05
FIRST TYPE OF BOOK THAT SHOULD BE READReview Date: 2005-08-03
I once was blindReview Date: 2001-11-17
READ IMMEDIATELY!Review Date: 2004-12-24
Important EssaysReview Date: 2001-12-25

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Your New Best Friend!Review Date: 2005-07-26
A Must for Any Job SeekerReview Date: 2004-01-15
Rob's book is interesting, fun, succinct, and filled with wisdom. I found his book much more relevant and useful to me than "What Color is Your Parachute." I highly recommend "Getting Your Foot in the Door" instead.
Not the typical dry "Parachute-like" bookReview Date: 2003-09-10
The case studies are great and really make Rob's points come to life. That, by itself, makes this book different because you can see the difference this approach makes. But don't kid yourself. It takes work. It took me a few weeks just to work through the self-assessment.
If you're looking for a quick fix, magic pill, you aren't likely to find it anywhere. You hold the key to your future. It's up to you to uncover the gold in your background. Thanks to Rob, I'm well on my way.
While this book is particularly valuable for career-changers and entry-level job hunters, I'd recommend this book to anyone.
A rising classicReview Date: 2005-02-07
Solid training in advertising plus real world experience (at ad-world giant, Leo Burnett, and as a VP and Senior consultant for an executive recruiting firm) equip Sullivan with the means to define and craft the job search in marketing terms, as well as plenty of insider knowledge of interviewing techniques. Moreover, these recommendations are market-tested: Sullivan suffered through more than 80 interviews before writing the book and leveraging its methods to attain career success.
Sullivan's comparison of the job hunt to a product launch, with potential employer as consumer, orients the job seeker early on toward a realistic and research-driven self-assessment. Subsequent chapters prod the reader through the process of harvesting and quantifying details and variously combining the elements into persuasive, job-specific resumes and covers.
With well-selected quotes, honest field reports and a long, quirky bibliography, Sullivan reveals his humanity-a creative counterbalance to the book's stolid core. Scattered with gems such as the recommendation to keep a work journal of your ideas and contributions, and advice on how to handle time gaps, lateral moves and backward steps, Getting Your Foot in the Door is well-worth its modest price.
Great Information on How to Market YourselfReview Date: 2004-03-20
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A wonderful, colorful storyReview Date: 2008-04-13
My Favorite Children's BookReview Date: 2006-09-07
LOVE IT!!!Review Date: 2006-01-15
Awesome!Review Date: 2005-12-09
Mamma Bear assures Goldie's mom that Baby Bear is fine because bears can't get chicken pox. Henny Penny comes by to let the Lock's that the sky is falling. Jack Be Nimble wants to play with Goldie but her dad doesn't think it's such a good idea. Little Bo Peep has stopped by to see if she can find her sheep and Little Red Riding Hood wants some company on the way to her grandmother's house.
It is a very contemporary book with humor and intrigue. Goldie's brother just can't stop teasing her. He wants to connect her dots and wants to know why she can have ice cream and treats and he can't. At the end of the story however, he ends up with some very mysterious spots.
This poem will make children laugh and get them excited because they will recognize other characters form other nursery rhymes. They will also be able to relate to Goldie if they have ever had chicken pox themselves. It is a very cute and simply entertaining story for children to enjoy.
Excellent BookReview Date: 2005-06-01

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I loved it!!!Review Date: 2007-11-16
Respecting the questions.Review Date: 2006-03-07
Bumbling humans that we are, Christians and Jews too often misunderstand and misrepresent each other's views. Dickson tries to avoid the oversimplifications involved in these superficial dismissals, but without surrendering his essential Christian understanding. Many commentators on the Torah are cited; on the Christian side these include the New Testament writers, Augustine, and Kierkegaard, for example. But most of the expositors cited are the Talmudic rabbis (who, of course, were Pharisees, that group of Torah students whom Christians are typically anxious to simplistically vilify wholesale). Dickson says- "As has happened so often in my time with Chever Torah, the floor of my study is littered with fallen stereotypes." (p135)
". . . again it seems that Rabbinic Judaism and Christianity are far closer than I once thought. Christianity says if I love Jesus I will obey his teaching. Judaism says if I wish to follow I will be led along the road. In both cases, faith by the grace of God leads to obedience to God. . . I am free to choose the road I wish to follow and then I am led along it, either downward by my foolish pride or upward by the grace of God." (p142)
I read this book at the same time I was reading Philip Yancey's "The Jesus I Never Knew." Both books are excellent and both speak to some of the weaknesses of the other. The one aspect of Dickson's study that I thought came up short was his arguments regarding the Trinity. It's a challenging subject and I have seen others approach it as Dickson has, citing Torah references to the God who is One with occasional language of plurality, but, of itself, it is a difficult argument. I believe our best understanding of the Trinity must include the insights of Augustine and Anselm. Any weaknesses aside, Dickson has written an excellent book about how one's attitudes, including cognition of one's own ignorance, are of central importance, whether attempting to resolve the mysteries and paradoxes of the Torah or the mysteries and paradoxes of the luminous Jewish rabbi, Jesus.
A book for every Christian's bookshelfReview Date: 2006-03-10
The book reads smoothly, uses comfortable language, and flows in a logical way. Dickson employs several mini-stories throughout the book to introduce and illustrate the subject matter of that chapter.
Dickson touches an area of Christianity which is desperately needed. We embrace so much of our faith without having any knowledge of its roots or foundation in Judaism. Christianity and Judaism are not synonymous. They have significant differences, and Dickson does not ignore these differences, or try to homogenize the two faiths. But they ARE similar, and Dickson does a great job of showing just how so many of the themes in Christianity overlap with those of Judaism, even if that doesn't appear to be the case at first glance. Most of Dickson's focus is not on the minutiae differences of Christianity and Judaism, but is on the larger elements of our faiths, including the differences in how we approach our faith, and how we answer the hard-to-answer questions.
Allow me to share my favorite aspect of the book. Dickson discusses, in detail, the difference in the way Christians and Jews deal with difficult questions about our faith. I grew up in the church, Dickson is correct in characterizing the way most Christians answer those questions: we often try to make them seem less difficult than they really are, and look to some pre-fabricated answer found in our "ways to answer those questions" manual. Many questions are off-limits as quasi-heretical, meaning that we often never quite satisfactorily examine the things in our faith we struggle with. By Contrast, according to Dickson, no question is off-limits for Jews, and they embrace difficulties and questions concerning their faith. I believe more Christians should react like the latter. We should be willing to ask questions--the answers in our manual may be correct, but we should be willing to go and see.
One of the things that make this book so good is its ability to make you think-it encourages you to examine what you believe. You will find yourself pondering the things you read throughout the day. I cannot agree with everything that Dickson asserts in the book, and there are some areas in which I felt he could have elaborated and discussed more thoroughly. But the book DID make me think, and it did have an effect on what I think about a couple of issues. If you read this book, and consider the things discussed in it, there is a fair chance that your view on an issue or two will be tweaked in some way too.
The book is great. The book is easy to read, and enjoyable. While I still don't necessarily agree with everything Dickson says, those things are rather minute and mostly insignificant. People interested in the subject matter should definitely read the book. I am confident that you'll enjoy the book, and that you'll be glad you bought it.
So, What's the Difference?Review Date: 2007-09-02
When I read this, Dickson wasn't afraid to to discuss what a Christian believes, opposed to what a Jew might think. And he wasn't afraid to apply Torah and Bible scripture. He takes examples in The Bible like Moses and Abraham, and events in their lives. He begins by stating, "Life's most important moments are often disguised as the commonplace." In this case, in the situation that Athol Dickson knowingly put himself into, that is most certainly true. Did he expect to be challenged? Possibly. He wasn't afraid to expose the differences. Or was he? Where does Jesus fit in this? You'll know soon enough.
So, if you want a few of the topics that Dickson addresses in a nut shell, I'll give a few. In the opening chapter, Dickson talks about dealing with doubts. He'll talk about why God lets us suffer. He'll discuss finding connections between obedience and grace. And in the final chapter, he'll ask a real tough one: Are Jews going to Hell? He discusses a lot of other stuff as well. The topics are 13 chapters total. I would dare to say, give this a try. If you have tough questions, then maybe this has the answer. Will it give you satisfying results? Only you can answer that.
Is this possibly a "Jesus Freak Among the Jews" account? Quite possibly, and a little more. It was awesome.
Perspective Expanding Insights for ChristiansReview Date: 2006-05-15

Foundation FranklinReview Date: 2000-11-20
Farley Mowat is a superb writer!Review Date: 2000-09-24
Riveting slice of marine historyReview Date: 2000-09-25
First-Rate True Saga of the SeaReview Date: 2000-09-24
Perfect Storm, eat your heart out!Review Date: 2001-12-19
If the author, Farley Mowat is sometimes guilty of over-the-top prose---well, he lived and worked on the Franklin, and he loved her sturdy lines, her jaunty roll, and every rivet that held her together while she rescued ships that were Goliaths to her chubby, little Baby Huey. No work could have been more dangerous; none required a higher degree of seamanship and courage than dropping a line on a berserk, lunging, steel-hulled freighter, and then towing her through the maw of a mid-December gale, or the shoals and `sunkers' of the Newfoundland coast---something the Franklin did so many times that her crew lost memory of all but their most freakish or man-killing expeditions.
"Grey Seas Under" will give you an interesting perspective on the true maritime heroes of World War II. Farley Mowat doesn't pull any punches when he describes the tension that existed between the expert seamen on the ocean-going salvage and rescue tugs, and their relatively `amateur' counterparts on Canadian and American naval warships. Some of the funniest scenes in the book involve convoys of merchant ships under the `protection' of corvettes and destroyers. Once a U-Boat had been sighted and the merchants steamed for cover, it was up to the Franklin to rescue the ones that ran into each other or shoaled themselves. Usually, the tug had to perform her duties without any cover from the warships.
"The days the salvors (tugboat seamen) spent tethered to fat and crippled merchantmen, crawling along on a straight course at a speed of two or three knots like mechanical targets in a shooting gallery, were the kind of days that would drain the courage from the most heroic man alive...The Germans knew, that for every rescue vessel sunk there would be a score of crippled merchantmen who would never make safe port."
This is a great book about men against the sea, even though the language gets very nautical at times. Read it and you will learn all about Lloyd's Open Form, and the tricks that wrecked merchant masters play to cheat tugs out of their salvage fees. You'll learn to tell the difference between `Monkey Island' and the poop deck---and the difference between `brass monkeys' and true seamen. You'll thrill to the dangers of sunkers, beam seas, and Arctic white-outs. You'll bite through your pipe-stem, just like the Franklin's captain did during those tows when his sturdy little tug steamed back into port with barely enough coal in her bunkers to "cook a pot of beans."
Someone ought to make a movie out of "Grey Seas Under." It's got everything---romance (between man and ship, at least); life-and-death adventures; heroism; humor; and the treacherous ice, wind, and sea of what the author respectfully refers to as `the Great Western Ocean.'
Related Subjects: Travis Tate Taylor Thomas Thompson Thornton Turner Tyler Tudor Tucker
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