Ware Books
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Great classic strip Review Date: 2008-09-17
Great Classic ComicsReview Date: 2008-01-10
A lot of the jokes are repeated, for instance Walt, the only bachelor among his circle of friends, constantly uses the line `I know when I have it good' after seeing his hen pecked buddies. We also get to experience Walt's continual struggle with his weight. There are a few extended storylines including a shady land developer who takes the Gasoline Alley gang for a bit of money. The longest story is about the arrival of an attractive young lady named Blossom and her developing relationship with Walt.
Three things stood out for me in this collection. First was the always meticulous job done by editor Chris Ware who goes above and beyond the call of duty. There is a ton of fascinating background information on cartoonist Frank King. My tip is that any publisher who wants to release a comic collection like this one should call on Chris Ware. He is a man with serious passion for comics. The second thing that caught my attention is how clean and pleasant Frank King's drawings are. But what I enjoyed most about Walt and Skeezik's was the glimpse at life in the United States prior to the Great Depression.
What you need to do when reading through these comic strips is to try and put yourself into the era. These comics were created over 85 years ago and it's like peering into a time capsule. There is not a single mention of television or pop culture. Most of the residents of Gasoline Alley are chiefly concerned with the mileage they get on their tires or the cost of a new hat. Volume one pretty much satisfied my curiosity and I probably won't buy further volumes but that takes nothing away from this excellent collection. You definitely get your money's worth and it literally took me months to get through the entire book.
A look into the really, truly pastReview Date: 2007-08-07
It has a lot of the same flavor as For Better or Worse. It's infested with genuine American characters. (Fair warning: the portrayals of African Americans are deeply stereotyped--but also remarkably sympathetic in terms of human feeling.)
DO NOT read it all in one sitting. Try to limit yourself to ten strips a night. Like movie serials, comic strips that appeared in daily newspapers took months or years to fully develop a story arc. You can't rush through that--and why the heck would you want to?
Comics JunkieReview Date: 2007-07-31
This is a Great BookReview Date: 2007-04-11

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Great Book!Review Date: 2008-09-10
Buy them with confidence. Play with joy. making music is a wonderful thing.
Fred from Baltimore
The best way to start playing the banjoReview Date: 2007-09-21
The How and the Tao of Old Time Banjo by Patrick CostelloReview Date: 2008-04-05
After the introduction by Patrick, (and Pat, his 'Dear Old Dad'), there are tips on how to tune your banjo, and advice on the correct technique for holding and playing it, and then you are shown your first chord. You will then be able to 'frail' your very first folk song! After the first couple of songs, Patrick explains how to read the tablature which is used throughout the rest of the book. There are many tunes in the book to learn to play, lots more chords to be learned, and different techniques to practice. Towards the back of the book there is a lot more 'in depth' stuff which I have not attempted yet!
Learning the banjo is great fun, and Patrick Costello's friendly and relaxed manner of teaching makes this book an absolute must for beginners. At the end of the book he relates little anecdotes which are both amusing and encouraging.
The book is A4 size, with 168 pages full of instruction along with the words to the tunes you can learn. There is even a bit about reading music if you are interested in that!
I was a complete novice when I bought my banjo 5 weeks ago and have found this book invaluable. I live in the UK and could not find it in any of my local music shops so looked on Amazon and bought it from there! It arrived in possibly a shorter space of time than if I had ordered it from a shop in the UK anyway! And it is worth its weight in gold. Highly recommended!
The How and the Tao of Old Time BanjoReview Date: 2008-03-06
I think this is without doubt the best tutor book for frailing the banjo that I have read and I have tried quite a few in the past. I fully recommend it to anyone that wants to learn to play this instrument.
The Best Banjo Book Ever!Review Date: 2007-10-07

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Awesome!! Definite Page Turner!Review Date: 2004-10-07
Where's the sequal to this excellent book?Review Date: 2004-03-12
It's a very emotional tale of being torn betwen duty and love and settling for what you can have or reaching for what you really want. The conflict was very realistic and I may be the only person who understood Alex's complex feelings of love and jealousy and insecurity. But he was truly unlikable at the end and this disappointed me.
This book made me laugh and cry and stay up all night to finish it. My only wish is that the ending where either more conclusive or the very opposite of what it was. I had a soft spot for Alex. But Ms. Ware's ending is hamronious with the history as I understand it.
It's a great journey even though the ending sort of halts abruptly and leaves you wishing for more.
no titleReview Date: 2005-12-24
Great storytellingReview Date: 2004-02-05
Wuthering Heights meets Diana Gabaldon...Review Date: 2005-02-23
I liked the ending. It was enough to know for me that they found each other.
As I read the pages of Island of the Swans, I was reminded of Wuthering Heights and Diana Gabaldon's Dragonfly in Amber, as well as the triangle between Rhett, Scarlet & Ashley Wilkes in Gone With The Wind. But Jane is much more a woman of honor than Scarlet O'Hara ever was, and Thomas Fraser more of a man than Ashley Wilkes. Although Thomas Fraser is not quite as dramatic a love interest as Healthcliff, he is sweeter and definitely manly.
I will being running out to get more Ciji Ware novels! I stayed up well into the night to read the ending of this one and I haven't done that in a LONG time.
Well done Ms. Ware!

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The largest book I have ever owned and will never give upReview Date: 2008-03-21
Nothing is being produced like this anymore. McCay's talent is beyond amazing, it would take a normal artist months to produce one page like he was doing every week. The book is exhausting and I can only read a dozen pages at a time. These are exact reproductions of actual newsprint pages from the time so all the printing imperfections are here but that should not dissuade the appreciation of this comic.
If you are a true drawn art aficionado find the money for this. You will not regret it.
Little Nemo. So may splendid SundaysReview Date: 2007-01-17
Chris Hunt, Alnwick, UK
An Extraordinary Work Of ArtReview Date: 2007-03-26
I would rate it 6 stars if I couldReview Date: 2007-02-16
The only drawback is that it does only contain a selection of the story, but I can always read the missing pages in the cheaper old edition. A big applaud for the publisher who dared produce this wonderfull piece of art.
A stunning bookReview Date: 2007-04-17
First of all, this book is huge. McCay's work is reproduced at its original size, which reveals his superb draftsmanship in all its glory. If you remember Little Nemo as lovely but kind of cramped, you're not going to believe how open and expansive the strips look here.
Secondly, the color reproduction is superb. I'll take the editor's word that a great deal of effort was expended to match McCay's original coloring directions. What I will say is that the colors here are vibrant without being garish. It's really unbelievable that such sophisticated color work comes from a strip that's a hundred years old. I don't think most newspapers today could pull this off.
You really have to see the book to appreciate how incredible it is. This really sets a standard against which the other collections I've seen fall far short. If you can swing the price, you won't be sorry. You might, however, have a hard time finding a place to store it!

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Divine Bonanza!Review Date: 2008-11-18
That's a seriously-good question. The correct answer is known to B.A.Ware [yes, that's his real name!!], to wit: People must devote attention to the holy Trinity, and stop poking fun, or else they will go to Hell for a very long time (i.e., for ever)--which also means that people (while they still have the chance) should put this book into their Amazon shopping cart, and delete _The God Delusion_, by Richard Dawkins.
Sadly, not many people are doing it--
* R. Dawkins, THE GOD DELUSION: "Amazon.com Sales Rank: #338" [as of Nov. 2008]
* B. A. Ware, FATHER, SON, AND HOLY SPIRIT: "Amazon.com Sales Rank: #162,869" [Nov. '08].
--and if you think the Trinity is not angry about that, then you don't know God.
"Can the Christian faith SURVIVE" asks B. A. Ware, "if the doctrine of the Trinity is omitted? Are we AWARE of just how crucial this doctrine is to all else we believe as Christians?" (p. 16).
If God were a single person (as the Jews and Muslims believe)--if God were not "Triune," a perfect triplicate--then we would stand to lose the doctrines of Adam and Eve and the Talking Snake; Noah's Ark and the Curse on Negroes; Balaam and the Talking donkey; the Star of Bethlehem; the Essential Inferiority of Women; the Rapture of Christians Up to the Sky; and the all-important doctrine that Everyone Except Us will Suffer Unspeakable Torments Forever in Hell, After Death.
Here, then, is the essence of the Trinity, as B.A.Ware explains it: Yahweh the Father is holy. He cannot forgive your sins (e.g., your Sabbath-breaking and cursing and masturbation) unless someone first gets crucified for what you said and did. And it might as well be His Son, Jesus, who gets nailed instead of you! (I mean, just watch Mel Gibson's movie, _The Passion of the Christ_, or at least read my Amazon review of the film. Then look into the mirror and ask yourself: "Would I rather have God the Father do that to Jesus on a Friday two thousand years ago, or would I rather have Him do it to me for all eternity after I'm dead?" --Come on, be honest!)
To be saved from Hell, you don't have to "like" the holy Trinity; you just need to FEAR Them, as the Bible reminds us in Deut. 6:2; Deut. 6:13; Deut. 6:24, and in roughly every tenth verse, right through to the Apocalypse: "Fear God, and give glory to him; for the hour of His judgment is come" (Rev. 14:7).
But as B. A. Ware argues, it's also good thing if you actually do LIKE the Trinity. If you like at least one of Him, that can be a definite plus toward escaping the judgment of eternal damnation.
Today, if we were to take a vote among born-again Christians which member of the Trinity they like best - Father, Son, or holy Ghost - and even if we allowed the Virgin Mary as a write-in candidate, Jesus would win by a landslide. This is especially true in America, where the Son enjoys a huge and growing base of popular support. There is even a powerful new movement afoot in America to rename the nation "the United States of Jesusland," in recognition that the world's greatest democracy was founded by evangelical Christians such as Thomas Jefferson, Ben Franklin, and George Washington - unlike, say, Australia, which was founded by banished criminals; or Britain, which was founded by naked tree-worshiping Celts who painted themselves blue and threw rocks at the troops of Julius Caesar.
Jesus, hands down, is also my own personal favourite. Long ago--before the Creation, before he came down to Earth to be punished for your sins--Jesus was one of the kindest, quietest, most courteous deities you'd ever choose to worship (Ware, chap. 4). To this day, I can still imagine myself having lunch, or a drink, with the Son of God. There are days when I would rather have a beer with Jesus Christ than with Beelzebub and Belial, my two best friends. But when the Son comes again, at the so-called "Rapture," there will be no more Mr. Nice Guy. When "Jesus returneth in power and glory," there will be scores to settle, and Hell to pay (Mark 13:26).
The Ghost is less chatty than the other two, and harder to describe. He is more like a Force than like an actual person (Ware, chap. 5). We angels in Heaven used to have a saying, May the Ghost be with you! But I never really figured him out. If you want something from God, you should say, "Dear Father," or "Dear Jesus." Don't bother with, "Dear holy Ghost." The Ghost is the Trinity's most aloof personality. He is not really someone you can to talk to, or ask for favours. In North America they don't even call him by his real name any more. At an 1895 conference of American Bible translators, it was voted, 127 to 96, that "holy Ghost," though literal, sounds "a little too Gothic" for modern readers. English translations from the American Standard Version (1901) through the New International Version (1973) have therefore switched over to calling the holy Ghost, the "Holy Spirit."
(That's my only complaint about B. A. Ware's fine exegesis: he goes with the flow and calls Person no. 3 the "holy Spirit." I personally dislike the innovation. But these big Bible companies are forever changing the text in order to sell new Bibles. Next thing you know, in order to attract more readers to its New International Version, Zondervan Corp, will start calling the holy Trinity: "the Father, the Son, and the Very Good Feeling.")
The holy Ghost still has the charismatics squarely in his corner. A "charismatic" Christian is one who has been "filled," not with charisma, exactly, but "with the holy Ghost," and who therefore has a special ability to "speak in tongues" and to "believe in the miracles on TBN television." If the divine election were held today, I might even vote for the Ghost myself. I don't know him as well as I know Jesus, but of the divine threesome, it is the Ghost who is usually pounding lumps on the fewest people at any given moment.
Third, but not least, of course, is YAHWEH (Ware, chap. 3). The Jews after all these years still feel a special loyalty to God the Father, which actually amazes me, a little, because their Yahveh-worship has never done them a darn bit of good. (Not to put too fine a point of it, Judaism exhibits the same painful quirk of human psychology as Battered Woman Syndrome.)
The corker, for Ware, is that the holy Trinity gets along with Himself so perfectly, without any signs of a dysfunctional relationship: "The Father is supreme in authority, the Son is under the Father, the Spirit is under the Father and the Son," and the Virgin Mary is under all three, figuratively speaking, which is how Jesus came to be born, and acquired a perfect human body that he can no longer get rid of. (The other two--the Father and the Ghost--have no body per se, which is one good way to tell them apart from Jesus.) "Yet there is also full harmony in their work, with no jealousy, bitterness, strife, or discord" (p. 131); which is pretty remarkable, when you think about how long those three have been hanging out together, especially during those pre-Creation days, when the Trinity had absolutely nothing to do for billions of years, except to exist.
"In order for us sinners to be saved," writes Ware, "One must see God at One and the same time as the One judging our sin (the Father), the One making the payment of infinite value for our sin (the divine Son), and the One empowering and directing the incarnate--human--Son so that He lives and obeys the Father, going to the Cross as the Substitute for us (the Holy Spirit). The Christian God, to be Savior, MUST then be Father, Son, and holy Spirit" (17). And that is just so true--especially in these Last Days before Armageddon, when the Roman Catholics are still trying to slip a female One in there! But GOD IS NOT A QUARTET! and there is NO WOMAN INVOLVED. Do the math, people! 1+1+1=3/3=1.
- L.
The Doctrine and Applications of the TrinityReview Date: 2008-07-07
Many tremendously important lessons to learn can be derived by understanding the difference in their roles and relationship, which not only serves as a divine revelation, but also a pattern and divine design for humanity to follow, having been created in His image. The beauty of the Trinity lies in the respect and affection in their treatment to one another, harmony in operation, and unity in purpose, as well as the complete absence of envy, friction, disagreement, power struggle and abuse of authority amongst Them. Here is a model of a perfect, most sublime authority-submission relationship displayed in the supremacy of the Father, subordination of the Son to the Father wherein the Son glories in the Father, the Father glories in the Son, the Spirit submitting to the Father and the Son. Moreover, the Spirit glories in the Son, yet when the Son was on earth, He was subject to the Spirit, and the Spirit is always eternally joyfully content to take up the background behind-the-scene roles assisting the Father and glorifying and pointing all attentions to the Son.
Dr. Ware also covers what each Person does, and its implications whereby one learns the true fatherhood and obedience, the gracious work of inspiration, illumination, sanctification and evangelism. In regard to Christian life, they teach the divine inspiration and thus, the infallibility and inerrancy of the Bible; expose the importance of illumination in understanding of the Scriptures, show the right way to pray; by the Spirit, through the Son, and to the Father, direct how to worship properly, the Son being the center of all. In the mission field, they affirm the absolute necessity of the work of regeneration brought forth by the Spirit in a true conversion that results in faith and repentance. At home, these lessons are applicable to the relationship between men and women in marriage as husbands and wives, and between parents and children. It is also a divine design for the church and society in general; between congregation, ministers and elders, citizens and government; students and teachers; subordinates and superiors wherein God ordained authority-submission structure or taxis to reflect who He is and how He operates. In each of these relationship structures that Dr. Ware went through in details, he not only teaches that the doctrine of the Trinity is highly practical, but also refutes egalitarianism and a general distrust of authority. Yes, human authority is imperfect, whether it be husband, parent, minister, governor, and superior in a workplace, but Dr. Ware pointed out the preciousness of the lesson of submission from the Trinitarian taxis,
"It appears then, that we need to learn something about the nature of true freedom. Freedom is not what our culture tells us it is. Freedom is not my deciding, from the urges and longings of my sinful nature, to do what I want to do, when I want to do it, how I want to do it, with whom I want to do it. According to the Bible, that is bondage, not freedom. Rather, true freedom is living as Jesus lived, for He is the freest human being who ever lived. In fact, He is the only fully free human being who has ever lived, and one day we will be set free fully when we always and only do the will of God.
So what is freedom? Amazingly, Jesus' answer is this: Freedom is submitting, - submitting fully to the will of God, to the words of God, and to the work that God calls us to do" (p.75).
The reason why this book is a must-read is because we live in the days where human autonomy is God and the seemingly prevailing rule is that I am my own authority; you have your own rules and I have my own, so don't ever tell me what to do. Understanding, embracing and applying the doctrine of the Trinity is a great antidote to this toxic post-modern spirit.
A Great Study!Review Date: 2008-05-31
Great book on the TrinityReview Date: 2006-11-01
There are at least two commendable things about the book. One is its "readability". The author takes such a complex topic and writes very simply. The information is also arranged so systematically that it is easy to follow and outline. Secondly, the book is full of practical application. He sees the relationship between the three members of the Godhead as the basis for understanding human relationships. He points to examples of love, humility, and submission found in the Trinity.
Why the Doctrine of the Trinity Matters to Each of UsReview Date: 2005-07-07
Bruce Ware's Father, Son, & Holy Spirit: Relationships, Roles, & Relevance, seeks to provide us with the robust understanding we lack. The brief 158 page book is an adaptation from a series of lectures Dr. Ware gave at a conference in 2004 and is broken down into six chapters.
Chapter One addresses the importance of the doctrine of the Trinity. "Would God have chosen to reveal himself to us as the one God who is Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, unless he knew that this would be important to our understanding of him and our faith?" (13) Chapter Two claims to be an historical overview of the doctrine, though it's really more of an analysis of the Biblical evidence for the Trinity.
Chapters Three through Five are each on a different person of the Godhead. Each chapter describes the unique roles of each person, how they relate to one another, and what relevance each person's roles has for our lives.
The final chapter, six, concludes with ten "lessons for our lives and ministries from the relationships and roles of the triune God." (132) Since we are made in God's image, we must start with understanding of God in order to understand ourselves. The applications include living in community, the harmony of unity, the importance of authority and submission within our families and churches, how to pray, and how to worship.
The book is a very easy read, though it is far from simple. I still think James R. White's The Forgotten Trinity is the best book available in regards to the Biblical basis of the doctrine. However, Dr. Ware's is the best I've seen that explains the roles of each person and how the doctrine should apply to how we live. For instance, "Here in the Trinity... we see hierarchy without hubris, authority with no oppression, submission that is not servile, and love that pervades every aspect of the divine life." (157)
If you're questioning the Biblical basis of the doctrine, go read James White. If you are seeking a deeper understanding of the Trinity and the relevance the nature of God has in your life, Dr. Ware's book is a must read. I know of no other book that explains these profound truths with such clarity and warmth while maintaining their depth and weight.

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Voltaire's Magnum OpusReview Date: 2008-04-24
:)Review Date: 2008-02-27
EntertainingReview Date: 2008-02-20
Buy it and enjoy.
"O che sciagura d'essere senza coglioni!"Review Date: 2008-02-07
If you've made the decision to read Candide already, then this is the version you want to buy. Theo Cuffe's translation is more recent and much better than any other ones out there. I was thinking of purchasing the Oxford World Classics edition - after all, it's a few dollars cheaper and has a few more stories - but after contrasting paragraphs from Candide in either version, I decided Cuffe's superior translation warrants the extra money. This edition is also bound beautifully; it's a paperback but the cover is much firmer than a regular paperback and is adorned with eye-catching comic strips and a useful list (with pictures) of the main characters on the inside flap of the cover. This edition also has very thorough footnotes at the end; if you're like me and have little acquaintance with the 18th century and life through the era of Enlightenment, the handy footnotes will graciously guide your way. Aside from the footnotes, this edition also has additional pertinent writings from Voltaire including a poem he wrote on the disaster of the Lisbon earthquake and some excerpts from his Philosophic Dictionary.
Now, if you haven't made up your mind as to whether you'd like to read this, I strongly urge that you do. It's a rather short story but a very profound one. It's extremely witty, clever, and yet masterfully laconic. The story itself is an assault on the philosophic concept of "Optimism" as championed by Leibniz, Alexander Pope, and various other contemporaries of Voltaire who believed that all that happens in the world is for the best, and that we live in the best of all possible worlds. As Pope himself said famously, "whatever IS, is good." Candide, the young, naive and charming protagonist of our story is very much swayed in the direction of believing in Optimism because of the teachings of his philosopher teacher Pangloss. But as Candide inadvertently travels the world, matures, and learns from the sight of reality beyond the corridors of his residence at Westphalia, his perceptions begin to change, and we begin to develop nothing short of a sense for everything that is meaningful and meaningless in life. As Gustave Flaubert once said, the prose of Voltaire is mesmerizing and yet ingeniously succinct. You'll know the feeling once you travel the land of Eldorado, where people are indifferent to diamonds and gold lying in their streets and where everything is in perfect harmony, with non-other than the worthy Candide.
A fun adventure storyReview Date: 2007-10-28
You are no doubt getting ready to throw this book into your Amazon cart, but I beseech you dear reader, hold back and finish this review. For I need to impart in you the fact that this book is a love story as well! Candide, from his days in the Baron's court has been in love with the beautiful Cunegonde, whose stolen kiss is responsible for his banishment from the castle! On his journeys he meets back up with the fair maiden, in Portugal, and they go on a romantic boat-ride together! They sail to South America in the New World where they soon must split up.
Candide then travels to El Dorado where he meets the king! The king gives him billions of dollars worth of diamonds! He loses most of the diamonds on the way home, but he is still a millionaire. He then must travel to Venice where he is to meet back up with his love.
There were some funny parts in this book, but most of it was starkly serious. There was war, torture, natural disasters, and many other road blocks that Candide must overcome in order to get his prize, Cunegonde. I found this book to be a great motivational tool for myself. "You don't get the princess Cunegonde unless you sail to the New World and get a bunch of diamonds from the king of Eldorado," I keep telling myself.
I don't understand why so many people had a cow over this book. Apparently its author was thrown into prison for writing it! Maybe because it was a little violent and people weren't used to violence back then. Though I do admit, this book is strictly R rated, which makes me upset that they have school-kids reading this stuff. Kids, having never been subjected to the subjects of s e x and violence in this book may not understand it in a mature way without parental guidance.
The author picked a good name for the star of this book, as Candide is an unusual name and makes a good title. Can you imagine if he named the main character Steve? It just wouldn't have the same effect. I liked this book so I hope the author has some more fun adventure stories in the works.


Telecommuting is officially in!Review Date: 2008-08-13
A new business model, one that enables businesses to embrace workworld changes on a global scale.Review Date: 2008-02-07
Diane C. Donovan
California Bookwatch
Resource guide for a changing work placeReview Date: 2008-01-07
Corporate Agility gives us a look into companies such as Hewlett Packard, Sun, IBM and others. It provides detailed analysis of how they are addressing the changing work place environment. How are companies staying connected with an increasingly mobile work force? How are they integrating Gen X, Gen Y & the Millennial workers? How are they reducing costs for work space, real estate and I.T. while increasing productivity and worker satisfaction? In depth case studies provide hard data regarding how different programs impact costs savings, worker productivity and employee satisfaction.
The analysis and case studies also let you key into a network of resources to help with your projects. Furniture systems, architects, designers, real estate brokers and I.T. solutions are all discussed. The Future of Work community is a door to a nearly endless supply of thinkers and practitioners dedicated to solving today's work place issues. Regardless of the size organization you are trying to change, Corporate Agility will provide the ammunition you need to get the project designed, approved and completed.
How to avoid or overcome "the ideology of comfort and the tyranny of custom"Review Date: 2007-12-29
In the Introduction, Charles Grantham, James Ware, and Cory Williamson explain that they assembled a small group of thought leaders from major corporations and collaborated with them when conducting a survey among decision-makers in both labor and management "to discover how new technologies, the changing workforce, and economic globalization were changing how and where people worked, and what those changes meant to the future of work in the so-called Information Economy." The survey responses confirmed what they had only suspected previously: "most businesses had been unable, or unwilling, to adapt their traditional management styles to the new conditions." Various factors resulted in a crippling loss of corporate agility. "These Industrial-Age behemoths are often referred to as corporate dinosaurs, in an effort to describe just how slow and unwieldy they really are - to say nothing of being nearly extinct - and there may be even more truth and insight contained in that image than anyone ever intended."
Grantham, Ware, and Williamson pose an especially interesting question: How can a business evolve from being a dinosaur to a jaguar, and do so in the space of months, not millennia? In this book, they provide their response to it, what they characterize as "a collaborative, strategic approach to management that acknowledges and leverages the growing interdependence of human resources (HR), corporate real estate (CRE), and information technology (IT), a process we call collaborative strategic management." In this volume, they explain to define, develop, and then implement the CSM process, and thus achieve corporate agility. The co-authors organize and present their material within ten chapters and draw upon a collection of wide-ranging, cutting-edge ideas drawn from pilot programs, case studies, and evolving best practices established by members of the Future of Work community. (The co-authors invite you to visit www.thefutureofwork.net/index.html.)
FYI, the quoted phrase in this review's title was formulated by James O'Toole while identifying major barriers to leading change in a book that bears that name. Grantham, Ware, and Williamson have no illusions whatsoever as to the difficulty of defining, developing, and then implementing the CSM process to achieve corporate agility. They realize that many organizations cannot overcome "the ideology of comfort and the tyranny of custom" and will not survive. These are the "dinosaurs" to which they refer. However, other organizations can become agile and thus adapt to rapid, model-shattering changes in the global economy. These are the "jaguars" to which they refer.
To me, it is especially appropriate that the process of defining, developing, and then implementing collaborative strategic management requires organizations to be actively involved in all manner of alliances and mutually beneficial partnerships between and among members of global communities such as Future of Work. This is precisely what Satish Nambisan and Mohanbir Sawhney also have in mind in Global Brain: Your Roadmap for Innovating Faster and Smarter in a Networked World. They wholeheartedly agree with Grantham, Ware, and Williamson that agility is more, much more than a highly desirable attribute; it is, in fact, a key to organizational survival. Hence the importance of this brilliant book that will be of incalculable value to those planning for or have already embarked upon the perilous and complicated but necessary process of strategically integrating the effective management of real estate, human resources, and technology assets.
And as Charles Grantham, James Ware, and Cory Williamson point out, "It does that in a collaborative fashion that requires a change in decision-making processes and styles from what most organizations rely on today. [Moreover, an agile enterprise organizes itself into three (and only three) levels that center on completion, survival, and renewal." In this context, I assume that "completion" refers to achieving the given objectives, whatever they may be. However, collaborative strategic management is a journey rather than a destination, an on-going process that must be constantly renewed with appropriate modifications. Only then can an organization sustain its agility.
Those who share my high regard for this book are urged to check out Thomas Friedman's The World Is Flat and Competing in a Flat World co-authored by Victor Fung, William Fung, and Yoram (Jerry) Wind as well as The New American Workplace co-authored by James O'Toole and Edward Lawler, O'Toole's aforementioned Leading Change, Henry Chesbrough's Open Business Models, Noel Tichy and Warren Bennis' Judgment, Richard Ogle's Smart World, Frans Johansson's The Medici Effect, James Kilts's Doing What Matters, Dean Spitzer's Transforming Performance Measurement, and Enterprise Architecture As Strategy co-authored by Jeanne W. Ross, Peter Weill, and David Robertson.
Drive dramatic change in Real Estate strategy and costReview Date: 2007-12-12

Beautiful, sensual, and subject to infinite interpretationReview Date: 2005-07-05
In the poem, one sister gives in to the temptation of the forbidden fruit offered by the dark goblins forever lurking in the twilight to seduce their victims to a first taste of their exotic wares. The desire to obtain more of the passion fruit overtakes her young life, yet the goblins appear to her no more; as a result, she begins to waste away near to death. At this point, her sister, who sensibly avoided temptation, willingly seeks to bargain with the goblins, only to have them force their juicy wares upon her. The fruity residue is enough, however, to revive her sister. The act of salvation is obviously the juiciest part of the story on a number of levels - such a sensual act between sisters, with lines such as "Hug me, kiss me, suck my juices" and "Eat me, drink me, love me," cries out for interpretation of all kinds - and those quick to criticize the hypocritical prudishness of Victorian society have a veritable field day with it.
Some say this is not a poem for children's ears? Balderdash. Like any masterful work of poetry, Goblin Market can be read and interpreted on many levels. Children will delight in its lyrical rhyming patterns, its allusions to wee goblins hawking the most delicious of fruits, and interpret the salvation of the tempted sister in comparatively innocent terms. I say leave the interpretations to the adults. And what interpretations there are of this lengthy poem. Some see in it a recreation of the genesis story, a story of sacrifice and redemption, a tale of lesbian yearning, a declaration of the power of sisterhood, a commentary on women as commodities in market society, evidence of sexual molestation by Rossetti's father, etc. There's no limit to the interpretations put forth about what is, on the surface, an engaging fairy tale set to verse.
This is a fascinating work of lyrical poetry that can be read fairly quickly yet will sustain your interest through multiple readings, all sorts of fascinating research into analysis and interpretation, and just plain wonderment. As sensual as it is beautiful, Goblin Market is probably one of the most fascinating and insightful products of Victorian literature.
Fantastic erotica not for childrenReview Date: 2001-12-06
Don't let the word "erotica" scare you away. This is not a blatantly sexual work in its language; it is not a "dirty" book. Just understand that despite what anyone else says or writes, this is about as unambiguously EROTIC as you can get. With phrasing like "Eat me, drink me, love me; Laura, make much of me; For your sake I have braved the glen; And had to do with goblin merchant men."
Since the original work is now in the public domain, if you want to read the full text online just do a search using most standard search engines with the terms "Christina Rossetti Goblin Market" and you should turn up a number of links to the actual poems, go read it, and decide for yourself about it.
This makes a wonderful gift for people you are very close too. However, it is also a very personal poem, and if given inappropriately could actually scare someone away!
A Prettily Presented ClassicReview Date: 2005-08-24
A tale to dream on...Review Date: 2000-07-13
RedemptionReview Date: 2000-04-04

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Quimby masks a hidden storyReview Date: 2007-11-18
Las historieta del siglo XXIReview Date: 2007-01-19
Heartbreakingly funny and touchingReview Date: 2004-05-17
Another Slim Volume from the MasterReview Date: 2004-02-05
Review of Quimby and more-so, revue of Quimby's revues...Review Date: 2003-12-08
I am not going to tell you it's "the best thing I've read all year (!)" or "true brilliance (!)" like some excited putzy twerp who thinks they've found a niche for themselves in comics ("Oh why don't I fit in anywhere! woe is me! nobody understand my art pain!")
It's just good. Very good. That's all. Quit reading.
All of these long revues are worthless. look at the stars, go with the gut.

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A Solid Defense Of CalvinismReview Date: 2007-10-02
(THEY WERE NEVER SAVED - HEBREWS 6)
'enlightened' Gk photizo
Eph 1:18 'that the eyes of your enlightenment'
and Heb 6:4 'having once being enlightened'
: 'Contrary to the assertion of several interpreters, does not carry the sense of 'believed the gospel' or 'came to faith' in these or any of its 11 NT uses. It refers to learning and understanding, and therefore the most that can be confidently claimed for it is that it speaks of those who have heard and understood the gospel. Certainly such intellectual understanding of the facts of the gospel is an important step toward saving faith, but it does not in itself constitute the element of personal trust in Christ that is essential to faith.' pgs 141,142
'Another good parallel is seen in the false teachers described in 2 Pet 2:20-22. They had 'escaped the defilements of the world through the knowledge of our (Kurios) and (Soter) Jesus Christ.' vs 20, which indicates that there had been both knowledge of the gospel and repentance, but then they had turned back to their previous ways. Moreover, they had never really been saved, for Peter says, 'It has happened to them according to the true proverb: 'The dog turns back to his own vomit, and the sow is washed only to wallow in the mire.' vs 22 - in other words, the repentance was only an outward cleansing , and did not change their true nature.' pg 148
Presents the Calvinist viewpoint wellReview Date: 2006-07-09
Space does not allow for the detailed discussion each article deserves, so this review focuses on a few articles (particularly those other reviews have overlooked) and make some general observations on the book's contribution to the perennial predestination verses free will debate.
The collection kicks-off with Ray Ortlund's case studies on God's sovereignty in the Old Testament. In doing so it nearly shoots itself in the foot, at least for this reviewer! Whilst Ortlund's rather pugnacious article makes some reasonable exegetical points concerning Psalm 139 and Jeremiah 1, his section on Jonah perpetuates the misunderstanding surrounding this great prophet. To call the first true missionary to the Gentiles (who, incidently, had a 100% success rate) a "nasty, sulky prophet...clearly he is the bad example we are not to follow" is a staggering insult. If apologising is in order in Heaven, Orlund will be joining what will probably be a very long queue to the prophet Jonah!
Robert Yarborough contributes a more conciliatory essay on Sovereignty in John (a response to Grant Osborne's thoughtful essay in Grace of God). Donald Westblade handles the Calvinist view of election in an equally thoughtful manner, but in not avoiding the stumbling stone of double predestination, for this reviewer he inadequately deals with the implications of divine foreknowledge.
Wayne Grudem's essay on Hebrews 6, as other reviewers have noted, is a highlight of the collection. Whilst Hebrews 6 is not the only problem passage for Perseverance to be found in the Bible (Ezekiel 18:24-26, 2 Peter 2: 20-22 and even John 15: 5-6 spring to mind), it is perhaps the most sustained teaching in the New Testament contradicting "Once Saved Always Saved". Grudem argues well for the passage to be read in a Calvinist light. Though he crowns his argument with the old cliché of "the backslider was never saved", the article ingratiates itself by neither quoting the Westminster Confession, nor trashing opposing views and by keeping its Biblical focus on the passage in hand, rather than wandering off into the warm, sunlit uplands of Romans 9-11, Ephesians 1-2 and certain parts of the Gospel of John. Would that more Calvinists took this approach!
Four articles deserve special consideration as between them they cover what is, in effect, the keystone of 5-point Calvinist doctrine. If Bruce Ware can prove Effectual Calling and Grace (those who are elect in Christ will be saved come what may), Thomas Schreiner can disprove Prevenient Grace (God's grace is extended to all, it is down to us to appropriate it in salvation - a key part of Wesleyan Arminianism), J.I Packer reconcile God's love being for all, but only saving the elect (without the elect having to do anything about it), and John Piper prove that there are two wills in God, then 5-point Calvinism has won the day and the emperor is truly clothed.
Though the arguments of these four authors are strong, and certainly scriptural, in the opinion of this reviewer, they are not compelling. Schreiner's comment that, "The scandal of the Calvinist system is that ultimately the problems posed cannot be fully resolved," sounds like an admission of defeat. He does not adequately resolve the passages which state that salvation (and hence God's grace) is offered to all, such as John 1:9-13 (note how easy it is to assume v.13 is predestinarian if you have already decided it to be so!) and John 3: 14-18. Ware uses scripture rather selectively in his defence of ECG. He admits that there are problems with passages such as Rom 10:13 but doesn't follow them through adequately. Packer writes a characteristically pithy article, but doesn't resolve the tension inherent in the question of whether God's love can still be for all in the face of limited atonement. The only true Calvinist resolution remains to go down Pink's route and make God's love truly selective. This would satisfy logic, but do a disservice to the Biblical revelation of God! Piper, probably Calvinism's leading apologist, rests too strongly on secondary sources. I also agree with another reviewer that he is wrong about 1 Tim 4:2. He is hamstrung by a false dichotomy between whether God's highest commitment is to his glory, or to a love relationship with the saved. Why should God have to choose - he is God after all!
Don Carson's article on Assurance is characteristically thoughtful, well written and rounded. In summarising Compatibilism (an attempt to reconcile the full Biblical revelation of God's character with 5-point Calvinism) Carson inadvertently reveals the problem: God's character as revealed in Jesus Christ through the Bible is too rich and multifaceted to fit into the confines of a theological system, even one as established as Calvinism. For this reason Still Sovereign is unlikely to be the last word on the subject.
Still Sovereign is a response to The Grace of God and the Will of Man, a collection of essays edited by Clark Pinnock in 1989. If time allows, reading the two volumes in parallel is highly recommended. As Grace of God is pre-Openness Pinnock (just - the germination of the Open Theist seed is obvious, and co-Open Theists Richard Rice and John Sanders feature prominently), the response in Sovereign is more measured and less knee-jerk than much of what has been published more recently. It is also a valuable introduction (and summary) of many of the contributors' theology, as well as contemporary 5-point Calvinist thought.
Overall, I highly recommend this book. I read it through to the end and found myself agreeing with quite a lot of it - and reading other parts with gritted teeth. Where it succeeds (where, I am sorry to report, Grace of God fails), is to keep its focus on the Bible, rather than appeal to philosophy. Still Sovereign's contributors are given enough space to develop their arguments, and are not constrained by the editor. Calvinism remains the majority view in evangelicalism, and this book explains it well.
Best AvailableReview Date: 2001-04-05
Overall, this book was well-written, scholarly, and Biblical. I highly recommend it. While not an easy-read, it is one of the best defenses of Calvinism I have encountered, and it puts most Arminian parallels to shame. For links to essays and articles written by John Piper and other Calvinists on predestination, I recommend the site,
...
This website is a massive resource of arguments for and against Calvinism, and is the best I have seen on this issue.
Thoughtful, challenging explanation of Reformed theologyReview Date: 2002-04-25
Like many other classic strips, you have to read long sections of it to really get a feel for it. I think the publishers did a good job of starting with the 1921 strips (they say they will eventually do a collection of the pre-1921 strips later on. Good idea, as I think starting it at the begining would have been a mistake).
Moderns readers should be warned that GA does take a while to grow on you. I think most readers today would be put off by how long it takes something to happen. And the strip, at least during 1921, seems to gyrate between Walt and baby Skeezix, and the other denizens of Gasoline Alley. The car-focus of the strip, which is very topical for the time, may put off people more used to the modern auto, if they aren't into cars themselves.
I certainly plan on getting future volumes. I do hope Drawn & Quartered will start doing some of the planned sunday volumes, too. Am put off by the high cost of Sunday Press Book's collection of GA sundays.