Wilson Books


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

Wilson
For Women Who Do Too Much Page-A-Day Calendar 2008
Published in Calendar by Workman Publishing Company (2007-06-30)
Author: Anne Wilson Schaef
List price: $11.99
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this title is an annual Christmas gift
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-19
The recipient looks forward to receiving the calendar every year for Christmas for the daily inspirations throughout the new year.

LOVE THIS
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-08
I try to live by the comments on the pages. They help me in my daily life!

Amazing !
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-22
It's the second year I ordered this wonderful calender, because the messages,spiritual and practical insights every day another one are absolutly amazing,funny, helpful and deeply inspiring ! I can absolutly recommend this day-to-day calender to every woman who is looking for a little mood-lifting message whenever needed..Enjoy it !
Eva from Belgium

Wilson
Four Colours Suffice
Published in Paperback by Penguin Books Ltd (2003-08-07)
Author: Robin J. Wilson
List price: $16.50
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The Four Colour Problem,
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 13 total.
Review Date: 2003-09-22
This is the sort of book which all popularizers of Mathematics aspire to. It is well written, mathematically honest, with absolutely minimal prerequisites. On finishing the book, the reader should have a good understanding of the essentials of the Four Colour Problem, and its solution.

"Four Colours Suffice" is essentially a chronological history of the Four Colour Conjecture (4CC), the attempts to solve it, the successes and failures, the incremental and fundamental steps forward.

Although Wilson mentions that most of the 20th century used the graph theory perspective to attack the problem, he sticks with the map presentation throughout.

Wilson has a very readable style. He gives the reader a real sense of the key elements of the story, such as Kempe's chain argument, the necessity of pentagons in a minimal criminal (a minimal counterexample to the 4CC), discharging, and reducible and unavoidable configurations. He gives background on the main characters, with excellent photos, and is mostly kind in his evaluation of various individual's contributions. He calls Kempe's flawed proof an excellent proof, and is sincere in that characterization.

The book is very focussed on the 4CC, but does mention related issues such as Heawood's Theorem on the torus, and empires, and Birkhoff's chromatic polynomial. There are no exercises, but there are several proofs, e.g. the five colour theorem.

The controversy over Appel & Haken's proof closes out the book.

I was surprised at the number of people who were nipping at the heels of the 4CC when Appel & Haken announced their solution. There must have been some deflated egos amongst them, but all of the experts supported Appel & Haken when their proof was criticized for its reliance on computers, and its apparent ugliness.

One very minor disappointment is the lack of a bibliography, but this is nullified by the references scattered throughout the endnotes. This is not a math textbook, but is excellent supplementary/bedtime reading. Perhaps it will stimulate a young mathematician to present us with a readable, convincing, and surveyable proof of the 4CC. A Proof From The Book might be too much to hope for, but we can dream.

Four Colours Suffice
Helpful Votes: 12 out of 13 total.
Review Date: 2002-11-10
Every now and then a mathematical book of an historical/overview nature arrives on the scene and deserves to be an instant success.
"Four Colours Suffice" by Robin Wilson is precisely such a book.
This book marks the 150th anniversary of one of the most famous of all mathematical problems: How many colours are needed to colour in a map so that no two adjacent countries have the same colour?
The problem is famous for two main reasons:
(1) It is very simple to understand but incredibly difficult to solve.
(2) It was eventually solved in 1976 with computer assistance and represents the first major mathematical theorem which continues to resist any attmpet at a solution not requiring computer assitance.

The full story of how the proof finally came about has to rank as one of the most fascinating stories in the history of mathematics and Robin Wilson's account is full of interesting anecdotes and lots of humourous asides.
Wilson has gone to immense trouble to ensure that his book is both accurate and understandable to the novice. All in all a truly rewarding read for anyone with even a cursory interest in mathematics.

. . Ted Swart . .

Solved
Helpful Votes: 75 out of 75 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-14
Review of: "Four Colors Suffice - How the Map Problem Was Solved"

By: Robin Wilson

The four color map theorem is easy to understand and hard to prove.

The four color map theorem states that on a plane, which is divided into non-overlapping contiguous regions, the regions can be colored with four colors in such a way that all regions are colored and no two adjacent regions have the same color. In other words you can color any ordinary map with just four colors.

The proof of the four color theorem is very difficult. It is so difficult that the proof took over a century. The search for a proof was so long and became so complex that some mathematicians speculated that it was impossible. The four color served as one of the first real mathematical challenges posed to mathematics undergraduate students.

The statement of the challenge was deceptively simple. Prove that four colors are sufficient. The statement of the problem is so simple that it seems the solution should be equally simple. It is not simple. In 1976 the four-color theorem was finally demonstrated. The authors of the proof are Kenneth Appel and Wolfgang Haken of the University of Illinois.

The book "Four Colors Suffice" is the story of the century long search for the proof. The effort culminated in a computer program. Appel and Haken restated the problem as a collection of 1,936 types of maps. They had a computer program prove each of these 1,936 forms.

The author succeeds in conveying the excitement of the competition in those final months. This book shows the drama of one of the most exciting episodes of modern mathematics.

See also:

Graphs, Colourings and the Four-Colour Theorem (Oxford Science Publications)

The Four-Color Theorem: History, Topological Foundations, and Idea of Proof

Introduction to Graph Theory (4th Edition)

I thoroughly enjoyed this thoughtful and exciting book.



Wilson
Fred Carrasco, the heroin merchant
Published in Unknown Binding by Heidelberg (1975)
Author: Wilson McKinney
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i have to have this book!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-08-26
if anyone knows where i can find a copy of this book, please email me.

Searching for this book
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2000-04-27
I have been seareching gor this book for a very, very long time. If the reader who rated this book please submit another review and let me know where I can obtain a copy ,I would greatly appreciate it.

Product of the enviroment, I understand
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 1999-02-23
The story as told, is great. But the end that is told, is just a beginning of what was yet to come. It has to still happen and will continue to be, I and we, are all products of our enviroment, it's just the way it should be (or the only way we know how it should be).

Wilson
Fresh Wisdom: Breakthrough to Enlightenment
Published in Paperback by BookSurge Publishing (2005-11-15)
Authors: Tony Hope, Markus Hart, and Vicki Wilson
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The Most Profound Book You Will Ever Read
Helpful Votes: 12 out of 13 total.
Review Date: 2005-11-23
Fresh Wisdom is definitely not for everyone, and if you are sensitive about fast-held beliefs you should definitely not purchase this book.

The authors show no mercy as they expose commonly accepted deceptions and delusions in the 5 key areas of life:
Health and Longevity;
Romance, Love and Relationships;
Independent Wealth Creation;
Metaphysical and Spiritual Realities, and;
Sovereignty and Personal Privacy.

Fresh Wisdom has changed my world view entirely, and as a result my life has changed completely.

If you are one of the few who realize 'things are not as they seem', this book will 'make sense of life in a senseless world'. If, however, you are happy in your cocoon of life, you will find some of the revelations too uncomfortable to accept and should perhaps consider a less controversial alternative.

Fresh Wisdom presents a paradigm (or way of looking at life) that will enable one to answer any challenging life issue. Get it if you are in any way frustrated with what you see happening in the world around you - you will finally grok why things are the way they are.

A life-changing work!
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2006-01-05
Fresh Wisdom has had an incredible impact on my life. It has helped me escape from that `held back', stifled, chained feeling I have had my entire life. Fresh Wisdom has helped me to break free of so many shackles that have prevented me from living life to it's full. It has helped me to understand so much about my past choices and `mistakes', and to actually change the way I think and live my life. I now live without guilt; am happy and content every day of my life; don't judge those I meet but have a new capacity for love; have that incredible feeling of living with my `eyes wide open'; but most of all have discovered the purpose of my life, which has literally transformed me. I wake up every day with a bounce in my step and anticipation in my heart. I no longer drag myself out of bed, dreading the day ahead and the boredom of life. I know exactly what I want and what I need to achieve every day. I am no longer distracted from this by other people's needs and agendas. I now truly know the meaning of what it is to be FREE.

Great Reading
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2006-01-09
Paradigm shifting. I wish this book would become a best seller, because this would mean that there has been some sort of great awakening. Regardless, I am delighted to be one of a chosen few who can say he has been laboring to internalize all that this life "textbook" contains.

This book is must reading for anyone who knows that something in this world has gone wrong and is attempting to lift that proverbial veil of deception. It shows the reader how to prepare spiritually, financially, and personally for the coming difficult times. I have a mission in life and that is to edify and admonish others while there is time.

Please read and spread the Truth. Once you learn, you will know why the Apostle Paul preached and admonished as much as he did. He knew that this life was only a test and a preparation for something inconceivably wonderful after this - but only if we pass the test. This makes a great study guide. Please pass the test. God Bless.

Wilson
The wound and the bow: Seven studies in literature (A Galaxy book)
Published in Unknown Binding by Oxford University Press (1965)
Author: Edmund Wilson
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The myth of the invalid hermit: incurable and stinking wound, but invincible weapon
Helpful Votes: 12 out of 14 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-11
Since I look around with open eyes, I find hermits all over the place. Weird.
Philoctetes is the hermit in question here. He is a hero of a Sophocles play, (and a Gide play,) and he has some part in the Troyan war. But leave that aside.
Wilson's small volume of 7 highly interesting essays is a look at the lives and work of an odd collection of writers: Dickens and Kipling, Wharton and Hemingway, Joyce, Casanova, Sophocles. Sophocles provides the overarching theme, spelled out in Gide nearer to our time: genius and disease, strength and mutilation, may be inextricably bound together.
Well, I don't know, but it provides a mighty interesting way of looking at these writers.
EW's opinion on Dickens is unambiguously positive: he praises D's complexity and depth. D's version of invalidity is of the childhood trauma kind: the abrupt descent into poverty and misery at age 12, the fall from middle class schooling to factory work obviously left a deep mark on his mind and on his future sujets.
Kipling is more dramatic due to a series of traumas, but also for having failed to achieve what he seemed to promise. H.James once saw in him a potential Balzac of the Empire. That didn't happen, instead the man became obnoxious and fell out of fashion, quite rightly. K had a cruel experience as a 6 year old, when his parents left him and his sister in the care of an evil aunt and her family. The ordeal lasted 6 years. Later, K suffered the loss of a little daughter due to an illness, and of a teenage son in WW1.
Casanova is somewhat of an odd man out. The essay is interesting for its interpretation of the spectacular autobiography of the Italian adventurer. Where was his wound? Can't see it. C seems to have written the memoirs while he was falling on hard times, to the extent that he had to accept employment as a spy. Hardly equivalent to a stinking wound.
Good to know that EW didn't overstate his theory.
Wharton is described as an uninteresting writer in her early phase, then an interesting one, (and not a James copyer,) in her middle phase, but a flop again in her final years. EW's theory on this strikes me as a bit simple: she, W, had a highly stressful and unsuccessful marriage during her strong phase. Well, isn't that a bit mechanistic?
The Hemingway essay is great in its ambiguity. H hated it so much that his publisher had to refuse to print The Wound and the Bow. EW writes that H's media personality in the 30s was his own worst invention: obnoxious, arrogant, belligerent, and boastful. But EW praises quite a few of H's books. He mentions that in the Spain war H had sided for a while with the Stalinists, but that he seems to have overcome that phase.
The Joyce essay deals mainly with the then recent Finnegans Wake. EW has a superb quote from JJ, which encapsulates the man's state of mind perfectly: The demand that I make of my reader is that he should devote his whole life to reading my works. EW thinks, JJ has somehow overdone it. What a lovely understatement.
One theory on the Wake: since JJ was nearly blind, suffering from glaucoma, the book is written for the ear, not the eye. So there we have a wound.
Interesting side observation: EW never mentions Orwell. I wonder if he knew him at all. Both men wrote substantial essays on Dickens at about the same time (might be worth comparing; eg Orwell finds a surprising lack of the actual work life in D's work; that escaped EW). Both men wrote some about Spain and seem to be rather on the same page re the political appraisal of the role of the SU.
Worth while stuff.

To be stronger at the broken places
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-24
One of the subjects of these seven essays, which have their center on the theme of ' the wound and the bow', Ernest Hemingway spoke after his famous First World One wounding, about 'being stronger at the broken places'. The major idea and myth around which this group of essays center is the myth of Philocetes, the Wound and the Bow. The final essay of this work explicates and retells the myth. Philocetes has been charged with Heracles with the task of lighting his funeral - pyre. For this he is rewarded with Heracles, great weapon, a bow. On the way to wage the war against Troy the Greek stop in a small island. Philocetes approaches the local shrine to worship and his given a terrible bite by a snake. The wound does not heal, rather festers. And it gives off a terrible smell. The fellow- warriors of Philocetes abandon him to his terrible suffering, and to the additional suffering of loneliness. Years pass. The Greeks are not able to triumph over the Trojans. They capture one of the Trojan soothsayers who tells them that they will never triumph unless they use the arms of Heracles. Odysseus returns to the island where Philocetes has been abandoned. Wilson in retelling the story focuses on the version of Sophocles, and not on parallel ones of Aeschylus and Euripedes. In this version Heracles son at the behest of Odysseus attempts to persuade Philocetes to give over the weapon. The young man is honest and does not wish to engage in the ruse and deceptions suggested by Odysseus. Essentially Odysseus instructs him to be deceitful for this one time, so that they can be more honest later on. But the young man refuses, and in so doing provides his loyalty to Philocetes, his understanding of his suffering. As a result they venture with the bow to Troy where the Greeks at last have their victory.
For Wilson the heart of this book is in the theme that those who go through some extraordinary suffering may be granted with it extraordinary powers of creation. He illustrates the theme in reading the works of Dickens, Kipling, Joyce, Wharton, and Hemingway.
Wilson was a critic of enormous erudition who could sweep through and bring together learning from diverse worlds. He was a pioneer in his own seeing of the value of the great turn- of- the century literary creators . A master man- of - letters this book of essays remains one of his best works.

Parentless and helpless child
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 13 total.
Review Date: 2004-08-05
Dickens was Dostoyevsky's master. Shaw and Chesterton saw Dickens as a very great writer. His grandfather had been a butler and his grandmother a housekeeper. When Charles's father went to Marshalsea Prison when he was twelve his life changed. His whole nature was penetrated by grief and humiliation. Wilson's theory is that the literary work is compensation for the wound. In the middle of his career Dickens experienced a mounting dislike for the top layers of middle class society. Dickens invented a new literary genre, the novel of the social group. In LITTLE DORRIT the fable was presented through imprisoning states of mind. Dickens was emotionally unstable, almost as unstable as Dostoyevsky.

The wound of Kipling also occurred in his childhood when his parents left him in the care of a heartless aunt while they returned to India. The trauma is recounted by Kipling in BAA, BAA BLACK SHEEP. Kipling's sister termed the place the 'house of desolation'. Kipling's work was shot through with hate. Kipling's failure of nerve may be explained by the fact that he lacked faith in the artist's vocation. Some stories show Kipling's morbid permanent sense of injury. Inescapable illness dominates the later Kipling.

The theme of Casanova's Memoirs is the many things life may hold. Edith Wharton's later work dulled the reputation of her earlier work. Kipling, Dickens, Wharton were all maladjusted. Edith Wharton writes of the conflict between the individual and the social group. Mrs. Wharton was always aware of the pit of misery, the wastefulness of the plutocracy. Wilson believes that Mrs. Wharton's genius was triggered by an exceptional emotional strain.

Hemingway possessed an exceptional mimetic gift. He mastered a precise and clear style. The actual title of the collection of essays is derived from Wilson's essay on Sophocles's play, PHILOCTETES. There is the conception that superior strength is inseparable from disability.

Wilson
Ghost Writer
Published in Paperback by Amber Quill Press, LLC (2004-03)
Author: Staci Layne Wilson
List price: $17.00
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T. M. Gray's review from Book of Dark Wisdom magazine:
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2004-10-21
Where do a writer's words come from? Some might say they pour forth from the mind, personal demons or imaginings, dreams and nightmares...but what if the answer is something else entirely? Meet Cary Bouchard, art associate secretary and struggling fiction writer. A quiet man, his only friend in the world is his pet canary until the horrors of his fantasies springs to life. His typewriter begins spewing forth pages he doesn't recall typing quickly forming a full length novel to be snatched up by a publisher with an unbelievably generous offer. Sure, they change the title of his book--but what the hey?--Bouchard becomes a best-selling author. Overnight, his fortune has changed, and so has his life. Too bad he didn't read the fine print in his contract....

First-class storyteller, Staci Layne Wilson, has a style that is all her own: from her wicked tongue-and-cheek insider play on words and names to the heart she puts into the tale. She evokes the reader's compassion for her mild-mannered main character--from being publicly dissected by a talk show host to his mounting terror at the long string of grisly murders that keep mysteriously finding their way to him . . . with an ending so tightly twisted that it fits perfectly!

Also, you'll find an added bonus: Wilson's short story, Lover's Eye, at the end of GHOST WRITER: a delightfully erotic, stomach-flipping tale of everything you've ever thought (and heard) about eyeballs, spun into a diabolically visual yarn about artist Iris Blume and her passionate greed for instruments of sight.

GHOST WRITER is among her very best works yet; I'm doing more than looking forward to reading more Staci Layne Wilson books--I'm begging her to hurry up and write another one! Visit Staci on the web at: www.staciwilson.com

[posted with permission from Book of Dark Wisdom]

Riveting! A great read!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2004-10-14
This book kept me guessing from beginning to end. A spine-tingling tale told with such smooth-flowing prose, I can't believe I haven't heard of this author before. I've no doubt I'll be hearing a lot more about Staci Layne Wilson in the future. If this book is any indication of her other work, I'm going to own them all. I highly recommend "Ghostwriter" to anyone who likes a truly frightening, look over your shoulder, read.

Spooky, devilish fun!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2004-06-12
I absolutely devoured this novel from page one till the bitter end. Never a dull moment, and it's funny and scary at the same time. The writing style is really different and totally complelling. I ordered another book by Staci Layne Wilson, based on the strength of this one, and I am biting my nails with aniticipation -- that's how I am, when I discover a new writer I like.

Wilson
Good Zap, Little Grog
Published in Hardcover by Walker Books Ltd (1995-09-04)
Author: Sarah Wilson
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Please Reprint
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-01-29
My daughter is 14 now and still lets me read this every now and then to her! This was her favorite bedtime book for many years. I wish it was in reprint so I could buy it for friends having babies and grandchildren.

A fun and happy read
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-08-21
My 16 mos old daughter loves this book. We read it at least once a day. I love the idea that "the giant chiwangas are starting to sink" means that the day is almost over. Silly, calming and engaging.

This is a wonderful book!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 1999-12-06
This is a completely charming book, showing a child going through his day, from waking to sleep, in a world surrounded by imaginary and intriguing creatures. They are vaguely Dr. Suess-like, but the illustrations and simple, short rhymes appeal to even smaller children. My one-year old nephew loves it (again and again), and my child, now eight, enjoys these unique creatures and the made-up words. It is a book that I'm happy to read too, especially in the evening, since the child goes to sleep in the end. I highly recommend this book, with its great illustrations and rhythm.

Wilson
Haunted by Dreams
Published in Kindle Edition by Hard Shell Word Factory (2002-09-01)
Author: Norah Wilson
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A Strong New Voice In Romance!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2002-11-25
Norah Wilson is a strong new voice in romance and definitely not to be missed. Haunted By Dreams is a contemporary second-chance-at-love story about Canadian Natives. When Cassandra Ashe walks into John Deadmarsh's university class after disappearing from his life 17 years ago, John is immediately swamped not only by feelings of unrequited love, but also betrayal. With wonderful characterization and detail, Ms. Wilson skillfully leads us along Cassandra's and John's rocky road to love. Haunted By Dreams will stay with you long after you've finished the last page.

Compelling and Wonderful
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2002-11-26
Haunted by dreams is a heart rending story of love, life's challenges. And, through struggle - success.

From the first page, I was hooked. John Deadmarsh is a scrumptious, larger than life, believable hero who has searched for his lost love for seventeen years.

We feel the struggles and disappointments Cassandra Ash suffers, even though, through it all, she's able to keep going.

This book delves into issues simmering under the surface of native society and faces them head on.

The immediate and growing emotions between the hero and heroine kept me turning pages with expectation until the very end.

A very satisfying read!

I couldn't put it down!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2002-11-13
The very first scene of Haunted By Dreams caused a delightful shiver to run up my spine. Cassandra Ashe meets her old lover John Deadmarsh at a university and Bang! the sparks fly. The more I read, the more intense their relationship. John is bitter, not trusting Cassandra one bit. To him, she's flighty, not to be trusted, but the reader knows better and yet, we understand him as well. Ms Wilson has done the extraordinary, written a long-overdue story about Native Canadians in a modern, realistic romance. Well done! This one's a keeper!

Wilson
He Walked Among Us
Published in Paperback by Here's Life Publishers (1988)
Authors: Josh McDowell and Bill Wilson
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It will erase any doubt and change your life forever
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 18 total.
Review Date: 1999-05-24
It will certainly change the way you look at life and it will make a beleiver out of you

Wonderful Book - Although a little technical for some
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-26
This books gives wonderful background on the historical, factual evidence for life and death of Christ. The author systematically lays down the evidence point by point and chapter by chapter. One problem some readers may find is that the book is very academic at times and can seem like a text book to those who get bored easily. As an engineer, I enjoyed the way the book was logically laid out, but my wife couldn't get more than 1/3 of the way through before deciding that she'd had enough. It is also a lengthy book, over 300 pages, but it's well worth the time spent for those who are looking for bullets when discussing Jesus & the Bible's account of His life with non-believers.

One nugget - many literary scholars doubt the truthfulness of the Bible by claiming there are many inaccuracies that have crept in over the years. However, we have thousands of orginal manuscripts of the New Testament books - some dating to less than 100 yrs after the actual events. These same literary scholars have no problem with the accuaracy of the works of Archimedes or Socrates or Julius Caeser despite the earliests known manuscripts for their works dating almost 1000 yrs after the documents were written. Of course, this isn't really a literary issue - it's a God issue - but it's noteworthy nonetheless.

Amateurish Writing; Astounding Information
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2004-03-28
The writing is sometimes a little amateurish as it includes hand-tipping phrases like "in the next chapter we will be getting into..." etc., etc.
Nevertheless, the factual/historical information itself is such that it still renders it worthy of very high marks. It pretty much blows the doors off so-called "higher-critism" and shows you that Jesus was real, is real, and was and is exactly who He said He was/is. If an unbeliever reads this book and still goes away an unbeliever, he seriously has only himself to blame. They are without excuse (Romans 1).

Wilson
Health for Midlife Women: When You Think You Are Falling Apart (Dispatches from the Frontlines of Medicine)
Published in Paperback by Whiskey Hollow Press (2004-07)
Author: Kathleen W. Wilson
List price: $21.95
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Every woman over 35 should have this book!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-02
This is a fantastic book and I highly recommend it for any woman over 35.
It addresses every health issue that may concern a woman of middle age, in a clear, direct and easy to undertand manner. It is a no-nonsense book: not only does the author let you know when to worry, but also when to NOT worry about a symptom. That is great for women who are suffering vague symptoms and do not know when or if they should see a doctor.

The author makes clear and convincing arguemnts for eating well, exercising and so on. There is nothing new there but she encourages small changes, rather than a major life overhaul. The small changes add up, as she illustrates with case studies of women who chose to take care of themselves and those who did not. The comparisons clearly show how much of our health is impacted by our own everyday choices.

Finally, I have never read a better explanation of why women should be very concerned with their bone health. I knew it was important, but after reading this book, I am going to take more steps to protect my bones. I know now how critical that it is thanks to this book. The section on osteoporosis alone can save your life, and the sections on heart disease and blood pressure can do the same. Well worth the price of the book.

Excellent
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-23
I enjoyed the book and loaned it to my daughter- in-law and my daughter. Both found the information very informative and also classified it as excellent.

Important Health Facts for Middle-Aged Women
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2004-12-02
This book was loaded with current information I could use about myself. I think it will be as important as Our Body Ourselves and The Wisdom of Menopause in teaching women how their bodies work, how to keep themselves healthy, how to reduce stress, and how to manage in the medical system.


Books-Under-Review-->Reference-->Biography-->W-->Wilson-->42
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