Columbia Books
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This book and the web site REALLY measure up!!Review Date: 2008-09-18
Brain Candy for Statistical GeeksReview Date: 2008-09-11
Exceptionally useful for a wide variety of research purposesReview Date: 2008-08-11
Truly Eye-OpeningReview Date: 2008-07-15
The report is unique and the first of its kind in that it exclusively examines the United States all the way down to its 436 congressional districts. Likewise, even more specific lenses are provided when ethnicity, age, income, etc are all included. From all this, index scores are computed and given to each locality and state, allowing readers to rank and compare just how well-off we all are. This is truly an innovative report that is well worth a long look.
Preliminary Review: BUY THIS BOOK, Challenge Both CandidatesReview Date: 2008-08-07
This is a preliminary review to encourage one and all to buy this book, but especially Americans who read and are smart enough to realize that the two candidates for President are both illiterate and incoherent. I am quite sure neither one of them has read this book or any other book remotely relevant to curing all that ails America.
Some first impressions--this week-end or next I will do one of my "full up" reviews with a summarization of key points.
1) This book benefits from the best possible work of the United Nations with respect to evaluating human development.
2) The model measures a long and healthy life, access to knowledge, and a decent standard of living in a credible useful way.
3) The over-all development of this book, including font, white space, and illustrations in color, is superb.
4) The US is collapsing and this book explains why on all fronts.
I am deeply impressed by this work. It is a stake in the heart of US politics and the corruption that defines the leadership of America across all fronts (government, corporate, media, labor leaders, and religion)--all crooked and all working AGAINST the public interest.
BUY THIS BOOK! Nothing would please me more--nor be more salutory for the health of this once great Nation--than to have hundreds of you waving this book in each candidate's face, demanding that they read it, review it, and act upon its fundamental recommendations.
One small example: the book examines how low-education and low-income parents create new generations of low-education and low-income children, for lack of a coherent program to lift all children.
BRAVO!

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A welcome addition to Native American art/culture studies.Review Date: 2000-04-06
Mythic Beings : Spirit Art of the Northwest CoastReview Date: 2000-07-30
Impressive Book on Northwest Coast ArtReview Date: 1999-12-13
Mythic Beings features 75 beautifully reproduced photographs of masks, robes, and rattles representing the work of 34 artists. Each artist provides a commentary about his/her piece. This provides an opportunity to become familiar with the physical depiction and mythological roles of the creatures depicted by the artists.
Mythic Beings is a gem. It is a wonderful gift book for anyone interested in indigenous art and First Nations peoples.
Mythic Beings : Spirit Art of the Northwest CoastReview Date: 2000-07-30
A FINDReview Date: 2004-05-22
Mr. Wyatt also allows the artists to describe for the readers their inspirations and ideas behind their products, which allows us to get to know them a little. After a short while I was able to determine the various artists based upon the varying styles of the pieces depicted here.
Highly recommended!

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Looks like a gem so farReview Date: 2007-12-12
Reading the Bible with Fresh EyesReview Date: 2006-09-12
A New Look at an Old Book: A Biblical JourneyReview Date: 2007-04-22
On a personal level, this book has given me one more way to explore and view Jewish history and my own beliefs. I did a small bit of serious studies ages ago, when I was in my teens, but there was a long lapse until I picked it up a few years back. It's becoming increasingly important to me and I'm grateful for everything that helps me in a search to find some intelligent sense in my Jewish universe.
What else do I like so much about Daniel Hillel's book? That he explores and explains the meaning of words. His appreciation of women. And the beauty of his language. I was especially moved by the passages on the "land of your fathers" and the spirit of the desert.
I hope that this book will generate interest in reading the Bible from an environmental perspective. I think that it deserves to be seen as an important reference in the field of biblical studies.
The Landscape of GodReview Date: 2007-02-02
Ecology and CultureReview Date: 2007-03-20
In summary, a tour de force without knowlege of which every student of the Bible and the cultural world which derives from it cannot feel complete.
Haim Gunner, Ph.D.
Professor Emeritus, Environmental Sciences
University of Massachusetts

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Great BookReview Date: 2008-05-14
The best guide I've ever seen.Review Date: 2007-05-01
The only guide you will need when visiting the NY areaReview Date: 2002-10-24
Interesting and UsefulReview Date: 2006-01-19
I found the tree data (leaf, young bark, mature bark, fruit, crown shape, and where to locate examples in and around NYC) sufficient to make many local identifications so far.
One would presumably have an existing interest in tree identification to go and buy a book like this. However, if given as an unexpected gift, there is enough sincerity and information that it just might spark an interest in finding and knowing the wonderful, living trees that cohabitate with us in NYC.
know the tree you're huggingReview Date: 2003-08-06


True AmericaReview Date: 2006-07-29
As we slide into this new global society people's interests are seeming to take a keen look into what this country has had to offer and the ways of life in the past for those of this nation....orchards, like Johnny Appleseed type feel and what we don't get in the history books. The interest in nature's nooks and crannies, dwellings of family and the need to go into your own family tree. Truly inspirational. Read closely books like these because they are a dying breed. Or maybe immerging....?
Early Irrigation Farming in the Washington State Columbia River BasinReview Date: 2006-04-11
To date, the heroic efforts the irrigation projects exacted from the early farmers to develop orchards and farms nourished by irrigation has received little attention from historians. Mendenhall describes how the families formed a lively, thriving community whose members supported each other through the hard time and shared a common vision of irrigation farming's future.
In spite of the White Bluff farming families' resolve to turn the desert into an Eden, the story of how their efforts were impacted by the railroads and power monopolies and by the US government itself, including the devastating Hanford Atomic Project, makes this book an important contribution to Washington State history.
A fine accomplishment!Review Date: 2006-05-06
A Family and a TownReview Date: 2006-01-26
The material for this book came from a variety of sources. The author began with a wealth of information saved in her grandparents' letters which she agumented through interviews of her aunts and uncles who had grown up in the comunity of White Bluffs. Her story has been further informed by narratives of other families from the area as well as reserch of historical resources. The results are both informative and interesting.
I found her description of the social structure of the community of White Bluffs to be particularly fascinating. She used her grandmother and great-grandmother's experiences in White Bluffs society as examples to illustrate the role of women in building social cohesion in rural America.
Children played an essential role in the economic survival of farming families. These roles were still vivid in the memories of the surviving aunts and uncles. In areas where there is no direct evidence the author makes reasonable guesses and clearly indicates when she is doing so.
I heartily recommend this book for people interested in history of the West or family stories.
A trip worth more than a goalReview Date: 2005-11-27
> In WHITE BLUFFS, Nancy Mendenhall has brought to
> life in vivid detail the
> birth, maturation and death of a tiny desert town.
> She tells the story
> through the eyes of one family, which sets out to
> create the good life for
> themselves and their children, pioneering as
> irrigation orchardists along the
> Columbia River in eastern Washington. Their dream
> lasted from 1906 until the
> confiscation of their land for the Manhattan Project
> during WWII, through another
> world war and the Great Depression. An economic
> balance sheet would say that
> their dream failed; but the richly woven human
> story revealed in WHITE BLUFFS
> -- history which reads like a novel -- tells a
> different tale. Through all
> their struggles, these wonderful people loved their
> river, their homestead,
> the town they'd helped create, their lives in it
> and each other, steadily day
> by day for almost forty years, as few of us are
> gifted or privileged enough
> to do.
>
>
__________________________________

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Very practicalReview Date: 2001-10-14
One of the best book I ever readReview Date: 1999-09-06
I agree with every words that printed on the back cover i.e. the analysis and design techniques that really work.
A great find!Review Date: 1997-12-13
Platform independent, plain english, and complete - buy it.Review Date: 1998-10-27
This book is for people who want to be productive. It is not for people who like sitting in all day meetings trying to come up with the CUTEST idea.
To get a straight forward answer on associative entities/relationships was like a breath of fresh air. I was told once that you should never have to use association tables. You should maintain the integrity of the database via code - yeah right.
I have recommended this book to every developer I know. This book should purge your mind of every piece of useless information that anyone has ever told you on how to approach building and designing applications.
Easy to read, easy to learn, truly practical techniques.Review Date: 1998-06-23
Dave writes in a terse, easy-to-read, plain English style. All jargon, theories and concepts are explained in a simple, straightforward words, emphasizing their practical use. I've been studying this stuff for years, and Dave has written the clearest explanation of event modeling I've ever read. Humorous examples and analogies are used to lighten up abstract concepts. The "Chicken Crossing the Road" example used to explain associative entities is unforgettable. Lots of delightful cartoons, diagrams, screens and models drawn by the author also underscore important points and keep the pace moving from cover to cover.
As an instructor, I would highly recommend using this as a text in systems analysis and design courses. Each chapter concludes with a quiz and there is case study that brings all the tools and techniques together in a system design for a veterinary practice.
If you're reviewing system design techniques or learning them for the first time, Dave's concise descriptions and humor will keep you engaged and moving along at a rapid pace.

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An excellent workReview Date: 2008-01-26
A major contribution toward understanding modern JapanReview Date: 2001-08-05
Excellent writing and historical researchReview Date: 2004-02-09
A Gem of HistoryReview Date: 2004-02-28
This book follows the events leading up to the Meiji Restoration, and it especially focuses on Sakamoto's role in setting it up. It provides an overview leading up to this period and shows that there were many factors which lead to the overthrow of the Shogun. Perry's arrival was only a trigger that unleashed years of frustration. To get a better grasp of Japanese politics, I think this book is an excellent source for understanding the founding of the modern Japanese state.
Ryoma!Review Date: 2001-06-25

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Through the Someday Window...Review Date: 2007-03-25
Michael Burke ReadingReview Date: 2006-10-27
I went to Professor Burkes reading last night and it was so fun. His book is full of humor, at least, the passages he read were. I haven't read the whole book (yet).
But from what I heard, I am buying it and I would recommend it!
Very good bookReview Date: 2006-09-16
WONDERFUL MEMOIR - MY KIND OF BOOK!Review Date: 2008-06-03
The author, Michael Burke, dropped out of the University of California-Berkeley, and became, through faking his lack of experience, a white water river guide. Burke has apparently been guiding now for over thirty five years. The author obviously continued his education, as he now teaches at a University, and beyond a doubt, the guy can certainly write. In 1991, when the author was 38, he found himself with a pregnant wife, two step-children, an academic career, living in Maine and driving a station wagon. Now, although the author does not admit to the fact, it is pretty obvious he is probably losing some of his hair, getting less muscle tone than he had when he was twenty, and, most importantly,(again, not really stated)is feeling rather trapped. Gosh, it does not take much of a creative leap to figure out that a gigantic mid-life crises is about to descend on this poor guy. This is okay though, at least Burke faced his crises with class, like a man, and did not go the route of gold chains around his neck, a little sports car, a poor comb-over and chase twenty year old undergrads around campus; something we see all too frequently. Rather, he returned to the roots of his youth, the river!
The Same River Twice is the story of Michael Burke's journey down three rivers in the Canadian Wilderness of British Columbia. Using his old river raft, a left over from his youth, and in the company of a relative stranger, a fellow adventurer, who was chasing his own demons, the author starts on a very poorly planned adventure. The premise of the trip is to find and trace the territory traveled by distant relative of the author's, who himself was a famous river man during the Klondike glory days at the turn of the century. The author feels a connection with this long dead river man and wants to strengthen this connection with information. The story Michael tells of his trip is interwoven with stories of this old river man mixed with tales of the author's own glory days as a professional guide on some of the most famous white water rivers in North America. This three section story is wonderfully intertwined and the author has the ability to make you feel you are in all three eras with him, as he physically and mentally journeys through them.
Burke's ability as a descriptive writer is truly wonderful. His true love for the wilderness, for the wild places in our planet, for wildlife, solitude and yes, danger, comes shinning through on every page. You can actually squint in your mind's eye, as you read his prose and picture what he is seeing as he writes. The author makes a point that this sort of thing, once experienced, never quite leaves your blood. Great bodies of water have been apart of our souls throughout time...once you are hooked, you are hooked for life.
This work is truly a satisfying read, one of the better reads I have had in sometime now. I will quite likely give this one a second going over down the road. I must admit that I would love for this author to give us another book, telling of his adventures on the other rivers that he ran while learning his trade. The author can be quite humorous at times and I suspect was and is quite good at camp fire stories. It would be a delight to read some of them. NOTE: There seems to be a great deal of nonfiction writing coming out of Maine right now, and has been over the past few years. To be quite frank, the only thing I really knew about Maine was that they had Moose, potatoes, had a good store to order clothes from, and made good canoes...now I find the place is full of good writers...go figure.
Child of glaciersReview Date: 2008-05-07
Having guided seasonally since he was a college student, Burke at thirty-eight was married, a professor at a college in Maine, with a baby on the way. This ambitiously planned trip was a three-week-long pilgrimage to the places where a distant relative, Sid Barrington, had lived a life of legend on the wild rivers of long ago. Burke, along with a stranger named Max whose only qualification was availability, set out with an ancient rubber raft, a heavy load of gear, a rifle in case of bears, and jury-rigged arrangements with bush pilots. From this unpromising start, Mike and Max had a soul-stirring experience in this "humbling land."
Putting in by plane to breathtaking Chutine Lake, they worked their way down glacier-fed rivers with wild names: the Chutine, the Stikine, the Sheslay, the Taku. Along the way they encountered black bears, grizzlies, moose, and on one memorable evening a wolf with two pups. Burke's deep love of the challenging terrain is evident throughout the book.
Stories of the old river runner, Sid, are woven in, along with some hair-raising stories of Burke's younger days as a guide; a wild, adrenaline-saturated life that he remembers with affection at this settling-down time of life. Thoughts of his pregnant wife are with him always but he was unable to resist the pull of the river.
Why do this crazy, dangerous thing? Burke writes about the meaning of memory as a defining concept; about freedom and control. But mostly it's because he loves the rivers. "Rivers," he writes, "are an experience of time. The river is more human than the ocean, limited like humans are, yet sweeping forward in its implacable way, like time itself sweeping past. We are proportioned to rivers..."
Have you ever stood on the slope of a mountain and felt its age and power? Looked up into the weird blue ice of a glacier and heard its deep voice? Or even felt the edge of a river on your ankles and known that it flowed according to forces older than time? Then you should read this book. The geography is bewildering but just put in at the beginning and let the current take you to the end, rapids and all. You're sure to feel the awe and beauty of the planet's wild places. Go there, even if it's just in a book.
Linda Bulger, 2008

Plenty of inspirationReview Date: 2008-10-16
For the artist or craftsman who wants to make something inspired by polyhedra, this book is perfect. This is one of my favorite books because every time I pick it up I have a new idea for something to make.
Quite charming book on polyhedraReview Date: 2006-11-23
An excellent introduction to Archimedean Star PolyhedraReview Date: 2001-02-14
If you find this material as compellingly fascinating as I do, you may want to follow up this book with these two:
"Polyhedron Models," by Magnus Wenninger, has a more thorough and systematic treatment of the Archimedean star polyhedra than Holden's book. These include some incredibly complicated models of "snub" star polyhedra -- spectacular stuff that is not included here. (On the other hand, Wenninger's book costs a good deal more.)
"Regular Polytopes," by H.S.M. Coxeter, is an elegantly written introduction to polyhedra in 3 and 4 dimensions. Coxeter himself wrote the first systematic treatment of the Archimedean star-polyhedra, and helped to discover the last few in the process. This book's illustrations are nowhere near as nice as the other ones', but this is balanced by its more rigorous mathematical treatment of the theme. Somebody needs to come up with a better way (using computer graphics?) to illustrate higher-dimensional polyhedra. In the meantime, this inexpensive book is the best I know on the subject.
Little GemReview Date: 2002-01-19
Most of the book is occupied with a treatment of regular and semiregular polyhedra, prisms and antiprisms. These are examined in some depth--for example, all nine regular polyhedra are constructed. The last fifty pages introduce other topics, such as packing, lattices, and knots; the treatment here is very brief, somewhat disappointing and leaving a desire for more depth. The same can be said of the final section, on construction--Holden gives general guidelines but leaves the reader to compute the dimensions of all the faces of his models himself.
The prose is clear and concise, rare for a mathematics book. But the real substance lies in the photographs of polyhedra models. These are contructed in such a way that it is always easy to see the details of the solid: faces of different shapes are made of different shades of paper, complicated models are shown in intermediate stages of construction, polyhedra to be compared (such as duals) are shown as individuals and interpenetrating. The great icosidodecahedron photo on page 112 (or its companion that might go by the same name on page 98) is almost worth the price of the book by itself.
This is not a rigorous treatment of the subject, but it is a beautiful one.
A beautiful, simple and elegant book on polyhedraReview Date: 1998-11-01

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Spirit Bear:Encounters with White Bear of the Western RainforestReview Date: 2007-10-02
Wow! Great for any bear loverReview Date: 1999-07-15
great content, credible author, fascinating photosReview Date: 1999-06-04
Fantastic!!!Review Date: 1999-03-28
Studying the white bears of Princess Royal IslandReview Date: 1998-05-14
The author begins by summarizing his own and his family's long history and experience with black and grizzly bears. In so doing he establishes his credibility before describing his encounters with' the Kermode bear, a rare white variant of the black bear that inhabits some of the largely undisturbed west coast islands. Russell was wise to open in this manner as the story that follows truly stretches the reader's credulity.
After recounting how he came to be on Princess Royal Island to film the white bears with Sue and Jeff Turner, we learn how they got to know the Spirit Bear, and how they developed an extraordinary relationship with him. The Spirit Bear not only "enjoyed" human company, but he fished with people, slept beside them, and allowed the author to scratch and even tickle him between his toes! Perhaps most incredible is the incident when men and bear play tug-of-war, with the bear attempting to initiate a wrestling match without harming his human friends.
After these amazing adventures, the last chapter is somewhat disappointing. We read about how the author and the Turners, after several months' absence from Princess Royal Island during the winter, returned and spent their last summer finishing their film. However, only one brief paragraph is devoted to their meeting with the Spirit Bear and the renewal of their extraordinary friendship.
Despite this disappointment, the book is well worth the price. Although not always technically perfect, the amazing photographs are generally very good and document some of the incredible events described in the narrative. The text not only provides fascinating insights into bear behaviour, but give? plenty of reasons to change preconceived notions about bear aggression. Underlying the story is a message about the importance of keeping an open mind when dealing ! with animals. But don't expect the next bear you meet to treat you as a long lost friend. THERESA ANISKOWICZ
Related Subjects: Departments and Programs Athletics Organizations Publications and Media Libraries and Museums
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