Western Books
Related Subjects: Athletics
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Silver WingReview Date: 2000-08-15
Page turnerReview Date: 1999-10-02
WONDERFUL!Review Date: 1999-12-22
Full of love!Review Date: 2000-03-09
5 Star Plus, couldn't put it downReview Date: 1999-08-07

Moos in unison!Review Date: 2006-11-21
I love this book.Review Date: 2005-08-07
"In truth, cows aren't too bright."
Terrific early reader book!Review Date: 2005-04-06
Sixteen Cows is aswesome!Review Date: 2003-09-30
A rootin'-tootin' good read!Review Date: 2003-06-18
Lonely Cowboy Gene and lovely Cowgirl Sue share a fence, but despite their neighborliness and like herds of eight humorously named bovines, a bit of competition keeps the two at odds. The deus ex machina of a tornado rips down the fence and the cows do the rest, intermingling hopelessly, while refusing to hear the calls to come back to their respective sides. Forced to cooperate, the rival cowpokes finally drop the competition and work together. Can love be far behind?
Clearly there is plenty to like in the book. Many kids' picture books fall down in the text, but not here. Lisa Wheeler's long rhymes capture the reader's heart and flow nicely, complemented well by the sprawling, glowing, watercolor images of Kurt Cyrus. Together there is a synergy that makes this book oddly compelling. Little humorous touches abound - such as the cow names and the items tossed up by the tornado - that may mean more to adults than kids, so while my toddler son likes the book, his dad enjoys it even more. (At the cost of a star, the backstory of the book may be lost on the very young, who may not fully grasp love stories and weddings.)
With its large illustrations and silly/sweet story, this paean to the prairie is clearly designed to be read out loud and often. So pick out your best West Texas drawl, mosey on up to your favorite lil' pardner, and share the fun of "Sixteen Cows."

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Collectible price: $35.00

Weird Western Tales had nothing on this book.Review Date: 2003-06-27
A helluva fun readReview Date: 2000-06-20
Highly recommended.
Twisted, Twisted, TwistedReview Date: 2002-03-21
The book contains 12 stories, all of them good, none of them bad. But of course, some stand out against the others. Jack Ketchum's "Luck" is a great little campfire tale, Rick Hautala's "The Screaming Head" is about a horrifying folklore legend that comes to life and Yvonne Navarro's "Divine Justice" plays with the idea of heaven and hell in a Western setting.
But there are three great masterpieces of the bizarre in this book. Richard Laymon's "The Hangman" is a classic ghost story mixed with the elements of the Western tale and ends up being a great, satisfying read. Lawrence Walsh's "The Devil's Crapper" is a funny and twisted story that will make you laugh with every word and every sentence. And Adam-Troy Castro's "The Magic Bullet Theory" (the longest story in the book) is an epic tale that is brilliantly written and highly satisfying.
And if that's not enough for you, there are also stories by Edward Lee, M. Christian, Nancy A. Collins and a very twisted, very disturbing story by Robert Devereaux. Skull Full Of Spurs has it all; horror, action, fantasy, humour... It has something to please every reader of the genre. This is one collection you'll want to come back to time and time again. So saddle up part'ner and get ready to be entertained!
"A round up worth reading"Review Date: 2000-06-17
This book is a must-have for your next camping trip to scare the dickens out of the kids. Read them "The Hangman" by Richard Laymon and "The Screaming Head" by Rick Hautala and there will be nightmares in abundance. If those don't do the trick there's another half dozen that will keep that campfire stoked all through the night.
I look forward to a to sequel "Skull Full of Spurs" in the near future.
Want to Read Something Good? Buy This Book!Review Date: 2000-05-19
This book has 13 of the best Weird Western tales ever collected in one place. You got a tale about a cowboy with a virus that won't let him be killed. There's one about a magic bullet traveling down Main Street at a couple inches a year. And who wouldn't love a story about a midget sheriff? Oh, and for you nymphos out there, the sexiest, most erotic, Old West showdown ever written on paper is printed in these pages, too.
To top it all off, each story is followed by the author's bibliography. The search for the rest of your favorite author's work is right at your fingertips. Now that's a nice touch.
Yep, SKULL FULL OF SPURS has it all. Buy it. And pray Dark Highway Press puts out a SPURS part II.

An Outstanding Adventure story for any age!Review Date: 2001-01-09
Here, within the covers of a very well-written book, you'll find a group of charming children and a few adults, spanning a wide range of ages and character types. Swallowdale is by turns funny, thoughtful, insightful and so well written it is a distinct pleasure for readers of any age.
Did I mention the writing? It's better written than most current novels.
More an equal than a sequel!Review Date: 2000-12-10
The book has all of the fine qualities that make its predecessor such an excellent read for children (and adults) of all ages. Ransome's prose is a delight throughout, his characters engaging and the events that befall the children entirely believable. As in all of the other books of this series, simple pen and ink drawings by the author add considerably to the enjoyment. If only the world (and the Lake District!) was still like this!
Incidentally, although this was the second of Arthur Ransome's "Swallows and Amazon" books to be published, it is best read after the third volume, "Peter Duck", because it is set chronologically after the events of that book, and makes occasional back reference to it. You will enjoy "Peter Duck" much more if you read it BEFORE you read "Swallowdale". And if you enjoyed "Swallows and Amazons" you will certainly enjoy this.
We were enthralledReview Date: 2000-05-26
Adventure and charm!Review Date: 2004-05-25
This book continues the adventures of the brave kids we first met in SWALLOWS AND AMAZONS, only they're a year older and a little nervier. The books' descriptions of camping and exploring are fun, fun, fun; I remember doing similar things as a child. The story also gives some good lessons to kids, although not in a preachy fashion...we see the importance of being calm in a crisis, and how an otherwise bad situation can be turned into a positive experience. Also, the boat-race scene at the end has a great scene of good sportsmanship, as the losers enthusiastically and sincerely congratulate the winners and compliment them on their sailing. And, as present in SWALLOWS AND AMAZONS, there is the element of using one's imagination.
The mountain-climbing scenes are good, with an unexpectedly poignant moment at the summit. The lost-in-the-fog scenes are actually quite atmospheric and memorable.
The book's main problem is that it is rather dated, but for some readers, that's part of the charm. The great-aunt's insistance on Victorian-era manners may not click too much with modern readers, although they'll probably be able to think of their elders who they see as being too old-fashioned. The book takes place in a circa 1930 England, when charcoal-burners and horse-drawn wagons were still commonplace in rural areas; some might find the setting too alien, while others may become absorbed into it.
Despite those few flaws, this is still a 5-star book in my view. Great for parents and children, and a great inspiration for outdoor adventures.
Note: This book makes references to an imaginary character, "Peter Duck," who was the subject of a sort of collective fairy tale that the group made up over the winter holiday. That story is told in the next book in the series, PETER DUCK.
Peril and adventure on the LakesReview Date: 2002-11-26

The Sword of No-Sword: Life of the Master Warrior TesshuReview Date: 2007-02-07
great bookReview Date: 2005-08-28
Inspires Martial Artists to TrainReview Date: 2001-09-16
There are numerous accounts that give insight to Yamaoka's mindset and character. Thus, no matter what art the individual reader may practice, Yamaoka's approach to training will reinforce the ideals of the serious-minded.
Unlike other books where certain martial arts figures are ridiculously protrayed like gods, Steven's book has humorous stories and Tesshu comes across like a normal human being who achieved everything throigh his diligent search and practice.
The book's strong point...it inspires hard training.
Well worth readingReview Date: 2002-03-02
Enjoyable accountReview Date: 2004-02-20

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A Chinese Cat, a Ball of StringReview Date: 2003-11-12
Best of The BestReview Date: 2002-06-02
Outstanding CommentaryReview Date: 2000-10-02
I first compiled my favored, composite translation of the Tao Te Ching 23 years ago. At that time I relied mostly on the translations (and commentary) of Wing-Tsit Chan and Lin Yutang, although I used about 8 references altogether. I recently checked out of the library three new translations, including the one by Chen, in order to compare them with the earlier works. As I delved into Chen's book I became more and more impressed by her translation, and especially by her commentary. Although for me, Wing-Tsit Chan still has the more consistently preferred translation, I am learning much more from Chen's commentary than I ever learned from other works. I think it is a shame that her book is seldom cited in lists of "best translations" of the Tao Te Ching. Her work is far more penetrating and lucid than all the favorites.
Even if you finally decide of a particular section that you prefer another translation to Chen's, you will learn much from her explanations. I'm going to buy my own copy when I return the one I have to the library!
Right up there with the bestReview Date: 2007-09-30
I rank it up there with Derek Lin's version for its clarity and succinctness.
While these two versions don't always agree, they do offer more than just a translation. I believe that is a major plus factor.
Arriving as Guests to a Banquet.Review Date: 2001-05-10
Chen, who is a Professor of Philosophy at St. John's University in Jamaica, New York, is not your usual sort of scholar, the type who views ancient wisdom texts as a mere quarry for materials. In contrast to the sterile type of academic who pride themselves on a purely illusory 'scientific objectivity,' Chen is a dynamic and concerned personality who seems utterly committed to trying to get the world to see the fantastic importance and value of the Tao Te Ching.
For her, in fact, the wisdom of the Tao Te Ching is a wisdom that could save us from the utter ruin the human race is heading for, if only we would start to take that wisdom seriously. Hers is a wise, well-written, thoroughly researched work which rises way above the usual run of scholarship, and it is far too rich for me to be able to do justice to it here.
Briefly the work falls into three parts. First we are given a full and quite unique 48-page Introduction in three chapters: 1. Date and Authorship of the Tao Te Ching; 2. The Tao Te Ching as a Religious Treatise; and 3. Use and Translation of the Text. Chapter 2, which is divided into six sections, is a minor masterpiece, and even if you don't intend to acquire the book, you should certainly read her 'Humans Become Gods on Earth,' 'Two Pseudo-Religions of the Twentieth Century,' and 'Religion For or Against Life' (pages 31-39). Here in a nutshell you will find her striking analysis of the essence of the modern problem, and its solution. I often return to her words, and I wish there were some way of getting everyone in the world to both read them and take them to heart.
The second and main part of the work is made up of her New Translation and Commentary. For each Chapter of the Tao Te Ching we are given: 1. A translation with interspersed key terms given in Chinese; 2. A brief General Comment on the import of the chapter; and 3. Very full and valuable detailed comments. Chen is a well-qualified scholar and highly competent translator, and her work reads very well indeed. Here is a brief example from Chapter 32, slightly modified since it should be set out as verse:
"Tao everlasting (ch'ang) / is the nameless uncarved wood (p'u) / Though small / Nothing under heaven can subjugate it (mo neng ch'en). / If kings and barons can abide by (shou) it, / All creatures will arrive as guests (pin) to a banquet" (page 133).
Her interspersing of the Chinese is a marvelous device, and provides a painless way of aquiring a vocabulary of key Chinese terms. The third part of the book, besides containing a full and scholarly 13-page Bibliography of both Western and Chinese sources along with an index, also contains a detailed 12-page Chinese glossary which gives the romanization and Chinese graphs (characters, ideograms) for all Chinese names and terms used in the book.
The Tao of Ellen Chen is evident everywhere throughout this book, and she has placed a splendid banquet before us. It's a banquet to which we have all been invited. I'm certainly glad it's one I didn't miss.

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It's alrightReview Date: 2007-07-22
a powerful, moving collectionReview Date: 2006-01-04
BravoReview Date: 2005-12-30
nice companionReview Date: 2005-05-20
this is a great take anywhere book. I highly recommend it.
An Absolute Asset On Your Way To WakefulnessReview Date: 2007-03-31
I consider this book a great source of inspiration and definitely awe-inspiring. Whether you're a Buddhist or not, it is a must-read. It is actually a must-have, because it opens your eyes to the essentials of life.
The fact that you don't have to read this book from beginning to end, but that you can just open it anywhere and read the little stories, is what works for me. "Teachings of the Buddha" is a compilation of life's values, molded in time-transcending stories that peak every reader's interest.
A paragraph in the editor's preface of this book was also the inspiration to my book, "The Awakened Leader: One Simple Leadership Style That Works Every Time, Everywhere." It is the paragraph where Buddha, shortly after his enlightenment, met a man, who was captured by his radiant glow. So the man asked Buddha: "Are you a celestial being or a god?" Buddha said "no." The man then asked, "Are you a magician or a wizard?" Buddha said, "No" "A man?," and Buddha said, "No." Finally the man asked, "Well, my friend, what are you then?" Upon which Buddha answered, "I am awake."
I believe that, in a time where globalization has become a part of our everyday life and has ignited increasing interdependency, multiplicity of mindsets and approaches, and multi-faceted workplaces, we have no choice BUT to be awake.
The book, "The Awakened Leader" presents a meta-leadership approach, which guides leaders toward implementing the appropriate leadership style once they have assessed the situation, the followers, and the environment at hand. Awakened Leadership is based on flexibility through open-mindedness, or wakefulness. And it completes the perspectives that many great leadership authors have presented us in the past decade: successful leadership of the self and others, based on proven trends of the past, the now, and the future.
Kornfield's book is a great asset to everyone's private library, and so is "The Awakened Leader, One Simple Leadership Style That Works Every Time, Everywhere."
Collectible price: $24.95

Lessons for tomorrow from yesterdayReview Date: 2007-05-11
--Hilmi--They asked Hilmi: `Why do you take so much interest in matters which are not connected with the progress of man?'
He said : `When you want to know how hard the coppersmith had been working, you look at the shavings on his floor.'
--Do not rely upon your own opinion when you think you need books and not exercises. Rely less on your belief when you think you need exercises and not books.
re: Spiritual FreudianismReview Date: 2004-11-30
Sufis, as well as Buddhists, date back thousands of years before Dr. Freud was born, so calling this book "Spiritual Freudianism" is superimposing a western perspective on an Eastern text. Also, using terms such as "a priori" assumes, again, a western perspective. Sufis demand that the student "know how to learn," and this requires dropping our western prejudices towards learning and towards what we've been told wisdom really is. Sufis do not always provide evidence or justification when teaching--their evidence takes the form of asking you, the student, to really observe yourself, without prejudices, without conditioned forms of thought, and see if what they say might be true. If you have issue with what they teach, investigate the matter (yourself) to see what the truth really is--and don't lie about it because your ego has been stunned or cracked. If you don't want to give up your western approach to life, Eastern teachings won't benefit you much; and I must ask, if you are so stuck to your western views and thinking, why did you pick up the book?
An exposition of narrative psychologyReview Date: 2004-06-01
Listening to a teacher reciting these stories in real-time (replete with pauses, inflections), or receiving them as a written/ or visual message, is a very different experience than reading these linearly by oneself. Nevertheless, this title, like most other writings on Sufism, is a wonderful "snapshot" in the picture album labelled "Sufism".
In my understanding of Sufism, "Trust", "Leaps of Faith", and "Surrender" are critical in progressing on this path, as much as excercising "care" and "good sense" are. This much cannot be easily executed in the framework of minds that have known only to trust their own limiting, relativist perceptions. It is quite likely there is a well-reasoned fear that the assumed end-result of such talk is likely some crazed idolization of a teaching figure-head. What's more, in the real world, this type of thing happens all the time -- Shah speaks of this frankly and frequently.
Nevertheless, there still exist cases, wherein, those attained on the Path are freed from idolizing anyone or anything because the focus of their world-view isn't only about their egoic selves. Sufism is all about "Love", a state which does not adhere consistently with any mental constructs, or help one escape from any other unmentioned aspect of life. It is all about living Life, experiencing all aspects of it, finding the lessons, and recognizing "The Face of The Beloved".
newton PA precisionismReview Date: 2004-03-02
I'll Make You RememberReview Date: 2002-01-30
Shah wrote this book of 'Eastern practical philosophy' for those who want to enlarge and enrich their perception and experience of what it is to be human. He states in the preface, "This book contains, arranged in a manner commanded by the tradition.... the materials belonging to the Sufi teaching, selected in accordance with the needs of the time. It might be termed applied specific experientialism."
Enjoy the stories for their obvious content. Then re-read them for possible other qualities and effects. Sometimes a second interpretation will jump out at you. Sometimes a smile or a sense of wonder or possibiliy will lodge in your heart.
Sample story:
I'll Make You Remember
One day Latif the Theif ambushed the commander of the Royal Guard, captured him and took him to a cave.
'I am going to say something that, no matter how much you try, you will be unable to forget,' he told the infuriated officer.
Latif made his prisoner take off all his clothes. Then he tied him, facing backwards, on a donkey.
'You may be able to make a fool of me,' screamed the soldier, 'but you'll never make me think of something if I want to keep it out of my mind.'
'You have not yet heard the phrase which I want you to remember,' said Latif. 'I am turning you loose now, for the donkey to take back to town. And the phrase is: I'll catch and kill Latif the Thief, if it takes me the rest of my life.'

A great readReview Date: 2006-11-10
Very enjoyable bookReview Date: 2006-11-08
I especially enjoyed the characterizations. The development of the people portrayed in this book added a great deal of realism to this novel.
One can tell that the author researched extensively her subject matter. The book was quite authentic in time and place and sent the reader back to this fascinating period to learn more about this famous pair of explorers and the mysteries associated with their lives after their famous expedition.
The Last Journey of Lewis & ClarkReview Date: 2007-09-03
A fascinating life-like portrayal of the last days of one America's great adventurers, and the author has provided an interesting theory on one of our country's great mysteries. Worth checking out for any one interested in this period of our history. Four stars.
an intoxicating storyReview Date: 2007-05-29
We all know who Lewis & Clark were (if you don't, go find out on your own, I'm not going to explain it to you here.) but what we don't all readily know, is what happened to them after their three year expedition. That is what this book is about. It opens in 1809, and Lewis is a man in trouble. He's drinking too much, writing government vouchers for things that later will not be honored, postponing the writing of his novel, and lying to his best friend.
Due to a corrupt adversary within the US government, Lewis sets out for Federal City (the then name for Washington DC) In tow, are all his journals, maps and notes from his previous expedition. En route, Lewis is faced with enemies and allies alike, sometimes making it impossible for him to tell the difference. Hearing that his friend may be in trouble, Clark packs up and leaves after him, hoping to save his friend.
Its hard to explain what takes place on the journey to Federal City without ruining the story for those who would like to read it. Just know that its full of twists and turns, ups and downs, chaos and honor. It's a story you won't soon forget, and one that should be added to any historical fiction library.
So good, it must be true...Review Date: 2006-10-22

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Trade Show and Event Marketing. Review by: Adam PlattsReview Date: 2006-09-28
Review by: Adam Platts, Northridge
Fantastic tool for anyone involved in trade shows/event marketingReview Date: 2006-04-26
Case HistoriesThat Teach Really Valuable LessonsReview Date: 2007-03-06
Justify Your Trade Show InvestmentReview Date: 2006-03-20
Specific Trade Show StrategiesReview Date: 2005-11-16
But if you want to turn a trade show appearance into a truly special corporate event, author Ruth Stevens has a game plan for you. Her book includes sample budgets, case studies, expense spread sheets, lead generation forms, checklists, survey ideas and a great appendix listing sources of additional information. It explains everything you need to know about the opportunities that trade shows offer and how you can use them to advance your marketing goals. We highly recommend this book to marketing managers of business-to-business companies who want to start getting solid returns from special events.
Related Subjects: Athletics
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