Nebraska Books
Related Subjects: University of Nebraska Creighton University Chadron State College Wayne State College College of Saint Mary Dana College York College Peru State College Concordia University Nebraska Hastings College Doane College Midland Lutheran College Nebraska Wesleyan University
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A wonderful primer on starting a business with contact information for locating startup funds if necessary.Review Date: 2006-12-17

Used price: $5.02

Not too many books like it.Review Date: 2000-05-01
This book is the experiences of some of the soldiers who took part in the battle for Port Arthur. Originally written in Japanese for a Japanese audience, it was translated first in 1907 (?) and rereleased in 1920 in attempt to show the world what Japanese soldiers thought and felt regarding warfare at the time. Japan was being bathed with both admirition and astonishment for being first a nation that had only modernized a handful of decades previous (a mere 40 years) and second the only non-European nation to effectively defeat a modern power.
These are the stories of men that fought in the Japanese army during the Russo-Japan war. Reading this will give the reader a look at how Japanese fighting men saw things, and can serve as a valuable contrast to how warfare was and is viewed in the west.

The finest discussion of the literature of existentialism ever written.Review Date: 2007-01-16
At the age of twenty-one, I first discovered a tattered 1959 edition of Hazel Barnes's Humanistic Existentialism: The Literature of Possibility in a small Connecticut bookstore. The binding was creased; the pages were already beginning to separate from the spine--but like Alcibiades comparing his homely master Socrates to a statue of Silenus, I glimpsed things inside the book's covers "so godlike--so bright and beautiful, so utterly amazing--that I no longer had a choice." Like Socrates' tragic student, I had no choice except to take up the moral, philosophical, and aesthetic challenges posed by Barnes's interpretation of the existential tradition.
And just what is existentialism? It is, as Walter Kaufmann points out in his own Existentialism from Dostoevsky to Sartre, "a label for several widely different revolts against traditional philosophy.... Existentialism is a timeless sensibility that can be discerned here and there in the past; but it is only in recent times that it has hardened into a sustained protest and preoccupation" (11-12). And in her Humanistic Existentialism, Hazel does a peerless job presenting the sustained protest of these often misunderstood philosophers, especially the post-WWII French existentialists Jean-Paul Sartre, Albert Camus, and Simone de Beauvior.
Existentialism is not synonymous with radical nihilism or immature hedonism. Rather, existentialism is in fact a deeply ethical philosophy that demands extreme personal responsibility. If according to Sartre "existence" does indeed "precede essence," then you as a conscious individual are free to decide what it means to exist and be human. Because an essential self is an illusion, an existentialist cannot make excuses for his or her behavior by saying, "I can't help it. It is in my nature to lie, cheat, steal, kill, etc." According to this philosophical system, a person's self is the sum of his or her actions. You are what you do. You exist in this world as a conscious individual, and it is your free will that will choose at each moment how to act or not to act without resorting to someone else's standards. However, this does not give you license for narcissism or criminality. Just as you value your free will, you must also value and protect the free will of other conscious minds. To treat someone as an object (being-in-itself) rather than a free, willing human being (being-for-itself) is to live in existential Bad Faith.
Some existentialists were atheists; some were believers--but all were so overwhelmed by the horror of human suffering that they had no choice but to rebel against this metaphysical injustice. Existentialism is frightening, heady stuff. It asks hard questions of both man and God, questions few have ever dared to ask.
When I discovered the works of Hazel Barnes, I was in a deep crisis of faith--a true existential crisis. If everything happens for a reason, how can a supposedly rational and benevolent universe allow so much suffering, especially the suffering of innocent children? Even though Ms. Barnes draws much of her interpretation of existentialism from Sartrean ethics (indeed, she was the first English translator of Being and Nothingness), she also has a deep understanding of existentialism's roots in Nietzsche, Kierkegaard, and Fyodor Dostoevsky, author of the most important novel ever written: The Brothers Karamazov. (Don't believe me? I dare any great-souled man or women to read The Brothers Karamazov and not come away profoundly changed and shaken.) In truth, Hazel Barnes was the first person to guide me toward the peerless Dostoevsky, who to this day stands as my spiritual guide and master.
Professor Barnes, you opened the doorways of the philosophic life for me, and I owe you a great debt. I have never sat in your classroom, but I consider myself one of your students. Your life's work serves as an inspiration to us all--a life lived with integrity and courage. A life lived in existential Good Faith.
With respect,
James B. Pepe
References:
Kaufmann, Walter. Existentialism from Dostoevsky to Sartre. Cleveland: World Publishing, 1956.

An insight to the history and memories of Nebraska footballReview Date: 1996-12-07

Used price: $29.50

The Soul of Nebraska FootballReview Date: 2008-02-11
"Huskerville" asks the questions pondered by many Nebraskan fans, particularly those of us who've left the state but still call it home. Why does Husker football mean so much to Nebraskans? Why is the connection between Nebraskans and Husker football so strong? Is this connection unique?
Aden provides the answers, referencing countless Husker fans, and a fair amount of Nebraska history along the way. It's a good read. It's heavier than your average sports book, but Aden treats the subject seriously while throwing in some fun.

Used price: $10.85

Great Nebraska ShipsReview Date: 2006-02-20

A REAL book.Review Date: 1999-11-02


Innocence Sucked Into the Vortex of TerrorReview Date: 2006-07-25
In the book's final third, Nadia describes how the town, suffering so many beheadings (five girls beheaded for wearing short skirts), turns against the terrorists and will no longer be sympathetic. By the book's end, Nadia must find refuge for she becomes "a wife of a terrorist" and such is a pariah. Her courage to tell her story is another important testimony in the literature about how society cannot be complicit in its most malignant underground communities.
Readers who enjoy this theme will also want to check out Killing Pablo by Mark Bowden.

The Imagination of DisasterReview Date: 2007-05-12
In The Imagination of Disaster Professor Ward has taken exception to the commonplace remark that James is a "pure" novelist. He sees him as a man profoundly aware of the crisis of civilization and culture; he finds that James's novels and tales dramatize not only the timeless conflicts of good and evil, man and society, but also the unique form these conflicts assume in the modern world. After defining and analyzing James's conception of evil, the author considers its forms and implications in his fiction, and its relevance to James's fictional purposes. The emphasis in this study is literary rather than theological or moral. The subject "evil" is a means to an end; it serves as a new focus for and explication of James's fiction.
--- from book's dustjacket


An imaginative approachReview Date: 2007-07-27
The study is limited to "works by African Americans who represent the experience of living in the American West" as opposed to those who were simply born or raised there. Even that boundary is by necessity rather fluid, which is exactly what makes the premise of this book so interesting. In addition to turning over new ground, Allmendinger helps readers view old ground through a new lens. The key word in the title is "Imagining" and I think the author himself has taken an imaginative approach which will appeal particularly to students of American culture.
Related Subjects: University of Nebraska Creighton University Chadron State College Wayne State College College of Saint Mary Dana College York College Peru State College Concordia University Nebraska Hastings College Doane College Midland Lutheran College Nebraska Wesleyan University
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I am a SCORE counselor (Senior Corps of Retired Executives) who typically does face-to-face counseling sessions three nights a month. It would really be neat if my clients would read this book BEFORE they came to their session with me because they would pretty much be "educated customers" ready to ask educated questions. Our sessions would be so much more beneficial.
My favorite chapters were:
1. Initial business concerns
2. Your business' structure
3. Business start-up details
5. Sources of business assistance (SCORE is mentioned here)
7. Your smart business plan (and a good sample plan is included)
8. Obtaining the financing you need
The book is weak when it comes to how the Internet can be used in corresponding, hiring, and marketing. But this is just one example of how googling keywords and concepts found in the book will make the book more complete. Don't treat the book as authoritative on the law. It isn't. Nor was it ever intended to be. It is light on tax information as it relates to small business.
I was particularly impressed with the material presented in Chapter 2: Choice of Legal Entity. That subject is sorely ignored in most small business books, and it is critically important. It is a subject I regularly must spend a great deal of time discussing at my SCORE sessions. This book does a pretty good job on the topic.
Chapters 4 and 9 through 12 are easy to find fault with. The topic of each could fill a book. But having these topics covered definitely will help a budding entrepreneur know some of the issues they raise.
I would have liked the book more if Chapter 6 (marketing) had been less superficial. When I read it I got the impression that the author was more a public relations expert than a marketing expert. I generally categorize public relations as a subset of marketing. Marketing includes advertising, public relations, and a whole host of other promotion techniques. I did not get this message when I read the book. I also would have liked the book better if the Internet, email, and Web sites had been discussed more. But there are many books on those subjects. Therefore, I can't complain too much about the limited discussion of computers.
When you read this book it may feel a little like it was produced on an assembly line. Maybe it was? There are 51 versions of this book sold; one for each state and the District of Columbia. Content is king, and this book has it. 5 stars!