Ireland Books
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No better way of "Passing the time ..."can be found !Review Date: 1999-06-07
Long Lasting ImpressionReview Date: 2002-11-16
No better way of "Passing the time ..."can be found !Review Date: 1999-06-07
For Those Wanting to Know the "Real" IrelandReview Date: 2002-01-18
Essential Reading in Ethnographic StudyReview Date: 2004-01-04

Michael Collins In His Own WordsReview Date: 2000-07-22
A well-edited testament of wasted geniusReview Date: 1997-01-18
Michael Collins the ThinkerReview Date: 2002-03-29
If you are looking for a traditional biography on Collins, this is probably not the right selection for you. _Michael Collins: The Man Who Made Ireland_, the book Tim Pat Coogan excerpted his foreword from, would be a much better fit for that need. If you are already basically familiar with the life and times of Collins, this book will give you a much richer sense of how his mind worked.
A good detailed read on the life of Michael CollinsReview Date: 1999-08-05
Eye opening, informative readingReview Date: 1999-09-13


The Death of Paddy. Review Date: 2008-07-22
constitutes Irishness. The Irish, to us, are a people of simplistic identity, incapable of venturing out into the wilderness of economic prosperity or of absolving the events that haunt their bitter memories. It is here where we find them in our fanciful time capsules, right next to the ones that find Germans as forever echoing quasi-Nazi sentiment, the Australians all wearing crocodile skins, and the Caucasian residents of the American south as toothless, confederate sympathizers of the `lost cause.' It is when we finally step aside from these ancient stereotypes and look at the facts that we begin to view a reality of what is, not what we think something is. For the Ireland of today, however, the change in culture, economy, and mindset has happened so quickly that the naivety of the western view of Ireland can almost be understood, as it has been a change so exceedingly different than the Ireland of Angela`s Ashes, Patriot Games, or Far and Away that had managed to seep its way into our consciousness like rancid fruit. The root causes to this pendulum shift from the modest pauper to the assertive, if not sometimes impetuous, buyer have been many. The once-docile picture of the pious, fatigued Irish-Catholic has now been replaced by that of a roaring economic Celtic Tiger. This begs the proverbial question, just how in the world did this happen? The answer, it seems, begins with a visit by the Pope in 1979.
It is from here that McWilliams takes us on the rollercoaster ride of Irish economics which has seen a financial explosion in recent years, demonstrating to the reader with vivid humor and characterization the reasons for the economic boom. Coupled with these reasons are the socioeconomic thought process of those who have benefited the most off the boom, groups McWilliams humorously dubs Hicos and Decklanders.
The Pope's Children is a hilarious and astute look into the realm of Irish economics, giving the reader an enjoyable overview of many of the reasons that Ireland now stands near the top of Europe's economic fortunes. I highly recommend this book to anyone wanting to know more of the extensive fabrics of the late shift in "Irishness."
Catching Up on "The Irish Miracle"Review Date: 2008-04-28
Why were the Irish and not the Italians or French or Spaniards able to turn what seemed to be a failing economy and fractured political and cultural environment to become one of the happiest people in the world with an annual per capita growth rate of 7% for almost twenty years and become the world's most interglobal economy?
It's all in the book but what is also in the book, and what I found the most fascinating, is how this turnaround has changed the way the Irish live. It is not always a bright picture. There are many dark sides to the Irish success and the book presents these in a balanced and thought provoking way.
I finished the book wanting to know more about the keys to the Irish success and followed up with another book "Luck and the Irish" by R.F.Foster. The two books provide a well written and inciteful account of the prosperous presnt and unclear future of Ireland. An both books are full of Irish wit and charm in telling the story.
The Celtic Tiger Is a Funny Cat Review Date: 2008-02-22
Have the Irish become materialistic?Review Date: 2008-06-17
Entertaining and informativeReview Date: 2008-03-25

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Outstanding Publication!Review Date: 2008-03-28
Portrait of a Priestess, scholarly merits and popular appealReview Date: 2007-05-07
Excellent studyReview Date: 2008-01-21
Not Your Grandpa's Coffee Table Book...Review Date: 2008-01-30
Equal opportunity templesReview Date: 2007-08-06
The text is pretty hard going for the non-specialist but the pictures are great and it will make a handsome addition to a feminist coffee table although it will be a shame if it stays there. I think the large format is justified on more than esthetic grounds because Connolly's argument depends on her ability to bring to bear on the subject her abilities as an art historian and therefore adequate illustrations are needed. These are more than adequate; they are magnificent. It would be presumptuous to pronounce on the strength of her case without more expert knowledge than mine. No doubt other academics will be on the attack and it will be fun to see the fur fly in the Times Literary Supplement etc.
At the risk of quibbling I must break a lance in my ongoing battle against publishers who transcribe Greek inscriptions into lower case. Greek lower case was unknown before the Byzantines. I noticed that she does not mention the triple bronze serpent in the Hippodrome at Istanbul in her discussion of the Pythian oracle at Delphi. Is it authentic?

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Fascinating and informative readingReview Date: 2004-02-12
Fascinating!Review Date: 2004-03-22
An illuminating record of global explorationReview Date: 2007-08-06
Another Great IntroductionReview Date: 2003-10-12
In terms of Western historiography, global history remains a nascent field. The diversely and globally located formal and informal enclaves does not mean that the overseas experiences belong to the Portuguese people alone, they were not to be claimed exclusively by Asians, Africans or Brazilians either; but as one scholar remarked -it was a shared memory
Like its more "matured" British counterpart, Portuguese history is increasingly interacting with indigenous and primary sources. Russell-Wood's Portuguese Empire is built on largely secondary sources, as expected; including afew Portuguese primary materials. Mastering the languages and the necessary paleography remains a daunting task for any historian. Eventhough the perspective might be Portuguese, the issues dealt with are global in nature; qualifying it in the category of world history. Russell-Wood also clarified from the beginning that he will not be probing too much into the political-administrative-military aspect but with explore the technologies, geography, demography, economics, ideas and dynamics of ecology (ie flora, fauna and disease)
In terms of perspective, the Portuguese Empire does indeed take on a "new history" approach, looking not only at the business of "the high class" in society (ie administrators and clergy) but also at the individuals and the voiceless
Whether in terms of human experience or traffic of goods, Russell-Wood has woven the international nature of the Portuguese empire well into the book. In an illustration of the former, there was a father and son team who were given appointments from Brazil to Africa to Goa and Macao and even returning briefly to Portugal to participate in the War of Spanish Succession (p 70-1). In the terms of trade, cloves from Ternate were carried to Malacca, to Cochim, then to Lisbon, reloaded there for Morocco and exchanged for wheat which became a further part of the exchange system of the South Atlantic (p 134). Excellent maps and tables were also interspersed in the book to explain the flow and traffic of commodities exchanged between the Portuguese and their hosts or that of the complicated wind system of the Atlantic or Indian Ocean
In some ways, the largely non new primary resource based and reinterpretative nature of the book meant it will still resonates afew outdated ideas. For example, the book continues to portray a planned approach by which the Portuguese were undertaking their overseas enterprise (p 21). Even the historians of the more "successful" British are conceiting that the formation of its First Empire might be more haphazard that what have been previously believed. Granted, the Portuguese venture had seen more of the state/crown intervention in the beginning than the private enterprise approach of the British; logistical and technological challenges of the time forbid a more coordinated effort
The book professed to look at development of the "Portuguese Empire" to the eve of the Napoleonic Wars just on the onset of nineteenth century (beginning of modern era?). Space does not permit it to treat the entire period with justice even on the secondary sources available. On trying to tie the Portuguese world together, the book did a splendid job and certainly complement, as the author humbly acknowledged, Boxer CR's magnificently written Portuguese Seaborne Empire as well as many other research done to date on political and military aspect of this human experience
Portuguese worldwide impactReview Date: 2007-06-27

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Classy and Stylish. Puppy Book Without the Cheese Factor.Review Date: 2003-06-24
A simply fantastic book!Review Date: 2005-10-10
Just like a baby book for newborns, but for dogsReview Date: 2006-11-07
Unique Pet KeepsakeReview Date: 2000-11-27
Finally--A Keepsake Book for Dog LoversReview Date: 2000-11-25

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An important intellectual tradition reconsidered!Review Date: 1998-11-06
Myth BusterReview Date: 2005-07-17
The chapter on Ernst Junger is the most fascinating. Herf makes Junger's writings clear by placing them in the cultural milieu of the time, something important for understanding most authors, but vital for Junger. While I imagine in hindsight Junger still come off as strange to most of us, he is at least understandable now.
While I can't match the author's experience in research and reading, I remain somewhat skeptical of the extent to which the Nazis adopted reactionary modernism. Was it just a means to an end, to be abandoned once the war was won, in favor of romantic pastoralism. Why the need for lebensraum in the east if not to escape the crowded, "un-nordic" city life?
Also, I wonder if the author's reading of Heidegger isn't a bit off. While Heidegger himself may have prefered the cabin in the woods to the metropolis, I always read his anti-technological views as an attack on a technological, calculating mindset, or way of viewing the world, not as being against the machine neccesarily.
Worth the ReadReview Date: 2000-07-08
Reactionary Modernism and Conservative Revolution.Review Date: 2002-12-10
Review of Jeffrey Herf's "Reactionary Modernism"Review Date: 2001-04-27
Jeffrey Herf's Reactionary Modernism studies the complexities involved in Weimar and Nazi Germany's attempts to simultaneously modernize and antiquate their nation. Herf explores the conservative, anti-democratic groups during Weimar and how they were able to bring together the technological modernization of Germany, while at the same time rejecting almost of the liberal qualities of the Enlightenment. Herf looks to the intellectual, political writings of Juenger, Sombart and Spengler (also, Heidegger, Schmitt and Freyer) to demonstrate how the intellectual community desired to bring Germany into the modern era, while still retaining their distinct German Kultur. Other interesting sources that Herf uses to state his case are German engineering journals and the research of historian Karl-Heinz Ludwig. These sources show how German engineers were brought inline with the reactionary modernist line of thought. Herf successfully demonstrates how the synthesis of technology and German Kultur not only existed, but also thrived. Reactionary Modernism's incorporation of anti-Semitism is detailed if full. Herf explains that this explanation of modern German anti-Semitism is more solid than the version set forth by Adorno and Horkheimer in "The Dialectic of Enlightenment." Anti-democratic groups in Weimar Germany saw the Jew as the reason behind everything that was wrong with Germany. Herf's conclusions show how the Nazis became lost in their ideology and this ended up making technology that was needed for the war effort suffer. The popular myths of German technological supremacy are put to rest. a "Reactionary Modernism" is a valuable source for anyone studying Weimar, the Third Reich or the influence of the Enlightenment in totalitarian governments.

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And I don't usually like to read about History!Review Date: 2004-05-12
The J Man lives onReview Date: 2003-11-17
Mr. JulicherReview Date: 2005-03-07
Highly recommendReview Date: 2003-09-03
fascinated by the authors detail description of the
tsars. It's wonderful to read a book with substance
and not fluff! I am impressed!
Informative ReadReview Date: 2004-08-23

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Many HistoriesReview Date: 2007-08-21
An informative, moving, well-written book. A great read!!!Review Date: 2003-01-15
Unlike traditional historians, Boia doesn't just list facts; he analyzes Romania's condition throughout the ages and the events, ideologies and people that have made it what it is today, and at the same time, urges the reader to analyze them and to draw his or her own conclusions.
(I simply could not put down this book until I finished it.)
An informative, moving, well-written book. A great read!!!Review Date: 2003-01-15
Unlike traditional historians, Boia doesn't just list facts; he analyzes Romania's condition throughout the ages and the events, ideologies and people that have made it what it is today, and at the same time, urges the reader to analyze them and to draw his or her own conclusions.
(I simply could not put down this book until I finished it.)
Romania by BoiaReview Date: 2005-07-28
I devoured this book!Review Date: 2004-01-22

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The Russian Roots of NazismReview Date: 2006-03-19
Karla Poewe
Professor, University of Calgary
New insights into the Intellectual Roots of NazismReview Date: 2006-03-18
Irving Hexham, Professor of Religious Studies, University of Calgary.
Well-researched studyReview Date: 2006-11-05
With "The Russian Roots of Nazism", an extremely dense and well-researched text, Kellog provides an important new study on a still insufficiently explored aspect of the history of contemporary German-Russian relations. His book focuses on the years 1918-1923, and details at length the connections that a number of prominent émigrés from the former Tsarist empire had with the early Nazi elite, in general, and Adolf Hitler, in particular. The central theme of the study is the rise and fall of the short-lived, yet important émigré association Aufbau: "Wirtschaftspolitische Vereinigung für den Osten" (Reconstruction: Economic-Political Organisation for the East). With such an intriguing subject, Kellog will find many readers among historians and the interested public of both Russia and Germany as well as other countries.
Kellog's analysis suffers, however, from an overemphasis of the pro-Slavic tendencies in the German extreme right and an insufficient consideration of the deep roots of the Nazis' rabid anti-Slavism. More generally, Kellog could have considered in more detail rival influences on Nazism such as `scientific racism' or occultism in order to make a better case for his thesis about the `Russian roots' of Nazism. While he, at one point, puts his position on the nature of Nazism close to Ernst Nolte's (p. 199), he, in fact, succeeds in providing arguments against Nolte's assertion that fascism is essentially anti-Marxism. Kellog's many quotes show that the `bolshevik' part in the Nazis' talk about `Jewish Bolshevism' was secondary and that the Nazis instead thought that the bolsheviks were guided by `Jewish finance capitalism' (e.g. p. 226) - thus, oddly, making the Nazi interpretation of communism somewhat similar to the communist interpretation of Nazism.
Remarkable and unexpectedReview Date: 2006-03-27
Interesting also is the relationship with Wagner clan in Bayreuth , so that the book is complementary to Joachim Kohler's Wagner's Hitler; and that both groups visited Henry Ford in Detroit to seek funds , arising from his anti-semitic attitudes.
Kellogg does not explore the implications that the General Staff in Berlin was seeking a rapprochment with bolshevik Russia at this time .Nor does he assess Ludendorff as a politician.Above all , he does not refect on the confrontation between class-ridden White Russian Officers and the Bohemian Corporal who spent the war in the trenches on the Western Front.
Anyone coming to study this period and phase of the Nazi Party/ Adolf Hitler will have to take note of this book and its importance.
I hope that Michael Kellogg will go on to produce works that follow on this pivotal start.
Surprising and enlighteningReview Date: 2006-06-03
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