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Articles
Eleanor Roosevelt: A Life of Discovery. (award-winning book): An article from: The Horn Book Magazine
Published in Digital by Horn Book, Inc. (1995-01-01)
Author: Russell Freedman
List price: $5.95
New price: $5.95

Average review score:

Eleanor Roosevelt: A Life of Discovery
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-29
My review is simple. I like using Amazon because it is easy, fairly priced and the order comes quickly. If there is a mistake Amazon does not hassle you. What else would I want. It's all simple.

Robert R. Hilger
Princeton, NJ

Must read book.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-27
I purchased this for my 10 year old daughter, hoping to get her interested in starting to read more nonfiction. She loved the book and read it all in three sittings. It must be very well written, because I saw her engrossed in it for hours at a time.

A life of discovery
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-25
This is a must have for any historian. I loved the book. I was able to use it for my recent bibliography for college. There was a lot of little tidbits that I did not see elsewhere.

my review of eleanor roosevelt
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-04-01
I learned that eleanor roosevelt was a very kind loving person who had a very odd child hood, she was known as the ugly duckling.Her mother did not treat her right and made eleanor afraid of everything.
Personaly, I think that this information was very helpful and would be grate to do a scool project on. this book had lots of pictures that gave wonderful information and were very deitailed, and showed me how to eleanors life was when she was a kid. I also learned that that eleanor loved her father very much, more that enything, and he loved her just as much. eleanor was an orffan at age ten because her whole family died of yellow fever. as I said before this book has a lot of amazing pictures [194]and about half of them showed eleanor and her father together.
I enjoued this book alot and I think you will to. the only thing is I would not try to read this book in one week because it is pretty long. Something I liked about this book is that it gives lots of details and is very factual. I also recomend this book if you like a traditional paper back book. I highly think this book is agreat book for a school project, like I did it on a biograghy. I hope you wil llearn as much as I did reading this amazing historical book, Eleanor roossevelt.

A highly readable reference on a remarkable woman
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2004-09-15
This Newbery Honor Book, subtitled "A Life of Discovery," covers Eleanor Roosevelt's life in 11 chapters and nearly 200 pages. The biography covers Roosevelt's childhood, education, courtship, marriage and motherhood, entrée into politics alongside her husband, and her humanitarian work independent of FDR. The text itself is straightforward and easy to read, presented in a scholarly fashion rather than the sort of fictionalized manner of some biographies. While certain events are dramatized, no dialog is invented - the words the reader encounters are those of the figures themselves, from journals, letters, and speeches. The best passages are the friendly and informative explanations offering children some background knowledge about the time, such as this account of courtship at the turn of the century, seamlessly woven into the chapter on "Cousin Franklin":

Of course, Eleanor and Franklin were never alone together. That would have been highly improper in those formal Victorian days. When Eleanor visited Hyde Park or Campobello, when she met Franklin in New York for lunch or tea, even they went riding in the Roosevelt carriage, a third person was always present. If a relative wasn't available, Eleanor's maid served as a chaperone (38).

These frequent explanations offer the reader a broader insight into time, describing the conventions of the era in order to later set Roosevelt's often unconventional views and activities in contrast. This treatment gives young readers a strong sense of why Roosevelt is worthy of special attention. The text is accompanied by more than 100 black and white photographs, both formal portraits and informal candid views of Roosevelt. Overall, the book focuses on Roosevelt's life as a public figure, though does not shy away from intensely personal matters such as her father's alcoholism, her adolescent insecurities, and even her husband's infidelity. In this way, Freedman manages to create a very intimate portrait of the woman herself and to make a larger-than-life figure, with a highly privileged background seem very real and accessible. Although Freedman's tone clearly indicates an admiration for his subject, the book does not idolize her, often drawing attention to her faults such as her lack of her tenderness as a mother when her children were very young (acknowledged by her son). The book concludes with a photo album, bibliography, and index. The book is readable from beginning to end and usable as a reference for exploration of specific events or issues from Roosevelt's life. Children will likely come to this book because of a classroom assignment, but in the process will certainly be entertained and inspired.

Articles
Lexar Media expands product line with newly introduced Memory Stick Duo and Memory Stick PRO Duo.: An article from: EDP Weekly's IT Monitor
Published in Digital by Millin Publishing, Inc. (2003-08-18)
Author:
List price: $5.95
New price: $5.95

Average review score:

Certainly recommended reading!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-10-17
A really excellent press release; particularly enjoyable when read in the cockpit of your new JL-421 while enjoying a glass of Tuscan whole milk.

What an exciting read!
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-05
This press release truly borders on the magnificent! 398 words of compelling arguement all wonderfully woven into a poetic delivery make sure that this will be a press release to be savoured for years to come.

Paragraph 13 is exceptionally good.

If you read only one outdated flash memory-related press release this year...
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-24
...make it this one. All those precious moments spent with your Memory Stick Duo (or Memory Stick PRO Duo) will come flooding back. As a bonus, the Reader's Guide will definitely liven up your next Classic Memory Stick Press Release club meeting!

Absoluting enthralling with an ending that will leave you wanting more
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-07
The masterful author forms his extravagant words into a web of announcement perfection as though the words themselves were a viscid, transparent liquid which hardens upon contact with air. I nearly lost myself when he began writing about MagicGate(tm) copyright protection technology. Beautiful, every time I read it I cry.

512MB memory sticks bring back memories of my childhood when we would go down to the store, buy some memory sticks and plug them into a computer. We would transfer files between computers with them. Oh what fun we had! This press release certainly brings back fond memories.

It also stirs your thoughts with its deep moral messages. You will ponder it deeply.

Truly at the level of Tolkien or Chesterton. Its wit, wisdom, and logic strikes to the very core of man.

The ending is left deliberately open for a sequel. How long will we have to wait? It's been four years! As soon as we know about a sequel I am pre-ordering it.

Enthralling
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-06
I couldn't pull myself away from this press release! Best 6 minutes of my LIFE!!! I would have paid twice the price.

Articles
Readings: Essays & Literary Entertainments
Published in Hardcover by Indiana University Press (2000-10)
Author: Michael Dirda
List price: $24.95
New price: $5.99
Used price: $2.52
Collectible price: $24.95

Average review score:

Pleasure in books
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2004-01-02
Dirda is a critic and editor at the Washington Post, notable for his erudition, his enthusiasm, and his wide-ranging reading--not just in respectable, "literary" fiction but in mystery and science fiction as well. It's common to make a distinction between "reviews" (ephemeral, plot-focused, intended to attract or warn off readers) and "criticism" (intellectual, in-depth, insightful, aimed at people already familiar with the works in question)--but Dirda's columns often blur this distinction in the most welcome way.

Readings collects these columns, including pastiches of Wodehouse and Pepys, appreciations of comic masterpieces, articles on soft-core porn, hard-boiled thrillers, science fiction, fantasy, forgotten classics and not-quite-classics, The Tale of Genji, the obsession of bookcollecting, and much more. Reading the book felt like making a new friend: Dirda offers a delightful mix of appreciations on books I know and books I always meant to try and books I'd never even heard of. Above all, he manages to convey the heady *pleasure* of reading--that we do this, really, heretically, hedonistically, not for our greater good but because it's just plain fun.

a dangerous book
Helpful Votes: 18 out of 18 total.
Review Date: 2003-02-28
If you carry around a list of books you must find, if you've ever hidden new (or used) books from someone who thought money could be better spent (!) on food or electricity, if you've ever fantasized about meeting your favorite authors .... you will have found a kindred spirit in Michael Dirda, book lover and essayist, who has collected 46 of his Washington Post Book World articles here for you.

Wide-ranging but never overextended, Dirda impresses me not only for his erudite commentary but because he manages to rattle off titles and lists and names without ever seeming patronizing; he discusses a multitude of literary concepts without ever being condescending; and he relates a remarkable and far-reaching knowledge without ever sounding arrogant.

Dirda is knowledgeable and funny, intelligent and affectionate, as he considers Wodehouse, maxims, criminally-bad retention, Chesterton, Irish and French novelists, children's books, vacation reading, comedic novels, Beerbohm, Oulipo, the Internet, death, genre reading, Benson's Lucia, private clubs, teachers, autobiographies and getting in shape. And he reveals some interesting information about pre-presidential Jimmy Carter!

If you love books, you will thoroughly enjoy these observations. But beware! When you are finished you will have drawn up a LONG list of books that you did not know existed but which you cannot now live without.

Stimulating. Thought-provoking. Fun. All learning should be so enjoyable!

good book for a rainy afternoon
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2005-02-27
I spent the afternoon reading, smiling and occasionally laughing out loud. I have always imagined I was the most addicted reader I knew -- but, Dirda gets the prize.

He tells us about pouncing on a find like a "rabid marmoset" and sneaking books into the house to hide them from the "Beloved Spouse."

His taste is catholic and he is a good writer. I think any reader will enjoy his essays.

A Booklover's Listmaker
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2005-02-05
This is a wonderful book of short essays by Michael Dirda, book reviewer for the Washington Post. Dirda appears to have read everything ever written, from literary fiction to science fiction to history to books that are just plain funny.

One of the things I particularly like about him is his enthusiasm for all kinds of books and his love for making truly eclectic lists (e.g., the "100 funniest books ever written", but with no more than one book per author; otherwise he said the list would be little but books by P. G. Wodehouse). He is also an aficionado of lost treasures (e.g., "The Autobiography of Augustus Carp, Esq.," at once one the most humorous books ever written and devastating account of true hypocrite--a man who would give Pecksniff a run for his money--or "Ashenden," Somerset Maugham's interconnected stories of a British secret agent in WWI--and the inspiration for other writers in the spy genre). He's also big on the Lucia series by E. F. Benson, which are hilarious representations of the battles for social supremacy in small town Britain--they are comedies of manners that compare well to Jane Austen's incomparable novels. No one is as good as Austen, but Benson is very, very good.

Dirda has also re-introduced me to science fiction (in particular Jack Vance).

This is an entertaining and highly varied set of essays with one central theme--the love of reading good books.

I'm a life-long book lover and reader. To my wife's chagrin, Dirda has reinforced all of my antisocial tendencies. He's given me the names of a pile of new treasures to read. I loved the book and I appreciate Dirda's infectious love for books. Read it.

a book for the incurable reader
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2002-09-18
Pulitzer Prize-winning writer Michael Dirda is one of the main reasons I read the Washington Post Book World every Sunday. In his book, "Readings: Essays and Literary Entertainments," Dirda assembles forty-six of his best essays (all of his Book World editorial columns are good) to delight the reader who, like him, is an incurable book aficionado.

Although the idea of reading a book about reading books may sound a bit redundant, Dirda's exciting, humorous, wide-ranging, and engaging narrative will not lose the reader's attention. He is a scholarly bibliophile in every sense of the term, minus any pretension. His love of books is infectious, and there is no escaping Dirda's charm and wit. The chapters "The Crime of His Life," "Listening to My Father," "Mr. Wright," "Commencement Advice," "Clubland," "Turning 50," and "Bookman's Saturday" are especially good.

For the reader who finds himself (or herself) swamped with reading wish-lists, tirelessly hunting for a first edition, obsessing over collecting all of a particular author's works, finding unparalleled solace in the library, and generally spending more time reading than doing anything else, this is the book for you. I have seen Mr. Dirda speak about this book on C-SPAN2's "Book TV" and on open university's "The Writing Life," and he is just as enthusiastic about reading in person as he is on paper. I highly recommend this book to everyone who loves to read.

Articles
Crystal the Snow Fairy (Rainbow Magic)
Published in Library Binding by (2007-10)
Author: Daisy Meadows
List price: $13.99
New price: $13.99
Used price: $16.25

Average review score:

Good series for younger readers... and very, very, very girly
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-12
This is the second series of "Rainbow Magic" fairy books written by Daisy Meadows, picking up where the seven-part Rainbow Fairies series left off. These books are innocent and engaging, focusing on two young girls, Kirsty and Rachel, who meet while on vacation with their parents, and are drawn into the magical world of the fairies, who are in conflict with the mischievous Jack Frost. The structure of this series is nearly identical to the first: the girls are given a quest in which they must help seven fairies (each with sparkles aplenty and cute, super-girly outfits and princess-y names such as Hayley, Heather, Iris, Amber and Iris... ) who have been bothered by Jack and his goblin helpers. In each book they complete one part of the quest and meet one new fairy.

It is important to know going in that these books are interconnected -- each individual volume ties in with the others, so you will want to start with book #1, then go on to #2, etc. The plots are not very complicated, but they do make reference to each other, and the idea is to read them all together.

The other thing to know is that these books are not very scary or troubling - there is action, but not much real danger (the goblins are easily beaten, and not very frightening) so if you are looking for longer narratives for young kids to read, but don't want anything disturbing, this series is good option. One criticism is that the books are pretty WASP-y, and while a couple of the fairies might be seen as Asian, basically the entire series takes place in an all-white, middle-class world, populated with thin, blonde girls and a few brunettes. Other than that, though, this is a good series for families looking for light, engaging, age-appropriate stories. Not much depth, but they are very readable and engaging. (ReadThatAgain children's book reviews)

Crystal the Snow fairy
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-28
My Daughter Loves this book & looks forward to read the rest of the series. Its very easy to read.

Crystal The Snow Fairy
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-04
My daughter liked Crystal so much she wanted to get the rest of the weather fairies. We have since bought the Rainbow Fairies and Jewel Fairies. She loves reading them! They are captivating and have super illustrations. She also enjoyed Holly The Christmas Fairy as a Christmas surprise!

Doodle's magic feathers lost!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-10-13
I love this book! I would recommend this book for ages 5 and up. In this book Jack Frost's evil goblins stole Doodle's, the rooster who gives the weather faries their weather feathers so they can control the weather in FairyLand, tail feathers which are the weather feathers! Kirsty and Rachel are best friends, who are friends with the fairies so they can help! Their first mission is in this book when they have to find Crystal the snow fairies weather feather. Read this book to find out more!

We love it!!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-12-23
My seven-year old daughter Clare has read 12 books by Daisy Meadows and we've ordered several more. She especially liked Crystal the Snow Fairy. It has great pictures. Some of her other favorites include: Pearl the Cloud Fairy and Heather the Violet Fairy. What a great series!

Articles
The Complete How-To Book of Indiancraft: 68 Projects for Authentic Indian Articles from Tepee to Tom-tom
Published in Paperback by Wiley (1973-06-01)
Author: W. Ben Hunt
List price: $13.95
New price: $28.09
Used price: $2.55
Collectible price: $24.00

Average review score:

Wonderful!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-11-14
We received the book promptly and were very happy with it! It had some really cool projects and lots of additional information, as well as pictures. Very interesting and informative and we couldn't be happier!

INDIANCRAFTS
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-15
Great book with black and white pix for learning to create various Native American (especially plains style) and pioneering crafts from natural materials the old way. Set up in a nice vintage tone and format. Truly a treasure for anyone exploring survival skills, Native heritage or crafting items from nature!!! Highly recommend!

A true treasure from the past
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-03
If you want a politically correct and modern Native American craft book, this is not it. Though the copyright is 1973, this book has a 50's feel and sketches. However, it is a wealth of information with crafts ranging from leather & rawhide making to building your own dogsled. With a simple change of materials theses scout projects go from Hollywood to historically correct. I found this book to have the best set of instructions and illustrations for making an Eastern style roach headdress despite the instructions calling for manila fibers (I used turkey beards). I highly recommend this book to the Buckskinner or Native enthusiast.

Excellent livre (contenu et qualité)
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2004-12-22
Livraison dans un excellent délai, moins d'une semaine. La qualité du volume est excellente, presque neuf.

answer to happeeface
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 2002-07-30
This book was wonderful. It came highly recommended. The prompt service on the purchase of this used book was great.

Articles
The Debate on the Constitution : Federalist and Antifederalist Speeches, Articles and Letters During the Struggle over Ratification, Part Two: January to August 1788 (Library of America)
Published in Hardcover by Library of America (1993-06-01)
Author:
List price: $35.00
New price: $5.00
Used price: $4.00
Collectible price: $35.00

Average review score:

Wonderfull
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-07
This is an infinitely useful collection of primary sources. Any student of this period should have this on their bookshelf - they will get much more than the $23.10 worth of use.

The editor does a good job of including the best arguments of both sides and does not taint the actual debate with modern biases.

Great for study
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-24
Love the book! Been looking for these debates for years. It's nice to learn the behind-the-scenes arguments for and against the Constitution. Also nice to know that partisan bickering is not new.

Constitutional Debates
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-31
I've gathered other collections (i.e., The Federalist Paper, Constitutional Debates) over the years, but this collection (along with Volume 2) is by far the most comprehensive yet affordable collection to date. Given the fact Bernard Bailyn compiled the contents and wrote the background material, the reader can rest assured that a distinguished historian is behind these endeavors. Bailyn's commitment to detail and analysis of primary sources has always been one of his hallmarks. He continues that commitment in these two volumes.

There is more material here than the average person probably ever knew existed regarding the constitutional debates. Letters, newspaper articles, formal treatises, and speeches all provide the documentation. Bailyn wants to show the depth and richness of the discussion, which varies from those who feared loss of personal liberty to those ready to embrace the document. Anyone who picks up these volumes will come away with an idea of how complex the constitution really is - that it will never be all things to all people, but it does ground our national identity. It becomes the task of each succeeding generation to uphold the tradition yet strive to assure the Constitution carries out its intended purpose. Obviously this is no small feat to be taken lightly.

The books are arranged chronologically, more or less, divided into subsections. The reader will get the broad spectrum of constitutional debates (the Federalist Papers are included, the "antifederalist papers" are included) as are the fears, assurances, and the entire range of human emotion regarding the Constitution are all there for the reader to peruse.

The only spoiler I offer is the peculiar selection of a Benjamin Franklin letter as the very first entry of the set. Franklin fears the Constitution yet is willing to embrace it just the same. In a way, this might be the quintessential document of the entire collection as all Americans have reason to heed Franklin's concerns.

real political analysis
Helpful Votes: 25 out of 27 total.
Review Date: 2003-01-07
Unlike the political commentators of the late 20th and early 21st century (watchers of Sunday public affairs programs and AM radio listeners know who they are), the commentators of the 18th century actually had something of substance to say. This was a time when education was rare, but when done was done well. The New American Library does its usual exceptional job in assembling the material in this book including some of the more important selections from the Federalist Papers as well as some of the writings of the anti-Federalists. Here the role of the government and the nature of freedom are really explored. Life was better before politics became about feeling and emotion. Every American should read this book, but only if he wants to really understand the basis of the American experiment.

Provides a complete environment for the Federalist Papers
Helpful Votes: 30 out of 35 total.
Review Date: 2001-03-27
Study of the Federalist Papers, of course included in this two volume series, is a conduit for understanding the American ethic. When the Federalist Papers are viewed as included in this chronological deliberation between the Federalists and Antifederalists, they become even more profound than the enormous depth they can achieve when read alone. The concerns of Brutus and Agrippa are answered, the repititive call for a 'Bill of Rights' revealed. Madison wrote to Jefferson in 1825 defining the Federalist Papers as 'may fairly enough be regarded as the most authentic exposition of the text of the federal constituion, as understood by the Body which prepared & the authority which accepted it.' The enormous insight gained from tracking the arguments and concerns of the proposed Constituion , and the responses of the Federalist cannot be easily estimated, yet the result is a much more informed conscience of the American experience. Madison in the same letter mentioned above stated that Federalist Essays did not foresee all the misconstructions which to that date had occured, nor prevent some it did foresee. For the concerned and deliberate citizen of today many of these issues remain, issues such as Federalism are current topics and all too often the opinions of the few become the conscience of the many, examining these volume will do much to alleviate this vexing condition. More alarming is the realization that many of the fears of the Antifederalists have become a reality in todays polity. An excellent and comprehensive collection thank you Bernard Bailyn.

Articles
Chicago: With the Chicago Tribune Articles that Inspired It
Published in Paperback by Southern Illinois University Press (1997-10-29)
Author: Maurine Watkins
List price: $17.50
New price: $37.99
Used price: $18.94

Average review score:

one of my favorites
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-30
i love, love, love this book and re-read it often. first of all, i'm a huge "chicago" fan - the movie, not the musical play (perhaps the original musical was awesome, but that was before my time and i've only seen the current day touring version of "chicago" and i was not very impressed). anyway, i am also a huge fan of anything 1920s, so this book was absolutely perfect for me.

it was great to hear about the stories behind the play and how two horrible murders were turned into entertainment and how the murderesses were turned into glamorous stars. it was also fascinating to see the pictures of the murderesses - the one of beulah annan is super creepy!

maurine dallas watkins' articles were incredibly entertaining and it was great to read them and then go onto the play. i love that when rob marshall made the movie "chicago", he used a bit more of the play than the muscial version did.

it's sad that watkins didn't go on to even greater things after these articles (although i do love the movie "libeled lady" - with jean harlow, myrna loy, william powell, and spencer tracy - that she collaborated on the screenplay for). but it's awesome that her legacy turned into such a popular musical and movie!

i would definitely recommend this book to anyone interested in "chicago", the 1920s, crime writing, and media sensationalism.

Wonderful!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2002-12-16
This publication of the play that inspired the hit musical is amazing. Not only is it the original script, it gives wonderful newspaper articles of the time period and gives a real sense of time and place. As an artist, it was amazing to perform this piece. While the musical is a hit, it owes everything to this beautiful and strikingly funny but touching play. I highly recommend it and enjoy!

Perfect
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-11-28
I read this book for my history fair project that I was doing on the true story behind the musical "Chicago." This book was so helpful to me because it gives every bit of information about the crimes and it even has all of Watkins' Tribune articles from the time. The script for the original play is an added bonus, and it is fun for me, as a "Chicago" and Fosse fan, to compare the original play to the musical and movie. This is well worth the price and a must-have for any "Chicago" fan.

Fablous for Dramaturgical Work
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2000-01-13
This book is amazing if you are looking to find some history on the play. I have seen the non-musical produced in Ashland and will be directing it myself in the next couple of years. This book includes the full original script, which is amazing in itself, but also includes a fantastic introduction my Thomas H. Pauly. The articles are a joy to read because you really get a sense of Watkins' style of writing.

Insightful history of what became a classic musical
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 1999-07-03
Watkins' days a court reporter inspired her to write the script for what was to become, itself, the inspiration for one of the best musicals of our time. The daily reports from the court trials of the real life muderessess in Chicago were certainly very telling. The fact that the women who escaped death row or life sentences were white women, society women, beautiful women, and most poignantly, women who killed their lovers - not their husbands.This reminded me of how people get caught up in the soap opera of life and love to glamorise all events. If you are a lover of the musical, this is an interesting book to read.

Articles
Construction Law & Risk Management: Case Notes and Articles
Published in Paperback by Ardent Publications (2003-04)
Author: J. Kent Holland Jr.
List price: $39.95
Used price: $93.65

Average review score:

Good Solid Advice
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-07-23
This book is well written, making it a pleasure to read. In addition, the author has provided case references so additional details can be readily obtained if needed (plus it makes everything read with more credibility). I find the practical advise at the end of each article to be very useful and good solid advice. Since purchasing the book just a few weeks ago, two sections have proved to be immediately beneficial: Section 24 on Surety and Section 19 on Site Safety Risk and Responsibility.

Must Buy for Construction Professionals
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2003-10-22
The book is an elegant complilation of real world design and construction case law. It is concise, cogent and well presented.
Although it should be referenced in the case one is involved in litigation, it's true value is as a prerequisite primer prior to underatking any new design or construction project.

Construction Law Book Review
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2003-08-13
Kent,
I have found the reference to be a valuable source of information on a broad range of problematic construction topics. The articles include abstracts of issues brought before Triers of Fact, providing both the issue basis and the decisions of contentious contract disputes. A helpful source for those desiring an understanding of the strengths and weaknesses of issues before them. Thanks for your great work.

Rob Hartley
Sr Construction Consultant
TRS Consultants
San Ramon, CA.

Specific Points or Overview
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2003-07-24
This book is an excellent resource for any one who is in Construction or deals with Contractors. If you need to know a specific point, the concise but well reasoned sections provide you an answer. Also, if you want an overview of Construction Risk, the book as a whole can do that.
This book should be utilized by Contractors, Insurance Brokers and Carriers and Attorneys. I have been a Contractor, Broker and Attorney and find it useful. I have used it as a resource and a way to review this arena. Take this book to lunch and read a few sections at a time.
As I do Construction Risk Consulting for Contractors, I find that this recap is an excellent way of keeping aware and it has provided resources for my business.

compilation
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2003-07-24
True to the preface, this books compiles cases of law in construction, organizes them in a very useful index to subjects and table of contents for reference. The cases have been prepared by a large group of experts in the industry.

Articles
An empirical test of the incentive effects of deposit insurance: the case of junk bonds at savings and loan associations.: An article from: Journal of Money, Credit & Banking
Published in Digital by Ohio State University Press (1994-02-01)
Authors: Elijah, III Brewer and Thomas H. Mondschean
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Sylvia Beach and the Lost Generation
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-09
Sylvia Beach and the Lost Generation

This is an ambitious and serious work, accessible in style, and packed with information in over four hundred pages. It has three main themes, clearly defined in the introduction.
The first is the love between Adrienne Monnier and Sylvia. The details of this, so we are told, 'were and are still little known' in 1983 when this book was first published. The second is her admiration for, and championship of, James Joyce. The third is her bookshop, Shakespeare and Company, which was a key feature of the literary scene in Paris between the two World Wars.
By far the most detail is provided on her professional relationship with Joyce. Her efforts to get Ulysses published and smuggled into America, her financial and personal efforts to support the author, and the amount of time and energy she invested, are the key theme of the book.
Naturally Sylvia knew all the other familiar literary figures of the time. Hemingway and Pound are frequently mentioned, as is Gertrude Stein.
As intimated in the introduction there is less to be said about more personal relationships. In a way this seems rather a pity. The anecdotal style and recurring references to various incidents along the way give the writing a rather disjointed feel. Inevitably there is also a certain sense of déja vu particularly for anyone familiar with biographies of Hemingway for example.
The strength and the weakness of the book is the amount of text devoted to James Joyce. Joyce attracts great, but not universal, enthusiasm. The man himself seems to have had more arrogance than charm. Depending on the side of this divide which the reader favours this book will firmly hold the attention or will, in places, rather pall.

keen and insightful....
Helpful Votes: 14 out of 14 total.
Review Date: 2004-05-17
This is one of the best books that I've ever read about the 'lost generation' of Americans literary refugees in Paris. The writing is excellent, the research exhaustive and thorough with unparalleled access to Ms. Beach's 'surpressed' portions of her autobiography "Shakespeare and Company". It is readily apparent from this book that without Ms. Beach and her unflinching support, there would have been no "Ulysses" (and maybe no James Joyce). But there was so many other authors she supported and nurtured as well, as the quote from Ernest Hemingway cited above illustrates as well. This book is almost a 'must read' for those persons interested in American literature of the mid 20th century.

WELL RESEARCHED - FOR THOSE INTERESTED IN OUR LITERATURE
Helpful Votes: 15 out of 15 total.
Review Date: 2005-04-12
This one has been around for some time now and it is not the worse for wear. For those interested in our literature and literary Paris during the 1920s and 1930s, then this is one of those "must reads" (I truely hate that term, but know of no better to describe the improtance of this work at this time). The author's research is absolutely miticulous and fills in many gaps in the story of this remarkable woman. Do be warned though. Many of the names of people mentioned here are rather obscure (at this day and time) for those not immersed in the literary world. This can make the work a bit difficult to follow at times. That being said, this is a wonderful work to read to cause many of these names to become less obscure than they are now...one more of the many reasons to read this work! The book covers some of the intimate details of Beach's relationship with friends and lovers that she so well side steps in her own account of this time. Recommend this one highly. Actually, you probably should purchase this one as it is one that is a good book for reference and one you will probably want to reread.

A Fantastic Insight Into The Most Famous Bookstore in Paris
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2005-12-01
This is quite a spectacular book, a privileged look into the most famous English language bookstore in Paris, Sylvia Beach's Shakespeare & Company. Not only is it delightful to read the history of how Sylvia's modest dream became such a huge success, but it is also fascinating to read about Hemingway, Fitzgerald, Gertrude Stein, and James Joyce when they were young. The language is rich and fulfilling, the photos insightful, and in the end, I really felt as if I had been part of it all, sitting in Sylvia's bookstore, hearing the rustle of pages as the day passed away.

History-Biography-Delectation
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2004-10-24
This is one of those books where you care about the characters. Their past and future becomes important and that the characters are real people make this book all the more fasinating. A book one does want to end. But end it does with style.

Articles
On Film-Making: An Introduction to the Craft of the Director.(Book Review): An article from: Cineaste
Published in Digital by Cineaste Publishers, Inc. (2005-06-22)
Author: Alexander Mackendrick
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One of the very best books on filmmaking
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-11
I have read many books on filmmaking and I have a film school degree (from CalArts, as it happens, where Mackendrick once taught). You can't learn filmmaking from a book or from school, only by making films. Nevertheless, "On Film-making" comes as close as any book I've ever found to explaining precisely and beautifully the work of a film director. Whether you want to make films or are simply a film fan, this book will be an immensely rewarding and illuminating experience.

the master speaks
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-18
Great book by a great filmmaker and a great teacher. Anyone serious about how to create meaning in the cinema by using the "grammar," the form, should read this book. Ditto for the creation of story along classical lines --

He changed me
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-13
When Sandy MacKenrick told my CalArts MFA Thesis committee that my thesis film script was, "long, much too long, and very much too long" and, "doomed to never be completed", I was shocked and terrified.

Sandy was one of the most brilliant and irritating people ever to tell a story or to browbeat an egotistical young film student. His films and lectures convey that contradiction -- his every work is a pearl.

If you were not lucky enough to get Sandy's notes while at CalArts, you must buy this book.

Odds are good, you won't have the genius of Sandy MacKendrick, but you will appreciate how much you could grow as you strive to attain what he found so simple.

I was proud to invite Sandy to the first screening of my thesis film, "Pirate's Dagger", and it still hurts that he was too ill to attend. I wouldn't have gotten it done without his special form of encouragement.

Great man, great book.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-12
Too intelligent to be a director, to make compromises in the craft of film making with the studio system of his time, Alexander Mackendrick only left us a glimpse of his own potential in his body of work. He did however pass his vision and passion for creativity onto the next generation in his teaching. In this book his voice is loud and clear, without being dogmatic. It's like having a drink with a friend in a bar and having him sort out all your problems with scripts, actors and life. No director should be without a copy. From the beginner to the established star everybody can find something in this book and all conveyed in the manner both intense and unpatronising that was uniquely his.

Very, very good
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-06-28
Unlike most how-to directing and writing books, Mackendrick was an accomplished director with decades of professional experience. He speaks from hard-won experience, not dubious armchair notions of what makes a successful film or director. He is wise enough to know there are no "secrets" or immutable laws of storytelling, only rules of thumb. Every time I go back to it, I learn something new, and with every film I make, I am struck by points in the book which ring ever more true. This book will not make you a great director by reading it, but Mackendrick has the good sense and candor to know that a book or a course never will, only lots and lots of hard work and dedication.


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