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A must have if you are new to SF and looking to meet peopleReview Date: 1999-08-02
best way to connect with people of similar interestsReview Date: 1998-07-30
Getting out is easy!Review Date: 1998-09-01
Great Resource for Locals and Visitors Looking for Fun in SFReview Date: 1998-09-02

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Obra clave de la sociología contemporáneaReview Date: 2005-08-21
Más allá de que Giddens terminó en el polo opuesto político de Bourdieu, sus teorías lograron romper con la falsa dicotomía entre estructura y construcción o agencia social.
Es una de las obras que ningún estudioso de sociología o teoría social puede dejar de considerar, desgraciadamente la traducción en castellano es pésima y es necesario recurrir a su lectura en inglés para poder comprender la obra.
Roberto von Sprecher
Prof. Sociología Universidad Nacional de Córdoba. Argentina.
A brilliant piece of grand theoryReview Date: 2007-08-08
I will not provide a restatement of Giddens' "structuration" theory in this review, although doing so might be of use to many amazon.com readers. Instead I'd like to discuss Giddens' primary motivation for developing structuration theory: an attempt to clarify the relationship between both material and social situations and human action. Giddens is an action theorist who, particularly like Marx and Weber, has tried to explain this quintessential sociological relationship.
Like CPST, CoS is organized around select elements of Marx's sociology. While this may be more readily apparent in the case of the former monograph, one need only read page xxi of CoS's introduction to get the picture: "This book, indeed, might be accurately described as an extended reflection upon a celebrated and oft-quoted phrase to be found in Marx. Marx comments that 'Men [let us immediately say human beings] make history, but not in circumstances of their own choosing.' Well, so they do. But what a diversity of complex problems of social analysis this apparently innocuous pronouncement turns out to disclose!"
Neither Marx, Durkheim, nor Weber posited a one-way relationship between environment and acting subject, but none of their theories described the relationship with enough clarity to satisfy Giddens. Reading CPST after CoS, one can see how the earlier work presents what would later become many of Giddens' mature views as the most important contributions of the classical authors.
In my opinion, structuration theory is so successful at explaining the environment/subject relationship because of its use of developmental psychology. Openly borrowing from Erik Erikson, Giddens considers the need to minimize anxiety as the primary motivation of human action. He argues that we engage in the type of regular social behavior observed by Garfinkel and Goffman because doing so lessens the anxiety that we first develop as infants. As if wedding the work of "interactionist" and "structuralist" sociologists were not impressive enough, Giddens enhances microsociology by providing a psychological basis for its observations. Furthermore, this combination facilitates the incorporation of arguments and observations from human geography. The spatial notions of presence and absense that form the basis of individual anxiety also define societies at large. Thus the "problem of order" in structuration theory is how it's possible that actors who are not co-present can coordinate their actions and reproduce anxiety-minimizing social norms across space and time.
As Giddens' critics have stated at length, the empirical utility of structuration theory is debatable. Even so, I consider "The Constitution of Society" an underutilized resource for guiding sociological investigation, and I wholeheartedly recommend it to all those interested in social theory.
The closure of the debate of 20th centuryReview Date: 2000-04-12
Ontology in SociologyReview Date: 2001-03-19

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Contrails Over the MojavieReview Date: 2008-06-07
"The Right Stuff" for USAF fighter testing programsReview Date: 2008-06-13
Marrett's interest in aviation began at an early age during the height of World War II. He and his friend Bob used to run around the backyard pretending to be fighter pilots, or sometimes a bomber crew on a mission over Germany. He was always the co-pilot, because Bob said that you had to have a silver whistle to be the pilot. Marrett continues "I envied Bob and his whistle and promised myself that someday I would get a whistle and advance into the lofty ranks of the pilots. I never asked Bob why a whistle was required. It was just a requirement - that was enough for a young boy." After graduating flight school, he earned silver wings, but he was always trying to earn his next `silver whistle'.
The book does an outstanding job of focusing on the major events in Marrett's 12-year Air Force career. After his flight training at Bainbridge AFB, Georgia, he traveled to San Francisco, California to stand fighter alert in the nuclear-missile armed F-101B Voodoo. It was here that he learned many of the important lessons for young fighter pilots, and he also set himself up for success as a future test pilot.
After graduating from Col Chuck Yeager's `Charm School', Marrett finally became a test pilot. In this section, the book's scope expands to cover the contributions of the entire fighter branch, not only the achievements of Capt Marrett. To name a few of the bigger testing programs, the book offers recollections for the X-15; the century series fighters; the XB-70 Valkyrie; the SR-71/YF-12/A-12; the F-4 Phantom; and the F-5 Freedom Fighter.
Along with his engaging recollections of the aerial achievements, Marrett also captures the subtle entrenchment of bureaucracy at Edwards AFB. Along with the rapid expansion of the base, the Air Force Flight Test Center had to deal with increased oversight from the Air Force. As aircraft design knowledge (and aircraft prices) increased, there was an increase in the safety requirements at the installation. Tragically, Marrett recants the stories of far too many pilots who gave their lives chasing the next whistle.
Marrett is an extremely talented author. "Contrails Over the Mojave" is an insider's look at the flight testing of America's greatest fighter planes of the 1960s. Every aviation enthusiast needs to set aside a space on the bookshelf alongside Tom Wolfe's "The Right Stuff".
An Excellent BookReview Date: 2008-04-10
A Pilot's ReviewReview Date: 2008-03-23

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Back to the LandReview Date: 2007-08-23
A fine pick for any collection interested in urban planning, ecology, or Bay Area history alike.Review Date: 2007-12-04
Diane C. Donovan
California Bookwatch
Green Activism, Bay Area StyleReview Date: 2007-09-29
Always attuned to class issues, Walker acknowledges that these movements were mostly led by upper-class folks and ultimately turned parts of the Bay Area (e.g., Marin) into lightly populated enclaves for the well off. Working families in the Bay Area have had great access to public parks and the coast, but activists so far have done little to impede the siting of toxic nastiness in low-income neighborhoods. Walker questions the link between efforts to slow or stop growth and the Bay Area's high housing prices, but he notes that the growth that has occurred--in the eastern part of Contra Costa County and the San Joaquin Valley, for example--isn't very smart and may be linked to the inner Bay Area's aversion to virtually any growth at all. At the end of the day, though, it's hard to resist Walker's conclusion that Bay Area residents have plenty to be thankful for. Highly recommended.
Inspiring! Understand how the Bay Area came to be such a terrific place to liveReview Date: 2007-08-22
I love the SF Bay Area for its beauty and outdoors and I wanted to know how it happened and who to thank. Now I know.
Another book worth considering, which is much more specific to the creation of one area is New Guardians for the Golden Gate: How America Got a Great National Park
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This was the most up-lifting book I have read in years.Review Date: 1998-02-28
This was the most up-lifting book I have read in years.Review Date: 1998-02-28
A "Must Read" for Anyone Touched by Breast CancerReview Date: 1996-08-31
Be prepared to laugh, to cry and to love the author!Review Date: 1996-08-30

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Just a wonderful book, on many levelsReview Date: 2004-05-09
The author's careful, meticulous documentation of those three livelihoods, plus a "you are there" look at her childhood in Beverly Hills (a decade before my childhood fifteen miles away) paint a many-faceted portrait of her family and the times, with joy and pain and glamour. The untimely deaths, the splits in the family bonds, all are described unflinchingly. Weller even gives a less-than-flattering description of her own girlhood, and how hard she tried to please a reserved father who reluctantly gave her a pet name, Brooksie. She was delighted until he added, "Because you babble."
An admirable effort from Sheila Weller. And bless her and her sister, for coming out whole!
kept me on my toesReview Date: 2003-03-23
A wonderful surprise!Review Date: 2003-04-03
FascinatingReview Date: 2003-02-10

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important work of philosophyReview Date: 2008-03-11
ExcellentReview Date: 2007-11-29
A "different" translationReview Date: 2007-03-08
However, I found this translation to be a bit difficult. One of the reviewers on the back of the book refers to it as "poetic" - well, maybe; mostly I found it a bit of a struggle to make sense of it, and had to read through it with several parallel translations to figure out what Roberts was translating. However, in that situation, read with several parallel translations, this translation provides an worthwhile "spin". I find Mair's translation much cleaner, simpler, and more comprehensible. The two together are nice.
An exceptional translation.Review Date: 2002-05-08
Roberts is a Professor of Chinese at New York University, and the goal of his work is to assist his reader in understanding Lao-tzu's difficult poem. His book includes a twenty-three page Introduction that offers the historical background of the TAO TE CHING. He then annotates his literal translation of the two-part, eighty-one stanza poem with his insightful commentary. His translation is just as scholarly as Robert Henricks' translation, more literal than Stephen Harrison's poetic rendering of Lao-tzu's TAO, and more challenging than Red Pine's excellent translation.
G. Merritt

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How to overcome culture shock in ChinaReview Date: 1998-04-24
Becoming sensitive to another culture-Chinese CultureReview Date: 1998-04-28
Interesting Insight into a Perplexing WorldReview Date: 2000-08-09
Book captures the joys and frustrations of living in ChinaReview Date: 1998-04-15
The book will be a wonderful service for those planning to go to China to teach, and for those whose dreams take them only as far as the living room couch.
A must read.
Margot E. Landman
Director, U.S.-China Teachers
Exchange Program
American Council of Learned Societies

Used price: $65.13

Vintage P.I. yarn with an original narrator's twistReview Date: 2008-05-11
Perfect for fans of the gritty hard-boiled detective listen.Review Date: 2008-04-03
fine historical mysteryReview Date: 2008-01-12
Wealthy Rita Heppelwaite hires Dex to report on what her married boyfriend, Harrison Dempsey is doing. Thinking this is an easy case and needing help on surveillance, Dex brings Kitty with him. However, their prey proves to be someone else's prey as the sleuth and his assistant finds the murdered corpse of Harrison. Dex wants to make money from his affluent client so he tells Kitty to say nothing about the dead body for now. Kitty is appalled by her boss' disregard of the deceased so she defies Dex and calls the cops. However, to her shock she soon learns that Harrison is alive making her wonder what is going on.
With Madeline Carter on temporary hiatus, Linda L. Richards introduces readers to a new fascinating detective team in a fine historical mystery. The story line is fun, but not so much due to the mystery of Harrison and the corpse or depression Era L.A., but instead because of the bickering relationship between unethical Dex and the moralistic Kitty. They make the tale entertaining.
Harriet Klausner
Lots to love about this bookReview Date: 2008-02-09
I loved the voice of this book. You can almost hear one of the old silver screen actresses talking right off the page. Her wonderful first-person narrative was so true to voice as to lose those of us who aren't familiar with words like "mook" and "spondulix." But she helps us out with enough description that we can figure it out, if not exactly, in general.
This was an especially fun read. I enjoyed the strong heroine and that her boss, though bumbling, was not entirely an idiot. And I really enjoyed learning more about LA during prohibition, too. The cast of shady characters was so great as to leave me completely in the dark about whodunit until it was time to know. There are so many twists and turns in this book that I even started suspecting the good guys. Whose side was everyone on, anyway? I couldn't help but to just keep turning pages.
Even if you aren't typically into the mystery genre, I encourage you to pick up this book. Though there are many dead bodies, the book was not at all gruesome and considering all the two- and three-timing that was going on, and talk of melting lipstick, it was also surprisingly clean.
Armchair Interviews says: Highly recommended.

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Best Book on the History of LatinosReview Date: 2003-01-02
By the sweat of their brow, the wealth of CA was built...Review Date: 2003-02-10
thoroughly researched and readableReview Date: 2003-01-24
This new important work delineates the history of ethnic Mexicans in the county, particularly its East Side. From the poisonous mines of Almaden to the poisonous laboratories of the West Side, it has been ethnically based labor for low pay that has allowed the county to develop in all its prolific economic richness. The author's book provides an overview of these dynamics through research, figures, facts, and eyewitness accounts.
The "devil" mentioned in the title has to do with racism, and the book goes beyond the usual sociological and psychological explanations of racism to emphasize its classist underpinnings in a supposedly classless society. Also emphasized are the creative responses in opposition to it as ethnic Mexicans have made their voices heard and refused to be subjugated without meaningful forms of culturally enhancing assertiveness. Highly recommended.
About timeReview Date: 2002-12-18
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