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A great bookReview Date: 2003-07-25
Knighthood explained, if you're Middle Age French...Review Date: 2000-06-09
The prose is well done, giving good insight into the mind of the Knight of that era. Examples of the problems of lust versus courtly love, the appropriateness of staying just a little hungry, and a comparison of the Orders of Grace (priesthood) with the Orders of Knighthood all work together to give the reader a sense of the noble and knightly duties in the pre Republic days of Europe. This is a good starting point (along with Ramon Lull's _The Book of the Order of Chivalry_) for the novice to learn how social Chivalry developed from the military form to the current socio-political. The parallels in current day knighthood can easily be seen once an understanding is gained of the past, and this book brings the past into focus in an amazing way.
Do be advised -- the French and English are interleaved, so you'll either be reading on the right (english) or left (french) once you get past the introduction!
Guidlines of being a better manReview Date: 2001-04-05
Listen to a medieval knight reflect on knighthoodReview Date: 2000-10-21

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His melody lingers on!Review Date: 2005-10-18
A story of talent and successReview Date: 2005-10-19
I can only wish that I had first hand experiences with Mr. Mongomery's music. Seeing his group via TV in Macy's Thanksgiving Day parade was of interest. The recounting in his book of his half-century of performances and creations seems to demonstrate rather convincingly his outstanding musical and directing skills. To be able to compose - invent - new music as well as arrange the work of others; to write transitional or counterpoint melodies and lyrics, surely are gifts that few people have. For performers, collaborators, or those interested in stories of success, Mr. Mongomery's book is a true delight to read.
A GREAT READ - FASCINATING AND INSPIRING!Review Date: 2005-09-29
"Afterglow", forever.Review Date: 2005-12-13
but how "Monty" and his men put together their annual shows and built on them is even more enthralling.
Surely anyone who had anything to do with the University of Pennsylvania for the past 50 plus years has been touched by the
talent of Bruce Montgomery and should find this a good read!

Brighten Your SpiritReview Date: 2004-08-19
The setting is the village of Ladykirk, Pennsylvania in the early 1900s. The main characters are the gentle village pastor, David Lyall, his wife, Mary, and their three children, Faith (24 years old), Jeremy (20 years old) and bubbly, sweet Lucy (18 years old), all three of whom are grown, unmarried and still living with their parents in the well-worn, cozy church parsonage. The book centers on this extraordinarily devoted family and their affectionate daily interactions with each other and also with the other fascinating citizens of the Ladykirk community, most of whom are also life-long members of Pastor David's Presbyterian congregation. It is a story of a family short on cash, but rich in everything else.
A darling part of the story centers on what happens when a very high society (RICH) Pittsburgh steel tycoon's only son falls in love with the poor minister's 18 year old daughter, Lucy.
Much of the book focuses on how the small town church dealt with the "sin" issue in that day and age. It was interesting to compare the "then and now" methods of handling church discipline problems.... drinking, theft, unwed mothers and so on.
The author wholeheartedly described scenery and people. I finished the book feeling as if I had visited this 1900's village and had become friends with each and every person in the Ladykirk community . The book also left me with a more optimistic view of life and people, but most important, it renewed my faith in a "Good God".
Heart-warming!Review Date: 1999-01-30
It was a wonderful & inspirational story.Review Date: 1998-12-30
A book for all seasonsReview Date: 1997-05-11

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The best that I have read on Review Date: 2005-09-13
Indispensable Brazilian Slavery Research TextReview Date: 1999-12-02
Primary Sources Tell AllReview Date: 2007-01-08
children of god' fireReview Date: 2007-01-05

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CorrectionReview Date: 2005-01-12
Yale Richmond
Informative and Enjoyable.Review Date: 2004-09-27
Other recommendations along with this title:
New Myth, New World, from Nietzsche and Stalinism
Toilet: The Novel (A Tribute to the Literary Works of Franz Kafka)
Readable and ExhileratingReview Date: 2003-12-05
These cultural exchanges involved books, movies, writers, performing artists, scientists, technologists, think tanks, politicans, and scholars.
Richmond writes eloquently, liberally using quotes of people who took part in the exchanges. One was organized by Gerald Mikkelson, professor of Slavic languages and literature at the University of Kansas, and it flourished in the 1970s and 80s. From several days to several weeks, Soviet writers came to the university, experienced the Midwest, and went away forever changed.
"Those visits to Kansas," says Mikkelson, "not only broadened their horizons culturally and ideologically, and gave them plenty of food for thought that sometimes got translated into specific literary works or images, but it added to their prestige and emboldened them at home in their efforts to make the Soviet Union a more livable place for writers and people in the other creative and performing arts."
Imagine a Soviet writer being plunked down in Kansas!
And other new places!
The same for Americans in the Soviet Union!
Some Soviet scholars were not allowed to take part, because the Soviet Foreign Travel Commission didn't think they were "reliable" to travel abroad, for whatever reasons. One of them was Soviet professor George Mirsky, a Middle East expert, who whole-heartedly encouraged his students at the Moscow State Institute of International Relations to go on such exchanges.
Mirsky writes, "Before the exchange, people believed that Western society, no matter how wealthy and affluent, was narrowly materialistic, devoid of any humanism and spirituality, selfish and arrogant, indifferent to moral, cultural, and artistic values, full of hostility for Russians and of anti-Communist crusading spirit.
"What amazed them was American hospitality, warmth, willingness to oblige, civility and politeness, lack of ethnic prejudices, care for disabled, richness of artistic life, pluralism of opinions, abundance of associations. The Soviets were able for the first time in their lives to see a functioning civil society. This was a great surprise...The exchange visitors would never be the same again."
As a musician and lover of the arts, I especially enjoyed the chapter on performing arts, with highlights of American impresario Sol Hurok's success in bringing Soviet musicians, dance troupes, ice shows, and circuses to the U.S. As a child, I had seen some of these performances, but not been aware of their long-range effect! Reciprocal trips took such Amerian writers as Norman Cousins, Robert Lowell, and Edward Albee, and such groups as the Philadelphia Orchestra, the American Ballet Theatre, and the Preservation Hall Jazz Band to the Soviet Union.
These cultural exchanges paved the way for the the arrival of Mikhail Gorbachev to the presidency of the Soviet Union. Gorbachev and his wife had done a great deal of foreign travel in the 1970s and 80s, and loved it. They saw that another world existed beyond their country. As president, Gorbachev opened the door even farther and moved the Soviet Union forward to help end the Cold War.
I love this book because it is informative, inspiring, and written with obvious relish and passion. Richmond was there, working on these exchanges, helping to get people talking, and opening up their minds. He records this first-hand. Who else can tell such a great story so well? I recommend the book to anyone who wants to learn, to understand more about history, and to appreciate the people who changed it. Bravi!
OPENING DOORS TO THE ENEMYReview Date: 2003-09-01
The exchanges between the two countries were initiated by President Eisenhower in a letter to Bulganin, the Soviet head of state, and were begun in 1958. Whatever concerns there might have been about potential Soviet espionage, the program found approval even from FBI Director J. Edger Hoover. Richmond demonstrates the wisdom of this program as thousands of Russians and Americans participated in these exchanges which continued up to the time when the Soviet Union ceased to exist.
The book's table of contents provides early clues to the range of the program. There were exchanges of scholars in science and in the political and social sciences, exchanges of scientists and technicians for conferences and participation in working groups, exchanges of journalists and diplomats, and the well publicized exchanges of performing artists in ballet, music and theater. Students in the exchange program often remained in the host country for several years; scientists and technicians only for the several weeks of a conference or working group.
The background to the exchange rogram is provided through citations from the reports of American administrators and scholars associated with it and through personal interviews in which they describe the difficulties of implementation in the face of bureaucratic obstacles from two mutually suspicious countries. It is the interviews with the exchange participants, however, which is at the very heart of this quiet but remarkable story. Of particular interest are the interviews with dozens of participants from the Soviet Union.
This reader was arrested by the positions held by the Soviet participants at the time of their arrival in the U.S. and by what became of them and their careers on their return to the home country. In contrast with the American exchange scholars who came largely out of academia, many from the Soviet appear to have held government positions when they arrived in the U.S. or at some earlier time. The nature of some of these positions is especially surprising to the lay reader. Among four students who came to study at Columbia University, for example, two were in the KGB, one in Soviet military intelligence, and the fourth in the Central Committee of the Communist Party. These backgrounds do not appear to have been exceptional among Soviet exchange scholars.
It is not certain from Richmond's reports if expsure to the U.S. through this program was, in general, an advantage or handicap to Soviet participants' careers on their return home. Nevertheless, it is evident from some of the case studies that some achieved positions of great influence. Alexander Yakolev, for example, became a senior advisor to Gorbechev and is known as the "godfather of glasnost." Rem Khoklov was awarded the Lenin Prize for his scientific research and became a member of the Soviet Parliament. What may have been of importance even greater than those who reached high positions, however, is that many scholars were inthe government and on the job when the Soviet Union collapsed and were prepared for the social and economic changes which were to come.
At a time of increasing barriers to those who would enter the U.S. as students or observers, CULTURAL EXCHANGES AND THE COLD WAR demonstrates the value of openness even during the most stressful periods of the Cold War. American leaders coming from a broad political spectrum took the risk of allowing access to this country by students and leaders from our most feared competitor. From this there appears to have been an unimagined payoff.

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What a surprise!Review Date: 2008-02-08
The mystery plot was original and fun and the story has plenty of twists and turns.
I hope this turns into a series because I would like to get to know these people better.
Agatha Christie Reborn in Death on Delivery Review Date: 2007-05-16
But Death on Delivery isn't really a cozy. Instead, it hearkens back to the good old days when Agatha Christie's freakish imagination and gentle wryness were lighting up the British book scene. Edwards' story is not saccharine; it is black, psychologically astute comedy. Death on Delivery is the type of book you don't read so much because you believe what is happening, but because of the author's dead-on understanding of human nature.
The story begins when greedy Jania Yewbanks gets her death "ordered up and delivered," by her disgustingly self-righteous husband. Rid of a nasty woman whose death is "delivered" in a way that lets him off the hook, the husband figures he's now on easy street.
But Hannah is on the case--and it's pretty clear from the start that Hannah always gets her man. No spoilers in this review, you'll have to read the book for yourself. But a number of entertaining sub-plots intertwine which keeps the surprises coming. The story finishes strong--with Hannah Claire proving she sleuth with the best out there in detectivedom.
Like Agatha Christie once did, Edwards takes a lot of chances with Death on Delivery, such as letting readers in on whodunit on the second page. The next 300 pages are crowded with outcasts--eccentrics, lovelorn old maids, criminals, scoundrels: you'll recognize your entire family before it's done.
The best part is that Edwards' wit and wisdom helps us laugh at those who drive us nuts on a daily basis. A convenient catharsis for those days when (tell the truth, now) we all are wondering how we could order up our own: Death on Delivery.
Cheryl Swanson, author Death Game [..]
Reviewer with Gotta Read, [..]
Mystery delivered at YOUR doorReview Date: 2007-03-27
Going undercover, Hannah is hired to keep house for Ted Yewbanks, the husband of a local socialite, Jania, who was found dead of "natural causes". Jania's sister hires the Brom's agency to investigate. She suspects brother-in-law was responsible.
When Brom dies suddenly under suspicious circumstances, Hannah knows there's more to the mystery than meets the eye.
Edwards' cast of characters is diverse. She finds character flaws in the best of them, making them human and believable. Hannah Clare is more than a middle aged, smoking, grandmother, she is practical and smart.
The story Edwards weaves is complex and held this reader's full attention well past the discovery of the last body, to the last word.
I'm happy to say that Death On Delivery is the first of Hannah's adventures. I'll be looking forward to reading the next book.
An original, heart-racing mystery!Review Date: 2004-11-02
Hannah Clare, widow of Brom's ex-partner, cannot settle to be the adoring granny. A sharp mind with a taste for danger, she needs work and action. Knowing her for twenty-four years and seeing her so eager to get back to work, Brom brings her into the case. Ted Yewbanks, now widowed and living alone, needs a housekeeper, and what better person than Hannah to take the job?
Then in the mid of her investigations Brom dies for no apparent reasons. Stunned, Hannah realizes his death resembles that of Jania's. Something strange and evil is working its way into this small community. During the last few months there have been other unexplained, naturally caused deaths and this fact hasn't escaped Hannah's sharp eyes. Are they all murders? Soon a pattern begins to emerge, and an innocuous-looking gift advertising ad in a woman's magazine seems to be at the heart of these demises.
The characterization in this mystery really stands out. The minor characters are as complex, interesting, and carefully drawn as the main ones. With an excellent understanding of human behavior and motivations, this author has succeeded in creating a deftly crafted, classic suspenseful mystery that will keep you submerged from beginning to end. The climax made my heart race. Hannah is certainly a character with her no-nonsense, practical, tough yet sensitive and compassionate approach to life and I look forward to reading more of her future adventures in the second book for these series.

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Ben Franklin's Medical LegacyReview Date: 2006-09-06
Previously, Finger has written on other major figures in the history of science and medicine, including a number in his book, "Minds Behind the Brain." But this is his most exhaustive study yet, and one which, in his opinion, was long overdue. Indeed, Franklin's many biographers make little mention of his contributions to medicine, although they helped to shape the 18th-century medical landscape in major ways. To aid him in his research, Finger examined some 30,000 letters to and from Franklin, as well as other historical documents.
Benjamin Franklin comes across as consistently curious, empirical, and systematic in his observations about almost everything he encountered over the course of his 84-year long life. An element not often realized about Franklin was the degree to which he carried on correspondence and networked with other great minds of his era on a great variety of topics, including pertinent medical issues. This network and his own genius enabled him to see the benefits of early inoculation methods for smallpox, the risks of lead poisoning, the real causes of the common cold, and the importance of clean air. An accomplished swimmer and a weight lifter even into old age, he also recognized the need for exercise, and even noted the warming of the body and changes in heart rate accompanying different forms of exercise.
Franklin also helped some bright American students to be accepted into European medical schools and to get additional training in major hospitals. These individuals, including Morgan, Shippen, and Rush, would then be encouraged by Franklin to start the first medical school in America. Interestingly, he was instrumental in founding the first major hospital in the colonies, a charity institution for the physically or mentally ill, also located in Philadelphia. It is no wonder that, with his honorary degrees and memberships in the leading learned societies in Europe and America, Franklin came to be viewed as a physician when, in fact, he had only two years of formal schooling!
Ben Franklin has long been viewed as America's sage. As Finger shows, with his love of experiments and hard data, he was also one of Colonial America's leading men of medicine and a man willing to share his findings and views with a much wider audience.
"Truly, A Man For All Seasons"Review Date: 2006-07-30
A published writer & Univ. Prof. of Psychology, Finger explores in comprehensive & detailed manner that leser known personae of Benjamin Franklin & purveys in great detail those medical contributions which most writers generally gloss over or have completely overlooked in most accounts of this man's remarkable life.
Franklin's life & level of medical knowledge is revealed in 4 parts: as existing during his lifetime firstly in the American colony, then Great Britain, and France & finally in Ben's aging years along with recital of his own maladies (gout, bladder stone & senescence). Franklin's brilliance, pragmatism & resorting to controlled experimentations establishes a uniquely high benchmark for Enlightenment, a characteristic of the 18th century.
The book is replete with his enterprises as a printer, journalist ("Poor Richard's Almanack"), inventor (Franklin stove, lightning rod, armonica, bifocals), investigator (electricity, fraud), societal needs (poor sick hospital, med-school, sci. societies, libraries), medicinal queries (lead poisoning, variolation, colds, fevers, gout & afflictions). His many sayings & his self-practiced emphases on hygiene, sleep, exercise & fresh air were as profoundly true then as now. He even penned "...snug as a bug in a rug" in an epitaph about a beloved squirrel for a grieving youngster - so I'm at a loss as to know what he did not do. This read is inspiring -- if you haven't done so, please do.
An intriguing look at founding father Benjamin Franklin's contributions to the field of medicineReview Date: 2006-04-08
Excellent bookReview Date: 2006-03-07
The author's stated objectives are to examine Franklin's medical contributions, show how his knowledge was influenced by eighteenth-century medicine, and describe how his life and medical views were shaped by his own chronic conditions.
Franklin's views on the importance of exercise, eating and drinking modestly, breathing fresh air, obtaining a good night's sleep and avoiding things dangerous to the health are described. His improvements in stoves, furnaces and ventilation systems contributed to disease prevention. Franklin used Poor Richard's Almanac as a vehicle to make colonists aware of lead poisoning, and the importance of getting inoculated for small pox, after losing his son to this disease. He used electrical shock therapy to treat depression. His bifocals and the long arm made life easier for the aged and infirm
This book is more than a listing of Franklin's medical contributions. Dr. Finger recounts Franklin's role in founding the Pennsylvania Hospital and the first medical school in the colonies. The Library Company and American Philosophical Society were started by Franklin to foster the exchange of medical information to a much wider audience. Franklin favored hard evidence based on repeated observations and experiments when approaching his own chronic conditions of gout and a large bladder stone.
This very readable book exceeds its stated objectives. The author often lets Franklin speak for himself, the annotations are scholarly, and the illustrations enhance the masterfully crafted text.
Hundreds of books have been written about Franklin, but this is the first book to emphasize Franklin's contributions to medicine, a part of his life largely overlooked until now. It definitely should be read by anyone who wants to know more about Franklin, not just professional historians or people engaged in the healing arts.

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Am I On the Bit?Review Date: 2008-10-04
Odgers is a joy to read, and someone I would definitely enjoy on a horsey play-date.
comic relief for the overstressed dressage riderReview Date: 2008-05-17
This book gives you new eyes thru which to see the stuffed shirt parts of dressage as something demanding and worthy, but silly and laughable! I am eternally grateful to Odgers for blessing us with this gift of humor and comic relief. If i could i would buy one for everyone in my barn!
Laugh-out-loud funny!Review Date: 2006-05-13
Great read for riders of all disciplines!Review Date: 2005-01-21
Highly recommend it for riders of all ilks. AND it makes a greate gift!

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Kudos for The Emperor of Nature by Patricia Tyson StroudReview Date: 2000-08-15
A Resolution for 2001Review Date: 2001-01-04
Engrossing and EngagingReview Date: 2000-08-27
A fascinating biography, erudite yet highly readableReview Date: 2000-09-18

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A must have for the novice wild mushroom picker!Review Date: 2007-03-10
Very HelpfulReview Date: 2007-11-26
Author of "Hobo Finds A Home" and editor "Of A Predatory Heart"
Wonderful Mushroom Guide - I Highly RecommendReview Date: 2007-02-16
Field Guide to the Wild Mushrooms of Pennsylvania And the Mid-atlantic (Keystone Book)Review Date: 2007-01-10
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Bigger and more concise than the hagakure, it should be required reading for anyone who aspires to be a good person.