Europe Books
Related Subjects: Georgia
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Fantastic book, photos, and designReview Date: 2006-10-09
Most Amazing Part - The 2-hour Architectural Walk FoldoutReview Date: 2003-09-24
A must when travelingReview Date: 2003-04-24
Great Travel Guide, Beautiful Coffee Table Book!Review Date: 2002-05-23
Summary:
Every Dorling Kindersley Guide has been a great and interesting book... and delightful to have and use, even if you are not traveling to that location, but are only interested in learning more!
The Guides are well organized in a logical and easy to follow manner. They are beautifully illustrated, well developed with accurate information (it is unusual for hotel and restaurant information to be that accurate), have enough history to help the reader understand the people and cultural background, and have a lot of useful travel information and useable maps in the appendixes.
The really great attraction to this book is several fold; it is:
............Very complete
............Easy to read
............Beautifully and artistically completed
............Good shopping, safety and other tips
............Gorgeous photographs too numerous to list.
Specifics:
The guides are organized as follows:
How to use this guide
Introduction to Historical and Geographical information
............Introducing Amsterdam
........................Amsterdam on the Map
........................History of Amsterdam
........................Amsterdam at a Glance
........................Through the Year (events, holidays)
............Amsterdam Area by Area, each section includes:
........................Introduction to street by street area
........................Detailed pictorials of area buildings
........................Architectural drawings, pictures, cut-aways of buildings
........................Specific stops, historical monuments, churches, buildings, etc.
Travelers Needs - includes full list with rankings and notes
............Hotels
............Restaurants, bars, cafes
............Shops / Markets
............Entertainment
Survival Information
............Practical
........................Tourist info., Etiquete, Personal Security and Health
........................Currencies, Telephones, misc info.
............Travel Information
........................Planes, trains and automobiles, signs
............Street Maps
............General Index
............Phrase Book
Discussion:
The book begins with "Introducing Amsterdam", including a complete map, a review, the city's history, and Amsterdam through the Year - including events, etc.
For the specific areas it provides an "At a glance" overview, then has subsections of specific blocks, or sections, then specific locations, churches, historical monuments, bridges, galleries, etc.
Architectural reviews include various views, and cutaways; given greater understanding and better perspective. They are all attractive, if not works of art - honestly.
The travelers' Info. offers good and valid info. on prices, currencies, customs, important words, etc. I used the reviews on hotel's restaurants and nightclubs, etc. and found they were useful and accurate, and helpful with my touring and site decisions
The books are so well thought-out that it has multiple maps, with various lookup tables, and the book's flaps are designed to be used as bookmarks for map pages.
Conclusion:
Each book in this series is a great help, and beautiful collectible resource. As the President, CEO of an International Meeting Planning Corporation we have many resources and techniques to learn about places we have meetings / groups at as well as the cities and sights. But, as a traveler, this book really is top notch and I would recommend it to anyone going on a personal trip, or wanting to learn about a city, or location. We have used some of these books to augment our research to investigate cities for our groups.
Excellent Book!Review Date: 2002-11-30
The selection of restaurans was great. Every restaurant rated in this book that we went to was a hit.

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Great Siege: Malta 1565 (Wordsworth Military Library.) Review Date: 2007-12-21
This is a good, well written book.The siege of Malta is one of those great episodes of history where almost super-human courage and bravery triumph against overhelming odds.
If you like adventure read this book: besides reading like a fascinating adventure story it happens to describe real-life actual facts. Beats any Hollywood epic, imho.
highly readable account of a heroic moment in European historyReview Date: 2007-09-29
The book, by a British historian named Ernle Bradford, is great! But unfortunately extremely difficult to get. It's not stocked on Amazon and second hand copies are rare. I was lucky and got mine second hand off Amazon for 20 bucks plus shipping, back in April. It's a book I'd always had a wish to read, since seeing a review years ago.
The historical background to the siege, and an abbreviated discussion can be found here online: Siege of Malta (1565) - Wikipedia.
The book uses all the contemporary accounts and puts them into a flowing narrative, that is really quite riveting. The main characters are the Grand Master of the Order of the Knights Hospitaller of St. John, (a fighting religous order who also maintained hospitals! Go figure.), Jean de Valette, the Turkish leader , Mustafa Pasha, and his Tripoli ally Turgot Reis.
The Turkish invaders really should have won the day as they had vastly more men. They were stymied by their own infighting, some bad tactical decisions (especially opening the siege by trying to capture the Fort of St. Elmo's), and by the heroic defense of the Christian defenders who travelled to Malta, and the Maltese fighters. The violence level is appalling. It was a bad idea to be captured, by either side!
It's a great, highly readable story, if you can get the book. I hope it gets re-issued soon.
SpectacularReview Date: 2007-10-09
The Great SiegeReview Date: 2006-04-23
Amazing siege, amazing story, amazing book...Review Date: 2006-01-17
It felt sorry for all the people fought during the siege, both the siegers, who came to "smoke out the nest of vipers who were constantly attacking their ships in the mediterranean", and the defenders, who "were defending their last homeland to death".

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A Quiet JewelReview Date: 2008-08-19
She watches as those around her are arrested, tortured, and put to death because they are Conversos (Jews who have converted to Christianity). She feels for them but is happy that she and her family attend the Christian church headed by Friar DeLeon and that her brother is a seminarian.
Estrella's best friend and neighbor is Catalina. They have been close since birth but it is Catalina's cousin Andres, who lives with Catalina's family, that ultimately causes the rift between the two girls. Catalina has always believed that she and Andres would be married. But Andres sees Catalina as a sister while he looks at Estrella in love.
With the horrors of the Spanish Inquisition as a backdrop, Estrella soon learns from her honored grandfather that she is Esther, that her entire family are Marranos (Jews converted to Christianity but who practice judaism in secret). Because of Estrella's love for Andres and his for her, Catalina and her family betray the Madrigals; Estrella watches from the shadows of the crowds as her family is first denounced, then tortured, and finally put to death. She is the only one to escape.
This book is short but packs a mighty punch. Easy enough to read in one sitting but don't, no matter how much you are tempted. Take time to digest what you are reading here. Although meant for the younger reader, most adults should find this a compelling story. A word of caution: the descriptions of the torture of the Marranos is very detailed and vivid and may not sit well with the squeamish.
Different from Alice Hoffman's other novels, I found this one nevertheless equally as good. Ms. Hoffman hasn't disappointed me yet.
AmazingReview Date: 2008-04-30
AmazingReview Date: 2008-04-05
The Inquisition aliveReview Date: 2008-03-07
IncantationReview Date: 2008-02-06
In the beginning, Estrella has a good life. She has a wonderful, if a bit strict, family, and she has a best friend that she loves with all her heart. But things begin to change when Estrella starts to get attracted to her best friend's cousin. And things get even worse when Estrella finds out that her whole life she was raised thinking she was Catholic, only to find out that it was just an act and she's really Jewish.
This book was wonderful, truly. I couldn't put it down. There was some romance in it, but mostly it was about a family who struggled to stay true to their faith, but stay alive at the same time. I was really sad, and there were some memorable passages that I will never forget. The writing was fantastic, and I found that I liked this book much more than I really thought I would.

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Clearly superbReview Date: 2006-12-14
No fluffReview Date: 2004-11-09
Good Book, Puts you in the ActionReview Date: 2002-06-17
View from a fox holeReview Date: 2004-08-16
An intelligent look at war from the front linesReview Date: 2001-09-19

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fascinatingReview Date: 2006-02-01
Prepeare to be rivited!
Bob McCallan
Courage and HeroismReview Date: 2005-06-28
Entertaining but hardly brilliantReview Date: 2005-06-06
However, this book is written by two journalists rather than historians, so it does not have the academic research nor analytical insight that a serious work might have. Cornelius Ryan comes closer to the style of writing that might have made this a heavier book. This is understandably difficult, in some ways, given the relative sparcity of combat and drama; or so this book would suggest. Again, a better writer and researcher would find more material to include.
Some material that might be considered, for example, are Allied intelligence estimates, Axis intelligence estimates, operational orders, etc. It is not clear to me, for example, how the German commander could fail to execute Hitler's orders in August 1944 when the Gestapo and SS were omni-present, especially after the failed July plot on Hitler's life.
Moreover, good research might show to what extent the Allies knew of Hitler's intentions. The Allies had significant intelligence capabilities, not the least through Ultra. And if they knew of the plans to destroy large parts of Paris, why didn't they send in commandos and special forces to disarm any explosives? Indeed, the French themselves seemed to put a higher priority on erecting road blocks rather than disarming explosives.
This is an easy, enjoyable read; and one of the few on the subject in English. However, it's about time someone else updated and added value to this book.
Brennt Paris?Review Date: 2005-05-03
The tale starts with the uprising in Paris, and ends just after its liberation is celebrated in the streets. Hitler had hand-picked the last military governor of Paris, based upon his reputation from attacks against Rotterdam and Sevastapol, and he had the task of holding back the Allies at Paris, or, failing that, reducing Paris to ruins, much like Warsaw had recently suffered. The Allies had every intention of bypassing Paris and moving onwards, but the freedom fighters in Paris knew the Allies were nearby, and hoped to push things to their advantage. All of these things should have spelt disaster for the City of Lights, but opportunity and stubborn resistance and collusion and soldier's honour led to a different outcome.
The authors tell a spellbinding tale, based upon much research. My copy is a used copy, and dates back to the mid-1960s (bought it on amazon, used). There are a great deal of photos, documenting scenes from throughout the story. The authors, in my opinion, did a commendable job, and I would recommend this book to those interested in Paris, or in the Second World War.
No Prior Experience NeededReview Date: 2005-10-27


Absolutely DelightfulReview Date: 2008-07-22
Don't read on an empty stomach!Review Date: 2008-06-01
I love this bookReview Date: 2008-04-02
I ran across this book on another Amazon book search and it looked so interesting that I bought it without knowing anything about the author. David brings the international food scene and the yachting scene to life in a down to earth and warm way. I traveled in my mind right along with him.
It is one of those books that I read slowly towards the end in order to savor the last pages before I finish reading. I highly recommond this book.
I absolutely LOVED this book!!!Review Date: 2007-11-26
A delightful... (even a little suspenseful) read. Review Date: 2007-09-30
I particularly enjoyed the map of the journey included on the inside cover, along with the detailed maps preceding each chapter. This added the additional benefit of the adventure being a descriptive travel guide as well ! And top this all off with the included bonus 50 pages of recipes at the end. (And each of these recipes include very specific & detailed instructions for preparation.) Bravo. Bravissimo Davide.

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beautiful villages of tuscanyReview Date: 2008-05-26
Wonderful for so many reasonsReview Date: 2007-11-17
The Most Beautiful Villages of TuscanyReview Date: 2007-07-21
Oh no, not another Tuscan picture book!Review Date: 2008-02-12
Someone who reviewed this book suggested bringing it along on a Tuscan trip; if you put this large and heavy book in your luggage, you will have to leave the toothpaste, underwear, and a number of other things at home, particularly now that some airlines are apparently toying with the notion of lowering weight allowances and charging for the excess.
The text in most instances is not particularly helpful. There are quite a few books on Tuscany that do a much better job. And I was truly surprised to see the town of San Quirico d'Orcia included in the list of "most beautiful villages". I happen to know San Quirico and because it is off the usual beaten tourist path, it retains an "Italianness" that has been lost by, for example, Greve in Chianti, where one would be hard-pressed to find an Italian in that town's lovely main square on a Saturday afternoon. But San Quirico could never be called "beautiful", by any stretch of the imagination.
Despite my reservations about this book, it would probably be a welcome present for a friend who has recently returned from the grand tour of Tuscany and it will, at least for a while, have a prominent place on this friend's coffee table.
TuscanyReview Date: 2008-01-12

Recomended book to readReview Date: 2003-07-22
FabulousReview Date: 2006-04-06
The book covers a plethora of topics from simple gradient descent through second order techniques and conjugate gradient, through to the use of 'bayesian techniques' (basically confidence intervals on network outputs), monte carlo techniques etc. Similarly error functions, non-linearities (sigmoids, softmax etc.) and data preparation are all treated.
The extensive bibliography also provides excellent references for further study, (a whos who of the field, as well as actual titles). My copy is now dog earred from frequent reading.
It makes a difficult topic easy to understandReview Date: 2003-09-15
Sheer pleasure.Review Date: 2004-01-28
Only for an expertReview Date: 2006-07-20
In summary, this book should only be purchased by someone already familiar with neural networks and their mathematical basis. Anyone else will be wasting their money.

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A wonderful look at leadership and at combatReview Date: 2007-08-10
Read this as a book about leadership, and you will do fine. Read this as a book about war, and you will also do fine. Read this as a book about both, and you'll get even more out of it.
One Hundred Days: The Memoires of the Falklands Battle Group...Review Date: 2007-03-10
One Hundred Days -- And Still a Damn Near Run ThingReview Date: 2007-02-17
1. submarines track ships and the risks they run to track them and shoot them. The example of the sinking of the General Belgrano is first rate
2. how a routine matter such as cross-decking troops between ships bedevils commanders and can end in tragedy
3. ship's tactics for defending themselves against aircraft (this is particularly helpful. In the US military, we have become so accustomed to air and sea superiority that those who operate on the ground take it for granted. It's not! It must be gained and earned - if need be, the hard way.)
4. The inevitable tension that will arise between sea, air, and land commanders during the prosecution of an amphibious campaign. We get Woodward's side here, but he is brutally honest on when he was right and when he was wrong.
5. The role of destroyers, frigates, aircraft carriers, amphibs, and supply ships, and the risks they ran -- and still do -- to do their jobs.
This is one of the only books I know of that actually explains how modern navies fight, and it is thus indispensable to navy officers and to those who seek to learn more on control of the seas.
Woodward/Courage 101Review Date: 2004-07-21
Exceptional war memoir!Review Date: 2005-07-23
As the Admiral mentions in the epilogue, many will always regard the Falklands as having been "a pushover war - the mighty Brits crushing the ridiculous Args" (349). But as this book makes clear, it was anything but a cakewalk. The Argentinian sailors and pilots were brave and worthy oponents. The British fleet took heavy casualties: 6 ships sunk (2 destroyers, 2 frigates, 1 amphibious warfare vessel and the transport vessel Atlantic Conveyor with its precious cargo of 10 Wessex and 4 Chinook helicopters). Another 10 ships were badly damaged. Many of these were not sunk only because the Argentinian bombs reguarly failed to detonate. The British, of course, won decisively though, thanks to the professionalism and courage of the British forces. But it was an intense and bloody six weeks.
The campaign was also a turning point in the history of naval warfare. Although anti-ship missiles were first used to sink Syrian missile boats by the Israelis back in 1973, the destruction of HMS Sheffield by the French Exocet missiles fired from Super-Etendard fighter-bombers grabbed the attention of the world's militaries. Newsweek's subsequent cover-story on the incident read "Falklands Fallout: Are Big Ships Doomed?" Many wondered if large warships had been rendered obsolete by the effectiveness of anti-ship missiles. Indeed, the two British aircraft carriers in the South Atlantic were very vulnerable. If even one of them had been put out of commission by an Exocet, it is unlikely the Falklands could have been recaptured. It is very interesting to read about how the British struggled with some of their new high-tech weaponry such as the Sea Dart. It took some failed attempts in battle before the bugs got worked out and they got comfortable with the new system.
Admiral Woodward is an excellent writer. His descriptions of the battles are riveting, especially the moments of calamity such as when HMS Sheffield was crippled by Exocets. You really get a sense of the fear, anxiety and adrenaline. It's as exciting as any Tom Clancy novel without a doubt.

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A NEW PERSPECTIVE ON A DEFINING MOMENT IN HISTORYReview Date: 2008-08-31
One Minute to Midnight...Review Date: 2008-08-17
Doomsday Averted Review Date: 2008-08-16
And this is an event I lived through. Dobbs makes the point that the "eyeball to eyeball" event of Russian ships turning around when they saw the American blockade was an exageration, that the ships were hundreds of miles apart. However, the book as a whole makes it seem like the world's two super powers were closer to going to war than I realized. When Kruschchev announced he would pull out the missiles on a Sunday, Kennedy had already authorized an air strike on the following Tuesday. We really were on the brink of a nuclear war.
Kennedy and Khruschev each come off as relatively level head political leaders dealing with a military leaders and systems poised to launch a nuclear war. Castro, not so much.
Dobbs does a masterful job of juggling events on a world wide canvas. The book moves seamlessly from scenes in Washington, Moscow, Havana, the missiles sites in Cuba, on board Soviet submarines, American U2 flights, including when an Alaskan based plane inadvertently goes over Soviet airspace.
The book is stronger on reportage than analysis. Not that the analysis is wrong headed, just that there is not really very much of it. Still, it was hard not to be impressed with the effort the Kennedy administration went to in their effort to establish that the weapons of mass destruction were actually in Cuba, in contrast with, the rush to judgement in Iraq by the Bush administration.
Read it and be scared all over againReview Date: 2008-08-28
"One Minute to Midnight" brings it all back and adds new information that is very frightening, even with 46 years' distance. The book is well written and seems to have been very thoroughly researched. Dobbs resists the temptation to pad his story to make a longer book or to dramatize the situation to heighten the tension. The story is dramatic and tense enough as it is. His straightforward and coherent writing makes it clear how amazing it was that we didn't all get vaporized at the end of October 1962.
The scariest thing to read is that Fidel Castro was urging the Russians to launch a nuclear attack on the US and that he explicitly preferred dignity and his dogmatic "end of days" vision of a victory for socialism over a retreat. I used to think that the possession of nuclear weapons was likely to make leaders much more cautious about going to war. So much for that idea! Castro's advice to the Russians shows that having nuclear weapons won't make a crackpot ruler sane. So by extension, the prospect of Iran having the bomb in the future - or even Pakistan, which does have it - is a lot more frightening after you read Dobbs' book than it might have been before.
The book makes the case that John Kennedy's experience in World War II helped him resist the demands of his generals - most notably Curtis Lemay - to start shooting. The Pentagon thought there were 6,000 to 8,000 Russian advisors in Cuba, but there were 40,000. And they were armed with tactical nuclear weapons. Imagine what a disaster we would have had if we'd dropped a couple of divisions onto the beaches east of Havana. Anyone who's been in the military soon learns to question intelligence and to be skeptical of reflexive assumptions about the enemy. John Kennedy had already been burned by bad intelligence during the Bay of Pigs fiasco, so he was doubly skeptical. Dobbs shows us how lucky we were that JFK was neither naïve nor trigger happy.
All of this and far more unfolds brilliantly in One Minute to Midnight. The story is intrinsically intriguing and riveting. The book is well structured and well written, and Dobbs has given us enough new information to make shake our heads in wonder and dismay.
A few years after the Cuban Missile Crisis, Robert Kennedy wrote "Thirteen Days" to describe the meetings of the US civilian and military leaders. While it had Bobby's own spin, the sweaty palms we all had in October 1962 have made me keep Kennedy's book on a special shelf. It's one of the books that have shaped my understanding of the world. Michael Dobbs' "Now One Minute to Midnight" is going to join it.
So close to the abyssReview Date: 2008-08-14
It's hard to pick a "best moment" in this book, but the idea that President Kennedy could broadcast an address heard around the world and not talk with Chairman Khrushchev in "real time", has to be one of the intensely personal outcomes of the crisis. The triangulation here is evident...Castro, a rising politician in the western hemisphere, had hooked his star to the Soviet Union...and with it came all the pitfalls of that association. As Dobbs indicates, the missile crisis was the height of the Soviet-Cuban alliance. But the private and personal memoirs of those days really make this book stand out. From the U-2 pilot who wandered into Soviet airspace at the height of the tensions because of "celestial navigation", to the Soviet submarine commander, who had run out of time, luck and just about everything else...these are the stories that "One Minute to Midnight" captures with eloquence and sincerity.
The military aspect is central, of course, and there is much made of the Kennedy inner circle at the White House. We also know more of what must have gone through Khrushchev's mind and how he handled the fanatical Castro. But if the American public was on a high state of alert the Cubans were remarkably calm. Yet the missile crisis could have exploded in a thousand different ways at almost any given point during late October...militarily or politically. As it turned out JFK was dead a year later and Khrushchev was gone a year after that. Castro became the survivior.
"One Minute to Midnight" is a further explanation of the Cuban missile crisis and it is good that Dobbs closes with a sober comparison of JFK to George Bush, the former knowing of the consequences of war, personally. This book, which I highly recommend, is timely not only as a terrific study of October, 1962, but how the lessons of history seem not to be learned by those destined to repeat its failures.
Related Subjects: Georgia
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