Texas Books
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The Most Informative Elvis Book This Year!Review Date: 2002-10-14
EXCAVATING ELVISReview Date: 2003-09-14


Images and more...Review Date: 2005-10-27
There is a logical flow in how information is presented. First a basic description of the algorithm. Second some Matlab or pseudo-code. Then third he describes exactly how to implement it on the c6x dsp. Not only are there implementation details but also interfacing explanation for both Matlab and Visual Studio.
Overall this is an excellent book for getting a project up and running in a timely fashion.
A well laid out introduction to embedded image processingReview Date: 2005-08-13
Starting with an overview of the tools involved and the C6x architecture, Qureshi moves into simple image processing concepts, such as contrast stretching and window/level processing. After clearly explaining the concept and the implementation, the reader is led through the process of optimizing the code for the DSP environment. Later topics, such as edge detection and wavelets leave the reader with a clear understanding of the fundamentals of image processing, as well as code examples that make implementation a breeze.
Overall, an excellently written book and a must for anyone interested in image processing, whether on TI DSPs or not.

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Baby and the BeastReview Date: 2006-03-27
Ex-military man falls for live-in nanny!Review Date: 2005-07-15
Tied up in knots! How on earth had Texas Cattleman's Club member David Sorrenson been roped into protecting a tiny baby girl? The ex-military man knew everything about security and danger, not infants! Marissa Wilder was the perfect solution. This down-to-earth family gal knew all about children, and agreed to be a live-in nanny at his ranch. David yearned to show Marissa a steamy night or two, even though his high-risk lifestyle had taught him to avoid long-term attachments and his sexy houseguest deserved someone permanent. Living with Marissa was tangling up his emotions something awful, and if he didn't know better he'd swear he was falling for her....

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IF I COULD ONLY KEEP MY COPY HOMEReview Date: 2001-01-28
Great guide for family travelReview Date: 2000-05-26

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crazy beautifulReview Date: 2008-03-19
It changed my lifeReview Date: 1997-06-24

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Collectible price: $59.99

Family Survival and TogethernessReview Date: 2007-01-13
An awesome read!Review Date: 2006-06-23

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Mystery, Magic, and Cruel Realities: The Art of Graciela IturbideReview Date: 2008-04-30
Iturbide studied with Manuel Alvarez Bravo in the late 1960s and his well-known influence is felt in her work. But this fine artist has found her language beyond Bravo and manages to take the raw realism of Bravo's images and transform them with the magic of the spirit world and the mystical elements that inform her photographs. Her images are all in brilliant black and white and for the most part are 'constructed' or posed. The gradations between dark and light add a sense of the surreal to her images, whether the subjects are friends of the artist, couples at weddings, burial sites, East LA Cholas, or her very strange images of women with iguana hats or of her own face inhabited by live snails or wings of dissected birds!
An excellent feature of this book is the addition of Graciela Iturbide's comments on pages facing her photographs, and the book opens with an informative 'Conversation with Graciela' by Fabienne Bradu. This is a sophisticated portfolio of works by one of our contemporary gifted artists. Highly Recommended. Grady Harp, April 08
A fine pick.Review Date: 2007-02-03

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I'm not a Texan, and I don't play one on TV but . . . Review Date: 2007-02-25
You don't believe me? Look it up!
I first read this book years ago and loved it. I've recommended it to others who have loved it. It's a fabulous read and rollicking adventure. It's the kind of book I keep re-reading and buying any copy I can find and passing it on to people I love.
Please excuse the passive voice in the previous paragraph. I know better ; )
Fast Copy is a lot of lively fun!
And that's the way it was, is, and shall be....Review Date: 2002-04-04
However, it is not just a comedy that pokes fun at Texans. Nosiree! It deals specifically with Depression-Era Texas and makes us take a disturbing look at ourselves. How can someone callously believe that other humans are "just hobos"? Do we truly believe that appearances are more important than reality? What will one do for Love; is it ok to hurt others to pursue one's own pleasure?
This is a most thought-provoking work and well worth the time to read.
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"Fear on Trial" should not be forgottenReview Date: 2000-05-22
Those who do not study history....Review Date: 2006-02-19
A must read for anyone who truyly values democracy, liberty and the *real* America-- the one where difference of opinion is valued, not feared.

Used price: $12.50

Made me LOVE ferns.....Review Date: 2004-02-05
ferns and fern allies of the Trans-PecosReview Date: 2002-12-18
To look at a fern is to travel back in time. Ferns date from over 300 million years ago, long before the appearance of the first flowering plant. Although I knew nothing of this remarkable ancestry when at a young age I saw my first ferns in the forests of Breton Woods, their delicate beauty nonetheless captivated my imagination. My childhood fascination with ferns was hardly unique, however. People have been attracted to ferns for some time. During the 19th Century, for instance, nothing less than a fern craze sprouted up in England, where suddenly once wild ferns were abundantly cultivated in gardens, purchased as indoor potted plants, and replicated in ornamental designs on numerous household items.*
When I arrived in Austin in 1969, whatever fern-desire I may have harbored soon withered in the heat. Although my first Austin home was located on a creek site, all the land surrounding it was caliche-hardly ideal for ferns or much else. Ferns, I had always observed, thrive in a shady, moist habitat. It was not until many years later when an acquaintance of my daughter gifted us with ebony spleenwort (Asplenium platyneuron) that my fondness for ferns revived. While this Texas native plant may not be as aesthetically appealing as the more delicately textured wood fern (Thelypteris kunthii), it is both hardy and drought tolerant. I have become very attached to ebony spleenwort. Planted along the north side of my home's foundation, it has thrived, even remaining green throughout every winter. After a protracted stretch of heat and drought, it signals the need for some water by yellowing slightly.
That there is yet more hope for Texas fern lovers who live in such dry places is evident in Sharon C. Yarborough and A. Michael Powell's new book. It identifies many native pteridophytes adapted to the arid conditions of the Trans-Pecos region-that Maine-sized western part of our state situated between the Rio Grande and the Pecos rivers where the average annual rainfall is a mere 12 inches. One of the intentions behind this book, in fact, is to promote the ferns of this locale as suitable candidates for xeriscaped home gardens.
The Trans-Pecos ferns conserve water by producing hair-shaded fronds somewhat smaller in size than average. Some of these plants will wither after a long period of dryness, and yet these very same seemingly dead flora will immediately green up again whenever water becomes available. It is likely, moreover, that these plants reproduce more by asexual means-vegetative buds forming on a tiny heart-shaped prothallus that normally produces eggs and sperm on its underside when moisture is present. Fern reproduction is a curious business, in any event, and the authors of Fern and Fern Allies do very well explaining the intricate process so that it can be easily understood by lay readers.
Including spikemosses, horsetails and scouring rushes, this attractive field guide provides detailed keys designed to facilitate plant identification in the wild. Besides useful information concerning the floral morphology and habitat conditions of Trans-Pecos pteridophytes, Yarborough and Powell provide 37 line drawings. In the matter of fern identification such detailed drawings are more helpful than photographs.
A comparison with David L. Jones's Encyclopedia of Ferns and Boughton Cobb's A Field Guide to the Ferns, in the Peterson series, provides another measure of the value of Ferns and Fern Allies. Of the 15 examples in the new book of members of Cheilanthes, the largest genus of the maidenhair fern family, only 3 appear in Cox's book and only 2 in Jones's volume. Similarly, of the 11 members of Selaginellaceae (the spikemoss family) described in Fern and Fern Allies, 2 are included in Jones's work and none in Cobb's guide. As these statistics and results of a comparative review of the remaining plants both suggest, Fern and Fern Allies is as valuable as it is handy.
What an invitation to adventure Yarborough and Powell's book provides. Like several columbines native to the same region, many of the Trans-Pecos ferns are hidden in unusual places. To be seen they must be searched out. And, as the authors note, "there are probably more rare treasures to be found in certain microhabitats" of that area of Texas. Let's hope so, and let's hope, too, that native plant nurseries will make some of these arid-adapted ferns available for our home garden landscapes.
*See David E. Allen, The Victorian Fern Craze: A History of Pteridomania (London: Hutchinson, 1969).
William J. Scheick, a former NPSOT vice-president, is also a member of the Central Texas Horticulture Council and a frequent contributor to Texas Gardener.
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