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California
Philip Vera Cruz: A Personal History of Filipino Immigrants and the Farmworkers Movement
Published in Paperback by University of California, Los Angeles, Asian (1997-02)
Authors: Craig Scharlin and Lilia V. Villanueva
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Average review score:

A valuable resource for understanding the transplanting of Filipino culture to America
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-07-05
I ordered Phlip Vera Cruz: A Personal History of Filipino Immigrants and the Farmworkers Movement to gain insight into Filipino farm worker culture in America. What I got was more than I ever expected. I learned about the differences between generations, of the vast sea of Central Valley and Delano culture, and the history of Filipinos in America, whose hardships were endured by transplanted and misunderstood culture.

I've since learned that generational gaps in understanding Filipino culture exist that tear the rooted fabric of Filipino culture, making its historic transformation to Americanism nearly forgotten by many of the younger generation. Craig Scharlin's book of Cruz's memoirs provided a means through which I could research and begin to understand what many Filipino youth have never gained.

Great Quick Read on Fil-Am Contributions and Inter-Racial Relations
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-10
I picked up this book because I am a Filipino-American and knew little of the contributions of Filipino-Americans to American society and even had non-Filipino friends tell me of this man and the contributions to the UFW and labor laws in America. It's a sincere story of an honest man who bridged people and cultures and stood up for what was right and worth fighting for. I read it over one weekend and had a hard time putting it down. It's a great read for anyone interested in the UFW, Cesar Chavez, Filipino-American contributions, labor laws, and/or inter-racial relations.

Remembering the Pioneers of Our Community
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2004-12-29
I am often dismayed when college aged Filipina/o Americans, many of whom are the children and grandchildren of post-1965 immigrants, cannot appreciate the lives of the Manongs, early Filipino immigrants from the the 1920's & 30's. I realize that it was a long time ago and there are many other Fil-Ams to recognize and honor, but I believe that this first large wave of immigrants to the U.S. is a part of Fil-Am history that should not be ignored. The life of Philip Vera Cruz epitomizes the lives of many of these immigrants who came to the U.S. as migratory and service sector laborers but became activists by protesting labor exploitation. Further, Vera Cruz and other Filipinos played an integral part in the formation of the United Farm Workers. Young Filipinos often complain about not knowing their history or the role Filipinos have played in U.S. society. This biography is a good place to start learning about where we've been and what we've done.

Correcting History and Common Sense Understanding
Helpful Votes: 22 out of 23 total.
Review Date: 2005-02-27
An very intimate portrait of his struggle as a new immigrant, farm worker and then later activist, Philip Vera Cruz honors us with his reflections in `Philip Vera Cruz: A Personal History of Filipino Immigrants and the Farmworkers Movement.' Authored by Scharlin and Villanueva, Cruz gives us a personal account of his encounters with Cesar Chavez and the rest of the ilk of the United Farm Workers.

In an effort to handle the situation that the Filipino migrant workers found themselves in, they cherished the set of connections between friends and family and established cultural, religious, and community organizations, not to mention fraternal organizations. According to Vera Cruz, Filipino migrant workers subsequently organized labor unions and established charters in the AFL. It is established in common sense understanding that the farm workers movement was a Mexican American movement that was set in motion by the 1965 Delano grape strike in the San Joaquin valley (3, 8-21). In reality, the farm workers movement was actually initiated in the 1930s with the Filipino Workers Association, the Filipino Labor Union, and the Filipino Agricultural Laborers Association. In this account we read that the 1965 grape strike was instigated by the Filipino Labor Union, headed by Larry Itlong, and was joined a week later by Cesar Chavez and his National Farm Workers Organization (31-51). The two unions were merged into the United Farm Workers with the support of Philip Vera Cruz, who became a vice president of the UFW (xiii). Philip Vera Cruz provides us with poignant insight regarding the Filipino immigrant experience at the turn of the century and beyond:

"New immigrants, who will compete with the workers already here, are arriving everyday from the Philippines, Puerto Rico, the Arab countries, from Jamaica, and especially Mexico. Third World countries have been exploited so much by the multinational corporations that their people, moved by extreme poverty, leave their home countries to seek work in an industrialized country like the United States. The multinationals suck the wealth out of their homeland like a vampire sucks blood. And these same big businesses here greet these new immigrants with open arms. These poor foreigners bring their cheap labor which means increasing profits for the big corporations. When the present group of workers here start to get organized and win some of their struggles for better wages and benefits, then the big agribusinesses here in California, with the help of the government, try to bring in new groups of workers" (145).

Immigration was cut short in 1932, when the Great Depression severely curtailed recruitment of Filipino workers abroad. In 1934 the passage of the Tydings-McDuffie Act by the U.S. congress re-categorized Filipinos as aliens and limited their entrance to the U.S. to 50 per annum with a specific but contradictory agenda. According to Vera Cruz it was caused by the fear and insecurities of workers here over their job situation. Although it is not reflective of the conditions of ALL immigrant groups (particularly Asian) Vera Cruz's experience does echo that of Carlos Bulosan and forms part of the discourse and narrative of the manong experience. As mentioned previously, Philip Vera Cruz honors us with his reflections in Philip Vera Cruz: A Personal History of Filipino Immigrants and the Farmworkers Movement.

Miguel Llora

California
Plant Life in the World's Mediterranean Climates: California, Chile, South Africa, Australia, and the Mediterranean Basin
Published in Hardcover by University of California Press (1998-09-17)
Author: Peter R. Dallman
List price: $60.00
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Average review score:

Author's Credentials
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2004-09-20
Peter Dallman, a retired pediatric doctor and docent at Strybing Aboretum in San Francisco, California, spent many years
studying plants and traveling the world to see them where they grow in the Mediterranean climate areas of the world. Prof. Robert Ornduff, the late director of the Univ. of California Botanical Garden, encouraged him to write about these
plants and his travels. The result is a book giving the reader the best armchair picture of the vegetation of a very special part of the world.

A thoughtful, beautifully produced book
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2001-01-02
This book falls into a category somewhere between botany, climatology, and geography; it looks at several different types of "mediterranean climate" around the world, and describes the different vegetational types within each region, explaining (in a scholarly but accessible way) why these plant communities look the way they do.

It's beautifully produced, with both climate maps and full-color illustrations of plants and plant communities. I know of no other book that explains the relationship between geography and botanical ecology this elegantly; it's a lot of fun to browse, and I would recommend it *very* highly to armchair travellers with botanical inclinations.

Great overview of mediterranean climates
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2005-09-19
This book is great. It has plenty of pictures, diagrams and drawings. Most of the pictures are not in color, however, which is its biggest downfall. It is not a detailed evaluation of mediterranean climates nor is it a good plant ID book, but provides an excellent overview for both the layman and scientist. It provides informatin on the plants that make the mediterranean climate unique and the typical plant communities that are found in them. It is great for someone who doesn't want to get bogged down with individual species and wants to see how all the parts fit together. I first checked this book out of my local library and felt it would be such a good reference book for work, play and travel that I had to have it. The book uses the most scientific and inclusive use of the term Mediterranean which means you are going to get descriptions of plant communities from San Diego to Sacramento to San Francisco. For those of us that prefer the more exclusive definitions it may come as a shock that San Francisco and Sacramento could be considered mediterranean so I'm warning you now. I am currently using this book to help plan a trip to Australia as a supplement to Lonely Planet's travel guides. This book has inspired me to visit all the world's mediterranean climates at some point in my life and I'm not even a plant lover.

A "must" for horticulralists and gardeners.
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2000-02-03
Peter Dallman's Plant Life In The World's Mediterranean Climates covers plants of California, Australia, South Africa and the Mediterranean, and will prove more accessible to general audiences studying plants. Here are photos, charts, and a host of details on plant communities and plant life common to this climate, with chapters providing both individual regional details and links between plants of each area. This is a highly recommended pick not just for specialty libraries, but for general collections.

California
Plantsman: Notes from a California Garden Designer
Published in Paperback by Dog Ear Publishing, LLC (2006-09-15)
Author: Steve Harbour
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Average review score:

Plantsman: Notes from a California Garden Designer
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-17
When I began reading Plantsman, I expected to learn all about California plants and gardens. Having lived only a short time in the state, I was eager to know the names and temperament of the gorgeous plants and flowering trees I saw in front yards and parks on my daily walks.

What I did not expect was an even flow of lively prose that would grip me like a best-selling work of fiction. Plantsman is an entertaining page-turner as well as an encyclopedia of plant life. Its master-gardener tips will help you transform your humble plot into a luxuriant, esthetically charming, and environmentally-friendly garden, be it desert, inland, or coastal. You are seduced by the striking hues of Red Columbus, Leopard Lily, Mexican Primrose, Pink Spice and a myriad other plants, and dizzied by the scent of plants like Box Honeysuckle and Peppermint Scented Geranium.

In an engaging poetic style peppered with bursts of wonder and excitement, Harbour takes us on an unforgettable journey through the gardens of his life. We meet his grandmother, discover the inspiration for his first love; we hike through desert canyons in 90 degree heat with his family, gasp in the encounter with a mountain lion, ponder the secret lives of plants, learn how to exterminate gophers, and welcome anew each magnificent season.

Plantsman will delight both garden lovers and general readers.
Megan Webster

Plantsman: Notes from a California Garden Designer
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-12
Gardening guru Steve Harbour's account of a year in the life of a garden designer springs from fertile ground as the seasons unfold. With an encyclopedic knowledge of plants and an artist's eye for design and detail, Harbour escorts the reader on a grand tour of landscape masterpieces in the making as the year buds and then blooms. Harbour's humor and humanity color his perspective as he moves through an impressive array of garden projects.

Which is not to suggest that the year is without its challenges. In a compelling chronicle of frustrations with fickle clients, unreliable contractors, and the demands of design competitions, the author recounts his adventures in a wry, insightful and moving style. The path that Harbour treads is beset with garden pests, inept cannabis cultivators, a bureaucratic homeowners association, and a first-hand and moving account of a devastating wildfire that nearly consumes Harbour's home.

For the green-thumbed aficionado or the aspiring beginner, Harbour's gentle and well-conceived guide traces the impulse to create and coax order and beauty from the world around us. Along the way we witness the wonder and beauty of a life lived among a landscape of the author's own making. It is a journey too important to miss. A deep-rooted and flourishing floral find.

A beautiful journey
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-28
Harbour has one of the most beautiful sence of prose I have come across. Whether or not you are a plant afficianado Plantsman will take you on a journey through gardening that you will love. Like a travel essay Platsman travels through gardens, nature hikes, and Steve Harbours experiences along the way. You will actually laugh outloud at some of his commentery and insights. Loved the book!!

Great review of a year in the life of a plantsman...
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-06
Harbour is a plantsman in the true sense and let's the reader into a year of his life. Whether it be as a designer, a collector, or just a home gardener; Harbour delights with entertaining and funny tails about life in Southern California as a plant person.
Whether it was the chapter about the snake, the mountain lion, or the fire; I kept the pages turning and enjoyed it from cover to cover. Looking forward to the next one from this author.

California
The PMZ Way: Strategies of Highly Successful Real Estate Agents
Published in Paperback by PMZ Publishing (2005-03-01)
Author: Michael P. Zagaris
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Average review score:

Not just for Real Estate Agents, Insights for any Career
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-07-18
Excellent book with insightful stories. This book helps you manage your real estate career and provides examples from a start-up as a single agent to building your own team. It goes beyond the day to day business activities to discuss what other things you should do, not only to develop a successful career, but ensure a successful life!

terrific!!!!!!!!
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2005-07-21
I thoroughly enjoyed reading the stories of successful realtors working at PMZ Inc. The inside look at what a career in residential real estate is really all about was so helpful for someone like me who was really interested in a career change. This a great book by an obviously brilliant business executive who spends 85% of the book on allowing other people to tell their stories. How refreshing is that? Buy it...it is a fun, informative read.

Impressive and Insightful!
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2005-03-29
This is a terrific read for anyone interested in the field of real estate. Take tips from the pros who are actually out there practicing and learn lessons from the man who runs the company! A Great read!

INSPIRATIONAL & PRACTICAL!
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2005-07-20
What a great read! I am a business student in the Haas School of Business at UC Berkeley and stumbled upon this book as it was listed on the "suggested supplementary reading" list distributed by the professor in my upper-div real estate investment elective. I loved this book from beginning to end - I think that it especially provides a realistic point of view into residential real estate, with great tips on how to get started, networking and important keys to success. It is clear that this author knows what he is talking about and I love how he combines useful business tools and tactics with personal accounts of the real-life application of these tools by real estate agents. If I could give this read 6 stars, I would. It has really inspired and moved me in an incredible way!!

California
Poet Be Like God: Jack Spicer and the San Francisco Renaissance
Published in Hardcover by Wesleyan (1998-05-15)
Authors: Lewis Ellingham and Kevin Killian
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Average review score:

Spicer's Gnosticism
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2002-09-05
Spicer and Ginsberg influenced one another, as is clearly shown in this book. Ginsberg stole a lot of his ideas from Spicer, but he was still the greater poet because he touched upon the conversation of his times, while Spicer went whacko and had no real impact on his culture. Academics have taken up Spicer, but this has again had no echo at all in the popular culture.

It's particularly interesting to study the automatic side of Spicer's poetics from surrealism forward -- the relinquishing of choice for a ouija board automaticism that resulted in odd nonsense that probably did not come from the dead, but resulted in an arcane verse that did indeed catalyze some of the lazier aspects of SF poetry but which was a dead end.

Magisterial biography that brings to life a tormented alcoholic who was not even trying to be nice, or even well-dressed, enough, to enter into the public forum.

His best work is the discussions he offered in The House that Jack Built -- astounding to see what he could do when he DID enter into the public conversation. Too often in his poetry he seems to be mumbling to himself. Poets need to reconnect to the real world -- because the world is real -- it has an ecology and texture, and the poets who got this will survive. Others form dead ends into their lost selves.

Gnosticism is a dead end.

Important biography of crucial postmodern poet
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 1998-06-04
I find that the Kirkus review available here does ill-service to this important biography of Jack Spicer. One would have no inkling, from reading this review, that Spicer's poetry is one of the most influential sources for postmodern poetry and poetics in the 1990s. It is not some recent academic fad to study Spicer; rather, Spicer has been a crucial poet for many younger writers for over three decades. This biography, published at the same time with his collected lectures, should provide the opportunity for even more serious study of his work.

Essential Reading (Not An Exaggeration)
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2000-07-15
Poets in the 1950s and 1960s have been well served by some of their biographers, and in this thrilling critical treatment of Jack Spicer and the poets of the San Francisco Renaissance, Ellingham and Killian join the ranks of Peter Davison (The Fading Smile: Boston Poets from Lowell to Plath) and Bill Berkson and Joe LeSeur (Homage to Frank O'Hara) in magically capturing the soul of an important school in the poetic ferment of those years. The San Francisco circle around Spicer was intense, prolific and inspired, but they didn't get the publicity that the New York poets received or that the Beats had showered on them. Lack of media attention didn't stop them. They were dedicated to a pure vision of poetry as an almost religious vocation. On his hospital death bed in 1965 (he died at 40 from acute alcohlism), Spicer told friend Warren Tallman, "I was trapped inside my own vocabulary." His genius/mania to use that vocabulary in service of the Muse produced great work and reminded others of the seriousness of their purpose. Spicer, in all his contradictions and drives, leaps from these pages. The book as a whole bristles with the very energy it celebrates, both poetic and sexual (intrigue was in their blood), and is essential reading for all of us interested in the circles that nurture poetry in every creative center. As if that is not enough, the quotations from a vast number of interviews of the surviving participants make this a delicious oral history as well as a compendium of hair-raising gossip of the wild times in North Beach before tourists took it over fom artists.

Jack Spicer was not a Beat poet.
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 1998-08-25
I have read Poet Be Like God, and I wish neither to rate it (but there's no option available that allows one to opt out of the rating game) nor review it, but to make a correction to the idiotic Kirkus review: Jack Spicer was NOT a "Beat" poet. There were a group of Beat poets in San Francisco in the late 1950s, early 1960s (e.g.,Bob Kaufman), but Spicer wasn't one of them. His intentions in poetry were different from theirs; naturally, so was his aesthetic. Spicer was part of a triumverate of poets that included Robert Duncan and Robin Blaser who met at the end of World War II in Berkeley, Ca., and were sometimes known as the Berkeley Renaissance group, or more simply, and more accurately, as part of the San Francisco poetry scene (which was part of the New American Poetry movement). That the Kirkus reviewer could make such an elementary and stupid mistake should be taken as a clear indicator of the idiocy of the rest of the Kirkus piece of schlock.

California
Pointing from the Grave: A True Story of Murder and DNA
Published in Hardcover by Miramax (2003-04-16)
Author: Samantha Weinberg
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Average review score:

THIS BOOK PROVES CRIMINALS HAVE A MORE HAZARDOUS LIFE
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2003-10-01
David Paul Frediani is the perpetrator and Helena Greenwood is the victim. Around 15 years is the time period of investigation and this case was finalized in the year 2000. All up-to-date stuff. You discover the history of DNA and its application to crime detection which is a fascinating subject and also the fact that hundreds of inmates have been released from prison as it was proven they were innocent. The thrust of this story however, are the deeds of David Frediani, his incredible self-made alibis, those who helped him (a handful of people), and how he was eventually brought to justice because of the work of a handful of law enforcement people. I thought if the volume was cut by about 25 pages it would have rated 5 stars. This is one of the early detections using DNA and if it had occured much earlier then Mr. Frediani would have gotten away free...forever.

A Murder Mystery and a History of DNA Research
Helpful Votes: 12 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 2003-05-10
Helena Greenwood was the head of marketing at a biotech company in southern California. She was present at the dawn of DNA testing in her industry, and when she heard about the newly patented method of DNA fingerprinting, she told the directors of her firm, "This DNA fingerprinting is going to be big. I think we should get into it." She was just the person to influence the firm in that direction, but in 1985 she was murdered in the front garden of her home. There was a suspect, but no witnesses, no fibers, no fingerprints, and the homicide department put the murder in the archive for more than a decade. Then a resourceful investigator found physical evidence in the file, and, ironically, used the same DNA testing on it that Greenwood had been promoting. The history of this case, and the results, are told in a fascinating detective story, _Pointing from the Grave: A True Story of Murder and DNA_ (Miramax) by Samantha Weinberg. The book does not simply relate the facts of the case and profile the personalities involved, but it also gives a satisfying and useful history of DNA research and the effect of that research on forensic investigations.

Weinberg intercuts her murder story with visits to labs and descriptions of the history of DNA going back to before Watson and Crick. One of Weinberg's digressions is to the Innocence Project, which has used DNA evidence to free wrongly convicted prisoners. The Project's efforts have shown that courts and juries are more badly flawed than anyone had previously suspected, and have increased the importance of DNA for fair legal investigation. But the useful digressions in _Pointing from the Grave_ all hang on the story of Greenwood's murder, and that story is very well told indeed. In 1998, an investigator found Greenwood's fingernail clippings taken at the autopsy, and thought that perhaps under the fingernails would be skin samples for investigation. When Greenwood had been murdered, such evidence was useless; fifteen years later, it provided the basis for the arrest of a charming sociopath who at the time of the murder had had been out on bail for sexually assaulting her. His lawyer attempted to use the defense that the science was untested, to "persuade the jury it was voodoo," but in 2001, juries had heard enough about DNA successes, and prosecutors had had enough experience with demonstrating the reliability of such evidence, to make a difference.

Weinberg has interviewed many of the scientists whose work she mentions, and has had jailhouse interviews with the accused. She has become friends with his family, who are sad figures ("they were the essence of the American suburban family") trying to understand how a nurturing and non-abusive upbringing could have turned out so. There are vital portraits of all the players at the trial here, and a summary of the proceedings that is exciting. Unforgettable is Greenwood's father; he was proud of his science-inclined only child, and devastated by her death. "There's enough sadness in the world," he said, "without people killing each other." He compared it to stones thrown in a pond, "... the ripples as they grow outward bring misery to everyone." When he said this, prostate cancer was painfully killing him in England, but he had hung on to life for years hoping to have his daughter's death resolved. He heard the verdict relayed to him by telephone, and died only hours later.

Very entertaining and informative!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-22
I have been looking for books about forensic science as I want to go into that, and found this wonderful book. It is almost hard to believe that it is true! The author really weaves the true story line in with the history of how DNA testing was discovered and developed. And it is even more amazing that the victim was involved with geneics and DNA herself. This book was as enertaining as any fiction book with forensic science.

Truth Can Be Stranger Than Fiction
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2003-04-30
I walked into this one knowing the outcome and essential facts. This case had been covered on either Unsolved Mysteries or one of the many forensic shows available through cable tv and I was immediately familiar with it.
The pleasant surprise was the book's essential structure and Ms. Weinberg's writing style. This was a true story that in many ways was written like a great crime novel. Her cast of characters had well developed personalities. Her research was meticulous. She was able to build a level of suspense when her reader already knew where she was going. Weinberg managed to maintain a level of objectivity and even a level of sympathy for the perpetrator while managing to be mindful that this person wasn't innocent.
As for my own reaction to this story, I became almost immediately hooked. There was almost a creepy aspect here as I had stayed at a hotel no more than 2 blocks from the scene of the crime last October. Her descriptions were so intensely visual that I almost felt like I was in Del Mar witnessing the crime scene first hand. I kept thinking that this all seemed so surreal. On a certain level I kept thinking the title could have been Murder In Paradise.
This book was researched very thorougly and many people who were involved closely to the victim, perpetrator, or the investigations conducted were interviewed at length.
Of course, as the title implies, the victim was indirectly responsible for nailing her murderer 15 years after the fact. While there is a certain irony in that, by no means is that the whole story.
I read this book in slightly over 3 hours. Usually I don't speed read when I'm reading for pleasure, but it was so compelling I just couldn't wait to move forward.
Be forwarned that I only review books that I really like or really detest. I absolutely loved this one.

California
Poles Apart: Parallel Visions of the Arctic and Antarctic
Published in Hardcover by University of California Press (1995-10-29)
Author: Galen Rowell
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North Pole - South Pole - Brilliant concept, better execution
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-05
If you are a fan of Galen's work you will certainly enjoy this book. The concept, comparing and contrasting the two poles, is brilliant.

The photographs are typical Galen - beautiful, engaging, illuminating. The accompanying text provides context and insight.

There is an essay section at the back that provides some insight into how Galen thought about the photos that appear in this book. Very interesting reading and a great teaching aid for amateur photographers and photojournalists.

A MUST-HAVE picture volume
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-09-26
Wow, what a great and such awesome picture volume. This book not only shows you pictures from the Arctic and the Antarctic, it particularly reveals the true differences between the two polar regions...they ARE truly different and fascinating! This book also delivers very-high quality photography, which can easily tempt you into travelling to such exotic destinations.

In the book, you will find 2 pictures side by side-one showing the Arctic, the other showing Antarctic. That way, you will get an idea of its differences. In addition, there is a separate chapter that dedicates to interesting stories regarding these regions, anything from life in Siberia, Inuit life in northern Alaska, to the South Georgia Islands & the South Pole. Last, but not least, there is also a whole section reviewing all the pictures showed in the book, including background information describing each photo, etc.

This is truly an amazing picture volume that is a MUST-HAVE for any polar fanatic. Get prepared for over 180 pages of some superb photography and much info on these fantastic regions. For the money, it was quite worth it...

Experience the stunning beauty of the Earth's poles!
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 1996-05-15
This is much more than a coffee table book, though its unique photographs of the pristine beauty of the Arctic and Antarctic would impress even the most casual of browsers. A short story about each photo is included, along with more general, thoughtful and poignant commentary from someone that is truly in touch with the global environment. Rowell is one of the great nature photographers, and this is a stunning collection

GREENLAND REVISTED THROUGH A LITTLE DANE'S EYES.
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 1998-12-26
Turning to page 74, my Danish-born wife, Aino, was amazed to discover her little town of Scoresbysund. She spent her fomative years(age 5-12)growing up there, where her father, Dr. Werner Mortensen, served as the sole doctor for the area of 3 villages.

Galen Rowell's photography captures the typical beauty of a Scandinavian mileau, even though it is truly a facade for the garbage that the typical native Greenlander casts no further than his front door!

His words portray the many problems of the native Inuits, who have been unable to adapt to the influence of Danish culture and progress. For Rowell to elaborate on the problems of alcholism, violent crime, and the high rate of suicide in a village of only 500, distinguishes him as an author that researchs his subjects quite well! It brought back memories for my wife of the "Grundlander" that beat his wife with the carcass of a frozen seal, only to have his wife bite of his ear.

The large yellow building in the left foreground is the eight bed hospital; the little red house with white trimmed windows that is over to the immediate left is where family Mortensen grew up from 1966-72. This book really takes my wife back,and helps me see things that were only in her mind's eye. It also brings her up to the what the present day Scoresbysund has become. And now that my family will be moving to Fairbanks,Alaska, my wife can get a sneak preview of our future from this marvelous book. Having lived in Alaska myself, I definitely recommend this book for its shear splendid photography and candid commentary. Great job Galen!

California
The Pool Party
Published in Hardcover by Delacorte Press (1993-06)
Author: Gary Soto
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Average review score:

The Pool Party by Gary Soto, Robert Casilla (illustrator)
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2002-04-29
I believe that third and fourth graders would really enjoy this text about this Mexican American youngster. Children would also enjoy the occasional Spanish included in the text. The only problem: Soto does not include a glossary this time. Oh well, Soto does a great job of portraying a family that understands what it means to really work for a living and teaches kids not to take everything for granted. Soto stays away from the sterotypical "lazy mexican".

The Pool party
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2002-12-10
The Pool Party by Gary Soto is a great story of a little hispanic boy named Rudy that gets invited to a pool party of a wealthy friend. Rudy's family is concerned that Rudy will not fit in and proceed to give him advice on what way he should act at the party. In the mean time Rudy decided that he is going to take an inner tube to the party against the wishes of his sister who told him that in a pool party, people don't actually go into the water and just chat by the side of the pool. Rudy listens to everyones advice, but at the end he does what he thinks is right and goes to the party and just does what is right for himself. The inner tube that he takes to the party is well received by everyone and he has a good time. This book is great for children in the fifth grade and on to read because it teaches them that being yourself is the right thing to do.

Fitting In
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2002-12-05
Gary Soto expresses the issue of fitting in and family life while using Rudy to guide us in a humorous way. This book is a great choice for young readers because they are able to relate with Rudy's dilema of fitting in and being liked by a new group of friends. One major concern was when Rudy finally goes to the pool party with his inner tube. One can't help but think of poor Rudy returning home early from the party crying and feeling dreadfull. The family unity is prevelant through out this book and it is expressed with how everyone is trying to give Rudy advice on how to act, talk and greet people while he's at the party. Over all this book is a great book that I had the pleasure of reading. I would recommend it to any student regardless of their ethnic background.

Great for kids
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2000-03-26
I remember being so captivated when reading this book in the fifth grade that I read it in one sitting! I had hated reading books before that. Soto is a great author and his story's will appeal to all kids.

California
Problem Solving Strategies: Crossing the River with Dogs and Other Mathematical Adventures (2nd Edition)
Published in Hardcover by Key Curriculum (2001-01-01)
Authors: Ted Herr and Ken Johnson
List price: $36.95
New price: $19.50
Used price: $5.69
Collectible price: $38.99

Average review score:

Great for problem solvers -- good and bad
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2002-01-24
This book taught me one thing I didn't know (finite differences -a lot less strain on me to find formulas and equations) and gave me challenging problems.

From a Beginning Math Teacher
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2001-11-26
I borrowed this resource from another teacher during my student teaching as a math teacher. Now I am in my first year teaching full time and looking to buy my own copy--I don't know what to do without it! It is a great resource for problems for many age and ability levels. The problems are interesting, use a variety of well-established strategies, and make problem solving fun! A great book.

Wit and Wisdom in a Math Book? Imposimous!
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2001-03-08
Six years ago I actually took Problem Solving from Ken Johnson, one of the authors, at Sierra College. Problem solving became a whole new and exciting recreation from then on. I would have to credit that miracle to the class's amazing teacher and the book he wrote. I have had hundreds of teachers in my life, and am a teacher myself, yet I have never met any teacher that was as gifted as Ken Johnson. His talent is clearly evident in his written work as well. (PS, how many people would it take to give this book 396 thumbs up?)

Problem Solving Strategies: Crossing the River with Dogs an
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2001-01-13
I had to purchase this book for a Class I was taking at Sam Houston State University. It is an excellent book to help learn problem solving strategies. Although, I am an elementary education major with a math specialization and had to take this class, I would recommend this book to anyone who is planning to teach grades 1 through 12. This book was designed for middle school grades, but could be adapted to any grade level. Problem solving is so important in mathematics.

California
Pure Theory of Law
Published in Paperback by University of California Press (1971-03-01)
Authors: Hans Kelsen and Max Knight
List price:
Used price: $25.00

Average review score:

Pleased with my product
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-12
This book can be hard going but if you grasp the theories and understand how they are linked with jurisprudence than you will enjoy the book.

Kelsen's positivism: an old if necessary step
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 1999-01-21
No doubts Kelsen is to be considered a watershed specially concerned to juridical thought. His efforts to break with the natural theories' tradition is of maximum importance for the basis on what the concepts of law and right were built. What is to be focused - as the importance of the works of Hans Kelsen is no new - is the impossibility of having his theory as the only one to be appliable to modern juridical dogmatics. Reading Kelsen is deffinitely a must for the ones who intend to study Law in deep. Nevertheless is to be kept in mind that his work is not and end in itself,but a solid and well structured beginning point.

The most important book on philosophy of law ever published
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2001-01-27
This is undoubtely the most important book on philosophy of law ever written. It's the book that broke paradigms (in the Thomas Kuhn sense of expression)and brought scientific dignity to the study of law. You can divide the science of law between "before and after" the Pure Theory. Even other really important books, like "the Concept of Law", by Hart, or "On Law and Justice", by Alf Ross, would be not possible if Kelsen hadn't written this book first.

Hans Kelsen is extremly successful in buliding his Theory
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 1998-09-06
"Pure Theory of Law" is a classic and a must for Law and Philosophy students. Hans Kelsen is extremly successful in building concepts and also his theory. Although this "pure theory"is extremly criticised nowadays, its reading is essential ,and help readers to understand other theories clearly.


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