Massachusetts Books
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Good StuffReview Date: 2006-05-20
A great book from a young talentReview Date: 2006-03-06
Keen, clever and never cute: a great read!Review Date: 2003-03-10

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Saw familiar peopleReview Date: 2004-02-28
Great BookReview Date: 2004-01-10
great collection of memoriesReview Date: 2004-01-09

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Loved this book!Review Date: 2006-09-27
Best Guide! everything u need to SEE this cityReview Date: 2005-02-17
It's seriously the best book you can buy for this city.
Here's a tip: The Blue Man Group show is great. Better yet, you can see it FOR FREE!!!! As an usher. Just call the Charles Playhouse (info in book), ask to be an usher, they'll schedule you, give you the full behind-the-scenes experience and it's SOoo much fun cleaning up at the end (believe it or not!). Not many ppl know this, even the locals, so take advantage of this!
Excellent resource at your finger tips/Boston Rocks!!Review Date: 2004-07-20
What more could I recommend about this book is that their headquarters is right next to Harvard Univ.
Other great things about Boston. A very small city, clean and user friendly. Bostonians are very helpful and aren't as bad since this Nor Cal Guy was expecting East Coast "Jerks".
Must Sees
1. Fenway, $20 standing room only tickets or at least do the tour.
2. Duck Tour, very fun and goes in the charles river.
3. Liberty trail. A great walking/trolley tour of the historic boston. Maybe 5 miles, but i did it at a snails pace in about 6 hours.
4. buy a $37 citypass (citypass.com) that includes;JFK Library, Harvard Mus, Science Mus, MFA(MusFineAart, my fav), Prudential Bldg, Aquarium.
5. Go in the summer!!
6. Get wkly T line pass for $16.50 and it includes buses, downtown trains and water taxi (Jul 2004)
Good Luck and you'll Love it!!

great book for learning linguisticsReview Date: 2002-07-15
Great book!Review Date: 2008-02-08
Excellent intro textReview Date: 2003-12-24
As I am mainly a neuroscientist and secondarily a linguist, I was most interested in Part 3 of this book. The first two parts present the usual linguistics topics such as phonology, morphology, syntax, semantics, language variation, and evolution. Part 3 deals with the area of Psycholinguistics, and there are four chapters discussing language from the standpoint of Cognitive Psychology and Neuropsychology. The four chapters are: Pragmatics: The Study of Language Use and Communication; Speech Production and Comprehension; Language Acquisition in Chimp and Child;, and Language and the Brain. The chapter on the brain might be a little too basic for neuroscience students, but it's an excellent introduction for the linguistics students, and I noticed that a number of the classic experiments such as the famous "Wada test" and dichotic listening experiments were discussed, as well as topics like conduction aphasia, Broca's aphasia, Wernicke's aphasia, hemispheric localization and dominance, and so on.
Overall still a fine text and worth picking up used if you can find it, when it will be bargain for the price.

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Better than Cod Cakes and BeansReview Date: 2002-10-15
Some errors but lots of good infoReview Date: 1999-07-06
loaded with topographic mapsReview Date: 1999-06-10
Armand J. Courchaine, The Mansfield Buzz, May 27, 1999

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First rate translationReview Date: 2003-08-18
The best translation is one that is highly readable and yet accurate, a faithful rendering of the most distinctive qualities of the original and not an exercise in the free invention of ideas and expressions that are nowhere to be found in the Latin. Verse translations frequently capture, at least somewhat, the feel and flow of classical poetry, and I confess that I am partial to them. On the other hand, prose translations of geat poetic works -- I am thinking especially of Vergil's Aeneid -- often fail utterly to convey the spirit of the original. However, upon reading this translation of the Metamorphoses I am beginning to reconsider this view.
Simpson's Metamorphoses is a triumph of the translator's art. In language that is clear, direct, and highly faithful to the diction and syntax of the original Latin, he has turned Ovidian verse into highly readable English prose. I am quite familiar with the Metamorphoses in Latin, and read it comfortably in the original. However, I often have a need to read the poem in English and am familiar with a wide variety of translations. Each has its own shortcomings, and some are frankly annoying to read at all. Simpson has managed to steer clear of the pitfalls waiting to trap those who seek to render Ovid into English, offering a version that should satisfy the needs of many different readers.
The value of this edition is greatly enhanced by over 200 pages of in-depth notes, a full bibliography of major scholarship on the poem, and a highly useful index.
I strongly recommend this version of the Metamorphoses, which will likely be the only one that I turn to for the indefinite future.
First rate translationReview Date: 2003-08-18
The best translation is one that is highly readable and yet accurate, a faithful rendering of the most distinctive qualities of the original and not an exercise in the free invention of ideas and expressions that are nowhere to be found in the Latin. Verse translations frequently capture, at least somewhat, the feel and flow of classical poetry, and I confess that I am partial to them. On the other hand, prose translations of geat poetic works -- I am thinking especially of Vergil's Aeneid -- often fail utterly to convey the spirit of the original. However, upon reading this translation of the Metamorphoses I am beginning to reconsider this view.
Simpson's Metamorphoses is a triumph of the translator's art. In language that is clear, direct, and highly faithful to the diction and syntax of the original Latin, he has turned Ovidian verse into highly readable English prose. I am quite familiar with the Metamorphoses in Latin, and read it comfortably in the original. However, I often have a need to read the poem in English and am familiar with a wide variety of translations. Each has its own shortcomings, and some are frankly annoying to read at all. Simpson has managed to steer clear of the pitfalls waiting to trap those who seek to render Ovid into English, offering a version that should satisfy the needs of many different readers.
The value of this edition is greatly enhanced by over 200 pages of in-depth notes, a full bibliography of major scholarship on the poem, and a highly useful index.
I strongly recommend this version of the Metamorphoses, which will likely be the only one that I turn to for the indefinite future.
Ian Myles Slater on: Simpson Transforms the MetamorphosesReview Date: 2004-04-27
The second part -- about half the volume by number of pages, probably much more in terms of wordage, given the slightly smaller typeface used -- is a running commentary on the poem, generally closely integrated with Simpson's rendering. This is in itself a departure from recent practice. There are a number of excellent stand-alone studies of the "Metamorphoses," to which Simpson frequently refers the reader. There are commentaries of various ages on the Latin text (notably the recent volumes by William Anderson). Translations however, have generally contained much less comprehensive notes, and those with brief commentaries have tended to be "aides to the reader," supplying the myth-deprived modern with essential information on the ancient gods (e.g., that Jove is another name for Jupiter, and Phoebus is the same person as Apollo). Simpson's commentary far exceeds in scope and ambition, as well as size, the otherwise impressive set of notes by E.J. Kenney to A.D. Melville's verse translation (1986; Oxford World's Classics), to take one example.
In fact, the only comparable joining of a "modern" English translation and extended commentary with which I am familiar is the combination of Brookes More's verse translation with surveys of Ovid's sources and his influence on later art and literature by Wilmon Brewer (1895-1998), which was also published separately as "Ovid's Metamorphoses in European Culture." That translation-and-commentary appeared in five-book sections in 1933, 1941, and 1948, and the whole work was reprinted (somewhat "revised") as recently as 1978. Brewer's commentary remains interesting, but for understanding the poem it relies heavily on formerly current views about Ovid's supposed Hellenistic sources. By and large it amounts to a series of essays on the stories, rather than a close analysis of what Ovid does with them, and how he does it. (And, as it can be published separately, it is really another book about the poem, rather than a close commentary.)
Simpson is an authority on extant sources of Greek myths, and their subsequent literary developments -- see the commentary included in his translation of "The Library" of Apollodorus, published as "Gods and Heroes of the Greeks". In treating Ovid, however, Simpson usually notes only the most prominent of Ovid's literary predecessors, notably Homer, Hesiod, and Virgil, with whose versions of some of the stories Ovid's original audience would certainly have been familiar. Instead, he deals with Ovid's literary creation. Points of poetic style, and the moral and political implications of passages are covered. So are complex problems of the structure of the whole poem, and its parts, such as the tangle of cross-reference, tales told by characters in stories told by characters in Ovid's narrative. The result is an intriguing view of Ovid, not as a clever poet and skilled anthologist, but as a master of the narrative art.
The volume concludes with an exceptionally detailed index, which also serves as a concise glossary.
[Note: A very favorable review of this translation by Sara Mack, just now (September 30, 2004) available in the online "Bryn Mawr Classical Review," reports that a revised edition of Simpson's "Metamorphoses" is forthcoming, sometime during the current (2004-2005?) academic year. This will apparently will include some substantive revisions, as well as correction of numerous typographical errors (many of which I seem to have read past without noticing). I would urge the curious to consult Mack's review for a professional Latinist's perspective on the problem of translating Ovid, as well as a far more authoritative evaluation of Simpson's work than I can provide.]

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Mountain Bike America BostonReview Date: 2002-09-16
The Topo information is excellent, and in my humble opinion, a necessity for any mtb guide (why don't others do this basic research?).......If riding in Boston is in your plans or you're a local looking for new trails, this book is your starting point.....
Happy trails for youReview Date: 2001-02-27
The Best Boston Mountain Biking GuideReview Date: 2000-04-19

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TerrificReview Date: 2008-03-29
A definitive encyclopedia and outstanding reference!Review Date: 2006-03-19
WOW-You Will Not Believe This Book-Beautiful!!Review Date: 2002-09-25

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counting Fun for little ones!Review Date: 2002-12-30
Very sweet book for young children!Review Date: 2000-09-20
My kids love this book!Review Date: 2000-09-15

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every recipe is a star!Review Date: 2005-10-14
This is a splendid cookbook.Review Date: 1998-08-03
This is a splendid cookbook.Review Date: 1998-08-03
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Highly recommended.