Z Books
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Rutgers University Project on Economics and ChildrenReview Date: 2008-10-31
A Sensitive, Beautifully told story.Review Date: 2008-10-14
A Lesson in Needs and WantsReview Date: 2008-10-20
The perfect friendship/compassion book.Review Date: 2008-08-11
When I read it to a group, I ask, "Have you ever not gotten what you wanted, even if you thought you really needed it? How did that make you feel?" Even the "privileged" kids can relate.
Without being syrupy, this is the story of a kid who is just getting by; he wants the cool shoes the other kids have and knows he can never have them. He finds them--sort of, they are too small--in a consignment shop and manages to buy them, desperate to fit in. Meanwhile, the only kid who didn't laugh at him a few days ago doesn't have any shoes, either. Without giving too much away, I'll say the story ends with compassion and dignity. It's also miraculously brief; every word is important.
Since I am a librarian, I often have parents or teachers asking me for books on friendship. I've never seen one as well-written as this, and the illustrations round out the story perfectly.
take a walk in my shoesReview Date: 2008-01-12
Empathy is the big word here. Some lucky children may not understand about the scene in the guidance counselor's office. Someone can't afford shoes? Other children will come to understand that they ar not alone in their needs.
This is a book about sharing that reaches out especially to boys! Kicks are important to them.
Everyone I have shared this book with has been touched by it. I highly recommend it for all elementary school age children.

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No Kitchen Should be Without This BookReview Date: 2006-11-13
Must HaveReview Date: 2000-12-11
My favorite cooking info book.Review Date: 2001-04-26
What your Mother Never Told YouReview Date: 2002-01-21
NOT A DUST COLLECTORReview Date: 2001-10-19

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Looking for a framework to focus your retail strategy?Review Date: 2008-01-05
For example, this book helped me settle into a Easy-Est strategy for starting up a Next-Generation Pharmacy. In this context, both The Wellness Revolution and Blown to Bits complemented the Easy-Est strategy.
A Winning BookReview Date: 2004-10-15
If you're seeking an outline for the particulars of cash-flow management, marketshare, procurement strategies etc., this book won't satisfy. Stern and Ander don't excavate details. Instead, they hover at a conceptual level and methodically reduce high-achieving retailers' major differentiating factors to a workable, comprehensible 5-point "EST-model". The authors concede immediately that no retailer can (or ought to) be strong on all points of their model, since vigor on one axis may preclude a company from muscle on another. They argue that a retail concept must prevail on at least one or two points on the EST model to secure a place among the top three retailers in a segment (which, the authors say, is how to prevent consumer neglect and ultimately, the company's failure). The strengths of the EST model are both its intuitiveness to the reader and its simple construction.
The tome is pithy and easy to read. Stern and Ander sustained my attention throughout by using a familiar -- yet diverse -- set of retailers to illustrate the models. I encourage any reader who wants to appreciate what differentiates compelling retailers that stay relevant to consumers from the many that end their days in "the black hole of retail" to read Winning at Retail immediately.
The est model wins in Winning at RetailReview Date: 2004-09-27
Insightful!Review Date: 2005-07-29
New 21st century of retailingReview Date: 2005-01-19
biggEST
cheapEST
fastEST
hottEST
etc
You can probably be 2 but not or 5 of them. Great history of stores that do welll. Even though the book talks in big names (like Target which is HottEST as in up to the minute designer fashions at good prices) a small retailer can do this. You jst can't THINK small.
One bad part.......If you read this and think it will be like a motivation seminar where you'll absorb this and it will happen-well, you're wrong. You need to do a lot of things different starting tomorrow morning. the same old drab store with the same old drab employees won't hack it.
You decide. But if you want to change this book will give you direction. Then go read "The E-Myth revisited"
David Geller

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Women Talk About Their ArtReview Date: 2000-11-27
Women Talk About Their ArtReview Date: 2000-11-27
More Than InformationReview Date: 2000-12-01
More Than InformationReview Date: 2000-12-01
Women Talk About Their ArtReview Date: 2000-11-27
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Clear Picture Review Date: 2005-10-25
Professor Buswell's book is an engaging and fascinating portrait of Buddhist life in a Korean Seon temple long before it became common for us to see books and dharma talks by foreign Seon monks. His tale is as rollicking an adventure story as a tale of quiet mediation and disciplined scholarship could be. Reading his words we imagine the idealistic young man Buswell must have been, urgently holding his professor back in the halls after class to answer his eager questions, with firm purpose boarding a plane for Thailand where with a serious expression and a quick beating heart his head was shaved and he donned the robes of a monk. Then finding something missing setting out for a remote tete-a-tete, sharing his monk mentor with only one other as he diligently studied tracts on Buddhist philosophy written in Classical Chinese, then by chance and good fortune finding the spiritual home of his heart, Song'gwangsa, the `Sangha Jewel Temple'.
This book, in brief, is the story of Buswell's experience of Korean Buddhism, written in a style that manages to be both conversational and easily readable and yet academic and possessed of face and content validity at the same time. Buswell explains Seon Buddhism in Korea by explaining what he saw and experienced over five years at Song'gwangsa, including chapters on the temple itself, the daily work of monks and the different positions monks filled beyond working on meditation. This book serves as a more closely focused and Korean telling of the world that you can read about in Welch's "Practice of Chinese Buddhism". The sorts of tasks, the ways the monks meditate, even the ascetic practices that we heard about from Welch reappear here in a clearly told and highly reliable illustration of the mid to late 70s practices of Korean Seon monks.
It is very curious to think of the amazing success that Seon Buddhism has had with foreigners. Though Buswell was one of the early ones, or even the first, there are many monks who many years ago put on their robes, and unlike Buswell, have kept them on many more than five (or seven) years. It was Seung-san a famous Buddhist teacher who became the most active face of Seon to the outside world. Through temples and centers he established in America and Europe many non-Koreans got to experience Buddhism, Seon style, first hand. It's unsurprising to me but perhaps quite surprising to most Koreans that many of those interested in Seon went so far as to attend retreats in Korea, and some even ordained.
I am not convinced that becoming a monk is any more or less difficult for a foreigner than a Korean. However there is one thing I must admit, if a westerner is lazy and shiftless and unskilled and they want to find an easy life, they would never consider moving to Korea and putting on a cheongsam. Buswell in his evaluation of those who ordained for the wrong reasons states "...continued involvement in the monastic life may remold that motivation into an entirely exemplary one. Indeed, there is no way of predicting from a monk's background his ultimate success in the religious life." (pg 76). I hold to the idea, personally, that fate leads us where we are supposed to go. So, though it would not occur to a foreigner to use a temple as a back-up way of life, and it would occur to a Korean, it doesn't mean that any foreigner will be a better monk than his compatriots. If a (Korean) man becomes a monk, even though he thinks he's doing it to use the monastery as a safe escape from lay life, there is a reason, and he will fulfill some task or mission as a monk that he could not otherwise have carried out. Though Korean and foreign monks may ordain for different reasons, they are living the same life, can each find their own path to understanding and may help people in different, but equally legitimate, ways.
In fact, I have only two complaints about this book. The first complaint is that occasionally Buswell included Romanized Korean terms that were not special Buddhist vocabulary (using his spelling, for example kabang, and haroboji) but in the context of the book, where all other Romanized terms were specific to Buddhism, this could be confusing to a non-Korean speaker. I kept imagining someone saying to their friend "Those gray bags for monks are called `kabang'. I learned this from this book I just read!" The only other complaint is that the information in the book is in some respects dated. Though many things about life in temples has not changed, nor is it likely to change, there are constant trends and fads that effect the practice of the monks, and new issues that arise. When reading the book I felt regret that I couldn't go and talk about some aspects of the book with my monk friends because most of them hadn't even become novices yet when Buswell was a resident at Song'gwangsa.
Don't misunderstand me, though, I truly enjoyed this book. The best part about it for me actually (not withstanding kabang) was the fact that I learned useful new Korean terms, what I want to use as soon as I can is to ask my friends where they are in the Samigwa, Sajipgwa, Sagyogwa, and Daegyogwa system. I'm also happy to see terms like Dono Jeomsu and Dono Donsu written side by side, because this is not vocabulary I can find in my own dictionary, even though I am familiar with the terms in English, I've never been able to have a satisfying talk in Korean by trying to only explain what I meant without having confidence in the terminology I was using. I think that in terms of improving my own understanding of Korean Seon Buddhism it was this chapter (A Monk's Early Career) with the clear descriptions of the process that will provide the most benefit.
I would certainly refer this book to anyone interested in Korean Buddhism.
I escaped to temple life for a bit with this book.Review Date: 2003-12-18
Living in this hectic modern world and having my illusions shattered over and over again made me realize how lucky I was to have seen a Buddha with my very eyes. I think I'll read this one again soon. Buddha Bless You. You know what I mean.
scholarly workReview Date: 2004-11-25
Great Book on Korean ZenReview Date: 2004-03-01
If you like this work, you will also like "A Glimpse of Nothingness" by Janwillem van de Wettering; an account of experiences had in an American Zen community. Also I cannot recommend enough the teachings of Zen master Seung Sahn, ie. The Compass of Zen, Only Don't Know, and Dropping Ashes on the Buddha. This is a great accent to such works.
InsightfulReview Date: 2001-01-01

60's Era Espionage for the KiddlesReview Date: 2006-08-29
Get Smart and read this book!Review Date: 2004-03-19
Another great bookReview Date: 2004-02-11
Puts a smile on anyone's face!Review Date: 2004-02-11

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My preschooler loves these!Review Date: 2008-10-23
Perfect practice for preschoolers!Review Date: 2007-06-01
My daughter is three. These worksheets have been a wonderful help to her and fun, too! She loves playing "school". The best part is the free copying!
HIGHLY RECOMMENDED.
Georgia Kindergarten (9 yr. veteran) teacher loves this!Review Date: 2007-01-04
writing pagesReview Date: 2005-09-11


A superb and original read to stir interest in childrenReview Date: 2003-11-18
Great Book!Review Date: 2003-10-13
Andy Owl ReviewReview Date: 2003-08-11
Great for teachers!Review Date: 2003-08-07


cenne spostrzezeniaReview Date: 2000-05-27
Wyborny wybor rozmowcow!Review Date: 2001-08-13
Polecam kazdemu, kto interesuje sie swiatem, ludzkimi doswiadczeniami, historia i jej zagmatwianiami. Podoba mi sie, ze Autorka rozmowcow pokazuje jako zawsze waznych i traktuje ich zawsze z szacunkiem. Nigdy nie wysuwa siebie na pierwsze miejsce, prowadzi rozmowe w taki sposob, nie by pokazac siebie czy swoje sady, ale swoich bohaterow. Jakze czesto w innych wywiadach rozmawiajacy chce pokazac swoja wiedze czy przekoanc do wlasnego sadu, jakze czesto po prostu sie madrzy. Nie zauwazylem tego zjawiska w tej ksiazce. Autorka kieruje uwage czytajacego na swojego rozmowce, nie siebie.
Bardzo ciekawa jest rozmowa ze slynnym w Polsce dr Burzynskim. Dopiero teraz zrozumialem istote jego walki z amerykanskimi korporacjami. Jestem po jego stronie w 100 procentach!
ciekawy dokument i ladna story o wielkiej aktorceReview Date: 2001-02-16
The most interesting story about Ingrid Bergman!Review Date: 2001-01-14


Really good in office reference!Review Date: 2008-05-31
A most useful reference!Review Date: 2003-11-27
It complements similar references such as the Wills Eye Manual, however the excellent photographs are
an advantage over the Wills.
It is certainly an excellent learning tool for students, and a very useful chairside
reference for practising clinicians. Highly recommended!
Book reviewReview Date: 2004-09-21
thanks for your wonderful book review. i'm glad that you found the book helpful.
we do have a posterior eye disease book in preparation. good things take time :-)
best wishes, adrian
WonderfulReview Date: 2004-08-26
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This clever book contains a powerful lesson about differentiating between wants and needs in the face of tight budget constraints. At the same time, the subtle text and expressive illustrations communicate clearly a child's desire to conform. At a time when expensive shoes have become a high-status consumption good, Those Shoes comes out a winner for telling an appealing story to which readers across age groups can relate.