W Books
Related Subjects: Walker, Antoine Williams, Jay Wallace, John Webber, Chris Williams, Jason Willis, Kevin Walton, Bill West, Jerry Wilkens, Lenny Wilkins, Dominique Worthy, James Walker, Greg Wang, ZhiZhi Ward, Charlie Wallace, Ben Wallace, Gerald
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I enjoyed this book very muchReview Date: 2007-12-19
Timeless themesReview Date: 2008-05-28
old man will not be budged. He will not share a meal or a conversation with Will, something that Will's sons notice and ponder.
This book is about timeless themes--the relationship between fathers and sons, the destructiveness of unforgiveness, and the glorious possibilities of reconciliation and obedience to God. W. Dale Cramer is one of the best Christian writers of our day, blending harsh reality with the redeeming love of God. His characters are real and unforgettable. I heartily recommend this book!
An truly inspiring story Review Date: 2007-08-24
Sorry to say, I have been disappointed. It seems to me he did not intend for women to read Bad Ground. As I read it, I kept thinking that my husband would really enjoy this story, but I felt I was intruding in a man's world. I haven't been able to finish Sutter's Cross. It started out pretty interesting, but it became obvious what was going to happen in the end. It just didn't hold my interest.
I will never forget the story of Levi's Will.
A joy to readReview Date: 2006-11-02
Quiet, thought-provoking, journey of discoveryReview Date: 2007-02-27
In 1943, nineteen-year-old Will Mullett decides he cannot stay with his rigid, dogmatic, Old Order Amish family, and heads out to face the evil, the challenges, the complexity, the diversity, and the beauty of the World.
Will McGruder is Will Mullett.
W. Dale Cramer has given us a wondrous gift of prose in this introspective fictional biography. Adeptly shifting back and forth between two time-lines (the days between Will's father's death and Will's father's funeral, and the decades between Will's departure from home and his father's death), we get to ride along as Will ponders such weighty issues as the meaning of life, the differences between rituals and relationships, the differences between religion and faith and beliefs and values, the tendency for people to parent their own children not very differently from how they were raised (despite vowing to do otherwise), and how to live with, and grow beyond, one's own mistakes. Mr. Cramer has created a realistic protagonist who is truly three-dimensional, in this character study of a character who is worthy of study.
The writing in "Levi's Will" flows evenly and deeply. In Orson Scott Card's "How to Write Science Fiction and Fantasy," Mr. Card cites the late Octavia Butler as a prime example of an author who loaded every line with meaning, and gives the first line of Ms. Butler's "Wild Seed" as an example. Mr. Cramer has gone a step further, in a way, as even the title, "Levi's Will" has many different meanings, all of which gradually emerge throughout this rich tale of humanity, grief, tragedy, triumph, and love.
Chapter 36 of "Levi's Will" deserves special mention, as it is a turning point for the protagonist, and is a wonderful essay on the meaning of life, love, and belief. All of the bits and pieces of wisdom encountered by Will McGruder/Mullett finally coalesce into an epiphany that changes his world-view, and the reader gets to join that moment of wonder. Mr. Cramer manages to do this with finesse, and it really gives the reader a chance to re-examine his or her own beliefs and values, without feeling that the author is preaching or dictating the "Truth" or the "right" answers.
In some ways, I am startled that I enjoyed this book, and that I wrote what I wrote in this review. While I have always held strong moral and spiritual beliefs, I long ago turned away from organized religion, because of the rigid dogma and ritual I had encountered. From reading the description and reviews of this book, one might get the impression that religion is the focus of the story. I see it differently. Religion is the context of "Levi's Will," but its focus is really on the beliefs, values, ethics, and morality that are supposed to be the true messages of religion. I think there is much that is of value in "Levi's Will" for the Christian, and for anyone of any other religion, as well as for agnostics and even atheists. At it's root, "Levi's Will" is a tale, well told, about values and the power of love.

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Eat Well, Feel Great, Gain WeightReview Date: 2002-02-05
Best cookbook ever!Review Date: 2006-09-13
ExcellentReview Date: 2005-09-25
THIS IS THE BEST "diet" COOKBOOK EVER!Review Date: 2002-04-21
Better Homes & Gardens New Dieter's CookbookReview Date: 2002-12-17

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Great buyReview Date: 2007-05-25
Bill Watterson. Cartoonist exrtodinaire.Review Date: 2003-02-23
a little bit of perspective...and a lot of funReview Date: 2005-03-07
Insightful looks at classic sunday stripsReview Date: 2004-05-13
Created by Bill Watterson, Calvin & Hobbes will be hailed among the greatest ever created, right alongside Peanuts and Krazy Kat for its creativity, scope of influence and the enjoyment it offered the reader. It was a strip capable of being all things gleeful and all things sad, all things goofy and all things serious.
Bill Watterson's genius cannot be overstated. He was a master of the comic form. He somehow managed to be funny, clever, touching, insightful, warm, cynical, uplifting, devious, nostalgic, and mischievous, all in the space of a little three- or four-panel comic strip.
And his Sunday strips? A feast. His use of space and color, especially in the strip's later years, was masterful. He knew how to work a page like no other.
In this collection, some of the best Sunday strips are collected in glorious color. Each is amended with footnotes and annotations by the creator himself, along with early pre-newspaper versions of the strips. While many of these can be found elsewhere, this collection is a nice look back at some favorites, made even better by the insight and observations of the man who drew them. Even those intimately familiar with these cartoons will learn something new about the craft of comic creation through his annotations.
Each comic strip is a story - and for longtime Calvin & Hobbes readers, a memory. That final strip, with its clean slate of white snow into which Calvin and Hobbes disappear, talking of discovery and exploring ... just fantastic.
If you're a fan of Watterson's work and Calvin & Hobbes, you owe it to yourself to pick this up.
Great Look Behind the ScenesReview Date: 2004-12-24

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Fresh insight on a misunderstood topicReview Date: 2005-11-28
Dr. Younkins knows business like Bo Jackson knows sportsReview Date: 2005-11-21
Economic Eye OpenerReview Date: 2003-12-25
This is a very good book and Ed has been able to lubricate the previously dry subject of economics. Any person who believes that Americans live under a free enterprise system should read this book. If you believe that you are entitled to some economic aid from the "Government," read this book.
Must have for all Lovers of Freedom.Review Date: 2008-02-22
Younkins' wonderful contribution with this work is not only to demonstrate that words like `rights', `justice', and `dignity' have specific meanings, but from the view point that man prefers freedom over slavery, he eloquently lays out the ontological framework of a free society.
Today many would argue that there's a natural tension between `rights' and `justice' with a tendency for one to happen at the expense of the other. That is not true, according to Younkins. He argues that when these terms are properly understood within the context a free society, they not only fulfill their roles unfettered, they work symbiotically towards producing a happy society.
Younkins covers much in his work and in the process he clears the fog by defining the role of the law, government, corporations, education, etc. within a free society. Younkins book is so systematic, consistent and thorough that it can be used as a litmus test to measure the degree of freedom within a particular society.
My only criticism of this work (and it is very minor) is that though his intended audience are lay persons in philosophy, economics and political science, Younkins' language does get a bit recondite at times. But overall this is thoughtful and brilliant work from a fine scholar. Every person who cares and thinks about sustaining a free society must have this work included in their library.
economic insightsReview Date: 2005-11-21

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All you need to coach yourselfReview Date: 2008-09-01
Next Best Thing to Studying with Emmett in PersonReview Date: 2008-08-25
I was at first skeptical that a book format of these concepts would be possible or as good as swimming with him personally, but this book completely blew that notion out of the water (so to speak). As I read the text and studied the diagrams, I was completely impressed with his abilities to communicate via the written word. It is an easy read, and the ideas are explained clearly and woven together beautifully. Studying this book, applying the concepts, and following the workouts will take you from complete novice highly skilled and efficient swimmer. I keep a copy of it on my nightstand, and it will probably remain there for many years to come. This book is a must read for anyone who thinks he might be interested in learning to swim or improving their already advanced swimming skills.
Great book for new swimmers and experienced swimmers.Review Date: 2008-08-19
This book is great!Review Date: 2008-01-06
When you first try these drills, they may seem awkward and frustrating, because they are different from your normal (and probably bad) swimming motions. Don't give up - after several workouts (maybe even several weeks' worth) I promise that eventually the light bulb will go on over your head and you'll say "Oh, now I get it!" This has happened to me numerous times doing Hines' drills. Your body will, seemingly magically, figure out what he's trying to show you.
We have a 1-mile swimming race every August here in Austin called the Deep Eddy Mile. My first year (2006) I completed the swim in 36 minutes, 13 seconds. After a year of using Hines' lessons, I knocked my time down to 34:20, and I can already tell that I'll probably knock off another minute or two this year.
Obviously, the best way to improve your swim technique is with a personal coach, but if (like me) you do not have the time or money for personal lessons, this book is an excellent alternative.
The BEST freestyle book made even Better in 2nd editionReview Date: 2008-08-03

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Great Book, Very Moving!Review Date: 2008-08-19
Great ReadReview Date: 2007-08-28
Courage beyond beliefReview Date: 2008-08-08
InspiringReview Date: 2006-01-06
A very inspirational bookReview Date: 2007-05-15

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Lachenmeyer helped my relationship with my fatherReview Date: 2008-04-28
Lesson #1 for the programmed massesReview Date: 2007-02-17
The OutsiderReview Date: 2005-08-02
Heartbreaking and poignantReview Date: 2005-08-20
This book breathes life into a person with mental illness, and it brings understanding. It left me in tears and with a deep respect for Charles.
A Book Everyone Should ReadReview Date: 2005-11-02

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Wonderful glimpse into Pan Yuliang's lifeReview Date: 2008-08-12
"...no matter how we long for the past, we are rooted in the present," Pan Yuliang tells her husband, Pan Zanhua. Jennifer Cody Epstein brings this concept home to us in her use of present tense in telling Yuliang's story. Based on the limited knowledge of the painter's life, she has captured this turbulent time period in China, and some of the experiences she imagined Yuliang may have had.
The Painter From Shanghai pulls the reader into Yuliang's life, sharing the horrors of Hall life, the joy in discovering her ability to paint, and the hunger and loneliness of her life in France. Though most of the public never understood her need to paint nudes, Epstein suggests her monsters were what produced her art. In creating beautiful female bodies on canvas, she may have been able to deal with the memories of offering her body in a way no fourteen year-old girl should.
Haunting, compelling, and masterfully written, The Painter From Shanghai invites the reader into Pan Yuliang's world. Although this a work of fiction, you'll feel you've had a glimpse into the life of this intriguing and talented woman.
Reviewer: Alice Berger, Bergers Book Reviews
An unfortunate missReview Date: 2008-08-03
Perhaps the most disconcerting part of the book is that it is written entirely in the present tense. I'm sure the author was aiming to give the reader a sort of first-hand impression of the events, but it's actually quite difficult to read. More than that, it is used incorrectly; rather than building suspense, it ends up killing it, and the resulting story is flat and lifeless.
The author chooses to either spell out letter-by-letter every event so that the reader doesn't ever have to think, or to skip the event entirely. The latter was an interesting plot device the first two or so times it happened, leaving the reader with a sense of anticipation about the eventual return to and conclusion of these events. It becomes apparent early on, however, that even when there are conclusions, they usually occur as an afterthought and so briefly one might wonder why they were mentioned at all. Even some of the book's most "important" characters are swept under the rug, out of sight, out of mind. When the reader comes to realize that almost EVERY major plot point is going to be built up and then skipped (to be mentioned again, possibly, in a brief flashback), it becomes tiresome. The story is gutted of any emotional bonds between characters because they might vanish at any time, never to be mentioned again. The reader ends up caring as little about the secondary characters as the emotionally vacant main character does.
Amazingly, a story that should be extremely interesting-- set in one of the most turbulent periods of China's history and focusing on a talented and driven young woman who defies the odds-- is in this book incredibly dull. I could barely get myself through to the last page, and by the time I arrived I was just glad to be finished with the book.
ReviewReview Date: 2008-08-16
The Painter from Shanghai is based on true events of Pan Yuliang life. I have to admit that I had never heard of Pan Yuliang. After reading The Painter from Shanghai, I found Pan Yuliang to be a very remarkable woman. She could find beauty in everything around her. This included even during the two years Yuliang was at The Halls of Eternal Splendour. Pan Zanhua was a good husband to Yuliang. He helped Pan Yuliang pursue her dreams no matter what people thought. For this fact Pan Yuliang was able to stand up for what she wanted to paint and not just what sold. I feel Jennifer Cody Epstein did Pan Yuliang justice in this creative masterpiece of a book titled The Painter from Shanghai.
A Story of Impossible Odds Overcome in the Name of ArtReview Date: 2008-08-12
The challenge for Ms. Epstein was what to make of such a life, how to cast it against its own remarkably volatile cultural/historical backdrop while still positioning her biographical subject's place in the 20th Century art world. She fairly successfully meets the first part of that challenge in her book, infusing Ms. Pan's life with the sense of an artist's vision and tortured soul against a background of violent historical movement - the end of imperial rule, the portioning of Shanghai by Western powers, the birth of Sun Yat-Sen's Republic, the advent of Chang Kai-Shek's Nationalist Party, the early signs of the evolving Communist Party (embodied by multiple appeareances of Zhou Enlai), and the Japanese intrusions paving the way for its 1937 invasions and massacres in Shanghai and Nanjing.
It is not so clear whether she succeeds in the second challenge, that of defining Ms. Pan's importance to the history of art, either China's or the world's at large. Ms. Epstein provides no substantial sense of Pan Yuliang's artistic style, seemingly settling for the notion that female nudity alone was enough reason to signify her work. While this may well have been true in 1930's China, Ms. Pan's actual work (not included in the book) are strikingly different - far more Rubensesque, for example - than the impressions left by Ms. Epstein's writing. I chose not to survey Ms. Pan's oeuvre until after reading the book, only then to be astonished at the difference between the mental picture I had formed and the reality of Pan Yuliang's work. It seemed surprising that paintings with such strong 17th Century influences would have found an accepting critical audience in a European art world already under the thrall of Pablo Picasso, Georges Braque, Piet Mondrian, Marc Chagall, Max Ernst, Paul Klee, Marcel Duchamp, and so many other Modernists. To a modest extent, I feel compelled to fault Ms. Epstein for both the perception gap (literary impression versus artistic reality) and the reasons for Ms. Pan's acceptance in the Paris art world. How much of the latter, for example, could have been simply a product of her "Oriental exoticism?"
Nevertheless, Ms. Epstein effectively brings her subject to life, casting her as a heroic victor over extraordinary odds by sheer force of talent and will. As an author, she has much material from which to choose - Ms. Pan's cruel childhood (including footbinding), her "Memoirs of a Geisha" adolescence, her insistent self-education, her strong feminist leanings, her cultural iconoclasm, and her unshakable belief in her own artistic vision. There are suggestions of deeper veins to be mined, particularly references to Ms. Pan's homesexual relationship to another prostitute, Jinling, that can hardly fail to be connected with the artist's later focus on the nude female form in much of her work, but Ms. Epstein appears content to introduce them without further examination. In addition, the male characters in Ms. Pan's life - her uncle Wu, her youthful revolutionary friend Xing Xudun, and of course her "savior" husband, Pan Zanhua - are perhaps less thoroughly exploited for their perspectives on Ms. Pan than they could have been. Alternating chapters seen through Ms. Pan's eyes and those of the various males in her life might have provided for more critical, arm's length view of the artist's actions and their effects on others within the broader social and cultural context of early 20th Century China.
Likely unknown to most Western readers of THE PAINTER FROM SHANGHAI is an earlier, fictionalized account of Ms. Pan's life in subtitled cinematic form. A SOUL HAUNTED BY PAINTING was released in 1994, directed by Huang Shuqin and starring China's incomparable Gong Li as the tortured painter. While the movie suffers numerous flaws - underexplained character motivation, storytelling choppiness from multiple continuity breaks, and melodramatic acting, among others - it fairly mirrors Ms. Epstein's story while providing a much greater sense of Pan Yuliang's artistic style and works.
Compelling and heartbreaking story of a woman's fight to be an artistReview Date: 2008-08-18

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right out of lord of the rings - suspenseful intrigue Review Date: 2004-09-17
A great book to read for all ages which takes you away to the Medieval era with details of life long ago, with virtue and honor and chivalry and nobility to enchant your wishes for the characters and idealize attributes to strive for.
A Very entertaining and enjoyable read with a map to follow and peoples lives at stake for the outcome of Truth.
A multi-faceted tale that gleams at every angle!Review Date: 2004-07-06
Great Fantasy Novel!Review Date: 2004-01-08
What a great book!Review Date: 2003-04-08
Take an Adventure -- and bring your family!Review Date: 2003-06-24
Fantastic job! I am hungry for the second volume.

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universal truthReview Date: 2008-08-08
Life Changing!!!! Read this Book Now. . . . Review Date: 2008-04-30
Even if you think that you don't want to read anything that would make you "hurt or wince", this is one of those books that also reminds us to appreciate our connection both to our inner selves and others.
Thank you Matt. . . you're too awesome for words!
Very powerful!Review Date: 2008-03-26
One of the best books ever writtenReview Date: 2008-03-03
Waking" A Memoir of Trauma and TranscendenceReview Date: 2008-02-23
Related Subjects: Walker, Antoine Williams, Jay Wallace, John Webber, Chris Williams, Jason Willis, Kevin Walton, Bill West, Jerry Wilkens, Lenny Wilkins, Dominique Worthy, James Walker, Greg Wang, ZhiZhi Ward, Charlie Wallace, Ben Wallace, Gerald
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Tommy Taylor