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Good idea if you really want a careerReview Date: 2006-04-24
The best book I've ever read on changing your lifeReview Date: 1999-07-28
Fellow Dreamers...Review Date: 2006-04-22
This book motivated me to enroll in the author's acting school 3 and 1/2 years ago. I have grown so much as an actress and as a person by having made that decision. To the post of "A Reader" - I'm not a Scientologist. To everyone else - If you're interested enough to read the reviews, I suggest that you read the book for yourself and start making your dreams happen.
Wow!Review Date: 2000-09-12
The BEST book on going after what you want.Review Date: 1999-10-20

Exceptionally Good BookReview Date: 1998-10-03
Highly recommended for anyone interested in gifted childrenReview Date: 1998-04-16
Read This Book If You Have a Gifted ChildReview Date: 2004-04-11
If you already think your child is gifted, but she or he isn't "fitting in" you just might have an exceptionally gifted child. Since the intellectual level of these children is high, even compared to other gifted kids, parents don't generally have any true means of comparison. They often have never met any other kids like theirs.
Instead of guessing, read this book. You will know--quickly--if you see your kid there. This is NOT a book about "perfect," high-flying, academic achievers. To the contrary: it is a painful examination of how enforced academic underachievement has hurt these kids, and how appropriate intellectual challenge (when they could get it) helped them feel comfortable in their skins.
Read this book if you think your child is gifted. Read this book if you "just knew" there was something special about your child when they were little, but they've never fit in school. Read this book if you work with or care for the gifted.
Not for everyone - but wonderful for those who need itReview Date: 2005-05-25
First, this book isn't about gifted children - it is about exceptionally and profoundly gifted children. There is a difference. If your child falls into this special group, this is one of the few books you will find that discusses your child - with all the good and the challenges that accompany these extreme gifts.
The book has very BORING sections if you are reading for the sake of reading. Be prepared. I didn't skip anything and I don't regret it - but some sections were hard to wade through. In the end, however, some of the charts and tables gave me the insight that I was hoping to get. Also, each chapter has a high level summary - so if you do have trouble wading through a particular chapter, skip to the end of the chapter and figure out what you are supposed to be learning. Decide whether it is worth going back to deal with the details.
I started reading the book with the goal of convincing myself that my son didn't belong in this group. The first few chapters with their amazing stories of each child's most wonderful accomplishment left me thinking that I was right. However, as I read further along and got into the meat of the book, I recognized my son in its pages.
Ms. Gross holds out hope in her numbers for allowing a very special child to grow up happy and well adjusted. It isn't politically correct to allow a child like this to go at their own pace, but it is healthy - and her data shows it. Quantitative evidence (albeit on a limited sample) to show that these children are not normal and we should celebrate that rather than trying to force the issue.
I'm much more prepared for the future with my child than I was before reading this book. I would recommend highly for parents and teachers who are coping with EG and PG kids.
Extraordinary Children, Exceptional BookReview Date: 2000-08-20
It is easy to see why. Miraca Gross brings her subjects alive with her even-handed and clear-sighted case studies. The narratives illustrate the lack of comprehension frequently encountered in schools when children are functioning 4 to 8 grade levels ahead of their "peers" intellectually, and the stress and outright cruelty often inflicted on these children and their parents as a result. It also documents the almost immediate elimination of these problems when appropriate educational settings are found.
The book was a continuation of Gross's doctoral research, and it shows it's origin in the data analyses. These sections aren't for everyone, but they are quite helpful for those with a research or education background and interest. Others can skip directly to the summaries. But for both groups, the case studies are what make the book.
If you have one of these remarkable kids, I recommend that order a used copy from Amazon and keep your eyes peeled for it elsewhere...

Used price: $5.30

e Intimacy of InspirationReview Date: 2007-02-12
Inspirational and Engaging AccountReview Date: 2006-07-09
Beautiful and introspective - and very highly recommended.
Incredibly beautifulReview Date: 2003-07-10
Lovely, lovely bookReview Date: 2004-11-25
* the stunning page and a half photo spreads of Australian desert and scenes showing Robyn's trek with the camels
* engaging narration by Robyn that shows you the beauty, fear, boredom, and other feelings that accompany her on the months of solitude crossing 1700 miles of outback Australia
The photographer represented National Geographic, and the photos have that look the magazine readers expect. Interesting panoramas, the light playing on the spinifex, the wrinkled face of an Aboriginal tracker, the otherworldly red dirt, the camels silhouetted against the skyline.
Robyn represented only herself and undertook the trek for reasons even she did not understand. Seeing her develop and expand her thinking during the days and weeks and months on the track makes this a fascinating book.
Alice to OceanReview Date: 2000-03-06
Collectible price: $10.00

Where's the Free Will in Prayer Healing?Review Date: 2005-05-30
On the other hand, I've been reading a book on prayer and healing. It's the almost classic and often referred to book by Larry Dossey, M.D., Healing Words: The Power of Prayer and the Practice of Medicine, (HarperCollins). He writes about how over one hundred experiments, exhibiting good scientific methodology, indicate that "prayer brings about significant changes in a variety of living beings." This includes fungus, bacteria, animals and humans. Moreover, the healing effects did not depend upon whether the person praying was in the presence of the organism being prayed for or at a great distance. Healing occurred whether the healing object was in a lead-lined room or a cage shielded from electromagnetic energy. It didn't seem to matter if the person (if it was a person and not a medical sample) knew about the prayer or believed in prayer.
"The fact that prayer works (at least some of the time) says something important about our nature, and how we may be connected to the Absolute," he says. It also shows that we are connected to each other. It shows that our thoughts matter. Dossey is smart and brave enough to discuss the flip side of this revelation. Call it "toxic prayer," where our negative thoughts have a negative effect on others. I'm not talking just about curses or swearing (as in asking the Absolute to squash you or condemn you to an eternity in the fires), but even those so-called "harmless" black thoughts we have about people from time to time. If we can be helped by prayers, we can be harmed by the mental negativity of others, even when we do not know they are being negative toward us, even when we are safely in our own homes, even when we are minding our own business. Sounds to me like an invasion of free will, a bruise to my autonomy, an assault on my integrity.
Now I have often heard that we are not supposed to pray for people without their permission. If Dossey is right, it is possible to pray for people without their knowledge and they still get well. We can hope that they wanted to heal! Seems like we shouldn't say to someone, "Good morning," but rather, "Good morning, by your leave, unless you have other plans!"
But I'm not joking, I'm serious and seriously confused here. I have read of experiments begun in Russia and duplicated here, where one person can mentally affect the physical functioning of another person, making that person tired, sleepy, even putting the person to sleep. It is possible to telepathically affect a person's heart rate. I guess that means that it is possible to stop a person's heart, especially if some writings on Voodoo are to be believed.
Now if it is true that we can mentally, telepathically, energetically--however you want to envision it--affect another person, even when they are in the privacy and safety of their lead lined home, then what does that mean about free will. Do we have free will if someone else can, from a distance, without our knowledge or consent, make us do their bidding, think the thoughts they want us to think, make the moves they want us to make? It is even possible to hypnotize a person at a distance, telepathically. The Russians called it "mental suggestion." Now we've all heard the soothing reminder, "you can't hypnotize a person to do something against their will." So does that mean you can't telepathically induce a person to think, feel, or do something against their will? If the telepathic influence was effective, then at some level the affected person was willing to allow it to happen? Is that how we get out of the quandry? Or is there really a hole in the protective shield of our free will?
I've met many people who complain that someone is sending them bad energy, invading their thoughts. Do we take the complaint seriously? Is the person "psychotic"? Since mental influence exists, maybe the person is right. If so, then is the real problem is that the person is willing to have it happen? The person objects to the invasion but feels helpless to stop it. Where's the free will, the willingness? Maybe not all of our free will is available for our freedom of choice. Maybe some of it is hidden in the dark depths of the soul. What do you think? Let me know. www.henryreed.com/publications/bookreviews
A wealth of information on prayer-based healing!Review Date: 2000-05-07
Renewed belief in prayerReview Date: 2006-06-30
Nonlocal mind and the (possible) power of prayerReview Date: 2001-07-16
In fact Dossey is highly critical of the "New Age" movement. And despite some overblown cover blurbs, he doesn't claim to have "proven" anything about the power of prayer in healing; he's making suggestions and exploring possibilities, not laying down law.
Nor, for the most part, is his speculation wild or unfounded. His suggestions are founded on two things: empirical research that seems to show prayer is effective in promoting the biological growth of certain forms of life under controlled laboratory conditions, and the theological/philosophical view that reality is ultimately a single, universal, "nonlocal" Absolute Mind.
However controversial these foundations might be, he presents his suggestions with proper caution. And he is especially careful to avoid falling into the New Age blame-the-patient trap; he is well aware that prayer doesn't always achieve the results we might like and that this isn't because somebody has done something to "choose" or "deserve" ill health.
On the contrary, he has a healthy sense that prayer is really (though this language isn't quite his) for the purpose of adjusting us to the Divine Will rather than vice-versa. (Anthony de Mello tells a story somewhere about a man who said, "In your country it is regarded as a miracle when God does the will of a human being. In my country it is regarded as a miracle when a human being does the will of God.") On his view, the "power" of prayer is shown as much in our acceptance of our health limitations as in their elimination.
There are a couple of places where Dossey threatens to wander off the deep end (e.g. his suggestion that prayer can change the past), and there's a little bit of language (e.g. "Era I, Era II, and Era III") that recalls bad 1970s self-help books. But I really have only one bone to pick with Dossey: he tends at times to overstate the difference between his views and those of traditional, "classical" theism.
There is a tendency among those (of whom I am one, which is in part how I know this) who left their childhood religions in their early teens to assume, more or less unconsciously, that our understanding of such religion was complete at that time and none of its adherents understood any of the cool things we went on to discover for ourselves. It's hard to shake one's implicit belief that those hidebound "fundamentalists" couldn't _possibly_ have known any of this nifty "spirituality" stuff; "dogmatic" religion is, of course, the arch-enemy of "true" spirituality -- isn't it?
Dossey has a very mild tendency in this direction. In consequence I suspect he will occasionally leave more traditional religious believers with the sense that they are being misunderstood, patronized, or both.
But it doesn't happen very often, and it hardly happens at all in this book. On the whole, Dossey's approach tends to confirm rather than undermine the great theistic religions' view of prayer.
A Must Read!Review Date: 2007-07-03
Used price: $1.76
Collectible price: $25.00

Nice story; strange styleReview Date: 2007-07-25
A captivating debutReview Date: 2004-03-12
"It was the summer the world stopped turning on the spiral of history, the summer we spent waiting for the world to begin again, when the sun hung above the village and poured a hot glue that slowed everything down."
Narrator Alison Freemantle looks back from adulthood onto that summer of her ambivalent coming-of-age (freeing Pears from the constraints of a 13-year-old's understanding or, especially, use of language). She contemplates the changes in her body and forms a secretive friendship with the Viscount's shy son. She also comes perilously close to losing her life in impulsive, childish stunts - swimming alone in the deepest section of the quarry pool, striking a match in a dry barn full of hay.
The book opens in September, when summer should be over and school should have begun. But the teachers are on strike and the drought has taken on an implacable force that saps the will of warm blooded creatures. "Gradually, though, objects took on a life of their own and moved without the spirits' help, rising from the surfaces of furniture through empty air that the heat had squeezed even gravity out of."
Recalling that summer in all its torrid detail, Alison wanders into the history of her family - her bookish, now-blind, strong-willed grandmother; her taciturn, hard-working grandfather; her sad-fated, childlike father; solid, enduring mother; her two brothers, one so stolid and silent, the other a quivering mass of nerves and worries, her sister who already seems a guest on the verge of leaving.
Alison draws us into the lives of the other villagers as well - the Rector who wrestles intellectually with his faith in an empty 26-room house, the brooding farmer who'd left home for a dozen years when his father criticized his table manners, the hedge-layer, Martin, "the friendliest man in the village, and the most lonely."
Slowly, at various intervals over the course of Alison's free-ranging story, the details of their histories emerge, until each character stands revealed, perfectly ordinary and wondrously strange, with lives of poignant heroisms, hard-won joys and crushing defeats.
Dialogue is in the vernacular of the Devon countrypeople and the characters are farmers, each with a supplemental trade - slaughterer, glazier. The Freemantles are no different, yet, choosing wives from outside the village, they stand slightly apart, slightly more prosperous, with a bigger house.
Under the singular heat the soil turns to dust, the hay dries to wisps in the fields,
the cows' ribs protrude, the hens eggs turn transparent and yolkless. Tension simmers, occasionally erupts. There is death
and betrayal. Love affairs begin and end. But there is no single driving event, no plot. That the novel succeeds in grabbing
and holding the reader is due to the Alison's strong and lively narrative voice - quite a feat for any novelist, amazing in
a novice.
Humorous, sad, magical, "In the Place of Fallen Leaves" is a beautiful novel.
One of the most satisfying novels i've ever readReview Date: 2004-07-17
I loved the humor (the Green is renamed "The Brown", because all the grass dried up). I loved the dialect ("bay" for "boy"). I wish i could have been in Alison's shoes when i was 13.
MagicalReview Date: 2000-09-28
A beautifully written bookReview Date: 2000-03-27


The Intoxication of LoveReview Date: 2008-11-02
Heart and Soul of Moments and MilestonesReview Date: 2008-08-24
Loving - finds the protagonist/author discovering a fairy tale romance of mythic proportions. After spending years developing his sense of self-worth, delineating his own personal ethics and undergoing a comprehensive investigation of self, Timothy Mulder is graced with the gift of true love.
Rooting for this accomplishment came easy for both me and my lover, (We read these chapters together in bed) since we had become so invested in both the character and his convoluted story.
The details conveyed in the initial stages of his romance with his lover from down-under are achingly poignant. Some of the most intensely, erotic interludes. Love and romance portrayed at its finest without ever crossing the line of sleaze or inappropriateness.
I've been living happily in a relationship for over twelve years and Loving has helped to redefine my standards of quality and happiness. At the very least, I'm going to have to give special thought to future birthday presents.
5 Stars of the sweetest love.
At Long LastReview Date: 2008-08-06
A touching exploration of romance engaged in by two people who truly know themselves and can share a full life together.
These three chapters were truly inspiring.
Like a port in a storm, Loving brings the reader to safety.
Reading this latest installment makes me wish, I could fall in love all over again.
LovingReview Date: 2008-08-02
To recognize it is even more imaginable. This chapter is a culmination of knowledge practiced with wisdom in a life path that few can claim. He has shared his memories of an everlasting love with the reader and given the reader a chance to live this experience for the short duration of the printed word.
High praise for the writing in Loving that allows the reader into a little bit of heaven.
Sondi
Loving will LingerReview Date: 2008-07-08

Great!Review Date: 2006-12-31
Cute book!Review Date: 2006-08-27
GREAT FUN!!!Review Date: 2002-09-05
A good Mr. Men bookReview Date: 2006-11-22
Mr. Noisy is a really noisy person (a big round red blob with hands, feet and eyes) who is rude to Mr. Butcher and Mrs. Baker (who are an item??;)). They then get together and conspire to change Mr. Noisy's rude and noisy ways by simply pretending they are deaf. After going to bed hungry (and with a little more encouragement) Mr. Noisy changes his brash ways and everyone is happy. Don't you love those happy endings?!
Best of a Great SeriesReview Date: 2003-05-15

Used price: $11.49

Helpful guide to a wonderful way to spend my summerReview Date: 2004-08-06
Fun ReadReview Date: 2004-06-08
Plenty of info, fun read even for armchair travelersReview Date: 2004-06-30
The book actually assumes you know a bit about RV's--there is terminology and technical discussion that someone who already toured in an RV might be more familiar with. Carolyn advises you on motor memberships (AAA and KOA), money, dealing with the Kiwis, where to go, what to eat and even, how to talk--there is a glossary of Kiwisms in the back of the book.
I enjoyed reading the glossary as much as the book and was interested in how a country so remote can be so like us and so unlike us in every way. If you are considering an extended stay in an RV down in the Roaring Forties (fortieth parallel south and beyond) this book is a worthy guide.
Witty and informativeReview Date: 2004-06-24
Solid information and invaluable advice Review Date: 2004-08-07

teriffic bookReview Date: 2006-07-04
really good illustrations aswell. i read it years ago for the first time and havent forgotten it since.
Sinister...with a sequelReview Date: 2005-04-28
A book of a mysterious taleReview Date: 2004-11-18
The Watertower keeps them interestedReview Date: 2000-06-22
Erin says her favourite part was when Bubba came out of the tank and Spike wants him to show him his hand. Bubba says "No" because his mum would be worried however at the beginning he says that his mum would not care!
Alaster says that his favourite part of the book is solving all the mysteries.
Laura says her favourite part of the book was the picture of Bubba's face up close.
Melissa Lowry agrees with Erin that the part where Bubba came out of the Watertower is her favourite. Actually most of the class agrees that this part was the best. I think this is because it began all the questioning about the story.
Aaron and Matthew say that the mystery is related to the pitchfork that is seen on all pages.
We will be continuing to use Gary Crew books for language and drama work. We would love to hear from any one who has solved the mysteries in the story or of any activities you have been doing in the classroom. Thanks. .............
Eerie but funReview Date: 2002-12-30
This 1995 Australian Picture Book of the Year winner uses the contrast between colorful illustrations and black background to great effect. In a twist on the usual picture book, the illustrations tell the real story, while the text provides the background information.
What a great puzzle. This is the kind of book that I could not stop thinking about, even long after I read it. This is an engaging book for adults as well as for children.

Used price: $20.72

A MASTERPIECE! Insightful, well-crafted, and a great read!Review Date: 1998-06-13
A powerful and surprising tale of urban race relations.Review Date: 1998-03-17
An excellent first novelReview Date: 1998-03-10
GloriousReview Date: 1998-12-16
A beautiful, thoughtful read...Review Date: 1999-03-08
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