United States Books
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Used price: $8.90

Review By Craig Justice, Founder, Blue Merle Vineyard & WineryReview Date: 2008-05-13
Especially good for trellising and pruningReview Date: 2007-12-11
These are two things that lack in other books that i have bought him (and that I am starting to be interested in, too).
Of course the book covers all aspects of the grape and wine making process, but the trellising and prunning in more detail was very welcome.
Recommended on all aspects.
Great for Home Winemakers or Wine StudentsReview Date: 2007-11-25
If you are a person engaged in wine studies, this is an essential first look into serious technical winemaking aspects. Before delving into more serious technical manuals such as "Understanding Wine Technology" and "The Science of Wines from Grape to Glass".
Pros: wonderfully written in laymans terms
Cons: drawings sometimes difficult to distinguish
Complete resourceReview Date: 2007-05-26
Everything you need is in here.
Almost perfectReview Date: 2007-01-18

Used price: $9.00

ghosts + victorian mansions (+some pretense) = great fun!Review Date: 2008-08-29
But highfalutin' language aside, as a former Old Louisvillian I am glad to see someone dedicating such time and research to the history of this decidedly spooky area. If you are into creepy stories then this book, as well as its Phantoms sequel, is definitely worth a read. Be advised there is a also a strange foreword, (somewhat creepy in its own right), perhaps best viewed as a form of comic relief if you find yourself getting too frightened halfway through.
Whatever its idiosyncrasies I do recommend this book to lovers of a good scary story, especially those who live or have lived in the Old Louisville Area.
Ghosts of Old Louisville is a great read!Review Date: 2007-04-08
A Spine-Tingling Stroll Through Old LouisvilleReview Date: 2007-10-04
Rose Pressey
Author of "My Haunted Family"
Just finished this excellent read last night!Review Date: 2008-01-08
I must say that Mr. Domine's literary style is astute and never fails to keep the reader immersed in its depths at all times.
*begin spoiler*
Him sharing his story of having the hardwood floors in his home redone was one of my favorites. The way he described his thoughts and feelings while Lucy crept around his bed made me examine my own as I lay there reading (in the bed). He is blessed with the skill to give a description that shares his world to the reader for a short time.
*end spolier*
Not only is Mr. Domine an excellent writer, but he also seems a very likeable person. From his description of those days during, leading to, and after his encounters I found myself thinking "Wow, this would be a cool friend to have!".
Whilst reading this novel I imagined that the only things he loved more than the idea of the supernatural was his friends, animals, Louisville, fine drink and food. Probably in that order.
This piece of work has been very enjoyable. If you have any curiosity concerning the supernatural you need this book. I can't wait to aquire the rest of his novels and gobble them up!
I've also included a link to another one of David Domine's books that I intend to make my very next read.
Phantoms of Old Louisville: Ghostly Tales from America's Most Haunted Neighborhood
Great Read!!!Review Date: 2007-05-12


a must-read for professional wrestling fansReview Date: 2006-07-14
Not Just for WrestlersReview Date: 2003-11-03
The BEST book on Professional WrestlingReview Date: 2003-06-28
An traditional, memorative view of wrestling history.Review Date: 2004-01-27
Thesz is a very open and honest person and I'd suggest this book to any wrestling fan who truly wants a good insight to the roots of professional wrestling through the 20th century.
Wrestling History 101Review Date: 2003-11-03
This book's weak point is in the actually biography of Lou Thesz. Way to much stuff left out. He would rattle on for page after page about Toots Mondt and other promoters. And then throw in a sentence like "I was married for 30 years to so and so. I wished I never met her." And just leave it at that. So he comes out of this book kind of like a cardboard cut out of the good guy he played in the ring. But dont get me wrong this book is awesome and a must read. 5 star supreme, one of the most interesting books Ive ever read. Just dont think that Lou reveals much about his self. Because he dosent. He talks about his 3 sons with just a one liner about he has three sons. Very shallow about his family life. And no pictures. But a great biography of the actual wrestling and behind the scene promotions. And how George Tragos took the son of a Hungarian/German shoe maker and made him one of the most dangerous human beings to ever walk the planet. Must read!

Used price: $3.56

Excellent tool...Review Date: 2008-08-17
Easy read - gives a new perspectiveReview Date: 2008-05-15
It will give you a new perspective of when a cop draws his/her weapon and if you run into a cop after reading this book, trust me - you won't move and you'll do everything they ask!
Should be mandatory reading for all academy recruitsReview Date: 2008-04-21
Eye OpenerReview Date: 2007-10-10
An Accurate View of the Kill ZoneReview Date: 2007-06-12
If you want the true story about what it's like to be in the kill zone where cops make life or death decisions, then live or die by them, this is the book for you. Klinger's interviews with 80 police officers who recounted incidents in which they used deadly force, were shot themselves, or exercised restraint even when they would have been justified to shoot are mesmerizing. They also have every bit of drama you would expect in a movie or TV, but with none of the b.s.
This is the truth, recounted by people who were there and recorded by a thoughtful scholar who's been there too. As another ex-cop who also is a scholar, I recommend this book most highly.

Used price: $15.21

Best of 2008Review Date: 2008-12-02
Show-stopper titleReview Date: 2008-09-03
Contemporary Art QuiltsReview Date: 2008-10-07
Jumpstart creativityReview Date: 2008-09-04
"Masters: Art Quilts" by Martha Sielman is a collection of the works of 41 artists who are working today as art quilters. Many are well known - Jane Sassaman, Hollis Chatelain, Yvonne Porcella, Caryl Bryer Fallert, to name a few.
Others you will enjoy getting to know as you read brief biographies and comments from the artists and see color photographs of their works.
It's A Master of A BookReview Date: 2008-09-01

Used price: $0.10
Collectible price: $24.95

Comfortable and EntertainingReview Date: 2003-07-21
INSIGHTFUL AND INSPIRINGReview Date: 2003-07-18
Hard to put downReview Date: 2003-05-14
So-SoReview Date: 2003-03-12
Very Inspiring!Review Date: 2003-03-04

Used price: $1.30

Loved it!Review Date: 2008-08-22
Reminds Me of Dr. Harriott BooksReview Date: 2008-07-30
Don in Chilli
Delightful A book you can share with your parents and your children.Review Date: 2008-04-07
maybe he would also read it and we would have something to talk about
during our trip. We were on the way to Hawaii and I finished the book
before we landed. I couldn't put it down. It was so much fun to read.
The lady sitting next to me said "You are truly enjoying that book. I have
seen you laugh, sigh, giggle and even cry while reading it. I am going to
buy it as soon as I get home.".
My son now wants to become a vet his grades are good, especially science and math, and we live near
"The Ohio State University", so he may even attend the same Vet school as
Dr. Sharp!I have sent a copy to my parents and two neighbors.
A Good ReadReview Date: 2007-06-21
Pure Small Town CharmReview Date: 2007-10-06
It will convince the reader that those "better times and people" really haven't disappeared, and that is tremendously Good News.

Used price: $17.97
Collectible price: $28.95

Many minutes past midnightReview Date: 2008-11-23
I do have a couple of problems with it though. One is that Mr. Dobbs seems to have a limited knowledge of aircraft and ships. For instance, airplanes don't have "steering columns" and ship speeds are not noted in "knots per hour."
Otherwise, this is a wonderful book, and a valuable resource for anyone wanting to know what happened during the Cuban missile crisis.
Your no JFKReview Date: 2008-11-17
"Some Sonfabitch Doesn't Get The WordReview Date: 2008-10-30
The title of this review is a quote from JFK that is somewhat similar to what Clausewitz described more eligently as "Operational Friction"; how in any compex military operation things start going awry. In the age of nuclear weapons it is even more dangerous. The chance for an accidental nuclear release were so numerous ("People you wouldn't trust with a loaded 22 rifle were flying around in single-seat aircraft with control over their nuclear weapons" as one speaker says) The "Afterwood" chapter is excellent with insights and is very useful to use as a classroom reading assignment.
Well-researched history in page-turner packagingReview Date: 2008-10-20
One Minute to MidnightReview Date: 2008-10-17

Used price: $3.76

A story - not a simple business bookReview Date: 2006-05-09
I've done the leadership thing at Toastmasters. I've attended the 12-class Dale Carnegie Course. I've read a lot of books on leadership, and I've counseled clients at SCORE.org counseling sessions on leadership. What I've garnered from all of this on the subject of starting a business and doing it as a leader is described in this book.
If you are leading a company - are you interested in just creating short term profits, or are you looking to the long term? When you hire people are you promoting them because you have become their friend, or because they have earned it? Are you leading or just managing? Do you have passion, or are you just putting in your time? These and other topics are addressed in this book. Get it and read it. You'll be glad you did.
Excellent read for any businessReview Date: 2002-11-20
Sound advice for all businessesReview Date: 2002-11-16
His advice is sound, logical and yet not simple. Ideas such as having proteges (including relatives), work their way up through a company rather than having the reins of power simply handed to them without training is a sound yet often ignored management principle. Another bit of sound advice that is often ignored is the toleration of honest, well meaning and factually based dissent. An examination of business, political and religious history shows quite clearly that when dissent is crushed an organization loses its' health and eventually dies, sometimes rather abruptly. As greater details of the latest corporate fiasco's come to light, it is clear that those who dissented were hounded, and sometimes it continues even after they were proven correct. This is an absurd business practice, as denying the truth only makes it worse when the end finally comes.
The nine keys listed in this book will not make your business a success. Only the making of a valuable product and executing a sound business plan can do that. What it can do is increase the odds that you will do both by showing you how others have done it.
an invaluable book on building and transitionReview Date: 2002-10-28
Drawing on what he has seen in his own family business' transition to second generation leadership, as well as what he has witnessed as a consultant on such transitions, Hutcheson gives the reader much to think about. As he makes each point in his "9 Keys" he illustrates it with a real-life example.
Many of the keys are basic but easy to overlook and (after having overlooked them) sometimes tricky to introduce in a static leadership environment. Yet Hutcheson is a faithful guide through the peaks and valleys.
Having suffered through encounters with ineffective organizations (my daughter's school) and reveled in being a part of an effective, on-purpose organization (my Church), I cannot stress enough how important it is for people in leadership positions to be intentional in what they do and have the ability to be life-long learners. Learning about leadership and listening to those who "have been there," like Mr. Hutcheson, is a big part of this. Nothing less is in the balance than the difference between a life of drudgery and one of joy and freedom.
My only critique of this book is one that springs from my Christianity. I feel that the missing tenth (and possibly most important key) is Spiritual giftedness. When people serve in an area they not only enjoy, but also are gifted by God to serve in, explosive results are to be had. Also, as part of the Kingdom, "Business Traditions, Myths, and Shared Beliefs" melt away in the face of the kind of common purpose given by the Great Commission and the whole history of salvation.
Bearing this in mind and also recognizing that Mr. Hutcheson's audience probably have not all partaken of the Kingdom as of yet, I have to say that this book does a darn good job as a whole. It is less of a compilation of other sources than are most other leadership books. I found it refreshing to be able to distinguish an actual authorial voice in a work such as this. Too many leadership books read like a cross between a presentation and an instruction manual.
Get this book. It is well worth the time spent reading.
Neither Passionate Nor InformativeReview Date: 2003-02-25
In the business books I have read recently, I found this one lacks the authority and substance I found in others. William Pollard's "Soul of the Firm" has the authority, as he took ServiceMaster to a new level. "Values of the Game" by Bill Bradley was worth the read because of Bradley's unique metaphorical look at life. "Leadership" by Rudolph Giuliani has power because of what Giuliani has gone through. "Portraits," however, has a flaccid tone to it. I felt as if it was researched information regurgitated into book form. I felt like I was reading the kind of book which gets sold after a corporate sales seminar.
The book, as seen in the subtitle, can be boiled down to nine major points. In each, Hutcheson retells stories of business success and failures, from security company founder Richard Wackenhut to Yankees owner George Steinbrenner.
Action items accompany each chapter, and herein lay the book's greatest value. Hutcheson provides a topic sentence to lead the mini-lesson, but weakly completes the thesis in the following paragraphs.
The redundancy of subject matter mixed with a bland presentation has me suggesting to you to look elsewhere. It was not edited tightly enough to build the necessary tension and excitement. Overall, "Portraits of Success: 9 Keys to Sustaining Value in Any Business" lacks the poignancy I have come to expect from professional advancement books.
Anthony Trendl
editor, HungarianBookstore.com


A Wonderful ReadReview Date: 2008-09-15
This Is a Novel That Reads YouReview Date: 2008-09-04
Every person of African descent should place this on their must read list (Science says that includes you- regardless of your race or nationality). From the moment you flip the first pages, or push the toggle bar, this historical novel challenges you to consider anew ones understanding of humanity, identity, and faith as you follow-or more accurately "journey with"- Aminata Diallo, an African girl sold into slavery.
From the home of her loving parents and her small village to the waiting slave ships and the middle passage to a different world, "we" journey with her coming to know the horrors of the slave trade in a profound way. Yet, Someone Knows My Name is also a story of liberation, of abiding faith, and of courage and survival. The themes of Exodus and migration are present throughout reminding us that life and faith are a journey. In the words of one of the novel's characters, Daddy Moses, "It doesn't matter what we call your soul....What matters is where it travels and who it lifts up". Someone Knows My Name will continue to travel with you long after you read its final lines and it will indeed lift your soul.
You may want to purchase this book as a hard copy so that you can pass it on to others that you care about.
Historical novels, such as "Someone Knows My Name" and "Ama: the Story of the Transatlantic Slave Trade" by Manu Herbstein, are perhaps the least appreciated genre in literature. Once you pause to read Someone Knows My Name you will find yourself searching for more.
Will Challenge Your SoulReview Date: 2008-08-29
The Best I've Read in YearsReview Date: 2008-08-08
First reviewReview Date: 2008-09-09
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