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Open Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

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How to Open and Operate a Bed & Breakfast
Published in Hardcover by Globe Pequot Pr (1995-06)
Author: Jan Stankus
List price: $14.95
New price: $6.00
Used price: $0.01

Average review score:

Most complete
Helpful Votes: 138 out of 139 total.
Review Date: 2001-03-28
Have you ever flirted with the idea of opening a B&B? Many people have, but most don't have any idea where to start. Jan Stankus's book will tell you everything you'll need to know whether you have one spare room or six.

I admit I was thinking about the possibility of buying a larger house than we can afford and putting the unused space to use as a B&B. I needed information, but surfing the Internet was a long and time consuming job.

I did end up with two trade journals, that I'll tell you about later, but there is no web site that has the plethora of information in this book.

This book is very well written. I actually sat down with it and read most of it straight through, like a novel. The index is so good you can easily go back to the topics you'll need if you pursue the B&B route.

Stankus doesn't pull any punches when she tells what's involved in owning and operating a B&B. I found out things like:

* the difference between a B&B and an inn

* safety concerns for yourself and your house

* zoning issues and ordinances

* insurance, fire laws, and other legal requirements

* furnishing and outfitting your home

* how to get in the guide books

* applying to and using an RSA (reservation service agencies)

* ways to market your B&B business

* what's involved in the B&B lifestyle

* your competition - how to find it and use it to your advantage

* how to price your rooms

* determining your start-up costs

* amenities - what are they and do you need them

Included are: some useful web sites; a state-by-state list of the RSA's; U. S. & Canadian tourist offices; and a number of various work sheets.

Stankus also deals with issues such as allowing pets or children as guests, medical concerns, food preferences and allergies.

There is enough information to give a reader a solid background in how a B&B works.

Here are some other sources if you're enamoured of the idea of a B&B:

* look for local or regional classes (many times taught by owners of B&B's)...

As always, Globe Pequot's "How To" series is chock full of useful information, reasonably priced, and delivers more than expected. I've decided B&B (or innkeeping) isn't for me. But, if you want to explore the option for yourself, I can't think of a better book to start with.

Best Bed & Breakfast available
Helpful Votes: 21 out of 23 total.
Review Date: 2001-06-07
Found this entertaining, fun, and highly informative. If you need encouragement in starting a b & b biz, this is for you! Great anecdotes that are amusing and educational. Good advice all around. Particularly liked the checklists.

Easy reading/great information
Helpful Votes: 56 out of 74 total.
Review Date: 1999-06-02
After taking a seminar in Opening a Bed and breakfast, I found this book to be very informative and influential in my decision of opening my own Bed and Breakfast soon. Realizing it will take a few years to get it up and running successfully, I know that this will be my goal and I feel I will be very successful in this endeavor with the help of my husband.

Starting a B & B is more than just clean sheets!
Helpful Votes: 64 out of 68 total.
Review Date: 1997-06-22
A terrific book for the person thinking of starting their own Bed and Breakfast! Stankus has supplied a cornucopia of useful information. From sample forms to listings of help organizations in the B & B field, including suggestions on how to make your B & B successful! Sprinkled throughout the text are comments by actual Bed and Breakfast hosts/hostesses. How To Open and Operate a Bed & Breakfast is a straight forward guide to help the novice successfully achieve their goal of opening a B & B. A great book to read with a highliter in hand. I look forward to other editions.

Open
How to Open Doors in the Music Industry: The Independent Way
Published in Paperback by Starfield Pr (1987-05)
Authors: Frank Fara and Patty Parker
List price: $8.95
Used price: $19.15

Average review score:

Good advice from someone who obviously knows the ropes.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2001-09-18
Very good and easy to read. I wish I'd known about this book earlier. I'm going to keep it close at hand.

Very informative!!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 1998-11-09
I got this book from Frank some time ago and still refer to it from time to time. Well worth the money!!!!!!

Great musicians reference tool.
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 1999-02-02
I have just finished reading your book and I have found it a very interesting read. My only regret is that I did not have a copy four or five years ago, as many of the areas you point out as possible pitfalls, I have already managed to blunder into through trial and error. I have a lot to learn about the music industry and what I have learned has only been from some very costly and time wasting ventures on my behalf. I hope to avoid many of these in the future. As I read through your book my empathy increased and each chapter seemed to echo some of my more bitter disappointments, but I also began to see some of my triumphs stemming from similar ideas that you had proposed, so I know that I am at least heading in the right direction. All in all, a good concise, practical book that I will refer to for further reference. Thank you Frank Fara and Patty Parker.

The best book for anyone starting out in the music industry
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 1999-01-30
"How to Open Doors in the Music Industry: The Independant Way" is the best book there is for anyone starting out in the music industry. Whether you are an artist, songwriter or industry person, you will find a wealth of information in this book. Frank Fara & Patty Parker really made an easy to understand publication that you will want to refer back to again & again. This book is a Hit! As a songwriter and artist manager myself, this book really got me going in the right direction by enabling me to understand the market and therefore charting in Europe and the U.S. In my opinion "How to Open Doors in the Music Industry" is a must read and will help you along in your career.

Open
Hydrogeology and geochemistry in Bear Creek and Union Valleys, Near Oak Ridge, Tennessee (Water-resources investigations report)
Published in Unknown Binding by Books and Open-File Reports Section [distributor] (1991)
Author: Zelda Chapman Bailey
List price:

Average review score:

no title
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-11-12
Absolutely fascinating book about the pioneers who went west, either for gold or a better life. Read most of it while camping in the Boundary Waters. Took author ten years of research. Was his doctoral dissertation. Pioneers were not as alone, nor Indians as bad, as history has made them. 1840 trip was much harder than 1860. Things really changed fast. One man drove 1500 turkeys west!

Very Very Thorough
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2001-06-11
This is an excellent book for learning the intricate details of the Oregon Trail crossings. Mr. Unruh has obviously done his research.

A Memorial to a Fine Historian
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2003-08-29
The Plains Across is a remarkable book, a nearly unrevised dissertation that is nevertheless a thoroughly readable synthesis of the overland migration to the American West, 1840-1860. It's a pity that Unruh never had the chance to further rework this manuscript after so diligently honing his craft during the eight years of research and writing it took to complete his dissertation.

The least interesting chapters come first: long, pedestrian surveys of public opinion about the Trans-Mississippi West. More compelling is the chapter on emigrant-Indian interaction, which Unruh proves was considerably less violent and more mutually beneficial than the later myth of unremitting conflict suggests. Unruh's discussion of emigrant-Mormon relations is too apologetic for Mormon behavior, but the chapter nevertheless explains well why overlanders and Saints often came into conflict.

To my mind, the best chapters are the final ones that chronicle the significant assistance that overlanders received from the West Coast. Not only did earlier emigrants extend aid for its public relations value in the struggle to increase local populations, there was also a remarkable amount of pure humanitarian assistance, sometimes granted at considerable personal sacrifice. The last chapter, "The Overlanders in Historical Perspective," is a fine summary of the emigrant experience.

The Plains Across is now more than twenty-five years old, but it is still the standard history of the Trans-Mississippi migration. As one of Unruh's friends wrote, "It is sorrowful beyond expression that this book must stand as a posthumous memorial to [the author], rather than as the beginning of an outstanding professional career."

Par excellence
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2002-03-06
An exceptional in-depth study of the Oregon/California Emigrant Trail. Each chapter is thoroughly researched and written very well, with excerpts from the overlanders' journals and diaries, along with references from various newspapers throughout the country. The reader is first introduced to the political and social ramifications from the news media of the pros and cons of overland travel to Oregon and California. Next, Unruh unravels the "whys" as to the emigrants' desire to pursue such an endeavor, risking loss of everything, including possibly life itself. We also get a feel for how the overlanders got along with each other; their relations with Indians; the battles of overcoming hunger, thirst, cold, etc. There is also mention of private entrepreneurs along the trail who were trading and selling goods at exorbitant prices; the "white Indians" who were white men masqueraded as Indians taking advantage of the emigrants; the Mormon influence throughout the Salt Lake area, along with the "Winter Mormons" who were average non-Mormon emigrants wishing to overwinter in Salt Lake but subjected to cruel and unjust treatments. Then the federal goverment comes into the picture by improving roads, establishing forts along the way and implementing troops to guide and protect the overlanders to safety. We read detailed descriptions of how west coast assistance was a major factor in helping settlers make that final push into either Oregon or California. The book is totally amazing! A definite page turner. Even if one is not into Western U.S. history, this book will make one look at the hardships, perils and sacrifices these people overcame to establish a new life for themselves, families, friends and relatives.

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Josef Albers: To Open Eyes: The Bauhaus, Black Mountain College, and Yale
Published in Hardcover by Phaidon Press (2006-11-07)
Authors: Frederick A. Horowitz and Brenda Danilowitz
List price: $75.00
New price: $47.15
Used price: $73.91

Average review score:

Relevance
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-12-30
"Josef Albers: to Open Eyes" by F.A.Horowitz and B. Danilowitz is not only a review into the life and work of a great complex artist and teacher. It also signals the end of a debatable era called "postmodernism" whose glitz, pomp and kitsch we have been witnessing universally since Tom Wolfe's pamphlet "From Bauhaus to Our House". "Josef Albers: to Open Eyes" also gives hope to the rediscovery of relevance. This elaborate study deserves to be part of the curriculum of the future art generation in its defining process.
Frank R Schmidt, Princeton, NJ

Superb narrative of a brilliantly talented man
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-12-11
What a mammoth yet intriguing and masterful study of the brilliantly talented Josef Albers! This book has many substantial insights, but I was personally fascinated with the depth of passion that Albers demonstrated both for his art and his pedagogy. Fred Horowitz has elegantly evoked the ways that Albers sought to "open" the eyes of his students, so they could "bring the conscious mind to bear on the task at hand" and take risks as they became "creative, self-reliant, [and] independent."

Outstanding Description of the Methods of A Superlative Art Teacher
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-08
Josef Albers: To Open Eyes by Frederick A. Horowitz and Brenda Danilowitz, is a beautiful, magnificent book about this internationally eminent artist, teacher of art, and theorist of design and color. It simply could not be better.

Brenda Danilowitz, Chief Curator of the Josef and Anni Albers Foundation in Bethany, Connecticut, writes about the biography of Albers, 64 pages, while Frederick A. Horowitz, a former student of Albers at Yale, who taught a The University of Michigan School of Art & Design in Ann Arbor and at Washtenaw Community College, devotes 181 pages to Albers as teacher of design, drawing, color and painting. An additional 34 pages cover Notes, Bibliography, Sources, Illustrations and Index. To find out what made Albers such a unique and revered teacher Frederick Horowitz interviewed a total of 160 students at Bauhaus, Black Mountain College, Yale and Harvard as well as 9 of his professional colleagues.

Albers was first a student and then a member of the faculty of the original Bauhaus in Germany. When Hitler took over Germany in 1933 and the faculty, led by Mies van der Rohe, closed the Bauhaus, Albers came to the U.S. to teach, first at Black Mountain College in North Carolina and then, beginning in 1950, at Yale as Head of the Department of Design. By 1962 Yale University awarded him an honorary Doctorate at the same time she similarly honored President John F. Kennedy and former Secretary of State Dean Acheson.

Albers experimented with color relationships in the form of nested squares of color. His great dedication resulted in a retrospective exhibition of his oeuvre at The Metropolitan Museum of Art, an honor only rarely given to a living artist. Another retrospective was organized in 1988 at the Guggenheim Museum in New York.

At Yale all first-year graduate students in architecture, undergraduates majoring in architecture and design, and all students in design took Albers' courses in color and in drawing, while his basic design course was meant for undergraduates majoring in architecture.

Albers had a wide influence on generations of artists, architecture and design. The book makes it eminently clear why Albers was as influential a teacher as he was and why his courses and theories became the basis of art teaching all over the United States.

The text of this truly remarkable book is very informative and well written. The illustrations are superlative, carefully chosen and in many instances unique, not available anywhere else since they come from the Albers Foundation. I counted 284 illustrations, 103 in color.

By describing the life and artful work of Josef Albers this book demonstrates to teachers and lovers of art at all levels how to impart a life-long desire to experiment with fundamental principles of art and with novel materials to create new objects of art.

An Essential Book for Art Teachers Everywhere
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2006-12-20
Many people may not know that Josef Albers played a large part in revolutionizing teaching art in the 20th Century. Many people do not know how many 2oth century artists lives were in some way affected by his teaching--either directly or indirectly.

It is surprising that it has taken this long for a book on the remarkable teaching career of Josef Albers to appear, but here it finally is. Fred Horowitz and Brenda Danilowitz do a superb job of bringing the pedagogical thinking of perhaps the greatest 20th century art educator to life as well giving us a clear picture of the teacher himself. If this is the only book you ever read on teaching art you will give yourself the greatest gift possible.

The explanations and analysis of individual projects in four foundations courses, are coherent and represent the meat of this remarkable book. Plentiful fine illustrations from the Albers Foundation Archives, the Bauhaus and Black Mountain College make clear the descriptions of the problems and the reasons Albers found these to be indispensible in developing visual thinking--in opening eyes.

The choice of type weight, spacing, margin widths, and the light value of the ink may make reading the text a little difficult, but you should persevere--because real gold lies within the text. This is not just a book for the pictures!!

The publishers should take note, however, that Josef Albers as a designer would have deplored the way the layout and typography makes the reading a difficult task. I wonder whether the book designers took the trouble to read the text, or if they might benefited from some of the basic lessons imparted in Albers' famous Design courses.

I hope that with the publishing of this book, the vital lessons that Albers made the core of his life teaching will once again be brought alive and vigorous into the Foundations classrooms of colleges and art schools worldwide.

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Little Tales of Misogyny (Open Market Edition)
Published in Paperback by W. W. Norton & Company (2002-08)
Author: Patricia Highsmith
List price: $11.00
New price: $6.03
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Average review score:

cuentos extraños e interesantes
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2001-07-14
Un pequeño libro lleno de historias tremendas, historias de hombres maltratados y de personas con problemas. Es un libro divertido. Quizás refleje en el fondo la personalidad de la autora o quizás solo lo usa Como artificio literario para atraer lectores, pues bien es sabido que las historias de gente bien y situaciones estables no interesan a nadie, mientras que las historias de vidas y gente torcida atraen las masas. Quizás es para saber que no somos los únicos torcidos o con pequeñas manías en el universo. Ver que la vida de un prójimo real o imaginario es peor que la nuestra nos puede servir de consuelo, tal como sirven de envidia las actrices de novelas que se casan con un príncipe azul. El libro tiene sus meritos de entretención y no hay que quitárselos, es bueno y debe ser disfrutado como tal. Estas historias llevan al lector al universo desconocido de la mentalidad femenina, aunque aun no revela las razones por las cuales las mujeres de estas historias se comportan como lo hacen, nos enseñan patrones que vemos en las mujeres aunque no de manera exagerada hasta el grotesco como en estas historias. La brevedad de las historias y la forma en que están escritas incitan al lector a devorar el libro a no dejarlo escapar, a no dejar de leer la siguiente historia a no soltar el libro hasta su final. estas historias han despertado en mi los viejos hábitos de lectura rápida en la que me veo ensimismado por horas y más horas... Luis Méndez

Entretenido, Retorcido, Bellaco
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2001-07-14
Un pequeño libro lleno de historias tremendas, historias de hombres maltratados y de personas con problemas. Es un libro divertido. Quizás refleje en el fondo la personalidad de la autora o quizás solo lo usa Como artificio literario para atraer lectores, pues bien es sabido que las historias de gente bien y situaciones estables no interesan a nadie, mientras que las historias de vidas y gente torcida atraen las masas. Quizás es para saber que no somos los únicos torcidos o con pequeñas manías en el universo. Ver que la vida de un prójimo real o imaginario es peor que la nuestra nos puede servir de consuelo, tal como sirven de envidia las actrices de novelas que se casan con un príncipe azul. El libro tiene sus meritos de entretención y no hay que quitárselos, es bueno y debe ser disfrutado como tal. Luis Méndez

More misanthropic than misogynistic
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2002-12-20
Much of Patricia Highsmith's writing proceeds from one simple idea: that with intense effort and single-minded determination, even the most unremarkable people can manage to ruin not only their own lives, but the lives of everyone around them as well. One need look no further than this slim collection of short fables to make the point. Whether it's "Oona the Jolly Cave Woman," hapless Elaine in "The Breeder," or a truly malevolent creature like Thea in "The Perfect Little Lady," all of the main characters in these short stories display an insatiable appetite for destruction.

Although the title suggests that this book is misogynistic, the men in this collection aren't necessarily any better than the women. Highsmith's deep misanthropy can (and does) get monotonous, but with such gemlike stories as "The Hand" and "The Prude" in this collection, the book gives little cause for complaint.

Black humor?
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2000-11-12
These aren't stories, really, merely vignettes that describe horrific women abusing men, rolling around in self-absorption, or just being stupid blobs; they occasionally meet richly-deserved bad ends, at which we are invited to cheer, or at least feel satisfied. The fact that the book was written by a woman, and one who, one suspects, found the writing of the project vastly amusing, makes it a must-read of sorts; Highsmith was a very unique person. A nice companion piece to her other extremely eccentric work, THE ANIMAL LOVER'S BOOK OF BEASTLY MURDER.

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Mac OS X Panther in a Nutshell
Published in Paperback by O'Reilly Media, Inc. (2004-06)
Author:
List price: $39.95
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Average review score:

Hefty, deep and well written
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 16 total.
Review Date: 2004-07-29
It's tough to tell this from Amazon, but this book is a thousand pages, which makes it quite a hefty tome. But that doesn't make it a doorstop. There are screenshots, but they are, by in large, useful and relevant, and the book doesn't use them to tell a click by click story of the interface.

The book is organized into four parts that start at the user interface and continue to peel away levels of the system until, in chapter four, the author covers the command line unix shell at a surprising level of detail. A level of detail which rivals O'Reilly's other command line exclusive books. In fact, this book gives a fine introduction to scripting bash and tcsh. It does as good a job there as it does covering printing, or the vagaries of the new Finder in the chapters that precede it.

This is a quality piece of in-depth work about the unmodified Panther operating system. It's well worth the price for those who are more interested in understanding than hacking (though I admit a love for the new Mac OS X Panther Hacks book as well.)

The Definitive Guide to Panther
Helpful Votes: 16 out of 18 total.
Review Date: 2004-08-31


The publisher, O'Reilly Media, seems dedicated to covering Apple's OSX operating system, OSX, from every conceivable vantage point. Its "Missing Manual" series on Panther is a user's reference on how to use the operating system and its applications for productivity and fun. Its "Hacks" series provides dozens of tips, guides, and project ideas. In the "Nutshell" series iteration, "MacOSX Panther in a Nutshell" designs to provide in-depth, comprehensive information about the inner workings of the OS. It is for power users and developers who want to master the OS and have the fullest description and explanation of OSX.

This book starts out detailing the multi-layered architecture of OSX and illuminates its power and elegance. In great depth and detail, it explains the Unix components, Aqua elements, OS9 and Classic, the Finder, and the multitude of Unix services, daemons, and applications.

This is terse, descriptive prose. The authors focus a sharp telephoto lens on the skeleton, sinews, and pores of OSX, starting with basic elements and probing deep into the details of the file system, networking components, directory services, printing configurations and more. This in-depth description and large handfuls of guides and tips totals over 1,000 pages.

A separate part of the book is devoted to Applescript, X-code tools, and Java. The X-code tools are for developers. Part IV is all about Unix, including three chapters on "shells" alone, plus sections on text editors, the X-Window system, and a full 262 pages of Unix command references, touted as the most complete such source in print publication.

No mere user manual would have ten pages devoted solely to understanding and managing preference files, or five pages on using the Colorsync feature with Quartz filter scripts.

Surprisingly, only ten pages are dedicated to security issues. Although the Mac is known to be extremely secure, recent news shows even the Mac is vulnerable to sophisticated exploits.

For those with a need to know, this is the definitive source for deep knowledge of OSX.

Nice addition to my OSX UNIX library
Helpful Votes: 18 out of 20 total.
Review Date: 2005-09-25
Since I converted I have found OS X UNIX is amazingly friendly and accessible. Some people who had never used it before type commands and work with the operating system directly as a "cool guys" in movies! This book is very helpful and well written and it is serves as a very nice reference. I paired this book with Linux and UNIX for a beginner training suite, 4DVDs + 2CDs includes 4 Unix Academy Certifications ed.2008 This book and a video they contribute one another greatly. You improve the reading and by reading you improve what you have seen.
The book is very particular about the subjects that related to OS X and because there are some differences between OS X and other UNIXes it is nice to have a book that deals with it.

Comprehensive and authoritative
Helpful Votes: 20 out of 21 total.
Review Date: 2004-07-22
Do any of you remember the O'Reilly books from the late 80s on X Windows? Those became the definitive guides to X11, and probably were crucial in putting O'Reilly on the map as a prominent technical publisher.

Well, this book on Mac OS X Panther captures some of that early O'Reilly spirit. In its comprehensiveness and heft. But also in its terseness. Turn to a random chapter and start reading. The authors try to get to the point, without wasting time. They write at a technical level that assumes you don't know the specifics of that chapter, but that you are no novice to computing.

It should be noted that the second half of the book is essentially a standard unix reference. As you may be aware, OS X is now a unix variant. Which is neat. But also accounts for much of the book's size. Unix has built up a massive set of utilities in 20 years, and the length of the unix sections here reflects this.

Don't let this put you off either the book or OS X. On the contrary! The building of the Mac operating system on top of unix gives you more power and stability (against crashes) on the Mac.

Open
The Moon in the Well: Wisdom Tales to Transform Your Life, Family, and Community
Published in Hardcover by Open Court (2001-05-30)
Author: Erica Helm Meade
List price: $34.95
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Multicultural and Inspirational
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-26
As a teacher I found this book extremely useful because it represented so many different cultures and was so organized. The organization made it quick and easy to use which is important for teachers. The stories were beautiful and authentic but not too long--definitely usable in a classroom setting.

The Moon in the Well
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-28
I have returned to Erica Meade's The Moon in the Well because of some research I am doing about storytelling and wisdom traditions. Not having perused the book for several years, I had not remembered its animated, vibrant retellings and its soulful passion for the depth of stories and thier universal artistry and healing power. For anyone interested in the ways of the human heart this is indeed a wellspring book.

Merna Ann Hecht, storyteller

Stories for Our Time
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-12
There are many anthologies out there, but this one is unique. These tales are beautifully rendered and exquisitly told. They are inspirational and practical, simple and wise, universal and local, poetic and instructional. At the end of each story Mead directs her reader to mythic and psychological themes. She offers reflections and suggestions for weaving stories meaningfully into our lives. This book is a gift to anyone engaged in personal self-reflection and social change, and a worthy companion to those in the healing and teaching professions.

A great resource
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-09
The Moon in the Well is a great collection of stories from around the world. Those who use story in their work will find this book a great resource. I work with young people and the notations after each story are helpful in pulling out themes to explore and learn from.

Open
Multitool Linux: Practical Uses for Open Source Software
Published in Paperback by Pearson Education (2002-05-07)
Authors: Michael Schwarz, Jeremy Anderson, Peter Curtis, and Steven Murphy
List price: $39.99
New price: $43.20
Used price: $4.86

Average review score:

what exactly is linux good for?
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-05-02
What is linux good for? That is the question that the authors of this book set about explaining. They tell you all of the wonderful things that you can make linux do with a little bit of effort. It could use a new edition but otherwise a very good read.

PS A station wagon packed with hard drives has more bandwidth in most instances than dsl or cable internet.

WOW!! Linux, here I come!
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2002-10-22
I've been curious about Linux for some time now. But, the only books that I could find, are all on installing, administering, configuring. Every one rehashing what the other said. None of them sold me on diving in.

When I discovered this book, I was apprehensive, but I went for it and purchased it. All I have to say is WOW! I never realised how flexible Linux is, or how much you could do.

I was thouroughly impressed on the variety of this book. I've finally been inspired to dive right in to Linux.

A must-have for Linux users
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2002-08-25
Are you a new Linux user, and want to learn more?

Are you an experienced Linux user, but are wondering what other interesting things you can do?

This book will teach you fun things. This book will teach you useful things. This book takes you on a tour you can't help but enjoy. At the end of the day, you'll find yourself not only entertained, but more knowledgeable about what you can do with Linux. It's probably more than you think!

This book helped me discover new interests and new possibilities, all in easy to read and entertaining prose. With that in mind, I'm giving this book the highest rating possible.

Linux (+ open source tools) as a swiss army knife
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2002-11-18
Technically, Linux is the name for the operating system kernel at the heart of "Linux" distributions such as RedHat and Debian. When most people "use" Linux, they are in fact using the shell, the web server, or any other of the zillions of open source programs that (1) are available for, (2) are distributed with, or (3) can run atop the Linux kernel.

It used to be that there were only a few things you could do with a Linux box (namely run a Unix box as a web server) but the open source community has come a long way in providing (1) applications and (2) hardware support, so that you can now do a lot of things w/ your Linux box that used to only be doable on a Windoze box.

Schwarz et al have put together a smorgasbord of things you can do with your Linux box. These projects range from things you would tend to do on a Unix box (eg IP Masquerade, SSH, system security, even a chapter on writing Apache modules!) to stuff you would expect to need to do on a Windoze box (eg burning CDRs, syncing with Palm devices, and audio/MIDI/image/video processing).

The level of detail in the chapters (as well as the required level of Linux familiarity on the part of the reader) varies considerably -- a hazard of multiple authors and the breadth of the topics covered -- but each chapter starts off with a "Difficult-o-Meter" which more or less accurately states the level of Linux proficiency required.

That said, there are some real gems to be found in this book. There are some pretty hefty howto-like treatments in this book of topics such as system security, "undernets" (collaborative web sites), and setting up a web/IMAP/mail server.

There's a chapter on "Tools You Should Know", which lists the tools a typical Unix hacker should know: regular expressions, vi, dd, sed, diff, etc. Like some other parts of the book, this chapter doesn't give you a lot of information on these individual tools, but it brings them to your attention, so you at least know what to look for.

This book by itself won't turn a newbie into a Linux ninja after one reading, but it is a good overview of many different things that can be done with open source tools on a Linux box. I would highly encourage the prospective reader to take a look at the Table of Contents of this book. If you see a topic you're interested in, then this is a worthwhile book to buy. (I suspect that most folks running Linux at home at a beginner to intermediate level will find several bits of interest in this book.)

Open
Open All Night
Published in Hardcover by Overlook Hardcover (1995-10-01)
Authors: Ken Miller and William Vollmann
List price: $45.00
New price: $7.95
Used price: $20.00
Collectible price: $60.00

Average review score:

Bold. Un-quaint. Superb.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2001-07-11
Miller knows his subjects (the people) and his subject (their desperation) with a clarity and fearlessness that most people would prefer to avoid. Viewing his photographs are no easier a task than living wholly and honestly. Skinheads, speedfreaks, Tenderloin whores, friends and neighbors. Lucid, terrifying, and ultimately beautiful photographs from a man of the same qualities.

Bold. Un-quaint. Superb.
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2001-07-11
Miller knows his subjects (the people) and his subject (their desperation) with a clarity and fearlessness that most people would prefer to avoid. Viewing his photographs are no easier a task than living wholly and honestly. Skinheads, speedfreaks, friends and neighbors. Lucid, terrifying, and ultimately beautiful photographs from a man of the same qualities.

Wonderful!
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 1999-01-07
The black and white photographs in this volume are strikingly beautiful, achingly poignant, and gritty at the same time. Unflinching, honest portraits of the darker side...

Bold. Un-quaint. Superb.
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2001-07-11
Miller knows his subjects (the people) and his subject (their desperation) with a clarity and fearlessness that most people would prefer to avoid. Viewing his photographs are no easier a task than living wholly and honestly. Skinheads, speedfreaks, Tenderloin whores, friends and neighbors. Lucid, terrifying, and ultimately beautiful photographs from a man of the same qualities.

Open
Open Bible
Published in Unknown Binding by Nelsonword Publishing Group (1997-07)
Author:
List price: $59.97

Average review score:

THe Open Bible Shines
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-22
I bought my first bible at Half-Price Books in Houston in 1985 for $3.50, well before I became a Christian. The bible was The Open Bible NKJV Study Edition by Thomas Nelson. I believe this book gave me the foundational concepts I needed to understand Chistianity. Over the succeeding years, I've bought many bibles but I have to say, I keep going back to The Open Bible because of the wealth of notes before each chapter and the many helps in understanding bible passages. It really shines and should be a part of any Christian's library.

A question of approach
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-03-07
I bought a leather Open NASB Bible early in my Christian walk. During my early stages of exploration I thought this was the best Bible a person could have, however I have since moved on from that point. I subsequently gave the Bible to one of my children, who has also since moved on, in their case to the Thompson Chain Reference Bible.
So I regard the Open Bible as a good intermediate study Bible - one for people who are getting into study, but perhaps do not feel inclined to do their own analysis by way of the Thompson, or, as I do, by way of a Hebrew/Greek analytical concordance.
I would still buy this Bible for a relatively new student of scripture, in the knowledge that the person would likely want to move on in the next year or three.

Excellent first study Bible
Helpful Votes: 22 out of 26 total.
Review Date: 1999-04-21
I received my first Open Bible in 1983 from my father who is a minister. He said all preachers need a good study Bible. Well, I am not a preacher but I have wrote a few papers on subjects like; prayer and faith using the outlines in this Bible. It has a very excellent study guide that is in the middle of the Bible. Easy references guides and Bibical Index is so indepth. Will I ever buy another Open Bible? Most certainly YES!!!!!!

If You Have Looked For A Great Study Bible..Stop Here!!!!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2003-09-22
I have invested in several Bibles, and all are good. But the best, that I have found overall, The Open Bible is the best. The many tools in this Bible make it a essential book for all who are serious about God and learning the basics and beyond. This Bible is the only Bible i recommend to people.


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