12/31/2009

Review of Unspoken: A Mystery (Inspector Anders Knutas Mysteries) (Hardcover)

I hadn't read the first book in this series, but I really loved this mystery novel and will be looking for more by author Mari Jungstedt. I can only imagine how powerful this book must be in Swedish; needless to say, this intertwined story of the death of former newspaper photographer turned alcoholic Henry Dahlstrom and the missing 14-year-old Fanny is a page turner.

Set in Gotland, off the coast of Sweden, the book's greatest strength is the character development. As a reader, I came to care about both victims and empathize with inspector Anders Knutas (around whom the series is developed). The only detraction for me was the side story of TV reporter Johan Berg. However, this would not stop me from recommending this book wholeheartedly. A joy to read!



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Review of Creatures of Habit (Hardcover)

Do people behave any better than animals? Do they often behave worse? That question underlies Jill McCorkle's latest book, Creatures of Habit, a collection of stories set in the fictional town of Fulton, North Carolina, that explores the vagaries of childhood, love and marriage.

The best stories in this book deal with betrayal. In "Chickens," McCorkle demonstrates her profound ability to report on the intricacies of human psychology. The story tells of a young college graduate, Kim, who always expected to marry Randy, her childhood sweetheart. Toward the end of her college career, however, she learns that Randy has been dating -- and sleeping with -- other girls. When he attempts to patch things up, her pride rebels. Instead of taking him back, she starts dating a divorced man 14 years her senior. Has Kim betrayed her birthright or has she bailed out of a bad situation? McCorkle shows her brilliance as a writer by not telling the reader exactly where to stand on this question.

"Snakes" is another story that deals with the compromises one makes with the romantic ideals of youth. A middle-aged married couple has weathered a dark patch in their relationship. They are enjoying a quiet evening together when the wife learns that her husband had a brief affair during their estrangement. Now she has to decide whether to undo the repairs her marriage has undergone by making an issue of his lapse.

Another powerful story is "Turtles," in which McCorkle draws back the curtain on old age. The central character, Carly, is ending an unloved life in a nursing home that fails to live up to the promises of its brochure. Her son never visits, and she has an unrequited crush on a distinguished old man in another wing. Even the nursing home dog leaves her for another resident who offers better snacks.

McCorkle is a justly beloved author, in part because of her ability to deal a straight hand without bitterness. Though she does not hold back when it comes to capturing the cruelty in life, she doesn't sell short its moments of tenderness, either.



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Review of Globality: Competing with Everyone from Everywhere for Everything (Hardcover)

Globality is an excellent book for corporate executives, business unit leaders, and entrepreneurs. If you are an investor or want to read about the culture of world business, this isn't going to be your cup of tea.

We are in the middle of the great business convergence, an event so epochal that it will be written about as one of the great turning points in world history over the next several hundred years. What's it all about? Simply, every organization will complete with virtually every other organization on the planet. In the process, the dominant companies of the 21st century will be built.

In Globality, Boston Consulting Group (BCG) partners Harold Sirkin, James Hemerling, and Arindam Bhattacharya take the view primarily from enterprises founded in China, India, Brazil, and Mexico to show how those with the fewest resources, least skills, but lowest costs, are building important global positions in major industries. I compared this writing to what BCG founder Bruce D. Henderson used to write in the 1960s about Japanese, Korean, and Taiwanese companies being poised to deflate profits for companies in the U.S. and Europe, and I was pleased to see that Globality is much more articulate, better defined, and easier to understand.

Although the book is very much about the evidence brought by the challengers, the information is presented neutrally in terms of describing opportunities available for anyone. In addition, there are specific suggestions for what well established companies in developed countries might do to best take advantage of these opportunities.

For me, the best parts were the case histories of companies in China and India that I don't know much about. You'll find many interesting stories.

In terms of analyzing the opportunities, the major themes are:

(1) Minding the Cost Gap

(2) Growing Human Capabilities

(3) Reaching Deeper into Markets

(4) Geographically Pinpointing Resources and Capabilities

(5) Thinking Big

(6) Acting Fast

(7) Getting Help from Outside

(8) Innovating the Business Model

(9) Embracing Global Diversity

(10) Being Prepared to Attack Everywhere and Be Attacked from Everywhere

The chapter titles in the book aren't quite this clear. You'll have to read the material to grasp the key concepts, but you'll get it.

I liked that the book has strategic, organizational, and tactical dimensions. If you want to get a quick look at the overall themes, head to page 239 to read the Nokia story and to page 249 to read the Emerson story.

Product Description
Globalization is about Americans outsourcing product development and services to other countries. Globality is the next step, where rapidly developing economies from around the world are now competing with us head to head. The authors present a strong case that the economic climate in which we have lived is going to change in unprecedented ways.

"...their insights into the competitive battle in emerging markets are so keen." -William J. Holstein of The New York Times

"Many American chief executives, it turns out, are aiming at emerging markets...And they will find many insights into prevailing in those battles in this book." -William J. Holstein of The New York Times

"...for any corporate strategist pondering the challenges and opportunities of globalization, this book is an indispensable guide." -John Cummings of Business Finance

"While the global economy has been a hot topic for at least two decades, it is in constant need of updating ...GLOBALITY...does the job nicely." - BNET

"[This] vividly detailed tome describes the latest shift in globalization from a one-way street of Western domination to an increasingly competitive global playing field, where businesses from once-discounted nations are solidifying their standing." - CIO Insight

"Whatever the next New World Order turns out to be, the advice in GLOBALITY will come in useful, for multinationals and individual workers alike."-Business Pundit

"A smart discourse on how local companies in developing economies, such
as China, India and Brazil, are bucking tradition and going for broke on
their own terms..."-BNET

"This book is a must-read for leaders of companies in the developed world who want to get into the globality act and stay in it."- Cecil Johnson, McClatchy-Tribune News

"Get ready for a new wave of challengers, 'bursting their way onto the big stage.' So say the three authors of this smart analysis about the latest developments in global competition" - Andrea Sachs of TIME

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Review of My Father Before Me: How Fathers and Sons Influence Each Other Throughout Their Lives (Hardcover)

Dr. Diamond is exploring the relatively uncharted waters of the psychological relationship between fathers and sons.As a father reading the book, I realized how many things I took for granted in the relationship between my father and me and between me and my sons that are broken down and discussed in this book.The analysis and the examples provide a reference for how I conducted myself at various times in my life and the effect it may have had on my family. This is a wonderfully insightful look, written in straigt forward prose, to learn how to be a better son and father.
P.S. It doesn't hurt to be a baseball fan.For those of us who love the game, there are lots of examples where baseball is the vehicle for insights and understanding.

Product Description
A powerful depiction of the unexplored reciprocal relationship between fathers and sons.For decades, mothers were thought to be the only real influence on a child. Now we recognize that the father's involvement also has a profound impact, but how sons affect their fathers is too-often overlooked. In My Father Before Me psychoanalyst Michael J. Diamond firmly establishes fatherhood as an essential event for both the son's and the father's development. With chapters analyzing the father/son relationship throughout the life cycle, and demonstrating the powerful influence between them, Diamond calls for a more inclusive notion of masculinity, thus allowing men to access parts of themselves they previously ignored. He argues that sons are largely responsible for helping their fathers embrace this more flexible notion of manhood, making them better partners and better parents. Diamond has written an important book that enables us to make sense of the question: what does it truly mean to be a man. .

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Review of Dani Noir (Hardcover)

When a tragedy or change strikes a family, sometimes the kids will grasp at whatever sense of stability they can. Novels for youth may include foster children and the kids of divorcees grasping at everything from saving Redwood forests to becoming the lead in the school play, as long as it means concentrating on something outside of their own misery. To the best of my knowledge, however, I've never seen a middle grade novel where the main character went in for noir cinema. Dani Noir does just that though. First time novelist Nova Ren Suma presents us with a sympathetic if not entirely charming protagonist. Bound to create plenty of discussion, if you're looking for a book that will get kids talking, I think this one has your number.

When Dani's mom and dad split up she made one thing very clear; She wanted to stay with her mother and not her double-crossing, two timing, cheating traitor of a father. So why is her mother making her spend a weekend with the man? This summer, Dani hasn't any plans at all except to sit back in her tiny town's solitary art house theater and watch all the film noirs she can. Unfortunately, now she has her dad's new life (and new upcoming wife) to distract her, as well as a mystery at the theater. Who was that mysterious girl she saw exciting the projectionist booth unawares? Is there a double cross going on? Who's going to find out? Conjuring up everything from Gilda to Double Indemnity, this Rita Hayworth-obsessed heroine finds a mystery of her own and sets out to solve it. But are all mysteries meant to be solved? And what happens when uncovering the crime makes you more culpable than the people committing it?

Suma does a nice job with Dani's voice. This particular heroine has a tendency to waver between the inherent romanticism and drama of her black and white noir world, and the reality of her low-rent little town. Right on page one she tells you, "There's the one supermarket, the one movie theater, the one Chinese restaurant. But there are twelve different places to buy junk for your lawn." Really, the descriptions in this book are a lot of the fun. Sentences like this one about putting butter on movie popcorn may even make you physically ill. "The what-we-assume-is-butter sinks down into the lower reaches of the popcorn slowly, like ear wax coming alive and spreading down your body to your feet." Suma also describes characters in an almost visceral sense. Of the mysterious "other woman" Dani has taken to spotting, she says that the girl has, "... oddest of all, footless tights with spots all over them, dark pink and star white, like she broke out in some sort of heinous rash just on her legs." Or of her future stepsister, "Her eyes are like the sharp little stones you step on when you're running down the driveway to get the mail..."

In a book of this sort, the primary difficulty comes in maintaining Dani as the kind of person you want to read about. To be blunt, she is often not very likeable. Sympathetic, oh yes! But not likeable. I'd love to poll kids on the moment when they start breaking with her, mentally criticizing her for her choices. Near the beginning? Halfway through? Right at the end? Or are there kids out there who feel like Dani is justified on acting on her whims at the expense of others every step of the way? For me it was around page 16 when you hear Dani say of her old friend Taylor, "I could compliment her hair, but I don't. Besides, she's in my way." Taylor, for the record, is a pretty interesting character too. She begins the book just as someone for Dani to be dismissive of. The kind of girl who has t-shirts with fuzzy tiger heads on them, and unicorns on her books. But as the book goes on, Taylor becomes the kind of person who would normally be the hero of a middle grade novel. She learns, grows, and even begins to question why she would even want to be friends with Dani as the story goes on. I do believe that there will be some kids out there who don't like Dani and who will put down the book because they can't make themselves spend any more time with her. Most, however, may not like her but they'll relate to her, and in the long run that's what's more important.

There were particularly contemporary plot details that I thought worked very well in the context of the story. Perhaps the use of Facebook in the plot will date it as the years go by, but I prefer to think of it as an element that simply solidifies it in a specific moment in time. As for cell phones, Suma's very good at using them perfectly. Sometimes I feel like many middle grade authors today are more comfortable writing historical fiction because they won't have to deal with the problem of how to incorporate cell phones into their stories. Smart authors use them strategically like Ms. Suma does here. Everything from ringtones to spotty cell service caused by nearby mountainsides has a purpose here. A tip of the hat to that.

Not to give anything away, but I was very pleased with how the book ended. Aw, what the heck. Spoiler alert if you don't want to know the ending! Okay. So at the end of the book Dani could do a crazy 180 degree turnaround that is completely wrong for her character, and embrace her new stepfamily. Doesn't happen. Her dad is a jerk of the first order and he's not getting off the hook all that easily. And while there may be some hint that Dani will be going to his upcoming wedding after all, I wouldn't necessarily bet on it. That's part of the charm of Dani Noir. Even while you may not agree with everything it does, you are emotionally involved from page one onward. Dani's anger and frustration is your anger and frustration. So at least she's understandable.

It's funny, but there's a fellow debut middle grade novel that has come out in 2009 that acts as almost a companion to this book. Neil Armstrong is My Uncle and Other Lies Muscle Man McGinty Told Me by Nan Marino would never be confused with Dani Noir but on paper the similarities are there. Both books star bullying, selfish, single-minded female protagonists who are dealing with the fact that their best female friends recently moved away and their parents are not getting along smoothly. In both cases there's a boy who goes out of his way to be nice to our heroine in spite of the fact that she treats him like garbage. There's even an older absent brother in both of the books who is unable to give our heroine the support that she really needs. Of course, these are just surface similarities. You'll find the tone of the two tales very different indeed, but I still think that kids who like one will be naturally drawn to the other.

Though it stands entirely on its own, Dani Noir may be one of those books that lends itself to a sequel or two. Certainly Dani's story isn't done. Nor, for that matter, are the stories of her friends. It will be interesting to see the extent to which kids go for a character this self-involved. Still, let's remember that Katherine Paterson's The Great Gilly Hopkins was the ultimate litmus test in me-focused children's novels. The real question may be this; Does Dani change enough by the book's end? Some will say yes. Some will say no. I say, read the book for yourself and find out.

Product Description
If this were a movie, you'd open to the first page of this book and be transported to a whole other world. Everything would be in black and white, except maybe for the girl in pink polka-dot tights, and this really great music would start to swell in the background. All of a sudden, you wouldn't be able to help it -- you'd be a part of the story, you'd be totally sucked in. You'd be in this place, filled with big lies, mysterious secrets, and a tween girl turned sleuth....

Zoom in on thirteen-year-old Dani Callanzano. It's the summer before eighth grade, and Dani is stuck in her nothing-ever-happens town with only her favorite noir mysteries at the Little Art movie theater to keep her company.

But one day, a real-life mystery begins to unravel -- at the Little Art! And it all has something to do with a girl in polka-dot tights.... Armed with a vivid imagination, a flair for the dramatic, and her knowledge of all things Rita Hayworth, Dani sets out to solve the mystery, and she learns more about herself than she ever though she could.

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12/30/2009

Review of The Unbreakable Child (Hardcover)

The Unbreakable Child will rip your heart out of your chest and dangle it in front of you. You'll ignore that minor inconvenience, because your eyes won't move from the pages of Kim Richardson's debut memoir. This is the story of Richardson's nine years in a Kentucky orphanage. At the same time, it's the story of the lawsuit brought against the order of nuns who ran the orphanage by Richardson and forty-four other former orphans.

You know those sensational stories splashed across the newspapers and leading the nightly news? The ones about priests and nuns abusing and molesting children? Kim lived it.

Kim and her three older sisters were taken from their neglectful mother when Kim was a toddler. The beatings started soon after and didn't stop until the girls' mother was granted custody again nine years later. There were bright spots--the gardener's flowers and homemade cookies, the friendships, the visits from the mostly ineffectual social worker. But the brightest spot was perhaps the death of Kim's main abuser.

Interspersed with the story of Kim's childhood is the story of the lawsuit. Forty-five regular people against the might of the Church might seem too daunting to attempt. But one lawyer took on the task, and won. Kim's struggle against high-powered lawyers mirrors her indomitable spirit struggling against years of abuse. Kim came out the victor both times. The end of this book, with Kim loved by her husband and children, is a testament to hope and strength.



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Review of Career Choice and Development (Hardcover)

Brown presents a very readable and thorough synopsis of various career development theories.A very useful tool for instructors of career development classes including undergraduate and graduate levels.



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Review of You Are Here (Hardcover)

Reasons I loved this book:
1.Factoids.Like do you know where we get "OK" from?
2.I loved Emma, the female protagonist.She's spunky, fun, adventurous, and unapologetically moody.
3.Peter really won me over!At first I, much like Emma, kind of dismissed Peter, the map-loving male protagonist, but he wormed his way into my heart!
4.The Maps.I've always loved to travel, but for some reason I never considered the maps, and what they represent, and how interesting they really can be.
5.There's no big twist, no crazy surprise, but the ending really snuck up on me and made a huge impression.I keep thinking about it, and inevitably rereading it, not because it's shocking or unexpected, but because its so heartfelt and true.

This book really struck a chord with me; all throughout, I kept thinking that not all who wander are lost and that despite the fact that I can't always find my way, the journey is the most important part.

Product Description
Emma Healy has never fit in with the rest of her family. She's grown used to being the only ordinary one among her rather extraordinary parents and siblings. But when she finds a birth certificate for a twin brother she never knew she had, along with a death certificate dated just two days later, she feels like a part of her has been justified in never feeling quite whole. Suddenly it seems important to visit his grave, to set off in search of her missing half. When her next-door neighbor Peter Finnegan -- who has a quiet affinity for maps and a desperate wish to escape their small town -- ends up coming along for the ride, Emma thinks they can't possibly have anything in common. But as they head from upstate New York toward North Carolina, driving a beat-up and technically stolen car and picking up a stray dog along the way, they find themselves learning more and more about each other. Neither is exactly sure what they're looking for, but with each passing mile, each new day of this journey, they seem to be getting much closer to finding it.

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Review of When Invisible Children Sing (Hardcover)

This book is interesting on several levels.First, it tells the fascinating story of Dr. Huang and his work with the street children of Bolivia.His approach of focusing on the stories of several children makes it very easy for the reader to connect with and understand the children.

In addition, the book really explains generational and intractable poverty and the forces that keep it in place. I suspect similar forces are in place in all settings, even in a country as wealthy as the United States.Moreover, he describes his own childhood living with a family recently immigranted from Taiwan and his family's experience with the health care system in the U.S.It is a must read for employees in social service settings.

Last, because he is an physician, he describes in detail the medical and mental health issues faced by the children, and I would recommend this book to be required curriculum for anyone planning to do medical mission work.(Or work with the homeless in the U.S. for that matter.)





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12/29/2009

Review of Logic, Induction and Sets (London Mathematical Society Student Texts) (Hardcover)

As a regular reviewer who reads the books he reviews, I am beginning to find a routine sameness to many of the books I examine. This holds for introductory logic, some areas of which have not changed for thousands of years. In many cases, it has become so routine that it is very hard to read the books, and to solve this problem I have adopted the solution that I read approximately ten pages at a time. Most books covering this material are a sequential listing and proving of the fundamental theorems. Correct, but hardly a point of differentiation between books.
Fortunately, I found this book to be different. The author uses more explanatory text and fewer equations than most others do. While that alone does not make it better, the quality of the exposition does. There was more enthusiasm generated when reading this book than I have had in a long time when reading an introductory mathematics book. There was no reason to adopt the ten page rule. Despite the relative lack of equations, all of the basics are covered in sufficient detail. One hundred and thirty eight exercises are interspersed within the text and solutions to approximately one fourth of the exercises are included.
A book that can be used as a textbook or for self-study, it manages to be different enough to read easily, but not so different that it is difficult to learn from.

Product Description
Philosophical considerations, which are often ignored or treated casually, are given careful consideration in this introduction. Thomas Forster places the notion of inductively defined sets (recursive datatypes) at the center of his exposition resulting in an original analysis of well established topics.The presentation illustrates difficult points and includes many exercises. Little previous knowledge of logic is required and only a knowledge of standard undergraduate mathematics is assumed.

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Review of Eat, Drink, and Be From Mississippi: A Novel (Hardcover)

Nanci Kincaid has created a beautiful, delightful, sweet story in Eat, Drink and Be From Mississippi.The title alone told me that I would be in for a wonderful reading experience from a Southern writer.

This is the story of Truely Noonan and his older sister Courtney.They were born and raised in Mississippi by caring parents, but both left early in life and sought their fortunes in California.Now both are successful, have more money than they know what to do with and live in fine homes.Unfortunately, both have marriages that have crumbled or are crumbling.Into this picture comes Arnold, a young African American male, who is one of the most engaging characters I've read about in a long time.I couldn't help but smile almost every time Arnold spoke.

This is a story of family, perhaps not the traditional family of mom, dad and some children, but family nonetheless.Truely and Courtney are both genuinely good people who take Arnold in and offer him a life he could never hope to achieve on his own.

This is an excellent story told with true Southern charm.It's the kind of story you hate to see end and the characters stay with you long after you read the last page.I highly recommend this book to those who love Southern literature or just a kind, sweet story.




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Review of The Local News: A Novel (Hardcover)

"The Local News" is narrated by Lydia Pasternak, whose older brother Danny mysteriously disappears one night, when Lydia was 15 years old. Most of the book consists of Lydia's memories of her high school years and the impact Danny's disappearance had on her life and her relationships. Lydia was an incredibly brilliant social outcast, who kept few friends and was constantly being teased by her older brother and his popular friends. Once Danny goes missing, everything changes for Lydia. She starts receiving attention from the other kids at school and much to her surprise, Danny's friends become protective over her and even befriend her. Lydia also takes a liking to the detective investigating Danny's case and a deep interest in helping him track down the truth. The books ends with the present day, as Lydia prepares for her 10th high school reunion and readers get to see what became of the other characters.

This is Miriam Gershow's first novel and I think it is an excellent testament to her beautiful writing style and powerful story-telling abilities. I loved how so many of her phrases were like poetry, because of the way they could evoke intense emotions. The writing and overall tone of this book reminded me so much of Alice Sebold's "The Lovely Bones" (which funny enough, I later read the same thoughts from The New York Times book review). The similarities lie in the dark and eerie feelings that emanate from the pages, as if something about the story is haunted in some way. That feeling is what drew me to the writing and simultaneously made me long for some lighter material to ease the emotional burden.

Even though the subject matter of the book was serious, it didn't always need such a somber tone. I think that had there been some comic relief weaved into the storyline, I would have enjoyed the story more. I had hoped for an uplifting ending but the reality was a bittersweet one, which perhaps was the author's intentions all along.

Overall, I think that this is a successful debut with respect to the excellent writing and plot development. I look forward to reading more from Miriam Gershow in the future!

http://bookopolis.blogspot.com



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Review of A Life in Balance: Nourishing the Four Roots of True Happiness (Hardcover)

As one would surmise from the title, this is a book about establishing and keeping balance in your life.One of the better self-help books that I have read, it includes sections on Happiness and Health, Seasons of Your Life, Focusing Inward for Happiness, Stress and Stress Busting, Poisons that Kill the Roots of Your Happiness (fear, anger, hate, pessimism, apathy, greed, etc.), Establishing Serenity, Exercise and it's Gift to Your Body and Spirit, Love and Intimacy, and Nourishment.It is all about living life intentionally with purpose and balance.A Life in Balance is a recommended read.



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Review of A Life in Balance: Nourishing the Four Roots of True Happiness (Hardcover)

As one would surmise from the title, this is a book about establishing and keeping balance in your life.One of the better self-help books that I have read, it includes sections on Happiness and Health, Seasons of Your Life, Focusing Inward for Happiness, Stress and Stress Busting, Poisons that Kill the Roots of Your Happiness (fear, anger, hate, pessimism, apathy, greed, etc.), Establishing Serenity, Exercise and it's Gift to Your Body and Spirit, Love and Intimacy, and Nourishment.It is all about living life intentionally with purpose and balance.A Life in Balance is a recommended read.



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12/28/2009

Review of Fearless Golf: Conquering the Mental Game (Hardcover)

valiante takes golf psychology to a new level with this book. whereas rotella's message is very anectodal and breaks down to something like "equipment and your swing don't matter, stop trying to be perfect and accept things more," valiante's message has more a lot more depth. he acknowlegdes the importance of a good swing and the right equipment and his message is well grounded in psychological research.although breaking his message down to a few points is no easy task (as a matter of fact, he goes out of his way at the end to say it's really up to the individual to frame a message in their own context), it would be something like:

- don't attempt to try and control emotions by pretending they don't exist and that you're not nervous, rather condition yourself to respond productively when these feelings arise;
- focus on things you can control such as preparing properly, developing a plan for the course and the target for your next shot, rather than things you can't control such as what other players are shooting or the weather;
- practise makes permanent rather perfect, so be realistic about what it is you need to work on to get better and how accurately your practise routine reflects these items;
- strive to maintain a light grip, because when the nerves tense up you will lose feelings in your outer extremities and without realizing it, you will grip the club much tighter and hit poor shots as a result.

there are other important elements of this book that from someone else's perspective might be prioritized differently (consistent with the notion of what's key for each individual), but these are the keys for me.clearly, the principles laid out in this book transcend golf and provide a framework for success in life.this is one of the few books of any kind that i am certain to re-read from start to finish -- it's really so powerful that you'll want to make sure you don't miss anything and are left with the right plan for you.

my one criticism is the book's format: several exemplarystories about golf professionals (nicklaus, woods, dimarco, stewart, toms, mickelson, etc etc) are inter-woventhroughout the chapters but in odd spots where if you want to read the story it interrupts the flow of the chapter or section.most of them are worth reading, however it would have been a lot better to put them at the end of sections to reinforce the point(s) that had just been fully articulated.

but that said this is clearly an instant classic and becomes the new standard that replaces the works on golf psychology that preceded it.

bravo gio!



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Review of Experimental Man: What One Man's Body Reveals about His Future, Your Health, and Our Toxic World (Hardcover)

In David Ewing Duncan's new book, "The Experimental Man", he takes us on an adventure through his own body that a mere decade ago would have been seen as science fiction, not science fact. A modern "Fantastic Voyage", we travel with David through a variety of tests that explores who we are and where are going.

Most people by now have heard an advertisement for fully body scans, genetic testing for markers, or genetic testing for family lineage. David Ewing Duncan has obviously decided to take this not just a few steps further, but leagues in the future-present and doing what many would be fearful of doing, taking the world along for the ride.

Not just a book of medical tests, medical capabilities, or the effects of the world on our bodies, this is a masterly crafted story of one man's odyssey of medically-enhanced self-discovery.

If you a wondering "Should I buy this or not?" stop hesitating. David Ewing Duncan's book is a must read and belongs on everyone's book shelf and will soon be the topic of discussion at every water cooler and social gathering.


Product Description
Bestselling author David Ewing Duncan takes the ultimate high-tech medical exam, investigating the future impact of what's hidden deep inside all of us

David Ewing Duncan takes "guinea pig" journalism to the cutting edge of science, building on award-winning articles he wrote for Wired and National Geographic, in which he was tested for hundreds of chemicals and genes associated with disease, emotions, and other traits. Expanding on these tests, he examines his genes, environment, brain, and body, exploring what they reveal about his and his family's future health, traits, and ancestry, as well as the profound impact of this new self-knowledge on what it means to be human.

David Ewing Duncan (San Francisco, CA) is the Chief Correspondent of public radio's Biotech Nation and a frequent commentator on NPR's Morning Edition. He is a contributing editor to Portfolio, Discover, and Wired and a columnist for Portfolio. His books include the international bestseller Calendar: Humanity's Epic Struggle to Determine a True and Accurate Year (978-0-380-79324-2). He is a former special producer and correspondent for ABC's Nightline, and appears regularly on CNN and programs such as Today and Good Morning America.

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Review of Me, Myself, and Bob: A True Story About God, Dreams, and Talking Vegetables (Hardcover)

Can 40-year-old Phil Vischer, creator of the astounding VeggieTales videos tell a great story in a heartfelt, yet entertaining, manner? Of course he can! And, he does. "Me, Myself, and Bob..." traces Vischer's personal history and gives readers insight into how the lovable Larry the Cucumber and Bob the Tomatoe rose to continue to have such a startling impact on a generation of young people and their families.

Using very touching anecdotes in a style the often punctuates with laughter, Vischer describes his early life in Muscatine, Iowa, his move to Illinois, and his college years. He shares the creative spark that developed from his friendship with Mike Nawrocki.

He also narrates in poignant detail the exciting rise and the devastating fall of the company he had lovingly developed to produce the VeggieTales videos.

Every young person growing up in a family devoted to the Lord Jesus Christ needs to read this book. Vischer has a unique ability to share his life experiences in a challenging and life-affirming manner. This story will help all young believers develop a firmer hold on the practicality of their faith in a real world.

This book will also motivate and entertain anyone who has a dream that remains unfulfilled. And, this book will speak words of both reality and hope to those who face challenges in their daily work environment.

I cannot recommend this book more highly. Vischer not only shares moments of spiritual renewal, he also offers clear and concise explanations of the lessons he learned from his business experiences.

Perhaps one of the most succinct summaries of the mindset of Phil Vischer comes from his statement: "Life is tricky. God gave us all the freedom to choose, and with that gift comes the freedom to choose poorly...But as I think you'll see in my story, God has an uncanny ability to redeem our mistakes. To use them for good."

In Chapter 21, Vischer carefully and insightfully shares some deep spiritual truths that he learned from the experience of seeing his dream come to life and then die. In a poignant yet powerful manner, he shares how God revealed His truth in a life-transforming way. Everyone who reads this book and arrives at this chapter, already filled with heart-wrenching identification with what Vischer experienced, will come away with a significant dose of hopefulness. For it is in this chapter that Vischer provides the "You see, Timmy" moment that flows to the heart of the meaning behind the journey.

May God indeed use this most excellent, funny, deeply moving, and practically inspiring narrative for good; to touch the lives of every reader.


Product Description
Larry. Bob. Archibald. These Veggie Tales stars are the most famous vegetables you'll ever eat. Oops, meet. Their antics are known around the world. But so much of the Veggie Tale story hasn't been told. In Me, Myself, and Bob, Phil Vischer, founder of Big Idea and creator of Veggie Tales, gives a behind-the-scenes look at his not-so-funny journey with the loveable veggies. From famed creator to bankrupt dreamer, Vischer shares his story of trial and ultimate triumph as God inspired him with one big idea after another.

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Review of Time Steps: My Musical Comedy Life (Hardcover)

All she's ever needed was the music and the mirror and the chance to dance for you . . . Musical theatre fans will always recognize the last lines of the 11 o'clock number from A Chorus Line. The show, returning to Broadway this month in it's first revival since it closed there after 6,137 performances in 1990, starred Donna McKechnie. In her autobio, co-authored by Greg Lawrence, who wrote Dancing with Demons, the definitive bio of Jerome Robbins, there is much to like. The book, however, is not without a few jarringly uncomfortable moments.
McKechnie discusses in painful detail her brief marriage to genius director-choreographer wunderkind Michael Bennett. Bennett was gay, and was self-centered in a way mere mortals can only think about. Words like `manipulative,' `duplicitous,' `greedy,' `ambitious,' not to say `cruel,' `evil,' `mean' and `without conscience' litter remembrances of Bennett. McKechnie explains she married him, thinking, in a musical comedy ingénue kind of way, that he would change--she had known him a long time before they married, having done three Broadway hits with him, but then tells the reader entirely too much about this horrible, painful and demeaning relationship.
She recounts her battle with crippling arthritis in vivid and moving terms. Imagine being one of the most celebrated dancers in the world, then being told that not only would you never dance again, but very possibly that you'd not be able to even walk within a year. Her triumph in this battle, using traditional and holistic medicine, faith and unfailing determination, is the high point in the book. The authors try to cram as many names in as few pages as possible, and sections read like a theatre program of professionals from the last 50 years. However, in the end, it becomes a sweet, lovely show-biz bio with a measure of style, wit and grace. The satisfaction and pride McKechnie has achieved in her life and career is evident throughout the book. It's interesting that McKechnie has played, in revivals, all three female leads in Follies; her autobiography keenly illustrates that, like Carlotta, Lord knows she was there, and she's still here.



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12/27/2009

Review of The Wisdom of Harvey Penick (Hardcover)

This book provides the best of Penick's great anecdotes.He has so manygolf related stories from his days of teaching, coaching, and assisting,and each one sheds a new perspective on this timeless game.His bestcontribution to golf writing is his ability to provide clear visuals inassociation with sound golfing principles.He doesn't leave the readingwondering how to implement an idea, but puts it in concrete terms byproviding examples from his own life as well as the people he coached. Apart from the wonderful golf tips, this is just a plain good read, whichborders on an autobiography.If you love the sport and you love life, youwill truly enjoy this book.

Product Description

When Ben Crenshaw sank his putt at the seventy-second hole for a one-shot victory in the 1995 Masters, he bent over, buried his face in his fingers for a moment, then wept in the arms of his caddie. This was Ben's way of telling the world that what he had just done was his own memorial to his great friend and mentor Harvey Penick, who had passed away almost exactly a week before. With Crenshaw's victory, every golfer, every lover of the game, joined Ben in giving thanks to the greatest golf teacher of all time.

Harvey Penick's life in golf began when he started caddying at the Austin Country Club in Texas at the youthful age of eight. Over the next eighty-plus years, he enlightened the members of that club with insights into golf and life. In 1992, at the age of eighty-seven, he offered the world that same wisdom in a timeless collection of pieces entitled Harvey Penick's Little Red Book. He followed that with three more books, all bestsellers, and all filled with thoughts, stories, and golf advice that had stood the test of time. Now, Bud Shrake, Harvey's friend and collaborator, gathers together the very best pointers, portraits, and parables from all four of Harvey's previous works. Filled with nuggets of wisdom from Harvey Penick's Little Red Book, And If You Play Golf, You're My Friend, For All Who Love the Game, and The Game for a Lifetime and enhanced with dozens of personal photographs and keepsakes from the Penick family scrapbooks, The Wisdom of Harvey Penick is a lasting treasure from the most beloved teacher in all of golf.

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Review of A Dictionary of Modern American Usage (Hardcover)

This is an amazing book! I use it every single time that I edit anything, and this is one book I don't mind carrying with me to clients' sites. Garner's book has extensive coverage of most aspects of our language,broken down by individual words and phrases; his thorough cross-referencinghelps the user successfully navigate throughout the entire book. Garnerprovides numerous examples of correct and incorrect usage of every wordcovered, and for each incorrect usage, he provides a suggested revision. Ifmore than one variation of a word usage or phrase is possible (e.g.,"different from" vs. "different than"), Garner tells the reader which termor phrase is used more frequently (or is more preferable) under whichcircumstances. It is so refreshing to see a book that provides so manyrewrites instead of just criticizing poor word usage/style; the rewritesalone provide invaluable assistance to the writer and editor alike. To topif off, Garner's writing style is humorous, friendly, and quiteapproachable-not a hint of arrogance or condescension. Garner's upbeat,helpful attitude, along with his citing of many examples of venerablepublications/authors erring in some way, makes it very difficult to feelbad about not knowing the proper usage of some word or phrase. My onlycriticism of his book is that he doesn't cover every single word or phrasethat vexes me-but this is a minor "nit" and doesn't occur often enough todeter me from using his book on a daily basis and recommending his book toall my colleagues.



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Review of Roadside Attractions: Cool Cafes, Souvenir Stands, Route 66 Relics, & Other Road Trip Fun (Hardcover)

There is so much going on in this book; it is busy and fun, and informative, and a hoot! It is real trip down Memory Lane. Cover is lively and enticing, print quality is nice, as is page size. It is clear the authors enjoy their work. Colors are crispy cool! I plan to buy several for Christmas gifts. If you took road trips when you were young, you're going to really enjoy being reminded of the quirky places along the way. If you never experienced road trips in the middle of last century, then read it anyway and find out what you missed, and what your parents and grandparents are talking about when they say they "took a trip". I'm the cute little girl in the convertible on page 69.
Roadside Attractions: Cool Cafés, Souvenir Stands, Route 66 Relics, & Other Road Trip Fun

Product Description
Hit the open road for fun and wackiness as the Butkos visit offbeat attractions from coast to coast - dinosaur parks, miniature golf courses, populuxe motels, vintage amusement arcades, classic diners illuminated in neon, and even the world's largest ball of twine. More than thirty fellow authors and artists offer their favourite attractions or recall memorable trips. Visitor information is included to help plan quick visits or an entire road trip.

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Review of Trailer Trashed: My Dubious Efforts Toward Upward Mobility (Hardcover)

At first I thought the title was purely creative, but once I started reading the book I realized Hollis really knows a thing or two about trailers, and is honestly sharing her life experiences as she climbs the ladder of success.The stories in this book are absolutely hilarious, and inspiring for anyone who likes to read about free spirited/creative/honest/successful people.



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Review of Culturing Live Foods: A Step-By-Step Guide to Producing Food for Your Home Aquarium (Hardcover)

This is a terrific, up-to-date resource by Mike Hellweg, a master fish breeder whose success with fish is built on his success in feeding his fish appropriate live foods.

I've been discussing the culture of various live foods with Mike for several years now, and studying a lot of what has been easily available on the internet, and even put together my own web page reviewing the techniques I've used with my own cultures.But this book has already given me new tips and tricks on creatures I thought I knew all about, and given me confidence to try some that I've failed with in the past. The details are just right to enable success with each organism, and there are good sources for more information if you want or need it.

This book is also an excellent primer on spawning fish, because several species are discussed as easily bred feeders for larger fish.Those are tips you can use to propagate those and related species for your own enjoyment even if you don't keep predatory fish.

I can't recommend this highly enough for the aquarist who wants to keep and spawn happy, healthy fish.


Product Description

Culturing Live Foods is an essential guide for hobbyists who want to feed their aquatic pets a natural diet. It includes up-to- date, authoritative information on the best bacteria, worms, crustaceans, plants, shrimps, insects, and more to offer as nutritious foods for one's fishes, whether they are larvae, juveniles, or full-grown adults. It is also the first book to devote in-depth coverage to recently adopted live foods like rotifers, cyclops, Walter worms, blackworms, Dero worms, Halocardina and Neocardina shrimp, and Mysis shrimp.

This comprehensive guide covers the most popular live foods for home aquaria, reviews their benefits, and gives step-by-step instructions on how to culture and harvest them. And not only does Culturing Live Foods focus on freshwater cultures, but it also includes cultures for saltwater aquaria. Also, some cultures detailed in the book can be used not only by aquarium hobbyists but also by amphibian and reptile hobbyists.

This exclusive one-stop source of culturing information is a welcome innovation to obtaining information that once could only be found on the Internet and in outdated books.



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12/26/2009

Review of The Autism Sourcebook: Everything You Need to Know About Diagnosis, Treatment, Coping, and Healing (Hardcover)

I have a loved one (nephew) that has been challenged with an Autistic Spectrum Disorder (ASD). I felt that reading this book would be informative as well as showing my support for the family. Well it was, and then some.

What surprises me is that it is not a dry and tedious read. Author Karen Siff Exkorn manages to explain technical, diagnostic and therapeutic terms and processes in intelligent and uncomplicated English. Make no mistake - this is not a dim-witted "Autism for Dummies" style book either.

It is clear that she has been through much, for only the voice of experience could have this veracity. I was intrigued to read about her family's personal experiences. Her stories and examples involving her son, Jake, are understated and not drenched in sentimentality. It added a very real and human dimension to the book.

The book has four sections:
-Diagnosis
-Treatment
-Coping
-Healing

It also includes a large and pragmatic appendix; covering areas such as diagnostic criteria, organizations, resources, recommended reading, and a glossary.

At the end of each section are questions and answers. I found myself reading the questions and thinking to myself "Hey, now there is a good one!" No stone was left unturned.

I think many parents and guardians will also appreciate chapter 7: "You Have the Power: Advocating for Your Child's Legal Rights". It is clear and practical information, loaded with parent's experiences and helpful tips on how to "work the system". There are a variety of programs and Siff Exkorn explains how to jump the hurdles and stay on top of it all.

There is an aspect often neglected by other books and articles regarding ASD: the emotional impact on the care-givers and the family. Siff Exkorn devoted much of the last two chapters to this very subject matter. Here she advocates taking care of ourselves, and ways to do it, so that we remain effective care-givers and create a content family life that includes a child with an ASD. It was reassuring to read that others have gone through similar experiences.

I am most grateful to Karen Siff Exkorn for authoring this much needed book, and would recommend it to anyone who has interest in the Autistic Spectrum Disorders.


Product Description

Practical advice and information from the world's foremost experts on autism -- and a mother's own hard-won lessons from helping her son recover from the disorder

When Karen Siff Exkorn's son, Jake, was diagnosed with autism, she struggled to pull together comprehensive information about the disorder. Fortunately, she was able to educate herself quickly, and her extensive at-home treatment of her son led to his amazing full recovery. But the journey wasn't easy, and now, in The Autism Sourcebook, Siff Exkorn offers parents the wisdom she wishes she'd had at the beginning.

Recent studies show that there is a worldwide epidemic of autism. More than 1.5 million people are affected in the United States alone, with one in every 166 children diagnosed. Early detection and early intervention are two of the key factors in improving prognosis -- but too often, writes Siff Exkorn, parents get bogged down in denial or confusion about the still mysterious disorder, and are unable to take the necessary steps. Providing accessible medical information gleaned from the world's foremost experts, Siff Exkorn offers an inside look at families with children who have autism, and ties in her own firsthand experience as a parent. The author shares valuable knowledge about the following:

  • What the diagnosis really means
  • Understanding and accessing treatment options
  • Knowing your child's rights in the school system
  • Coping with common marital and familial stress
  • Making the stigma of autism a thing of the past

With extensive appendices, including the Modified Checklist for Autism in Toddlers, Diagnostic Criteria for the Five Pervasive Developmental Disorders, and carefully selected lists of Internet resources, recommended readings, and top autism organizations worldwide, The Autism Sourcebook is the single most comprehensive, practical resource available to parents and loved ones of children with autism.



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12/25/2009

Review of Zen Golf: Mastering the Mental Game (Hardcover)

What's the point of golf?What are we trying to achieve while we're out there?Simply put, the point is to get the ball in the cup as quickly as possible and enjoy the process.I played a round early this summer, had an awful time, came off the course stressed and feeling bad about my behavior.I was literally hyperventalating over putts. Turns out I scored well.So something was amiss, right?This book has me enjoying the game again.Zen Golf is not a deep and difficult treatise of the deeper meaning of life and golf.It is closer to an instruction manual on how to play better golf and enjoy the game more.It addresses concepts like trust, confidence and positive thinking.I now enjoy those 3-iron punch shots out of the trees.I'm learning to enjoy those 5-footers.Every shot is an opportunity and there's no need for fear or negativity.My "evil caddie" seldom comes around, and when he does, I know what to do.This is simply the best golf book I've ever read.



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Review of Communicating for a Change: Seven Keys to Irresistible Communication (Hardcover)

A casual reader might glance through this book and think Stanley is suggesting watering down the gospel in an effort to be pragmatic.This is not accurate.This is not a book about Biblical exegesis or scholarship.This style of preaching does not preclude in depth study.Study for sermon preparation simply is not what this book is all about.

This is a book about delivery.About half of all younger Christians today attend the top 10% of churches.These churches have learned to communicate in ways that are simple and relational.We pastors need to speak in a language that people can understand.

I went through this book and applied its communication principles to a "test" sermon.My preparation was no different than I might have done at any other time, except my delivery intentionally followed patterns laid down in this book.The results were electric.People were engaged.They didn't want to leave after the message, and conversation continued as people slowly left for home.

These principles will not be comfortable for everyone, but they are still worth wrestling with.We pastors spend the largest portion of our lives preparing for or communicating publicly.We must constantly stretch and learn new methods.Buy the book.Read the book.If these principles do not fit your communication style, fine.But make sure you know why they don't fit and that you are correct.Don't refuse to consider them just because they are new and novel.

Product Description
When You Talk, Are People Changed?

Whether you speak from the pulpit, podium, or the front of a classroom, you don't need much more than blank stares and faraway looks to tell you you're not connecting. Take heart before your audience takes leave! You can convey your message in the powerful, life-changing way it deserves to be told. An insightful, entertaining parable that's an excellent guide for any speaker, Communicating for a Change takes a simple approach to delivering effectively. Join Pastor Ray as he discovers that the secrets to successful speaking are parallel to the lessons a trucker learns on the road. By knowing your destination before you leave (identifying the one basic premise of your message), using your blinkers (making transitions obvious), and implementing five other practical points, you'll drive your message home every time!

"Long ago, in a galaxy far, far away…"

"Once upon a time…"

"In the beginning…"

Great stories capture and hold an audience's attention from start to finish. Why should it be any different when you stand up to speak?

In Communicating for a Change, Andy Stanley and Lane Jones offer a unique strategy for communicators seeking to deliver captivating and practical messages. In this highly creative presentation, the authors unpack seven concepts that will empower you to engage and impact your audience in a way that leaves them wanting more.

"Whether you are a senior pastor with weekly teaching responsibilities or a student pastor who has bern charged with engaging the hearts and minds of high school students, this book is a must-read."

Bill Hybels

Senior pastor, Willow Creak Community Church



"A very practical resource for every biblical communicator who wants to go from good to great."

Ed Young

Senior pastor, Fellowship Church, Grapevine, Texas

"To communicate effectively, you have to connect. Andy has been connecting with people for years, and now he's sharing his insights with the rest of us."

Jeff Foxworthy

Comedian

INSIDE LEFT FLAP

In Communicating for a Change, Andy Stanley shares the seven imperatives that define his approach to challenging people's minds in order to change their lives: Determine Your Goal Pick a Point Create a Map Internalize the Message Engage Your Audience Find Your Voice Start All Over

These seven concepts will simplify your approach to communication and transform your sermons, lessons, and presentations into powerful life-changing experiences for your listeners.



Story Behind the Book

Andy Stanley and Lane Jones are on staff at one of America 's largest churches, North Point Community. Leaders of thousands of people, they regularly speak in front of large groups. They also listen to numerous speakers and know the disastrous effects of a poorly delivered message. This book is the result of their efforts to make public speaking-one of the most common fear-inducing activities known to mankind-simple, easy, and even enjoyable, so that God's messages will readily produce the life-changing results they should.

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Review of Carolina Harmony (Hardcover)

After reading Carolina Harmony I was taken back to the days where I was a child in North Carolina.Marylin Taylor McDowell has created a beautiful story.I couldn't put it down.I look forward to the next book from Marylin Taylor Mcdowell.



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Review of I'd Be Your Princess: A Royal Tale of Godly Character (Hardcover)

Wonderfully written by Kathryn O'Brien and nicely illustrated by Michael Garland, I'd Be Your Princess: A Royal Tale Of Godly Character is a picturebook for Christian children. It tells of the bond between father and daughter. The daughter imagines what it would be like to be royalty, while the father encourages positive traits and good character. Each two-page spread also features an appropriate quote from Biblical scripture such as "Show proper respect to everyone" (1 Peter 2:17) or "Be kind and compassionate to one another." (Ephesians 4:32). An uplifting parable of human virtues to strive for, that combines religious values with positive and enriching principles to guide one's life.


Product Description
Includes recitations and poems plus longer plays and programs selected especially for children to perform for groups large and small. All new! Entirely reproducible!

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12/24/2009

Review of Corkscrewed: Adventures in the New French Wine Country (At Table) (Hardcover)

When I lived in Napa, I saw the sad, inevitable industrial takeover of the wine community. Now the moneymen mass produce thousands of acres of mediocre cabernet or zinfandel in the Central Valley and slap a label with the word "Napa" on it to inflate the price.They doctor their mediocrity with wood chips and flavored yeasts.Some regions of France are losing their integrity to this bottom feeding mentality. Robert Camuto, like Kermit Lynch and director Jonathan Nossiter (Mondovino), seeks out the people who are wrestling the soul of wine away from the people and places that would sell it to the highest bidder.Corkscrewed hits it on the head with his uneasiness at the rote tasting sessions at Vinexpo.From there he takes us with him on his voyages of discovery, not as an expert but as a wine lover.He conjures images of the real, the genuine, the natural and the heartfelt in each of his visits to various wine regions in France.His comical, bacchus-possessed visit to the most over-the-top wine event in the world, the auction at les Hospices de Beaune, makes you realize that the Burgundians have somehow maintained their integrity in spite of the world wide clamor for pinot noir.His journey with the peasant (et fier d'etre!) in the ArdĂȘche and that region's rediscovery of chatus, provides hope.The stories and survival of these intense, impassioned winemakers are essential for any wine lover.



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Review of Comprehensive Human Physiology: From Cellular Mechanisms to Integration (Two-Volume Set) (Hardcover)

At the time that I bought the books, I thought "My goodness!". But as I read it, I understood why. The authors didn't leave any equation out of view. They even made them understandable.

Product Description
Universitat Freiburg, Germany. Extensive text on physiology for advanced students or for practitioners as a reference. Emphasizes both molecular and systems approaches. Halftone illustrations and line drawings with color shading. 104 contributors, 29 U.S.

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Review of Daughters of the Moon: The Choice - Book #9 (Daughters of the Moon) (Hardcover)

Jimena and her best friends Serena, Catty, Tianna, and Vanessa are at a rock concert, having a blast, when suddenly the Atrox itself appears. Which has never happened before. Usually the evil being sends others in its place.

Suddenly Jimena's friends are sucked into the dark cloud, disappearing without a trace. Catty, before she can be taken in as well, takes Jimena back into the past to try and have her change the future. But Catty made a mistake in her panic. She accidentally drops her friend right into enemy territory--Wilshire Blvd. Jimena soon is confronted by her old rival, Payasa, one chola with an attitude.

Then, things go from bad to worse. Jimena is sent to juvenile detention camp after she is wrongly accused and arrested for an esctasy bust. How can she help her friends when she's in jail?!

This book was incredible. I stayed up until around 2 in the morning finishing it. But.. I hope the series isn't coming to an end just yet!!! The next book is 'The talisman', which is taken from Maggie's (the Daughters' mentor and guide) view. 'What!? No Catty?' I thought. Well, Catty fans, there is quite a bit of her in this installment, though it's from Jimena's point of view, so don't worry.

Product Description
In a reckless attempt to change the future, Catty drops Jimena into her troubled past-and into dangerous territory for the ex-gang member. As Jimena runs for her life, she is caught by the police and put in jail. There she is further threatened by a new type of Follower with a shape-changing power she is unable to resist. Her only choice is to break out of jail and hide out with a most unlikely ally-her old gang rival, Payasa. Together they have to save the other Daughters of the Moon before Jimena's most terrifying premonition comes true.

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12/23/2009

Review of Hound Dog: The Leiber & Stoller Autobiography (Hardcover)

The Jerry Lieber and Mike Stoller autobiography reads like one of their records... great, intoxicating, and wishing it didn't end, and if there is a fault to the book, that is it.But, who can rate a book badly for leaving you with a taste for more?

Anyone who has listen to a radio in the last 50 years has certainly heard one of L&S's compositions.Their music is legendary and has become the staple of the music world.

L&S have written an interesting and factual presentation that gives you some great insight into their personalities, creative process, and the people they have associated with during the early years of R&R.

Their recollections of writing for Elvis Presley, their first association with Phil Spector, their partnership with Atlantic Records, and even their run-in with the Mafia are all interesting but disappointingly, too briefly told.

Undoubtedly a thoroughly researched biography would have further extended the tales regarding the two, but this book does an admirable job of giving the reader a feel for the early developments in the music industry, and the people associated with it. Generally, the book is easy and fun to read, especially if you have any interest in all in the founders of rock and roll.On the other hand, it leaves you with a feeling you are seeing a half-painted picture.You know there's more there.



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Review of Offices at Work: Uncommon Workspace Strategies that Add Value and Improve Performance (Jossey Bass Business and Management Series) (Hardcover)

Offices at work is a practical guide to designing contemporary offices. However, most of the concepts are freely available as earlier work by the author on his website.



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Review of The Last Lecture [DECKLE EDGE] (Hardcover)

One of the staples of "the college experience" at many schools is the "last lecture" --- a beloved professor sums up a lifetime of scholarship and teaching as if he/she were heading out the door for the last time. It's the kind of tweed-jacket-with-elbow-patches talk that may or may not impart useful knowledge and lasting inspiration, but almost surely gives all present some warm and fuzzy feelings.

But a "last lecture" by Randy Pausch was different in every possible way. The professor of Computer Science, Human Computer Interaction, and Design at Carnegie Mellon University was just 46, and this really was his last lecture --- he was dying.

And dying fast. In the summer of 2006, Pausch had been diagnosed with pancreatic cancer, a ferociously efficient killer. Only 4% of its victims are alive five years after diagnosis. Most die much faster. Think months, not years.

Pausch fought back. Surgery. Chemo. Progress. But in August of 2007, the cancer returned --- and now it had metastasized to his liver and spleen. The new prognosis: 3-6 months of relative health, then a quick dispatch to the grave, leaving behind a wife and three little kids.

On September 18, 2007 --- less than a month later --- Randy Pausch gave his last lecture.

No one would have faulted him for launching a blast about desperately seizing opportunities in an irrational universe. Instead, Pausch delivered a laugh-filled session of teaching stories about going after your childhood dreams and helping others achieve theirs and enjoying every moment in your life --- even the ones that break your heart. Pausch's philosophy, in brief: "We cannot change the cards we are dealt, just how we play the hand."

The lecture was taped, and slapped up on YouTube. Jeffrey Zaslow wrote about it in The Wall Street Journal, and news shows made Pausch "person of the week" --- and soon Pausch had a book deal reported to be worth almost $7 million.Few expected him to be alive when it was published.

On February 19, I interviewed Randy Pausch for Reader's Digest. To the surprise of many --- including Pausch --- he was still his recognizable, energetic self. As I write (in early April, 2008), Pausch reports he's recovering from a standing eight count. But his good news doesn't deceive him. He notes that pancreatic cancer did to the photographer Dith Pran ("The Killing Fields") what Pol Pot couldn't --- it buried him in three months.

And now we have the book. It's two books, really, because it reads one way with the author still among us and will surely read differently when "The Last Lecture" is like the The Butterfly and the Diving Bell --- the record of a dead man, talking. The first book invites your support and gives you a wake-up call. The second, I suspect, is also a wake-up call but, between the lines, reminds you that even happiness can't save you from death.

Somewhere in between --- in the quiet space where a book really lives --- is a document that accomplishes a lot in 200 pages. It's about paying attention to what you think is important (when asked how he got tenure early, Pausch replied, "Call me at my office at 10 o'clock on Friday night and I'll tell you") and working hard and listening really well. It's easy to miss that last part of that in the emotion and the stories surrounding this book, but Pausch argues that hearing what other people say about you and your work is crucial to success and happiness. Because this is what you get: "a feedback loop for life."

So, if you must, shed your tears for Randy Pausch. Imagine what it would be like if you or your dearest loved one drew the card called pancreatic cancer. And then put dying aside, and get on with your dreams. Amazing how many you can achieve if you want them badly enough. And how they have the power to cushion the pain when the bad stuff happens.

Sounds crazy, I know: Pollyanna in the cancer ward. But I talked with the guy. And we laughed and laughed. Of all the achievements in a life that's winding down, that's got to be up there.





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Review of Grey Griffins #1: The Revenge Of The Shadow King (Hardcover)

Max Sumner is a very rich kid in the small town of Avalon, Minnesota whose parents have just divorced.He lives with his mom and baby sister who is 18 months old.This summer Max wouldn't have anything to do if it weren't for his friends Harley, Ernie and Natalia.They all meet at Mr. Iverson's store "Shoppe of Antiquities" to play a card game Mr. Iverson taught and is teaching them called Round Table.I imagine this is much like the Magic fantasy game my older sons played.

The four friends call themselves the Grey Griffins and love to meet in their tree clubhouse or each other's homes.Max loves going to his grandmother's home to spend the night.While there he discovers a magical book and accidentally lets loose a mischievous faerie called a spriggan that is also a shape shifter!She tricks him into releasing an evil thing called a Shadow and from then on the adventures and excitement are non-stop!

I read this book at the request of my 7th grade son who bought it at a school book fair.It is very well done and I can see why he looks forward to the next installment!

For parents, I also loved this book as the authors did not feel the need to put in vulgar and offensive language!!It is so refreshing to have a book that you KNOW is fine for your son/daughter to read.So many of the so-called young adult books these days have alot of swearing, smoking, drinking, etc. even if the characters are as young as these.

A pleasure!!



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Review of Dark Child: A Novel (Zane Presents) (Hardcover)

I thorougly enjoyed this novel and highly recommend it as a must read!
Every character is developed just enough and believable. Thanks for this realistic plot that will have people from all walks of life discussing a very controversial issue.

Product Description
When poor babies wind up missing, no one seems to care.

Urban Brown is a white man who grew up in the dark recesses of the inner city where he was the victim of torment, abuse, abandonment, deception and murder. Urban overcame his horrid past to live a peaceful and prosperous existence in his upper-class community. He has everything a man could ask for: a career, which he loves; a sprawling estate and a drop-dead gorgeous fiancée, Sierra. Then out of the blue, he receives a phone call that changes his life.

Jamillah is Urban's sister, and unlike her brother, she wasn't able to overcome the horrors of her past and turned to drugs to ease the pain. Life on the streets is hard enough, but once a baby comes along, she tries to sell him on the black market. Urban won't hear any of it, and he and Sierra resolve to raise the child as their own. But upon further investigation, Urban realizes that his sister is involved in a dark and sinister scheme to steal black babies from poor girls in small, rural towns and sell them to the highest bidders. As Urban digs deeper and deeper into the kidnapping network, he gets dangerously close to the heart of the matter and is disgusted and disheartened by what he discovers.

Dark Child is a chilling story about the untold struggles of the disenfranchised that inspiringly illustrates how one man is not able to turn his back on the problems of his former community -- even though he so desperately wants to leave that troubled place in his past forever.

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12/22/2009

Review of Amateur Barbarians: A Novel (Hardcover)

No other contemporary author (or at least the ones I read and know of anyway) writes the way Robert Cohen does. He crafts the most beautiful, thought-provoking sentences I have ever seen. He can string out metaphor upon metaphor without ever overdoing it. To read his prose is to constantly marvel at the fertility of his imagination and the masterfulness of his artistry. His intricate sentences are never obtuse and always endowed with a light touch that keeps you chuckling as you digest the steady diet of brilliant insights.

In this novel, he explores the inner lives of two men -- Teddy Hastings, a 50-year-old disgraced principal of a middle school in northern New England, and Oren Pierce, a feckless 30-year-old who replaces him during Teddy's temporary forced "sabbatical." On the surface it's the tale of one man suffering a major mid-life crisis, while the younger man tries to gain a foothold on adulthood after years of living without direction and enduring numerous false starts. The novel is told from their alternating perspectives, although one chapter deviates from that as we go inside the head of Teddy's daughter Mimi on a night she's out partying with her high school friends. After so many pages of deep insight into the male psyche, it's a marvel to witness how effectively Cohen gets inside the head of a teenaged girl as she drinks with her friends and grows tired of an overly solicitous boyfriend, whose solicitudes are no more than selfish demands for attention and praise.

The novel has some intriguing twists along the way. Without giving too much away, there is a wonderful exploration halfway in of why Teddy got into trouble and had to spend several nights in a jail. Let's just say he "suffered for his art" in the midst of becoming obsessed over his homework for an adult-ed photography class. Teddy's wife Gail also plays a key role in the novel -- both in Teddy's life and Oren's, but I won't say more to avoid revealing some of the plot turns in the book.

The path of Teddy's mid-life crisis takes him to Africa, originally in pursuit of his oldest daughter, who took a junior year abroad and then decided not to come back while hopping her way across Asia and East Africa. One of the media reviews suggested the novel is squarely in "Updike country" but in my knowledge of Updike (admittedly limited to the first two Rabbit books) he never left American suburbia to explore East Africa. The passages as Teddy accompanies a doctor on his rounds through various towns and into a desert are breathtaking -- particularly the descriptions of a visit to the walled city of Harar, Ethiopia, and a local shaman who tames wild hyena with raw meat dangling from his mouth.

Like most literary novels, it's a character-charged, not plot-driven, story. The greatest joy in turning these pages is having your eyes awakened to the beautiful ways the author describes and paints everyday life. He captures prosaic moments with such poetically wrought prose. Witness the words he can put behind the simple joys of opening a new purchase (in this case a camera): "Just opening the cardboard gave him pleasure. The cheerful snap of the bubbled plastic. The squeal of goods being extracted from their Styrofoam harnesses."

As I mentioned above, there's plenty of humor -- some of the funniest scenes occur in classrooms, as Oren tries to lead a discussion of a Hawthorne short story with his uninterested middle school students, and Teddy's witheringly funny observations about the obvious inexperience and incompetence of a teacher trying to lead his photography class. ("The stuttering, overemphatic gestures, the extraneous digression about this guy Rimbaud, the way she kept looking down at her note cards like a game-show host, shuffling them in search of an answer -- he'd seen all these signs and symptoms before: the novice pedagogue in over her head.") This scene reminded me of a hysterically humorous piece in his story collection, The Varieties of Romantic Experience: Stories, when an on-the-verge-of-losing-it professor gives his students a blow-by-blow account, via a classroom lecture, of his failed affair with a graduate assistant. (The seeds of this novel were also planted in another story from that collection about a man who gets himself into trouble after enrolling in an adult ed. photography class.) The thoughts here about how Teddy could create interesting photos from ordinary items around his house - like empty hangers in the bottom of a closet -- made me want to break out my own camera and start chronicling the ephemera of my family's daily life.

As is clear by now, I'm a huge fan of Robert Cohen's. If you love elegant, mind-expanding fiction delivered with gentle humor, he's your man. If you enjoy this novel, I can strongly recommend his story collection and three previous novels, The Organ Builder, The HERE AND NOW, and Inspired Sleep: A Novel.

In a sidebar note, I hope The New York Times Sunday Book Review write-up will bring the novel some well-deserved attention. While the reviewer praised much of the novel, he seemed more interested in laying out his expectations of what novels on male mid-life crises should be and wondering why Teddy didn't suffer some sort of major consequence for stumbling through his confusion about who he is and the path his life has taken. I think novels that leave you feeling bleak and hopeless because of some catastrophic consequence - death, murder, abandonment, maybe? - of your self-absorbed actions are very different types of books. If you're looking for less sensationalism and just more insight into the everyday aftermath of disappointing your loved ones and failing to maintain deep, enduring connections (and how hard it is to avoid either), then this is the novel to read.

If you'd like to watch a video of the author talking about this book, search his name and the novel's title on YouTube -- there's a five minute video of an interview he did with a New York radio station. An audio recording of the full 15- minute interview is available on www.wnyc.org in transcripts of the Leonard Lopate show.



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