Monday, May 31, 2010

Discount Bird by Bird: Some Instructions on Writing and Life


Anne Lamott has written a delightful guide to some of the more intangible aspects of writing and what to expect, should one wish to embark on the path of a writer. As has been said many times before, this is not a "how to" treatise. What I do like about the book is that it speaks from the author's perspective. She reveals her life to the reader in, at times, a neurotic and overwhelming manner, but she is always honest. After you read the book, you feel like you know Lamott and have gone on some of her more exciting escapades as a writer.

I would certainly recommend this book for anyone who wishes to write and anyone who loves to read. The author is as honest and open as she can be for a book on writing. Ultimately, it this inside peek into her head that invites the reader to view Ms. Lamott's life as a writer and gain some semblance of a complex and interesting individual.Get more detail about Bird by Bird: Some Instructions on Writing and Life.

Cheapest I Hope They Serve Beer In Hell


If you want to read good fun humor, then read this book. If you want to read literature, then read Twain. Tucker has either lived a great life, or has quite the imagination. Thanks for the laughs.Get more detail about I Hope They Serve Beer In Hell.

Cheap My Life in France


Now that I've got your attention ... I was shocked when I saw this edition. I have it on my Kindle and was satisfied with this even though the pictures are hard to make out. This paperback was bought for my mother, who's afraid she might break the Kindle if she used it. But there were no photos of the real Julia Child, her husband, her friends and family, or even of her kitchen and cat. I would advise someone who wants a copy of this book to buy one with the pictures. I blame the publisher for this mistake and what a whopper of a mistake it is!Get more detail about My Life in France.

Sunday, May 30, 2010

Buying The Age of Wonder.



While explaining "how the Romantic generation discovered the beauty and terror of science," Richard Holmes focuses on what "became the first great age of the public scientific lecture, the laboratory demonstration and the introductory textbook, often written by women. It was the age when science began to be taught to children, and the `experimental method' became the basis of a new, secular philosophy of life, in which the infinite wonders of Creation (whether divine or not) were increasingly valued for their own sake...Finally, it was the age which challenged the elite monopoly of the Royal Society, and saw the foundation of scores of new scientific institutions, mechanics institutes and `philosophical' societies."

Although Holmes poses and then responds to hundreds of questions or has others do so, "the book remains a narrative, a piece of biographical storytelling. It tries to capture something of the inner life of science, its impact on the heart, as well as on the mind. In the broadest sense it aims to present scientific passion, so much if it which is summed up in that childlike, but infinitely complex word, [begin italics] wonder [end italics]."

In the Epilogue, offering an especially eloquent and compelling conclusion to his book, Holmes acknowledges that "there is a particular problem with finding endings in science. Where do these science stories really finish? Science is truly a relay race, with each discovery handed on to the next generation. Even as one door is closing, another door is already being thrown open....

"But science is now continually reshaping its history retrospectively. It is starting to look back and rediscover its beginnings, its earliest traditions and triumphs, but also its debates, its uncertainties and its errors...Similarly, it seems to me impossible to understand fully the contemporary debates about the environment, or climate change, or genetic engineering, or alternative medicine, or extraterrestrial life, or the future of consciousness, or even the existence of God, without knowing how these arose from the hopes and anxieties of the Romantic generation.

"But perhaps most important, right now, is the changing appreciation of how scientists themselves fit into society as a whole, and the nature of the particular creativity they bring to it. We need to consider how they are increasingly vital to any culture of progressive knowledge, to the education of young people (and the not so young), and to our understanding of the planet and its future. Foe this, I believe science needs to be presented and explored in a new way. We need not only a new history of science, but an enlarged and imaginative biographical writing about individual scientists...

"The old, rigid debates and boundaries - science versus religion, science versus the arts, science versus traditional ethics - are no longer enough. We should be impatient with them. We need a wider, more generous, more imaginative perspective. Above all, perhaps, we need the three things that a scientific culture can sustain: the sense of individual wonder, the power of hope, and the vivid but questing belief in a future for the globe. And that is how this book might possibly end." And indeed so it does.

Congratulations to Richard Holmes on a brilliant achievement. Bravo!Get more detail about The Age of Wonder..

Buy North by Northwestern: A Seafaring Family on Deadly Alaskan Waters


An interesting read. I reconstructed weather for several Bering Sea disasters as a consulting meteorologist and Sig's description of how the crew coped was good to hear. As a viewer of the Deadliest Catch, this brings more insight as to the crabber's lives.Get more detail about North by Northwestern: A Seafaring Family on Deadly Alaskan Waters.

Purchase Bonhoeffer: Pastor, Martyr, Prophet, Spy




"Who stands fast? Only the man whose final standard is not his reason, his principles, his conscience, his freedom, or his virtue, but who is ready to sacrifice all this when he is called to obedient and responsible action in faith and in exclusive allegiance to God - the responsible man, who tries to make his whole life an answer to the question and call of God."

That quote from Dietrich Bonhoeffer says so much about the man you come to know in a powerful way through the writing of Eric Mataxas in Bonhoeffer: Pastor, Martyr, Prophet, Spy. Bonhoeffer is a man I became acquainted with over 25 years ago in seminary as we read portions of The Cost of Discipleship and Life Together. Therefore I was familiar with his story and writings. But Mataxas took me beyond all of that in a powerful way!

To see Bonhoeffer's faith in relationship to the times and struggles he was part of, makes the reader think much about their own faith! That is exactly the kind of biography I love to read and Eric Metaxas has hit the mark. When I can read a biography that leads me to look at and examine my own life and faith, I know the author has done a great job of pulling me in. And Metaxas did that from the beginning.

The resources that Metaxas had into Bonhoeffer's life brings out parts of his life, family, and faith that have not been seen in other writings. And that is part of what makes this biography so appealing.

So whether you are familiar or not with Dietrich Bonhoeffer, I strongly recommend picking up a copy. This is one that can profoundly change your life!

Get more detail about Bonhoeffer: Pastor, Martyr, Prophet, Spy.

Order Edison: His Life and Inventions


I thought this was a good overview of his life, but being from Port Huron there are some mistakes in the book. The most glaring mistake is that he was thrown off the train at Mount Clemens. It didn't happen there. He was thrown off the train at SMITH'S CREEK!Get more detail about Edison: His Life and Inventions.

Saturday, May 29, 2010

Where To Buy I Am Ozzy


All of this has been covered to many times already, Sabbath made Ozzy then replaced him with a better song writer/singer and Ozzy began making pop metal album....nuff said.Get more detail about I Am Ozzy.

Shop For Mennonite in a Little Black Dress: A Memoir of Going Home


I kept getting the feeling that this woman is very angry and hiding her anger behind what she tries to disguise as humor. But sarcasm and making fun of people is anger, not humor. Also, the author's almost manic attempt at turning everything into a funny story became quite annoying. Even the video featured here shows her smiling inappropriately while talking about incidents which are not funny, perhaps a way of protecting herself from the actual facts of her life. Her family must not be too pleased with this book and would probably have preferred Ms. Janzen had spent a few years in therapy coming to grips with her anger before writing a book.

I'm giving the book 3 stars because, in spite of what I've said above, this book was interesting enough to keep me reading.Get more detail about Mennonite in a Little Black Dress: A Memoir of Going Home.

Team of Rivals: The Political Genius of Abraham Lincoln


Team of Rivals is a classic history book. It is well written and illustrates an important time in our contry's history.Get more detail about Team of Rivals: The Political Genius of Abraham Lincoln.

The Middle Place Review


I loved Kelly Corrigan's other book Lift so much I had to read this one too, and although I did not love it as much I did love it. I love her writing style, and her honesty. I too felt like an actor reading a role upon having my first child, and while becoming an adult. She writes with such insight, and I would be anxious to see how she wrote a fiction book. This memoir filled me with many happy moments and sad one, but one feeling was predominant, and that was a feeling of hope.Get more detail about The Middle Place.

Friday, May 28, 2010

Jane Eyre Top Quality


I was a bit disappointed in the illustrations for two reasons. First, they are not the ones I remember from the original. Second, they are very much based on the old Welles/Fontaine movie--a version which was OK as these things go, but not the greatest intrpretation. The captions do follow the story fairly well.Get more detail about Jane Eyre.

Every Day in Tuscany: Seasons of an Italian Life (Thorndike Press Large Print Nonfiction Series) This instant


Like many, I loved Francis Mayes' Under the Tuscan Sun, but her sequels just aren't as good. Every Day in Tuscany: Seasons of an Italian Life follows the downward trend. Some of the same elements that made Tuscan Sun a winner are there: beautiful prose, well-drawn landscapes, charming local characters, great recipes, but there is a lack of narrative thread to pull the whole thing together. What the reader is left with is a rambling, somewhat self-indulgent memoir. If you're huge fan of Mayes or a lover of everything Italian, then you might be happy with this book. Otherwise, check out Tim Parks' Italian Neighbors.Get more detail about Every Day in Tuscany: Seasons of an Italian Life (Thorndike Press Large Print Nonfiction Series).

Mountains Beyond Mountains: The Quest of Dr. Paul Farmer, a Man Who Would Cure the World (Random House Reader's Circle) Immediately


An excellent read. I got a great feel for life in Haiti. Dr. Farmer had a passion for providing a cure for the ill with TB and HIV,even if just for one person. However, his work affected thousands of people, mostly in Haiti but also in Peru, Cuba and Russia. Tracey Kidder, the author, travelled with Dr. Kidder for about 3 years.Get more detail about Mountains Beyond Mountains: The Quest of Dr. Paul Farmer, a Man Who Would Cure the World (Random House Reader's Circle).

Wives of the Signers Best Quality


Just because their names were not on the official documents that organized our country doesn't mean that women did not take a part. I think they have often been overlooked by history, but this book brings to light their sacrifices and challenges in support of our great nation. It is a good example for todays women, that there is honor in standing for what is right and raising strong successful families. Too often todays women need their name displayed in shining lights to prove to themselves that they've done something great. The women behind our Founding Fathers took pride and pleasure in the success of their families and the changes taking place in America because of their silent but profound sacrifices on our behalf. Inspiring!Get more detail about Wives of the Signers.

My Stroke of Insight: A Brain Scientist's Personal Journey Get it now!


The book begins with a heart breaking story, the story of a young scientist dedicated to understand the secrets of human brain because of a brother with mental health problems. She was so involved in her cause that she was actively looking for actual human brains: human brains from people with mental health problems to analyze the brain tissue in her lab to be able better understand the problem at the organ, tissue, neurochemical and even molecular level. She was driven by her desire to better understand the human brain to be able to help her brother and other people like her brother. She was willing to do anything and everything to be able to better understand the human brain.
Her prayers were answered. God had a bigger plan for her. He wanted to bless her and the scientific community with a better idea to reveal more about the human brain than that could be obtained by just cutting open human brains. He wanted her to live it and experience it herself.
As explained in the book "The Secrets of Modern Medicine Revealed", only your own body and your own mind has the unique ability to know what is happening with you. No matter how advanced the technology used to do the scan, no medical scan can obtain the most important clue to the correct diagnosis. The most important piece of information that helps to make the correct diagnosis is what the patient actually tells the doctor. Only the patient's body has the ability to tell the patient about what is going on inside the patient's body by making the patient feel pain, discomfort and other symptoms in a unique way. Normally, the doctor tries to explore these clues by asking the patient very detailed questions about the symptoms to try to find out what is happening inside the patient's body. Now, what happens when the patient herself is a medical scientist specializing in the study of human brain and something actually happens to her brain?
That is exactly what happened to Dr. Jill. She woke up one day with a blood vessel in her brain ruptured. She was diagnosed with a type of stroke that could have easily killed her. Instead, she struggled with it for a long time and in the end came out of it stronger and more enlightened than before. She gained the type of knowledge from this experience that she could not have been able to obtain by cutting open dead brains. With her interesting and easy to understand writing style, she has been very successful in sharing this knowledge with her readers. This is a rare opportunity for all of us to better understand the most important organ of our body- our brain.

Thank You


N Sapkota, MDGet more detail about My Stroke of Insight: A Brain Scientist's Personal Journey.

Thursday, May 27, 2010

Animal, Vegetable, Miracle: A Year of Food Life (P.S.) Buy Now


This book has reinforced what I believe is a way to end hunger and eat healthy at the same time. Growing your own food and eating/buying locally reinforces community as well as helping to develop a healthy local and global economy.
The authors also reinforce already known facts about huge and powerful global agribusinesses and gives new information concerning their affect on global hunger, fossil fuel needs, and the economies of our world.

I would highly recommend this book to anyone who cares about good health of our bodies and local--as well as global--economies.Get more detail about Animal, Vegetable, Miracle: A Year of Food Life (P.S.).

I Am Nujood, Age 10 and Divorced Order Now


Nujood, who lives in Yemen, is married off with her father's permission and insistence, at the age of only 10. Her husband agrees to wait until she has reached puberty to consummate the marriage, but he's lying, and Nujood is suddenly in a situation where she is completely and utterly alone, with no one to defend her but herself.

The only thing I didn't care for is that the book switches settings and times, back and forth, regularly, denoted by the use of present and past tense. It appears this has been done to keep what some might believe is the most interesting part of the story going throughout the book. I personally wouldn't mind the entire book being in past tense and chronological, but this is merely personal preference.

The voice in the book is very authentic for a girl this age, despite her having a co-writer and translator. It's amazing that, being raised in a society where women have little say, as demonstrated especially in her sister's kidnapping and her father's second wife's living circumstances, Nujood would have the strength to fight back against the situation she is placed in. My heart goes out to her, and the many other girls who have the same fate, but aren't fortunate enough to find a way out of it.

There is no happily-ever-after ending here, but one can only hope there will be a sequel, years from now, that shows Nujood able to live out the dreams she so deserves to have come true. (Note: I received this book free from the publisher, but was not required to write a review.)Get more detail about I Am Nujood, Age 10 and Divorced.

A Million Miles in a Thousand Years: What I Learned While Editing My Life Decide Now


Donald Miller seems to be going through a midlife crisis. Given his age and accomplishments, this should be no surprise. It seems that he is dealing with the reality that success does not satisfy and he is now looking for experiences and relationships to provide meaning in his life. It is not a bad wakeup call for all of us to review what it is we are spending our resources on. The book is filled with Miller's great writing, finding humor in everyday things. There are also plenty of touching stories of those in his life who have faced obstacles and those who have lived creatively. If you have enjoyed Miller's other books you will love his most recent offering.Get more detail about A Million Miles in a Thousand Years: What I Learned While Editing My Life.

Fighter Pilot: The Memoirs of Legendary Ace Robin Olds Right now


Legendary fighter pilot telling the Air Force's true story in a compelling and 'down-to-earth' style. I was truly proud to be part of the USAF's fighter pilot force in SEA and can attest to Robin Olds' influence even when I participated in 1971. His story is about dedication, daring and real achievement in a time in our history when we needed his insightful leadership. For me, the book has filled in many gaps in my perceptions of the time; a must read.Get more detail about Fighter Pilot: The Memoirs of Legendary Ace Robin Olds.

Lowest Price Man's Search for Meaning


Viktor Frankl's Man's Search For Meaning lays the foundation for all of his other works as well as for his brand of psychotherapy, Logotherapy. For me it was one of those books which influenced my life forever and a book I go back to and read again. Based on Frankl's own experiences in Hitler's death camps and on the blackness of the Holocaust in general, it offers hope. It would be hard to read this book without changing one's life for the better. Frankl was a psychiatrist, but he was also a man who suffered deeply and turned that suffering into something positive.

Elisabeth Skoglund, author of Divine RecyclingGet more detail about Man's Search for Meaning.

Wednesday, May 26, 2010

Low Price George Washington


This volume gives a short factual bio of the great man. The author dispels some of the myths of the generals childhood and paints a picture of a man who was greater than life. Published in 1922 the book is somewhat dated in language but I believe that the story is told better than it would be by modern revisionist historians.Get more detail about George Washington.

Save Open: An Autobiography


What a fantastic book! I have never followed Andre Agassi, or tennis for that matter, but heard this book got wonderful reviews so I thought I'd check it out. I had no idea how engaging this incredible book would be. I could not put it down! It is an extremely well written (no typos I might add), completely engaging, and openly honest account of Mr. Agassi's life. This is not just another celebrity autobiography written for monetary gains. It is the emotionally poignant tale of one man's trials and tribulations spanning from childhood to manhood. This is not a story of fame; it is a story of forgiveness, learning from the past, discovering one's self, and moving forward in life. If you want to read about an OPEN celebrity who is not afraid of being real and raw, READ THIS. I cannot recommend this book enough - it is a must read.Get more detail about Open: An Autobiography.

Discount The Devil In The White City


I bought this book at my dad's suggestion. I had recommended "The Devil and Sherlock Holmes" by David Grann to him, and this was his response. The Devil in the White City is an extraordinary true tale of human, communal triumph and utter human depravity.

Larson's research is impeccable and every turn sheds light on the lives of the men and women of Chicago in the late 1800s.

The history links the vision and development of the World's Fair of Chicago with the life a serial killer stalking his victims, mostly young women newly entering this strange, industrial world.

Larson's writing style sets a lively pace, never dragging readers down with irrelevant detail. He relies on letters, journals and newspapers to draw a picture of the burgeoning city and its inhabitants. I was completely immersed in this world; enjoyed every page.

A delightful, intriguing book that soars to heights of glory and sinks to the depths of hell. I highly recommend this book.Get more detail about The Devil In The White City.

Cheapest If You Have to Cry, Go Outside: And Other Things Your Mother Never Told You


This book was amazing, very inspiring. One of the best books i've read this year. Cutrone tells woman to be independent and If you want something you have to work HARD and Do for yourself!!!!Get more detail about If You Have to Cry, Go Outside: And Other Things Your Mother Never Told You.

Cheap Parisians: An Adventure History of Paris


When a reader decides to enlighten himself by reading a book about a city such as Paris he would expect to learn things he did not know before.To do so, any writer should be explicit,clear and articulate so that his readers,who do not know much about it, get familiar with his subjects,characters, places or events that populate his opus.
Unfortunately, this is not the case here.A previous critic here-with whom i concur totally- has already mentioned the deplorable fact that Robb does not make clear who's who until the end of his short tales,which are also unrelated and do not have anything in common..Had his book been a thriller,I could have only sympathized with this approach.After all,this is one of the best and oldest literary devices to assure the reader's attention and suspense .In this case,the writer of this abysmally terrible- written book has caused me to drop it after some tens of pages.Paris will still be a gem without this failure.Get more detail about Parisians: An Adventure History of Paris.

Tuesday, May 25, 2010

Buying The Pacific


First they shot the t.v. series, then they wrote the book. And it shows. If you have read any of the underlying histories upon which The Pacific is based, you will find this a severely compromised read. The book lacks structure, theme, passion, originality, careful editing, literary or academic rigor. Although this can easily be chalked up to the rush job attempt to get a companion piece out in time for the mini-series, other factors are also at play.

First and foremost is the fact that Mr. Ambrose has taken on his father's mantle of WWII historian, but lacks the chops to fill Ambrose Sr.'s shoes. The Pacific strings together episodes in the lives of a pilot and various marines in a patchwork that doesn't give the reader any sense for each individual's achievements, or for the greater successes/failures of the war. It's as if he read a handful of stellar biographies and autobiographies, cut and pasted the high points, and put them down in random order.

Eugene Sledge's autobiography is particularly butchered. Ambrose takes the incident with Lt. Mackenzie and turns a complex, revealing mismatch between enlisted marines and their officer into a bland encounter that leaves out the crucial detail: Mackenzie had failed to completely empty the grenade, and but for its location it would have killed several marines as a "harmless prank."

This book was given to me as a gift by a good friend, so the price was exactly right. But for anyone trying to decide whether or not to lay out $26+ for a WWII book, I'd really suggest spending it on something else.Get more detail about The Pacific.

Buy The Bullpen Gospels: Major League Dreams of a Minor League Veteran


Having listened to Keith Olbermann on "Countdown" extol the virtues and delights of this book, I bought it. That's $9.99 and 5 hours of my time I'll never get back although I did e-mail Olbermann to ask him to refund my money. There is no refund for my time, however. I am writing to tell you to save both your money and your time. This book, while it starts out fairly amusing, degenerates into what I would term as typical male adolescent humor as it focuses almost entirely on crude bathroom humor and the everlasting and pointless discussions about sex, sexual fantasies, male genitalia, and attempts to conquer hot babes, no matter how tasteless the quest. There were some moments of salvation near the end when the author was dealing with his father and alcoholic brother, but those fleeting glimpses of humanity did not redeem the otherwise vain exercise in recounting a boring and sad autobiography. I suppose men might like this book a lot more than I did, and I won't even try to explain the differences in the sexes as it pertains to writing about sports experiences. It will be a long time before I'll be dumb enough to bite on another book having to do with baseball if this missive is truly what the sport is all about.Get more detail about The Bullpen Gospels: Major League Dreams of a Minor League Veteran.

Purchase A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Future: Twists and Turns and Lessons Learned


This is not a sad book! This is a delightfully entertaining and funny book. A fast read with lessons that may seem familiar to us all. Along with some I know I was glad I did not experience!Get more detail about A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Future: Twists and Turns and Lessons Learned.

Order Stones into School


Greg Mortenson again proves just how important one man can be in keeping the world a humane place for human beings.Get more detail about Stones into School.

Monday, May 24, 2010

Where To Buy The First Tycoon: The Epic Life of Cornelius Vanderbilt (Vintage)


Cornelius Vanderbilt (1794-1877) was a force of nature! He died worth in excess of 100 million 1877 dollars having worked himself to tycoonship over corporate American through genius, guile and sheer hard work. If ever there was a Horatio Alger of business then Vanderbilt fits the bill!
Cornelius Vandebilt was born to Duthc-English parents on Staten Island. From an early age he engaged in the Staten Island ferry business taking passengers to New York. Later he would buy sailing vessels, steamboats and railroads which spanned the continent in the age of manifest destiny, the birth of big business and the transformation of America into a land of huge corporate giants. Stles is incredibly detailed in discussing all of the business deals and mergers made by Vanderbilt.
T.J. Stiles rightly won the 2009 National Book Award for "The First Tycoon." It is a hefty volume of 571 densely written pages with over 100 pages of footnotes and bibliographic entries. Stiles labored on this biographical and economic history for several years. The essential points made by Stiles as to why Vanderbilt is an important, but often neglected, figure in American economic history are:
1. He was involved in the Supreme Court decision rendered by Chief Justice John Marshall in the landmark "Gibbons vs. Ogden" case that state erected barriers to trade were against the law. This case shattered the 18th century culture of deference in which the aristocracy ruled. Gibbons was a business mentor of Vanderbilt who favored Jacksonian individualistic rights to oppose monopolies.
2. Business competition was viewed by Vanderbilt as essential to personal, economic and political virtue in the new United States.
3.Through his superman work in the transportation industry Vanderbilt helped in the trade and textile industry of New England mills and led to the present mobile and highly industrialized American economy.
4. Vanderbilt's Nicarauga steam and railroad line through that Central America nation led to the growth of California especially the city of San Francisco during the gold rush of 1849. Due to titans like Vanderbilt the United States was united from sea to shining sea. Vanderbilt had to fight off the evil dictator filibuster William Walker in Nicaragua and also fight unscrupulous partners in the venture such as the notorious Joseph White.
5. Vanderbilt was highly instrumental in making New York City the hub of the stock market and business community in America. His building and transportation work greatly abetted the economic boom in the 1850s in New York City. His company built Grand Central Station and he owned the New York Central and Hudson railroads as well as several trunk lines throughout the nation. He aided in the recovery of the national economy during the 1873 Panic by shoring up failing railroads owned by his associates.
6. During the Civil War he gave his ship "The Vanderbilt" to the US government. He also transported gold from California to the east despite the predations made on trade by Confederate raiders such as Captain Raphael Semmes and his raider "The Alabama." Vanderbilt married a southern belle and was a good friend of Confederate general Braxton Bragg,
7. Vanderbilt was the first and most important corporate titan in American life. When he began his career most Americans lived on farms and in rural areas. When he died the nation was increasingly urban united by the powerful tie of rail transportation.
8. Vanderbilt believed in reconciliation between the North and South following the Civil War. He gave almost one million dollars to help fund Vanderbilt University in Nashville. The great university was dedicated in 1875.
Vanderbilt could be cranky and irascible. He had trouble with Cornelius Jr. who was a gambler. His son George Washington attended West Point and died young. Son William succeeded his father in power dying worth at least 200 million dollars at the time of his death Vanderbilt enjoyed racing horses, playing euchre and spending evenings with his cronies at the Manhatten Club and in quiet evenings at home. Vanderbilt never learned to spell, was often profane and disdainful of aristocrats.
Vanderbilt was an uneducated man who was, nevertheless, a genius. He was often coarse and ruthless in his business dealings. He was wed twice loving both Sophie and the young Frank Crawford whom he wed in late old age.
He had many children but spent most of his time at his office. He ate sparingly and drank little keeping in strong physical condition. He also had little interest in organized religion.
Vanderbilt was no saint and there is much to criticize in the ruthless unregulated business world of the
nineteenth century. The reader must make up his/her mind as to what is to be learned from Vanderbilt's incredible career!
This book is a difficult read for folks like this reviewer who is a neophyte in the world of high finance. I am, nevertheless, glad I stuck with it. Not everyone's cup of tea but worth the effort!
Get more detail about The First Tycoon: The Epic Life of Cornelius Vanderbilt (Vintage).

Shop For My Fair Lazy: One Reality Television Addict's Attempt to Discover If Not Being A Dumb Ass Is the New Black, or, a Culture-Up Manifesto


This book convinces us how much more satisfying life experiences can be when you're an active participant, and not just an observer. As a reality TV addict myself (I had to accept what I had become when I added the Fox Reality channel solely to watch "Househusbands of Hollywood" last fall while on maternity leave), I appreciate how Jen Lancaster remains true to herself while diving head first into the good, the bad and the ugly of a myriad of cultural experiences. Her description of various ethnic cuisines (and the wine/cheese tasting!) rival Ruth Reichel's in every savory (and not so savory!) detail. Riding shotgun with her friend Stacey, she discovers that theater, literature, poetry, and dance can be exhilarating, shocking, and sometimes disappointing, but that it's the experience itself that matters most.Get more detail about My Fair Lazy: One Reality Television Addict's Attempt to Discover If Not Being A Dumb Ass Is the New Black, or, a Culture-Up Manifesto.

Son of Hamas: A Gripping Account of Terror, Betrayal, Political Intrigue, and Unthinkable Choices


Great, great book. Everybody should read it! It is beautifully written, extremely hard to put down.Get more detail about Son of Hamas: A Gripping Account of Terror, Betrayal, Political Intrigue, and Unthinkable Choices.

Sunday, May 23, 2010

Lone Survivor: The Eyewitness Account of Operation Redwing and the Lost Heroes of SEAL Team 10 Review


I am a man of few words and have never written a book review on Amazon. But after reading this book I had to break my silence. I could not put the book down. Even though I had to work the next day, I read late into the night. I was sleepy all day at work, but when I got home I continued reading the book until I finished it that night. After I finished reading the book, I could not stop thinking about it. I strongly recommend buying this book.Get more detail about Lone Survivor: The Eyewitness Account of Operation Redwing and the Lost Heroes of SEAL Team 10.

Committed: A Skeptic Makes Peace with Marriage Top Quality


If you love the way Elizabeth Gilbert writes, then you'll love Committed! It's insightful, interesting and puts a whole new light on marriage. It was a terrific follow-up to Eat,Pray,Love. I'd reccomend it to anyone who enjoyed Eat, Pray, Love as much as I did.Get more detail about Committed: A Skeptic Makes Peace with Marriage.

The Happiness Project: Or, Why I Spent a Year Trying to Sing in the Morning, Clean My Closets, Fight Right, Read Aristotle, and Generally Have More Fun This instant


I stopped reading after March, (the book is divided into months). As other
reviewers have stated, nothing new here. I did appreciate her research into happiness, but the whole project came across as highly contrived. But what
I found most grating was the author's self-congratulatory tone. I found her personality obnoxious with her constant need to receive gold stars for her achievements. Give me a break. I wanted slap a gold star on her face.


Get more detail about The Happiness Project: Or, Why I Spent a Year Trying to Sing in the Morning, Clean My Closets, Fight Right, Read Aristotle, and Generally Have More Fun.

Have a Little Faith Immediately


Easy read - somewhat enjoyable. I think the problem here is that Mitch Albom has been trying to recapture the magic of Tuesdays with Morrie and has not been able to do so since. In fairness to Mitch Albom, this would be hard for anyone to do. He tries to replicate the formula by writing (again) about his visits with a dying man, but this time it comes off as cliche and hoaky.Get more detail about Have a Little Faith.

Saturday, May 22, 2010

The Greatest Trade Ever: The Behind-the-Scenes Story of How John Paulson Defied Wall Street and Made Financial History Best Quality


I am not someone who is familiar with wall street terms but had been interested in the book because of the recent economic collapse. The author illuminated me about formerly confusing subjects like hedge funds, but did not dumb down the subject. Overall, was an interesting and informative book.Get more detail about The Greatest Trade Ever: The Behind-the-Scenes Story of How John Paulson Defied Wall Street and Made Financial History.

Lives Of The Signers Of The Declaration Of Independence Get it now!


This is a book that every American needs to have in their home and read. It is time to really see who our nations founders really were. They would be rolling over in their graves if they knew what we were doing to this great country that they gave their all to establish.Get more detail about Lives Of The Signers Of The Declaration Of Independence.

Same Kind of Different As Me: A Modern-Day Slave, an International Art Dealer, and the Unlikely Woman Who Bound Them Together Buy Now


Our book club read this book and really enjoyed it. Very nice read. Loved that it had two people speaking about their stories. Initially did not think it was my type of book but really enjoyed it.Get more detail about Same Kind of Different As Me: A Modern-Day Slave, an International Art Dealer, and the Unlikely Woman Who Bound Them Together.

The Other Wes Moore: One Name, Two Fates Order Now


This is the story of two kids named Wes Moore that lived on the same Baltimore street but never knew each other. One went to college and became a Rhodes Scholar, while the other became a drug dealer and a convict. The first Wes Moore is the author of this book telling, in alternative narratives, the story of their two lives and how they diverged despite some strong similarities.

The book is broken up into four sections dealing with four pivotal times in both Wes Moores' lives. First, we see them when they are three (1982), then eleven (1990), eighteen (1997) and beyond. At three, Both Wes Moore's lost their fathers (the former to natural causes and the latter to absenteeism). At eleven, both boys began having trouble in school owing to apathy. A little later, both would experiment with the drug trade.

That is where the similarities become differences. The former Wes got caught by the cops on his first run and, by all appearences, that blew the drug trade's appeal. Out of his mother's concern and diligence, she sent her Wes to military school during his high-school years. The latter Wes made money from the drug trade and, while caught by his mother, drugs and money proved to be too big a pull. He became a successful dealer and got into all the things that life gives one access to. He had four children by two mothers and multiple arrests by the time he was in his early twenties.

This book, whose message really is that our choices and the choices of those around us make us who we become, has a lengthy appendix - a resource guide. It consists of descriptions and contact info of agencies designed to help 'at risk' youth. The hope is that kids will be able to take the path resembling the former Wes Moore's and that, with good choices and good options, the path of the latter Wes Moore will be avoided.

All in all, I found this book to be much more interesting than I first thought. The stories were both interesting and real (which is a rare combination, as often, real stories tend to be more exciting for the teller than the reader). I finished the book in a day and thought about it for a week. Ironically, I taught at a high-school not far from that "attended" by the second Wes Moore and every day saw instances of kids choosing the former and (all too often) the latter path. By contrasting embodiments of those choices in alternating narratives, this book really gets the reader thinking about the power of choice.

Highly recommended.Get more detail about The Other Wes Moore: One Name, Two Fates.

Friday, May 21, 2010

Lift Decide Now


I see that I am in the minority of readers but I thought that this book was mere tripe. And derivative tripe to boot.
If you don't like "inspiration" or the overly sentimental, you will not like this. Corrigan's friends and family members will love it, of course--it's the kind of material that one does want to write for family.

And I understand those who are astounded that the book costs so much money. But would you really want more? The thesis of the book is simple: the author loves the miracle of motherhood and she loves her daughters. Like a lot of people, she also has to contend with serious illness and a death in the family at the same time that she's bringing up her young children. The book might have been more interesting if she had written more about the pain of the difficulties, but as a letter to her children, I think she wants to spare them the essential anguish that people go through when it comes to death and disease.

If you want to "feel good" without taking Prozac, you might like this book. It has the same mind-numbing effects. And it probably works for a fair percentage of readers.Get more detail about Lift.

The Einstein Theory of Relativity Right now


This very short book is sort of an abstract on Einstein's Theory of Relativity. Whether you're familiar, and especially if you are, about Physics and Nature's Laws of Motion, Gravity, etc...this is a worthwhile read for getting to know Einstein's theory as written by a friend physicist. It describes Einstein's theory and quashes your curiosity on the subject matter.

Short and concise, I picked up a few concepts that I was not truly aware of since grade school or high school...when I was actually enrolled in a science class. For instance, I always thought space is enveloped in a vacuum...meaning no air or nothing at all. It was not after reading this book that I was made re-aware of the gas ether as "light's medium"...or what the upper atmosphere consists of, hence the word ethereal (`not of this world).

Read further and you actually grasp the essence of the theory, said in the simplest possible way from a physicist's point of view. Right now though, I'd like to read more on the subject matter at hand...or perhaps more on Einstein himself. This is just good entry-point reading.Get more detail about The Einstein Theory of Relativity.

Lowest Price The Last Lecture


In his book, The last Lecture, author Randy Pausch tells how he used the "last lecture" which is afforded much respected and loved college professors (which Randy obviously was) to leave thoughts for the faculty and student body.

In his case, Randy used the occasion of the "last lecture" not only to leave thoughts for the faculty and students but also to impart his philosphy of life...which as simply put "to live"!

I gav e this book to my oldest granddaughter without aving read it but then read it about a year later. I am glad I gave her the book.

It is a paen to life and living.

His last lecture nd the book he penned after giving the lecture is a paen to life. Although cancer claimed him in 2008, there is one indisputable fact ... Randy lives on!
Get more detail about The Last Lecture.

Low Price Helmet for My Pillow: From Parris Island to the Pacific


If you watched the HBO Pacific series and wanted to know the details about Leckie, this book provides it all.
Somewhat flowery writing style is unique. Leckie was a real character and it comes accross in this book. It reveals alot about military discipline that is often omitted in accounts of many wars.
It was a great add on after watching the HBO series and if your a WWII buff you'll enjoy it.Get more detail about Helmet for My Pillow: From Parris Island to the Pacific.

Save The Life of Abraham Lincoln


An excellent look into the life of one of our most trreasured leaders. This is worth your time to read.Get more detail about The Life of Abraham Lincoln.

Thursday, May 20, 2010

Discount Half Broke Horses: A True-life Novel (Platinum Fiction Series)


I read this book after reading Jeannette Walls' "Glass Houses", which made me want to read more of her books. "Half Broke Horses..." is an excellent picture of what life was really like back when people had to use their ingenuity to get be. Easy reading.Get more detail about Half Broke Horses: A True-life Novel (Platinum Fiction Series).

Cheapest The 48 Laws of Power


As I began to read this book I thought it had to be a cynically bad joke. This book epitomizes the exploitative mentality of Adolf Hitler and other megalomaniacs. It reads like the handbook of a slave owner, both ugly and self serving. This man is truly deluded and indoctrinated by the last 5000 years of competitive class society and the consciousness of individualism produced by it. He has no understanding or awareness of collectivity and/or collaboration as it exists outside of class competition and the exploitative private property relations found in modern capitalism. This book is a cultural disappointment and a sad reflection of just how far we have to go as a society to actually produce a decent world to live in. The book is abysmal and depressing, and buying it is the equivalent of supporting fascism, its theories and practices.Get more detail about The 48 Laws of Power.

Cheap Courage and Consequence: My Life as a Conservative in the Fight


This book is, on one level, a fine politicial strategy book, For example..problem: Governor Bush could not raise funds or campaign in the primaries as effectively as his competitors,as he had a state to run. But Rove had written a paper on President McKinley who had the same problem. Emulating McKinley's solution was the answer.

On another level, it is a surprisingly unbiased summary of the Bush years--what went right and why; what went wrong and why. Rove accepts full blame for what he perceives as his own mistakes.

If this well-written book has a flaw,I felt that the investment of two or three chapters on the Valerie Plame travesty was overdone.Richard Armitage --a dove at State- was the leaker; Rove was blameless. But it meant a good deal to Rove, of course, so perhaps the comprehensiveness of the subject was necessary.

Well done. Very interesting and revealing. Highly recommnended.Get more detail about Courage and Consequence: My Life as a Conservative in the Fight.

Buying My Horizontal Life: A Collection of One-Night Stands


Lighten up, people! This woman is hilarious!! I recently read Ms. Handler's middle book (awesomely-titled after a Judy Blume novel), and I thought it was absolutely perfect. My husband bought me her first and her third books for Mothers' Day this past weekend. I read the first book in one sitting...and loved it! This woman is crazy and irreverent and sardonic. This book is laugh-out-loud funny, and the author is so intelligent and witty and self-deprecating (throughout the entire book she is painfully and incredibly aware of her own short-comings), that you can't help but love her!!! Shame on you readers who do not "get it"! She is blatantly inviting you to be in on the joke!!Get more detail about My Horizontal Life: A Collection of One-Night Stands.