Book Description
A crucial step in getting a civil service job is a great score on the entry-level civil service exam. Basic math and English usage are two skill areas where many test-takers could use the most help. Detailed subject review and up-to-date practice material make this self-tutorial the first choice for job seekers looking for work with federal, state, local, and municipal governments.
Book Description
The test-taker's favorite for more than twenty-five yearsThis practical guide is the best single-volume review of the two subjects most frequently tested on civil service examinations. Packed with hundreds of sample questions and answers, it's helped thousands of job hunters to qualify for rewarding government careers.Barbara Erdsneker teaches mathematics at Mercy College in Dobbs Ferry, New York. Margaret A. Haller taught writing at New York University. Eve P. Steinberg is the author of many bestselling ARCO books.
Book Description
Fairyland is home to seven colorful sisters. Together, they are the Rainbow Fairies! They keep Fairyland dazzling and bright. But when evil Jack Frost sends them far away, the sisters are in big trouble. If they don't return soon, Fairyland is doomed to be gray forever!The beach means bubble trouble for Sky the Blue Fairy. Can a special friend help Rachel and Kirsty track her down?
Customer Reviews:
Great way to get kids excited about reading!.......2006-03-22
My first grader absolutely fell in love with the Rainbow Fairy series and is now onto the Weather Fairies. Lovely, light stories, they feature young girls (just like her) trying to save fairies and their magical world. These are perfect books for readers beginning chapter books.
Book Description
Wherever German forces operated during World War II, they were accompanied by the photographers of Signal, the German armed forces magazine?and the brainchild of Goebbel's propaganda ministry. While primarily a propaganda organ intended as a morale-booster (the title was a pun on the German word "seig" for "victory"), the Signal staff was always close to the front line, and took some of the most famous German combat photos of the war, including many in color.
Author and photo researcher Will Fowler has dug beneath the surface to reveal the true face of combat as German soldiers, sailors and airmen experienced it. He has now assembled a comprehensive and unique selection of Signal photos covering every major theater and arm of the German war machine.
Their War is much more than a photo scrapbook. Maps and a knowledgeable text follow the course of the war, year by year, theater by theater. And most importantly, the photographs are presented with detailed captions identifying units, locales, weaponry and equipment.
Customer Reviews:
I expected better.......2007-08-21
There should have been better photos with this product, considering a lot of the Signal photography I have seen in the past. Also, the information about the way the propaganda companies collected their products didn't really do them justice. Overall, I thought it failed to deliver.
short on color photos.......2005-09-14
I bought this book expecting to find many, if not all of the SIGNAL magazine color combat photos, for which they are best known, under one roof. However, there are only a few pages of color photos. In addition, the B&W photos are quite grainy and of only fair quality - I think partly due to the paper used. The color photos are good quality. There is a significant amount of text, which is OK by me, but be aware if you are expecting a photo album book. More numerous and better quality photos are available in other books but at a higher price of course. The price on this book is fairly low and reflective of what you're getting.
Signal.......2001-09-23
This is a great book detailing the rise and fall of the German forces in WWII. It has over 200 photos (several pages in color) of the German army on all fronts. Theres photos of battles, POWs (german,russian,american,british), air combat, destroyed tanks, infantry, and just about everything else. This isnt a picture book, it has a good share of text, but the majority is pictures.
Book Description
An overview of the life of Herge, Tintin's creator.
Customer Reviews:
A mixed bag.......2007-06-11
A strange book! The information and illustrations in it is great, but there are curious qualities to it. The writer is a native speaker of English, but from errors in sentence structure and some obvious mistakes in word usage, this publication was translated from French. There are curious recurring preoccupations and repetitions, almost suggesting that each chapter appeared separately, possibly in a magazine. For example, the comparison of Herge's work and that of his studio with that of Raphael and his assistant Giulio Romano occurs at least three times! The reproduction of pictorial archival material from Herge's collections and elsewhere alongside panels from the books is fascinating. But Farr often dedicates a lot of space to discussion of the source of a particular image or set of images -- and then there's no illustration. At other times there are illustrations that are scarcely mentioned in the text.
Still, we have to be grateful for all the data given here. I remember an old Tibetan lama looking at "Tintin in Tibet" with my children, and pointing out corners he knew in the panoramic picture of Katmandu, being puzzled by the Abominable Snowman, and laughing at the pictures showing levitation. In the '60's I camped all through through Yugoslavia; my young kids were reading "King Ottakar's Scepter" and constantly pointed out details in the landscape that matched the book. Herge did his homework, and it's great to have the sources laid out.
Despite its flaws, this book is a keeper.
Thoroughly researched, not the best of writers.......2007-05-15
This book has used the extensive archive of Herge, to which the author was granted unlimited access. The book is certainly enlightening and offers great insight into Herge's mind. The author rightly presents each Tintin adventure in its proper historical context, and exposes fascinating parallels of the adventures with Herge's own life. Most of the illustrations are juxtapositions of Tintin frames and concepts against the source material from Herge's archive of newspaper clips and books. Some comparisons are very convincing. Some comparisons are stretched, for example, the alleged inspiration for the carnival costumes of Les Joyeux Turlurons in Tintin and the Picaros. Groucho Marx amongst the crowd ogling at a blonde? I don't know about that... Please note that some of these comparisons are extracted by the author, who tried to read into Herge's mind. We will never know for sure what inspired Herge.
The criticism of the stories occasionally is uneven. The author knocks Flight 714 for stretching reality with its extraterrestrials and flying saucers. How about the Shooting Star, where a meteorite the size of an island drops out of the sky? Giant popping mushrooms and mutant arthropods, I don't know about that...
The text sometimes is dry, and sometimes too esoteric and only relevant to readers of the English editions of Tintin. I have read all Tintin books in French, so I could not care less about the subtleties of the English translations of French names. For other readers, this trivia may be interesting. Finally, the book ends abruptly, without as much as one paragraph of an epilogue, a reflection on the total Herge oeuvre.
Why the small print? The print is so tiny you almost need a magnifying glass. This is not a physics paper, it is a book about comics, and in comics readability is paramount.
Overall, this book undoubtedly was well researched. It definitely was worth the money. I came out with a renewed appreciation of Tintin and Herge. I wish the author was a more compelling writer.
My kids love this series.......2007-04-27
My kides are a little geeky and are enthralled by any of the series. It is good clasis sci fi for them. Suggested if you kids like adventure kid stories and sci fi.
Good intro to Tin Tin.......2006-12-21
I started reading Tin Tin when I was 10 but it never occurred to me that there was so much thoughts that went behind the series. The painstaking research, archival of photos, historical and political references that Herge went through just to get things right.
This book is by far the most comprehensive and detailed writing on the entire Tin Tin series. Michael Farr also compared the original French, black & white series to the English, color version. Though at times, the writing can be a little dry and has an academic feel, this book still triumphs in terms of accessibility to the general readers, both fans and non-fans.
The chapters are arranged in chronological order of each Tin Tin adventures. This arrangement gives the readers a sense of development of Herge's works.
Makes me want to pick up another adventure with Tin Tin.
A good start.......2006-09-02
A few months ago I was visited by a particularly nasty strain of influenza. As I sat paralysed in an easy chair with everything that could possibly hurt hurting, I had to decide how to pass the time, since nobody in my family would agree to shoot me. I couldn't concentrate to read the tiny print in a book. The thought of television nauseated me. Only one thing would do. Tintin books! I used to collect and read Tintin books with my son about fifteen years ago, and hadn't read one in at least ten years. So I re-read them all, from Tintin In America to Tintin and the Picaros and they were wonderfully therapeutic. I then went on to order Tintin In the Land of the Soviets, Tintin In the Congo and Tintin and the Lake of Sharks. My interest in Tintin being re-awakened, I looked for commentary and analysis about Tintin and Herge, and came across Tintin, The Complete Companion.
This is a good book and a boon for Tintin fans, but it is far from comprehensive. 205 pages in not enough space to satisfactorily comment on all of the ground covered by Herge and Tintin in their 40+ year careers. What I think is needed is a complete annotated Tintin, along the lines of the two excellent annotated Sherlock Holmes sets that are available. To be comprehensive it would have to be four volumes of about 500 pages each. It would be pricey but I and other Tintinophiles would pay up. Such a comprehensive study would carry odd, eccentric, but interesting features. For example, I came across a page on the internet where someone had catalogued all of Captain Haddock's curses -by volume, by who was being cursed at, etc. I unsuccessfully scoured Tintin, the Complete Companion to find out what a Bashi-Bazouk was, but then found it on the internet (it is a type of Turkish irregular soldier, very undisciplined). If we are going to go crazy about this plucky little reporter and his faithful dog, we might as well go all the way. While I was re-reading the books this time, I kept a tally of assaults and other insults upon Tintin's person, as follows (warning, I know I will have missed some since I was sick at the time):
-imprisoned: 10 -car/motorcycle crash (unconscious): 3
-hit over head: 20 -gun pointed at: 14
-car run off road: 2 -house blown up (unconscious): 1
-drugged: 7 -shot at: 44
-kicked by horse: 1 -fall from horse: 1
-tied up/handcuffed: 21 -falls over cliff: 1
-torpedoes fired at: 1 -train wreck: 1
-lynched (rope broke): 1 -plane hijacked: 1
-thrown into water (tied up): 3 -thrown into sausage machine: 1
-attacked with knife/sword: 5 -plane crashes/explodes: 2
-caught in volcanic eruption: 1 -falls into crevasse: 1
-caught in avalanche: 1 -buried alive: 1
-caught in bear/tiger trap: 2 -shot: 4
-knocks self out: 1 -tackled: 2
-punched/assaulted: 3 -bitten on nose by parrot: 1
-almost run down by car: 2 -faces firing squad: 1
-smoke inhalation: 1 -hits face with rake handle (unconscious): 1
-ship wreck: 1 -hit by car: 1
-swatted by shark's tail (unconscious): 1 -huge crate of sardines just misses: 1
-attacked by condor: 1 -falls from waterfall: 1
-attacked by Incas: 1 -bitten by rat: 1
-falls down steps (unconscious): 1 -blacks out during rocket launch: 2
-lack of oxygen (unconscious): 1
As you can see, this is one tough young man. Any one or two of the above incidents would have most people talking for years. One would have to fear for Tintin's health in later years from all those knocks on the head or post traumatic stress disorder from all of the close calls.
Back to Mr. Farr's book. Quibbles and suggestions are as follows:
Quibbles. 1. The chapter on The Black Island goes into minute, mostly boring, detail in describing the changes from the black and white to the colour edition. Some changes are interesting, most are not. Eg. P. 77: '... the ticket collector has dispensed with a wing collar and bow tie, preferring an ordinary tie and collar and a shorter coat. The Thom(p)sons have less luxurious moustaches...' 2. From the start, Farr is dismissive of Snowy. To me, Snowy is a major character and deserves to treated as such. 3. In regards to the moon books, many readers at the time would have been to the moon through the works of science fiction authors, such as Jules Verne, H.G. Wells, Robert Heinlein (Rocket Ship Galileo has a Nazi plot element similar to Herge's Borduria involvement) and others. Why not comment on this and compare? Did Herge read the stuff?
Suggestions: 1. Comment/discussion is needed in regards to Tintin's androgyny. There is no hint in any of the books that anything as strange and wonderful as sex exists on planet earth. There are very few female characters at all, and only one major one (Castafiore). Tintin never as much as holds hands with a girl, never goes on a date, and, indeed, shows absolutely no interest in the opposite sex (unlike his dog Snowy). Instead, he chooses to live in a huge mansion with a crusty, alcoholic sailor who also seems to have no girlfriend. In real life, eyebrows would be raised. While I have no problem with all of this, I think it does merit comment. 2. I would have liked Farr to tell the reader how King Ottokar's Sceptre was received in Nazi Germany. How about The Shooting Star? How did the Belgians take to Tintin during the occupation? Herge stayed in Belgium instead of fleeing, like many others, so he could contribute to keeping up his countryman's spirits. Did he have an effect? 3. The index of the book in spotty and incomplete. It should be alphabetised and greatly expanded.
Average customer rating:
- An exemplary study of London and US imperial malehood.
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Male Call: Becoming Jack London (New Americanists)
Jonathan Auerbach , and
Jonathan Auerbach
Manufacturer: Duke University Press
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
General
| Classics
| United States
| World Literature
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ASIN: 0822318202 |
Book Description
When Jack London died in 1916 at age forty, he was one of the most famous writers of his time. Eighty years later he remains one of the most widely read American authors in the world. The first major critical study of London to appear in a decade, Male Call analyzes the nature of his appeal by closely examining how the struggling young writer sought to promote himself in his early work as a sympathetic, romantic man of letters whose charismatic masculinity could carry more significance than his words themselves.
Jonathan Auerbach shows that London’s personal identity was not a basis of his literary success, but rather a consequence of it. Unlike previous studies of London that are driven by the author’s biography, Male Call examines how London carefully invented a trademark âselfâ in order to gain access to a rapidly expanding popular magazine and book market that craved authenticity, celebrity, power, and personality. Auerbach demonstrates that only one fact of London’s life truly shaped his art: his passionate desire to become a successful author. Whether imagining himself in stories and novels as a white man on trail in the Yukon, a sled dog, a tramp, or a professor; or engaging questions of manhood and mastery in terms of work, race, politics, class, or sexuality, London created a public persona for the purpose of exploiting the conventions of the publishing world and marketplace.
Revising critical commonplaces about both Jack London’s work and the meaning of ânatureâ within literary naturalism and turn-of-the-century ideologies of masculinity, Auerbach’s analysis intriguingly complicates our view of London and sheds light on our own postmodern preoccupation with celebrity. Male Call will attract readers with an interest in American studies, American literature, gender studies, and cultural studies.
Customer Reviews:
An exemplary study of London and US imperial malehood........1999-05-21
A deeply historicized, wry, and often funny look at the process by which London fashioned a model of US masculine selfhood and expanded territories of (barely sublimated) territorial/regional conquest. One of the best books I know on a single-author study of a Pacific author from imperial era of national expansion, then or now [sic].
Average customer rating:
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Autobiographical and Other Papers
Mairet
Manufacturer: Persea Books
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
General
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Letters & Correspondence
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General
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ASIN: 0856353264 |
Average customer rating:
- Tremendous resource for Joyce Scholars
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Joyce's Book of Memory: The Mnemotechnic of Ulysses
John S. Rickard , and
John S. Rickard
Manufacturer: Duke University Press
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
General
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| United States
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20th Century
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ASIN: 082232170X |
Book Description
For James Joyce, perhaps the most crucial of all human faculties was memory. It represented both the central thread of identity and a looking glass into the past. It served as an avenue into other minds, an essential part of the process of literary composition and narration, and the connective tissue of cultural tradition. In Joyce’s Book of Memory John S. Rickard demonstrates how Joyce’s body of workâUlysses in particularâoperates as a âmnemotechnic,â a technique for preserving and remembering personal, social, and cultural pasts.
Offering a detailed reading of Joyce and his methods of writing, Rickard investigates the uses of memory in Ulysses and analyzes its role in the formation of personal identity. The importance of forgetting and repression, and the deadliness of nostalgia and habit in Joyce’s paralyzed Dublin are also revealed. Noting the power of spontaneous, involuntary recollection, Rickard locates Joyce’s mnemotechnic within its historical and philosophical contexts. As he examines how Joyce responded to competing intellectual paradigms, Rickard explores Ulysses’ connection to medieval, modern, and (what would become) postmodern worldviews, as well as its display of tensions between notions of subjective and universal memory. Finally, Joyce’s Book of Memory illustrates how Joyce distilled subjectivity, history, and cultural identity into a text that offers a panoramic view of the modern period.
This book will interest students and scholars of Joyce, as well as others engaged in the study of modern and postmodern literature.
Customer Reviews:
Tremendous resource for Joyce Scholars.......2000-03-26
This book is definitely the best book on Joyce in recent memory. A must-have on my short list of books on the subject. Rickard's writing style postively electrifies the page. Really written by an expert. Rickard writes as if Joyce were an old friend.
Book Description
This multi-layered, often lyrical, autobiographical novel is considered by many to be Charlotte Bronte's best. Monsieur Paul's (i.e. Professor Heger's) and Lucy Snow's (i.e. Charlotte's) experiences in Vilette (Brussels) in and around a pensionnat are haunting and full of enchantment. Thirteen 90-minute cassettes.
Download Description
Left by harrowing circumstances to fend for herself in the great capital of a foreign country, Lucy Snowe, the narrator and heroine of Villette, achieves by degrees an authentic independence from both outer necessity and inward grief. Charlotte Brontë's last novel, published in 1853, has a dramatic force comparable to that of her other masterpiece, Jane Eyre, as well as strikingly modern psychological insight and a revolutionary understanding of human loneliness.
Customer Reviews:
much ado over nothing.......2007-07-25
too much French; too much detail. slow reading. amazing command of language. thin on plot and action.
I cannot say it better..........2007-06-02
"All these weary days, I have not for one hour forgotten you." -- Lucy Snowe in Charlotte Bronte's Villette.
Introducing Charlotte Bronte - Beyond Jane Eyre.......2007-05-16
I think it's safe to say that most of the people who have read "Villette" probably read "Jane Eyre" first. I know that I did. In such cases, "Villette" may come as a slight surprise. While still like "Jane Eyre" in the sense that much of the story tells of the character's history, includes a strange sort of "love" story, and has a series of fascinating characters, "Villette" feels less about the narrator (Lucy Snowe) than about the other characters.
Let me clarify. While the story IS about Lucy Snowe, there are parts that revolve around her friends. These parts are thoroughly enjoyable as these characters are all so vivid and clear. Everything is easy to imagine and written in such a clear fashion. The plot is intriguing, and parts actually made me laugh aloud in surprise. It's a surprising book. The way everything ties in is done so well. "Villette" deserves a wider audience and greater fame than it has. It rivaled "Jane Eyre", and perhaps surpassed it.
While the ending is the place where most people lower their scores, I personally find it brilliant. It is a vague, ambiguous ending that leaves the reader confused, disoriented, and intrigued. What better way to end a book than mystery? Perhaps not a mystery, but we're left trying to figure it out. Unfortunately, there is no answer, so the romantics will choose a happy ending, and the pessimists a sorrow-filled one.
"Villette" has a whole host of characters. It starts out with children - laughing, teasing, quite adorable children. Later there are the wealthy snob characters, the generous, yet suspcious, motherly characters, the handsome, kind young men, the sweet, and beautiful young women, and the annoying yet lovable colleague (one of my favorites!). Each character has their own spark, their own flaws, and their own crowning virtue and reason for attention. Lucy, in the center of this all, is also an interesting character, though occasionally weak and sometimes a little too fluttery for my taste. Then again, tastes vary. You'll have to see for yourself. (M. Paul is totally the coolest, by the way)
WARNING: Much of this book is in French. Keep a French dictionary handy.
"Villette" is a purely enjoyable book. While some parts seemed to drag on and needed extra attention and patience (not to be read while tired! You'll find yourself skimming over pages, yawning), the final, overall impression is a favorable one. This book deserves the name, "classic". It's a great read, and you're sure to enjoy it, especially if you liked "Jane Eyre".
Enjoy!
Another lovely tale from Bronte.......2007-03-25
Another semi-autobiographical tale from Charlotte Bronte, based upon her time spent teaching in Belgium. This is not a novel of page turning excitement, but a lovely tale of one woman's battle to maintain her independence.
It's very interesting how the author brings characters in and out of her tale, and ties them all together in the end. Along with that, Bronte's gorgeous prose and all those large words that make you want to go running for the dictionary.
A lovely tale, one to savour like a fine red wine or chocolate, and an old classic worth rediscovering (or to discover for the first time). If you enjoyed Jane Eyre this is worth checking out.
One of the Best!.......2007-02-02
I don't know why people are complaining about the ending--though it doesn't spell it out, it's a happy one, and doesn't seem controversial at all if you read it carefully a few times. I've read Villette about four times--once in college (ok, but I didn't really get it then) and more recently after going through a Bronte/Austen marathon. If you love the character of Jane Eyre, you will love Lucy Snowe. If the idea of making your way successfully in the world through challenges, finding love after experiencing a past unrequited love, and plot twists all over--then read on. I used to think that the Austen books and maybe Jane Eyre were the books I enjoyed rereading. Villette has easily made it to that winning list.
Average customer rating:
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A Virginian village, and other papers;: Together with some autobiographical notes (Essay index reprint series)
Ehrman Syme Nadal
Manufacturer: Books for Libraries Press
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Unknown Binding
United States
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ASIN: B0006BV3RW |
Book Description
Thinking of buying a vacation property? A seaside condo? An A-frame on the ski slopes? A cottage at the lake? Before you plunk down $100,000 or $220,000 for a vacation property, invest $16.95 in a new book by someone who owned vacation property for 16 years.
Written in association with Coldwell Banker Real Estate Corporation, this new book is must reading for anyone thinking of buying vacation property, and for those who already own.
Benefit from the insights and experience of someone who has been there . . . done that! Christopher Cain will help you avoid the pitfalls and discover the hidden profits in vacation property.
The book includes guest editorials from some of the country's foremost experts in timeshare, financing, keeping records, and furnishing your vacation property. And if you already own vacation property, Mr. Cain shares dozens of tips and tactics proven to help you boost your rental revenues. Put more "heads in your vacation property beds." He shares creative ideas on trading for other vacations and goods and services. And he gives valuable insights on working with your rental manager.
Customer Reviews:
A waste of your time & money.......2004-01-26
I saw Mr. Cain speak at a seminar recently and he had some good pointers so I figured it was worth the low cost to buy this book. Wrong.
There is not a thing in this book that a reasonably intelligent person would not come up with on their own. The book is 197 pages of large type and 56 pages of that is nothing more than a list of Coldwell Banker offices - as if we're not smart enough to look that up on the Internet. Oh yeah, there is "Directory of Other Resources" (other than Coldwell Banker) to keep it balanced. That's a one-page list of companies that are affiliated with Coldwell Banker.
This is nothing but an informercial in print. Shame on you, Coldwell Banker!
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- Eco: An Essential Sourcebook for Environmentally Friendly Design and Decoration
- Eladio Dieste: Innovation in Structural Art
- Fashions of the Thirties: 476 Authentic Copyright-Free Illustrations (Dover Pictorial Archive Series)
- Fireplace Kamin Cheminee Chimenea Camino Design (Designfocus)
- Folds, Bodies & Blobs : Collected Essays (Books-by-architects) (Books-by-architects)
- Great Houses of Europe: From the Archives of "Country Life" (Country Life)
- Herzog & De Meuron: Prada Aoyama Tokyo
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