| Sister Surfer: A Woman's Guide to Surfing with Bliss and Courage
Publisher: The Lyons Press |
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| ISBN: 1592287212 List Price: $19.95 Amazon Price: $13.96 Usually ships in 24 hours |
Avg Cusomer Rating: 5 Reviews: Summary: A great source of inspiration As a younger woman and recent breast cancer survivor, I found this book to be a great source of healing. It was validating and uplifting to read testimonies from other women that faced challenges in their lives. Sister Surfer reminded me of what's important in life: fun in the sun! After reading this book, I had my first surf lesson and had a blast. I can't wait to hit the waves again! Summary: Surfs up, Courage up Sister Surfer is a great inspiration. I picked up the book for a friend but had to buy a second copy for myself. Who doesn't want to surf? Starting is the hardest part. Sister Surfer de-mystifies surfing and makes it accessible to everyone. You do not need to be twenty, athletic, and bikini clad. The wide range of women of different ages and experiences featured in the book help to reinforce the idea that anyone can surf. Women like camaraderie and this book makes you feel like you are part of a community even if you haven't started surfing yet. The lessons in the book can be taken into every other part of your life where courage needs to overcome fear. The book is beautifully done with lots of graphics and great photos of women with the huge smiles that come from conquering fear or achieving a dream. The style of the book allows you to either skim for relevant topics or read it from cover to cover. Summary: 1/2 Inspiration + 1/2 How To = A great read. I have sand caught between the pages of this book, because it motivated me to get in the water ASAP. A highly recommended read for those who seek the waves. Kia Afcari and Mary Osborne have shown me that surfing is more than a sport, it is rebirth. Summary: |
| Reinforced Concrete Design, 6th Edition
Publisher: Wiley |
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| ISBN: 0471364223 List Price: $134.95 Amazon Price: $134.95 Usually ships in 24 hours |
Avg Cusomer Rating: 5 Reviews: Summary: Straight to the Point The discussions were clear and the sample problems hit the bull's eye. I recommend this book to be included in the school library. Summary: GREAT BOOK-MISPELLED TITLE The correct title for this book is "Reinforced Concrete Design" not "Reinforced Cornet Design". I am not sure what a reinforced "cornet" is? Summary: Excellent Examples This book has excellent examples for thoroughly designing reinforced concrete structural members. It references directly to the ACI code. Summary: |
| The Social Worker and Psychotropic Medication: Toward Effective Collaboration with Mental Health Clients, Families, and Providers
Publisher: Wadsworth Publishing |
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| ISBN: 0534515517 List Price: $69.95 Amazon Price: $56.50 Usually ships in 24 hours |
Avg Cusomer Rating: 5 Reviews: Summary: A Recommended Addition to any Social Worker's Bookshelf In the coming years, the role of the social worker in the treatment of the mentally ill will continue to grow. Books such as this help social workers to define their roles, which are critical ones. The mentally ill deserve the very best that the social work profession has to offer. Kia Bentley and Joseph Walsh do a great job in compiling the information needed to ensure that the collaboration between the social worker and patient is an informed one. This book is a fitting start to a new century of more effective treatment of some of our most vulnerable citizens. Summary: A Must Have Reference Book for Mental Health Professionals This book is a wonderful product of the Decade of the Brain. Written by two concerned professionals in the social work field, it emphasizes that the medication of patients is a true partnership between the patient and professional. Only then will many patients truly comply with the medication that they would be better off taking. Summary: |
| X-Men: The New Age of Apocalypse
Publisher: Marvel Comics |
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| ISBN: 0785115838 List Price: $20.99 Amazon Price: $13.64 Usually ships in 24 hours |
Avg Cusomer Rating: 1 Reviews: Summary: New Age of Idiots.... This was a real piece of trash. No artwork and the story really reads like a two second infomerical for hair restoring Grease. Summary: Great Continuation of a Great Story Back in the 90's Marvel released a series called Age of Apocalypse where the heroes of the marvel universe, X-Men in particular, were recreated in a world where Xavier had been killed and Apocalypse had taken control of much of the world. It has since become known as one of Marvel's most successful spin-off series and was both critically acclaimed and fan appreciated. Now, ten years later, Marvel released this collection of all six New Age of Apocalypse comics and the Age of Apocalypse One shot. The one shot itself does little more than fill in a few gaps from the original story and without the original Age of Apocalypse is of little worth. The six piece mini series however is a continuation/stand alone series that's an interesting new take on the original X-Men, as well as those from the AoA universe. Chris Banchalo's art is what really makes this story worth the money. He offers a new design of all of the previous characters and his art style is fresh and dark, very appropriate for the AoA universe. The story however is where the graphic novel falls apart. Not that it is horrible, but author Akira Yoshida has a few unexplained gaps like how Psylock suddenly became Japanese or how Wolfsbane freed herself of her transitional form. Yoshida leave plenty of spots for action where the artwork really access and in doing so makes up for his misshapes. In the end the story is readable and the artwork is admirable, this book should defiantly be picked up if you're a fan of the original series, or Weapon X (Wolverine) as a lot of the story focuses on him. Summary: Avoid To celebrate the ten year anniversary of the landmark X-Men storyline the Age of Apocalypse, Marvel comissioned hack writer Akira Yoshida (X-Men/Fantastic Four, Elektra) to script a six issue mini-series that returns to the dark, dystopian, alternate reality we all know and love. The mini-series itself begins where X-Men: Omega ended years back: Apocalypse is dead, and somehow Magneto and his surviving X-Men are still alive. However, not all is well, as we soon find out thanks to Yoshida's schizophrenic storytelling. Is it me, or does anyone else remember Sinister dying in the last issue of X-Man? Not to mention, in X-Men: Omega, remember when Jean Grey is killed, and as Weapon X cradles her, the caption states that "she is no Phoenix"? I thought so, but Yoshida tosses all that aside as Sinister is alive and well, and the Phoenix is here too. Nitpicks aside, this could be all well and good if the story were anything decent, but it isn't, and the characterizations of Magneto, Rogue, Gambit, Nightcrawler, Weapon X, Sabretooth, etc. are so far from what we came to know in the original AoA storyline that they seem like completely different characters all together. Other characters that weren't in the original AoA cross-over, including the Silver Samurai, Xorn, and even the currently hot X-23, are here as well, but for no good reason. Chris Bachalo provides the pencils for the mini, and they're about what you'd expect from the guy from seeing his most recent work: incoherent and sloppy. Also featured in this TPB is an AoA one-shot featuring work from original AoA writers Larry Hama, Scott Lobdell, and co., and that may be worth a look for old AoA fans, but all in all, this unnecessary TPB is better left on the shelf for the rest of us, and should be rightfully avoided. Summary: |
| African Cosmology of the Bantu-Kongo
Publisher: Athelia Henrietta PR |
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| ISBN: 1890157287 List Price: $19.95 Amazon Price: $19.95 Usually ships in 24 hours |
Avg Cusomer Rating: 5 Reviews: Summary: Wonderful Life Living Spirtual Knowledge The author is as soulful and mysterious as the cosmic -mathematical -spirituality written on the pages of this book. I had the pleasure of meeting him in person and knew I had to seek further into what he had to say. One of the more important messages being that since all systems are coded, it is imperative for groups of African descent to love the study of their languages, to prove their scientific capacity in order to avoid yesterdays biased blunders. The cosmology is explained in graphic form in the first chapter for those of us who need visuals to understand, and it is plain enough for the novice to comprehend. There is an awesome chapter on Law and Crime as it relates to cosmic Congo life and living principles as well as a chapter on the concept of the V, the basis for all realities and the binding force to all. You will love all of the proverbs as they are according to the author “ regarded as the warehouse of the ancient African wisdom.” This book is a must have, must read for all who value the old ways of living and who know that this is the way to go. Summary: Be patient This book is not for the faint of heart. as in faint heart never fair suitor won. You will have to work to get into this book, it does not reveal itself to the casual reader. all of those foolish notions about "primitives" fly far away when you try to examine this wisdom. Good Luck. Summary: Rhetorically brilliant - how/why village society works In the first chapter, "Kongo Cosmology in Graphics", Mr. Bunseki utilizes an ingenious series of geometric figures/diagrams to outline the cosmological/linguistic underpinnings of Bantu-Kongo society in the villages where he grew up and has lived for over 40 years. As in other African societies, so-called societal and ritual categories often overlap in many different ways - things aren't always as they seem, but this is why things work so well and are expressive of so much vitality. Everything interpenetrates with everything else, in numerous ways, and on numerous levels, and from numberless standpoints. Much is made in a few short sentences here and there of interactions of forms/fronts/loci of energy. The figures aren't referenced directly in the text, so you have to intuit your way through. Though annoying at first, this ends up being the best way to grasp the concepts at a fundamental level. You tend to "hear" what he's telling you as you're scanning the images, more akin to oral traditional ways of gaining knowledge, even though ostensibly it's being done to you via a printed medium. He uses native Kongo words to illustrate his lead concepts, even offering entire sentences, which he then translates and/or offers commentary on, at times creatively bending and distorting the English language rather than offering up a weak-kneed or water-down version. The chapter begins as an exposition of the origin of the elemental earth/cosmos, and proceeds to illuminate different general stages of planetary life. It then illustrates beautifully the living, breathing relationship between this macrocosmic vision and the comings and goings of individual humans in the cyclic dynamics and inter-meshing forces of family, clan, and society. This includes of course the world before birth and after death (that of the ancestors) as theirs is a [reincarnational] version of reality, every aspect full of dynamism, and of communication. The book, though slim, packs more and more potency the more you study it, even in fits and starts, rather than just reading it straight through. Even when you are trying to skim the text, you feel the forces symbolized therein grabbing at you, seeking to draw you into the world being portrayed. Yes, this book is rather alive. Next chapter: "The African Concept of Law and Crime"- there are no law books in traditional society. In large sections of Africa, all legal, political and societal matters are ensconced in a plethora of expressive proverbs which all members of the village have access to, depending on the extent of their memorization skills. So when a legal matter comes before the village, all those present act as 'lawyers', not for and against, but rather to flesh out the problem and to seek resolution. Any metaphor(s) enshrined in this or that proverb or folktale may be cited in order to get a glimpse of the energy of the moment and/or a grasp of the situation at hand. In the following chapter, "Historical Background of the Kongo Cultural Zone", Mr. Bunseki utilizes a large number of such proverbs to give a sense of the outlines of how Kongo society works. One ends up with a vision of a society that is/was probably pure democracy and pure communalism at the same time, prior to their eventual divergence. For instance: all land was held in common by the community . . . no one could become too rich, as that threatens the stability of the overall community . . . all important decisions are made in common. And leaders act as servants of the community, not as its rulers. Of course, none of this was known by the European colonizers of Africa, mainly because they never spoke any of the native languages, all the better to ignore Africans' humanity in order to exploit the continent's many resources. Thus Africans were portrayed as ignorant savages; their languages and customs were characterized as mumbo-jumbo. Bunseki's grasp of the subject matter is powerful, his delivery even more so - both very expressive, and full of truthfulness. He is rhetorically/poetically very sensitive to the needs of African society to find a way back to its roots, in order that the usual political excesses seen in recent years will hopefully be turned around, and the ancient order be allowed to re-establish itself. At the end of this chapter he outlines and (provides another diagram for) how perception (via sound,, sight, etc.) propagates in space; but expands/confounds the customary "scientific" conception by postulating/explaining how such things as dreams propagate as well. The final chapter ["The 'V': Basis of All Realities"] is even more astounding than what's come before . . . here is where the esoteric nature of Bunseki's training is showered upon the reader. There are several more figures/diagrams by which Bunseki opens up the inner heart of the matter . . . you'll emerged cleansed, somewhat more enlightened (depending on previous training/experience and the temporary condition of your mind and nervous system, of course). Your view of our universe will have been clarified, and amplified. Here, one diagram shows the seven cosmic directions, in an almost identical fashion to what many of us studying Native American traditions have come to know. But then the teacher opens up the seventh direction and uses a series of diagrams to really initiate the great work, provided the reader has followed along up to this point. The way he maps it out and describes it is exquisite, inspired, intuitive and wholeheartedly alive. Give this guy all of the stars you can find for this work . . . he's worth at least that much. Summary: |
| Down Second Avenue
Publisher: Faber & Faber |
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| ISBN: 0571097162 List Price: $11.95 Amazon Price: This item is currently not available. |
Avg Cusomer Rating: 5 Reviews: Summary: Down Second Avenue Before the dawning of the next Millenium, every discerning reader should have read this classic, by pre-eminent author Es'kia Mphahlele. In his true-life drama, Mphahlele chronicles the life of a young Black man growing up in South Africa. From the onset, he takes his readers through the layers of his multi-dimensional life. In the spirit of Jean Toomer, the grace and sophistication of Nelson Mandela and the furor of Toni Morisson, Mphahlele offers no apologies about all that has unfolded in his midst. He celebrates women, challenges racism without showing bitterness. Like no other Black author, he is not ashamed to showcase his tenderness. All in all, he propels us forward and with Alice Walker's caution, and Sindiwe Magona's humour he clarifies the philosophy connectednism.He takes his readers from his rural roots of Pietersburg, to the lights and bustle of Johannesburg, and finally settles them on the rumbles and tranquils of West Africa. What is prominent throughout Second Avenue is his refusal to take no for an answer. Down Second Avenue is a magnifying glass that portrays a lifetime that is more refreshing than Vivaldi's concerto. He comes across-subtly so-as more of an uncolonized African who is not afraid to paint an elegant watercolour of his stumbles, fumbles, falls and moving ons. In my opinion, he is one of the the 5 best novelists of the 20th century. Summary: |
| Batman: Child of Dreams
Publisher: DC Comics |
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| ISBN: 1563899078 List Price: $19.95 Amazon Price: $13.96 Usually ships in 24 hours |
Avg Cusomer Rating: 5 Reviews: Summary: The detail is spectacular While I don't think this is the best Batman storyline out there, let me explain the five rating. I like manga. The art is so fantastic, the characters so detailed. Asamiya is a fantastic artist. He draws the Joker so well. By giving the Joker a wild smile, yet with grimacing eyebrows, Asamiya portrays the character as a homocidal lunatic masquerading as some harmless clown. That is exactly what the Joker is. When Manga doesn't always connect with dialogue, the amazing thing is that the art itself is a form of characterization. The eyes, the lines, the perspective, are all elements of drawing that can add an effective element to creating a character. In a comic book, you have visual aids to help you picture the character. In America, I think the dialogue and writing are superior; however in Japan there is little question that the art is superior. The characters, by their mere appearance on the page, lend some insight into what lies beneath the character in a metaphysical sense. That is how good the best manga art is. However, the story itself is a very interesting, and creative one. Someone has the ability to recreate Batman villains at the genetic level. Due to the havoc it wreaks on the body, however, the "villain" mummifies within two or three days. Who is behind this strange development? Someone who is utterly obsessed with Batman! Someone who takes the saying "imitation is the sincerest form of flattery" to the next level: He wants to become Batman! The art is just so well done, and the story is pretty darn good, too. If you want to experience Batman in a new, and interesting way, and you are a manga fan, I recommend this book. Summary: Why is everyone calling this a manga? I'm reading a lot of these reviews here, and quite frankly, I don't get it. Do these people actually read the book, or just see the author's name? Most manga is ridiculous, let's be honest, it's either for little kids, or a cartoon form of pornography, which, hey, is fine and all, but then comes a comic book like this. It isn't playful, and I don't remember any nudity. It looks, surprisingly, like a comic! A good one too, not a half-a$$ed comics that DC keeps putting out to make money. You can tell someone put time into this one, and it looks great. The only thing "manga" about it is the attention to detail. Now other reviews complain about the plot line being outlandish. The joker, gator, penguin... face it Batman IS outlandish, get over it, if you want something more realistic read the news. Plotline, a new drug trying to come into Gotham from Japan, the distributers of the drug have a more extreme version that transforms them into their dream (like batman's villians, and batman himself). These are NOT the actually villians. People who have claimed that Two-face has a different personality than previously... well yeah because it's not supposed to be the real thing. Now I'm not an avid reader, I watched the cartoon when I was little, and I loved it (not the version that was done by the superman people), so if you want to call me an amateur in comics, go ahead (you freakin' nerd) but I know enough about the story to know that this works. For further examples of GOOD batman comics, check out Frank Miller, and the collection Batman:Black and White. Summary: Dragonball Batman...Just Kidding :) I first saw this at a Barnes and Noble here in town, and like a previous reviewer, got hooked by the story while perusing the pages. I enjoy manga and anime in general, but it was still a bit of a shock seeing the Dark Knight's world drawn like this. But once the story gets going, I didn't even notice the different style and readily accepted the presentation. Some have complained about the story, but I found it interesting enough to plow through the book in one night. Considering the length of the graphic novel, it was a bit of a feat. It is a fascinating international take on Bats, and if given a chance, could turn into a favorite for many fans. Summary: |
| Social Work Practice in Mental Health: Contemporary Roles, Tasks, and Techniques
Publisher: Wadsworth Publishing |
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| ISBN: 0534549209 List Price: $56.95 Amazon Price: $56.95 Usually ships in 24 hours |
Avg Cusomer Rating: Reviews: Summary: |
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