วันจันทร์ที่ 31 ธันวาคม พ.ศ. 2555

Review of "Saving Sea Turtles"



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Saving Sea Turtles: Extraordinary Stories from the Battle Against Extinction [Hardcover]
by James R. Spotila
240 pages, $24.95
ISBN-13: 978-0801899072
Nonfiction

In 2003, Disney released Finding Nemo, a forlorn tale which chronicles the haphazard journey of a Clownfish named Marlin as he navigates the Great Barrier Reef to locate his missing son, Nemo. In the opening scenes of that movie, Nemo excitedly asks his dad if he has ever met a shark with an important follow-on question: "How old are sea turtles?" Marlin, perhaps a little too annoyed while contemplating his son's first day of school replies, "Well, if I ever meet a sea turtle I'll ask him, right after I'm done talking to the shark." Fortunately, this said tale has a happy ending-Marlin is reunited with his son and informs him that some sea turtles live to be 150 years old.

Such is the mythos of animated cartoons where sea creatures are presented as talkative, happy, and engaging. While sea turtles can live to be quite old, the reality is that their numbers are dwindling every year. In his Saving Sea Turtles: Extraordinary Stories from the Battle against Extinction, James Spotila illustrates the issues that directly threaten these amazing aquatic animals.

Dr. James Spotila, a tenured biology professor for Drexel University, has penned a moving work which illustrates the tragedy of many varieties of sea turtles. While he does have a penchant for dropping names and places where his graduate students have studied, the book does not read like a lifeless doctoral dissertation. Quite the contrary, I found his thesis to be stimulating and provocative-throughout I kept asking myself: Is there anything I can do about this? In this collection of stories, the reader learns some amazing truths about the ongoing effort to preserve sea turtles for future generations.

I will never forget a turtle encounter I had while walking along the coastline in North Carolina. Early one morning, my wife and I were enjoying a leisurely stroll when we were flagged down by a determined beach visitor. He showed us the patterns in the sand that were indicative of a sea turtle coming ashore to place her eggs safely in a nest at the head of the beach. Together we called the local conservation society who dispatched a group of volunteers within minutes to cordon off the nest with appropriate notification.

Turtle conservation is necessary to pass along the appreciation of these amazing animals to our children. This book will anger you when you read of the lengths to which some will go to destroy nature. Everyone can play a part in sea turtles conservation-if you enjoy aquatic life, you will love this book.

Review by Steven King, MBA, MEd




วันเสาร์ที่ 22 ธันวาคม พ.ศ. 2555

Mustang Designer



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The Good

Labeled a design biography by its author, Ray Wagner, the book reads like a non-fictional historical novel. The story is told from the point of view of the P-51 Mustang's designer, Edgar Schmued. Ray Wagner had access to the designer's personal papers, and it shows. In fact, it was the designer's widow that suggested to Mr. Wagner that he write the book. Being a retired history teacher, Mr. Wagner wrote a wonderful narrative history of this most famous fighter.

This book is a far cry from the typical fighter love fest that I find in bookstores. Text in those other books looks like an afterthought. The focus there is clearly on the pictures. Mr. Wagner, on the other hand, makes it very clear that the star in the book is the story of the fighter.

The scope of the book is large. In about 250 notebook-sized pages, the author tells the story of the events that led to the Mustang being created and looking the way that it does. Later chapters cover postwar variations on the Mustang and even jet-powered designs that evolved from the wartime lessons learned. A fitting subtitle for the book might have been "The history of the P-51 Mustang in its historical context".

The book is filled with first person quotes, which made the book a lot more interesting to read. I really got the feeling I was there with the designer (Edgar Schmued) as he overcame all the challenges he faced.

There's lots of photos of airplanes (mostly Mustangs) and of the people that played a role in its history. The focus on the captions is on technical accuracy. You won't find any captions of the "Pretty Mustang in flight" type. As best as possible, the captions tell you exactly which airplane you are looking at in the picture. If you like technical accuracy, you'll love this book.

The Bad

All of the pictures in the book are in black and white. Given their historical nature, my guess is that color was missing from the original pictures, too.

I was also hoping to find more technical details that would help me create a scale model. A couple of three-view drawings of the P51D variant are included, but almost all of the pictures of the Mustangs are side views or three-quarter views.

The Ugly

The biggest issue I have with the book is the reproduction quality of the pictures. They are similar in quality to what you find in a newspaper. I was frustrated that I couldn't see more details in the airplanes.

Conclusion

This is a unique book on an extremely popular scale model airplane subject. It works wonderfully well as a way of understanding the mindset and wartime constraints that led to the design of the fighter. If you are an aviation history buff, I can think of no better book to read. If you are a fan of the P-51, as I am, bring this book along on your next vacation. You won't regret it.

http://www.rcadvisor.com/ founder - Home of the best model airplane calculator. Free!

Author of RCadvisor's Model Airplane Design Made Easy and other books.

Host of Ask the RCadvisor in the free weekly http://www.thecrashcast.com/ podcasts.

AMA Scientific Leader and Contest Director #4601.




วันเสาร์ที่ 8 ธันวาคม พ.ศ. 2555

Backyard Bigfoot a Logical Book Review



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I was curious about the possibility of stick signs being real evidence of interaction with Bigfoot, but I was also curious to know if Lisa A. Shiel, author of Backyard Bigfoot, had a new, logical perspective on Bigfoot and how the plausible existence of hairy forest giants might relate to UFOs, as it states on the book cover.

Shiel also discusses "orbs," but it seems that her outlook on these subjects as naive as those who staunchly "believe" that photographed orbs are manifestations of spirits from beyond, and that UFO's are proof that extraterrestrials or inter-dimensional beings maneuver through our airspace in highly advanced craft.

The bottom line is that there is absolutely no proof to substantiate these phenomena, and it is illogical to speculate based on belief alone.

I mean no disrespect to the author. This is an interesting, well written book, and she certainly has done her fair share of research. Her theories are entertaining, and there is much anthropological and paleontological information included in the book, though not always in the best context.

In some cases I notice that her interpretations are a bit of a stretch from what one might ordinarily gather from the information at hand. For example, in the first chapter, "Ancient Evidence," Shiel presents an image of a pottery piece decorated with a representation of Bes, an Egyptian "hairy dwarf" god.

Sheil tells us that Bes is often depicted with a feathered headdress, large feet, and sometimes as a bipedal lion-like creature but what the author fails to mention are the obvious wing-like appendages seen protruding from the back of the creature in the image presented. This depiction of Bes is as much a representation of a hairy hominid as it is of Mothman, for those who believe in the existence of such a thing.

The stick sign phenomenon is intriguing, and may indeed be evidence of a possible attempt at communication, or mere playfulness, by an unknown creature. Shiel has obviously done extensive experimentation with the stick sign phenomenon, but the fact that it continued at two very different locations, and on her property in both cases, may indicate that the phenomenon is a simple result of the misperception of her own environment.

I'm a skeptical person, but I try to keep an open mind about subjects like this. Backyard Bigfoot does contain some interesting information, and potential evidence that may or may not suggest the presence of hairy hominids on the author's property.

Much of what the author presents is assumption. She assumes a connection between hairy hominids and UFOs based on anecdotal evidence; stories. She assumes that orbs, and other likely photographic or optical anomalies, represent paranormal activity and not common dust, moisture, insects, or other airborne debris. Shiel also assumes that these orbs have a connection to the alleged hairy hominids she believes frequent her property.

Shiel suggests some sort of association between things like strange lights, mystery canids appearing on a motion-activated game camera, and her personal sighting of an out-of-place jaguar near her home when she lived in northern Texas. It seems that all of the world's paranormal mysteries found their way into her backyard. That is, if out of place jaguars, or wolf-like animals are truly paranormal phenomena.

It is common that many people who believe in the unexplained tend to experience all kinds of strangeness in their lives, while skeptics like me seem to miss it all. Everything becomes part of some great mystery to them, far beyond the comprehension of even the most educated scientists and thinkers.

On that note, one thing that Shiel doesn't hesitate to do, whenever she has the opportunity in this book, is to bash skeptics as a close-minded group with an agenda to shut the door on all hope for the believers. I got the distinct impression that Shiel views skeptics as the most illogical of people, when in fact the opposite is true. Unfortunately believers view skepticism as a threat.

Skeptics ask questions, and point out facts which believers tend to conveniently ignore, maybe for fear of change. It is not my goal to bash the author, she has written a fun book, and presents plenty of food for thought. There can be no belittling the author for amount of work she has done. She is an intelligent person, and the book is well researched, however, much of what she offers and interprets seems liberally colored by her belief.

Are Bigfoot responsible for the stick signs Shiel finds on her property? Maybe. Does Bigfoot exist? Maybe. But also probably not. It seems that the author, like many, is convinced of their existence and assumes that unknown hairy hominids are communicating with her through stick signs. Some of the stick sign formations do seem to be deliberate, while others could very well have just fallen out of a tree and landed that way.

There are many less mysterious woodland creatures capable of shuffling some sticks around too, during the course of gathering materials for a nest or den for example, or simply scurrying by. Even the wind can whip up a loose stick or twig and have them land as they may. To say that a found array of sticks are messages from, and evidence of, a creature that science has not found to exist is a stretch. Oh, there we go with science again.

Throughout the book are references to stick signs and rocks (some of which Shiel claims are evidence of hairy hominids' toolmaking skills), apparently showing up where they were not the day before. In this case, how is it possible that the author has such precise recollection of what is, or is not present on her property, and how can she be so certain as to how something got there?

Are we to believe that Shiel patrols her property on a daily basis making a detailed inventory of the contents of her land? Many of the passages in the book seem to indicate just that.

I will admit that my explanations above do not answer the riddle as to why Shiel seems to consistently get responses to her own placed stick signs. If an animal didn't just happen to shuffle over the sticks during the night, rearranging them a bit by mistake, then maybe there is something intelligent trying to communicate with her. But the evidence is very sketchy, and it does not necessarily have to be a Bigfoot.

Sheil also discusses mystery braids that appear in the manes of her horses, seemingly overnight. She describes the detail and intricacy of the braids, but at the same time she contradicts herself, referring to them as having a knotted appearance and being difficult to remove.

The photos Shiel presents of the braids show no real detail, and don't really help to support her claim. In some pictures it looks like she's showing nothing more than a tangle of hairs. Hard to say for sure. She is again making an assumption that the braids are the work of playful, hairy hominids, though she never claims to have seen any Bigfoot at work making stick signs or weaving the braids. These alleged events apparently happen overnight, miraculously, therefore we cannot assume that unknown creatures called Bigfoot are responsible for these events.

There is just no proof, despite the cute cover image, which seems more suited for a children's book than a serious examination of the Bigfoot phenomenon.

The book is interesting, but I must say that it is odd as well. It is a book about the paranormal and the author's belief, perfect for those who wish to continue to believe in such things.

Drew Vics writes reviews and features for various web sites, including EclecticReviews.com which features book, music, movie and product reviews.




วันศุกร์ที่ 23 พฤศจิกายน พ.ศ. 2555

Mrs. Kennedy and Me by Clint Hill and Lisa McCubbin: A Review



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Mrs. Kennedy and Me recounts Clint Hill's Secret Service assignment to protect Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy from November 1960 until Lyndon Johnson was elected in 1964. Written with dignity and respect, the book describes the challenges and rewards attached to guarding Mrs. Kennedy.

The detail about Mrs. Kennedy's daily activities and overseas trips is extensive. Photos of her public and private life abound. Mr. Hill and co-author Lisa McCubbin write of her indomitable spirit, her coy humor and her grace. Hill clearly adored the whole Kennedy family and guarded them with diligence. He generously chronicles his time with Mrs. Kennedy. She was an expert equestrian, which forced him to find creative ways to protect her while riding. At one point, she mischievously bummed a cigarette off him while they were in a car out of the public eye. A lover of ballet, she teased him about his reaction to a performance she thought particularly moving.

He describes her beautiful outfits for various state functions. Clothing was an important part of her image. American's adored her sense of style. She wanted to purchase some outfits while in Italy. Advising her against it, Hill found himself dispatched to women's boutiques with the former First Lady's shopping list.

A Secret Service agent must problem-solve in situations we can't fathom:

? Determining on the spot whether or not it was safe for Mrs. Kennedy to touch a baby elephant during a trip to India.
? Safely transporting a horse gifted to Mrs. Kennedy by Pakistani President Ayub back to the United States.
? Keeping Presidential moments private while maintaining adequate protection for the family.

Mrs. Kennedy valued her privacy and wanted her children to have a normal life. Much of her time was spent away from the White House. Although this meant Mr. Hill would see his wife and children less, he never complained. It was simply part of the job.

If you are looking for rumors and bits of scandal supposedly tied to the Kennedy Administration, look elsewhere. Wanting to bring a balance to salacious gossip about that time and negative stories of the Secret Service's response to the President's assassination, Mr. Hill breaks his fifty-year silence. The memoir is a positive and honest assessment of the joys and tests he met as an agent. The memoir overflows with respect for the Kennedy family. Hill writes eloquently about the depression and guilt he suffered because he felt he didn't move quickly enough to take the bullets that struck President Kennedy on that fateful day in November of 1963.

The author of this memoir is a consummate gentleman who humbly went about his duties. He was at that time, perhaps, Mrs. Kennedy's closest friend. In Mr. Hill's own words, "What started out as uncertainty for both Mrs. Kennedy and me, had turned into a comfortable and enjoyable working relationship based on mutual trust and respect."

Readers, you will be moved by this personal tribute to an unforgettable First Lady. I highly recommend Mrs. Kennedy and Me.

Article originally published by Holly Weiss on http://www.blogcritics.org/.

Holly Weiss is the author of a historical fiction novel, Crestmont, writer and reviewer of newly-released books. http://www.hollyweiss.com/.

Free reprint of article if entire bio is intact.




วันอังคารที่ 13 พฤศจิกายน พ.ศ. 2555

Book Review: I Want to Help: My Story About Cancer, Depression, and God



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Non-fiction/Memoir

I Want to Help: My Story about Cancer, Depression, and God

T. Laresca

2009

Dorrance Publishing Co., Inc.

20 pages

I Want to Help is T. Laresca's testimony on how his belief in God saved his life. The author discusses how his faith helped him to survive cancer after being told that he would only have three months to live if the prescribed treatments did not work. In this slim book, Laresca shares with the reader the impact his illness and the subsequent treatments had on his body and mind. He also reveals an incident with police that could have resulted in the loss of his life, had it not been for his unwavering faith.

Pain drove Laresca to seek medical assistance after several hours of suffering at home. Surgery revealed testicular cancer that had spread to his stomach and lungs. Two months of chemotherapy followed. The treatment was grueling and took a heavy physical toll on Laresca. But through it all, the author relied on his faith in God and maintained a positive outlook: "The whole time I believed God would take care of me (2)."

Laresca's credits his remission to his faith and medical treatment. He has been cancer free for over eight years. The next phase of Laresca's journey was unexpectedly difficult. He fell into a deep depression after his treatments were finished. The cancer had stripped him of his independence: he was physically frail, jobless, broke and living with his parents. The author states that depression was a more difficult adversary than cancer because of the shame associated with mental illness and his unwillingness to seek treatment.

After sharing his story about surviving cancer and depression, Laresca discusses a violent encounter with police during which he was repeatedly maced. He writes that he died during the incident. "I remembered something that I hadn't done that I had always wanted to do. That was to help, so I fought my way back... (17)."

This is a short read with a powerful message about the role faith can play in sustaining a person through all types of adversity. The author uses his story as a tool for sharing not only his personal beliefs, but to inform the reader about the mind's impact on the body and how crucial it is to think positively when problems arise in life.

I Want to Help is a straight forward, inspiring piece about a man of faith who wishes to use his story to help others.

Melissa Brown Levine

for

Independent Professional Book Reviewers

Melissa Brown Levine is a writer, book reviewer and manuscript consultant. She is the author of "I Need to Make Promises: A Novella and Stories." Read an excerpt at http://www.melissabrownlevine.com/.




วันอังคารที่ 30 ตุลาคม พ.ศ. 2555

Good Leaders Lead Without Deceiving Their Followers or Themselves



Most of us can't stand it when we learned that a politician, our boss, or someone in an authoritative position has been lying to us. In fact, nothing boils our blood quicker. Over the years, I have been fairly hard on those who stand up at the podium and tell us they are better leaders, claiming we should vote for them due to their leadership skills. I often laugh and think that if someone has to tell us they are great leader, then obviously they haven't been showing us or leading by example in the first place.

Indeed, what is that famous quote when it comes to politicians; "how do you know when a politician is lying? Their lips are moving." It is a sad state of affairs that we have to think like this, but perhaps the reason we do is we've been led astray far too many times by those who call themselves leaders. Of course there is something worse than a leader deceiving all of us, and that would be a sociopath or psychopath that also deceives themselves.

Now then, along this line of thinking there is a very good book I'd like to recommend that you read. In fact, it is written in simple layman's terms that anyone can understand, and it is a book that I own in my personal library. The title of the book is;

"Leadership and Self Deception - Getting Out of the Box," by The Arbinger Institute, Berrett-Koehler Publishing, 2000, 181 pages, ISBN: 1-57675-094-9.

The book explains how people lock themselves and their mind in a box and fail to understand the people around them. It's almost as if they don't care, and that their job is to accomplish the task, mission, or objectives without regards to the people involved, or the team which is to make it all happen. This can get leaders into trouble. Often leaders believe they are better than everyone else when they are not, and even if they are, that doesn't give them any advantage treating people like crap.

Often the authoritative style leadership works good in the beginning, but it also creates yes-men, and people who do not give their full potential, or volunteer pertinent information, or their full experience and observations to the cause. In this case it is the leaders fault for using their own particular style without regards to the people involved.

Thus, I think you'd be wise to read the book, it's a quick read, not more than a day and a half, with plenty of time to think in between the chapters. Indeed I hope you will please consider all this and think on it.

Lance Winslow has launched a new provocative eBook on Change Management. Lance Winslow is a retired Founder of a Nationwide Franchise Chain, and now runs the Online Think Tank; http://www.worldthinktank.net/




วันอังคารที่ 16 ตุลาคม พ.ศ. 2555

Coward by Saadt Hassan Manto



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Coward

By

Saadat Hasan Manto

This story Coward revolves around a man named Javed who is devastatingly torn between his instinctual desires and his virtues. All his life he has spent an honest and a clean virtuous life till this moment where he just is barely able to contain his desires.

The title of the story is symbolic. The story is portrayed in a sub continent society. Over here the word 'sex' is a taboo. We over here don't even accept the existence of brothels let alone people going to one. In this society there are societies within societies. In the story Javed is an "educated man who can distinguish between right and wrong". The point here is that he is educated and he for some reason has not been able to marry yet, probably due to some financial issue or like the one mentioned in the story that the woman he loved was Hindu and that would create problems. He had continuously failed relationships. He had been longing a woman's touch for some time now as most men do. The fact that "Javed's own house was quite far from this place" suggest that he is from a decent family background who take these types of behaviors as a sin. The author over here is trying to show us the ordeal the young generation goes through in this time of capitalistic society where marriages are conducted late, well at least for the male part of the society. The conflict in the young man's mind has arisen due to the society teaching us to be moral and yet at the same time there is this part of the society where there is a checklist which will endorse the young men of the society as real men. This checklist is not a written document; it is an unwritten mutual understanding to all. In the subcontinent this is the world of men, the society of men. To become a real man the man has to consume liquor, he should have tambaco wala pan in his mouth, he should have fight when his honor is at stake or just to be dominant and last but not the least and the one that makes you instantly into a real man is losing their virginity. This man is taken to be a real man. If you don't do these feats you are labeled as a coward, not just the subcontinent but throughout the world this checklist applies excluding the pan part. The author has shown this through Javed who is a victim to the society's misdoings.

Now Javed growing up in such a society where there are two sets of conflicting beliefs he is shown fighting with his consciousness. To top that he is a Muslim in the sub continent and Muslims here are puritans. The take pleasure to be a sin. Throughout his life he has been hesitant and virtues, but now his body can take it no more and his mind is being taken over by pure barbarian instincts. The Lamp is symbolizing his hesitance that he has suppressed all these years which is reminding him of his virtues and respect as he doesn't want to be discovered at the brothel, the man part in him who is labeling him as a coward and continuously reminding him of that, it is also representing the part of mind which we refer to as reason as the lamp tells him the reason as to why he has been hesitant. The light of the lamp represent the society in a way. Once he has entered that light the society will know of his doings.

The Story is being narrated by the author. We can see, feel, hear, smell and taste what Javed can. The story has been narrated from his point of view. We are actually witnessing the ongoing battle in Javed's brain with his consciousnesses. Javed is the round character in the story as he changing every moment. Unity of time place and action is seen. There are occasional flashbacks in the story telling the situation of Javed. The story does not have a chronological order as the story starts from the middle and the author then tells how the character has landed into this situation. There is a proper beginning, middle and an end.

There a two ways to look at the ending. One is to look it from the society of the men which will consider him a coward and one that is the puritan one will consider him as strong and brave to have fought with his inner self and won right at the last moment when it seemed as if he would fall into the pits of hell.




วันศุกร์ที่ 5 ตุลาคม พ.ศ. 2555

Book Review - Scale Aircraft Drawings: World War I



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Summary

This 150 page book covers 35 World War I airplanes through the use of over 40 highly detailed "master" drawings. They are all drawn at a consistent scale of one quarter inch to one foot. As best as I could tell, all of the classic designs are included.

The book was published by Air Age, the same company that publishes Model Airplane News magazine. Although not stated explicitly, my assumption is that these drawings were all originally published in the magazine.

The Good

Wow. These drawings are a dream come true. They are incredibly detailed. Frankly, most of them are plain gorgeous. The drawings were all made with modelers in mind. They contain excellent details about each airplane's internal structure as well as showing full details about external markings. Outlines of the airfoils used are always included. Many of the drawings even contain detailed information on the layout of the instrument panel. In other words, they are all that one needs to construct a highly detailed scale model airplane.

As a bonus, detailed drawings of some of the engines and armaments (machine guns and bombs) are included in the back of the book. They were drawn to the same high standard as the aircraft drawings.

The Bad

It appears that all of the drawings have been scaled down to fit within the dimensions of the book. There is no indication given as to how much each drawing was scaled down. It would take some detective work to look up a key dimension for the airplane, such as its wingspan, and use that to extrapolate the scale of each drawing. The publisher could have saved us the trouble by including this information.

A preface to the book encourages the reader to order full size drawings from the Air Age store. I only managed to find four master drawings for sale in their store, and none were for World War I aircraft. Buying a set of drawings from them may have been a possibility in the past, but it is clearly no longer a viable option.

On average there are two pictures per airplane included. Most of the pictures are small, and the quality varies a lot. If you are building a scale model, you might have to supplement the included pictures with others discovered through additional research.

The text that accompanies the photos and the drawings is useful, but very short. Only about a third of a page is devoted to each aircraft. That is really just enough to touch the surface of what is known about these airplanes. The good news here is that it is a lot easier to find text that describes these airplanes than it is to find quality drawings.

The interior of the book is all in black and white. This means that the photographs are all in black and white, which should not come as a surprise given the time period of the airplanes. But it also means that the descriptions of colors in the external markings are all textual. It would be a challenge to accurately recreate a color only described as "dulled light green", for example.

The Ugly

Many of the drawings in the book were created by William Wylam. Mr. Wylam started producing airplane drawings for Model Airplane News in the late 1930s. That was 80 years ago! The amount of research that has gone into documenting these aircraft in more recent years is enormous. We simply know now a lot more about these airplanes than we did at the time Mr. Wylam was creating his drawings.

The end result of all this is that the technical accuracy of many of the drawings included in the book has been called into question in recent years. The magnitude of the reported errors varies a lot. Some of the airplane outlines are said to be off a little bit. Some of the registration numbers shown on the aircraft have been discovered to belong to entirely different airplanes. Other errors in his drawings are reportedly more serious.

Conclusion

I find it very hard to fault Mr. Wylam for the reported errors in his drawings. He had a job to do, and he did his best. I am told that many model airplane kits have been released over the years containing the same errors as found in the book. Hmmm. I wonder which book they used as their primary source!

I don't think these discrepancies detracted from the enjoyment derived by the kit builders from flying their airplanes. If your goal is to create a highly accurate scale model, you are well advised to supplement your research with additional sources.

Despite the warning above, I cannot imagine a serious fan of World War I scale model airplanes that wouldn't benefit from consulting this book.

http://www.rcadvisor.com/ founder - Home of the best model airplane calculator. Free!

Author of RCadvisor's Model Airplane Design Made Easy and other books.

Host of Ask the RCadvisor in the free weekly The Crash Cast podcasts.

AMA Scientific Leader and Contest Director #4601.




วันพฤหัสบดีที่ 27 กันยายน พ.ศ. 2555

Are You Finally Interested in Losing Weight? The Resolution That Will Work!



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Lose It! The Personalize Weight Loss Revolution [Softcover]

by Charles Teague and Anahad O'Connor

206 pages, $21.99

ISBN-13: 978-1605290942

Nonfiction

In the era of the smart phone, it seems that new applications are released nearly every day. Some applications, such as Rovio's wildly popular Angry Birds, promise to steal countless hours of your life with very little offered in return. Slinging birds via slingshot into the skeletons of buildings is alluring to many-but will not do anything for you health. In 2008, Charles Teague sought to change that.

He released an iPhone application which would help people manage their weight. Hugely successful, the LoseIt application has been downloaded by over 6,000,000 people. Today, the Lose It platform can be downloaded for use on the iPhone, iPad, Android, or used online. If you own one of these devices, or have access to the World Wide Web, you have the ability to lose weight and keep it off for good. The Lose It solution works because it is based upon a time-honored principle: you must burn more calories than you ingest to actually lose weight. You enter the weight you want to weigh and you are provided with a calorie maximum for each day (and are even told when you'll reach your goal based upon your plan for losing weight.)

In the book Lose It! The Personalized Weight Loss Revolution, Charles Teague and Anahad O'Connor explain why the LoseIt application has been so successful. The LoseIt philosophy is based upon five pillars:
Embrace mindful empowermentTrack your caloriesTrack your habitsTrack your exercise as negative caloriesBenefit from peer support

The novelty of the program is the fourth pillar: Track your exercise as negative calories. When you use Lose It, you keep track of all calories ingested. The caveat is that any calories you burn while doing exercise are automatically deducted from your daily log as negative calories. It doesn't take the user long to figure out that losing calories from your log has a dual benefit: not only are you exercising-you're also able to ingest those negative calories and remain under your maximum for the day.

The Lose It! book helps dieters understand caloric intake and gives visual clues to help you understand how many calories you might be ingesting. For example, three ounces of cooked fish is about equal to the size of one's palm. Additionally, the book helps the novice by providing an exercise guide with plenty suggestions on how to burn more calories. Remember, calories burned can be eaten.

The most compelling chapter of the LoseIt book would have to be the one entitled, What's Your Type: Identify the habits that are holding you back. In this chapter, the authors illustrate why a one-size-fits-all diet will not work for everyone. In this chapter, this writer discovered he is the consummate weekender - logging calories fastidiously until the weekend, and then letting the logging go. LoseIt reminds you: a calorie is a calorie. Want to burn off a pound? Burn 3500 more calories than you've eaten and, yes, you will lose a pound.

Written in an easily read, narrative style, the Lose It! book is commended to anyone trying to lose weight. In the book, you will find the philosophy behind the LoseIt application; plenty of dietary information to help you; and a variety of personal testimonies of individuals who have lost over 100 pounds and have kept it off. If you like online forums, you will not be disappointed, either-there are numerous individuals who log on to LoseIt's virtual forums to discuss exercise strategy, swap recipes, and give each other motivation.

Slinging virtual birds into the meager structures to watch them cascade to the ground will not help you reach your fitness goals. LoseIt will: buy the book and download the program. After all what do you have to lose...

...except maybe the weight you've been wanting to lose all your life?

Review by Steven King, MBA, MEd




วันศุกร์ที่ 14 กันยายน พ.ศ. 2555

The Most Bloody Romp of All



It is hard to find something truly glorious in war, hard, but not impossible. This man was glorious, and it took a terrible war to make him so.

Once in a while you bump into something a bit special that has somehow not gathered the spotlight it should, and this WW1 autobiography fits the bill with bells. Massive loud bells. GUNNER SUBALTERN 1914-18 (published by Leo Cooper of London) by Julian Tyndale-Biscoe consists mainly of letters to his father, not published until 1966 and details a romp through apocalypse. This artillery officer's remorseless cheerfullness while his friends are cut down around him can only be admired, though at times it surely went a long way to placate his father's fear. His survival is a miracle, and there are, in my print anyway, a succession of poignant photographs of his friends who did not. A.C. Cooper is a case in point, gradually shot to bits through the war, photographed by the author in a Dublin fete, armless sleeve pinned to his Sam Browne belt, smiling in the sunshine and already itching to get back. He 'died as a result of being gassed'.

Most people the author describes are 'wonderful fellows', though he targets the fools and maniacs with cutting wit. They all live in the 'lap of luxury'. The experience of spending a night waist deep in freezing water under fire hardly fazes him...though he and the trooper with him had to keep lifting one foot at a time out to keep some feeling going...actually it is hard to know where to start with his experiences. He blithely describes crawling over smashed body parts, wading through gore and the remains of his dear friends, watching German trenches being obliterated by his guns five yards at a time, their occupants flung up as each salvo erupted, then an encounter with an fellow officer left enthroned after a shell hit the officers' latrine, who told him 'It's lucky that shell arrived when it did as I was feeling a bit constipated'. The sheer bravado of it all is breath-taking.

In the Ypres Salient (Toms Dog they called it) during one action they lost a third of their officers. His reaction was that it could have been a 'lot worse'.

He got shot, blown up repeatedly, suffered terrible ailements including dysentry, and still found the energy to set up spoof targets so that HQ would have to get up early (he narrowly escaped courts martial for that little jape) and fills at least a tenth of the book with descriptions of who he met at mess and where he managed to scrounge a meal. His attitude to rank was fabulously blase, and his descriptions of private soldiers and NCO's contains the same respect and honour as anyone from his own 'very middle class'.

It is undoubtedly a book about war, but gradually you realise it is a brilliant and vibrant snapshot into a world that by 1918, largely ceased to exist. Of finding ways round orders that officers should not hunt their chargers in Ireland, of knocking on a general's door simply because someone else sent a letter of introduction, and expecting to be asked to tea. Of laughing in the face of endless danger and violence because that was what your country and your companions expected. Eventually, the sheer bloody minded determination to remain of good cheer in the face of a great and terrible (and endless) experience is in itself the most moving element. I am not ashamed to admit I came close to tears during his description of The Somme, how a very near shell burst became so common-place they 'merely inclined our heads towards the burst, so our tin hats would take the odd bullet'. The officer he was talking to said calmly 'I'm hit', and duly expired. As did the battery clerk. That evening he could find no casualty return forms so instead used an equipment list form: "It seemed cold-blooded, indenting for a subaltern and battery clerk, to replace those 'destroyed by shell fire'."

My copy is inscribed by JTB himself, and he has added in pencil 'MC' after his name. The inscription is to 'George', Jan 1972. He died in December the next year, aged 77. What a character. What a story he tells.

It is, with the exception of 'Good-bye to All That', the most powerful account of that dreadful war I have ever encountered, and I came to it by sheer chance. I recommend this wonderful bloody romp to all those interested in things military and the men who carried (or directed) the guns...recommend it most highly, energetically and with due enthusiasm, as JTB would have said.




วันศุกร์ที่ 31 สิงหาคม พ.ศ. 2555

Book Review of "Death in The West: Fatal Stories From America's Last Frontiers" by Chris Becker



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Death in The West: Fatal Stories from America's Last Frontiers. [Soft Cover]

by Chris Becker

224 pages, $16.95

ISBN-13: 978-0873588935

Nonfiction

Review by Steven King, MBA, MEd

Diving into underwater caverns, scaling insurmountable mountains, or defying natural consequences of exploration, Americans are attracted to anything that produces a thrill. The adrenaline rush causes our hearts to beat faster and our spirits to soar. Adrenaline junkies are seldom satisfied unless they are defying death.

Whatever your vice for an adrenaline rush-do not strap yourself into a lawn chair and tie 45 helium-filled balloons to it. Your intention might be to rise to the top of the trees but you might find yourself spotted by airliners at 16,000 feet instead. Larry Walters, or Lawnchair Larry, as his neighbors in San Pedro came to know him, did just that in 1982. Unless, of course, you desire to be arrested - just like Larry was when he landed.

Becker writes of stories such as this in a powerful way to show where the odds catch up to thrill seekers. For every success, a handful of people die. It is unfortunate to be caught in the wrong place at the wrong time, but it can also have deadly consequences.

Sometimes, the Grim Reaper arrives as the result of really bad choices. If lightning strikes, the best refuge is not in a rock crevice where electricity can jump across side to side and destroy what is between. It is never advisable to hike into unfamiliar territory, without a compass, map, or extra clothing, and not tell someone your anticipated route. Becker's testimony rings clear: take precautions and provisions, or your next trek might be your last.

In spite of our best efforts, however, we are totally at the mercy of Planet Earth. Natural calamities abound and chances are, if you are in the wrong place at the wrong time, you might not return. Avalanches bury people, mudslides wipe out entire towns, and destructive fires burn across the landscape with apparent vengeance.

Sharks can mistake humans for natural food sources and grizzly bears can attack with little or no provocation. Mountain lions might stalk a hiker down a pathway and then attack for a late night snack. Perhaps our quest for adventure takes humanity too far into the natural habitat of the animal denizens of the planet.

A compelling read as Becker usually demonstrates how calamities could have been avoided. Reading these stories will certainly make the reader think twice before the next thrill seeking adventure.




วันเสาร์ที่ 18 สิงหาคม พ.ศ. 2555

The Warmth of Other Suns by Isabel Wilkerson - A Review



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If you've ever done genealogy, you cannot help but learn in intimate detail the history of your family and often the times in which they lived. The generation born prior to the Baby Boomers is quickly disappearing and so are their stories. Thankfully Isabel Wilkerson pursued the history of three of these people to help Americans understand the epic tale of the Great Migration of southern African-Americans, who came north for a better life.

This migration of close to six million people covered almost seventy years. Within a generation of the Jim Crow laws becoming established throughout the South, black southerners turned to the North. And although it had a confusing set of rules of its own, the North dangled a carrot of hope for all those seeking a chance for improvement. The North did not want to commingle with these poorly paid new migrants, nor did they want them to take any jobs that paid well, nor live in any housing outside the areas established for them. The North did, in fact, do almost anything to prevent their success.

Wilkerson records the journeys of three migrants from the small towns of the South to the big cities of the North and West. Her research shatters many of the pre-conceived ideas about southern black migrants. She reminds us of the courage of all those who come to America, seeking a life with more opportunities for themselves and their children.

Wilkerson weaves the first hand accounts of Ida Mae Gladney in Chicago, George Starling in New York City and Robert Foster in Los Angeles with background information of the times in which they lived. She sites new data to support her conclusions and does it all with incredible understanding and compassion. You will have a difficult time putting the book down, especially in the last hundred pages, as you become more and more attached to these real-life, fallible people.

As with blues music, which is often unacknowledged by today's African-Americans, this book may be ignored by those whose parents have lived it. Do not let the size of the book discourage you. Read it to better understand your parents and grandparents. Many of us grew up being taught American history from a white male perspective. This book makes you realize that we all influence history by example, by the way we live our lives, by what we will and won't tolerate and by the choices that we make. Learning about these three individuals proves that we do indeed have the potential of living heroic, albeit unrecognized, lives.

Copyright 2012 by Linda Murdock. Linda K Murdock is the author of four books, including two cookbooks, a puzzle book and an insider's look at the State of Colorado. She has traced her genealogy back ten generations in America and has written articles for the Colorado Historical Society. She is a blues enthusiast and an avid mystery reader. Learn more or read more reviews at http://bellwetherbooks.com/




วันศุกร์ที่ 10 สิงหาคม พ.ศ. 2555

Review - Musa Dagh



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Musa Dagh, Edward Minasian, 2007, ISBN 9781583851593

This is the true story about a famous bit of early 20th century history, the Armenian Genocide. It is also about the suppression, with the help of the American government, of a movie based on a novel about that time.

In the early 1900s, Turkey was run by a government of younger activists who wanted to "cleanse" Turkey of all non-Muslims (sound vaguely familiar?). Starting in 1915, it became official policy to kill or deport all Armenians (who were Christian). The population of Armenians in Turkey dropped from approximately 2 million to its present number of less than 100,000. Several villages of Armenians, facing "relocation" to the Syrian desert, made their last stand at a place called Musa Dagh. It is in present-day southeastern Turkey, just north of the border with Syria. They held out for approximately 2 months against the Turkish Army, before being rescued by a French ship.

In 1934, a novel called "The Forty Days of Musa Dagh" by Franz Werfel was published to worldwide acclaim. The Armenian Genocide had become The Forgotten Genocide, so Armenians around the world were overjoyed. They were even more overjoyed when MGM announced, in 1935, that a major motion picture would be made based on the novel. Then the Turkish government got involved.

They exerted a lot of diplomatic pressure to stop the film from ever being made. Turkey threatened to ban all American films from Turkey. France, their long-time ally, was willing to go along. The American State Department took Turkey's side. To this day, the Turkish government strongly denies that anything like genocide ever took place. MGM was eventually convinced to shelve the film, but they refused to let anyone else make it, diligently renewing their rights to the film every few years.

In the years after World War II, a number of well-known Hollywood figures were interested in making the film. No less than 15 different scripts were written. To satisfy Turkey, it was suggested that the Turkish Ambassador in Washington read the script before production, or that the title or setting is changed, so that it has nothing to do with Turkey or Armenians. The Turkish response was that no amount of re-writing was sufficient. During the Cold War, the threatened closing of the NATO base at Incirlik, Turkey, provided a very good reason to not get Turkey upset over the film.

In the 1980s, rights to the film were acquired by an Armenian from California named John Kurkjian. He was very interested in making the film, but he had a huge time constraint. If the film was not "in the can" by a certain date, a few months away, all rights to the film would go to Anna Mahler, Werfel's widow. Kurkjian was forced to make the film in the Hollywood Hills, using unemployed Armenian actors and a second-rate director. He was a total newcomer to the world of "Hollywood," so he was unmercifully taken advantage of by everyone involved in the film. It was a rushed, low-budget film, and the final cut looked like it. Kurkjian made the deadline, but when the film was shown in front of Armenian audiences, words like "disappointing" and "tragic" were used (the film stunk). He was able to make back the money he spent on the film; the only good thing about the whole experience was that the permanent rights to the film were now held by an Armenian.

This is a fascinating and eye-opening book. It exposes a little-known piece of American film history and is highly recommended.

Paul Lappen is a freelance book reviewer whose blog, http://www.deadtreesreview.blogspot.com/, emphasizes small press and self-published books.




วันศุกร์ที่ 27 กรกฎาคม พ.ศ. 2555

Book Review: Stories of a Traveling Belly Dancer



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Non-fiction/Memoir/Travel

Stories of a Traveling Belly Dancer

Zaina Brown

2012

Ebook

Zaina Brown is a professional belly dancer who has worked in the United States and in several countries abroad. In her new book, Stories of a Traveling Belly Dancer, Brown shares a collection of emails she sent to friends during her nearly four years of travel in Africa and the Middle East. The book documents the dancer's adventures in the twelve countries that she visited as a student and working dancer. Brown's descriptions of her dancing experiences are dramatic and exciting. Her encounters with the local residents of each country are as entertaining as the dances she performs.

Brown opens the book with a brief history of belly dancing, which originated in North Africa and the Middle East. The author describes the changes in the art of belly dancing as it became popular in India, Asia and Western countries. Brown discovered belly dancing as a teenager growing up in Finland. She quickly decided that she would pursue a career in the field. In her early twenties, after taking classes and working as a dancer in New York City, Brown embarked on what was supposed to be a two month trip to Cairo, Egypt. She left New York in 2007 and returned in 2011.

As a young, single woman traveling alone, Brown provides the reader with a unique perspective regarding the treatment of women in the Middle East and the beauty of many of the people, often poor and struggling themselves, who assisted her as in each country she visited. Brown's writing is personal, informative and funny. She includes history about each country and the specific sites that she visited, which makes the places come to life for the reader. The same is true of her accounts of the people she befriended. The stories are also revealing of Brown as a person. She comes across as brave, a little impulsive, compassionate, inquisitive, and open-hearted. Even though most of the jobs Brown worked during her travels included accommodations that many of her fellow performers stayed close to for security, Brown (who learned some Arabic in Egypt) made a point of reaching out to the local community at every stop. Even though the story is primarily about Brown's work as a professional belly dancer, what will keep the reader engaged is the spirit of this adventurous woman who seems to have few fears and sees even fewer limitations in life. From Egypt to the United Arab Emirates to Ethiopia, Brown's courage helped her navigate many interesting situations. And her love for her work never faltered.

Stories of a Traveling Belly Dancer is a colorful, entertaining story of a young dancer with a passion for her work and an absolute love for adventure. It is an inspiring tale for the young and old who are interested in travel and living an unrestricted life. I highly recommend it.

Melissa Brown Levine for Independent Professional Book Reviewers

Melissa Brown Levine is a writer, book reviewer and manuscript consultant. She is the author of "I Need to Make Promises: A Novella and Stories." Read an excerpt at http://www.melissabrownlevine.com/.




วันอังคารที่ 17 กรกฎาคม พ.ศ. 2555

Incognito: The Secret Lives Of The Brain - Book Review



After reading David Eagleman;s Incognito: The Secret Lives of the Brain, it's easy to see the future of writing is in good hands. Even better, the future of writing about a subject that would have most readers snoring by Page 3. Or, if they were eReading the work on a Nook, Kindle Fire or iPad, one might think the readers would be wandering off to apps that let them check their email or move to eBay, but it won't happen.

Eagleman is a deceptively cagey writer, who actually knows how to put together a sentence of more than three emoticons and four XOXOs - a tribute to the writing skills of some of his generational colleagues so that you learn something about concepts that you had, perhaps, thought were either boring or had no reach into your daily life.

Laboring under this premise is false because you soon learn the Eagleman is a man who knows his subject thoroughly as he is one of the future's top neuroscientists. Yet, he's more; he is a science writer who, like some of the science reporters that CNN or NBC actually pay, knows his topics and can actually make them interesting.

After reading this work, you have more than a fair to middling idea that there's a lot more going on behind what you see with your eyes and what you hear and that's how we get through our days. Why do you put on your left sock first and then your right? Why do you drive one way on one day to a stop while on another day you take a completely different route. Yes, you have a rational explanation quite ready: it's easier to raise my left leg first and my Mom made me learn to do it that way.

Each of these is plausible and quite likely true but what levels of your mind do you use to make these and other decisions during the course of your day? What would happen if you put on the right sock first? Would your universe turn upside-down? (In the case of clothing, you'd probably have a bad day and be cranky because "I chose the wrong tie;" "This shirt's collar is too tight," or "The sleeves just don't feel right." Yet, if you put your socks on correctly everything would be fine. As to your daily trips, well, we'll leave that one to your imagination.)

It's Eagleman, whose light touch with the word and excellent use of the proper examples at the right points, who shines here and strips away our preconceptions about how or why we do things. At some times, certain areas of your mind work with your eyes, ears and even your own body chemistry to produce your actions. All of these pieces are working together or forming new alliances - albeit temporary ones - with other areas of your mind and the layers that Eagleman exposes to produce how you handle a situation or how it handles you.

The brain is a fascinating topic that requires a deft touch or the book will be left on the shelf or unread on the eReader, but not David Eagleman's "Incognito." In fact, after reading it you'll find there's nothing incognito about your brain anymore. It's out there for you to see and it can't just hide behind the old "because I've always done it this way" because Eagleman shows that while you think that's the way your brain works, it may end up with "I've always done it..." thinking but you used a whole different set of your brain to get you there.

Roberto Sedycias works as an IT consultant for ecommUS-Books




วันเสาร์ที่ 7 กรกฎาคม พ.ศ. 2555

Book Review: Behind the Iron Curtain: Tears in the Perfect Hockey "GULAG"



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Non-fiction/Memoir
Behind the Iron Curtain: Tears in the Perfect Hockey 'GULAG'
Maxim Starchenko
2011
RoseDog Books
144 pages

Maxim Starchenko was an eight-year-old living in Kharkiv, Ukraine when he was recruited by hockey coach, Ivan Pravilov. His memoir, "Behind the Iron Curtain: Tears in the Perfect Hockey 'GULAG,' recounts the horrible physical and psychological abuse he and the other members of his team endured while playing for Pravilov. This is a difficult book with vivid descriptions of the abuse that occurred throughout Starchenko's ten years with the team. The author courageously shares his story to unburden himself and to encourage his former teammates to speak out about the abuse they suffered at Pravilov's hand.

The Hockey team Starchenko joined as a second grader in 1986 was called Druzhba-78. "Druzhba" means friendship and "78" refers to the year the boys were born. Throughout the book, the author makes note of the "unfriendly" atmosphere that Pravilov created among the teammates as he used violence and brainwashing techniques to pit the boys against each other. The author compares Pravilov to Stalin. Starchenko further compares the GUGLAG (Soviet concentration camps) system of slave labor that thrived on a culture of informants and spies to Pravilov's coaching style which pitted the players against each other. No one wanted to be Pravilov's "focus" and each child would do anything to avoid the abuse.

Starchenko describes several episodes of abuse committed against him by Coach Pravilov including being struck on the back of the knees and on the buttocks with a hockey stick. One particularly disturbing episode the author describes involved Pravilov repeatedly hitting him in the head with a hockey stick. There is also a story in the book that suggests Pravilov sodomized another player with a hockey stick. The hockey stick was often Pravilov's weapon of choice. The violence and humiliation escalated during the teams international travels in the nineties. According to Starchenko, Pravilov frequently demanded that the boys fight each other during these trips. Eventually, the "punishments" took on a sexual tone.

Even though there were laws against child abuse in the Soviet Union during Starchenko's time on the team, Pravilov was rarely confronted by adults who observed the children's injuries. Starchenko's own parents believed remaining on the hockey team was important for their son's future. While Starchenko does not hold back when recounting his parents' behavior during his time playing under Pravilov, he states that he bears no hard feeling towards them. Starchenko's his own loyalty to the coach resulted in Pravilov making him his recruiting assistant after Starchenko's team dissolved.

On February 10, 2012, Ivan Pravilov was found dead while in custody in Philadelphia on charges of child-molestation. Suicide is the suspected cause of death. This new development adds credibility to the accusations Starchenko makes in his book. It also assures that no other child will ever endure the abuse Starchenko and his teammates lived through.

"Behind the Iron Curtain" is not simply another story of childhood abuse. It is a clarion call to parents, educators, coaches and others involved in organized sports to make it their duty to become aware of abuse and to speak out against it.

Melissa Brown Levine for Independent Professional Book Reviewers

Melissa Brown Levine is the author of "I Need to Make Promises: A Novella and Stories"

http://www.melissabrownlevine.com/




วันจันทร์ที่ 25 มิถุนายน พ.ศ. 2555

The Prince and Pauper by Agu, Jaachynma N E - The Passport to a Greater Life



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To take those limitations off your life and be the real you, this book titled 'The prince and the Pauper,' authored by Mrs. Agu Jaachynma N.E., is the creative tool you need. It is loaded with the logos and rhema that will help you function in the unction of greater glory. This masterpiece is more than a companion if you truly desire a positive change in your life. It is the Midas touch that you need to live a better and higher life. An unselfish person is one who discovers something of great value and shares same with others enthusiastically, that is why I share this with you. Reading this great book blessed my life greatly and I highly recommend it for you to read and be blessed. This enchiridion written by a virtuous woman, teaches us why we should not settle for less but go for the best which is our birthright in Christ Jesus.

In this book, this godly princess shares with us God's words that positively transformed her life and this word can change you and the world positively. This is the book that you need for a positive mental re-engineering and for the renewal of your mind. Many authors of Christian books make their writing boring and tasteless but Jaachynma's book is interesting, inspiring and exciting. This beautifully written book teaches that the pauper is the man or woman that has no knowledge of God's plan and purpose for his or her life. He/she is not in good relationship with God. A prince is a person that is in good relationship with God. This book is enshrined with the knowledge that empowers your personality. After reading this masterpiece, you will be a person of note whose noteworthy legacy is worthy of emulation.

Agu Jaachynma N.E., the daughter of Zion who authored this book is a woman of substance, whose substance of sapience is blessing all and sundry. She is a pastor, educator, mother, wife, sister and a good encourager whose sagacity is ruling cities worldwide. This gifted and talented doyen is a graduate of Languages and Linguistics Department of the University of Jos, Plateau State, Nigeria. She has held several leadership positions in her church and various organizations; she presently works as an administrative officer in the Ministry of Agriculture, Nigeria. Jaachynma is a poet, linguist and a seasoned writer. A woman of dignity and a genius whose geniality is top-notch. Agu, Jaachynma N.E. is married to Dr. Agu Ahamefula, a respected man of God, a gynecologist and an obstetrician. Her marriage is blessed with two powerful boys.

The Prince and the Pauper is a 162-page perfect-bound paperback book, printed and published by Enaz Publications in New York, USA. This ten-chapter book has a dedication, foreword, acknowledgement, introduction, conclusion and bibliography. This power packed book has the ISBN number: 1-59232-199-2. The Prince and the Pauper is a life-changing book that was written under God's inspiration and it is loaded with God's life-transforming power that will take you to greater heights now and forever more. I endorse and recommend this life-enrichment book for all. Read and live a higher life.

?IFEANYI ENOCH ONUOHA




วันพุธที่ 13 มิถุนายน พ.ศ. 2555

Both Expert Riders and Novices Can Benefit From Developing the Art of Equine Communication



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Developing the Art of Equine Communication, a new Moonlight Mesa Associates publication written by C.L. "Lee" Anderson, is a one of a kind when it comes to the horse world and its myriad publications. Anderson's book will be extremely educational for many horse owners, and may challenge the beliefs and practices of many others.

For starters, the cover photo by professional photographer Allen Patrou alone speaks volumes. This is surely a perfect example of a picture being worth a thousand words. The cover design by Vin Libassi is also outstanding. What follows inside the book is every bit as good as the cover suggests.

Horses have been a passion for Anderson since his youth, and he has spent his life studying, reading about, and training these animals. He is, as his tag implies, a "Living Historian and Horseman of the Old-School." It's fortunate that Anderson's experiences and observations are now in printed form.

The beauty of Anderson's book is that he starts at the beginning - not the beginning of horse training, but at the beginning of man's relationship with the horse. These chapters are fascinating in that the author brings to light information that most people just don't know and really have no way of finding out unless they engage in the same painstaking research the author undertook. Anderson goes on from there to give insightful observations of horse behavior and how horses communicate with each other. While one may be tempted to jump ahead in this book and read chapters that pertain strictly to what one wants to know about, having access to this unusual and highly informative information gives the later material far more meaning and sense.

Anderson covers equine topics (sight, smell, touch, and sound) and how these senses affect horses. He goes much further than just explaining, though, and gives extremely helpful, solid suggestions on how to deal with specific issues and undesirable behaviors related to the topics. For example, when one understands why a horse bolts, it's a lot easier to deal with the issue or to avoid the situation altogether. Rather than reacting in blind anger to the bolting animal, having information about why this occurred puts the behavior in a different perspective.

This is not a book written by a newly educated horse person. This book is the culmination of decades of observation, work, and experience. This is a book that any horse person would find of value, regardless of whether a rider agrees with everything the author says or not, or whether the person is a novice or a skilled horseman. There is most definitely something of value for every single rider in this publication.

Barbra Lee is a retired teacher who enjoys reading books and writing book reviews.

Developing the Art of Equine Communication is available at http://www.moonlightmesaassociates.com/ and on amazon.




วันศุกร์ที่ 1 มิถุนายน พ.ศ. 2555

Moonwalking With Einstein - The Art And Science Of Remembering Everything



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This is the lesson that Joshua Foer, a science writer and journalist, took away with him when he looked at the world memory championships not long ago.

An engaging writer, who believes in becoming involved with his subjects and stories, Foer, who won an Amazon 2010 "Best Books of the Month" Award, looked the wide range of people competing in this amazing competition.

There was one competitor whose memory was so poor that he could not remember beyond the last instant of his life while another competitor was able to memorize complex theorems and mathematical problems, even though the contestant doesn't understand anything about math himself.

Then, there was one of the champions who was able to memorize the exact order of a 1528-digit integer.

The deeper he looked the more Foer wanted to find out how the process worked because, as he noted in one part of his well-written work, he had trouble remembering where he left his car keys and then wondered how many of us have the same problem. It turns out that there are more people out there with this issue than you may think and Foer works with the champions, using their techniques to not only learn where he left his car keys, but other things such as the things like: Brains find it easier to use visual cues than lists; Brains can be trained to take the visual cues they have been given and can then be trained to turn those visual cues into usable lists.

For example, Foer, learning the tricks of the trade from the masters, was able to learn long lists by using a method he called POA - person, object, action. In other words, he was able to remember the layout of deck of cards or actions by associating each individual card or action with a person, perhaps the presenter or a child, or associating the list with an object, an auto or item like a specific clock, for example. Finally, here was the action, where he was able to associate a piece of a long list with a specific action.

In other words, if the item he wanted to remember was the first of a series of actions, he would associate the item in the list with that action. Other people use mnemonics to do the same thing or providing tricks for every day items you hardly think about so that they remain with you all of the time, such as the location of your house keys or your car keys.

There are many, varied training techniques and Foer's engaging style not only shows people master the many issues they have in remembering long lists. It was this type of perseverance and memory management that enabled a contestant to memorize more than 1500 numbers in a row - without knowing them beforehand - and then repeat the list exactly.

The mind is a fascinating science. Some says that we don't use a-tenth of our conscious minds and from the way Foer writes, it is possible. If you want to learn how the master's do it in a delightful, quite readable style, the you will enjoy Foer's work and exactly how he remembers where his keys are.

Roberto Sedycias works as an IT consultant for ecommUS-Books