To be forewarned is to be forearmed. If you prefer to avoid the unpleasant truth that is written here you take the same risks that denial always brings but this time you take those risks with your continued ability to practice and with your livelihood.
But what a service author Adams has done for those who heed. In a clear straightforward way he puts it all on the line about the Kafkaesque nature of administrative law, and the basic (but somehow obscure to most professionals) fact that under this law you are guilty until proven innocent, no matter how wild the accusation. Furthermore since no penalty exists for false accusation the mischievous or vengeful are invited to have a field day.
Here is the information you absolutely must have in order to protect yourself, and to join with others to see to it that desperately needed reforms are accomplished in order to protect your profession. This is indispensable reading and the book should be required reading in every graduate and professional school that trains health care practitioners
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Michael Adams has done a great job of pulling together various information pieces in a coherent framework in an understandable and easy to read manner: history, rationale, process, market and technical details of the OpenCable architecture; current status and future direction. I recommend this book highly.
Satish Thatte, Director, Product Management & Standards LG Electronics Research Center of America Princeton Junction, NJ
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More important, in my opinion, is the book's "readability"! I'm sure there are numerous books that cover the exact same information as this book yet might not be written in a manner that is clear and simple to understand, especially for Cisco newbies like myself. This book is just a lot of fun to read.
Finally, I really enjoyed the "real world" tone of this title. It isn't written for someone who's bound for the testing center, but rather for someone who needs to apply the knowledge at work in the field. I'm certain that I'll constantly be using this book as a reference even after passing the exam. Very cool.
All in all, I'd like to recommend ICND to the Cisco neophyte who's looking for that great "First Book" to start off his or her Cisco library. I'm really glad I got this book and I'm sure you will be too.
Good luck on your CCNA!
I passed CCNA in December. So, I don't have the exam pressure. I am reading this just for fun and enjoying it.
I strongly recommend it over Cisco's ICND if you intent to take CCNA test.
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Each two-page spread starts with the title question, only the name is replace with another name. Adam's response is "I see creation all around me." Genesis 2:4-25 is listed as the reference to learn more about Adam.
Other major Bible characters are asked the same question, and they answer uniquely: Noah, Abraham, Joseph, Moses, Samson, Ruth, David, Esther, Mary, John, Peter, Paul, a little child, and of course, Jesus, all with corresponding Bible references.
I fully recommend "Adam, Adam, What Do You See?" by Bill Martin as a fun way to introduce your children to your faith.
Anthony Trendl
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It was here that Ansel Adams set up his camera, and put a human face on this tragedy. This is his book; the pictures he took, and the text he wrote. Originally published in 1944, this newer edition (published in 2001) contains all of the original photos, several additional photos that Mr. Adams took but didn't include in the original, and several fascinating introductions written by Japanese-Americans.
Considering the topic of this book is something of a cause celebre, one might imagine that this book was something of an anti-American screed. Well, if you thought that, you would be wrong. This book is a very balanced look at what happened, and the people who were caught up in it. Mr. Adams wanted the book to be factual, so both the good aspects and bad aspects are covered. That said, though, the book was something of an expose of what happened, and is not a whitewash. Therefore, if you are looking for a book that will tell you about this historical tragedy, then I highly recommend this book.
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The Velveteen Rabbit is heartwrenchingly beautiful. The Rabbit who yearns to be Real and whose love for the boy was unconditional is both imaginative and sad. I cannot read this book without a lump coming to my throat and being transported to simpler days when the love of a toy was the greatest thing in the whole world.
This is a book with an ending that is mixed, that touches on the ambiguity of life and loss. But there is also hope of a new beginning. And I think children can understand that and grow from it.
I cherish this book deeply.
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unfortunately, relate to. All of the details well
placed and in the proper sequence. A hard thing to
do properly. Looking forward to his next offering.
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How can you not love a dog?
On the surface, this is an accessible easy read; we're in the point of view of Ruslan, formerly a guard dog in a labor camp. When the camp bewilderingly closes, Ruslan is left to his own devices-- trying to find his commander, trying to get food. One terrible scene I have never been able to get out of my mind is when a peasant cruelly offers him a piece of bread-- covered with hot mustard, knowing it will cause the dog pain. No animal lover can read this scene without compassion or tears.
And yet.
Ruslan is faithful, but the reader knows the system he served was an evil one. Like the best allegories, this book works fully on all its levels-- as a sheer survival story from a decent, though misguided, dog's point of view the book is sad. But with the knowledge that certainly any Russian reader would have (and that any reader should have, really) about the changes in Russian society-- this book comes out of the Thaw period, when artists began to be able to critique more openly the repressive Stalinist regime-- the book's real tragedy is almost too much to take.
For Ruslan, you see, like so many Russians, had been deceived in his attempt to be a Good Dog. What Ruslan remembers fondly, the reader with horror can understand as atrocity (attacking prisoners, for example). (Another book which does this is Martin Amis' brilliant TIME'S ARROW, in which the Holocaust is remembered backwards, so that the narrator recalls resurrecting millions out of ashes).
Ruslan comes to a terrible, inevitable end-- the details of which are left to the reader's shivering imagination. Ruslan sees some people he once knew-- and goes to do his job. But the world had mysteriously and completely changed.
Poor Ruslan, he was only doing his job-- truly. The real criminals are the ones who corrupted and perverted his loyalty and decency into serving their evil ends.
An unforgettable book. I wept at its end, and emailed my Russian teacher to complain! (I got no sympathy; tragedy and sorrow are so Russian, she said).
The survivors, whether they worked for the system -- as in the case of a guard dog, or those who who were crushed by the system, as in the case of millions of former prisoners, were all forced to continue to endure in Soviet Russia, without any real justice for the victims.
The confusion that resulted, with former victims being "rehabilitated" and yet never enjoying any real restitution, and the former tormentors never being required to face the enormity of their deeds is palpably felt.
In addition, by using a morally neutral character, a dog, the author shows that in the case of many who supported the system, it is impossible to definitively assign to them guilt for the system which they supported. The book shows that while totalitarianism has a few monsters, it has many more people who accede unquestioningly to the environment with which they are surrounded. And it does all of this quietly, without melodrama or histrionics.
This powerful book is a must read for anyone who is interested in the human condition. Let us hope that more such books are written in Russia, and that this book is reprinted.
Michael Glenny provides a well-crafted translation of this important book.
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