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Book reviews for "Albaugh,_Ralph_M." sorted by average review score:

Jurisdiction
Published in Digital by Signet ()
Author: Ralph Cotton
Amazon base price: $5.99
Average review score:

FAST PACED WESTERN ACTION-A MUST READ
From the shootout between the posse of merciless militamen, towns men of Hubbler Wells and the Ganston Gang, JURISDICTION takes off with guns blazing and lead flying. Young Arizona ranger Sam Burrack has his hands full trying to bring in the Ganston Gang while at the same time saving young Billy Odle from not only from the Ganston Gang and the milita men but also from his hero worship of the outlaw indian Willie John. Once again Ralph Cotton has given western fans a fast paced page turning western. Just when you thik you have read Cotton's best Ranger book, he tops it with the next, in this case JURISDICTION. This is A MUST READ for western fans.

COTTON COMES THROUGH AGAIN!!!!!
I think I have liked all the Ralph Cotton books I have read and this one is no exception. I really like the character of Ranger, Sam Burrack. This one is about his earlier years as he learns the ways to deal with and handle people. Burrack is after the Ganston Gang, but there is a problem. A young boy by the name of Billy Odle is with them. Was he taken or did he go on his own? His life reminds me of so many kids his age today. Can Sam find him, rescue him and turn his life around at the same time? What about Willie John? Does he end up good or bad? Cotton can make you see in you mind just like you were there. A very good Western with a lot of heart. I think you will enjoy it.

A MEANINGFUL ONE OF A KIND SAGA.
I have read and enjoyed many of Mr Cotton's books. They are each and every one worthy of high praise. However, this one is in a class by itself. The boy Billy Odell is a sad yet believable example of a child whom life has thrown out of control. The way Ranger Sam handles him is so patient and Christlike, it will bring tears to the readers eyes. Everybody I know has their favorite Ralph Cotton book. This one is mine. Both the book and the author are a rare treasure to find. You'll can't help but read it more than once. Thank you once again Mr Cotton.


MINI CMMI(SM) (SE/SW/IPPD/SS Ver 1.1) Staged Representation
Published in Spiral-bound by Cooliemon, LLC (April, 2002)
Authors: Ralph Williams and Patrick Wegerson
Amazon base price: $17.95
Average review score:

Quick, hancy reference for CMMI transition
The Mini CMMI is a handy reference that allows for effective and efficient review of the material. Organizations that are making the transition to CMMI will find the tool invaluable when implementing the goals and practices of the model.

Great & Handy Resource
Sitting in a meeting and need to cite a goal or practice? This handy reference is there to help. Easily fits in a shirt pocket or portfolio case.

Ralph Williams, an SEI Authorized CMMI Lead Appraiser and Transition Partner, has produced an easy to use guide to assist the process improvement professional! It's well-organized and structured in parallel with the CMMI Staged Representation.

An Essential Reference
Mini CMMI(SM)
by Ralph Williams - Cooliemon LLC

Thanks Ralph for helping to make the incomprehensible available to the rest of us. This thirty something page guide is a summary of almost 750 pages.
It clearly shows the process areas relevant to each maturity level and discipline (or bodies of knowledge), and the generic goals, which are the significant factors that were not explicit in the old CMM's.
These are the rocks that provide the stepping-stones to increasing maturity levels applied to all process areas.
As a practicing process engineer this book is in daily use with me. I wholeheartedly recommend it.


Price of a Horse: A Jeston Nash Adventure
Published in Paperback by St Martins Mass Market Paper (May, 1996)
Author: Ralph W. Cotton
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A fine mixture of history, humor, and the old west.
I picked up my first Ralph Cotton novel while on vacation in Montreal. I read it on a train ride from Montreal to New York and loved every minute of it. When I returned to Chicago, I ordered the other five Jeston Nash novels from Amazon.com.

Price of a Horse, the third in the series, is a fine read. The story never flags, the inclusion of historical characters (Billy the Kid and Doc Holliday to metntion two) doesn't seem forced, and there are moments of sly and side-splitting humor (the scenes with Nash and Gustav the cook had me laughing out loud).

Cotton writes with the authority of a scholar and the easy style of a true storyteller. In his Jeston Nash novels he has managed to tell fast-paced, entertaining stories filled with action and humor and to slip in a few weightier issues (women's emancipation in this novel). He takes a genre form, elevates it to serious literature, and doesn't become boring.

If you are a a fan of novels of the old west, buy this book (as well as the others in the series). You won't be disappointed.

Fantastic new Western writer!

The day I found out Ralph Cotton and I shared
the same grandfather, the main character of this
book, I went out and found Price of a Horse and
dove in. I didn't know what to expect, since I'd
never heard of Ralph's work and had grown up
reading the wonderful novels of Louis L'Amour.
No way could this new guy, let alone a long lost
relative, prove to be a writer of merit.

Boy was I wrong! Price of a Horse is one of the
finest Westerns I have ever read, and the other two
Cotton novels I have read are at least as good or
better. He uses beautiful turns of phrase, slam-
bang action, nice period detail and well-drawn
characters. You don't find all this usually in one
Western novel. Usually you have to pick and choose
the merits of regular Western fare.

Not with Ralph, though. He has many more stories
to tell, hopefully all about our rapscallion grand-
father, James H. Beatty. Read on--you are sure to
enjoy.

Mark Twain reincarnated
Cotton's use of humor ranks right up with the old master of American literature and he uses it in a way that weaves itself into the dark drama of the story page by page. Like his other work he is telling us much more than the title and story line implies. He exposes such things as spouse abuse, women's rights, and the male mindset of the 1800s while at the same time depicting the tragic depths man will sink to in order to defend some warped belief in right and wrong. The price of a horse becomes the value we place on the one thing we think we must have in life and the exagerated lengths we will go to to have it. (Did Billy the Kid really smoke pot?) His wisedom and insight into human nature is enchanting and enviable


The Spiritual Teachings of Ralph Waldo Emerson
Published in Paperback by Lindisfarne Books (15 March, 2001)
Authors: Richard G. Geldard and Robert Richardson
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an american spiritual treasure
yes, go ahead, hit your one-click order button now. for anyone interested in the life, thought, ideals and teachings of a GREAT american original, this is a book you want and need. brilliant, beautiful, eternal, this book will not go out of date. universal wisdom is timeless and Emerson was a master. he was an avid admirer of the wondrous Bhagavad Gita and his writings reflect that. he had an understanding of the need for each self to connect with the eternal Self or spirit, to use his americanized way of saying it. his teaching keeps pointing the reader right back to the very heart of himself or herself: the place divinity lives, the place where God is found. shortly after resigning as a minister of the unitarian church, he wrote, "i will not live out of me. i will not see with other's eyes. my good is good, my evil ill. i would be free---i cannot be, while i take things as others please to rate them. i dare attempt to lay out my own road, that which myself delights in shall be good. that which i do not want--indifferent. that which i hate is bad, that's flat. henceforth, please God, forever i forgo the yoke of men's opinions. i will be lighthearted as a bird and live with God". o k, hit that button a couple of times, this book makes a wonderful gift and you ain't gonna wanna give up your copy!!!

An excellent introduction to Emerson
Harold Bloom repeatedly names Ralph Waldo Emerson as the great theological architect of the "American religion" in his book of that title. However controversial some of Bloom's other theses may be, there is much truth in his characterization of the Sage of Concord. Probably most of us have been influenced by Emerson, at least indirectly, in far more ways than we realize.

But reading Emerson directly is at once an enlightening and maddening experience: "enlightening" because Emerson was a philosopher in the best sense of the word -- a lover of wisdom -- and "maddening" because he was _not_ a philosopher in any _other_ sense of the word. He was stubbornly disinclined to argumentation or even systematic exposition; his essays read more like sermons than like philosophical arguments; he preferred to deliver himself of his oracular insights without, it seems, subjecting them either to the criticism of other minds or even to the rigors of critical self-reflection, on the view that Reason was an all but infallible source of insight into truth and its objects are known with the same immediacy with which we know that we are awake. (It is a curious view of reason which makes no allowances for improvement of one's understanding.)

As a result of this take-it-or-leave it approach, his writings are all too easy to misunderstand, and for this he must bear much of the blame. For example, his remarks on charity in "Self-reliance" have led some readers to suppose that he was opposed to charity altogether, whereas in truth he believed that we are each of us suited by talent and temperament to be "charitable" to a special class of persons for whom we are therefore _truly_ responsible. Then, too, his remark in the same essay on "a foolish consistency" has been infamously and endlessly misquoted -- but even in its proper context it invites misunderstanding by failing to pay sufficient attention to the non-foolish variety of consistency (which Emerson supposed would take care of itself more or less automatically). Here again, Emerson's account of Reason, in giving so much weight to intuition, leaves strangely little room for reflection.

But in my own opinion, at least, Emerson's insights are genuine, sometimes brilliant, and essentially right, and it would be a shame if the readers who needed him most were unable to profit from his writings merely because he had been needlessly obscure. It would be nice, then, to have from another writer the guidance that Emerson himself was unwilling or unable to provide.

As you've probably guessed by now, that's where Richard Geldard comes in.

In this volume (which is a revised edition of _The Esoteric Emerson_, so don't buy them both!) Geldard does a marvelous job of exposition. He knows his Emerson backwards and forwards, and he sets out the essential features of Emerson's thought in clear and orderly fashion, chapter by chapter.

His essential "take" on Emerson, as you can tell from his title, is that Emerson is best approached as a spiritual teacher. I think this is not only correct but even obviously so; yet it is surprising how few available critical studies of Emerson are actually written from this point of view. At any rate, Geldard's exposition will provide the reader of Emerson with a much-needed "map" of the territory traversed in his writings.

I suspect that Geldard's "map" will make Emerson available to many readers who might otherwise have found him unpalatable. Some readers may, for example, be put off by what seems to be Emerson's extraordinarily cavalier attitude toward tradition in favor of present experience.

But according to Geldard, Emerson's actual meaning was as follows: "We have to break, lovingly, the vessels of our tradition in order to become one with the source of that tradition" [p. 176]. Now, certainly there is a difference in emphasis here with the religious tradition in which Emerson was brought up. But surely this is not far from, say, the Christian doctrine that the scriptures are a closed book unless read "in the Spirit." (Granted, Emerson had much more in common with the Quakers than with the Calvinists in what he made of this point. Nevertheless it is not alien to even the most theologically conservative Christianity.)

Not being a Christian myself, though, I am interested not primarily in reconciling Emerson with Christian theology but in simple exposition of his teaching. And Geldard excels in this regard: in ten straightforward chapters he sets out the essentials of Emerson's teaching and places it into the context of his life. Not bad for 177 pages of text.

There are one or two points on which I wish Geldard had done a _little_ bit more explaining (for example, on the difference between the meanings of "idealism" in its philosophical and its popular senses), since he does not seem to be presuming any prior acquaintance with philosophy on the part of his readers. But this is just nitpicking on my part. (Hey, I have my own favorite hobby horses too.) This is a fine book and it will be of immense value to anyone who wants to understand what in the world Emerson was on about.

Emerson Would Be Delighted
Emerson had a persona of being withdrawn, and rarely showed emotion. However, if he were here today, I believe that he would be very pleased with Geldard's interpretation of his work. Most of us have read Emerson's essays. They are thick and difficult, but the spirit of the work rings through and speaks very loudly to the authentic heart. Geldard has done the work of specific interpretation for us. If you feel a need for being yourself, which most of us do (healthy people do), then this book is a must read. Emerson turned away from the path that seemed to have been chosen for him, took a chance, and listened to his authentic self. The author points out that Emerson had some difficult years, and that rings true today for those of us that know, and chose to march to the beat of our own drum (Thoreau??). Emerson was inspired and was a great gift to us. Geldard makes his work understandable and relates it to our lives, today. Emerson was highly intellectual, and after reading Geldard's book, I'm preparing to read Emerson's essays once again, with the light that Geldard has placed upon it. It's pure, and it's spirit, and it is authentic. Of the five best books I've ever read, like my five friends out of the many, I can count this one on the top five. Read it, read it slowly, devour it, contemplate it. Let it permeate your being and at the very least have a place in your thought patterns during your day. This work is meant to teach and inspire and it has succeeded!


Visual C++ 4 How-To: The Definitive Mfc Problem Solver
Published in Paperback by Waite Group Pr (July, 1996)
Authors: Scott Stanfield and Ralph Arvesen
Amazon base price: $44.99
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Easy To Follow
This is one of my favorite VC++ books. It has great examples and easy to follow explanations of the subject being covered. I have really learned from this book. Excellent.

A real programming book
Almost all of the programming books I have ever bought that are specific to a particular language product are worthless. They spend 550 of 600 pages describing the product's menu options and toolbar buttons then 40 pages of trivial worthless sample programs and 10 pages of index. This is not one of those books.

This book is 650 pages of pertinent and valuable examples and I have used it many times to help me solve many real world problems. I specifically liked that fact that it is the first book I have ever read that described the WM_GETMINMAXINFO message as a method of making CFormView based applications look the way they should. For the record, every other programming book I have that relates to MFC in any way gives naive CFormView examples that look stupid when running and behave stupidly when used.

Very useful, excellent reference.
An amazing amount of topics covered. Very thorough, and concise. No fluff. I constantly refering to it. One bad point: The index is not tabulated correctly, it can be difficult to find subjects. Overall the best book on Visual C++ I've seen yet.


What a Writer Needs
Published in Paperback by Heinemann (February, 1993)
Author: Ralph Fletcher
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Easy-to-Read Wonder
This easy-to-read wonder was required reading in my graduate class. Everyone in the class loved the book and found it extremely useful.

I've read it twice
A great inspiring resource for those who want to write or teach writing. It's not perfect, but it's very real.

This is THE book on the teaching of writing!
Words simply cannot describe this book. I read it through in one sitting and was left craving more. Teachers in grades kindergarten through graduate school would benefit from reading Fletcher's book. Simply outstanding!


Lifting Titan's Veil : Exploring the Giant Moon of Saturn
Published in Hardcover by Cambridge Univ Pr (Trd) (15 July, 2002)
Authors: Ralph Lorenz and Jacqueline Mitton
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Very good book on what we know now.
The authors do a good job in this book and it is a good read. What is interesting is how much we do not know about this amazing satellite. We have no idea about what the surface is like. In less than 5 years the Cassini mission w/ the Huygens lander will make this book obsolete. You have to wonder why this book was written so close to Cassini's arrival. Until then this book should be standard text in any amatuer astronomers library. The authors give too much credit to Carl Sagan and not enough to the real scientists who have contributed to our limited knowledge on the subject. Besides that this book almost gets my highest rating.

Titan And The Pursuit Of Science
This is an exciting time for planetary exploration, when after the solar system has been reconnoitered by spacecraft (except Pluto) and now spacecraft are being sent to specific planets and moons, etc., for closer examination. LIFTING TITAN'S VEIL covers the Cassini mission to Saturn and it's large moon Titan, known to possess a thick atmosphere and perhaps a hydrocarbon ocean, due to insert itself into Saturnian orbit in July, 2004, the attached Huygens probe should enter Titan's atmosphere January, 2005.

The authors include a lot of science in this volume, including background information concerning moons and planets across the solar system. Most of this book covers Titan of course, what we know about it and how we came about that knowledge, from early times to the present. Titan's atmosphere and surface and sub-surface conditions recieve the most attention, with the chemistry of the atmosphere discussed at length. Also, the authors debate the possibility of an ethane/methane ocean existing on Titan as the surface temperature, according to available evidence, is close to the triple point of methane. All of this science can of course, as the authors point out, shed light on the formation and evolution of the solar system and in turn give us clues to our own origins in the misty past. As a chemist I especially enjoyed the information on the chemistry of Titan, and the space-buff in me enjoyed all of it. In addition, the Cassini spacecraft is detailed, and there are lots of illustrations, many in color.

On a personal note, I remember being at the space center as a visitor just a few days before the launch of Cassini, in October, 1997, and thinking that here is this spacecraft sitting out there on the pad just a few hundred yards from the Atlantic beach, I wondered then, will Huygens, at the end of it's journey, find another beach? Space travel is cool!

Exploring the Giant Moon of Saturn
Lifting Titan's Veil is a revealing account of the second largest moon in our solar system. This world in orbit around Saturn is the only body in the solar system with an atmosphere strikingly similar to Earth's and the only moon with a substantial atmosphere. Nitrogen is the main gas in Titan's atmosphere but it is laced with a cocktail of hydrocarbons and is virtually opaque to human eyes because of layers of orange smog. Beneath the haze, lakes of liquid methane may be a feature of the frigid landscape. Titan is like a giant laboratory in deep freeze that may help scientists understand the first chemical steps towards the origin of life."


Pink Instrument: Poems
Published in Paperback by Brookline Books (01 August, 1998)
Authors: Max Blagg and Ralph Gibson
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Reads like a great pop record....
....with each poem a great single. Spin it

Unbroken, unfaltering, metered life.
I love the way Pink Instrument zooms like the Space Shuttle orbiting New York, very Un-John Glenn-like. It's funny and beautiful. Ralph Gibson's interspersed, nicely reproduced photographs are touchingly elegant.

Good work, lad!
Max Blagg is the relaxed Jack Kerouac. His meditations on the pleasures of the mind and body (and wine) are relentlessly and energetically entertaining.


TRICK OF THE TRADE
Published in Mass Market Paperback by Pocket Books (July, 1997)
Author: Ralph W. Cotton
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Not History as she is wrote but a good "could have been"
"Trick of the Trade" has little to do with the real Custers, or real history, but if seen as a parallel universe tale, it is ripping good fun to read and I can believe that Nash was smitten with Libbie and rode into hell to deliver her last letter to "Auddie" (Autie). A realistic look at a man who is less than fully in compliance wih the law -- but men made their own laws back then. And the Army was often between a rock and a hard place. I even enjoyed the touches Cotton put on Benteen.

TRICK OF THE TRADE is THE BEST OF THE BEST
Ralph Cotton has once again written a historical western so real and so entertaining, it's hard to tell fact from fiction. everybody has written about Custer's last stand, but Cotton has put a real spin on it with Nash's love interst in Elizabeth Custer. I'm glad he focused on the battle of Reno Hill. Too little has been said about the Reno Huill battle. Cotton pulled it off expertly. Anyone who knows history knows the battle scenes in this book are acurate.

A page-turner. Jeston Nash says:" Ya just had to be there".
Ralph Cotton's Jeston Nash is the kind of man a lady dreams of finding by her side on a dark sultry night... And the kind of Outlaw a man prays to a merciful God NOT to meet up with in the silence of the same darkness... The kind of man who'd sell you a tainted horse (completely against his will, you understand), protesting all the way to the bank. ...the kind of man who played wet-nurse to a young country; growing by leaps and bounds in its push to the Pacific Ocean. The kind of man who figured prominently in the real history of America. As Nash's friend, Quiet Jack often says: "Yuh just had to be there." Thanks to Cotton's words, you are


Twilight Comes Twice
Published in Hardcover by Houghton Mifflin Co (20 October, 1997)
Authors: Kate Kiesler and Ralph Fletcher
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Twilight Comes Twice
I recommend this book for 5-10 year oids because I think people who like poetry should read this book. I liked ho a girl made dawn and night sound beautiful I thik this book is great and you might like it to.

twilght comes twice
This book puts a lot of descriptive writing in it. It doesn't really have a problem. I love the way the author says "slowly dusk pours the syrup of darkness into the forest". In the pictures, they always put the girl's dog with the girl. I think you would like thiss book if you are 9 and up to 12. I loved this book. Giuliana G.

Gentle and calming beautiful illustrations with poetic prose
A story set in a suburban neighborhood with a girl and her dog doing various activities as the sun rises or sets. The first part of the book is about dusk and the second part is about dawn. The text is poetic and beautiful. The text is on one page and the illustrations are on the other page; this is a larger sized hardcover book. The illustrations are beautiful paintings, all with the special hues of dusk or dawn. Some of the scenes are: the girl and dog playing in a sprinkler while bats fly overhead and fireflies fly at their feet, two fisherman on the shore of a lake, and the girl and dog taking a walk through the woods at dawn. The poetic nature of the text is rarely found in modern children's books and is a joy to read. "When the sky is full and singing with stars you know that twilight has given way to true night." This is a gentle and calming book to read.


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