Related Subjects: Author Index Reviews Page 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
Book reviews for "Anthony,_Michael" sorted by average review score:

The cocktail handbook : entertaining with drink and food
Published in Unknown Binding by B. Cortabarria ()
Author: Michael Anthony Brunelle
Amazon base price: $
Used price: $194.91
Average review score:

A Practical Guide
This book is still in print and new editions occur every few years. It seems to be available at Idaho liquor stores.

This cocktail book is a very accessible book. It avoids two common problems of other books: 1) most cocktail books contain too many recipies and it is nearly impossible to find the drink you want to mix; 2) every other cocktail book I have seen is perfect bound and does not lay flat on the counter making it very difficult to hold the book in one hand and mix the drink in the other. The coil binding for this book makes it possible to lay flat on the counter and frees up both hands to mix your beverage!


Empires of Time: Calendars, Clocks, and Cultures
Published in Paperback by Kodansha International (August, 1995)
Authors: Anthony F. Aveni, V. Michael McKenzie, and Gordon Wise
Amazon base price: $16.00
Used price: $9.50
Average review score:

Fascinating
Aveni's book is a fascinating portrait of the rhythms and roles of time keeping in a variety of cultures including the Aztec, Inca, Maya, and ancient Chinese. A fascinating exploration of a topic we all too often don't bother to consdier.


Foundations of Ministry: An Introduction to Christian Education for a New Generation
Published in Paperback by Baker Book House (January, 1998)
Authors: Michael J. Anthony and Christian Education Faculty of Biola Uni
Amazon base price: $17.49
List price: $24.99 (that's 30% off!)
Used price: $7.99
Buy one from zShops for: $8.47
Average review score:

Textbook for different needs within Christian Education
This is a non-fiction how-to book on Christian Education.

It's probably not going to be a classic, but it is very good book if you are interested in thinking about all different needs and different spheres of education -- that is curriculum, environment, and so on.

The book has 25 chapters, each given to one special theme. Some of the chapters address psychology, special education, home schooling, Christian schools, mission education, Christian education in the church and in the home, and some other topics.

It's a good book to read through and then put on your shelf for reference, pull it out when you need it. (Not the type of book that you want to read over a number of times!) It's also very practical in a number of ways, suggesting how to approach the issue of Christian Education. You'd benefit most from this book if you were a Christian Educator (teacher, administrator, principal, on the board of directors for a school, teacher of Sunday school, homeschool), on a committee for Christian Education, or you were a pastor or seminarian.


MCAD/MCSD Visual Basic(r) .NET (tm) Certification All-in-One Exam Guide
Published in Hardcover by McGraw-Hill Osborne Media (14 February, 2003)
Authors: Larry Chambers, Richard Fowler, Michael Linde, and Anthony Sequeira
Amazon base price: $48.99
List price: $69.99 (that's 30% off!)
Used price: $33.98
Buy one from zShops for: $35.25
Average review score:

Great Detail.
Anyone will tell you that one book alone can not prepare you for Microsoft Certification. And I have to agree 100%. With that said I found this book detailed(technically) in a way that other books that aim at being the only certification book you need. I started reading the books on the subject and while the language was warm and fuzzy and easily kept your attention, I really didn't get much in the way of technical detail. The examples in the All in One book helped me nail down the more complex topics like delegates and remoting that other books only lightly touched. The one negative to this book is you need some experience in order to understand it. If you lack experience then my advice would be to buy both the MSPress Study Guides and this All in One. Use the MS book to get a feel for the concepts and use the All in One to start coding examples.


Michael Killian
Published in Paperback by Buy Books on the web.com (2000)
Author: H. Anthony Rogers
Amazon base price: $17.95
Average review score:

Michael Killian
I throughly enjoyed this book. It was a refreshing read about a young man who ends up having it all..his faith..his one true love and wealth. H Anthony has a real flair for writing. I look forward to reading more of his books


The Devil and His Boy
Published in Hardcover by Philomel Books (March, 2000)
Authors: Anthony Horowitz and Michael Green
Amazon base price: $11.89
List price: $16.99 (that's 30% off!)
Used price: $9.95
Collectible price: $8.47
Buy one from zShops for: $5.95
Average review score:

Sub-Par
I found this book disapointing. [Of course, its pretty pathetic that I'm reading children's books to begin with, but thats another matter.] Anyway, I think that the author exploited the Elizabethan setting, exagerating some aspects to the point of caraciture, but presenting nothing truely horrifying. It seemed so unhistorical, I was suprised to find out how much of the story the author "based on fact." He treated the themes of morality and honesty very lightly; the character Molly was a thief out of necesity, but the real hero unrealisticly and sanctimoniously refused to turn to crime. And the ending was predictable.
Read Susan Cooper's King of Shadows instead.

THe Devil and his boy
This Book is terrific. It is a thrilling and advenurous story. I have never read a better book. It is about a boy who wants to be in a play but his parents are dreadfully mean and wont let him.His real parents are the King and Queen of england but noone but the queen knows. He sneaks away from his Guardians and gets tied up with the most sinister and pulverizing murders in all of London. This is deafinatly a great book and once you start reading this book you won't be able to stop reading. It will keep you asking for more. I really liked this book, and I hope u do to.

Witty and thrilling, a superb historical novel from Horowitz
After such great children's books as 'Granny', 'Groosham Grange' and 'The Switch', Anthony Horowitz has now turned to the Elizabethan age for his latest work. Packed full of wonderful description of the period, which he obviously researched superbly, this book will transform any child's perception of what they may have thought of as a boring period in history. It brings the time and the characters of the time (including Queen Elizabeth herself and Shakespeare!) to life and makes them seem fun and interesting in much the same way as 'Shakespeare in Love' did at the cinemas recently. The characters are brilliantly depicted and children will identify with both Tom and Moll as well as laugh at some of the great villains and revolting adults that Horowitz is so good at creating. I have recently read the story to my Year 6 class (11 year olds) and I could not get them to go home! They always wanted me to read on and adored every minute of it. Probably Horowitz's best book yet - many of the children certainly thought so. Extremely well written and reminiscent of Dickens at times. We successfully turned the story into a play, which we performed at school at the end of July 1999 - it made a wonderful play too! Someone should make a film of this book! Horowitz is truly the master of children's fiction today.

Also recommended: Other Horowitz classics - 'Granny' 'Groosham Grange' 'The Unholy Grail' 'The Switch' 'The Falcon's Malteser' 'South by SouthEast' 'Public Enemy Number Two'


The Internet Bubble
Published in Hardcover by HarperBusiness (November, 1999)
Authors: Anthony B. Perkins and Michael C. Perkins
Amazon base price: $6.99
List price: $28.00 (that's 75% off!)
Used price: $5.99
Average review score:

Hypocritical advice from a master schmoozer
The ultimate hypocrisy. Here's a book full of ideas lifted from analysts and magazines, written solely to cash in on a trend. Perkins thinks so little of his advice that he did not follow his own suggestions. His magazine, The Red Herring, is a textbook example of dotcom excesses, bloat and "what goes up must always go up" thinking. Long after publication of the first edition, he was blithely making the same foolish mistakes he warns against in his book. As a result, the magazine went through a series of layoffs and downsizings and continues to teeter on the brink of insolvency.

Tony Perkins is a master of getting invitations to events in Silicon Valley and sucking up to the insiders. But trust me, you do not want to waste your money on this cynical, hypocritical advice from someone who is a business failure.

A must read
I have to disagree with the reviewer from Mountain View. Maybe he's in the industry and therefore knows all the inside information that's to be found in this book, but for those of us who are just trying to figure out how best to manage our portfolios, this book is a must.

The Mountain View reviewer says that "much of the book consists of a rehash of familiar and/or obvious information." Well, that information is familiar now precisely because the first edition of Internet Bubble made it so. The Perkins brothers were the first to dissect the financial food chain that
exists between VCs and investment bankers. I read that first edition, and I'm glad I did. It saved me from losing my shirt.

Given their track record, and the fact that I'm still keeping some of my assets in stock, how could I not read the second edition?

As for the Doerr quote, I was frankly amazed to see it, because the Perkins certainly don't treat the guy with kid gloves in the book. Maybe Doerr was just being honest when he called Internet Bubble the best researched book on Silicon Vallley ever. I know I agree.

Picking up the pieces,or why you should listen to mother
By Jamis MacNiven, Just the pancake guy
I run the lamest bookstore in the world. We have no books and I haven't necessarily read the one I'm reviewing. So what difference does that make? I'll probably outlast Amazon and no one paid any attention to my review of the Internet Bubble in 1999 (at least I didn't) so this is just perfect for our through-the-looking-glass-world of today. OK, maybe I had a peek at the galleys and I can say that The Revised Edition will be an even bigger success then its predecessor. Michael Perkins and his brother Tony are the ultimate insiders as founders of the Red Herring Magazine (the only magazine we carry). These guys simply ran the math and said, in the first edition, (I paraphrase) that we were living in a house of cards so flimsy that when a slight breeze came by the Internet stock market was going to come tumbling down and all the kings horses...
They provided a long list of stocks with the recommendation to sell immediately. I must admit that I was swept away but the promise of unearned riches so I ignored the warning and I was even all set to move my little gray-haired mother into some pretty snappy startups (I had all the hot tips). She was so old fashioned that she decided to buy certificates of deposit, a piece of a Hollywood movie and a trailer park in Santa Barbara. The CD's barely broke 4% and the trailer park moved up smartly but the movie (an embarrassing teen flick) has returned about 250%. And she hasn't even seen the movie! "Is an average net pretax of 140% good?" she asks with a straight face.
The Revised Edition summarizes our fall from grace but also shines light on many new areas of the business from which the next great thing will hopefully emerge.
In Silicon Valley we continue to demonstrate brilliance, toughness and an unquenchable optimism and this means we will learn from the past and keep on creating the future. You would do well to heed the Bubble books and when in doubt, listen to your mother.


The Warden (Oxford World's Classics)
Published in Paperback by Oxford University Press (May, 1998)
Authors: Anthony Trollope, Michael Sadleir, Frederick Page, and Edward Ardizzone
Amazon base price: $7.95
Used price: $0.50
Collectible price: $40.00
Buy one from zShops for: $3.99
Average review score:

A fine introduction to Trollope's (prolific) writing
This is the first book in Trollope's 6 part Barchester series. While the subject matter, the intrigues surrounding clerical life in a fictional English cathedral town, might put you off, don't let it. Trollope wrote fantastic characters. While it's sequel, Barchester Towers, is even better, this is an excellent short introduction both to the series and to Trollope's writing as a whole. (Incidentally, the BBC TV series `Barchester Chronicles' is a really good adaptation of both `The Warden' and `Barchester Towers'.)

What Should A Virtuous Man Do?
This is a simple, short novel dealing with the ethical dilemma of a virtuous man. The Reverend Harding is the warden of a small home providing quarters for 12 retired, indigent workers. The facility is provided for by a trust set up by its founder over two hundred years ago. Income off the land provides revenue for the maintenance of the home and a living for the warden.. The warden has traditionally been the benefactor of this income which has increased over the years. The Rev. Harding is a gentle, honest man who has never given thought to his 800 pound annual revenue until a young reformer files suit, claiming the intent of the will is being violated. Harding thinks about the matter and is inclined to resign. The Bishop and Archdeacon argue that he is entitled to the income.

This book certainly would be a good one for a book club read and discussion. The reformer, the lawyers, the church hierarchy and Reverend Harding all have their views on the matter. Author Trollope does not really pass final judgment on his characters; none of them are cast in black and white terms. In fact Trollope makes the unusual move of bringing a criticism of both the press and Charles Dickens into the novel. The press makes strident value judgments about issues without bothering itself with all the facts or considering the effect their articles will have on the people involved; Charles Dickens treats people as being all good or all bad. Indeed, I found myself arguing with myself for several days after reading The Warden. What should the Rev. Harding done? Was the issue shrouded in shades of gray, or was it clear cut one way or the other?

Many critics consider this to be one of Trollope's lesser works, yet to me it is a very interesting, valuable presentation of an ethical dilemma. And for readers who are reluctant to pick up Victorian novels because of their common 700+ page lengths, this is a little gem at less than 300 pages. Criticism? Well I did a bit of eye-rolling during some of the melodramatic passages. All and all, though, this is an excellent read. From an historical standpoint there was considerable attention being paid to clergy income during this period in England. Trollope's tale was very timely in this regard.

One final note. There are many outstanding Victorian novels that I would give a five star rating to. This book doesn't quite fit into that hall of fame so I have given it just 4 stars, which shouldn't be interpreted as a slight to Mr. Trollope or The Warden.

It was the beginning of an wonderful adventure . . .
I first read Anthony Trollope's book "The Warden" in 1995 at the age of 54; three years later I had finished all forty-seven Trollope novels, his autobiography, and most of his short stories. "The Warden" provides a necessary introduction to the Barsetshire Novels, which, in turn, provide a marvelous introduction to rural Victorian society, and its religious, political, and social underpinnings. However, "The Warden" is a small literary masterpiece of its own, even though the more popular "Barchester Towers" tends to obscure it. "The Warden" moves slowly, of course, but so did Victorian England; soon the reader is enveloped in a rich world of brilliantly created characters: in the moral dilemma of a charming and innocent man, Reverend Septimus Harding, who is probably the most beloved of all Trollope's characters; in the connivings of Archdeacon Grantly, who will become a significant force in the later Barsetshire novels; in Eleanor, an example of the perfect Victorian woman, a type that appears in many of Trollope's subsequent novels; and in the sanctimonious meddling of John Bold, whose crusade for fairness throws the town into turmoil. In modern terminology, "The Warden" is a "good read" for those readers with patience, a love of 19th century England, and an appreciation of literary style. Trollope's sentences have a truly musical cadence. "The Warden" was Trollope's fourth novel and his first truly successful one. It provides a strong introduction to the other five novels of the Barsetshire series, where the reader will meet a group of fascinating characters, including the Mrs. Proudie (one of Trollope's finest creations), the Reverend Obadiah Slope, and the Grantly family. The reader will soon find that Trollope's well-developed characters soon become "friends," and that the small cathedral town of Barchester becomes a very familiar and fascinating world in itself. It is a wonderful trip through these six novels. (I read all six in about three weeks.) But one must begin with "The Warden." Brew a cup of tea, toast a scone on a quiet evening, and begin the wonderful voyage through Trollope's charming Barchester. When you have finished the six novels, you may, like me, want to commence reading the Palliser series (another six novels) and follow Plantagenet and Glencora Palliser through their triumphs and travails! However, that remains another story.


PhotoImpact 7: The Official Guide
Published in Paperback by McGraw-Hill Osborne Media (17 January, 2002)
Authors: Michael Meadhra, Anthony L. Celeste, and Michael Meahdra
Amazon base price: $20.99
List price: $29.99 (that's 30% off!)
Used price: $6.53
Buy one from zShops for: $14.49
Average review score:

A real disappointment!!
I am a professional photographer who was looking for a reference book explaining the myriad of features available in PhotoImpact. Sadly this book is nothing of the sort. Shallow, incomplete and vague in it's instruction this book is a disappointment.

The software itself is very powerful - it's a shame there isn't a book to help us take advantage of it's power.

Guess I may have to buy Photoshop....if for nothing else, it at least has comprehensive documentation.

No better than the software manual
This a book that is twice as thick as the software manual that came with the product but offers little more than the same level of help as the manual itself; Which is very little. An example of this "joke of a manual" is the help associated with a brush option called "brush angle" (not even mentioned in the index), the manual states: "The brush panel has five tabs ... You can adjust the height, ... angle, soft edge..." THAT'S IT! No discussion whatsoever of what these options are, how to use them effectively, or how they work.

This is just ONE small example of many.

This manual, like most on the photoimpact software, is really quite useless

exellent book
i wanted to learn how to use photoimpact7 ,i found this book very easy to follow and have and have made big progress and created some beautiful things for the web, with the help of this book i love this book and do not find learning easy so it must be good.


Early Islamic Mysticism: Sufi, Quran, Miraj, Poetic and Theological Writings (Classics of Western Spirituality)
Published in Hardcover by Paulist Press (July, 1996)
Authors: Michael Anthony Sells and Sufi Mi Raj
Amazon base price: $34.95
Used price: $70.11
Average review score:

Sufism and Koran
The word Sufi is neither mentioned in the Quran nor in any Hadith of Prophet. It is most likely the result of interaction of Muslims with Persian/Indian culture along with, perhaps, Christian Monks. The so called Sufis, in integrating these foreign elements in Islam, looked for certain verses in the Quran and gave them a far fetched interpretation to fit their philosophy. This approach wasn't limited to Sufis ofcourse, the so called philosophers did the same thing trying to prove Greek cosmology and philosophical nonsense with verses of Quran. Nowadays that most of their arguments are proven to be false based on modern science, our Sufis and philosophers backtrack and tell us that the verses really didn't mean what they claimed( duh!). Sufi phenomena happened long after Islam came into contact with other (shirk) religions and there is not even a single proof among the saying of prophet or behavior of companions and early Muslim saints that suggests this kind of superstitious philosophy and "spirituality".

Contradictions
After reading this book, I got interested and bought a few other books. I came across this statement from famous Ibn Ul-Arabi "If the believer understood the meaning of the saying 'the color of the water is the color of the receptacle', he would admit the validity of all beliefs and he would recognize God in every form and every object of faith." I thought if he relay meant this, then why bother writing so many books and trying to prove or disprove this or that belief. Ibn-Ularabi does this many times, he criticizes many of his fellow theologians, philosophers, even other sufi's. If he really thinks all are right, why then bother by criticism, trying to prove so many are under "illusions" except him and a few like him. Besides would Ibn-ulArabi tell us that "Satan worshipping" is also right? The second factor that is troubling to me is the authenticity and objectivity of their"theophonic experiences". If one examines the content of their "experience" it quickly become clear that what they "witness" is nothing more than the "content" of their beliefs. Whatever they already believed in, they "witness" it. Not a single one them, as far as I know, has claimed that he /she "witnessed" a reality which made him realize a certain portion of his/her beliefs about this or that was wrong. Their experiences seem to be in perfect harmony with the " content" of their already established beliefs. If they believed that there are spheres in the heaven, then that is what they "see", if they believed in certain historical "facts" they also see it. If they believe in say in crucification, as Padre Pio, they also "see" it( though it may or may not have really happened. If you are a Hindu mystic then you will " see" say, reincarnation and how it happens, if you are a Sufi or Christian mystic who doesn't believe in reincarnation then you "see" the opposite of the fellow Hindu, you "see" how "reincarnation" doesn't happen. So my guess is that, under certain condition and practices, all the beliefs of a person turns into "Images/forms" and like a dream, a person experiences them. But these experiences are no more"objective" and reflective of "reality" out there, than the good old dreams we have.

Excellent selection of extracts from early Sufi texts
This volume, compiled and translated by Michael Sells, is really an excellent resource for those of us who are interested in early Sufism. Sells has compiled a very useful collection of extracts from early Sufi writings. I was surprised to know that writings of Junaid apparently even still exist (and this book includes some of those writings)!

A remarkable and very valuable book -- not only from a historical perspective, but also for those wanting to increase their own spirituality. (For this purpose, I also recommend W. C. Chittick's book, "The Sufi Path of Love," a collection of translations from Jalaluddin Rumi.)


Related Subjects: Author Index Reviews Page 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9

Reviews are from readers at Amazon.com. To add a review, follow the Amazon buy link above.