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Book reviews for "Austin,_Anthony" sorted by average review score:

Spell of the Black Raven
Published in Paperback by Simon Pulse (January, 1983)
Authors: R. G. Austin and Anthony Kramer
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thriller
this book and the other 15 stories are scary, exiting and they dont drag. It's fun to read because it's not only a book but a game too!!

With it's multiply endings,it's a new adventure every time!
This book is explained as a "which way book", which means the story starts the same, but at the end of the page you get to pick one of two options which allows you to bring the story where you want. So every time you read it, it's like reading a different book. It's well written and each story is interesting. My kids can't stop reading it!


Draco - The Tenth Planet
Published in Paperback by Black Rabbit Press (March, 2003)
Author: Anthony Austin
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Hello Doomsday again...
A remarkakable review of history over the last 15,000 years that accounts for most, if not all of the disasters that have overtaken our home planet, and several others as well. Goes about 150 years into the future to describe what will happen to us when our perennial nemesis, Draco, come by again. Notably, Austin & Crowley propose that Sitchin's 3,600 year period for his 'Planet X' is actually four orbits of Draco, more or less, because 892 x 4 = 3600 within 1% error. 892 is Austin's figure for the period of the tenth planet, named Draco in this work. According to Austin, the future comprises a grim reduction of 95% in the population of Earth after 2115, the next encounter date, according with the work of Chet Snow who says there will be a 'shortage of bodies' around in the 22nd century for us to reincarnate into. Austin is confirmed by the 'Franciscan Document' (see Jim Keith, IllumiNet Press) where a monk reveals that America is expected to be covered with ice by the middle of the 22nd century. Austin concurs, saying we are headed for a new ice age; the result of a passage by Draco, which although it will never hit the Earth, will bring along millions of tons of dust and this precipitates the overdue ice age. A similar event ended the Pleistocene, he says, when billions of animals died. See 'when the Earth nearly died' (Allen & Delair). A remarkable and necessary book that strips away our delusions and suggests cogent reasons why the globe is being reshaped in preparation for the end of 'civilisation as we know it' in around 112 years time.


The Dragon's Tail: Rediscovering the Tenth Planet: How Long Until the New Ice Age
Published in Paperback by Illuminet Press (October, 2000)
Authors: Anthony Austin and Brian Crowley
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Waggin' the Dragon
__________________

Where have we heard about an additional planet, unknown to astronomers? In Sitchin of course. What about planets on cometary orbits? Baillie, Clube/Napier, Velikovsky, and other scholars, as well as Sitchin. What about periodic and predictable celestial chaos? LaViolette, Sitchin, Baillie, Clube/Napier...

The author claims that a tenth planet whistles on past the other planets at 892 year intervals, meaning that the most recent pass was no longer ago than 1109 AD, and has happened at least twice since Julius Caesar was a boy. This book may be worth reading, but not at this price. Try the local library, and if not found, ask them to purchase it for the lending collection.

The truth about this book...
Hi there. I'm the gypsy who wrote about 60% of 'The Dragon's Tail'. Brian Crowley, an orthodox Jew, wrote 5% and Mr Christopher Mundy, an American, wrote the rest. The two last named got scared and don't want to know. The publisher, Ron Bonds died of a mystery infection in April 2001. He left a widow, Nancy Bonds, who also wants to get rid of TdT in case anyone wants to buy IllumiNet off her. Don't expect rights to TDT because I own it outright. None of us ever got any royalties and nobody wants to reprint. In the last chapter we told you what would happen in America from 2001 onwards and it did. The first reviewer here hasn't even read the cover blurb because we said the last pass of the Dragon was in the 13th C.tonyaustin@bushinternet.com bye

From the dustjacket
You are holding in your hands what may prove to be the definitive casebook of humanity, reaching back some 15,000 years into the past and now made accessible by the researches of a diverse pair of lay scholars. Evidence presented here from history, science and astronomy reveals that earth undergoes dramatic climatic changes at 892 year intervals, creating a universal disaster of doomsday proportions.

The massive wave of extinctions that occurred around 15,000 years ago in the animal kingdom, the sinking of Plato's Atlantis, the voyage of Noah's Ark, the plagues that beset Egypt at the time of the Exodus, and even the Little Ice Age of the 13th century, may all have a common cause - a rogue tenth planet (we call Draco) in our Solar System. This is the outermost planet of the Solar System, orbiting the Sun only once in 892 years.

Draco caused the destruction of the planet that once orbited between Mars and Jupiter, and it still cuts through the plane of the asteroids, creating more new comets and Earth-crossing asteroids every time it visits us. When it passes by, a great shower of dust cools our climate!

Draco will sweep by Earth again in the year 2115! The real countdown to doomsday can now begin!


A Century of Violence in Soviet Russia
Published in Hardcover by Yale Univ Pr (01 September, 2002)
Authors: Alexander N. Yakovlev, Anthony Austin, and Paul Hollander
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A grim, vital study of the horror that was Soviet Russia
I am not sure I can possibly convey the importance of this book and how urgently it needs to be read by almost anyone with an interest in the history of the last century. Actually, I would go further, and turn that last sentence on its ear. This is an indispensable book for those who have little knowledge of or interest in the 20th Century. People need to understand what went on in the Soviet Union between the years 1916 and 1989.

Growing up in the 60s and 70s, it was not at all uncommon, at least in Canada, for one's circle of friends to include Marxist-Leninists ' particularly once you got to University. I actually had a rather close friend who not only adopted this political philosophy, but also actively espoused the cause of Soviet Russia ' to the point of making excuses for Stalin. This made for extremely lively debates. In retrospect, knowing what we now know about communist Russia, I rather think my friend needed at the very least a good thrashing. For it was people like him, and the left-leaning western media, that gave succor to, and in a way legitimized, what we now know was one of the must shocking brutal, tyrannies ever to disgrace our planet.

The subject of the culpability of the western media, fellow travelers and communist sympathizers is covered by Richard Pipes, in 'Russia Under the Bolsheviks'. These people have, in a very real sense, blood on their hands, and I often tremble with rage when I recall the facile and damaging lies that they propagated. Under the noses of these gullible and willfully naïve 'liberal thinkers', 35 million people died, either as the result of political terror or deliberate starvation.

Alexander Yakovlev now reinforces the point with a harrowing, grim collection of essays, 'A Century of Violence in Soviet Russia.' Yakovlev was an advisor to Gorbachev and is now the head of a commission charged with analyzing and cataloging the horrors of Soviet Russia. In my review of Pipes' book (mentioned above), I had occasion to remark that in that book, Lenin came in for the thrashing that he so richly deserved. Lenin has had it easy. When the full horrors of the Stalinist period became known, Marxists and Socialists to a man rushed to point out that Stalin was an anomaly, that he and his regime had nothing to do with the gentle, humane, philosophical Lenin (and, in any event, 'one had to break eggs to make an omlette'). Some people still believe this. Do you? Well here is Yakovlev's trenchant, damning summing up:

'Exponent of mass terror, violence, the dictatorship of the proletariat, class struggle and other inhuman concepts. Organizer of fratricidal Russian civil war and concentration camps, including camps for children. Incessant in his demands for arrests and capital punishment by bullet or rope. Personally responsible for the deaths of millions of Russian citizens. By every norm of international law, posthumously indicted for crimes against humanity.'

Shockingly, Russians (as well and never-say-die communists throughout the world) continue to revere Lenin. This horrifies Yakovlev who notes that 'to this day the country proliferates with monuments to Lenin and streets names after him.' Worse than this, a shockingly large segment of Russian society today believes that Stalin is in need of rehabilitation, that he did nor good than bad for Russia. Stalin has become nothing more than a name to most people in the world. When Saddam Hussein was compared to Stalin, when it was noted that he had actually studied Stalin, this tended to make little impression - because most of the world has forgotten. Men like Conquest, Pipes, Figes and Yakovlev write so that we will NOT forget. Their books should be required reading, because men like Lenin and Stalin NEVER go away, they are always with us and we must be forever vigilant and on our guard that they do not take root again.

Boleshivism debunked
Am important book for Russians, and for all people who doubt the stark reality of the Bolshevik regime. Yakolev asserts at one point that the only true statement that came out of the Stalinist period was that there ws no change in the party from Lenin's time. Stalin, for Yakovlev, was the true student of Lenin, whoose brutality was shown from the very beginning. More, the entire system of Marxist-Leninism was flawed from the start, an untenable ideology doomed to failure. Coming from an insider, despite his ten years in the west as ambassador to Canada, and from the person who oversaw the rehabilitation of political victims under peristroika and after, these comments are damning indeed.

Yakovlev documents the atrocities--to the peasants, the church, the jews, ethnic groups, the inteligensia, to political dissidents, to prisoners of war and saddest of all to children and families of those considered dangerous to the regime. For Yakovlev Russia must purge itself of Bolshevism in order to once again move forward. At times an emotional journey, it nevertheless gives an accurate accounting. Well done.

Present at the Destruction
Alexander Nikolayevich Yakovlev may be best known as the godfather of perestroika. He was instrumental in formulating the concept of perestroika (restructuring), in persuading Gorbachev to implement perestroika, and in bringing Gorbachev back to perestroika when he vacillated, Hamlet-like, between his liberal and hard-line advisors in the late 1980s. Yakovlev was, in a very real sense, along with Eduard Sheverdnadze, Gorbachev's political conscience.

In A Century of Violence in Soviet Russia, Yakovlev presents the tragedy of Russia under Lenin and Stalin. He examines in separate chapters how various constituents of the Soviet Union fared under Communism: Political parties other than the Bolsheviks, the peasants, the intelligentsia, the clergy, the military, the numerous non-Russian nationalities, the Jews. All were exploited, when possible, to further the Bolshevik hold on Russia, and executed, exiled, or enslaved when political exploitation was not possible. Yakovlev holds Lenin and Stalin responsible for 60 million deaths. These include peasants that starved as a direct result of the collectivization of agriculture and World War II deaths, many of which were a direct result of Stalin's purge of competent military officers on the eve of the war and the unwarranted trust he placed in the Nazi-Soviet non-aggression pact. Some have questioned the legitimacy of attributing these deaths to Stalin. Rather than debate that responsibility here, the reader is referred to Robert Conquest, The Harvest of Sorrow, and Richard Pipes, Russia Under the Bolshevik Regime.

Yakovlev traces all of the totalitarian acts of terror associated with Stalin's rule to their beginnings under Lenin, demolishing the myth that Stalin somehow perverted the more humane party of Lenin. The book is a somber read, 200 plus pages documenting murders, torture, slave labor in the name of an ideology that is morally, intellectually, and (now, thankfully) financially bankrupt.


1st Workshop on Engineering Management in Technology-Based Organizations (Emtbo 2000): Held Augugst 17-19, 2000 in Austin, Tx
Published in Paperback by IEEE (December, 2000)
Authors: IEEE Society and Anthony Ambler
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Accounting for Change: Proposals for Reform of Audit and Accounting (Fabian Discussion Paper)
Published in Paperback by Fabian Society (31 August, 1993)
Authors: Austin Mitchell, Anthony Puxty, Prem Sikka, and Hugh Willmott
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Architecture of Austin, Texas: A Selected Bibliography (Architecture Series--Bibliography, No 1264)
Published in Paperback by Vance Bibliographies (October, 1984)
Author: Anthony G. White
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Austin Stack : protrait of a separatist
Published in Unknown Binding by Kingdom Books ()
Author: J. Anthony Gaughan
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Engineering Management for Appied Technology (Emat 2001): 2nd International Workshop on Engineering Management for Applied Technology: Austin, Texas 16-17 August 2001
Published in Paperback by IEEE (December, 2001)
Authors: Anthony Ambler, Ken Graham, and Paul Jensen
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Estimation of Demand for Emergency Medical Services (Special Project Reports)
Published in Paperback by Univ Texas at Austin, Office of Publications (August, 1986)
Author: Anthony A. Piasecki
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