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Artful Italy's prose hits just the right tone, conversational without being condescending, funny without that guidebook jokiness that can be so off-putting. And it sometimes can take your breath away. When the 17th century architect , Borromini is compared to an origami master, suddenly we see again how Mannerist architects have turned stone into paper - to give just one example. And you have a nice discursive air that proves always to have a real point to it. The book is unique and a pleasure. It will make those who know Italy start looking for cheap air fares, and even those making a first trip to Italy will find the book valuable.
Ann Brandon must be a kick at a cocktail party. Historical examples trip off her tongue and add just the right humor, import, and context for each bit of art appreciation. Reading this book is not a necessity for travel planning; the volume is a standalone orchestration of Ms. Brandon's love affair with Italy.
I have a few qualms with the book, but they are merely intellectual disagreements with some of its premises. First, I would not focus so much on art, but on the whole invisible lifestyle of the Italians, the life that "turisti" probably never see. I would also go beyond visual arts, and talk about music, as well as the culinary and design arts. Even in the visual arts there is so much architecture that one could find off the main trails. But Brandon promises more books in this vein, and will no doubt address these topics.
Second, I do not feel that the Parco dei Mostri qualifies as a hidden treasure. I consider it an excellent yet run-of-the-mill tourist attraction. A lot of people go there.
Finally, I disagree with the glowing assessment that Vasari's "Lives of the Artists." I have always considered this book at best uneven. It apparently draws its inspiration from Diogenes Laertius' "Lives of the Philosophers," which suffers from a similar spottiness in insight and accuracy. If I had to recommend a book that does what Brandon purports Vasari's does, it would be Burkhardt's "Civilization of the Renaissance."
All these quibbles aside, anyone who wants to learn about Italy should buy and read this book. It does not disappoint. I learned so much from this book, and it was if Ann Brandon was telling me what I learned in a personal conversation. So warm is her style of writing that it just makes for a quick and delightful read!
so much art that most of us have neither seen nor heard of. I was totally captivated by just reading the book, Ms. Brandon has great writing style and wonderful detail covering all of the pieces. What I found most exciting was visiting sites that I hadnt been to before-expanding upon the content. This book isnt just about museums!!-
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by participants. The book also has great maps to refer to while studying a certain battle or campaign. This book has a "contents"
that is handy in finding your interest, the book is over one thousand pages. The Spirit of Seventy-six is a great reference book for the Revolutionary War enthusiast.
The collected works are as the title states contemporary accounts. It is a real treat to read what the contenders had to say about each other. Also the reader may think that the style will be difficult. Not at all.
All in all I would most heartily recommend this work for either the student who would like a resource or anyone interested in The Revolution.
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Also, taekwando: The State of the Art, has some of the most detailed and helpful drawings for forms I have ever seen. I review this book often to check up on the different teguks.
So whether you've just started taekwando, just interested, or have been doing it for years, I highly recommend this book.
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I'm buying the second book just as soon as I get through this one. I do have one complaint/complement. Parkening has includes numbers next to notes. These are to show the student which finger to put on the string. It's very useful, but I've found it gets in the way of learning musical notation.
I gave a five-star rating to "88 Great MBA Application Tips and Strategies" because I feel it is the highest quality book in the market (notwithstanding a couple of books I might have missed). Probably what made the book a genuine pleasure is that it is so distilled. The author avoids the hyped-up writing style that shrouds most other books. A good example occurs in Chapter 2, Frequently Asked Questions, when he answers the question: "Is it better to apply early rather than late?" He states that, in general, earlier is better but says that it is not categorically correct to say "early is better than later". This is due to three different theories relating to the potential advantages and disadvantages of each of the three rounds. The advantage of round #1 is "vacancy" theory (lots of spots); the disadvantage of round #1 is "eager beaver" theory (i.e., strongest candidates may apply early). The advantage of round #2 is "middle-of-the-road is best" (i.e., avoids round 1 and 3); the disadvantage of round #2 is either "vacancy" theory (some spots are gone) or "theory of the diverse candidate". Round #3 may be advantageous due to "theory of the diverse candidate" (i.e., truly diverse candidates may be favored in round 3 best because ad com members look most strongly here at tweaking diversity) but obviously this round is disadvantageous because of the "vacancy" theory (i.e., many/most spots are gone).
This is only one of many examples of crisp writing. Also, the book contains the best overall sample essays including some truly cool, longer, meaner sample essays written by determined candidates.
One of the books I purchased was "ABC of Getting the MBA Admissions Edge" written by Matt Symonds, as it appears to be one of the better selling books on Amazon.com. Many reviewers of this book said things like "five stars...it helped me with the application process." This struck me as a bit ridiculous because any book will help some but the real question is, "how much did it help me relative to other books?" Isn't this what happens when we apply to business school? We get accepted or rejected depending on how compelling our background and application is compared with those of others.
So, in terms of direct MBA application help, I give a 5.0 rating to "88 Great MBA Applications Tips and Strategies" while other comparable books receive scores of 3.0 or 4.0. Of course, it depends a little on what you're looking for. "ABC of Getting the MBA Admissions Edge" is a big book of some 600 pages. It contains a lot of general information, so if you're up on the curve, its benefits, frankly, will be diminished. Probably the most useful information in this book is the information about the schools and programs themselves. But then again, if you want to learn about the school themselves, then a great book is BusinessWeek's "The Best Business Schools". The "ABC book" is built around individual schools and its mantra is "figure out what the schools want and then target this." Initially this sounded like a stellar idea until I heard one admission director say that you should be leery about trying to presuppose what we want and then tailoring an application to our "strengths". She mentioned that "what the candidate might think is attractive to us (the schools) might not be what we (the schools) find attractive in a candidate".
"88 Great MBA Applications Tips and Strategies" describes itself as a pure application book and, although its appendix contains various useful contact information for all leading schools, I noticed it doesn't address information about programs themselves (e.g. what percent is female, international, what are some of the professors names, what the students, professors, or dean think). The book focuses steadfast on each of the seven MBA application components and its mantra is "focus your 'career goals' essay and add creativity in your 'who are you' essays". Richard Montauk's "How to Get Into the Top MBA Programs" is also a fairly big book, approximating 500 pages. My overall criticism is that he doesn't have a real distinctive writing style and tends to waffle (he was a consultant in his past life!). Phil and Carol Carpenter's "Marketing Yourself to the Top Business Schools" is a nice little book with a clear writing style but it's outdated (the authors' claim it was one of the first of its kind in the mid 1990's) and the strategies and examples are not potent, particularly when put alongside "88 Great MBA Applications Tips and Strategies". Donald Asher's book entitled "Graduate Admissions Essays" is clearly written but includes only a few MBA admissions essays. Beware of buying books that try to cover all types of graduate admissions. As clearly brought home to me after studying "88 Great MBA Application Tips and Strategies", the writing of MBA essays is really a science all to its own. Hope this is helpful.
This book should be required reading for school kids except that it might create a generation with open minds. If you can afford the money to buy a used copy, follow it up with "The Rebirth Of Pan" if you can find it. That book tells more about specific sites. If you've done a search for this book and want more try: Loren Coleman, John A Keel, or Salvatore M Trento. But do a search for Sourcebook Project on the web first. You'll thank me later.
There is an alternative to this reality and you'll find that it overlaps at many of the points Brandon sites in this beautiful book.
Good luck.