Book reviews for "Browne,_Thomas" sorted by average review score:
Religio Medici, Hydriotaphia, and the Garden of Cyrus: And, the Garden of Cyrus (Oxford Paperback English Texts)
Published in Paperback by Oxford Univ Pr (1972)
Amazon base price: $24.95
Used price: $10.95
Collectible price: $12.95
Buy one from zShops for: $11.89
Used price: $10.95
Collectible price: $12.95
Buy one from zShops for: $11.89
Average review score:
Great writer, awful edition (Robin Robbins, Oxford UP)
What song the Syrens sang; meditations on time and eternity
Sir Thomas Browne's works from the first half of the seventeenth century remain worthy of your attention. He is an essayist, akin in spirit to his rough contemporary Montaigne. He was yet another prose stylist of those fine days of the Stuart period, when the sun of English prose approached its zenith, only to be eclipsed by the English cultivation of melancholia.
The -Hydriotaphia-, or Urn Burial, is perhaps the most celebrated of these works. Its nominal occasion is the discovery and opening of an ancient gravesite, about which Browne, a physician, writes with better archaeological method than most of his antiquarian contemporaries. But this discovery is merely the occasion for what turns into an extended meditation on the funerary monuments of antiquity, and of the great themes of time, eternity, and the frailty of memory and fame.
The -Religio Medici- is a meditation, quite humane and somewhat skeptical especially given his period, on the prevailing religious doctrines and teachings of his day. It is a prayer for peace in an age that was marked by a great deal of religious strife and contention; not surprisingly, it gave doubts to most of the warring parties as to Browne's orthodoxy. Despite its generally skeptical tenor, it seems Browne himself was prepared to accept alchemy, astrology, and witchcraft.
The -Garden of Cyrus- is the most curious of these works. Its nominal subject is the "quincunx," the arrangement of five units like the fives on dice, and its use in ancient horticulture. But it treats this slight subject with such various learning, finding quincunxes everywhere on earth and in the heavens, so that when it's over it seems that understanding the quincunx might be the key to the secrets of the universe.
The -Hydriotaphia-, or Urn Burial, is perhaps the most celebrated of these works. Its nominal occasion is the discovery and opening of an ancient gravesite, about which Browne, a physician, writes with better archaeological method than most of his antiquarian contemporaries. But this discovery is merely the occasion for what turns into an extended meditation on the funerary monuments of antiquity, and of the great themes of time, eternity, and the frailty of memory and fame.
The -Religio Medici- is a meditation, quite humane and somewhat skeptical especially given his period, on the prevailing religious doctrines and teachings of his day. It is a prayer for peace in an age that was marked by a great deal of religious strife and contention; not surprisingly, it gave doubts to most of the warring parties as to Browne's orthodoxy. Despite its generally skeptical tenor, it seems Browne himself was prepared to accept alchemy, astrology, and witchcraft.
The -Garden of Cyrus- is the most curious of these works. Its nominal subject is the "quincunx," the arrangement of five units like the fives on dice, and its use in ancient horticulture. But it treats this slight subject with such various learning, finding quincunxes everywhere on earth and in the heavens, so that when it's over it seems that understanding the quincunx might be the key to the secrets of the universe.
Professional Linux Programming
Published in Paperback by Wrox Press Inc (2000)
Amazon base price: $41.99
List price: $59.99 (that's 30% off!)
Used price: $24.91
Buy one from zShops for: $26.00
List price: $59.99 (that's 30% off!)
Used price: $24.91
Buy one from zShops for: $26.00
Average review score:
heavy reading
The biggest problem I have with this book is its weight. It's just too big and clunky to hold up to read. Splitting into two bindings would have been nice. But it does cover a lot and it needs to be large to do so.
Good reference
I bought the Beginners Guide to Linux Programming and I really liked that book. This book is a very good follow-up, but it doesn't give the reader more programming tips.
It covers many topics which makes this book a great reference for anyone who deals with Linux and even other flavors of Unix on a day to day basic. Buy this book if you are looking for a reference book on developing software on Linux that covers advanced topics.
It covers many topics which makes this book a great reference for anyone who deals with Linux and even other flavors of Unix on a day to day basic. Buy this book if you are looking for a reference book on developing software on Linux that covers advanced topics.
Good reference for a wide range of Open Source technologies
This book is a follow-up to Beginning Linux Programming, but with a wider range of authors. The book is a series of chapters on various tools and applications, all of them Open Source, based mainly round things that application developers might use, though there is a single chapter on device drivers.
Most topics only get a single chapter, so there isn't as much depth as you would find in a dedicated book on each topic, but there is a very wide range of material all covered in enough depth to get the more experienced programmer started with a new topic. There are one or two weaker areas, but overall a good choice of material succinctly presented for the more experienced application developer. I've given it 5 stars as it was exactly what I was looking for - a single reference to help me create a Linux-based web database application, your mileage may vary. I recommend you at least consider it.
The Anglo-Dutch Renaissance: Seven Essays (Publications of the Sir Thomas Browne Institute Leiden, New Series, No. 10)
Published in Paperback by Brill Academic Publishers (1989)
Amazon base price: $18.86
Average review score:
No reviews found.
Approaches to Sir Thomas Brown
Published in Hardcover by Univ of Missouri Pr (Txt) (1982)
Amazon base price: $23.00
Used price: $9.00
Collectible price: $9.53
Used price: $9.00
Collectible price: $9.53
Average review score:
No reviews found.
A bibliography of Sir Thomas Browne Kt. M.D.
Published in Unknown Binding by Clarendon P. ()
Amazon base price: $
Average review score:
No reviews found.
A Catalogue of the Libraries of Sir Thomas Browne and Dr. Edward Browne, His Son: A Facsimile Reproduction With an Introduction, Notes and Index (Leiden New Ser 7)
Published in Hardcover by Brill Academic Publishers (1997)
Amazon base price: $41.50
Average review score:
No reviews found.
Chippendale and his contemporaries
Published in Unknown Binding by Orbis Books ()
Amazon base price: $
Used price: $4.97
Used price: $4.97
Average review score:
No reviews found.
Circuit Interruption: Theory and Techniques (Electrical Engineering and Electronics, 21)
Published in Hardcover by Marcel Dekker (28 August, 1984)
Amazon base price: $215.00
Used price: $108.00
Used price: $108.00
Average review score:
No reviews found.
Democratizing Sir Thomas Browne: Religio Medici and Its Imitations (Oxford English Monographs)
Published in Hardcover by Oxford University Press (2000)
Amazon base price: $80.00
Used price: $50.00
Used price: $50.00
Average review score:
No reviews found.
Dutch Calvinists in Early Stuartr London: The Dutch Church in Austin Friars, 1603-1642 (Publications of the Sir Thomas Browne Institute. New Series,)
Published in Hardcover by Brill Academic Publishers (1997)
Amazon base price: $112.00
Average review score:
No reviews found.
Related Subjects: Author Index Reviews Page 1 2
Search Authors.BooksUnderReview.com
Reviews are from readers at Amazon.com. To add a review, follow the Amazon buy link above.
While this edition may be adequate for the casual reader, it's entirely unsuitable as a scholarly edition:
1) The editor has translated nearly all of Browne's notes without giving them in the original.
2) He has moved these notes from the margin to the foot of the page without bothering to number them. The reader will often find himself finishing a page, discovering a footnote and trying to backtrack to figure out where it fit in. Confusing to say the least, especially because Robbins intermingles his own commentary with Browne's, indicating the latter's with the initial B.
3) Protracted discussions of the text are confined to an appendix (and by protracted, I mean three or four sentences at most). They might as well be incorporated into the body of the text as footnotes, since he only provides six of these for Hydriotaphia, eight for the Garden of Cyrus.
4) The editor has modernized the spelling, despite Browne's well known preference for certain archaic forms. While updating the orthography is helpful (substituing 'j' for 'i,' 'v' for 'u,' etc.), Browne's occasionally unorthodox spelling should hardly present a problem to anyone with half a brain, and if you can't figure out that 'sceleton' means 'skeleton,' you probably won't understand why 'Man is a great and true amphibium.'
5) And obviously, modernizing the spelling vitiates the impact of Hydriotaphia, Browne's meditation on mutability, language and identity, and the anonymity of the grave.
6) Lastly, for such a shoddy edition, it's a pricey, slender paperback. The editor could at least have included Letter to a Friend or a selection from Christian Morals to round it out.
Unfortunately, there are no popular editions of Browne's work available at this time, and it's doubtful whether any shall be in the near future. Search out something used, and avoid this one if you can.