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I use Worthington and a book by Kenneth Haugk (CHRISTIAN CAREGIVING: A WAY OF LIFE) to supplement my main text, Gerard Egan's highly successful college upper division or beginning graduate level text (THE SKILLED HELPER), now in its 6th edition. Worthington's 5-stage model is easily integrated with Egan's 3-stage model; however, Worthington is written at a nonprofessional level while Egan is clearly more academically and professionally oriented. ALL of my lay counselors over the years have enjoyed Worthington and Haugk (also nonprofessional) , but some with only high school or limited college education have struggled a bit with Egan.
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This is how the book jacket of "A Wind to Shake the World" describes the coming of the storm:
"No one could have been prepared for the storm's ferocity. Sweeping suddenly northward from Cape Hatteras, building tremendous momentum as it advanced, the hurricane raced over six hundred miles in only twelve hours. Winds of 100 to 130 miles an hour and swiftly rising water of almost tidal-wave proportions slammed into the shore from South Jersey to Boston, most severely from Long Island to Cape Cod."
The hurricane struck Long Island around 3:30 PM. Few of the summer folk or permanent residents on the Island's south shore had a chance to escape, as waves between thirty and fifty feet high pounded the coastline.
Entire homes and families were swept into the ocean.
September 21st was also the day that Everett S. Allen, recent college graduate and future author of "A Wind to Shake the World", began his first 'real' job as a reporter for the New Bedford 'Standard Times.'
It took Allen over thirty years to recover from his own traumatic experiences during the storm, and write about one of the most under-reported natural disasters of 20th century America. Six hundred New Englanders were killed in less than twelve hours, and yet it is very difficult to find accounts of the hurricane that came to be called "The Long Island Express". I first heard of it in a story told by one of my Down East relatives---
"On the day of the hurricane, a Yankee farmer received a package containing a barometer that he had ordered through the mail. No matter how many times he tapped it, the mercury remained stuck at the bottom of the glass. Finally, he re-packaged the 'broken' barometer and returned it to the post office. By the time he got back to his own property, his house had washed out to sea."
If you are an armchair junkie of natural disaster stories such as "Isaac's Storm: A Man, a Time, and the Deadliest Hurricane in History," you should definitely read "A Wind to Shake the World." Although the survivors were interviewed over thirty years after the hurricane, Allen wrote that some of them still wept, "to see again the sick color of sky and sea on that day, to hear the scream of the wind, which was everywhere...to see man himself, face down and weaving like weed in the roiling shallows or open-mouthed and still, half-buried in the damp sand."
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1) PMP: Project Management Professional Study Guide
by Kim Heldman
2) PMP Exam Prep (4th Edition)
by Rita Mulcahy
After you've completed these two "must reads", you may want to add PMP Certificatoin for Dummies by Gerald Everett Jones as a third pass at the information. But I'm afraid that this publicaiton only fills that limited role.
Get to work on the "must reads" and good luck with the exam.
R.T.
Now, I believe I can ace the exam
Although the PMBOK Guide is organized along the lines of skills sets called the nine Knowledge Areas, the exam is organized along the lines of the five Process Groups. That provides a linear flow through the project lifecycle, which is how I work. This book (and the less complete ISBN 0782141064) are both based on how the exam is structured, rather than on the PMBOK Guide's structure. While this organization can be confusing to beginning project managers, PMI repeats over and over that these processes all connect, overlap and interact with each other. The PMBOK Guide was originally written by a bunch of engineers who really liked the idea of feedback loops and they understood that these processes happen simultaneously. So, in order to pass the exam, you have to think along the timeline of the project lifecycle as well as the Knowledge Areas. Otherwise, you'd miss every question "what do you do first?"
1.The familiar For Dummies icons make it easy to spot important information.
2.The answers are the most complete of any of the cert books. The questions are well thought out and representative of what is on the exam.
3.The CD has a study schedule (Microsoft Project template file) that provides a detailed roadmap to keep you on track. They suggest that you use this schedule and monitor your progress using Earned Value Analysis. That way you can practice the EV metrics that are on the exam.
Thanks, it's a great help! And it's the best value of any of the books in the category.
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"Coolmore" is the name of the small plantation with four slaves. The house (an actual historically significant house in Edgecombe County, N.C.) is also midway between two objectives of the Union troops, who have a foothold in the eastern part of North Carolina.
After Union troops do significant damage to Confederate stores and supply lines in the town of Rocky Mount, they head to Tarborough to do more damage. On their way to Tarborough, they pass Coolmore. The unusual architecture of the house attracts them, and they stop and plunder the plantation for rations. After freeing the slaves and burning some of the support buildings, they contemplate burning the plantation house. But one officer stops the men because of his appreciation for the house's beauty as well as the beauty of Julia, the owner's teenage daughter.
When the war ends, the Union officer decides to stay in the South, and his memory of Julia leads him back to Tarborough, where he is not wanted by the defeated townfolk. He persists in trying to make a living in unfriendly territory because he is still attracted to Julia. But Julia has no interest in the man who brought ruin to her family and so many others.
A chance meeting at church, starts a romance destined not to be easy.
"Coolmore" really does show how the Civil War did affect ordinary people--soldiers and civilians alike. A sequel certainly is in order to explain the same characters as they live ordinary lives during the hardships of Reconstruction.
My only reservation comes from my not being a Civil War buff. I found too much detail in some of the military descriptions and, possibly, not enough detail about work in the fields of the plantation. Even so, I found it kept my attention and kept me reading past my bedtime.
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Ganguro ("Black Face") Girls were inspired by the adult video actress turned TV host Ai Iijima, who popularized the post-nuclear tan look when mainstream ideas of feminine beauty championed pale skin. Teenagers, delighted by the disdain it caused in their elders, beefed up the look with press-on nails, platinum locks and odd accessories.
The book, while minimal on shopping details, does have a few pages devoted to background information. Each picture is accompanied by a bio which asks a few (boring) questions. There's even a section on how to do the favorite dance of the Ganguros, the "Para Para", which consists basically of arm movements because of the extreme difficulty of dancing in super-high platforms!
Unlike Shoichi Aoki's FRUITS, which showcases mostly "cute to attractive" youths, Ganguro Girls has no problem showing some really UNattractive girls, in some very unflattering poses. FRUITS is a far superior book in just about every respect, so if you have to choose between the two, leave Ganguro Girls on the shelf.
...
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The author is sorry if a reader is not happy and will be glad to replace the second edition with the third edition, free of charge if the reader sends the second edition to him along with a copy of the sales slip from amazon.com. Within two weeks from purchase date.
A Challenging View
This is a significant work that requires a bit of thinking. What he has to say about these things should be analyzed carefully. These concepts should not be discarded lightly simply because they differ somewhat from what one's own viewpoints may be. The author should be complemented for the depth of his vision.
Also recommended: 'Democracy in America' by Alixes de Tocqueville, 'Language and the Problem of Knowledge' by Noan Chomsky, 'Schzophrenia: The Secret Symbol of Psychiatry' by Thomas Szasz, 'What the Buddha Taught' by Walpola Rahula"
The truth, for the first time! The content of this book is a wake up call for humanity. For the first time that I know of someone is focusing on real causes of our problems. This is the most important stuff I have ever read. I can relate to just about ever word of it, even though some of it hurts.
Also recommended: I can think of no previous book I have ever read that goes for the roots of our problems, although Atlas Shrugged by Ayn Rand is what comes to mind.
The content of this book is a wake up call for humanity. For the first time that I know of someone is focusing on real causes of our problems. This is the most important stuff I have ever read. I can relate to just about ever word of it, even though some of it hurts.
Also recommended: I can think of no previous book I have ever read that goes for the roots of our problems, although Atlas Shrugged by Ayn Rand is what comes to mind."
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There are many books out there for actionscript, I suggest any of the others.
The projects are good and varied, and it seems like Friends of Ed has at last gotten someone to insure that coding styles are reasonably consistant throughout the book--other of their Flash books have been essentially collections of inconsistant and often incompatible articles. The usual suspects do show up (spaceship games and rotating 3D cubes), but presented with a level of detail and thoroughness totally absent in other books (short tutorial in matrix math anyone?)
The great chapters on Sound and XML are almost worth the price alone, but the standout chapter is called "Creativity in Practice" and covers invaluable stuff like: working in teams, interaction planning, prototyping, information architecture, even some usability. In other words, the stuff that professional designers do the 80% of the time they're not messing around with software. It's exciting to see these topics appear in what could have been just another coding book.
I won't dock it a star, but one qualm is that it doesn't come with a CD (again contrary to Kevin's review below). You have to download about 80Megs of files from the publishers site. Come on guys, if there's no CD at least knock a few bucks off the price. And even at high-speeds, that 80Meg download is kind of a pain.