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Book reviews for "Costonis,_John_Joseph" sorted by average review score:

Organizational Architecture : Designs for Changing Organizations
Published in Hardcover by Jossey-Bass (1992)
Authors: David A. Nadler, Marc S. Gerstein, and Robert B. Shaw
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An Excellent Book!
An Excellent Book.. A Must For All The Managers In Any Organistaion.


How to Keep a Sketchbook Journal
Published in Hardcover by North Light Books (2001)
Author: Claudia Nice
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Lovely country -- true country! -- recipes & folklore
Years ago I lived in Virginia, and this cookbook brings back a lot of memories of something rooted to the land. It's about the people, the hills, and the lifestyle -- all intertwined inseparably from the food. There's something rich going on here -- and I don't mean in dollars. The author's done a fine job. The recipes presented are not abundant (the first recipe doesn't appear until page 103), but they are as "American" as you can imagine, if not exactly contemporary. Included are country recipes with names that will intrigue many of us now: elderberry wine, pot likker dumplings, Cherokee hominy, Blue Ridge fried corn, cherrylog scuppernong pie, sorghum taffy, and mule ears. I don't know how many of these recipes I'll make, but boy do I love reading this book!

A Gem of a Book
Great recipies and great stories. Truly reflects the relatinship between food, culture and the heritage of the region. Even if I do not want to make a particular dish, I enjoy reading about its local historical importance. I read this book to imerse myself in the "feeling" of the region. I have about 200 cookbooks, but this is one of my favorities -- I sent it to my cousin in West Virginia so that she can better understand the background of her neighbors. To summarize: I just love this book.

Recording the Past
One of my true regrets in life is that I did not write down the treasured "old timey" way of doing things before my grandparents passed away. Things like making homemade apple butter and planting by the signs are now, sadly, a thing of the past. I want to thank the author for recording these things from others in my grandparent's generation. I am truly indebted.


Echoes Through Time: The Grand Canyon
Published in DVD by (14 February, 2002)
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Great Overview of Birds
This book has a wealth of information about a wide variety of bird topics. It has bird anatomy, songs, how to build a nest box, etc. The main chapter of this book, named 'The Habitat BirdFinder' is a field guide to about 100 of the most commonly seen birds in North America, and isn't in any specific order, but by which habitat it is most likely to be seen in. It is very useful, with a large photograph and colour drawings with text for each bird. The range maps are very clear and easy to use. In the back of the book there is a good selection of other books and resources, including local birding organizations.
If you are looking for a first birding book, to get you started and familiar with birds, then this is a great start.

You need to buy this!
This book has been an excellent addition to my library on birding. Splendid photography! Helpful tips!Interesting insights and all at a great price. The book is beautiful and is clearly of high quality. You won't be disappointed!

A beautifully illustrated and informative reference book
This is a wonderfully put together reference book for bird watchers. I also gave one to my father as a gift and he just can't put it down. The pictures are teriffic and there's a lot of information about each bird. I would recommend it to anyone that enjoys birds.


New Orleans Architecture: The University Section: Joseph Street to Lowerline Street, Mississippi River to Walmsley Avenue
Published in Paperback by Pelican Pub Co (2000)
Authors: Friends of the Cabildo, Robert J. Cangelosi, Dorothy G. Schlesinger, Hilary Somerville Irvin, Bernard Lemann, and Samuel Wilson
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Brought back great memories.
Growing up in this section of New Orleans, I was pleasantly surprised to see several homes of my childhood friends. No other city in the U.S. has such distinct and diverse neighborhood architecture. Another great volume in a GREAT series.

The best of the series
This volume in the N.O. Architecture series by the Friends of the Cabildo is, in my opinion, the best of the entire series. Perhaps it is because this is the section of the city in which I spend most of my time, a place to which I've become rather attached. Anyone who enjoys architecture will probably like this book, not just New Orleanians.


Classical Chinese Literature
Published in Hardcover by Columbia University Press (15 February, 2000)
Authors: John Minford and Joseph S. M. Lau
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Well worth
John Minford, one of our finer Sino-Anglo translators, here brings out a remarkably successful anthology of Chinese literature which stands together with the Norton's as a must-buy for lovers of Chinese literature. The book gives a comprehensive account of its beginnings from ancient classics (Book of Songs, Analects etc) to Tang luminaries Li Bo and Du Fu, using a collection of translations from Waley, Pound to Owen and Birch, while offering insightful annotations, readings and essays. There's a bit of everything: biographies, ballads, poetry, histories (a big genre in Chinese literature), and short tales, and a lot to delight the unsuspected.

Some things said in the last review seem so blatantly biased (and ignorant) I have to correct them there. There are actually very little difference between the Wade-Giles and the Pinyin system. Both are supposed to transliterate Chinese characters into Roman alphabets. So how can one makes Chinese more "beautiful, sonorous and elegant" while the other renders it like "gorillas"? What is important of course is how accurately they depict the spoken tongue. Pinyin does have an advantage over Wade-Giles in that it is more accurate: the poet Du Fu, transliterated as Tu Fu in Wade-Giles, is closer in Pinyin to the original, the Chinese character for "Du" pronounced with the consonant "d" (as in "death") rather than "t" (as in "tongue") in "Tu". The word "Beijing" is also better reflected (the two consonants, "b" in "bell" and "j" in "joke", are far more accurately rendered than "p" and "k" in Peking). It's sad that someone who obviously doesn't know Chinese tries to work his personal bias in others, and bringing out "critics" like Updike who doesn't know Chinese himself.

Gorillas in the mist.
CLASSICAL CHINESE LITERATURE : An Anthology of Translations, Volume I : From Antiquity to the Tang Dynasty. Edited by John Minford and Joseph S. M. Lau. 1176 pp. New York and Hong Kong : Columbia University Press and The Chinese University of Hong Kong, 2000.

Sometime in the 1950's, a committee of bureaucrats sat down in the People's Republic of China to create a new system of transliteration for the Chinese language. As Chinese Communists, they shared an extreme loathing for traditional 'feudalistic' Chinese culture. In addition, none of them of course were native users of the Roman alphabet.

The monstrous and deformed offspring of their lucubrations, which was approved at the 5th session of the National People's Congress on February 11th, 1958, is the system known as 'Hanyu pinyin.' Although a system designed by Chinese for Chinese, it was eagerly fastened upon and promoted by certain benighted elements of the Official West, and is, sad to say, the system of transliteration employed in the present book.

Pinyin has been condemned by no less an authority than scientist and sinologist Joseph Needham, distinguished author of the multi-volume 'Science and Civilization in China,' who described it as "extremely repulsive." Others, too, have expressed disgust with it, including American author John Updike, a man remarkably knowledgeable about China, who finds it "grotesque."

In contrast to the familiar, beautiful, sonorous and elegant names produced by the Wade-Giles system of romanization - names such as T'ao Chien, Hsieh Ling-yun, Hsiao Kang, Ch'u Kuang-hsi, and so on - pinyin gives us names which sound like they belong to a bunch of gorillas. Meet, for example, pinyin's "Kong Rong" (page 418), a distant relative presumably of King Kong. Meet too "Cao Pi," son of "Cao Cao" (page 628), whose presence may account for the many instances of "dung" (or is it "ding" or "dong"?) scattered throughout the book. Meet them, that is, if you would rather visit Minford's Beijing than Waley's Peking.

Pinyin's uglification of China's past is bad enough, but it leads to a far larger and more serious problem. Sinologist Victor Mair, who in his own fine 'Columbia Anthology of Traditional Chinese Literature' (1994) made the correct and sensible decision to employ Wade-Giles, cautions us that:

". . . the vast bulk of scholarly writing in English about Chinese literature employs Wade-Giles romanization. It would be terribly confusing and difficult for students without any background in the study of Mandarin (the typical student who will use this [i.e., his own] book) to try to follow up the readings with any sort of research if another sort of romanization system were chosen" (page xxxi).

So there you have it. PINYIN = Uglification + Confusion + a compounding of Difficulties, when anything to do with the study of China is already difficult enough. In other words, precisely what the Chinese Communists would have wanted : the beautiful made ugly, and the difficult made to look impossibly difficult to the general reader.

The only reason that editors Minford and Lau have condescended to offer us for the mess they have made in the present book is that pinyin is "now widely used internationally" (page lviii). In other words, dear general reader, it's trendy, and you're just going to have to bite the bullet and learn pinyin newspeak, or struggle with unpronounceables such as 'cen,' 'cuipin,' 'qiong,' 'xunzi,' or 'zhitui.'

A second problem with this book, since it lacks an index of titles, is that items can be impossible to find without searching through the entire 34-page Table of Contents. This difficulty is compounded by the Index of Authors, which is incomplete; amazingly it fails, for example, to mention Lao Tzu (Laozi), though extracts from the Tao Te Ching (but not its Chinese name) will be found on pages 202-206.

A third problem is that, judging by the pages of my own copy, there would seem to be a world shortage of printing ink. Instead of the print being crisp, clear, black, and readable, it's greyish. This makes it tiring and difficult to read (especially the footnotes which are printed in a miniscule font). It's rather like peering into a fog or mist.

A fourth problem is that there would also seem to be a world cotton shortage, since, despite its exorbitant price, the boards of this book are covered, not with cloth, but with mock cloth made of soft paper which is already showing signs of wear despite being brand new. But at least the printed pages are strong heavy stock, and the signatures are, as in real books, actually stitched.

As for the contents of this book (apart from their being liberally spattered with pinyin), they are, in a word, MAGNIFICENT! - Oracle Bones, Bronze Inscriptions, I Ching, Myths, Legends, Folksongs, Narrative and Philosophic Prose, Shamanistic Poems, Historical Wrings, Miscellaneous Prose, Women Poets, Drama, Literary Criticism, Ballads, Buddhist Writings, T'ang poets, Strange Tales, Zen and Taoist Poetry, etc., etc.

The book, in short, offers us a rich and brilliant selection of texts, in translations both literary (Pound, Waley, Rexroth, Snyder, etc.) and academic (Watson, Graham, Birch, Owen, etc.) - and contains almost every conceivable help and enhancement. These latter include full and informative introductions; extensive and useful annotations; numerous interesting black-and-white illustrations; seals; calligraphy; a few texts in the original Chinese; bibliographies; maps; an index of authors in both pinyin (full) and Wade-Giles (skimpy); and much else besides.

In sum, this book is clearly one of the richest and finest Anthologies of Classical Chinese Literature in English that we have ever seen. In terms of its contents it certainly deserves 5 stars. But in terms of the pinyin system which defaces those contents, a system which can be read with ease only by students of Mandarin - whereas if Wade-Giles had been used the book could have been read with ease by anyone - it deserves no more than a single star. Hence the 3 stars.

Who, after all, on opening a collection of writings by the refined, civilized, and highly intelligent ancient Chinese, wants to find instead a bunch of gorillas moving about in a mist ?

Songs, biographies, and early Chinese philosophy
Nearly a thousand selections from the best translators of Chinese literature covers antiquity to the Tang Dynasty in this first volume, an essential anthology of Chinese literature important for any scholarly or college-level collection strong in Chinese works. This gathers the most important writings of poetry, fiction, songs, biographies, and early Chinese philosophy, with a chronological and genre arrangement which makes study easy. Chapters are introduced by quotes and introductions in this weighty presentation which includes individual chapters on early literary criticism and works.


The Complete Arkangel Shakespeare: 38 Fully-Dramatized Plays
Published in Audio CD by The Audio Partners Publishing Corporation (2003)
Authors: William Shakespeare, Eileen Atkins, Joseph Fiennes, John Gielgud, and Imogen Stubbs
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Indispensible
Every sculptor should own this book, and it's really the only one you need. Meilach's volume makes a good supplement, but really that's all it is; Liebson's book easily stands on it's own as the standard reference.

Why? Almost the entire book is devoted to the craft and mechanics of carving stone. Liebson looks like someone's dad, and writes like it, too -- this book eschews all discussion of "art" in favor of simple, practical advice on "how to do it." From selecting a stone and tools to using and caring for those tools to finishing, polishing, mounting, and displaying your sculpture, even to gaining exhibitions and marketing your work, Liebson covers absolutely everything you need to know to get started, and to keep going. I've been carving for over five years now, and I still refer constantly to this book.

Excellent book on direct stone sculpture
This book has aroused in me a great deal of enthuiasm for the process of shaping stone and the creation of art forms out of stone. Liebson is an authority on the subject and he writes extremely well. Manufacturers and suppliers of tools and stone are listed in an index. A list of recommended tools is provided as well as a fairly comprehensive description of how to best utilize these tools. The photographs are interesting and informative. An inspirational book. Of the three books on stone sculpture which I've read, this is by far the best.


Suzanne Somers' Eat Great, Lose Weight
Published in Hardcover by Crown Pub (1997)
Authors: Suzanne Somers, Leslie Hamel, and Barbara M. Dixon
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Significant contribution
The G8's Role in the New Millennium makes a significant contribution to our understanding of an important institution.

Authoritative!
This publication is a succinct but authoritative primer on this organization's role as a potential policy-making alternative body for managing global financial challenges.

Lifts the curtain
This book goes a some way to lifting the curtain on the secrecy that surrounds the operation of a body that has no charter, no headquarters, no secretariat. --Business Worldaware


Cutting Garden for California
Published in Paperback by B. B. Mackey Books (1990)
Authors: L. Patricia Kite, Betty B. Mackey, L. Patricia Kite, and Heather Lovett
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Just What It Says!
I know understand myself, and others more than before. If you think this is some book that will help you control people's minds, this isn't what you are looking for. This will help you understand the sub-concious subtleties that everyone has. It also helps you to excersise your brain power to acheive excellence.

It's the Best
Of the many books published on Neuro-Linguistic Programming, this version tops the list. I say that because it does such an effective job of simplifying a complex set of processes and helps the reader understand its applications. Bandler and Grinder's earlier publications brought the concept to life; O'Connor and Seymour make it far more usable.

A Fantastic Introduction
I do very highly recommend this book. It is enjoyable to read - considerably moreso than other books of it's kind. From this book you will get a very good background in the field. I believe this book serves much better for background information than to give you a set of techniques... if you want to learn techniques --- DO IT AT A SEMINAR --- nevertheless it is very useful to learn them ahead of time.
This book is a good precursor to The Structure of Magic and Patterns of the Hypnotic Techniques of Milton H. Erickson, M.D. both by Richard Bandler and John Grinder -- which go much more indepth into the linguistic portions of the NLP model.


Ethnicity and Family Therapy
Published in Hardcover by Guilford Press (10 November, 1982)
Authors: Monica McGoldrick, John Pearce, and Joseph Giordano
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From a lay reader
I first read this book several years ago. I am a professional computer scientist/applied mathematician, and have no training at all in any social science aside from history, government and anthropology courses taken in college (lo these many years ago). My interest in this book arises from the illumination that its chapters on the English, the Irish, the Italians and the Jews (the main ethnic groups in the town in which I grew up) have given to otherwise inexplicable bits of my life. For example, I could never understand why one of my Yankee friends would go into paroxysms of anger when, after inviting his daughter to Sunday dinner, she would accept, and then call with a (legitimate) excuse on Saturday; or why one of my mother's best friends, a woman of Irish descent, drove me wild for over 40 years with her teasing manner, although she clearly meant very well towards me. The pathways of social and familial relationships passed from generation to generation through the filter of ethnic heritage appears to be remarkably powerful, even in these post-melting-pot days. Read this book with an eye to self-discovery if you don't believe me!

The Best There Is On The Influences of Our Ancestors
Ethnicity and Family Therapy is quite simply the best book that exists to any interested person as well as students and professionals with a good overview of important factors to understand when dealing with differences that exist in people.

I first became familiar with Monica McGoldrick about eighteen years ago. She has devoted her life's work to research and writing on the influences of ancestry and ethnicity in our contemporary lives. Every time I pick this book up (over the first and second editions), I find myself lost in it as if it is my first discovery of it and I always learn something new! A great book for a discussion group to consider.

A Must for anyone working with families
I have been using this book and the earlier book in my practice for more than ten years. It has been vital to my work not only with other cultures, but my own (Irish)> I have often shared the readings with my clients who also found the chapters on their cultures to be acurate. If there was going to be one book on my shelf, this would be it. Got a copy to sell I would buy it as a back-up!


Why am I afraid to tell you who I am? : (insights on self-awareness, personal growth and interpersonal communication)
Published in Unknown Binding by Fontana ()
Author: John Joseph Powell
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I've given away every one I've owned...
This is one of those books that can change your life. It was given to me by a dear friend , and I turned to it when my life made no sense. It helped me make sense of my life then, and it still makes wonderful sense today; 20+ years later. I have "passed it on" to many people and will probably do so as long as it's in print. I hope that this one will stay in my library, but if not, I know it will serve a purpose for someone that I care about - A great book to help you help yourself.....

Be Fully In the Moment
For many years, I wondered why some people abruptly shifted their eyes away from my eyes. I also wondered how it would be possible for me to acquire the charisma that I admire in many public people.

This book is the answer.

People who shift their eyes from my eyes fear that if I notice who they are, and if I don't like who they are, they won't be accepted, because, to them, that is all that they have. I learned that those people have a self-concept that is based upon anticipating what others will think of them.

And to become as charismatic as those I most admire, I've learned that by first accepting everything about myself, I am free to emulate them, without losing myself.

This little book has so much information for anyone who desires to be their best.

Read this book to become more than comfortable in your own skin.

A Venture Into The Self
Any person who desires to understand himself in regard to personal growth and relationship with others must read this book. I have read and reread this book and use it to counsel others. Powell deals with the topic of human growth and development with acute precision and accuracy that informs a picture of the well-integrated, whole individual. He communicates this person in the honor of the image of God, not in a preachy tone but such as to reflect the dignity of humankind and his own vast understanding in religion and classical studies. He also touches at the nerve of why individuals mask themselves from others and the care and caution that we as counselors need to take in dealing with these people. His catalog of games and roles is so descriptive that even emotionally healthy persons can identify the weakend emotional tendencies that characterize their life. The principles in this book can be communicated to adolescent and adult alike. Simply indispensable.


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