Used price: $19.95
If you write a lot and are not an accurate, rapid typist, get speech recognition software. If you are fast and correct, keep on keyboarding. Dragon is good but you will have to make corrections. If you already make mistakes, it does not matter if you talk or type.
Dan Newman takes you step-by-step through using Dragon Naturally Speaking. (For coverage, click on Table of Contents in the left-hand column of this page.) He even includes trouble-shooting tips and resources.
Dan Newman is a great writer, gifted computer expert and a dedicated teacher.
As the author of 113 books (including revisions and foreign-language editions) and over 500 magazine articles, I highly recommend this book to anyone who has to write a lot. DanPoynter@ParaPublishing.com.
Used price: $2.20
As a parent, I would add that if your child has concerns about nightmares, this book is a practical-but-fun story about how kids can control them.
Used price: $4.98
Collectible price: $6.00
Buy one from zShops for: $9.99
Pennac's book succeeds where many fail because it is entirely devoid of sanctimony. His thoughts on reading are presented as an answer to the question "How do we get a child to love reading." His thoughts are clear, well-reasoned, and passionately held, in a way that makes the reader think, "Me, too!"
If you love reading and want to pass on the feeling, this is a great book for a starter.
I'm usually jaded enough not to use the word 'inspiring', but this book is inspiring in the most benign and down-to-earth way. Amazon should show its legendary business sense and give a copy of this book away with every order. 'Better Than Life' so ignites, or re-ignites, the thirst for the printed word that every copy read would account for ten more novels bought.
Not least of the book's strengths is its ability to speak to all audiences, to the experienced or to the child, and hold them spellbound with stories from the past, stories about stories, and stories about how we use and absorb stories. But it's a remarkably tolerant book, more about curiosoty than commentary, written with flair, simplicity and a contagious good spirit.
The original title was far more suitable because, aside from everything else, the book also does 'read like a novel'. It's funny too. I haven't gone into the specifics of the book because I wouldn't want to spoil the effects of its charm, but I can't recommended it enough; I've foisted this book on friends and now I'm trying to do the same to strangers.
List price: $16.95 (that's 30% off!)
Used price: $5.83
Collectible price: $10.59
Buy one from zShops for: $11.09
Used price: $0.95
Collectible price: $37.06
Buy one from zShops for: $6.99
For eg: Postage stamps, those tiny square pieces which we lick , stick and forget. I quote how this book unravels it " Postage stamps are an intricate layered sandiwch of chemicals. The glue is a true masterpiece of the chemist's art. Think of a problem. Not only does the glue have to be sticky enough to hold onto a envelope, but it has not to be so sticky that it grabs permanently on your tongue. It has to do this with onlythe amount of salive we're happy to dribble off and then it has to stick to the envelope firmly, but still you give you a moment or two to readjust its position. Finally, even once the chemists have worked out something that's tongue attractive and humidity resistant and briefly free-sliding, they still have have to throw it out if it tastes bad. Or offends anybody's religion. Ir is too expensive. Or is too high in calories."
This is just a sample. The books jumps and hops in a free wheeling away across many varied aspects of our lives, commenting and shedding light on them. For eg, Chicken breast is found white in the fast food centers, stuffed in salads or other food menu. WHy? Normally food tends to be green or reddish or brown, but very rarely white. This is because of the sedentary lifestyle of the modern-day chicken. The flight muscles in the breast don't get used much, so there's no reason for oxygen sotring red blood cells to be soaked darkly through them. AS a result, the breast comes out white.
One thing you will definitely remember after reading this book is that you are never alone. Tuck yourself in the cleanest of bedsheets? Even then, there will be around 40000 pillow mites (ghastly miniature Rhino look alikes) crawling over the pillow.
Right now, on our faces are armies of demodex mites. Harmless creatures feasting on our skin, unvisible to us.
The pictures in the book are incredible. Read and enjoy!
cheers!
Used price: $8.46
Collectible price: $19.06
List price: $12.99 (that's 20% off!)
Used price: $1.95
Buy one from zShops for: $4.99
List price: $13.00 (that's 20% off!)
Used price: $5.99
Buy one from zShops for: $6.87
I definately recommend this book highly. It earns the greatest honors in my book. I don't give out "10's" very easily.
Used price: $10.25
Unfortunately, this McGraw-Hill edition abridges Halberstam's masterpiece. Most of the essential pieces of the story remain, but much of the rich, colorful narrative, which makes this such a fascinating book, is lost. Hopefully, a complete version will return to print soon.
Used price: $0.68
Collectible price: $2.99
Buy one from zShops for: $2.52
Fay is a mixture of Deliverance, On the Road and Rabbit, Run - a backwoods journey of an everyman heroine, who endures rape, murder and lost love. A story filled with substance abuse and altered states, Fay captures southern society's underbelly in a provocative and heartfelt way. Trailers, bars and old houses fill Larry Brown's Mississippi, which overflows with cops, strippers and criminals. Overall, Fay is a straightforward, compelling book. Subplots are sparse, but the central story is engaging entertainment. It has appealing characters and a rapid rhythm. Fay Jones is a character to root for, and Fay is a novel worth reading. What else would you expect from a Chapel Hill publishing company founded by a Charleston native? For further information, visit www.algonquin.com and for more of the Jones clan, read Larry Brown's prequel, Joe.
Brown is equally adept at stark, haunting descriptions of the beautiful desolation his characters inhabit, and the sudden, shocking violence they often confront. Much like Cormac McCarthy, another of my favorite writers, Brown's scenes of violence are almost poetic in description, gorgeously composed but shocking to the core. And, also like McCarthy, his characters seem always to be on the edge of redemption when one bad choice, one wrong turn, pulls them back under.
Fay is a fantastic character, one of the better female characters ever written by a man, and she will make you feel hope and despair for her as she struggles to make a life for herself in a harsh, strange world, but keeps sliding into pitfalls created by her own naivete and her ignorance of the havoc her beauty causes.
Read this book, and don't forget to read Joe as well, the novel in which her character was first introduced.