Book reviews for "Davis,_Deborah" sorted by average review score:
Our Elders Lived It: American Indian Identity in the City
Published in Paperback by Northern Illinois Univ Pr (2002)
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Delightful
Glad to see this back in print ...
The Autocrat of the Breakfast-Table is a demonstration of New England civility in the 1850s. I believe it went through more than 50 editions by the end of the nineteenth century, so it must have been very widely read at one time. The book is packed with amazing observations. Holmes takes the time to wonder why the sense of smell is the quickest path to memory. He rails against puns in a way that is better than punning. He points out human flaws and praises examples of good living. Trees come alive, through prosaic description and poetic flights. Would you like to go back to the 1850s and have a conversation with a Boston intellectual? Here's your chance. There are many old copies of this book sitting around, but it's nice that it's come back into print (again).... (it's also a quiet love story, by the way)
Psychiatry (Platinum Vignettes Series: Ultra High Yield Clinical Case Scenarios for USMLE Step 2)
Published in Paperback by Hanley & Belfus (2002)
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Great way to review psych for step 2!
Loved the unknown case format. Classic and atypical presentations of high-yield psychiatry diagnoses are reviewed. Answers cover important info and give you a feel for differential diagnoses and how to distinguish among similar conditions (e.g., schizophreniform, schizophrenia, schizoid and schizotypal disorders). Quick read written in easy-to-understand language, with terms explained well. Definitely recommend!
Highly recommend it!
I don't like psychiatry, but I didn't want to miss any easy points on the exam, so I wanted a quick review of the topic. I used this book in conjunction with First Aid and got all the info I needed to do well on the psych questions on the boards. Cases are presented as unknown in a format similar to my exam. Great explanations cover all related info including differential diagnosis pearls and other high-yield info.
The Comic Stories
Published in Paperback by Ivan R Dee, Inc. (1999)
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Delightful tidbits from the Master
Chekhov wrote all of these stories under a pseudonym, some of them while he was still in medical school. Until his death, he denied being their author; perhaps he did not want to spoil his image with these bits of humor, or perhaps he did not want to spoil these stories' frivolity by attaching a name like Chekhov to them. Unlike the dark, brooding impression of Chekhov one may get from some of his plays, these stories are lively, lighthearted and often hilarious. All are short -- some as short as just a page or two -- but all will have clever endings, even for readers not familiar with Chekhov or with his specific Russian brand of humor. Many of the stories are not meant to be laugh-out-loud funny, but are comic in the more classical sense, bringing forth clever observations and juxtapositions in a seemingly familiar world. These are highly recommended either as a supplement to Chekhov's better known works, or as an easy introduction to his writings.
The Complete Book Of Cockatiels
Published in Hardcover by Howell Book House (1998)
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I found nothing in Diane's book that I disagree with
I first met the author Diane Grindol when I joined the Monterey Bay Cage Bird Club (MBCBC) (which Diane founded) many years ago. I don't own any cockatiels, but have a pair of Lesser Sulfur Cockatoos and a Blue and Gold Macaw. I have been a member of the American Federation of Aviculture, gone to several of their conventions, bought many books and tapes, read BirdTalk, Bird World and heard numerous speakers over the years. After a while, you develop your own opinions and realize that just because its in writing doesn't make it so. I FOUND NOTHING IN DIANE'S BOOK THAT I DISAGREE WITH!
When I bought my first Cockatoo (and a Cockatiels is a little Cockatoo), it almost died because it wouldn't eat. I joined the MBCBC and learned from other people's experiences. Diane has done an excellent job of condensing these experiences into a 177-page book. I would have liked to see some of Roudybush's graphs on weight gain vs. diet included, but I guess space limitations wo! n out.
The book is worth the price for the pictures alone.
You have to love a book that is dedicated to a cockatiel
A clear, well-written and modern guide to cockatiels and their care. It is obvious that the author has a deep affection and respect for her birds; the book is sprinkled with little stories of her birds. There is a lot of information on cockatiel behavior and feeding. Rescue is also mentioned. One unique feature is the detailed chapter on cockatiel genetics.
Wonderful Book
I just bought this book because I just bought a cockatiel. I
have had cockatiels when I was younger & needed a refresher course. This book has alot of information on nutrition, training, colorings of cockatiels etc. All the information you'll ever need!
have had cockatiels when I was younger & needed a refresher course. This book has alot of information on nutrition, training, colorings of cockatiels etc. All the information you'll ever need!
Therapist as Life Coach: Transforming Your Practice
Published in Hardcover by W.W. Norton & Company (2002)
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You Don't Have to be a Therapist to Benefit from this Book.
This book goes far beyond helping therapists transition into life coaching. It gives the reader a very clear and exciting introduction to this new and upcoming field. It was my first real introduction to coaching, yet after training in the field and went back and read it again and got even more out of it.
The book explains the difference between coaching and therapy, and also helps the reader decide which is best for her/him. Exercises are provided to help the reader's decision making. The way the book is put together the authors quite effectively coach the reader toward the possibilities and the joys of coaching. They also spend a good number of pages on how to start a coaching business. I loved it. As an aspiring life-coach I say "thank you."
The book explains the difference between coaching and therapy, and also helps the reader decide which is best for her/him. Exercises are provided to help the reader's decision making. The way the book is put together the authors quite effectively coach the reader toward the possibilities and the joys of coaching. They also spend a good number of pages on how to start a coaching business. I loved it. As an aspiring life-coach I say "thank you."
Therapist as Life Coach
This is an excellent book for those of us who have been practicing therapists and have a desire to do what we actually intended when we chose this profession in the first place. The book is well written. It provides a comprehensive discussion of the differences between coaching and psychotherapy or counseling. After defining what this new and exciting field is all about, the authors have given us newcomers to the field a wonderful manual to assist us in establishing a coaching practice. You couldn't really ask for more... unless you want even more of a headstart; you might enroll in Pat's Life Coach Training course, a 30 hour course which supplements the book. A complimentary introductory session is available by going to the Institute web site,...Life coaching is a natural evolution from traditional therapy practices. Moving into this field has transformed my life. Thank you Pat and Deborah!
Therapist as Life Coach: Transforming Your Pratice
Pat Williams and Deborah Davis have crafted an excellent "How To" guide for therapists and others who want to enliven their lives and their practices. What I like best about this book is that it does not assume that the reader has no backgrond or skill but rather acknowledges the readers skills and helps them to see how they fit into the world of Life Coaching. The book is very well written, well thought out and well structured. Reading it is a great way for a prospective coach to find out about the field and to gain insight as to whether or not it is a fit for them. It is also a wonderful review and refresher for those of us already coaching because it covers the basics in such an interseting and informative manner.I highly recomend it.
The Consumer Revolution in Urban China (Studies on China, 22)
Published in Hardcover by University of California Press (01 December, 1999)
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An insight into the sociology of consumption in China
The consumer revolution in China is a relatively recent phenomena with the former state controlled society slowly moving to a capitalist market where the individual is beginning to exercise choice in his/her consumption decisions. Chinese consumer behaviour is therefore a relatively unchartered area and this collection of studies by 14 authors provides a socio-political context for a range of consumer practices. The studies range from a semiotic analysis of advertising for luxury housing in Shanghai to an analysis of the social impications of the emerging trends of adopting Western bridal wear, purchasing greeting cards, and visiting discos. The book helps the reader get under the skin of an otherwise impenetrable consuming society with anecdotes and insights not available anywhere else. It makes for highly absorbing reading and I would recommend it to anyone interested in gaining an understanding of consumers in this unique market
Tom Robbins : A Critical Companion/Online
Published in Calendar by GEM Online (2002)
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Expression & Possibility Toward a Unified Theory of Modern Dance
Published in Paperback by Hci Pubns (1996)
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Annual Review of Sex Research 1990
Published in Hardcover by Society for the Scientific Study of (1990)
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Aleatory
Published in Paperback by GoodSAMARitan Press (2000)
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Holmes was considered an important American writer until the 1920s when he was excised from the American canon by the modernists. They depicted him as willfully provincial, and elitist. What those critics failed to understand was that the Autocrat is also a comic pose, and that Holmes is making sport of everyone, including elitists. Holmes' democratic view of conversation as an open, free-wheeling discourse where anyone could join the Autocrat at his table, as long as they enlivened the conversation, ran counter to the views of his more elitist friends in Boston's Saturday Club in Boston. Holmes loved to talk, and his love for talk made him a democrat, or perhaps a true republican.
His Autocrat is a many sided character: stern and foolish, admonitory and celebratory, a polymorph who will don any temporaty mask necessary to keep the conversation alive. Holmes' playful metaphorical imagination is also a revelation. His gift for translating complex ideas into homey metaphors, aphorisms, and similes is nothing short of miraculous. In the words of another seriously comic American whom I'm sure Holmes would have delighted in, the Autocrat "floats like a butterfly, stings like a bee."
The Autocrat of the Breakfast table begins "in media res," in the middle of a conversation, with the Autocrat attempting to set the rules for conversation at his table. They are generous rules, but even they are open to sabotage by his tablemates at the boarding house. He begins by banning "facts" from his table as impediments to conversation, (a condition that should prevail on today's too numerous current event talking head shows. But I, like the Autocrat, digress).
Here's how the Autocrat starts: "I was just going to say, when I was interrupted, that one of the many ways of classifying minds is under the head of arithmetical and algebraical intellects. All economical and practical wisdom is an extension of the following arithmetical formula: 2 + 2 = 4. Every philosophical proposition has the more general character of the expression a + b = c. We are mere operatives, empirics, and egoists, until we learn to think in letters instead of figures." "They all stared. There is a divinity student lately come among us to whom I commonly address remarks like this. "
In other words, as Gibian says in his marvelous OLIVER WENDELL HOLMES AND THE CULTURE OF CONVERSATION: [The Autocrat] only asks us to study his beliefs the way a pragmatist would study the doctrines of any religion: "I don't want you to believe anything I say; I only want you to to try to see what makes me believe it." How refreshing in this age of factoids and statisticoids recited with rancor and ideological certitude, to hear the Autocrat and his tablemates at the boarding house attempting to fashion a democracy through and by their conversation. Nowadays all we have are the unironic Autocrats, control freaks like John McLaughlin, Ted Koppel, Rush Limbaugh, and that guy on FOX whose name I have, pleasantly, forgotten.
Listening to the Autocrat you can almost hear American singing. It's not exactly Walt Whitman's America, but it's still America in the hopeful, experimental antebellum era, and thus a good antidote to the cold technocratic chatter and lukewarm public relations cant we are showered with in this hypermediated century.