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Book reviews for "Fisher,_David_Elimelech" sorted by average review score:

Dancing in the Distraction Factory: Music Television and Popular Culture
Published in Paperback by Univ of Minnesota Pr (Txt) (1992)
Author: Andrew Goodwin
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becarefull what you call a cure
I have Mantle Cell Lymphoma. There is no cure. I don't what people to stop fighting. I believe that there is a danger sent here in that many people like myself will die before we are afforded the same opportunity. What is Mr. Murdoch doing with the proceeds from this book? If this book was written for noble reasons than donate all the money for this story as to not come across like an elitist who was given a chance to live that others won't. There are many inspiring tales of survival - for those of us that are sick - I certainly don't want to be reminded that he was privaleged. I feel like this was a bit sensationalist.

Ray of Hope
I have a Friend who just went through this process at John Hopkins. The results at this time are excellent and the procedures are almost exactly what the Author went through. I would recommend this book as a tool for all Patients that are diagnosed with this form of Cancer as a Ray of Hope for their peace of mind. The only downside is the exposing of how our Judicial System treats the Treatment of a serious illness as another point of Law. They should be ashamed and the Judge should be also for overturning a Jury verdict. They wonder why people have no respect for the Law and Jury Trials.

Momma, don't let your babies grow up and become lawyers!
This was a riveting story - - read it! You will be uplifted most of the time, and outraged by the final conclusion. Many heros emerge in the telling of this heart-pounding story - - from Murdock the patient to the scientists working in the laboratory to the clinicians offering new hope to cancer victims. Two noteworthy anti-heroes also emerge, U. S. District Court Judge Roderick McKelvie and plaintiffs' attorney Donald R. Ware of Foley, Hoag & Eliot, Boston, MA, whose use of arcane points of law ensured cancer victims would be denied potential life saving technology. These two should enter into a suicide pact to honor the patients who died as a result of their efforts. Interestingly, Mr. Ware's firm represented big business in the book "A Civil Action", another legal saga in which cancer victims were denied.


The Contemporary Parallel New Testament: King James Version, New American Standard Bible, New International Version, New Living Translation, New Century Version, Contemporary English Version,
Published in Hardcover by Oxford University Press (1998)
Author: John R. Kohlenberger
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A delightful and instructive overview of British India.
I am glad I bought this book. There is nothing new here for the reader well versed in the history of India. However, the language and presentation model is quite brisk and makes for a easy read. The material is fairly encompassing given that the purpose of the book is for the general reader. I found the narrative both interesting and fast moving. A good start for someone desiring to know present day India.

A Richly Detailed Story. . .
Given that so much has been written on the movement towards independence already in the last few years, I came with skepticism to this book, given that neither of the authors had significant experience in Indian history before. This becomes clear in their research and writing, which at times seems to borrow too extensively from prior works and in effect surveys previous surveys. Nonetheless, The Proudest Day accomplishes one singular feat: it paints a coherent story of more than 60 years of struggle, full of coloured yet flawed personalities such as Jinnah and Gahndi and momentous occasions, from the Amritsar Massacre to the endgame hysteria after WWII. It gives form to what more than anything was a series of stop and goes over a half a century.

Much of the author's criticism of the main protagonists is not new. The myth of Gahndi's pacifism is debunked. In Nehru's uncompromising idealism, the authors lay the blame for eventual partition. Jinnah is the consumate lawyer, manipulating and playing with legal vagueries. But it is for Mountbatten and the Congress hard-liners that the harshest criticism is reserved. Partition comes down to one missed chance in the summer of 1946. Whether or not in the emotional-charged atmosphere of Indian-Pakistan history you accept this proposition, the authors succeed in leaving that bitter feeling in the reader's mind- that partition, the holocaust that ensued after August 1947 in Punjab, and years of ensuing conflict could have all been avoided even after 50+ years of heated struggle if only in that last instance, the main protagonists laid aside their prior histories, showed their courage and seized the moment.

A review of Indian Independance Movements-Heroes and Pretend
An exellent book delaing with the Indian independence movement.
It starts with the British massacre of hundreds of Indians attending a peaceful meeting in Jallianwallah Bagh, which tuned the tide and ends with division of of the subcontinent into Muslin Pakistan and more secular India and the loss of millions of lives on both sides of the devide during the ensuing riots, and the birth of the the Indepenedent Inida and Pakistan. The book colorfully portrays the charecters involved in the drama-the likes of Jinnah the father of modern Pakistan, Mahatma Gandhi, Jawahrlal Nehru and Mountabatten and their arrogance and vanity, Gandhi's apparent dislike of Jinnah from the very begining and his non-democratic management of the congress party. Jinnah was a secular muslim and in the begining it was not his intention to carve a seperate Islamic Pakistan from the Indian subcontinent. The dogmatic refusal to accept the Cripps Mission, whose offer of the dominion status would have saved the division of the subcontinent and subsequent loss of millions of lives. The initial arrogance and later withdrawl of the British in a hurry without a great deal of thought resulting not only the worst religiously motivated riots and massive loss of lives and boarder problems between India and Pakistan. Only the common people of India emerge as the heroes in this book. It is a well researched thoughtfully written book and it should be read by any with an interest in the subcontinent.


Tube: The Invention of Television
Published in Paperback by Harvest Books (1997)
Authors: David E. Fisher and Marshall Jon Fisher
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An accessible history of television technology
Tube is easily the most accessible history of television's early years (its "prehistory"), and a good read to boot. The great Zworykin/Farnsworth technology battle is pretty well presented, and the men themselves come alive in the text. Color television's development gets easily the best treatment I've seen anywhere in the non-technical press. However, the final chapter on the future of television was mostly worthless; historians (along with most of the rest of us) do not do well in predicting the future. In a few years that chapter probably will be seen as an embarassment which the rest of the book does not deserve

La personnification de l'histoire

L'auteur du livre nous a raconté une belle histoire, celle des principaux protagonistes de l'invention de la télévision. Il a su vulgariser les notions scientifiques complexes qui intervinrent dans la réalisation du téléviseur moderne. Il s'adressait à un large public. C'est pourquoi son histoire est personnifiée.

Nous retrouvons les principaux inventeurs indépendant qui orientèrent leurs recherches dans le cadre du paradigme mécanique, Jenkins, Baird, Ives. D'autres figures peuplent les recherches dans le cadre du paradigme électronique, Zworykin, Farnsworth. L'auteur entre dans le détail biographique propre à nous illustrer les conditions de l'invention. La personnification de l'histoire permet d'attirer le lecteur.

Par ailleurs, le livre rend bien la complexité du développement de la télévision. Ce n'est pas un seul individu qui trône au dessus de l'histoire. En effet, l'invention de la télévision va d'au moins 1880 à 1939 et elle a mobilisé des chercheurs de partout dans le monde : Allemagne, Japon, Canada, Italie, URSS, France, en plus des États Unis d'Amérique et de la Grande Bretagne. Des inventeurs indépendants, des chercheurs universitaires et des chercheurs de grande compagnies y investirent nombre de jours. Plusieurs brevets furent déposés. Il n'y a pas -le- brevet décisif, mais plusieurs connaissances, savoir faire.

Cependant, pour le spécialiste de l'histoire des techniques, il ne s'agit que d'un livre de vulgarisation respectant avec intelligence les règles de l'art. Les livres publiés antérieurement sur l'histoire de la télévision (et il n'en existe guère peu) étaient soit trop rivés sur les faits, soit trop techniques, soit trop concernés par les débats entourant la télédiffusion de l'apprés seconde guerre mondiale.

Or, nous sommes toujours en attente d'une histoire de la télévision sous l'angle de l'histoire des techniques. Une histoire qui répondrait aux questions suivantes : quelles sont les contraintes exercées sur l'innovation technique par l'option paradigmatique des chercheurs? quel rôle a joué la présence de l'industrie dans le passage de l'invention à l'innovation? comment des inventeurs indépendants, tel Farnsworth ont-ils pu tenir tête à des industries telles RCA? pourquoi les Bell Lab., disposant de compétences techniques et de savoir faire éprouvés, en plus des ressources financières nécessaires, se sont-ils lancés dans l'aventure de la télévision mécanique plutôt que celle électronique?

A surprisingly likeable and interesting book.
This fine work has many of the qualities of a suspense novel, and is probably one of the best books of its kind ever written. It is written with a heart, and the reader easily feels what some of its subjects endured in this fascinating tale of the development and evolution of television, and later, color television. After this read, the reader will want to immediately order the equally excellent book about the development of HDTV by Joel Brinkley.


Strike Two
Published in Paperback by Bantam Books (1985)
Authors: Ron Luciano and David Fisher
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Good Stories
These are good stories about the umpiring life, but if you have read his first book "The Umpire Strikes Back", you may find a lot of this to be a rehash. There is some new information and even some of the old stories are cleaned up, but to quote Yogi Berra, I got a strong sense of deja vu all over again. If you have not read the first book, then this one is a good read.

HUMOROUS AND INTERESTING
MR. LUCIANO IS A VERY FUNNY MAN. THIS IS HIS SECOND BOOK, AND HIS SECOND BEST. THIS BOOK PICKS UP FROM HIS FIRST, THE UMPIRE STRIKES BACK. THIS IS MORE OF THE SAME. GREAT STORIES, EXPERIENCES, PRACTICAL JOKES AND OTHER VARIOUS SHENANIGANS. NEED A GOOD LAUGH, READ THIS. VERY RECOMMENDED.

Strike Two Hits a Home Run
For the baseball fan who can never be behind the scenes, on the field or in the dugout, Ron Luciano has filled the void. He shares with the reader his experiences, his interactions with the players, managers and the great game of baseball, making the reader feel like one of the insiders. This book will make you laugh out loud.


Hard Evidence: How Detectives Inside the Fbi's Sci-Crime Lab Have Helped Solve America's Toughest Cases
Published in Paperback by Dell Books (1996)
Author: David Fisher
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Well written look into the hidden world of FBI's Quantico
An interesting, well written look into the Sci-Crime Labof FBI's Quantico. Fisher spent about 18 months visitingthe different divisions of the lab...fingerprints (seen inEgyptian hieroglyphics), glass, DNA, handwriting (did you know current inks each have a different chemical added soit can be determined exactly what type ink was used; thereforeisolating a posssible source) in bullets and firearms.It is a book that will make you look differently at thecurrent terrorist activities that are part of today's, Thelessons the author learned are backed up with examples ofhow they were used to solve cases. Fascinating read. By:E. Whitne

Great for Quincy, Law & Order, NYPD Blues fans, only better
This book is well written and thoroughly engrossing. Not normally a non-fiction reader, I found I could not put Hard Evidence down. It is easy to understand, easy to read and filled with thorough explanations on cases I have heard of from the newspapers. Each chapter deals with a specific area of the lab so you can pick and choose your interests or read cover-to-cover as I did. Read about the lastest technologies and the people who put them to use to solve a variety of crimes. Highly recommended.

One of the best books I've ever read.
If you love reading about how people solve crimes, even with the most minimal amount of evidence, then this book is for you. It is full of examples on how to solve numerous crimes. It was a very interesting and well written book. I wish there were a Hard Evidence Part II!


Year I Owned the Yankees: A Baseball Fantasy
Published in Hardcover by Bantam Doubleday Dell Pub (Trd) (1990)
Authors: Sparky Lyle, David Fisher, and Sparky Lylt
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It will seem dated now, but it was funny when it came out
A fictitious account of the year that Sparky Lyle operated the Yankees. It spoofs the first fifteen years of the Steinbrenner era. That's why it's dated. Steinbrenner was well known for ignoring his baseball people back then, and doing boneheaded things like trading Jay Buhner for Ken Phelps. It's funny because, his intentions to the contrary, Lyle likewise ignores his baseball people in the book. I think he ends up with six left-handed hitting first basemen.

Lots of laughs
Sparky has a unique talent for mixing fiction with real sports figures.I passed this book around to my friends and we all enjoyed it!

The best Sports Fiction that I have ever read
Not only was he a great closer for the New York Yankees, Sparky Lyle spins the most hilarious yarn that I have ever read.

For baseball fans, especially Yankee fans which I am not, this is a must-read. Rarely do I laugh out loud when I'm reading, but Sparky made me chuckle throughout the entire read.

I'm waiting for Sparky's second fiction to come out.


Where's Waldo?: The Really Remarkable Activity Book
Published in Paperback by Candlewick Press (1996)
Authors: Martin Handford and Martin Hanford
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It's A Wonderful Life
Don't let the title of this book mislead you. While Terry Bradshaw is best known as the four time Superbowl Champion quarterback of the Pittsburgh Steelers and a regular on the FOX Sunday football show, this is not just a book about football. It's about a life. Terry Bradshaw's resilency, humor, confidence and honesty are showcased in this book, and nothing in Bradshaw's life is too sacred for discussion. This book made me laugh out loud so many times that I had to read passages of the book to travel companions that were wondering what could be so funny. Bradshaw's account of his attempt at cattle ranching is hilarious. There is plenty of football in this book to satisfy any fan of the game as Bradshaw recounts his playing days from high school to his Superbowl victories with the Steelers. But there is so much more. Jimmy Stewart had to be saved by an angel to know it's a wonderful life. I'll let you decide for yourself if Bradshaw convinces you that it's only a game. If you read this book, come January you'll wish Terry Bradshaw was at your Superbowl party.

You Don't Have To Be A True Steeler Fan To Love This Book!
I must admit before I go any further in my review that I am a Cleveland Brown fan for as long as I have been on this earth...let's just say I my generation was the 60's generation.

This was one of those books that as soon as I saw the cover, I swooped one of the three copies available at this bookstore I was in and never cracked it open to "pre-read" the book jacket. The book written BY Terry Bradshaw and ABOUT Terry Bradshaw was enough for this finicky reader (only few noted authors get this kind of purchase from me). I remember Terry Bradshaw on the field leading the Steelers and I watch Terry Bradshaw every NFL weekend on the FOX pre-game. I quite didn't know what to expect out of the book when I swooped it up, as a lot of players and coaches who author a book tends to relive each and every second of each and every game they ever coached or played. I love football but it's great when you can also read and get to know the person who you are supposed to be reading about.

The reader was alerted that there could be some serious laughter coming from the book and if caught in that situation in front of people...just look up, smile and point to the book! Let me tell you I ended up pointing more than once to the book with belly laughs and tears in my eyes....even sitting, of all places, on the tarmac in a jet liner at the Cleveland airport awaiting clearance for the jet to taxi and take off!

In the book, Mr. Bradshaw gave us a view of what his childhood and family was like...what ethics he was taught as a child that influenced as a foundation of how he grew up, as a guideline for how he would handle the fame of being a NFL quarterback to being a Television Analyst and motivational speaker. (Okay so, I am leaving out his run in the Cosmetic Industry.) When life gave him lemons (as life does everyone at some time or another), he doesn't glide over it like frosting on a cake but he showed how he turned those lemons into lemonade.

When you are reading this book, it isn't as if you are merely reading a book but that time just slips by as if you were sitting down with Terry Bradshaw with him sharing his life story. It's done in an honest, open and humble manner which this reader appreciates. If he made a mistake in life, he tells us about the mistake and his error of ways--he doesn't pawn the blame on to someone else to look good.

Not only will you find yourself listening to a friend, time slipping quickly by but you will find yourself laughing outloud at times at Terry's antics and even some of the behind the scene antics. Laughter is truly good for the soul.

It's an easy read and I don't think any NFL fan (regardless who your team is) will ever go wrong buying and reading this book. This Cleveland Brownie LOVED the book!

The only problem was when it came to the end! I WANTED TO KEEP READING! Okay Mr. Bradshaw....when can we have another installment??

"It's Only A Game" Another TD strike for Bradshaw!
First of all, let me just say I am a lifelong Cleveland Browns fan since January 31, 1958, the day I entered this world. I grew up watching Terry VS the Browns, in which I feel is the greatest, storied, legendary rivalry in Pro Football, past and present, bar none. I heard an interview with Terry Bradshaw on Jim Rome's radio show on Friday, August 10th, 2001. It was compelling to me. Terry Bradshaw's truthfullness, blunt honesty, in talking about his playing days with the Steelers had me highly impressed (for lack of a better word) to say the least. As an avid reader, I felt that if Terry's book "It's Only A Game" was as half as entertaining, as Terry's radio interview with Jim Rome, I knew it would be a great read. The next day (Saturday morning) I obtained a new, hot off the press, copy of his book. The book is EXCELLENT. I felt Terry Bradshaw was talking to me personally. As a Browns fan, I probably wouldn't give much thought or desire to anything written by a "Steeler", but Terry Bradshaw changed all of that! Oh, I will always be a Browns fan, but Terry's book gave me a completely new insight into Terry's life before and after his playing days. This book will forever have a place in my bookcase. I urge any NFL fan to read Terry's book, well written, articulate, compelling, fun and relaxing. As a husband, father and working stiff, this is what I look for in a book to relax with. Great job, Terry Bradshaw! You've done a good job with this novel! I could have easily read and enjoyed another 500 pages. Hopefully, there is a sequel in the future...


The War Magician
Published in Hardcover by Putnam Pub Group (1983)
Author: David Fisher
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A fine illuision
This book obviously appealed to some readers which suggests it was at least well written. But as Richard Stokes points out, it is an illusion the hero of the book would be proud of, based on a vainglorious and self-serving memoir rather than fact. Maskelyne was not the 'genius' behind British deception efforts: that was an obscure colonel of Royal Artillery called Dudley Clarke, as a cursory examination of papers at the Public Records Office in Kew reveals. Better to read David Mure's 'Master of Deception' should you be able to track it down,or Jon Latimer's 'Deception in War'.

Master of Make-Believe
Fisher's account is semi-fictional ....
I have actually researched the real background behind Jasper Maskelyne's war-time career and have corresponded with his son, Alistair who lives in Queensland, Australia.
I published a lengthy series of articles in the Australian Geniis Magic Journal in the mid-90's debunking Fisher's fanciful account.
Alas, Maskelyne was not involved in any significant camouflage work in the summer of 1940; his role in the protection of the port of Alexandria('41?) and the Suez Canal ('42) have both been exaggerated. Even his alleged involvement in the deception plan at El Alamein is open to question.
David Fisher has produced a mercenary work of dubious historical value. Readers are welcome to contact me for the alternative version. ....

The Grand Illusion
This book tells about Jasper Maskelyne, the famous British magician, and his efforts during the North African campaign in WW II. It lacks an index and table of contents, but is well written. It takes the technical subject of military camouflage and makes it interesting to the general reader. Magic has been part of warfare since the Trojan Horse. It can explain the Walls of Jericho, and the parting of the Red Sea.

It tells how JM matched tricks with the leader of the Dervishes to get safe passage for British troops. How JM stumbled over the means to get desert camouflage paint. To prevent Alexandria Harbor from being bombed, JM moved it! To avoid an attack, dummy tanks, guns, and troops were created as reinforcements to be seen by enemy air reconnaissance. To protect the Suez Canal he used high-intensity rotating searchlights; this was copied by Britain's air defense.

JM was asked to give lectures on escaping when captured; he became a member of MI9 (which dealt with escape and evasion). His Magic Gang also created dummy submarines to hide the absence of real ones. He traveled to Malta to help hide real airplanes and create dummies to attract and waste bombs. They developed a way to drop a crate of supplies without using scarce parachutes. When his friend survived a plane crash only to die in the fire, JM created a cream that withstood flames for a few minutes to allow people to escape. When testing out in the desert, JM became lost an nearly died from dehydration.

To prepare for the attack from the Alamein Line Gen. Montgomery wanted his forces on the north hidden so the enemy would expect an attack in the south. Since the desert was flat, the camofleurs had an impossible job of deception and misdirection: to put a decoy army in the south and hide a real army in the north. Thousands of tons of supplies had to be hidden in the north while dummy supplies had to be hidden in the south. Pages 278-9 explains how the dummy water pipeline was built. The Battle of El Alamein began as planned. The Magic Gang created a phony sea invasion twenty miles behind enemy lines, which diverted German reserve forces. Chapter 18 tells how German tanks were halted by dummy cardboard tanks and silver painted boards! And the battle ended with Rommell's retreat.

Afterwards JM was sent to Canada to establish Station M, which educated and served the OSS and FBI ("Room 3603" references this). The Gestapo placed him on their "Black List". He invented air to ground communication using infrared waves. After the war he migrated to Kenya, and died there.


Personal and Organizational Transformations
Published in Paperback by Edge\Work Press (2000)
Authors: Dalmar Fisher, David Rooke, Bill Torbert, and Dal Fisher
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Taking Sides: Clashing Views on Controversial Issues in Business Ethics and Society (3rd Ed)
Published in Paperback by Brown & Benchmark Pub (1994)
Authors: Lisa H. Newton and Maureen M. Ford
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