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Anyway, this book is highly recommended if you have any desire to know about the anatomy of a necturus, or if you even just want to see what one looks like. Basically this book is a great in depth guide to a necturus' anatomy (By the way, a necturus is a mudpuppy) The pictures are quite nice and reveal a lot. If you don't have the heart to dissect one of these critters, but need to know their inner workings, i recommend this book.
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---Megan W.
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Chesterton subtitled the book A NIGHTMARE, and this is more revealing than it appears at first. In one sense, this book can fit into a long tradition of the religious vision genre, which is more common in Medieval and Renaissance literature. This is not something that evokes much for a modern reader, though, so what we really get here is an inexcusable case of "And then he woke up." At least the writers of the Middle Ages had the guts to tell you upfront at the beginning that the character had fallen asleep.
By the time I got to the end of the book I felt that I had been cheated. I had been given a fascinating story, one in which Chesterton seemed to be setting up for himself insurmountable difficulties and obstacles in terms of plot, but it felt as if all that had been a device to get my attention, to get me to listen to his religious message, which, it turned out in the end, was not that interesting anyway.
Set in Edwardian England about 1905, the plot ostensibly revolves around a cabal of anarchists (a turn of the 20th century movement of men who believed that chaos was better than order and used dynamite as their markup language). Our hero, the poet and police inspector Gabriel Syme, penetrates the ruling council of this anarchist ring whose members go by the names of the days of the week. Syme wins a place as Thursday and sets himself against the unholy evil of Sunday. Soon, however, he finds that nothing is what it seems to be and that he himself is the one pursued.
The real novel, beneath all the fun and horror, is a look into a basic mystery of existence: how can a benevolent God be reconciled with the chaos of uncaring nature and monstrous evil?
Chesterton handles these interesting themes with a light, but sure touch. Chesterton believes in good and evil. He's by no means a modern moral relativist. At the same time, however, he's showing us that good and evil are parts of the same dance, part of the same chaotic fervor of nature and that it's not for us to see their clear nature; only God sees through the veil of chaos.
You don't have to be religious to enjoy the book, it's OK even for an atheist to ponder the nature of God (in fact, it's required). Chesterton takes us right to the heart of his.
The book *is* a "nightmare"; this is what its subtitle states; despite what an earlier reviewer remarked, Chesterton himself, in the book's afterword, insists that it ought to be taken that way; more importantly that's the way the narrative itself appears. All the objects, people, and backgrounds are loaded with wierd supernatural significance. The narrator's fears and desires constantly distort the world he sees around him. Of particular interest is Chesterton's peculiar skill at making everything pregnant with meaning like this. Borges picked up on this skill, and put The Man Who Was Thursday in company with Moby Dick, Vathek, and Robert Louis Stevenson's horror writings. (An example: "It was as though, at the eastern edge of the world, there is a tree that is both more and les than a tree; or, at the western edge of the world, something, perhaps a tower, whose very shape is evil.")
This is only in the loosest sense a detective story; it starts out that way, but if you insist on looking for a "whodunnit" you will be disappointed. By the end it transforms into full-fledged Christian allegory. But it never seems like a easy cop-out, the way, say, the end of C. S. Lewis' Narnia books do. Chesterton's thesis, if one can call it that, is that even a nightmare about atheism, modernity, and anarchists still has some potential to transform itself into something profound and sacred. Whether you like that or not, he gives you an intellectual run for your money. Besides which the book is worth rereading for the prose alone. Chesterton, anti-modernist that he was, was also one of the best stylists of modernist literature.
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After reading that book, I have a solid understanding of the Windows APIs and can use the MFCs reasonably confidently. I would still class myself as a beginner, but at least now I have a starting point and hopefully can pick-up the rest as I go along. Even after the first 10 pages, I could see that this book was well written and the information inside of it would be easy to take in and understand.
If for some reason you wish to contact me, then you may do so at r_hayden@breathemail.net.
Its relevent to Version 6.0, many of the others were talking about subjects that were related to Windows 3x etc.. eg they were the same old books with just the covers changed and really just repeating the Scribble Tutorial. The Authors really do act as guides throught the book and provide useful information for any beginner programmer such as myself. Also the book is set out in an easy to follow style that makes following the Author's instructions exceptionally easy, with a wide variety of samples to follow. The only downfall is a few typos in the printed sample codes. However with the CD on board they are easy to rectify .
I strongly recommend this book to anyone who wants to learn Visual C++.
(( I'm off to write 5 real bad reviews now ))
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Every chapter is focused and the flow of material is really excellent. I found myself, as someone who has had years of OO design and development experience, nodding my head repeatedly. And the end of each chapter contains a quiz, some suggested exercises, and a section on where to go for more depth on the subjects covered. As a result, this book would be outstanding for a college-level course or an informal workshop of Java developers who want to learn serious OO design and analysis.
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I mention this because it makes such a contrast to Gilvert's book. At times it is clumsy, wooden overwritten and a bit unfocused, and yes, a lot of it doesn't hold together but it is distinguished by a genuine, though healthily critical approach to his life.Gilbert understands Poters' importance as both a literary figure and a creative figure and writes passionately about both. Potter was a brilliant, difficult man and although he has not yet got the brilliant, difficult review he deserves, Gilbert's goes a long way to understanding the man and his extraordinary writing.