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Eric's struggle in overcoming misconceptions about power, control, dependency, and fear provides a raw look at the way most of us western cultured males have been conditioned to think. As Eric unlocks the shackles of male image, he becomes the creative spiritual human he was meant to be. The journey to freedom for Eric is far from a straight path. It has twists and turns, progressions and setbacks, all contained in a spellbinding plot.
I eagerly awaited the publication of this book. In 1996, I received my own "cosmic 2 by 4" in the form of diagnosed acute cancer for which there was no known cure. Pumped full of morphine, I was facing a choice of living less than a week or months of high risk experimental chemotherapy that had never been used on an adult human. As with Eric Crane, God sent a guide to assist me in making my decision to heal and live. My guide visited me often during those difficult months of chemo. Today, I'm not just surviving, but thriving, both on physical and spiritual levels. You should know that my guide is flesh and blood. He is also this book's author, Kenneth Byrd Chance.
If you're male, read this book for inspiration and personal growth. If you're female, read this book for understanding and insight. If you're not consciously seeking any of those things, read this book: It's a great story from an incredibly gifted author.
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Reading this book, I can understand this scripture a little more deeply. In order to be a proper subject of the Kingdom of G-d, you must be familiar with the principles that the Kingdom operates by. Covenants should be the starting place because all of G-d's dealings with mankind is in the form of a Covenant.
This book is an excellent study into Covenants; what they are, who they are for, what they mean, and why I need to be concerned about Covenants as a Christian.
This book is for ministry and laity alike, and it should be read slowly and prayerfully. A fantastic resource for the Body of Christ.
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Yes, the book is out of print, but more recently I have secured a copy from ACORN PRESS which has been given the right to reprint the title in Australia. It sells for under US$10!
The address is Acorn Press Ltd. P O Box 282, Brunswick East, VIC. 3057 Australia.
Tel: 613 9383 1266
It's a GREAT book! Give Acorn press a call!
This work is a charming, and well documented, account of the whole history, not only of the hobo, but of the homeless in American history, and also gives an interesting chronicle of the skidrow world as it flourished and then passed away after the second world war. If you are ever unemployed, don't panic. Get west of the Mississipi, find a railroad yard,and wait. People will appear who can explain the ropes. May or may not be an open society. But there are still a lot of open spaces.
It begins simply enough with defining homelessness. Originally those we call homeless today were seen as social outcasts, called vagrants, beggars, bums, vagrants or tramps. Dr. Kusmer traces the origins of these words, something we often take for granted. The use of the word 'homeless' in the public vocabulary did not reach general use until the 1980s.
The overarching theme is that these are people and as such deserve respect no matter what they're situation. Even though it is a historical account there are many personal accounts noted and one gets a good feel for the humanity presented in this book.
As folks living in this situation, for whatever the reason and whatever the definition given, waxed and waned over time, so too did the perception of the public toward them. Factors such as wars affected this population, so too factors such as economic downturns and the rise of the train. Stereotypes are dispelled and this complex and diverse topic is laid out in a well-written style not overloaded with technical jargon.
The documentation on this book is a feast. I have literally spent hours following up on many of his footnotes, especially the accounts in the New York Times from the late 1800s. Fascinating stuff grounded in history. He has a grasp of his material and gives such a broad, though thorough, sweep of the issue that it will become the seminal resource for footnotes in years to come.
I would suggest that Down & Out, On the Road is a must-read for anyone who wishes to understand a fascinating, yet overlooked, piece of American social history.
I congratulate Dr. Kenneth Kusmer on this fine work. Add it to your library as soon as possible.
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The success of Embattled Selves results directly from the manner in which Jacobson presents these remarkable individuals. The author permits each survivor to relate his/her own story through oral testimony. Jacobson's impartial narrative introduces the separate topics, and explains certain terminology, but in no way seeks to dominate the accounts. The reader is allowed to explore and ponder the issues raised at his own pace with a trusted guide at his side. What makes people who they are? Why do certain inviduals embrace their heritage while others reject it? What effect does the attitudes of parents, friends, and loved ones have on an individual's sense of identity? Can a person ever really abandon an identity? Or does a repressed identity live on? What impact does the desire to belong have on an individual's attitude towards a "minority" identity?
To its credit, Embattled Selves does not seek to provide definitive answers to any of these questions. The final examination is left to the reader, who may discover previously ignored issues of identity in his/her own life.
"Embattled Selves" by Kenneth Jacobson documents the lives of 15 people who during World War II discovered they were "Jewish" because the Nazis said so. Some of them had Jewish ancestors several generations removed they never knew existed. Some knew they had Jewish ancestors, but they or their parents had converted to Christianity. Some were born into religious Jewish families, but no longer practiced the religion.
Many of the more introspective of us spend our lives thinking about who we are, how we became who we are, or how we can become who we want to be. I have been working on my family geneology for some time. Since my mother was Dutch, after I read this book by a man named Jacobson who was Jewish, I took a closer look at the family tree. There are some interesting characters in the branches--with last names like Jacobson.
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Personally, the most useful information to me is on Energetics as it pertains to athletics, training adaptations, exercise testing and prescription. I use this information to help me decide how to train athletes from different sports. But, there is so much more than that in this book. Metabolism, Ventilation, Heart and Circulation (including CVD) is all covered thoroughly.
I especially like Brooks' approach to physiology. Brooks, likes to examine physiology by studying the rate-limiting processes. And to a coach, like me, finding weakness and improving that weakness is crucial to winning. Another topic I enjoy is Brooks' take on the misnomer of Anaerobic Threshold and Lactic Acid.
It's an extremely well-organized, well-written text. It's easy to read and a challenge at the same time. Brooks makes you think and delivers difficult information in a way that is easier to understand than other textbooks.
Eric Swannie, MA, ATC, CSCS
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The author has tapped many sources in libraries all across the west to get this information together. He makes a point in the introduction that this is information compiled nowhere else. He deals with lesser known narratives except he does include a journal from Virginia Reed a child travelling with the Donner Party and Tabitha Brown one of the top 10 figures in shaping Oregon history.
Very informative and educational! Can't wait to start the next book in the series.
Even if details of Hernandez's escape are more the stuff of fiction that fact, Kenneth LaFreniere does give young readers a real sense of what Hernandez went through on Cuba. After this younger half-brother Livan defected, the Cuban government Orlando Hernandez from baseball for life because they feared he would defect as well. Of course, the great irony is that once they took away his livelihood, Hernandez had no reason to stay in Cuba. Whatever he was thinking before the ban, defecting became the only rational option. Consequently, young readers will learn something about the oppressive government in Cuba (not to mention the fact that as a universal rule governments tend to do stupid things).
Young readers will easily recognize this book's rags-to-riches formula, although all things considered it spends more time on the riches than the rags part of Hernandez's life. LaFreniere spends as much time on the pitcher's attempt to get to the United States and be allowed to play baseball as he does on the years Hernandez spent in Cuba becoming the celebrated "El Duque," and almost half the book is devoted to his rookie season with the New York Yankees with its story book ending as his team wins the World Series, giving the Hernandez family another World Championship to celebrate. LaFreniere tries to give a sense of Hernandez's deceptive pitching motion, but that is something you simply have to see for yourself on television or in person. I do like the idea that there is an inherent lesson in this story that there are more ways of beating a batter than just having to throw the high heat by them. Consequently the Hernandez story implicitly tells young readers that baseball takes brains as well as physical talent, and that might be as important a lesson as reading the inspirational story.