Related Subjects: Author Index Reviews Page 1 2
Book reviews for "Groves,_Paul" sorted by average review score:

Fire in Boston's Coconut Grove
Published in Hardcover by Branden Publishing Co (1987)
Author: Paul Benzaquin
Amazon base price: $15.95
Average review score:

Fascinating, informative, well-written
I read this book back in 1984, when it was first published. I have since re-read it many times. Mr. Keyes writes an in-depth account of the tragic fire in Boston's Cocoanut Grove nightclub and the reader is drawn into the story almost as if he or she was there watching it unfold. Of particular interest to me was the fact that in the preface, Mr. Keyes paints a scenario of what Boston (and indeed, the country) was like during 1942. For those of us who are baby-boomers, reading about such things as mail being delivered twice daily and women never venturing outside without hat and gloves represents a fascinating peek into history. I searched amazon.com hoping to find more books about the Cocoanut Grove fire, but there seems to be only this one and Paul Benzaquin's book, Holocaust. I can recommend both, but I enjoyed Mr. Keyes' book more.


FORBES GREAT MINDS OF BUSINESS CASSETTE
Published in Audio Cassette by S&S Sound Ideas (1997)
Authors: Peter Lynch, Fred Smith, Andrew Grove, Paul Volcker, Pleasant Rowland, Paul A. Volcker, and John Wiley
Amazon base price: $15.40
List price: $22.00 (that's 30% off!)
Used price: $4.95
Buy one from zShops for: $9.45
Average review score:

GREAT IDEAS
This strong precise outlook reflects different aspects of different sides of the business spectrum. It's a truly positive look at successful businesses and the great minds behind them. Grove, Smith, Lynch, Rowland, & Volcker all share insights & directions in a volatile era. With Gretchen Morgenson, Senior Editor at Forbes magazine, letting these truly gifted individuals openly express ideas, predictions and success fortitudes. Forbes Great Minds made a lasting impression on me. It was great to listens to these fascinating people in an informal interview. To pick up one new idea and one new lesson is worth the time spent, but too generate the detailed information they provided is extraordinary.


Genealogy: How To Find Your Ancestors, Revised Edition
Published in Paperback by Heritage Books (2000)
Authors: Paul Drake and Margaret Grove Driskill
Amazon base price: $27.00
Average review score:

No nonsense advice for starting and finding your ancestors.
This 'How To' book is truly that! I was able to not only understand what was being said, but I understood how to follow the advice. Having always wanted to search for my ancestors and find out about their lives, I never knew how to start. I am still using it and have made some good progress in my search. Thank you!


Marie Antoinette: The Portrait of an Average Woman (Great Grove Lives)
Published in Paperback by Grove Press (2002)
Authors: Stefan Zweig, Eden Paul, and Cedar Paul
Amazon base price: $11.90
List price: $17.00 (that's 30% off!)
Used price: $5.50
Collectible price: $7.22
Buy one from zShops for: $11.05
Average review score:

The Wicked Austrian Queen
Portraying Marie Antoinette as an "average woman," as the title of Zweig's work provocatively suggests, is a debatable proposition. On the one hand, as Zweig shows throughout this study, Marie Antoinette was no prodigy: she was flawed, egotistic, intellectually limited and ... indiscreet. Her greatest passions were for clothes, vast flowery gardens, [fancy] jewelry and good looking Swedish men; she was a compulsive spendthrift; her political self-awareness was zero and her policy meddling was uniformly disastrous. Her indiscipline at court was flagrantly exploited by her political enemies - notably her jealous and ambitious brothers-in-law Louis and Charles (the later Bourbon Restoration kings) - who portrayed her as a modern day Jezebel. In all of these respects, her life was far from "average". But the "ordinariness" within, argues Zweig, left her ill-equipped to deal with the challenges of an extraordinary life.

Once the Revolution happens, however, Zweig's "averageness" argument makes a dog-leg turn. Under the extreme pressures of her imprisonment, her husband's guillotining, her separation from her beloved children and her state trial for treason, she rose above the "average," drawing on her Habsburg dignity and treating her Committee inquisitors with the contempt they deserved. In death, if not in life, she proved herself to be a true daughter of Maria Theresa. Even ordinary people can be martyrs, Zweig seems to be saying.

Zweig is a natural storyteller, and the fact that he, like Marie Antoinette, was Viennese gives him insights into her sensibilities and predilections. Another Viennese voice can be heard in this narrative: the psychological narrative owes much to Dr. Freud - particularly when we come to her early womanhood. Can it be, as Zweig dares to suggest, that Louis XVI's early impotence, and young Marie Antoinette's consequent frustration, fueled her shallow materialism? Was her scandalously profligate lifestyle an outlet for ... frustration? Did one man's "shortcomings" thus cause the revolution? And what of the bizarre Strasbourg ceremony whereby the newlywed Marie Antoinette was forced to [unclothe] at the frontier, lest the new Dauphine of France cross the border wearing foreign clothes? Surely an emotionally scarring experience? Her tale is a gift for the Freudian, and Zweig milks it for all it's worth.

The story of a Woman
Marie Antoinette... many things go through one's mind when thinking of that name. Many say she was cruel, pampered, and spoiled, and that she was the main couse of the French Revolution, yet, she was just a woman, a woman born a princess in the Austrian court, married to a French boy whom she had never met by the age of 15, crowned by 19, and beheaded by 35.

Life went by so fast by Marie Antoinette!!, and never gave her a chance to choose what she wanted out of it.

Stefan Zweig is a marvelous writer, and manages to gives us an intimate portrait of at times very hated, at others very loved and admired woman, an ordinary person who only wished for a normal life with her family, a little place of her own, where she didn't have to adjust and adapt to the many different rules impossed on her.

He describes the life of the French court as only he could, and you feel like you are part of the story, hearing about Versailles, Louvre, the revolution and the people involved, which makes this an excellent book to learn about history, about life in the French court, and about France's last great queen.

So, was she cruel, spoiled, and ignorant? read and decide for yourself....

An average woman in exceptional circumstances
Zweig's biography is so fascinating, I can't believe it's been allowed to go out of print. He does a remarkable job of delineating a light-headed, pleasureseeking woman who was thrust into circumstances she couldn't have anticipated or coped with. Marie Antoinette becomes a real woman, not a figurehead or a scapegoat. No one could ask for anything less.


Telephone Survey Methodology
Published in Paperback by Wiley-Interscience (2001)
Authors: Robert M. Groves, Paul P. Biemer, Lars E. Lyberg, James T. Massey, William L. Nicholis, and Joseph Waksberg
Amazon base price: $89.95
Used price: $74.20
Buy one from zShops for: $74.20
Average review score:

Good survey methods
A good if somewhat dated book on telephone survey methodology.


13 Ghosts
Published in Paperback by Hodder & Stoughton Educational Division (01 February, 1976)
Authors: Paul Groves and Nigel Grimshaw
Amazon base price: $
Average review score:
No reviews found.

999!
Published in Hardcover by Gomer Press ()
Author: Paul Groves
Amazon base price: $
Average review score:
No reviews found.

Academe
Published in Paperback by Dufour Editions (01 January, 1988)
Author: Paul Groves
Amazon base price: $12.95
Average review score:
No reviews found.

Alphabet At Work: Step Skills Books
Published in Paperback by Longman Schools Division (a Pearson Education company) (19 August, 1985)
Author: Groves/Paul
Amazon base price: $
Average review score:
No reviews found.

An Apple a Day
Published in Paperback by Longman Publishing Group (1991)
Author: Paul Groves
Amazon base price: $
Average review score:
No reviews found.

Related Subjects: Author Index Reviews Page 1 2

Reviews are from readers at Amazon.com. To add a review, follow the Amazon buy link above.