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Book reviews for "Hughes,_Thomas" sorted by average review score:

Every Day Light: Daily Inspirations
Published in Hardcover by Broadman & Holman Publishers (January, 1998)
Authors: Selwyn Hughes and Thomas Kinkade
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It helped during a low period of my life.
Mr. Hughes' book is a big help to get closer to God. It allowed me to taylor the daily readings to my needs. It challenged me and helped me to find peace in my life. It gave me a greater understanding of God's word. I can not wait to find more of Mr. Hughes' books.

Insightful, deep devotional study guide.
An excellent devotional with scriptural support that makes one think. Much deeper than the average meditation guide. Index of themes is also most helpful. Highly recommend to those in pursuit of a closer walk with God. (Each devotional takes around 15 minutes.)

Very inspiring.
Every Day Light is inspiring and it gives the reader a opportunity to study the Bible. This devotional not only gives commentary but challenges the reader to give their input about the overall theme.

The beautides study was most helpful. Mr. Hughes presented provoking thoughts on this topic.

I will be looking forward to the next edition.


Over Lord: General Pete Quesada and the Triumph of Tactical Air Power in World War II
Published in Hardcover by Free Press (August, 1995)
Author: Thomas Alexander Hughes
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He was also the creator of Dulles Air Port & L'Enfant Plaza
I knew the General. In addition to his achievements in WW II, he devoloped the concept of an airport where incoming and out going passengers moved on separate floors (Dulles)With David Rockefeller they created the magnificent L'Enfant Plaza in Wash.D.C. His stories of growing up in Washington could be another book, not to mention his civilian achievements in Washington. The story of his flying Ike behind German lines after the D day invasion in a 2 seat P 51 to prove his point over German positions (much to the chagrin of Gen. Bradley) is one of my favorites. He had a picture in his office of he and Tooey Spaatz from their early days in "Jennies" with oil all over their faces except where their goggles were. Right out of "Dawn Patrol". This book is long over due.

A history lesson that we didn't learn too well.
This book is easy to get into and very informative. The story of Gen. Pete Quesada and the tactical air arm in the European Theater of Operations in WW II is something that anyone interested in military history should read. This aspect of the war is often overlooked, which should not be the case. The working together of ground and tactical air assets should be a top priority for military planners as well as anyone connected with the ground troops.


Networks of Power: Electrification in Western Society, 1880-1930 (Softshell Books)
Published in Paperback by Johns Hopkins Univ Pr (March, 1993)
Author: Thomas P. Hughes
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Travel Back In Time To the Heyday Of Electification
If you're a history buff, and appreciate the technology that surrounds us all, you'll love reading "Networks of Power: Electrification in Western Society, 1880-1930" by Tom Hughes. Hughes takes us back to the days of fierce rivalry between Edison and Westinghouse; the early era of electric power generation and consumption where the battle of DC vs. AC consumer power was born and decided.

Hughes doesn't stop there. Also included in this well-footnoted edition are in-depth narratives of the evolution of commercial power systems in England and Germany through 1930. A well written, readable snapshot in time.

Compelling historical reading for the non-technologist as well as the student of electrical power commercialization.


Novell's Guide to IntranetWare¿ Networks
Published in Hardcover by Hungry Minds, Inc (13 December, 1996)
Authors: Jeffrey F. Hughes and Blair W. Thomas
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Very informative, even while studying for CNE 4.11
For every chapter of information their are examples and drawings. This book has taught me a great deal about Intranetware. While studying for my CNE 4.11 95% of the material in the study guide was already touched in this book. This book can get you prepared to start studying for the cne 4.11 with a better understanding of the information.


Programmable Controllers
Published in Hardcover by ISA - The Instrumentation, Systems, and Automation Society (November, 2000)
Author: Thomas A. Hughes
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Good explanation of most aspects of PLCs
This book is a good textbook for beginners and a good review/reference for more experienced PLC users. Its explanation of the new IEC 61131-3 programming languages is helpful, since many of us in the US have never dealt with anything other than Ladder Logic. For examples that require reference to a particular PLC, the book most often refers to Allen Bradly PLC5 and Siemens Simatic S7 series.


Tom Brown's School Days
Published in Hardcover by Ulverscroft Large Print Books (June, 1988)
Author: Thomas Hughes
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THIS IS NOT A COLORING BOOK
"Tom Brown's School Days"?, That's junenile fiction. That's a kid running down a merry lane in England with a satchel on his back, right? So wrong. How could this classic piece of little literature have escaped my attention? A stunning book about a boy's life in boarding school in mid 19th Century England, it tells it's adolescence tale with all the discipline of a Cub Scout Manual and whimsy of a comic book. Author Hughes frequently stops the action and intercedes on behalf of himself, commenting on the progress of the story as a teacher might. His defense of boys boxing with hard fists and fractured skulls is so socially incorrect it becomes amusing in it's conviction. Maybe skulls were harder then. A good knock-a-round is good for a boy. But school-yard fights aside, this is an adult piece of classic literature with a deeply moral narrative and a devoted sense of well-being. In it's second century of publication, it is a breath of fresh air.


Tom Brown's Schooldays
Published in Paperback by South Asia Books (April, 1997)
Author: Thomas Hughes
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A rare jewel
This book is about the life and coming of age of a young wealthy English boy, who goes to school at Rugby. Throughout the novel, we are witnesses to the growing up of Tom and his friends. Tom is not a model boy, but rough, virile and self-confident, as is his friend East, a smart and audacious guy. The story is funny and entertaining, and is also illustrative about life in the English boarding schools (for affluent people) in the XIX century. It is also a bildungsroman, that is, the story of the education and maturation of a young person. Although the story contains carefully hidden, and sometimes easily identifiable, morals, it is not a long lecture. It is easy to read and understand, and I consider it highly recommendable.

surprisingly engaging
I opened this dusty tome in a sense of duty and with expectations of a dreary read. I am still engaged in reading, but am so pleased with it's contents so far that I am prompted to write these comments.

The description of the horse driven coach journey to Rugby is delightfull, and worthy of Charles Dickens himself.

The introduction of Tom to his guide (mentor)has ensured my continued attention.

How can one review a book before finishing it?

One of my all-time favorite books
This is one of my favorite books. Hughes,the author, developes a wonderful atmosphere in this story, you feel as if you are in this 19th century English boarding school with Tom. You taste, smell, and hear the experiences in this book. It is educational about what life was like at that time in England for a boy like Tom. But it is the plot that endears this classic to me. Tom is a rough and tumble lad who cares little about character and education. This book is about a young carefree boy who matures into a young man who has a deep faith in Jesus Christ. I recommend this book to anyone.


Computational Inelasticity (Interdisciplinary Applied Mathematics, Vol 7)
Published in Hardcover by Springer Verlag (August, 1998)
Authors: J. C. Simo and Thomas J. R. Hughes
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Right on target yet someting missing
The book had been in the making at Stanford for some time. I happened to use a manuscript of it in 1991 at Virginia Tech. I was pleasantly surprised how quickly a student could pick up relevant aspects of compuatational plasticity from this book; the book has a style of its own. We have successfully used the book in programming the integral (or endochronic) hardening rule with the incremental theory of plasticity. The book surely makes a useful companion to a plasticity textbook.

It is disheartening to see that the numerical schemes for the integration of the constitutive equations of the endochronic theory are missing from the book.

A good book in computational mechanics
The authors have missed the opportunity of producing a comprehensive text on inelasticity. They have done such a good job in covering the computational mechanics aspect of inelasticity. For a proper understanding of underlying constitutive equations of inelasticity one has to rely on a more definitive book such as Plasticity Theory by Jacob Lubliner, or, Introduction to Theories of Plasticity by S. K. Jain, or, Continuum Theory of Plasticity by Khan and Huang. Hope the authors will consider expanding their book a bit.

Absolutely Accept No Substitute
This book is really well organised, and the theory is well presented, particularly Chapter 1. It is among the few which I highly recommend, and it is value for money.


Howard: The Amazing Mr. Hughes
Published in Mass Market Paperback by (1972)
Authors: Noah Dietrich and Bob Thomas
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The most inside view of Howard Hughes I have read.
This book seems to be one of the most in-depth books of Hughes's life and business dealings. Noah Dietrich, Hughes's right hand man and effectively CEO of most of his companies, wrote it. Mr. Dietrich presents excellent stories about Howard which both make you laugh and make you wonder.

Out of all the books I have read about HH, this one is the best. The one negative point about the book is that Noah Dietrich uses it more as a platform for his successes while working for HH rather than crediting them to Howard.

Whether they are true or not, I have no idea. But if you are a Hughes Fan, you should love this book.

Everything and More
Noah Dietrich is witty and informative. He gives incredible personal insight into Howard Hughes, and he does it in a way that makes one laugh or gasp on occasion.


Rugby Tennessee: Being Some Account of the Settlement Founded on the Cumberland Plateau by the Board of Aid to Land Ownership, Limited (The American Utopian Adventure: Series 2)
Published in Hardcover by Porcupine Pr (June, 1975)
Author: Thomas Hughes
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Rugby--A short, duplicitous book
Line up all of you Will Wimbles. Hughes wants save you from the new "hell" of late Victorian England. He wants to give you the chance to finally work with your hands without being stigmatized as a common labourer. He'll tell you out of one side of his mouth that you'll have to work hard, but out of the other side of his mouth, he'll tell you that Tennessee living is easy. Don't think that he's trying to pull a fast one on you, though. These are his true impressions. You can trust few literary character as much as you can Thomas Hughes. That's probably why no one reads him....

True summary from a resident of Rugby, Tennessee
This review is written by a resident-expert on Rugby, Tennessee. My family has been connected to that town since 1939. I have read the book in question, and without a doubt it is a necessary book for anyone wanting to know Hughes's true intent for the establishment of Rugby in 1880. Its purpose was to inspire young men from England to come to what was then a rather remote region of East Tennessee, to work the land and make good for themselves. I would not recommend it for the casual visitor or tourist who comes to Rugby (several thousand per year)but only for those who have a strong attachment to the Rugby community, or to those who may be studying Thomas Hughes's life. He was an extraordinary character. He was a member of Parliament, Queen's Counsel, lawyer, judge, promoter of a movement known as Christian Socialism in the mid 1800s. This book would be of great value to someone doing detailed research on Hughes and his life. End.


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