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THE BLESSING collects Jones's earlier books, COUNTRY OF AIR, AT LAST WE ENTER PARADISE, and A PERFECT TIME, as well as many new and previously uncollected poems. It also contains 48 QUESTIONS, a delightfully indirect set of a sonnet-like answers to an interviewer's questions, excerpts of which aired on NPR. Jones teaches English and creative writing at DePaul University in Chicago, where he also edits the independent poetry journal, POETRY EAST, which moved to the midwest with him from the east and which is soon to have a new incarnation as POETRY EAST OF EDEN.
My college students respond particularly well to Jones's moving accounts of the death of his nephew Andrew, in poems that teach us not only the reality of loss but the miracle of acceptance. (If you like these, you will also like THE ANDREW POEMS, by Shelly Wagner, Jones's sister, also available at amazon.com.) My students also appreciate Jones's straight-on look at dysfunctional family life (redeemed by love), youthful alcoholism, and alienation. The marvelous thing is that Jones's poems do not judge--they simply recreate or reveal the range of human feelings. And very often these poems guide us back from the depths of suffering to a transformed state. In his own words: "Do you know what I think, / drifting off toward dawn? / If, in the garden of the world, / there's such a thing as suffering, / I have never suffered."
While I have had great success teaching these emotionally accessible poems, I also turn to THE BLESSING for private pleasure, seeking wisdom, delight, redemptive tears, miracle. The poems in THE BLESSING describe an arc. They move from sorrow to acceptance, from the visible to the invisible and back, from seeking to finding peace in the world we are given to live in and discover as a paradise, after all.
He described his father's fascination for discarded golf towels. His father was at one time an airline pilot (impetus for Jones' book "Country of Air"), dissatisfied with his career. Now, as golf course "Marshall" for his local course, Jones' father gets great satisfaction in retrieving all sorts of discarded golf paraphernalia (some by the marshy paths, some in the trash bins), especially golf towels. After Jones read this poem, which included references to four different males named "Andrew" in his family, I later made the connection of a fifth "Andrew" in the poem, the golf towel from St. Andrews golf course in Scotland. This light blue towel, with a gold crown in the center, was wrapped around Richard's baby son (Andrew), fresh from a bath, and who was then handed to his grandfather's arms. (The poem says it so much more eloquently than I can describe it here.)
Besides publishing Jones' newest poems, "The Blessing" is a collection of four of his earlier books of poetry, which had been of print. Not only is it a blessing to read Richard Jones' newest works, but it is a blessing to once again have in print his older, equally powerful works, taking measure of the progress of his life.
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The book is a commentary that follows The Book of Romans. The heart of the message is salvation through faith in Jesus Christ - God accepting us, and not earning our salvation through our own works. The book is very well written, very easy to read (I usually reread it in a day or two), and the writing is very down to earth and on the level of the common person.
I first saw this book when I was young in the early 70's - this book has stood a time test, and the writing is still so current today. I reread the book yesterday and it reads like it could have been first published today even though it came out in 1967.
Christianity is a path more than a destination (a way of life in fellowship with God being led by his Holy Spirit). Sometimes you can stray off course, even a little, and start to loose your peace and joy. This book helps me to remember the basics of my salvation and set my heart in the right direction. The beautiful part is this book is so easy to read; no big language, you are not being talked down to, no from another world type of writing - just on your level.
Please read this book. Save a copy, and pull it out every few years. You will be glad you did.
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This work covers the major theories of pscyhotherapy and makes you feel like someone who has a firm grasp of them when you read it. The review from a Biblical viewpoint really gives you a lot to think about. The authors are also very objective, not showing favorites among the various schools of thought. This book is a must for every student and teacher of counseling and psychology.
At the end of each chapter, there is a section discussing the approaches as they relate to foundational Biblical principles. This is not a text whose purpose is to spout opinions or dogma; it serves as a strong and rational look at the different aspects of each approach discussed. The reader will come away with a better understanding not only of modern psychotherapeutic approaches, but also with which aspects of those approaches are Biblical in nature, which aren't, and why. Particuarly useful for those building an integrative or electic foundation, or who wish to base their chosen orientation on Biblical principles.
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First, there is an overview map, which shows all of the eleven tours overlaid on a large (though not detailed) map of London. Then there is an individual map (with main streets identified only) for the individual tours: The City, Dickens's London, A Historic Pub Walk, Westminster & Whitehall, St. James's, The East End, Clerkenwell, Bloomsbury, Soho, Chelsea and Hampstead.
I purchased several walking books of London before my most recent visit there and found this one the most useful; I walked six of these tours and thought each was worthwhile and enjoyable.
Phone numbers and hours are listed for businesses and museums along your route. Each tour begins with a two to three page introduction and has a paragraph or two about each site listed, usually 20-30 places. The introduction also gives information about the best and worst times to try the walk, the closest tube stations to the beginning and end of the walk, and the approximate amount of time the walk requires. The book ends with general information about London, including transportation, a list of recommended reading, and a very good index.
An excellent value.
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In chapter 1, the author introduces MFC utility objects in console applications. The three utility classes CString, CPoint, and CRect are used to create a simple Windows application. The author is careful to distinguish between a console application, which has the main() function, and a windows program, which does not. The CString class is used, instead of the standard C++ library class, and this is standard in MFC programming. The author advises the reader to think of CString objects as an actual object, and not as a pointer to a string. This is an example of value (or "copy") semantics, wherein the value is copied, and not just the pointer. Programmers concerned about performance issues commonly use this feature of C++. The author gives an interesting method to extract a string from a stream into a CString object, and how to use the Format() function to convert a value to a string for eventual display in a window.
A review of classes in C++ is given in Chapter 2, with emphasis on how virtual functions get executed in windows applications. The author shows explicitly how to use Visual Studio to add a class and member functions, and a good discussion is given on the difference between passing parameters by value, by reference, and by pointer. The role of the member function "this" is discussed also.
Chapter 3 could be skipped by the reader interested only in MFC windows applications, according to the author, where he discusses collections and class templates. Object and pointer array collections are treated via the code examples. The author discusses the three different ways of performing tasks on collections, and discusses how to use pointers to objects, which is very advantageous from a memory management point of view. He is also gives an interesting discussion on serialization.
The actual building of MFC Windows programs begins in Chapter 4, without using the AppWizard. The event handling via keyboard and mouse input is given the main emphasis, and the author gives a detailed discussion on the steps taken by a window event. The different types of member functions in the CMainFrame class are given a thorough treatment. The reader is first asked to use an MFC virtual function in this chapter.
In the next chapter, the author shows how to get graphics shapes in the windows, via device context attributes. This is followed in Chapter 6 by a discussion on how to use the mouse and keyboard to make changes to text and graphics.
The window controls are then discussed in Chapter 7, and the author gives a very detailed discussion on how controls fit in to CMainFrame. The process by which event and notification messages are handled is summarized in a diagram. List boxes, combo boxes, and scroll bars are all treated in detail using the example programs. This is followed naturally in Chapter 8 by a discussion of menus and dialog boxes in the context of resource editors.
Finally in Chapter 9, the author uses the AppWizard to generate an application. A simple program example begins the discussion, followed by a non-document application. The author carefully explains the steps used in the AppWizard to give the reader more insight on just how it is able to do its job. Then in Chapter 10, the AppWizard and the ClassWizard are used to refine and extend the discussion on menus, toolbars, and dialogs. A good program example is given for a dialog-based application.
Time-dependent messaging and XOR drawing mode are the subjects of the next chapter. The three functions for timer control are discussed, along with a discussion of animation. This is followed in Chapter 12 by a treatment of bitmap graphics, with bitmap editors via MS Paint discussed.
Messaging via the MFC functions SendMessage() and PostMessage() is discussed in Chapter 13. These functions are discussed in a setting more general than modeless dialogs. Modeless dialogs are however discussed in detail in the chapter, and the difference between modal and modeless dialogs clearly explained.
The next chapter of the book discusses how to use the document view architecture and the author shows in detail the major classes involved in its use. The reader can see the CMainFrame object as a container object, which will adjust the sizes of the windows it contains if the mainframe window is resized. The document and view classes are derived from the CDocument and CView classes. The discussion is helpful in that it shows how to use the member functions in these classes to propagate information to all views. The author also shows how to serialize the document objects.
In the last chapter the author shows the reader how to use Visual C++ to manipulate an existing ODBC database. The discussion is very brief, but it does the reader with database knowledge of how to generate code to interact with these databases.
Richard M. Jones assumes you have a basic knowledge of C++ before reading this book which makes sense. He starts out by teaching you some of the basic classes used in MFC such as CString, CPoint, CSize, and CRect. What I love about this author is that he makes reaching the book like taking a formal class. He starts by teaching you a firm basis, and then builds each lesson thereafter on the one before. By the end of the book (it took me approximately two weeks to finish). You're writing code for menus, toolbars, status bars, buttons, edit and static controls, etc.
This book is great, period. If you've never had any MFC experience and want to learn it from scratch I recommend this book.