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Book reviews for "Kost,_Robert_John" sorted by average review score:

Journal, Volume 2
Published in Hardcover by Princeton Univ Pr (01 September, 1984)
Authors: Henry David Thoreau, Robert Sattelmeyer, and John C. Broderick
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A day by day look at Thoreau
"Oct. 22nd, 1837. 'What are you doing now?' he asked, 'Do you keep a journal?'-- So I make my first entry today." Thus begins Thoreau's Journal, made up of more then two million words and covering about twenty-five years of his life. No other work of Thoreau's better exhibits his discipline as a writer and his devotion to the natural world. In the Journal can be found the fragmented foundations of masterpieces such as Walden, A Week on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers, The Maine Woods, and Cape Cod. But what is perhaps more interesting to a reader of Thoreau's Journal are his thoughts and insights on topics such as friendship, love, religion, nature, bravery, heroism, war, slavery, the art of writing, and, most important to Thoreau, the art of living. Anyone with any interest in Thoreau will find his Journal to be an invaluable aid in understanding and following the life of one of America's most profound prose writers


The Kent Family Chronicles Encyclopedia: With Condensations of the John Jakes Novels and Essays About America from 1770 to 1877
Published in Paperback by Bantam Books (1979)
Author: Robert Hawkins
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Great to read after or along with the Chronicles....
I bought this to reference back and forth. I want to read it again in a few years when I forget more of the story....


Keynes (Past Masters)
Published in Paperback by Oxford University Press (1996)
Authors: Robert Skidelsky, John Ma Ynard Keynes, and Jacob Alexander
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brief and valuable; presumes some understanding of economics

Skidelsky's three-volume biography of Keynes has just been completed (to much acclaim, I think it's fair to say). One wonders, then, for whom he might have intended the short book I'm now reviewing.

An early chapter covers Keynes' life in as much detail as you could expect from a slim volume whose main emphasis is on its subject's work. (The series of which it is a part aims at providing "introductions to the thought of leading intellectual figures".) A valuable bridge between the "life" and the "work" is given by a chapter on Keynes' philosophy, showing that his early studies of probability drew on issues that were of fundamental concern to him throughout his career--and playing down, incidentally, the importance of any consistent political philosophy.

Two chapters follow on specific books: one on the earlier works, and one on the General Theory itself. It's here that I'd caution those who've had no previous exposure to macroeconomics, warning them that Skidelsky may be fair in his judgments and clear in his exposition, but that the issues are necessarily technical; to those who are not economists, these chapters will not be easy reading.

The concluding two chapters cover Keynes' activities as a "statesman" in the '30s and '40s and, finally, his "legacy". Skidelsky concludes that Keynesian thought has had its day, if only because the experiences of the '60s and '70s have destroyed confidence in the very possibility of "Keynesian" solutions. Yet his is no hatchet job on Keynesian thought. Not only does he point out that Keynes can't be blamed for his followers' mistakes--an obvious point that Skidelsky is wise not to press too far--but he also offers a fairly nuanced explanation, given his limited space, of the lack of popularity enjoyed by Keynesian thought over the past thirty years or so. (There was much more at work than just the oil crises of the '70s, to mention only the factor most commonly cited in introductory texts.)

I should at this point confess that I have a doctorate in economics, and that I teach undergraduates. I say "confess", because I find myself regrettably unable to evaluate Skidelsky's accuracy and judgment. As I said earlier, his interpretation certainly does not seem to be idiosyncratic, but I suppose there's always the possibility that he's presenting only one side of a well-known, if arcane, academic debate. If so, however, it's unfamiliar to me.

To sum up, I'd recommend this book to economists who need a little brushing up (and who could follow Skidelsky's advice about which chapters of the General Theory they really must read, and which they should skip), but also to political scientists, historians and the like who are roughly familiar with the period and who'd like to understand the views of a major economist. The good old "general reader" (if any such remain) might well enjoy this book too, but it is likely to require--and to reward--their close attention.


The Kid Comes Back
Published in Paperback by Beech Tree Books (1990)
Author: John Roberts Tunis
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"KID" SURVIVES WWII AND RETURNS TO DODGERS
One of the most interesting books in the Tunis series about the Brooklyn Dodgers, "The Kid Comes Back" is very unusual in that it's not really about baseball so much as it is about courage. Roy Tucker ("The Kid From Tomkinsville") serves in the U.S. Army during the Second World War in Europe, where he suffers an injury in battle. This book deals with what he goes through in the war effort, his rehabilitation and his difficult return to major league baseball with the Brooklyn Dodgers. Tunis, who also wrote "Silence Over Dunkirk," is extremely effective at letting younger readers know what WWII was like. He also does a masterful job of painting a word picture of what it was like for veterans to come back to an America that had changed while they were gone. Of all the Tunis books, this (to me) is the best. The "gee whiz" tone of the first four books in the series is subdued, and a very strong storyline carries all the way through.


Land of the Commonwealth: A Portrait of the Conserved Landscapes of Massachusetts
Published in Hardcover by Univ. of Massachusetts Press (01 October, 2000)
Authors: Richard Cheek, John Updike, and Robert E. Cook
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Breathtaking!
Each turn of the page reveals another exceptional view. It's easy to take gorgeous landscape photos of New England in Autumn, but Richard Creek goes far beyond that. The lighting, cloud conditions, reflections, and seasonal conditions bring out the most in each photograph. I want to frame each one and hang it on my walls, or better still, visit each place and hope to see and capture a similar moment. I hope Mr. Creek follows up with a series of other states.


Landis on Mechanics of Patent Claim Drafting
Published in Hardcover by Practising Law Inst (1990)
Authors: Robert C. Faber, John L. Mechanics of Patent Claim Drafting Landis, and Practising Law Institute
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This is the bible of patent claim drafting and review
What more can I say. Nothing else is adequate


The Language of the Body: Drawings by Pierre-Paul Prud'Hon
Published in Hardcover by Harry N Abrams (1996)
Authors: Pierre-Paul Prud'Hon, Robert Gordon, and John Elderfield
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A college Fine Arts Major's dream come true!!
This book covers the structural anatomy with pin-point accuracy. Though this isn't really an anatomy book by title, by examining Prud'hon's structural techniques, one can easily see all of college's artistic anatomy classes in one of his graphics.


Learn Access 2000
Published in Paperback by Prentice Hall (01 December, 1999)
Authors: John Preston, Sally Preston, and Robert Ferrett
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A great way to learn a difficult subject!
I bought this book, along with three others in the series, for Winter semester classes. Although the class lasts through April, I finished the first book in December, then the other three in the next six weeks, because I need to know these programs immediately! Each step includes a picture of what the screen should look like. That made it very easy to tell if I did the steps right. I occasionally used the CD, which showed every step of every lesson, and actually talked me through them. Access is the hardest of the Office programs to learn, but I think I got a really good foundation with this book. I can now get one of those doorstop books and use it for reference, having the needed foundation. What a great way to learn Access. I highly recommend this series!


Learn Access 97
Published in Paperback by Prentice Hall College Div (1997)
Authors: Que Eduction, Training Staff, Robert L. Ferrett, John Preston, and Sally Preston
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Heavily illustrated book helped a lot
Illustrations for every step helped me learn, because I'm a visual learner. So did the CD.


Learn Excel 2000
Published in Paperback by Prentice Hall (22 November, 1999)
Authors: John Preston, Sally Preston, and Robert Ferrett
Amazon base price: $32.00
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A great way to learn a moderately difficult subject!
I bought this book, along with three others in the series, for Winter semester classes. Although the class lasts through April, I finished the PowerPoint book in December, then the other three in the next six weeks, because I need to know these programs immediately! Each step includes a picture of what the screen should look like. That made it very easy to tell if I did the steps right. I occasionally used the CD, which showed every step of every lesson, and actually talked me through them. Excel is the second hardest of the Office programs to learn, but I think I got a really good foundation with this book. I can now get one of those doorstop books and use it for reference, having the needed foundation. What a great way to learn Excel. I highly recommend this series!


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