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Book reviews for "Leshoai,_Benjamin_Letholoa" sorted by average review score:
The Saber-Tooth Curriculum
Published in Paperback by McGraw-Hill Trade (01 June, 1959)
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Good read with poignant undertones.
Don't let the 1959 date fool you.
Don't let the 1959 date fool you. Or the reference to curriculum. We have yet to learn and employ the lessons this book provides in education, in the military, in the analysis of clinical trials, and in socal policy. (Aren't we about to build a multi-trillion dollar missile system to keep out knife-wielding terrorists?)
One of the best books on education!
Paleolithic education will still be fashionable in the 21st century if educators of today are not going to do some reflections.
A-Train: Memoirs of a Tuskegee Airman
Published in Paperback by Univ. of Alabama Press (2003)
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Fighting Germany and America.
Charles Dryden's book forces people to see the trials and tribulations encountered by black servicemen and women during WWII. I was shocked to read about the different encounters with 'Jim Crow' that Dryden and his peers waded through during their service years. A must for anybody curious about WWII, the Tuskegee Airmen or about the fight for civil rights in America.
A definitive study in courage
I meet Col. Dryden when he gave a talk about his experiences and his book. I then read the book a felt a tremendous respect for the author and all the Tuskeegee Airmen. Col. Dryden tells his personal story in a way that made me feel as though I was there with him the whole time. The challanges of blacks in America in his story left a powerful impact on me, the courage the author displayed is an insperation. A-Train is very well written and reads easily. It is an powerful story that left me feeling inadequate and ashamed to be white. I had the oportunity to meet Col. Dryden again and sought him out just to shake his hand again, knowing him from his book, it was hard to hide my emotions.
Every young African American boy should read this book.
Every young African American boy should read this book. It is an inspiration.
Uncommon Cents: Benjamin Franklin Secrets to Achieving Personal Financial Success
Published in Paperback by Franklin Quest Co (1989)
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Best ... book I ever bought
I have been a student of personal finance for many years (Charles Givens, and others) spent over a thousand dollars on what is good information, too. However, the biggest bang for the buck has to be Uncommon Cents. What they do in 114 pages is concise, entertaining, loaded with cartoons, and right on! The plan to get out of debt works, a personal testimonial, and the financial myths timeless. Highly recommended reading!
ESSENTIAL
This is a must read book. It explains in such a simple format as to how to control your expeditures and curb instant gratification. I first bought it in 1990, and now I have bought a number of copies as presents for friends - and even my accountant. I highly endorse this publication. It is the best financial planning advice.
a must have
If you can still get this book, try. This should be a text book that is used in all high schools and by parents giving their children/young adults a very simple and pragmatic way of dealing with and understanding their finances. Although life and finances can get much more complicated, if everyone started out with this book and practiced its teachings, maybe we would do a better job at controlling debt and curb the need for instant gratification.
The Wills Eye Manual: Office and Emergency Room Diagnosis and Treatment of Eye Disease
Published in Paperback by Lippincott Williams & Wilkins Publishers (1994)
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A Must-Have
All beginning ophthalmology residents should have this book. It makes the first night on call much easier. Great quick reference.
wells eye manual
As an optometrist in practise for 25 years, I try to update my desk reference collection regularly. A new young associate recommended this manual,and he was right. Its compact, comprehensive, alphabetically-organzied format makes it easy to use and good browsing material for the rare quiet moment at the office. As well it keeps me current. I think this is a great buy.
A must for every therapeutic eye care practice.
Organized, thorough and useful. Includes refractive surgery management
3 In 1: (A Picture of God)
Published in Paperback by Concordia Publishing House (1984)
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Yes, children can understand the Trinity
This is my four-year old daughter's favorite book. One day, while I was reading it too her, after reading the passage that says "God the Father is God. God the Son is God. God the Holy Spirit is God." I asked her, "So how many God's are there." I watched as she counted to three on her fingers, started to say "three" but then stopped herself and said "One!"
My 3-year old hasn't looked at an apple the same since!
This book explains the trinity in terms that my 3-year old has come to understand. What an excellent tool in explaining how God protects, what faith is, and the role of the Holy Spirit. I will be packing this book for his overnite trips to grandma and grandpa's house to use as a witnessing tool.
Excellently explains the 3 persons of God to children!
Never before have I seen a book so clearly explain God to a child. Perfect for every Godchild you may have!
The Road to Terror: Stalin and the Self-Destruction of the Bolsheviks, 1932-1939
Published in Paperback by Yale Univ Pr (01 April, 2002)
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Brilliant
Dr Getty's study of the Terror is among the most groundbreaking and insightful of the last decade. I believe it is the best book on the Terror yet written. What began as a moderate attempt to clean up the Party in 1933 through controled means turned into violent chaos in mid-1937. The Yezhov years are covered deeply with a great reliance on archives avalible. For the first time the documents themselves can be viewed by the reader. Getty clearly defines the periods of the Terror according to their severity. In 1933 people were purged from the Party but it only ment dismissal and a chance for readdmition. In 1936 things began to get bloody but it was still controled by the elites. The explosion of 1937 with the liquidation of top Soviet Marshals signaled the coming of a full blown bloodbath. This period lasted from the last half of 1937 to the first half of 1938. This was largely directed by the NKVD under Yezhov but Getty stresses Yezhov was ordered by Stalin and the Politburo to conduct arrest and executions of party elites in both the Center and provinces along with mass shootings of social marginals. The Terror was horrible yet more conservative numbers of deaths are given. Elites were the primary victims. Getty's statistics appear to be correct. Millions were not executed but social trama of the Terror was horrid. This work shreds Robert Conquest to pieces...
Bolshevik Crimes Exposed
Unlike other mass murderers, the Bolsheviks left a paper trail detailing their horrific criminal deeds. Naturally, dictator Josef Stalin is prominently cited in the formerly top secret transcripts of the Soviet's Central Committee. Others, however, like his nomenklatura henchmen; Lazar Kaganovich, a Jew and rabid Christian hater; Vyacheslav Molotov; Lavrenti Beria; and Genrikh Yagoda, were just as complicit as him. The historian, H. R. Trevor-Roper put it well, "Great massacres may be commanded by tyrants, but they are imposed by people." The authors conservatively estimate that "1.5 million" Communist Party members were killed during the "Great Terror" purges of the 1930s. The majority were shot to death, others died in the GULAG camps, originally established by the fanatical Bolshevik thug, Vladimir I. Lenin. This riveting story opens by telling the sad tale of one Alexander Yulevich Tivel. It is typical of what happened to many of Marxism's true believers. A hack propagandist for Pravda, Tivel was shot as an "enemy of the people" on March 7, 1937, in Moscow, after a perfunctory trial. He was also a Zionist, who had made the fatal mistake of knowing Grigory Zinoviev and Karl Radek. Like Tivel, they were all Jews, who were suspected by the Kremlin elite of plotting with its arch rival, the exiled zealot, Lew Davinovich Bronstein, a/k/a Leon Trotsky. The Tivel drama didn't end there. His wife was sent to Siberia and she wasn't freed until 1953. Their young son was placed in an orphanage for being a "member of the family of a traitor of the Motherland." In this book, too, surprisedly, you will find the modern seeds of the dubious "Hate Crime" concept, championed by Sen. Charles Schumer (D-NY). Stalin, in a rant about the putative enemies of his Communist hell hole, is quoted in October, 1937, as saying, "Anyone who by his actions and thoughts-yes, his thoughts-encroaches on the unity of the socialist state, we will destroy them and their kin." I'm sure Schumer, a pompous windbag, will deny the alien-based connection to his legislative scheme. This is an authoritative book that exposes the unspeakable crimes of Stalin's Bolshevik gang against its own party faithful. It should be a sobering lesson to anyone who tends to believe in extremist solutions.
William Hughes, J.D. Baltimore, MD. (Published in the journal of the Social Justice Review, July-August, 2000 issue.)
Gives an exceptionally valuable insight into Stalin's purges
This book is tremendously useful because it gives a hitherto unknown insight into exactly how Stalin and his closest cronies set in motion the purges of the 1930s. The heart of the book consists of around 200 secret Communist Party documents interspersed with commentary from the authors. The archival material suggests very strongly that the path to the terror was not planned meticulously from the start but consisted of a series of false starts and zigzags until Stalin decided in 1937 to crush all resistance to the party's rule. Of particular interest are a couple of documents which show how many members of the inner Politburo demanded stricter punishments for alleged wrong-doers than Stalin did himself. Barring the discovery of Stalin's diary many of the dictator's motives will remain unknown forever but the documents in this book do paint a largely convincing portrait of an unpopular regime in Moscow lurching from crisis to crisis, trying both to stablise the internal situation and also to eliminate the possibility of serious internal resistance. What does come through very clearly is how arbitrary the terror was and how many of those charged with repressing alleged foreign spies and saboteurs were almost guaranteed to be shot themselves. First the Politburo lashed out at the secret police for not doing enough to stamp out centres of Trotskyite resistance and then issued orders demanding the execution and arrest of millions of people across the country. Later the secret police came under fire for allegedly indulging in indiscriminate terror and repressing too many people. I can understand the point of the Kirkus Reviews contributor who doubted the authors' explanation that the Politburo pushed ahead with the purges because they were indeed convinced enemies lay behind every corner and a coup was always possible. A sense of self-preservation and the need to show Stalin they were onside surely did partly explain their enthusiasm for spilling blood. But this is a minor quibble about an otherwise excellent book.
Takedown
Published in Paperback by Banks Channel Books (1999)
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More about life than wrestling
A book that is big within the amateur wrestling cycle, "Takedown" is a story about life lessons rather than wrestling. Read as Jake Chapman, hit with an unexpected dose of the unfairness of life, learns to survive and cope with fear while everthing that he values is slipping away. This book will hook you from page one. I read the whole thing in one night. I reccommend this novel to everyone, not just wrestling fans.
Takedown: A great book for young adults
This novel was a great educational tool! My high school special education class and I read this book together. My boys and girls equally liked the book. We would only read one chapter a day and they were truly disappointed when I wouldn't continue to the next chapter the same day. It opened up the door to alot of discussions on disabilities and perceptions. My students felt like the main character of the book knew how they were feeling most of the time. In teaching self advocacy, this novel helped my students reflect on their own disability after seeing how the main character dealt with his disability and how others perceived it. It was easy to read and understand for my students with all different disabilities. I highly recommend this novel to other teachers.
Outstanding book to introduce adolescents to Epilepsy
I am a teacher with Epilepsy and I discovered this book this year. I am presently reading it aloud to my eighth grade class and they love it! Both the boys and the girls can relate to Jake and how he wants to hide any differences that he may have from others. They are all more open to differences and have taken the perspective of the "differnt" person and tell me that they will really work to be more open-minded of all people and their differences. I feel that it is a great springboard for both my students and their families to learn more about Epilepsy and accept that I am a person with Epilepsy. Several of my students really like his brother, Chopper. A wonderful book and I plan to purchase Benjamin's other books to have available for my studetns.
What's the Big Idea, Ben Franklin?
Published in Hardcover by Putnam Pub Group Juv (1976)
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A Fun Book to Stimulate Interest in History
This is a fun book that shopuld help your youngster develop an interest in American History. It is easy to read an has great illustratiions. You will not be disappointed with this purchase.
Excellent book to keep interest!
I was so impressed with the descriptive wording of this book. I'm not a normal biography reader, but this worked perfectly for my 3rd graders. It held there interest, made them laugh, and actually taught them something! A great read for all ages.
If You Like Action Read This Book
This is a good book because it has good facts about Ben Franklin. This has a varity of experiments in it. But the greatest one of all is where Ben tries to see if lightning is electricty. Ben makes history in this book. This book is written by Mrs. Jean Fritz. I hope you enjoy this book.
Windsor of the North
Published in Hardcover by N/K (15 January, 2000)
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An Excellent Read
Although this is not the kind of book i would normally read,it was recommended to me by a friend, and i found it simply enchanting, not only was it informative but it also captured the essence of this historical site bringing it to life, i can't wait for his next book.
Northern Lights?
As a confirmed southerner, I had no idea the north of England was actually interesting until I read this book. Furnival wastes no space, cramming every page with previously undreampt of facts and anecdotes about Cumbria, and, happily, a good deal about London and the intrigues of court as well. This is really more than a history of one house- it is a symbol for a whole forgotten tranche of English history that was once considered uninteresting. With this book Furnival delights at every turn and more than reawakens the northern light that once shone brightly at the windows of Brougham Hall.
An intellectual landmark
What a publication. Furnival illuminates a potentially dry subject with a lucid style and fascinating digressions. In a field so often bogged down by lengthy and boring tomes, this will undoubtedly go down as an intellectual landmark in the field of local history.
Soccer Kicks!: A Play-By-Playb Soccer Journal
Published in Hardcover by Chronicle Books (2001)
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The characters Wayne and Peddiwell are wonderful, especially after they down several tequila daisies.