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Book reviews for "Levine,_David" sorted by average review score:

David E. Kelley: The Man Behind Ally McBeal
Published in Paperback by ECW Press (1999)
Author: Josh Levine
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brief introduction
"Ally Mcbeal","The Practice" and "Picket Fence" make me crazy for David E. Kelly.
If interested in David E. Kelly, it can be a brief introduction for him.

The man behind Ally McBeal
My friend rang me from his business trip to thank me picking this book for him. He is a BIG fan for sure. He loves the whole book till to ends degress, more importantly he feels inspired by David Kelley. This book is a must for anyone who wish to be a professional scripwriter/producer.

Thank you
Hi im not writting in regards to the book Im writting to thank Mr.David.E Kelly for making such a great show and having colored people on his show. It's fun to know that someone in Hollywood is actually taking in consideration that the world has many colors.Me as an African American I have great respect for you and you're cast if only you knew the smile that you put on people face every week. So on behalf of all ethnic people I would like to say Thank you dearly for making room for us on your show! And I will read you're book and give you the review on it! even thought i sure it's great! Thank you


Who Built America?: Working People and the Nation's Economy, Politics, Culture, and Society: From Conquest and Colonization Through Reconstruction
Published in Paperback by Pantheon Books (1990)
Authors: Edward Countryman, David Brundage, Edward Countryman, American Social History Project, and Bruce C. Levine
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Who Built America Vol 2
The book takes a completely different view of our nation's history from the late 1800's through the late 19000's than the average history text book most of us read in high school. Side bars and tid bits add anecdotal highlights to the information covered in that section or chapter which keep it relevant and interesting. It was very refreshing to see things from the bottom up. i.e. What was happening with this or that wave of immigration that caused the City's and Urban areas to change in this way, that caused the political and religious environment to change in that way, that caused this person to be elected, that caused this law to be passed, that caused this backlash, that led to this conflict, that led to this resolution. Instead of - this war was faught and this official was elected and this country won. It is biased towards labor and labor's role in building this country, so if you want traditional conservative history, this isn't the book for you. But if you like to read some of the stuff they don't tell you in high-school history 101, this is it. I'll never look at labor disputes or the immigration question the same way again. I came away from the book with a greater understanding and retained more of how we got to the 21st century in America from the 19th century.

An excellent resource
When I saw this book, I bought it straightaway, because labor history gets short-shrift in American society. I'm sorry to see it's out-of-stock, but am unsurprised.

While this book is fairly mainstream in its orientation, it is very readable and thorough, covering the struggle of working people through the late 1800s to the early 1990s.

I consider this book a good starting point for people interested in working people's history. What makes it especially rich is the narrative flow and personal stories that appear throughout it, and the sidebars with songs and other miscellaneous information. This is the way a history book should be written.

An excellent source for US 20th century history!
Who Built America? Is an excellent look at US history in the 20th century from the foundation up. The authors provide relevant and insightful information about immigration, the working class, unions, and the political and military events that shaped our country. The events are thoroughly discussed in terms of cause and effect, and followed through with anecdotal side bars and highilights. Because the text follows a contextual historical line, the information is readily understood and retained. Who Built America? was used as the assigned text in a US History class I took. While I read it willingly as assigned in the class, it is a book I have returned to on numerous occasions since. I highly recommend Who Built America? for everyone and anyone who would like to know not just who was elected when, and what wars were fought with whom, but why and how it effects every one of us.


Child of the Dark: The Diary of Carolina Maria De Jesus
Published in Mass Market Paperback by Signet Classic (2003)
Authors: Carolina Maria De Jesus, Robert S. Levine, David St. Clair, and Carolina Maria Jesus
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a great read
Just an outstanding account of real life in Rio de Janeiro. Carolina is a true heroine in her own right. She goes against the social standards and works to support her children by herself. It is a great book about the trials of the human heart-and Carolina certainly triumphs over them.

Hard life of favelados people in Brazil
the daily diary of the Carolina De Jesus describes a daily hard life of a woman, who picked up paper and metal everyday just to get enough money to feed her children. Also, in her diary she describes the horrible realatioship of the government to the people of the lower class.. The hunger and poorness of these people clearly illustrates in this book. The contest of these book clearly reflevt it's title, "Child of The Dark."

Poverty and ignorance still exist today
This book is both an uplifting and depressing work. For anyone who has ever visited the third world, and especially for those that never have; this book is a must read. It is uplifting and inspiring in showing the heroine's sheer strength of character that gets her through a life that would most certainly kill most of us. Written without pretense, it is a brutal indictment of the negative forces that constantly try the human spirtit. Here the enemy is not one person, or an army or even the poverty that wreaks havoc on the lives of these people, but rather the world's tolerance and acceptance of the pain, hunger suffering and injustices that are created by a world where the the rich can justify their greed by demoninzing their own creation: the conditons that make people live in utter desperation. Poverty and ignorance are not romantized here but instead like in Buñuel's film Los Olvidados, Child of the Dark shows us that hunger and loss of dignity brings out the worst in people. It is depressing because we all know that places like this exist not only in Brazil, but in almost all countries on earth, and that we all share in the guilt of allowing such horror to exist.


Practical Statistics by Example Using Microsoft Excel
Published in Hardcover by Prentice Hall (02 February, 1999)
Authors: Terry Sincich, Davidm. Levine, David Stephan, and David M. Levine
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Practical Statistics by Example Using Microsoft Excel.
Authors have written a beautiful book that does indeed face many of the elementary and advanced subjects of statistics using Excel. Following an introduction that will prove useful to readers with no knowledge need of either Excel, or Statistics. Authors include detailed of advanced subjects including: 1.Huge data collection that allowing for instructors to teach statistics. 2. Statistical inference. 3.Regression analysis. 4.Analysis of variance. In short, Student and teacher interested in computing statistics using Excel should find the time to review this text.

GOOD BOOK
This book is put together in text book format and contains instructions on using Excel to generate histograms; obtain confidence intervals; INTERPRET statistics; perform f, t, z, and ANOVA calculations; etc. The sections on ANOVA explain what it is, and why one would use single versus double. I bought this book as a reference/tutorial for our Technical department and found it to be extremely useful.


The Theory of Learning in Games (Economic Learning and Social Evolution)
Published in Hardcover by MIT Press (22 May, 1998)
Authors: Drew Fudenberg and David K. Levine
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Learning Learning in Games
An excellent treatise on some important work in the theory of learning in games. Fudenberg and Levine provide a good coverage of standard myopic play dynamics with a special emphasis on ficticious play and replicator dynamics. I particularly liked the sections going through the Kandori, Mailath and Rob (1993) model as well as Young (1993) on the evolution of convention.

The treatments of dynamic systems analysis, elementary game theory, stochastic approximation theory, etc., are necessarily short. The appendices do not suffice for a reader without a reasonable background.

Nonetheless an essential read for anybody doing serious work in learning, or wanting to know what all the fuss is about.

Good book
During the work on my master thesis ("Learning in strategic games") i bought several books about the topic. This is the one of them. Chapters 1 and 2 (Introduction, Fictitious Play) are really good introduction into the subject. The following chapters evolve the theory further giving some good ideas for practical implementation (I was writing a C program which had to be able to play the game and to learn). I would recommend this book to anyone interested in relatively new field - Learning in games.


Applied Statistics For Engineers and Scientists Using Microsoft Excel and MINITAB (With CD-ROM)
Published in Hardcover by Prentice Hall (15 January, 2001)
Authors: David M. Levine, Patricia P. Ramsey, and Robert K. Smidt
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Good for first edition
I used this textbook for a course in statistics. I must say that it was better then the first time that I had taken statistics 5 years ago. The book uses one or two data sets per chapter that helps you focus your thoughts while learning the different techniques. A nice feature about this book that wasnt available 5 years ago is the Excel and Minitab examples which saves a lot of time that is ordinarly spent on copious number crunching. I would have given the book 5 stars, however I found some obvious errors in the book that should have been edited out before the release. Good starter book for sats.


Life on the Rim: A Year in the Continental Basketball Association
Published in Hardcover by MacMillan Publishing Company (1990)
Author: David Levine
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Behind The Scenes Look At Minor League Basketball
The year is 1988. The good old days of minor league basketball before the NBA's power and popularity took over. This book chronicles a year in the CBA, following the Albany Patroons. I highly recommend this book to those who like a "real life" view of sports. This book highlights what the CBA was all about, from players dealing with their demons (substance abuse, attitude problems, wrong body types for their positions), to the horrendous travel conditions, to the turbulence of a team where players come and go in a matter of days.

For myself, I enjoyed the writing style (paragraphs organized by calendar date) and seeing the past lives of famous people. The coach of the Patroons is George Karl. Some of the other notable characters in the book are Kelvin Upshaw, Vincent Askew, Eric Musselman, Dan Levy, and Flip Saunders. For those of you whose favorite show is Making The Video and favorite sports video is The Secret Life Of The NBA, this book is for you.


Theories of Political Economy
Published in Hardcover by Cambridge University Press (1992)
Authors: James A. Caporaso and David P. Levine
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Great Summary of Political Economy
This is a very good introduction into the theories of political economy. It covers classical and neo-classical theories, as well as Marxian and Keynesian critiques. Notably missing is Polanyi. Sometimes a bit difficult to read, but then again, this is political economics...


The Cluetrain Manifesto: The End of Business as Usual
Published in Paperback by Perseus Publishing (09 January, 2001)
Authors: Christopher Locke, Rick Levine, Doc Searls, and David Weinberger
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One Great Thought Beat to Death 190 Times

There is one great thought in this book, i.e. that the Web makes it possible for everyone to participate in the "great conversation", and that it is the summing and slicing of these conversations that will drive business in the 21st Century.

The authors are quite correct, and helpful, when they point out that in the aggregate, the combined preferences, insights, and purchasing power of all Web denizens is vastly more valuable and relevant to business decisions about production, quality, and services than any "push" marketing hype or engineering presumptions about what people might need.

Sadly, the authors' neither provide an integrated understanding of the true terrain over which the great conversation takes place, nor do they provide any substantive suggestions for how web content managers might improve our access to the knowledge and desires that are now buried within the web of babel. Their cute "tell a story" and equally cute advice to have big boxes for customer stories in the forms provided for input, simply do not cut it with me.

This book is a 5 for the one great idea, a 2 for beating the idea to death, a 3 for presentation, and a 4 overall because it was just good enough to keep me reading to the last page.

Take a delivery from this Cluetrain--before it's too late!
Over the last several years, I've come to the conclusion that "business-as-usual" had to come to an end--that the world, culture, technology have changed so much that a new business paradigm is not only required but desperately needed. And it can't be simply a change of rules--the entire *game* has to change.

So finding the on-line Cluetrain Manifesto last year was a real pleasure. Here were these four guys with 95 wild-eyed idealistic theses for overthrowing the business world order--and setting up a new paradigm based upon (of all things) human interaction and conversation. I signed right up.

So you can imagine my delight when I found "The Cluetrain Manifesto" book had been published. I bought it in a millisecond.

Inside, you'll find the reflections of the Cluetrain's originators--in more detail, with more reflection than their Website provides. The Manifesto's background and philosophies are brought into a clearer focus--*not* crystal clear, mind you, but clearer than before. And it's a *very* enjoyable and provocative read.

It's not a flawless work. There's redundancy, for example, in the multiple essays within. Some chapters (Chapter 1 especially) are outstanding, others are so-so. One might even be called elementary. But there's always food for thought.

And don't expect to find some kind of "formula" or "strategy" or "plan" to prosper in the brave new world we live in. It's not there. In fact, such a plan, the authors remind us, would be *counter* to the Manifesto's assertion that honest human conversation is the key to success in the future.

But you will be stirred to find your voice and to add it to the voices of the revived marketplace called the Internet. Heck, you might even be inspired enough to try to help your company find *its* honest, human, authentic voice (rather than brochureware and doublespeak). And I think that's what would delight the Cluetrainers most.

This book is one of several that dramatically affected my life and career. I heartily recommend it!

"Consumers" Strike Back
If you're looking for a potted history of marketing or an essay about how the Internet is coming of age, please don't think you'll get the answers in this book. However, if you're in business now or thinking of starting up perhaps you should read this. Don't expect a ten-point plan on how to gain market superiority via the Internet or instructions on how to put your customers in a loyalty box they won't be able to escape from, but it may just help if you want to still *be* in business in the next few years.

As a senior manager of IT & statistical services in the public sector for over ten years I find that Locke et al make me ashamed for all the times I didn't tell suppliers that I would no longer accept their crap. I hope some of those suppliers are reading this book and taking heed because I'm sharing my copy with my colleagues and together we represent a not-too-shabby purchasing power...

I hope the message is clear; get a clue!


An Urchin in the Storm: Essays About Books and Ideas
Published in Hardcover by W.W. Norton & Company (1987)
Authors: Stephen Jay Gould and David A. Levine
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A good collection of disparate essays
In contrast to the previous rather bitter review, I think this is a very good book and a lot better than the the racism masquerading as science that is the Bell Curve - which Gould has read and demolished.
In terms of factor analysis, I used the Urchin in the Storm to teach factor analysis it's that clear and concise. Stuff the political viewpoint just read some very good essays.

An Urchin in the Storm
An Urchin in the Storm by Stephen Jay Gould is about books and ideas, but more so about writing, thinking and study in method.

An Urchin in the Storm is divided into five different sections. The first two sections of this book group reviews that discuss the irreductibility of history, along the way the pleasures and challenges of contingency, in its two principle domains of life and the earth. The first section on evolution focuses upon structuralist and hisoricist alternatives. While the second, explains nature's complexity, (Evolutionary Theory, Time and Geology).

The third section of this book explores the theory and consequences, both political and intellectual, of biological determinism. The fourth section deals with "Four Biologists." While the fifth works with "In Praise of Reason." As we read on throughout this book, Gould makes his point and scores, as he exposes fallacies, expands on geology, give thought to biological determinism, and gives the reader a clearer picture of evolutionary theory.

This is a fascinating little book, as Gould works through this little tome, like the urchin, always presenting a tough exterior and continues to prickle the enemy.

A very good book of essays about books
For a collection of disparate essays this hangs together in the classic Steve Gould style. If you're a 'fan', this is a book you may have missed, but its definitely a 'must have'


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