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-- Deborah Bell, Private Dealer of Photographs, New York City
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Not just the ground breaking design that is detailed, but the coverage of many aspects of the development have made it one of the best hydrofoil books I have ever read.
The text covers the design process, the costs, the delays and problems along the way as well as highlighting the successes and is written from a first hand perspective.
Well worth picking up if you can find a copy.
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The book I'd chosen for the title, and the fact that its author wore a bow tie and hat in the photo on the back cover. When do you see that anymore? And ... "Bodies in Motion and At Rest." Who could resist?
I'm now at the last essay. Thomas Lynch has an easy way of writing that belies the intricacy, the layer, the pull of century and legacy enriching each word. He has embroidered this pillow with care, and a true needle, and stuffed it full--though it is not always comfortable, it satisfies the soul. Recline, and enjoy.
I enjoyed the book very much. Lynch is a passionate writer who attacks the work with a poet's sensibility, carefully crafting sentences that are articulate, and better yet, emotionally satisfying. Unfortunately, to me, this turned out out also to be the book's biggest bane. Lynch, the "poet-undertaker" seems to be acutely enamored of his own voice. His prowess as a poet is remarkable, which is perhaps the reason that he exercises very little restraint when infusing his essays with his own poetry or the poetry of other, considerably lesser known poets. Like anyone who struggles for their art, Lynch laments the virtual apathy poets and poetry is shown by society at large, and therefore seens compelled to inject this poetry into the work wherever and whenever possible. To me, it undermines the collection, one that otherwise it truly sincere, poignant, and frequently funny.
I recall my early books and the instructors who taught me to look at words, sentances and paragraphs that make up a story. Mr. Lynch appears to pour over his words in a successful effort to make my mind enjoy this book.
I alternatively chuckle, smile, cry and breathe heavy while mind goes places with Mr. Lynch.
A fine book.
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An especially touching piece is "The Moveen Notebook" - based on family history and the inheritence of the "home place" in Ireland. It begins: "When I first came, the old dog barked me back, / all fang and bristle and feigned attack." The strength of the poem is in it masterful use of the ordinary - but what an enjoyable "ordinary" to read.
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Lynch is the sole funeral director in Milford, Michigan. As such, as he states in his opening, he "buries a couple of hundred of his towns people". It is not, an occasional aside notwithstanding, the technical aspects of his job that lynch focuses on here, however. As the subtitle suggests, it is the living that concern Mr. Lynch, and, in fact, as an undertaker, it is the living, not the dead, he truly serves. For, as he is wont to point out, the dead don't care.
The living, on the other hand, care a great deal. Especially in cases of tragic, unforeseen death. The young murder victim's family, the suicide's family, and so on.
Mr. Lynch is a published poet. So his essays are not the dry stuff of technical journals, but rater elegant, philosophical expositions on the nature of death, the nature of survival, and the nature of his profession.
One would think that this would be a rather depressing read but, in fact, it is anything but.
I have recommended the book to many friends-boomers like myself with aging parents. Reading this book helped me to deal more effectively with my own parent's deaths. It helps one put some perspective on the rituals that we observe attendant to death. That it manages to inform and entertain as well is a remarkable achievement.
Lynch is without a doubt an accomplished poet and as with many poets this has translated wonderfully to the world or prose. In The Undertaking, Lynch writes essays with an agility and fluidity that makes this collection a joy to read. But it is his dayjob, that of an undertaker which provides the wisdom and insight of this book. His day to day dealings with the dead (and their survivors) gives Lynch a calm understanding and appreciation of death and of life. The Undertaking, with the aid of some wonderfully colourful real-life characters, provides a moving meditation on life. Only occassionally does Lynch become slightly preachy when writing about abortion or assisted suicide - topics which he makes compelling arguements about. However you look at it, this is a powerful book and I highly recommend it.
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The CCMI LATA Map reprinted on pages 20-21 is not even half-toned and as a result is partially unreadable.
The actual text they wrote is only 170 pages. Don't get me wrong; they convey a lot of knowledge in those pages. However the rest of the 600 pages is the reprinted Telecomm Acts of 1934 and 1996 and two other outdated tables.
Welcome to the world of what I'd call low-volume trade press.
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