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The table of contents lists "History, Atelier, Dressmaking, Tailoring, Technique, Embroidery, Lace and Tulle and Featherwork.
I strongly recommend this book because it contains the works of many designers, and the photos of these beautiful creations are taken "up close".
Essentially, Golding seems to say that, brought to our lowest common denominator in a fight for life, we are all self-centered, that greed takes over. I found the argument weak because we discover that Martin was this way already. I would've liked to see a selfless person's fight for existence and the consequences of his actions.
Or maybe that's Golding's point: Martin's self-centeredness eventually corrodes his ability to survive because the motivations run shallow. Numerous true-life accounts show the struggle of men and women to rise above their base needs and extend life heroically to others. Selflessness often leads to the survival of the group, it seems, but in this book we have only one character's survival to consider.
A second reading might reveal to me more of Golding's intentions in this story, but the fact remains: Golding knows how to build word upon word until you are trapped within the dwelling of his character's minds. That alone lifts this book above the volumes of so-called literature stacked on most shelves.
Based on Golding's own standards from his other books, I cannot highly recommend this as a great story, but only as a great example of powerful wordage and characterization. I think Golding sells us short here on the premise of survival. I finished the last page with little emotional or intellectual reaction. I felt, like Martin, only blank disillusionment.
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The author also spends a good deal of time dealing with Heidegger's brief flirtation with Nazism... but neglects to mention that Heidegger soon fell out of favor with the Nazis and spent most of the Nazi years under a cloud of suspicion. (Perhaps Heidegger never disclaimed Nazism as loudly or as clearly as some would like ... but it's also worth noting that one of his major influences, Edmund Husserl, was Jewish... and of course there is his longtime friendship/love affair with Hannah Arendt, the author of *Eichmann in Jerusalem* and a major thinker in her own right).
Still, this is about as good an introduction to Heidegger as you are likely to find. The author manages to make his concepts of "Dasein" as clear as one can make such an abtruse concept. This will make explorations of Heidegger on your own a bit easier ... but it certainly won't serve as a replacement for same. Unfortunately, there's no way around studying Heidegger in his full glory... much as you may want to avoid the verbiage which was tangled in German and next-to-impossible in translation.
(On the bright side: after slogging through a few pages of Heidegger, Sartre looks like easy reading)
Heidegger's concepts are laid out in full here- from his "secular theology" to his concept of simultaneous disclosure. His observations on art are revealed, also.
This introduction to Heidegger was invaluable to me. I can now recognize strains of Heidegger's thought in the work of writers much easier to read such as Foucault, Sartre, and Jaspers.
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Generally, the book goes at lengths to illustrate classes in C++ and their workings, and offers many tips and traps as well as certain programming styles and approaches which would produce robust programs. The worked examples were also quite comprehensive. However I feel that the concepts of OO were not well illustrated, and from my experience, a thorough understanding of OO concepts help very much in being able to manipulate classes and using the methods in C++. The chapter on MFC was not very useful, it really looked as if it was just there to fill in space. It does not teach much about MFC.
All in all, however, I would still consider it a fairly good book to keep as a reference.
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Why do people like Kim's writing? It's joyous. He is joyous. Compassion seems all out of fashion nowadays, and cynicism has boldly taken its place. Thankfully, we still have a few books out there to bring our attention to ubiquitous things. To celebrate the mundane. To contemplate the everyday matters of life.
Dope on a Rope is a very guy-next-door take on life. He a well-versed snacker. His dog Buster (aka "his dogness") figures prominently in his life. And I'm pretty sure that he makes up at least one new word each week. Many of his essays read like short homilies on the state of his life. This makes perfect sense, being as he probably picked up a few techniques from his father, the minister.
Everyone who wants to be a better neighbor needs to read Dope on a Rope. Good neighbors pay attention to one another and the life around them. Makes you wish Kim would buy the house next door.
Talk about New York stereotyping, I found a warm, often humorous but sometimes serious look at life that could been written anywhere in this country. Don't worry Mr. Underwood, I will not tell the world about your mauve (not purple) shirt or what dope jumps from a hot air balloon attached to a bungee rope even if a Playmate is accompanying them. This compilation is fun, well written while readers gain insight into the "oddments from the mind" of a writer who makes his personal look at life a lot more interesting than canned asparagus (think what those shoots look like) or is it spinach? DOPE ON A ROPE is plain ole fun.
Harriet Klausner
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One caveat: if one is able to read Heidegger on one's own, this book will do more harm than good. If one is not quite up to the challenge of reading Heidegger, this book will not help.
I also ordered Hubert Dreyfuss' "Being-in-the-World", and I am cheerfully cruising through it at one chapter per day, and I am getting a lot out of this reading experience. Polt for beginners? No way.
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I think that these collections have some of the best ironies out of all of the Twilight Zone episodes. Aside from "The Monsters are Due on Maple Street," this book has the necessary works for the Twilight Zone lovers.
Recommended to any sci-fi fanatics--
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On the gala opening of the latest world's tallest building, an unstable construction worker detonates a bomb and starts a fire that spirals quickly out of control, leaving the celebrants trapped on the top floors. As the fire climbs closer and the situation grows grimmer, the characters true natures are revealed, and some are not pretty. The elements Irwin Allen used in his film version are easily found, but they work far better in the source material. An excellent suspense story with a refreshing and somber finale, highly recommended.
Richard Martin Stern
ISBN 0679503633
"The Tower" is the world' stallest building at 125 storeys. Built in downtown New York, the city has put millions towards its construction. Its architects and designers think it is perfect, but on the day of the opening copies of unauthorized changes are sent to them.
Meanwhile, an ex-employee at the tower, John Connors, has entered the building posing as an electrician. Unknown to the security guards he is carrying, in his tool box, plastic explosives with which he will seek revenge.
While preparation is under way for the opening ceremony the contractors are seeking to find if the changes were made, and what they mean. The building's architect, Nat Wilson is determined to find who forged his signature on the change orders.
The ceremony goes ahead as planned, but disaster soon strikes. A fire on a 4th floor apartment as well as an explosion in the basement wreak havoc with the organisers. As the investigators soon discover; the changes were extremely serious. The situation has suddenly gotten out of hand: 120 or so people, trapped 1500 feet up, with governors and senators amongst them, and a raging fire beneath them.
The fire soon eradicates both the stairs and elevators as possibilities for escape. The men on the ground must work against the clock, and the searing heat of the flames, to rescue the "hostages" of the tower.
Stern tells this tale at a terrific pace, building the suspense right up until the final trumpet; blown on a slightly different note. His characters develop their personalities through-out the book and finally show what each of them is made of.