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Book reviews for "Martinson,_William_D." sorted by average review score:

Three Lives for Mississippi (Banner Book)
Published in Paperback by Univ Pr of Mississippi (2000)
Authors: William Bradford Huie, Martin Luther King Jr., and Juan Williams
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Buy it!
What makes this book interesting is that it was written between the murders and the trial. Huie knew who the murderers were, how they did it, and never expected a guilty verdict.

The book introduces you in detail to Michael (Mickey) Schwerener and all the details leading up to his murder. This detail will help you understand exactly why and how these murders took place.

This latest edition includes updates by the author to compare his early speculation against the results of the trial.


Time-Saver Standards for Architectural Design Data
Published in Hardcover by McGraw-Hill Professional (01 November, 1997)
Authors: Donald Watson, Michael J. Crosbie, John Hancock Callender, Donald Baerman, Walter Cooper, Martin Gehner, William Hall, Bruce W. Hisley, Richard Rittelmann, and Timothy T. Taylor
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contens of the I want to read
The main contents of the book,please


The Twenty-Four Hour Society: Understanding Human Limits in a World That Never Stops (A William Patrick Book)
Published in Hardcover by Addison-Wesley Publishing (1993)
Author: Martin Moore-Ede
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There simply is not a better book on sleep out there.
If you are looking for a book about the hazards of sleep deprivation, your search is over.


The Visualization Toolkit User's Guide: May 2001
Published in Paperback by Kitware, Inc. (1900)
Authors: William J. Schroeder, Kenneth M. Martin, Lisa S. Avila, and C. Charles Law
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The VTK User's Guide & CD
Everything you need to install, use, and extend VTK. Detailed examples, installation procedures, developers guide, file format descriptions, how to write imaging and graphics filters, plus data object API details for VTK version 3.1. Includes source code, updated HTML documentation, release notes, data, and PC binaries. User's Guide is 356 pages and comes with the VTK CD.

The VTK Users's Guide is a companion text to The Visualization Toolkit text. While The Visualization Toolkit stresses algorithmic and data structure details, the VTK User's Guide stresses how to use the software. The VTK User's Guide includes a CD-ROM of VTK 3.1.


Where's the Melody?: A Listener's Introduction to Jazz
Published in Paperback by DaCapo Press (1983)
Author: Martin T. Williams
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A book for jazz fans
A presentation of jazz through the music itself for the general reader. Written to answer the questions: How does one listen to jazz? and What does one hear? it is a basic and highly informative book, full of good taste, not only for the uninitiated but for the long-time jazz fan.


William Turnbull, Jr.: Buildings in the Landscape
Published in Paperback by William Stout Publishers (2000)
Authors: Kenneth Frampton, Lars Lerup, Martin Wagner, Daniel Gregory, Donlyn Lyndon, Dung Ngo, William Stout, and William Turnbull
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Doing Good Architecture
This is a big, beautiful book portraying the works of an architect who strived not to design monuments with a signature style, but instead create wonderful places that fit their landscape. The book chronicles twenty of Turnbull's projects beginning with the Sea Ranch Condominium (with MLTW) and ending with Turnbull and his wife's own weekend retreat, Teviot Springs Vineyard. All but one of the projects (Sea Ranch Athletic Club)are residential, which reflects the nature of Turnbull's career. The book contains essays by Mary Griffen (Turnbull's wife and business partner), William Stout, Mitchell Schwarzer, and Donlyn Lyndon. Turnbull's buildings contain innate beauty, sensitivity to site, and the ability to bring common, conventional construction to a high art. Morley Baer's black and white photography is powerful and captures the wonderful subtleties in Turnbull's sometines simple and conventional structures that are truly "GOOD" architecture.


Wriothesley's Roses in Shakespeare's Sonnets, Poems and Plays
Published in Hardcover by Clevedon Books (1993)
Author: Martin Green
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Green's Sleuthing Reveals much about Shakespeare
Martin Green's WRIOTHESLEY'S ROSES IN SHAKESPEARE'S SONNETS, POEMS AND PLAYS adds significantly to our information about Shakespeare, of whom few have been able to tell us very much. The book captures the social milieu of the times, mentioning almost everybody who was anybody. It focuses on the well-educated, politically active, and sexually ambiguous coterie surrounding the Earl of Essex and their influence on Shakespeare's knowledge and concepts. Green's thesis is that the third Earl of Southampton, Henry Wriothesley (pronounced Rose-ly) was the "thou, my Rose" to whom the sonnets were addressed, the inspirer of Shakespeare's red and white and Rose imagery. One cannot but be impressed by the amassed evidence, starting with the Wriothesly coat-of-arms and the architectural particulars of H.W.'s Titchfield home. For all who love sleuthing, this book is a must. Stylistically a delight, partly because of Green's ready, wry humor, the book argues its case with the cogency of a skillful lawyer, anticipating and covering all points of view. In his insightful interpretations of Shakespeare's writings, Green highlights the puns and dark conceits that he says were there for artistic reasons and not out of legal necessity to avoid revelation of homosexual or sodomitical content. The book concludes with a short, lyrical chapter describing an initial meeting of Shakespeare and Henry Wriothesley, so beautiful that one ardently hopes it was so. Mr. Green is also author of THE LABYRINTH OF SHAKESPEARE's SONNETS, London 1974.


Zenith Radio: The Early Years: 1919-1935 (Schiffer Book for Collectors)
Published in Paperback by Schiffer Publishing, Ltd. (1997)
Authors: Harold N., Ph.D. Cones, John H. Bryant, Martin Blankinship, and William Wade
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A great book on early years of Zenith
This book is of real interest to someone interested in tube radios and their beginnings. Has great pictures and copies of sales brochures Just wish the authors would have gone clear through the 1930s.


Refactoring: Improving the Design of Existing Code
Published in Hardcover by Addison-Wesley Pub Co (28 June, 1999)
Authors: Martin Fowler, Kent Beck, John Brant, William Opdyke, and Don Roberts
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A book to read & reread...

Refactoring is a book which details simple techniques of fixing your code to facilitate making changes.

The book's main feature is a large catalog of at least 50 refactoring patterns (presented in a similar way to Design Patterns) with a name, example, and motivation for using it. The patterns are described using UML. There are several other chapters of interest, including one on "Bad Smells" which lists many telltale signs of poor programming and how to fix them.

Maybe I'm just showing my lack of sophistication, but Design Patterns went over my head. I only "got" a few of the patterns. But this book is much more accessible to an intermediate programmer who wants to improve his coding style. If you've ever wondered how to write more maintainable code this is your book. One good thing about this book is it's directly applicable to almost every standard procedural or OO language, whereas Design Patterns are pretty much for OO programming only. Even if you are writing VBScript or Javascript for your web page you could use many of the techniques illustrated here.

Highly recommended. Buy this one.

A future classic; ranks alongside _Design Patterns_
It's rare that I find a technical book as immediately useful and fun to read as _Refactoring_. The cleverest thing about refactoring as a technique is that it provides a well-articulated, structured framework for doing something that every experienced developer does already (more or less unconsciously) -- constantly restructuring their code to make it easier to understand and maintain. This alone makes refactoring a useful contribution to software engineering.

However, Fowler doesn't stop there. He presents rationales for refactoring (with an eye towards making a case to management) and much detailed, practical insight that comes from experience, but is rarely expressed so concisely and elegantly. I also appreciated the importance Fowler placed on unit testing; in fact, using unit testing makes refactoring happen much more quickly, and leaves you with a lot more peace of mind besides.

I read the book cover to cover and enjoyed nearly every page. The book has added a lot to my value as a developer, and was a lot of fun in the bargain. I don't think a whole lot more needs to be said. Just buy it, you can thank everyone who told you to later.

Making tired old code better
The basic thesis of this book is that, for various reasons, real programs are poorly designed. They get that way for a variety of reasons. Initially well designed, extending the program may lead to software decay. Huge methods may result from unanticipated complexity. Refactoring, according to Fowler, is a function preserving transformation of a program. The transformations are reversible, so the intention is to improve the program in some way.

Fowler suggests refactoring a program to simplify the addition of new functionality. The program should also be refactored to make it easier for human readers to understand at the same time.

He also insists that each step is small and preserves functionality, and on frequent unit testing with a comprehensive test suite.

Half of the book consists of a catalogue of refactorings. He gives each refactoring a memorable name, such as "Replace Type Code with Subclasses". He illustrates the design transformation with a pair of UML class diagrams, and has a standard set of sections: Motivation, Mechanics and Example.

The Motivation is a prose section that describes and justifies the refactoring, showing the relationship to other refactorings.

The Mechanics is a sequence of steps needed to carry out the refactoring, shown as a list of bullet points He expands on some points.

The Example is where the value of this book lies. Fowler takes a fragment of Java code, and takes us step by step through the refactoring. The code is small enough that he can show it all each step of the way without overwhelming us, but is large enough to be realistic.

The code is clear enough for non-Java programmers to follow. He explains his code well enough for the book to function as a Java tutorial where the meaning of the code is not obvious. One or two of the refactorings are specific to the Java object model, and do not apply to other languages. Other languages would benefit from similar treatment, but there are very few language-specific refactorings.

The book is very much of the Design Patterns movement, with frequent references to patterns. The aim of a factoring may be to achieve a particular pattern, or it may take advantage of a particular pattern. The book can be used as a tutorial on Design Patterns.

I have a small number of complaints. Fowler advocates the use of refactoring while studying code for a code review. One needs to be very sensitive to the feelings of the programmer here, especially if he or she is a novice. The reviewer should read the code with refactoring in mind, and possible refactorings recommended, but it is for the programmer to make the changes.

Reading this book has inspired me to refactor some of my own code. My mistakes underlined the need to take small steps, and to test frequently. I spent a day building a useful Delphi testing framework from the description Fowler gives of the JUnit testing framework. The one category of code that does not seem to lend itself to this approach is some highly coupled parsing code. While I can extract small blocks of code, they remain tightly coupled with each other, and it is hard to give them meaningful names. The answer here may be to use the top down approach of recursive descent, rather than the bottom up approach of refactoring. Perhaps recursive descent can guide refactoring. Refactoring is largely a local approach. One can almost say a pinhole approach. Sometimes a global view is needed.

In summary, I would say that this very good book would be of use to Java programmers who have some understanding and much bafflement. It is very good for us older dogs who have become a little jaded and need some new ideas and motivation.


The Varieties of Religious Experience: A Study in Human Nature
Published in Paperback by Penguin USA (Paper) (1983)
Authors: William James and Martin E. Marty
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An all-time classic: a "must read."
To call "Varieties of Religious Experience" a classic is an understatement. What I find really amazing is that it was written in 1902. James was first known for his work with "functionalism" in psychology, essentially making him the first modern psychologist --- moving psychology away from the realm of philosophy. Thus, we have psychology becoming an empirical science. The empirical methodology was used to explore items of interest in psychology and religion.

Many books on religion express an interest in religion from the point of view of a theologian or person who studies religion from the point of view of religious institutions. To many people, religion means different things. It could be from the point of view of a "born-again Christian," or it could be from a more personal point of view. We come to see religion as an existential phenomenon. We learn that it is an incredibly personal relation between the individual and his concept of the Divine. There is a definite emphasis on the personal aspects of religion.

With experimental psychology, we deal in matters that are seen and are easily quantifiable. In the psychology of religion, we deal with how the individual deals with the reality of the unseen. We have a feeling of the presence of God. Some people can feel a mystical experience, whereas others have a more rational approach. People experience the divine in different manners - on the one hand, it can be impersonal and transcendental, and on the other hand it can be solemn, personal, and passionate. The religious tell us that religion can have the result of "healthy mindedness" -- in fact, it leads to a systematic sense of "healthy mindedness" diverting our attention from disease and death. This is more than just "faith healing," but rather a prescription for a life of action. It leads to practical effectiveness. Another area of interest is sin and the "sick soul", and the healthy effects of "redemption." Other areas of interest are conversion, religious "back-sliding," saintliness and living the good life, empiricism and skepticism, mysticism and philosophy, and aspects of religious worship service.

I found that this book should have interest not just to students of the psychology of religion. It also has appeal to the religious, and those who want to find out more about the religious experience from a point of view that is a different from the views expressed in Church and Sunday School. The point of view is one that will appeal both to religious conservatives and to religious liberals. Its presentation is sensitive and logical. For some people, it may even produce the "aha!" response that they are now seeing religion with greater perspective. (This is a review of the paperback edition.)

The Varieties of Religious Experience
This book is heavy going. Its like slogging up a beautiful mountain and on the way seeing all the beauty nature created on the way.

If you can grasp this book, and try to distill all the collected wisdom as presented by James, you will see that the essential religious experience is effected through surrender.

This book is not meant to be read at one sitting; no one will find it all captivating; but just finding one part - " But since, in any terms,the crisis described is the throwing of our conscious selves upon the mercy of powers which, *whatever they may be, are more ideal than we are actually*, and make for our redemption, you see why self-surrender has been and always must be regarded as the vital turning-point of the religious life, so far as the religious life is spiritual and no affair of outer works and ritual and sacraments.

Wonderful book;well worth reading.

Pure Religious Experience
A timeless and proufound book! Whatever you believe, there is much to be had in the Varieties. James weaves through the experiences of many different individuals, clarifying and illuminating both their inner and practical meaning. Decidedly, the book focuses on mystics, gnostics, the extremely devout and the chronically depressed at the exclusion of more mundane religious experiences. A very interesting bunch. Perhaps the most fascinating thing about the book: One of the depressed characters James mentions is none other than James himself! Similar to his father, Henry Sr., William had a psychological breakdown at about the age of thirty. As James describes it in his memoirs and letters, the nature of the breakdown was such that he had lost faith in free-will. As he asks in his psychology, are we merely automaton slaves to our underlying biology, or do we have the ability to act independently and free? A quagmire any relentless self-examining philosopher could get hung up on. And James was just that - relentless in self-examination. Indeed, his quest for the truth was epic. You can never go wrong reading anything he wrote. Always well-thought-out, clear and penetrating. This man illuminates everything he touches.


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