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Book reviews for "Moore,_Tom" sorted by average review score:

Angels Crying: A True Story of Secrecy and Tragedy
Published in Paperback by Tomcod Pr (1994)
Author: Tom Moore
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Compelling Book
Upon starting this book i found it hard to place down. A truly moving story of a youth tragedy. I feel that more colleges could make use of this book in there teaching of literature. A really excellent read.

Weeping and angry.
A story so chilling that it left me weeping and angry that a system chose to ignore and/or cover up this child's misery. It has made me open my eyes to my own surroundings. Well written to the point that I felt I was there.

loss of innocence
I find this story to be deeply moving...true stories are more disturbing than any fiction...


The Big Blue House Call (Bear in the Big Blue House)
Published in Paperback by Simon Spotlight (1900)
Authors: Kiki Thorpe, Tom Brannon, and Chris Moore
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What Children's Books Should Be
Too often these days children's books and tv shows are simply aimed at keeping a child's eyes glued to a colorful page or to a screen, without much thought to imaginative stories or to helping a child to learn or adapt. Not so with this opus. The subtle, fun, and funny narrative cannot but succeed in infusing in the child reader the importance of going to the doctor and of conquering his or her fears of health care. Although Kiki Thorpe and Tom Brannon do a great job in bringing this into book form, it should be noted that this book is adapted from a "Bear" episode written by the talented Chris Moore, whom Thomas Bonfiglio once called, "The best children's writer since A.A. Milne." I only wish more of his work was available.

Everything Your Child Wants to Know About the Doctor
This book is an excellent choice for explaining your child's visit to the dotor. It covers everything from eye charts to vaccinations. Bear rids Ojo of fear of shots in a simple way that works for your own little ones. The other characters are enthusiastic about their check-ups, which I believe is a great example and very influential to our children. If I could share one book before a doctor's visit with any child, this would be it. Light hearted yet full of information kids can relate to, this is one of the best "Bear" book yet!


Foghorn Outdoors: Florida Camping
Published in Paperback by Avalon Travel Publishing (30 December, 2000)
Authors: Marilyn Moore, Tom Dubocq, Sally Deneen, and Robert McClure
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Suits out of state visitors and native Floridians alike.
Florida Camping is packed full of great directions, reviews, and a 1-10 rating system. It looks condensed, but what you get is factual, to the point, and complete. Whether you are an RV camper or a tent camper, you can find the perfect campground in this book. You'll need to mark the page or lose it forever, there are so many campgrounds listed! Included in the reviews are local trivia, like "a kid was nearly eaten by an alligator here", or "this is the only area that rare white squirrels frequent", to "there's a fantastic bar-b-q place just down the road". Thank you!


Hidden Gardens of Beacon Hill
Published in Hardcover by Beacon Hill Garden Club (1999)
Authors: Gail Weesner, Barbara W. Moore, Peter Vanderwarker, and Tom Lingner
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Wonderful photography of seldom seen urban gardens!
This book is packed with beautiful photographs of the seldom seen gardens that are hidden from view as one strolls along the streets of Beacon Hill. Many of the garden owners spend significant time creating beautiful masterpieces for themselves to enjoy. In this book, you can glimpse inside these unique gardens.


Inside the Minds: The Wireless Industry - Industry Leaders Share Their Knowledge on the Future of the Wireless Revolution
Published in Paperback by Aspatore Books (2001)
Authors: Aspatore Books Staff, InsideTheMinds.com, John Zeglis, Patrick McVeigh, Martin Cooper, Alex Laats, Robert Gemmell, Sanjoy Malik, Scott Bradner, and Paul Sethy
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THE BOOK on Wireless
We have been trying to decide on some of the best wireless initiatives for our company for quite some time. This book was incredibly useful in understanding where some of the industry leaders see the future going. I especially liked the chapter written by the CEO of AT&T Wireless. This book is a must have for anyone interest in wireless opportunities or in the wireless industry.


A New Ireland: Politics, Peace, and Reconciliation
Published in Hardcover by National Book Network (1996)
Authors: John Hume, Edward Moore Kennedy, Thomas McEnery, Richard Shepard Healy, Rebecca Grunch, Carrie Meback Mack, Jack Van Zandt, and Tom McEnery
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A framework for true reconciliation in Northern Ireland
John Hume is a virtually unknown figure in the United States, but he has been steadily gaining recognition due to his work in the Northern Irish peace agreement. This recognition is overdue and much deserved. This monumental book outlines Hume's political philosophy - a philosophy which seeks to brush aside the vengefulness and intransigence of Northern Ireland's past, searching instead for reconciliation through justice for all. Hume is heavily influenced by Matin Luther King, Jr. and John F. Kennedy, and quotes from these two figures flavor Hume's text. Hume's themes may seem repetitive, and his ideas seem to be based on the shakey foundation of human progress, but this work demonstrates that he is a champion for for a true peace in Northern Ireland - a peace that is just for all.


The Plains of Madness
Published in Paperback by Tomcod Press (11 November, 2001)
Author: Tom Moore
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Set in the Canadian provinces of Newfoundland and Quebec
Winner of the Inaugural Percy James Award, Tom Moore's The Plains Of Madness is a superbly written novel set in the Canadian provinces of Newfoundland and Quebec, drawing parallels between the birth of a nation centuries before the present day and the plagued identity of history teacher searching for his humanity and meaning. An absorbing trip through time, history, and the recesses of the human soul, The Plains Of Madness is a most unique and satisfying read. ...


Why I Am a Baptist
Published in Paperback by Broadman & Holman Publishers (2001)
Authors: Tom J. Nettles and Russell Moore
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A must read
Dr. Tom Nettles and Russell D. Moore have edited a wonderful volume on the true glue that holds Baptists together and that is theological conviction. The list of contributers is a veritable "who's who" of Baptist theological conservatives. The contributers span from the U.S. to Wales to Zambia. They reflect the theological diversity that is found among conservative, confessional and committed Baptists. They are pastors, scholars and lay people. The men and women in this volume stand in the tradition of their Baptist forebearers, committed to God's inerrant Word and the doctrines contained therein and willing to suffer for those distinctives they find in the Bible that makes them Baptists. I would implore every Baptist to read this book and rejoice in the true glue of theological conviction that holds us together as Baptists. I would also encourage every non-Baptist to read this volume for an honest understanding of what is at the core of what it means to be a Baptist Christian.


The Gorilla Game : An Investor's Guide to Picking Winners in High Technology (AUDIO CASSETTE)
Published in Audio Cassette by HarperAudio (1998)
Authors: Geoffrey A. Moore, Tom Kippola, and Paul Johnson
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A "must read" for investors in high-tech
High-tech professionals and amateur investors dream of catching the next hot stock before it takes off. Geoffrey Moore's latest book The Gorilla Game outlines a strategy for identifying and investing in high-tech companies. Geoffrey Moore's previous works Crossing The Chasm and Inside The Tornado serve as the foundation for the investment strategy presented. Individuals familiar with the author will find The Gorilla Game valuable as it applies Moore's ideas on product marketing to well known companies within the high-tech sector. One of the most interesting sections of the book is the three case studies which serve as examples of past Gorilla games and involve companies that most readers will be familiar with. The Gorilla Game is highly recommended for any reader with an interest in high tech industries regardless of their investment background.

Need more tech than investment savvy
This book came to me highly recommended by a friend and I read it in no time at all, very well presented and very readable. The only thing is to get the most out of it you need to have a lot of tech knowledge. I work for an e-business consultancy and I found the idea of picking the basket of stocks in a potential Gorilla industry a bit of an intimidating task. However, it does point out you can make a lot of cash from investing later in the game as it becomes more obvious who the key player is, this is probably a better approach than the one they advocate for most people.

Reverse Engineering to Invest in Intel, Cisco and Microsoft
A popular pastime for the past 50 years (and possibly before that) has been to look at the stocks that would have made you the most money in the last 10 or 20 years and devise an investment approach to find the next ones going forward that will do as well or better. I have lost count of how many books I have read that have taken this approach.

I found the Gorilla Game to be refreshingly above the pack in this area. The authors do an excellent job of describing some of the ways that technologies get adopted, when the stocks do well (and when they don't), and when to buy and sell stocks in technology companies. They also devise a fairly detailed, somewhat risk-controlled investment process, and detail how it would have done in a number of case histories. From the backward-looking perspective, the book is solid.

The weakness of such backward looking methods shows up in their new material in the revised edition (1999) on the Internet. Although some aspects of their model apply to the Internet, many do not. They are left needing to vaguely explain how so much money was made so quickly in Internet stocks. Their explanation is actually pretty solid, but they never quite come out and say that their methodology will not get you all of the fast-growing stocks in technology.

They needed not be defensive. No methodology is perfect. The main weakness of this one is that is designed around semiconductors, software, and computers. The technology patterns can look a lot different in future technologies. For example, what will happen with companies like Gemstar that lead in new television technologies that could disrupt the Internet for direct marketing? The reason this point is important is that the barriers to switching are higher in the technologies studied here than in many other areas. If you get into a low cost of switching area (like business to consumer marketing on the Internet), you could invest in an industry leader and still lose your shirt. Although the book acknowledges these issues, it probably doesn't create a substantial enough warning.

The book is aimed at the medium knowledge investor (about the markets and technology). I hope they bring out a more advanced version. They decided not to go into specialized semiconductors like analog devices where enormous profits may lie in the future, because of concerns about not going over the heads of readers. A lot of the best run technology companies with enormous growth potential in markets with high bariers to competitors were not discussed in this book. I am sure most readers would be willing to spend some time learning about these other markets in order to make enormous gains.

Despite my quibbles, this is a fine book that will help all but those who are already quite knowledgeable about technology companies and technology investing. Good luck in capturing those irresistible gains in the future! Perhaps you will be the first person you know to identify the next irresistible growth enterprise!


Tom Strong
Published in Paperback by DC Comics (2001)
Authors: Alan Moore, Todd Klein, and Cam Smith
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true pulp comics.
This follows Tom Strong from his chilhood on a mysterious island where his parents trained him on a harsh gravity, to his most recent adventures as he nears the age of 100.
Teaming up with his wife, daughter, butler robot, and super smart ape.
The first three issues are okay, but it really works in the last four, showing one of the coolest characters of all time, the Pangean.
This is an okay book and if you like Alan Moore and have a few bucks, pick this up.

Alan Moore's male archetype
Alan Moore is, and deserves to be, a highly regarded author of what we should still call comic books (other names seem largely a reflex action hide embarrassment - which makes me annoyed to see them referred to as "the graphic story medium" in this book). He has in more recent years created a line of comics under the imprint "America's Best Comics", of which Tom Strong is one of those titles. This volume reprints the first seven issues of that comic.

'Tom Strong' is an attempt to render the male super hero in an archetypical form. This book has a strong science and family theme, with the male lead cast in a paternal role: Tom is a husband and a father, and has other family members around him, and he is also the leader of a society called the Strongmen of America, ordinary people who takes Tom's life as an inspiration. This book looks over the 100 years that Tom has lived to date, and throughout it he derives benefits from his family/ies and passes them on to the next generation.

What's good: Tom represents all those things we have enjoyed about many characters in the past. You'll spot echoes of Tarzan, Doc Savage, Superman, Tom Swift and many more as you read. Alan Moore has built an impressive back-story, which reveals itself slowly as the book unfolds, and everything fits together very well. Tom is also a thinker, rather than just a brawler - he overcome problems with his brain more than his fists. Tom's wife, Dhalua, and daughter, Tesla, are also fabulous characters.

What's not so good: I gave it 5 stars, so not much. My main complaint is that that many of the villains are overly stereotypical for me. With a little more effort, they could have been more rounded people. I could also have lived without the comical sidekicks, talking ape King Solomon and robot Pneuman.

Lots of thumbs up, and also check out Alan Moore's female archetype in 'Promethea'.

More than meets the eye
Don't let the talking monkey fool you.

Ditto the robot butler.

Tom Strong is a smart book.

Written by hirsute prodigy Alan Moore, this is a book about growing up. More to the point, it's a book about how Western pop culture grew up. Tracking the 20th Century as witnessed by Strong and his family (wife Dhalua, daughter Tesla, robot butler Pneumann and simian aide-de-camp King Solomon), the first collection chronicles their pulp-inspired adventures protecting the world from enemies like the Modular Man and invading forces from the Aztech Empire at the dawn of the 21st.

But don't be fooled. There's a heck of a lot more going on here.
Tom Strong is self-aware right off the bat: The first chapter tells the story of Timmy Turbo, a preteen who buys the first issue of a comic called - you guessed it - Tom Strong. As it turns out, Strong's adventures are chronicled in a series of comic books, which Moore uses as s storytelling device to clue the reader in on the family's adventures earlier in the century.
Many of the stories involve Tom Strong battling some enemy from his past, the introductions of which are chronicled in the "Untold Tales" of Tom Strong - comics-within-a-comic written and drawn in the styles of comics from decades past. The format gives the book a chance to showcase different artists, though all, I think, have well-established résumés; Dave Gibbons, Moore's partner in crime in the well-known Watchmen, makes an appearance.

But, as I said, it's not all about the pulp. There's a more profound message in Tom Strong one about how we imagine our heroes, and how that could have gone wrong, and where it didn't.
Strong is a Western pop hero in the classic sense of the word: tall, rippling biceps, Caucasian, nigh-invulnerable. But other aspects of his story aren't so typical. His wife, Dhalua, is black, and the two have a biracial daughter. His arch-enemy is Ingrid Weiss, a genetically engineered Nazi superwoman, who represents all of the evil things that Strong could have been created to be.

In this way, Strong is almost an antidote to critics who understandably charge that Western popular culture is white-centric and paternalistic. Strong may be the titular superhero as well as husband and father, but he is in no way patriarchal. On at least one occasion, it is Dhalua and Tesla who come to Tom's rescue at the hands of something far more sinister than he ever could have become. Both women are strong characters, operating as part of a family unit, but at the same time fiercely independent.

I can't say much more without giving away the ending. But in the end, all of the Strongs must do battle with the worst that humankind has to offer, and the evil that Tom could have become had he - and the people who canonized him a hero - made a few different choices.


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