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

Puppetry of the Penis: The Ancient Australian Art of Genital Origami
Published in Hardcover by Corgi / Transworld Pub Inc (2000)
Authors: Morley, David Friend, and Simon Morley
Amazon base price: $19.95
Average review score:

Hysterically funny
This book is just the thing to bring a little genital excitement into your dull, drab, wretched life. It proves beyond a shadow of a foreskin that it is a phallacy that the penis can't be funny. The authors' hilarious exhibit of penis performance art is guaranteed to drive all your inadequacies away. My favorite is the puppet with the pop-up feature. This is one of the funniest and most entertaining books I've ever seen. I'd love to see the show if it ever comes around to my obscure and vanishing corner of America's sexual landscape.

Challenging
While detailed and imaginative, "Puppetry of the Penis: The Ancient Australian Art of Genital Origami", is only the tip of Simon Morley and David Friend's fascinating show of penis-art. This book explores the many different shapes and positions the penis can be temporarily molded into. And thank you Morley and Friend, for rising to the occasion, and putting your penis-art in a book, for the world to see.

Many of these penis-puppets are hard to accomplish without lots of practice. The "Hamburger", "Hot Dog and a Bun", and the "Loch Ness Monster" are among the more challenging puppets to create, but you'll have plenty of fun trying.

Don't be ashamed to take matters into your own hands, and buy "Puppetry of the Penis", today!

Oh my goodness I'll never leave the house again
Well what can I say about this fabulous book. Before I read this book my life was dull, imcomplete but through this book I discovered that my penis was not an inanimate peice of flesh just hanging there in between my legs but a instument of pleaseure that I can share with many people through the magic of puppetry! It is no longer the dull slip of skin that was but an all singing ,all dancing Marionette of mirth!
I've already been putting on puppet shows for all my friends and family and so far they have been delighted.I would wholeheartedly recommend this book to everyman everywhere.


How Would You Survive As an Ancient Egyptian?
Published in Library Binding by Bt Bound (2001)
Authors: Jaqueline Morley, Jacqueline Morley, David Salariya, and John James
Amazon base price: $16.10
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How Would You Survive As an Ancient Egyptian?
I had to use this book as a report on Ancient Egypt. It had so much information on everything that I needed. It had information on mummies, life, and gods, and more all in this book. If it wasn't for this book I wouldn't be hear with a good grade.

How Would You Survive As An Ancient Egyptian?
As an educator and parent, I found this book to be phenomenol! The kids in my classroom were fascinated by all the details and illustrations that show what it was really like to be an Egyptian on a daily basis. It has a "quiz" at the end of the book that's fun to take to test your skills as to what you learned. This book really takes you back to Egypt and helps you put your own two feet into the real world of Egypt! Superb detail on every subject; housing, foods, typical daily life, women in society, mummification. Just wonderful!


How Would You Survive in the American West
Published in Library Binding by Bt Bound (1997)
Authors: Jacqueline Morley, David Salariya, and David Antram
Amazon base price: $16.10
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Excellent Home School Resource!
Excellent Homeschool resourse for my Learning disabled Child on the Oregon Trail and Settlers. This is all visual, and Cause and effect is easy to understand in this titles' format. The great aspects of this book is the feelings of the native peoples along the way are taken into consideration, and also significatly the way this Path took its toil in the women of the movement westward. Very senstive! We used the PC game "Oregon Trail" ( latest edition) to introduce the subject, which excites them to want to know more once they get invested in the game, and this text explains for a 11-year old, pretty much all the other issues in a three-dimentional aspect that the PC game does not even touch. The PC game Oregon Trial rasied alot fo questions that this book answers fully. So glad I found this series! I used this for my 11-year old whom is learning disabled, but most children younger can also benefit from this text in addtion to regular school studies on the subject.

History of the American West for the budding MTV generation
This is a fabulous book. As a museum educator I am always on the look out for a children's book that will hold the kids interest and get them excited about history. This is the book!

The layout is great. It is almost as if the authors took the concept of computer interactives and laid them out on paper. That may not sounds terribly enticing but it is -- and it works. The information is thoughtfully prepared and presented in a way that kids should love. Questions at the bottom of each page encourage kids to jump from one topic to another as they make their journey, by covered wagon, across the American West. All the hazards and pitfalls are included, along with several vingettes of the daily life of various members of a wagon train. This is a book that shows history as vital, exciting and human.


The Anatomy Lesson/a Novel
Published in Hardcover by St. Martin's Press (1995)
Author: John David Morley
Amazon base price: $21.95
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Collectible price: $3.42
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A haunting, disquieting novel
An exploration of the dark sides. Very disquieting images. Addictive stuff.


Exploring North America
Published in Hardcover by Peter Bedrick Books (09 March, 2002)
Authors: Jacqueline Morley and David Antram
Amazon base price: $18.95
Used price: $11.03
Collectible price: $11.11
Average review score:

Excellent book
Shows simple maps of explorers routes into North America. Colorful illustrations, brief but meaningful texts, realistic descriptions of the way natives were treated by various groups that came to conquer. Overall, is great for even 7yos!


Pictures from the water trade : an Englishman in Japan
Published in Unknown Binding by A. Deutsch ()
Author: John David Morley
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Rigorous, exhausting, enthralling
I don't remember where I got a copy of "Pictures of the Water Trade," or why, but I know I haven't lost track of it since.

"Pictures" is a fictionalized account of the author's experience in moving, as a young man, to Japan, and his experience of 'turning Japanese.' He passes through several stages of understanding, incomprehension, accepatance and rejection, examining his feelings and reactions through the prizm of the Japanese language. He explores how concepts and metaphors embedded in a language can change the perception of someone who immerses themselves in it completely. His relationships with co-workers, his roomate and a girlfriend detail these changes. I recall a scene in which he realizes he has begun to bow when on the telephone, and he understands how his personality is changing in response to culture.

This is a poignant and intellectually challenging work. John David Morley alternates personal, illustrative events from his life with detailed explanations of sociology and linguistics. I am reminded of authors like Neal Stephenson, and Noam Chomsky. Strange and heady company.

Stunningly soulful, stylish and insightful
If John David Morley's use of English does not bring a gasp of pleasure then the contents of his work certainly will. If you have the slightest interest in things Japanese then you are sure to enjoy this remarkable journey of cultural exploration seen through the eyes of a fictional Englishman. It seems very real, and for those who have traveled in Japan the context is set so perfectly. But more than that, it provides delicately woven connections and insights into a whole fabric of Japanese society of which most Westerners will never be aware. Perhaps the author's fluency in Japanese helps him unravel the thinking behind many interpersonal and cultural patterns which otherwise remain opaque to outsiders. To me the book was emotive, and real, with a captivating web of characters and a motion which maintained my interest to the last page.


The Ancient Egyptians
Published in Hardcover by Peter Bedrick Books (09 March, 2002)
Authors: Jacqueline Morley, Mark Bergin, John James, and David Salariya
Amazon base price: $10.47
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A Small Book With Big Information
The book is small but is packed full of a lot of useful information. Kerr describes diverse aspects of the ancient Egyptian civilization featuring such topics as the division and farming of their land, the typical Egyptian family life, their houses and homes, the pharaoh's duties and his court, entertainment, religious beliefs including the afterlife, government and war, and the last Egyptian pyramid built. The inclusion of a concise description of the life of men, women, and children was a nice aspect of the book. Kerr explains that two of the main resons we know so much about life in ancient Egypt is because of the ancient Egyptian artifacts and writings of people who traveled through Egypt at that time. She also briefly explains techniques modern archaeologists use to try to preserve what remains of ancient Egypt. All of the colorful illustrations are clearly explained with small captions and complement the information presented in the easy to read text. The table of contents at the beginning and a glossary of fourteen useful words along with an index at the end are all included in the book. These useful tools help the reader to efficiently and effectively navigate the book. This is a great book with a wide variety of useful information and is written concisely using easy to read language. It would be an excellent resource to help students begin their studies about the ancient Egyptian civilization and possibly interest them into exploring more.


Cultural Studies and Communications
Published in Hardcover by Edward Arnold (1996)
Authors: James Curran, Valerie Walkerdine, and David Morley
Amazon base price: $59.95
Average review score:

cultural studies...an introduction
This book offers an excellent introduction into the world of cultural studies. Written by some of the most renowned scholars in the field, it discusses the key issues raised in the explorations of contemporary culture: identity and communication, cultural production and consumption, postmodernism. An important book for anyone seeking a multiparadigmatic representation of current social science debates on the "old" notion of CULTURE.

Ozren Pupovac, University of Zagreb, Croatia


In the Labyrinth
Published in Hardcover by Atlantic Monthly Press (1986)
Author: John David Morley
Amazon base price: $2.98
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Collectible price: $4.19
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Haunting account of a businessman & his post war retribution
This is a factual account of the post war justice and subsequent imprisonment meeted out to a pro German (Nazi) businessman by the Soviets. But it is by no means simply an account of hardship and imprisonment suffered by a man who hoped to be apolitical but a haunting picture of how political situations interact with personal morality and family relationships to form a life. More than any other book that I have read this account asks What should a good man do? in situations in which all good men are endangered. This book, in my view, should have made JD Morley's reputation totally secure as a great writer.


The Other Side of the Moon: The Life of David Niven
Published in Hardcover by HarperCollins (1985)
Author: Sheridan Morley
Amazon base price: $18.95
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A fair and unbiased biography
Sheridan Morley's biography of David Niven is a more concise an indepth look at the British actor's life and career than that portrayed by Niven in his own autobiography "The Moons a balloon". As Morley points out Niven writes more about his Hollywood experiences then actually about himself, creating a narrative that delves superficially in terms to his own life story as to that of his famous friends. Morley is an equitable writer who provides a fair and detailed account of the man and actor who was always slightly bemused by his own success. Morley offers no nasty hidden skeletons in the Niven closet but does clarify those stories that the actor alluded to in his books, especially the affair he had with Merle Oberon and the traumatic mental breakdowns that plagued Vivian Leigh. An interesting biography of a truly charming man.


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