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I love to read and discover new authors. I wasn't disappointed by Stuart Rice's first novel. In fact, his is a career I expect to follow and enjoy for many years to come. I can't wait to read his next one--Covenant with Eternity.
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Out of the box, Win2K will do a better job of protecting the OS than NT -- for example, the default domain group policy settings will prevent user enumeration, even though they permit null sessions (stand-alone systems, by contrast, are just as vulnerable to enumeration as NT 4.0). However, by default, the system is just as vulnerable to to attacks against legacy LM based password hashes as was NT -- this book explains how to avoid this while still maintaining compatibility with legacy consumer Windows products. And the named pipe impersonation privilege escalation exploit was one that I had not heard about. SP2 fixes it, but it's definitely something that you need to be aware of.
This book is a treasure trove of security-critical information for Win2K administrators. You will learn how to apply group policy to effectively lock down your Win2K systems against many of the attacks commonly used against Win2K. You'll get links to all kinds of freeware ranging from hacking tools to intrusion detection software so that you can assess the security of your own Win2K network. You'll learn about the vulnerabilities of IIS, SQL Server, and Terminal Server as well as how you can deploy these services securely.
This is real-world stuff. You just can't learn it by studying for 70-220. Hacking Win2K Exposed is probably the one book that I'd try to grab off the shelf if my library were on fire.
Having read the original "Hacking Exposed" in Oct 99, I knew the authors possessed strong Windows security and administration skills. HEW2K gives the Foundstone crew a way to share their knowledge with the world. Thankfully, HEW2K doesn't repeat information found in the general-purpose "Hacking Exposed." For example, HEW2K covers Windows-specific denial of service issues, but directs readers to "Hacking Exposed, Third Edition" for a broader description of DoS. The same approach is taken with social engineering and dial-up security.
The "Hacking Exposed" series differ from the "Maximum Security" and "Hack Proofing" titles. While the latter are predominantly defensive-minded, HEW2K and its cousins are more offensive in nature. Vulnerability assessors and penetration testers will appreciate this focus. I was able to immediately apply tools and techniques in HEW2K to discover at-risk hosts on client networks.
HEW2K continues to offer the best combination of command-line examples, screen shots, and sample output of any security books I've read. I could literally read, type commands, and check results against the material in HEW2K. Furthermore, HEW2K covers topics given little attention elsewhere; these include attacking and defending SQL Server, Terminal Services, and client applications. HEW2K also gives enough background on each topic, like ISAPI filters or ASP, to give unfamiliar readers enough context to understand security implications of these technologies.
HEW2K is another must-buy from Osborne McGraw-Hill. As Foundstone principles, the authors ride the cutting edge of security developments. They recognize and communicate that application security (IIS, SQL Server, etc.) is the target of choice as administrators lock down layer 4 and below. With its clear methodology, expert explanations, and inside tips, HEW2K easily differentiates itself from the pack. We readers benefit, and hopefully our adversaries will not.
(Disclaimer: I received a free review copy from the publisher.)
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The book begins where "Wilderness" left off. Grant and Lee are staring at eachother from behind strong entrenchments. The narrative proceeds to describe the armies' movements to Spotsylvania Courthouse, and as a reader, you find yourself holding you breath occassionally, asking questions like: Will Lee's men get there in time? Will Sheridan break through? etc. Rhea's style makes it very hard to put the book down while at the same time you are getting all the information and facts that you would froma text book.
As Rhea continues, he describes the 5 days of fighting in and around the Courthouse in brutal detail. He discussion of the battle on May 12th for the "Muleshoe" salient is hauntingly similar to the trench battles of WW I. No other battle in the Civil War came close to the brutality displayed there on that day. In the space of 1/2 mile, 17,000 soldiers fell, and Rhea's description leaves and indelible mark on a reader's mind.
The book itself is well constructed. The chapters are a bit long, but not too bad. There are many maps that give a clear picture of the action. As an added bonus, there is also an in-depth discussion of the Battle of Yellow Tavern, where Jeb Stuart was killed. All these, plus extensive endnotes, combine to make "The Battles for Spotsylvania Courthouse" the very best in Civil War battle history. Definitely a must own for any Civil War buff, or military historian in general.
Not only Spotsylvania but the tragic cavalry battle at Yellow Tavern are covered here. Relevant to this, no other study I have seen, not even bios of Stuart, brings out Stuart and his troopers' role in initially forming the crucial defensive line on Laurel Hill and then deploying the infantry in ideal positions. Little known, but perhaps one of Stuart's finest hours.
Rhea seems even-handed ideologically speaking, and his criticisms of Grant and Sheridan seem well supported by the facts. I would recommend this book not only to scholars but to amateurs who want to know why the Civil War was a horrible conflict. This is not light reading. It is a story of appalling human suffering, courage, and unbelievable sheer endurance.
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Musically and dramatically, it is Mozart's greatest opera. From the striking Overture to the use of dark strings, trumpet and soaring flute passages, the individual arias which express intense emotions to the neverending theme that good triumphs over evil, the Magic Flute stands out as a great opera to begin with for newcomers and a favorite for old time opera fans.
In this recording, conductor Wolfgang Sawallisch leads the Bavarian State Orchestra in a highly effective, thoroughly dramatic and sentimental, full interpretation of Mozart's score. Tenor Peter Schreir as Tamino is exceptional, passionate in his aria "Dies Bildnis" (This portrait), and again as he plays his flute in "Wie Stark ist Nicht dein Zauberton" (How powerful is your music, magic flute), his individual lines in the ensembles and his duet with Pamina as they undergo the final trial of fire. Annelise Rothenberger, a sublime German lyric soprano, is moving in her portrayal of Pamina. She has her moments in this recording. Note how her high, melodic voice seems to come from nowhere as she confronts Sarastro and Tamino for the first time "Herr! Ich bin zwar Verbrecherin ! (Sir! I am the transgressor). Her aria "Ach Ich Fuhls" (O, I feel that happy days have passed) is the finest interpretation, full of pathos and a kind of melancholic madness, as well as her lines in her suicide attempt, finally, she is sublime as a strong woman ready to face trials with Tamino, especially striking when she sings the line "Tamino!".
Kurt Moll's Sarastro is without question the best. His voice is suited for God. So divine and sonorous and full of grace, his voice is especially noticeable in the aria "O Isis and Osiris " and "In deisen Heilen Hallen"( In these holy halls). Finally, and not to be missed, is Edda Moser's incredible interpretation of the Queen of the Night. You have not heard the true Queen of the Night, until you've heard Edda Moser. She has a Wagnerian intensity and neurosis in her lines, apt and effective for the role of a Queen bent on deception and the murder of her rival, Sarastro. Her aria "O Zittre Nicht, Mein Lieber Son" (O tremble not, beloved son" is full of lyric dramatic passages and coloratura at the end. The vengeance aria "Der Holle Rache Kocht Meine Herzen "(Hell's Anger Burns Within My Heart) is full of fire. The way she attacks the dramatic, powerful lines is out of this world and the high F's she escalates are unsurpassed.
In view of this, it is sad to see this beautiful recording issued in association with a perfectly vile and disrespectful book about the opera. The author has the temerity to liken this work to "a Broadway musical", "a rollicking entertainment for the common man" simply because it was composed as a Singspiel, or German opera with spoken dialogue. This is equivalent to likening one of Shakespeare's comedies to a street farce. The book also suggests that Zauberflöte was composed for purposes of pure entertainment, unless it is, perchance, a "work of profound insight" dressed up in the trappings of a "cartoon". Obviously, the writer is ignorant of the significance of the Egyptian setting in the time of Mozart, when it was a clear symbol for rational ideas and liberal politics. The details of the setting delineate the struggle which was then taking place in Europe, over the true nature of Masonry, philosophy and music, and which soon came to a terrible end, for that time at least, with the banning of Freemasonry in Austria, and the loss of much of the learning about ancient philosophy which had been so laboriously gathered in circles such as that frequented by Mozart. It is largely on account of Zauberflöte, which alludes with precision to much of that learning, that it was not entirely annihilated in the chaos of the revolutionary and Napoleonic periods. Rather than misrepresenting this vitally important work, those who have the privilege of coming into contact with it should do all in their power to contribute to the very difficult, vital, and continuing attempt to understand it. While the availability of this recording is of great value, it is scandalous to see it associated with a contribution to the generally prevailing ignorance about this extremely important, and very difficult, work.
An irate Mozartian
In view of this, it is sad to see this beautiful recording issued in association with a perfectly vile and disrespectful book about the opera. The author has the temerity to liken this work to "a Broadway musical", "a rollicking entertainment for the common man" simply because it was composed as a Singspiel, or German opera with spoken dialogue. This is equivalent to likening one of Shakespeare's comedies to a street farce. The book also suggests that Zauberflöte was composed for purposes of pure entertainment, unless it is, perchance, a "work of profound insight" dressed up in the trappings of a "cartoon". Obviously, the writer is ignorant of the significance of the Egyptian setting in the time of Mozart, when it was a clear symbol for rational ideas and liberal politics. The details of the setting delineate the struggle which was then taking place in Europe, over the true nature of Masonry, philosophy and music, and which soon came to a terrible end, for that time at least, with the banning of Freemasonry in Austria, and the loss of much of the learning about ancient philosophy which had been so laboriously gathered in circles such as that frequented by Mozart. It is largely on account of Zauberflöte, which alludes with precision to much of that learning, that it was not entirely annihilated in the chaos of the revolutionary and Napoleonic periods. Rather than misrepresenting this vitally important work, those who have the privilege of coming into contact with it should do all in their power to contribute to the very difficult, vital, and continuing attempt to understand it. While the availability of this recording is of great value, it is scandalous to see it associated with a contribution to the generally prevailing ignorance about this extremely important, and very difficult, work.
An irate Mozartian
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But, as the title suggests, the primary thrust of this book is not so much Henry VIII as each of his unfortunate wives. One learns a great deal more about them than the usual lines given by armchair historians. For example, "saintly" Jane Seymour, usually depicted as a meek and mild young thing, was just as much a deliberate factor in the downfall of Anne Boleyn as her royal husband-to-be. And as one reads about Anne Boleyn's temper, one teeters between sympathy for her and ... a vague feeling that perhaps Henry beheaded her not so much for failing to produce an heir as to get her to shut up and cease her constant nagging and ill-tempered outbursts. (Of course, then you swing back into Anne's camp, figuring anyone living with someone like Henry would be ill-tempered ... or perhaps worse!)
And so it goes ...
Fascinating, chock full of details of court life and rife with facts from many primary sources, Alison Weir's account of Henry VIII and his wives remains a standard of its genre.
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The mystery is very good. I never know whether Alex is really Alex or not until the very end. And Anne Stuart writes very well.
And I find the characters memorable as well. The dear heroine initially is a doormat, but gradually she regains her backbone. The hero is an intriguing rogue. They make me smile.
Shadow Lover was another Anne Stuart masterpeice. Dark, powerful, with many twists and turns. Eighteen years earlier, Alex MacDowell ran away leaving a distraut mother and Carolyn, the foster child. Now that his mother is on her deathbed, he's back. Is it the real Alex, or an imposter?
Throughout her childhood Carolyn Smith idolized Alex, even though he tormented her. On the night he left, Carolyn followed him to the beach and watched as someone shot him and murdered him. Now another Alex is in the picture and Carolyn has fallen in love with him. Has she fallen in love with an imposter?
Anne Stuart's Shadow Lover is one of those books that grab you from the beginning and you can't put it down until all questions are answered. This is a hands down must read!
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Wilde's style, as ever, is populist and jokey, but the message is uncompromising: you have to take complete responsibility for your life if you want to avoid repeating old patterns that cause suffering, if you want to put ego in its rightful place. He is very good at exposing the ego-gratifying and change-inhibiting nature of (most) organized religion. Wilde uses ancient Daoist teachings and insights as his starting point, but gives them a contemporary flavor. His idea of the God Force may sound New Agey but, in spite of first appearances, this is no milk-and-water spirituality.
And yet, even as I continue to cherish Wilde's work, I come increasingly to the view that he is one-sided in discussing what he calls the God Force: the Dao, the Divine Essence, God, etc. Although he is not a conventional New Ager, he strikes me as naive in assuming the universe to be necessarily benign. Single-mindedness and purity of heart (difficult as they are to achieve) are not enough; we often do not get what we bargain for. One should approach the living God with fear and trembling and limitless humility. The tone of this book is a too light, too bright, too self-regarding; there is not enough of the otherness of God (even the God-within-us), of the shadow we do not see and most certainly do not want. Perhaps Wilde knows more from his spiritual explorations than he tells the reader here, and maybe this book already serves a valuable purpose. I am certainly grateful for it.
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The author is a very decent guy too. I wrote to him and, a few weeks later, I got a hand-written reply. Such gestures are not commonplace and I never expected it.
This book and the follow up title, is worth every penny: it's about training smart and how to avoid wasting your time and energy on useless exercises. Buy it!