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Book reviews for "Oliver,_Anthony" sorted by average review score:

Catastrophe & Culture: The Anthropology of Disaster (School of American Research Advanced Seminar Series)
Published in Paperback by School of American Research Press (2002)
Authors: Susanna M. Hoffman and Anthony Oliver-Smith
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Superb Focus on Culture Underlying Catastrophe


This is one of those books where the Amazon.com referal system worked for me. I would never have found it otherwise. It is a timely book, and it has direct relevance to the 9-11 catastrophe because everything this book talks about in terms of "cultures of catastrophe" (one could call them cultures of oblivion or cultures of inattention) resonates with the findings of the joint congressional panel on the many ways in which the CIA, FBI, and NSA failed America.

What most engaged me about this book, apart from its outstanding attention to the relationship between cultures of inattention or distraction and major catastrophic events (the book makes clear that catastrophe's don't have to happen--they make the jump from disasters when the over-all system of first responders and related parties fails to act quickly and correctly in harmony, precisely because of their past culture), is its focus on the total system, on every feature of society in relation to the environment.

The editors write: "One of the common sources of the policy-practice defect is its construction on culturally bound assumptions. In disaster contexts, aid often gets delivred in inappropriate forms and according to unsuited principles." The book excells at looking at the uneven record of disaster preparedness, and the lack of understanding to local contexts that often help turn disasters into catastrophes.

I recommend this book as a primary reference for national security practitioners as well as state & local responders. The ... billions now in the Homeland Security budget was not designed with this book's lessons in mind, and will in all likelihood do more damage than good when we are tested again.

The message of the book is so important it merits emphasis--no amount of money is going to prevent catastrophe--absent a commitment to creating a culture of attention and interoperability and information sharing, we will create our own catastrophes each time we are challenged by what could have been nothing more than a localized disaster.


A short history of Africa
Published in Unknown Binding by Collings ()
Author: Roland Anthony Oliver
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Well-written, concise, informative
I read the 1966 (second)edition of this volume and was not aware of updates until opening this site. Despite much political and demographic change in Africa over the last 30-odd years, and despite the availability of much more research and the advent of DNA-based studies, not even heard of in 1966, I found Oliver and Fage's work a pleasure to read. Their chapters are intelligently organized, the flow of ideas and trends unblemished by superfluous detail or tedious asides. The entire continent is covered, North Africa as well as Sub-Saharan, though personally, I felt a little more could have been said about Madagascar. As a reader without a professional stake in African history, I found this book just the thing. It raised many issues that I had not thought of, told me about many patterns and issues of which I had known nothing, and did so in clear, concise language which kept my interest throughout. I strongly recommend this book to anyone interested in African history. I myself will look for an updated edition to see what the authors say about the last third of a century.


Lonely Planet Germany (Germany, 3rd Ed)
Published in Paperback by Lonely Planet (2002)
Authors: Andrea Schulte-Peevers, Andrew Bender, Angela Cullen, Anthony Haywood, and Jeanne Oliver
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Be careful-is this really what you need?
I travel a lot and compare guides a lot. I have used and enjoyed other Lonely Planet guides for other countries successfully. This one was a real disappointment. It is thorough, but does not really teach you to prioritize your time, or compare routes. It is intensely geared towards rail and bus travelers, but many things in Germany are worth renting a car to see--in which case the book will not cover those areas at all. Hotels chosen by the book will be in relation to train stations--which aren't always either a good deal or a restful place to stay. Add that to the fact it's heavy, and you'll be shlepping a lot of useless information unless you're spending the whole year there...

Lonely Planet Germany (Germany, 2nd Ed)
Great book. Lots of nice information. Compact design so you can actually travel with it. The Frommer's book I just bought is already falling apart! A nice bonus is the history section at the start.

comprehensive and hands-on guide
I have read this book and it offers a thorough and helpful view over germany. Its advices are good and mistakes from previous lonely planet guides have been corrected. Its maps are impressive and its hints, sincere and advantegeous


The Elberg Collection
Published in Paperback by Fawcett Books (1986)
Author: Anthony Oliver
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Bizarre crime, good detective
A couple vacationing in France go for a walk along the beach. Somehow they catch fire and burn to death. How did it happen? The police are satisfied it was a freak accident, but the couple's daughter doesn't believe it. She hired ex-CID detective John Webber to find out what really happened.

After such a bizarre opening, it takes good, solid detection to find out the identity of the killer. I found the story and characers very interesting, but sometime the story moved a little slow. I skipped around during some of the descriptive parts. Although this story is old and out of print, if you do come across it, you may enjoy it. But it wasn't so great that I'd recommend scouring the used bookstores until you find it.


Marienburg: Sold Down the River (Warhammer Fantasy Roleplay)
Published in Mass Market Paperback by Hogshead Publishing Ltd (01 August, 1999)
Authors: Anthony Ragan, Ralph Horsley, Tony Ackland, Oliver Bancroft, Pete Knifton, Russ Nicholson, James. Wallis, and Danny. Willis
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Great Book!
The book describes the city, her quarters, habitants, history, gods, dangers and "stars" in a soberb way. The adventure with happens in a market chash is very good too. The ONLY drawback of the book in my oppinion are the pictures who are inferior to Warhammer FRP standards. Anyway the book surely worth the price.


Africa since 1800
Published in Paperback by Cambridge Univ Pr (Pap Txt) (1994)
Authors: Roland Oliver and Anthony Atmore
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short and dense
Weighing in at less than three hundred pages on a history as convoluted and mysterious to Americans as that of Africa it still manages to convey at massive amounts of information. This is also it's main weakness dumping extras like style and readability it gets incredibly frustrating at times. The subject is fascinating though. The sections on the approaches taken by the various holding countries to release their holdings and transfer rule are fascinating.


The African experience
Published in Unknown Binding by ()
Author: Roland Anthony Oliver
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Africa 101
Roland Oliver's second edition of this useful book offers good chapters on Africa in the 1990s and an essay about its future as well as and excellent overview of African history. Oliver is expert and thurough. The book is well organized and on the whole interesting. However, because it is an overview the book picks up subjects and drops them in a page or two often after offering just enough to generate genuine interest. This is of course to be expected, but would be more forgivable if the author had included a list of books to read for more information on specific subjects or a bibliographic essay. More troubling is Oliver's tendency to apologize too much for the colonial powers that divided and subjugated Africa. Still, the book is valuable and lives up to its billing.


Africa in the Days of Exploration.
Published in Paperback by Prentice Hall (1965)
Author: Roland Anthony, Ed. Oliver
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The African Middle Ages, 1400-1800
Published in Paperback by Cambridge Univ Pr (Pap Txt) (1981)
Authors: Roland Oliver and Anthony Atmore
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The Almanac of Hawaii
Published in Paperback by Mutual Publishing (1993)
Author: Anthony M. Oliver
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