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Book reviews for "Richards,_John" sorted by average review score:

Sinatra: An Intimate Portrait of a Very Good Year
Published in Hardcover by Stewart, Tabori & Chang (2002)
Authors: John Dominis and Richard B. Stolley
Amazon base price: $21.00
List price: $30.00 (that's 30% off!)
Average review score:

SINATRA FANS THIS IS A MUST!
I LOVE this book. It's a collectors item no doubt. Pics of Frank that you've never seen before. Classics with Frank and Jackie Gleason and Sammy Davis jr. Frank at his house, on the massage table, in private places never seen. You can tell he wasn't posing for these pics. All naturally which is why it is so unique. And the texts keeps you wanting to roll thru the book without putting it down. What a life he had! What a book this is!!

Michael Brandmeier


The Singing Bird Will Come: An AIDS Journal
Published in Paperback by Canticle Pr (1997)
Authors: John Richard Noonan, Mary Rose Noonan, and Daniel Berrigan
Amazon base price: $10.95
Average review score:

A "must read" for all who want to face death with courage
The Singing Bird Will Come is a remarkable book by a man who is truly in touch with himself as he struggles with the reality of death. His strong desire to continue to celebrate life as he prepares to die makes a lasting impression on the reader. How the author comes to grips with communicating his journey is the focus of the book. He seems to follow Kubler-Ross's stages of death--denial, anger, bargaining with God, depression and finally, acceptance. He feels it is especially ironic that he has to come to accept his dying so soon after he had come to accept himself as a gay man. This story captures the well-balanced tension John Noonan experiences between continuing daily living and thinking of eternity. I recommend it highly for caregivers, service providers, and all of us who will prepare to die someday.


Sleisenger and Fordtran's Gastrointestinal and Liver Disease: Pathophysiology/Diagnosis/ Management
Published in Hardcover by W B Saunders (15 August, 1998)
Authors: Mark Feldman, Bruce F. Scharschmidt, Marvin H. Sleisenger, John S. Fordtran, and Richard Zorab
Amazon base price: $229.00
Average review score:

Truely a Work of Art !!!
There was a lacuna in the field of gastroenterology but with the introduction of this masterpiece, that gap too has been filled. Amazing insight and utmost simplicity of presentation has made this a prized posession, at least in my collection and I hope that it will be so for many many people across the globe.


South Bronx hall of fame : sculpture by John Ahearn and Rigoberto Torres
Published in Unknown Binding by Contemporary Arts Museum ; Distributed by University of Washington Press ()
Author: Richard Goldstein
Amazon base price: $
Average review score:

Terrific
This is a much needed and enjoyable book. Although not terribly well written (in that trendy, almost-clever way), it covers material that must not be neglected. Rigoberto Torres is a treasure.


The Spirit of Anglicanism: Hooker, Maurice, Temple
Published in Paperback by Morehouse Publishing (1986)
Authors: William J. Wolf, Owen C. Thomas, and John E. Booty
Amazon base price: $9.95
Average review score:

A developing spirit...
William Wolf's book explores the diversity of theological development in the Anglican Communion by bringing together descriptions and analyses of three major Anglican thinkers'Hooker, Maurice, and Temple'to illustrate both historical development and breadth of range of what can be classified as 'Anglican' theology. Wolf concedes that there are many other theologians who might have been included; the Anglican Communion doesn't have a definitive person (apart from Jesus Christ)''the Anglican Communion sets aside no special authoritative place for a great reforming figure such as Luther or Calvin'' (p. 137) Wolf also states that 'the Communion has unfortunately produced no systematic theologians of the first rank.' (p. 137). That being said, the theological thoughts and development presented for Hooker, Maurice, and Temple illustrate the branching streams that feed Anglicanism today, a stream that continues to branch forward.

Richard Hooker
Hooker was alive and active as a theologian during a tumultuous period in the development of the Church of England as a distinct body. Politics entered into church affairs on a grand scale; the idea that church and state issues were one in the same was as strong in England in the sixteenth century as it ever was in any continental kingdom or empire. Religious tolerance was a new concept, imperfectly conceived; the idea that each kingdom must be united in religious practice was strong. Hooker was an active apologist for the Church of England, his main opponent being the Puritan factions. 'Hooker's magnum opus was addressed to Puritans who attacked the church of England in the name of a purer, more scriptural ecclesiastical settlement.' (p. 9)

F.D. Maurice
Maurice would agree with Hooker that prayer is social action. Working in the nineteenth century, Maurice was exposed to the social ills that befell England as an imperial power in simultaneous growth and decay. The situation in society was deteriorating. 'Maurice saw that this social breakdown was rooted in a theological breakdown.' (p. 50) Maurice was unique in that he lived a prophetic life (and, like many prophetic persons, was often disliked for his prophecy). He made 'Christology the starting point of all Christian theology and ethics' and made Christ the central focus of all he said and did. (p. 49) Maurice made the Gospel the centrepoint of his educational philosophy, as well as the call not for revolution, but for regeneration of English society upon a truly Christian foundation. (pp. 64-67)

Maurice's view of theology is, like Hooker and Temple, rooted firmly in the communal action of the Book of Common Prayer. 'The Prayer Book becomes the key for understanding the views of the Church of England on the six signs of the Catholic Church,' these six signs being baptism, creeds, forms of worship, eucharist, ordained ministry, and the Bible. (p. 61) This practical and tradition approach was in keeping with the general spirit of the English society. 'Maurice expressed both English empiricism against the conceptualism of continental thinkers and the Anglican's respect for historical institutions as points of departure for theological analysis.' (p. 72)

William Temple
Temple was, in the words of G.B. Shaw, 'a realised impossibility.' A man born and raised in the church, he rose to the position of Archbishop of Canterbury and made the broad church appeal for Anglicanism that renewed its spirit for the mid-twentieth century. 'The general tendency of his faith and theology was toward a more catholic or orthodox position. But this was always balanced by his concern for freedom in doctrine and by his generally liberal attitude of mind.' (p. 104) Temple saw an intimate connection with God through Jesus Christ, perhaps thinking in proto-process theological terms by believing that 'because of Jesus' perfect union and communion with God, it can be asserted that in him God has a real experience of human life, suffering and death.' (p. 112) For Temple, this communion and experience is worked out both individually and communally''the inner unity of complete personality and the outer unity of a perfected fellowship as wide as humanity.' (p. 117)

Temple felt it important to be open to new ideas and developments modernity (perhaps a reaction to having been raised in an era with the expectation of long-term stability and subsequently living in a world turned upside-down by warfare and other social change). Temple felt that freedom of churches and freedom of individuals for inquiry and development, with the guidance of the Spirit, was more important than a rigid adherence to tradition. 'Temple was quite open to the new truth and insights of the modern world and to the critical and constructive use of reason in Christian faith and life. this can be seen clearly in his commitment to philosophic truth.' (p. 133) This, coupled with his call to social action by the church and the working out of Christian faith in everyday life and action, made Temple a major ecumenical figure.

The Current Spirit of Anglicanism
A key word for the current spirit of Anglicanism is comprehensiveness. Anglicanism incorporates catholics and protestants, literalists and agnostics, high church, low church, broad church, in all ways these terms can be defined. 'The Anglican synthesis is the affirmation of a paradoxical unity, a prophetic intuition that Catholicism and Protestantism'are not ultimately irreconcilable.' (p. 143)

The current spirit of Anglicanism is largely based upon Scripture, tradition and reason, with definitions of these three varying a great deal. The authority of Scripture is important, but this does not mean a literalist view. The authority of tradition, best summed up by adherence to the Book of Common Prayer's liturgical forms, is locally adaptable. Reason is used to interpret both the authority of Scripture and of tradition, but must be held in restraint by these as well. 'The spirit of Anglicanism ought in its rich resources to find the wisdom to retain its identity and yet to develop through constructive change to meet the demands of the fast-approaching world of the twenty-first century.' (p. 187)


Study Guide to Accompany Psychology and Life
Published in Paperback by Harpercollins College Div (1999)
Authors: Richard J.. Gerrig, John Caruso, and Philip G. Zimbardo
Amazon base price: $38.00
Average review score:

wonderful
I couldn't have gotten the A- I did in Intro Psych without this book...good job prof Gerrig


Telinde's Operative Gynecology
Published in Hardcover by Lippincott Williams & Wilkins Publishers (15 January, 1997)
Authors: Richard W. Te Linde, John D. Thompson, and Rock
Amazon base price: $149.00
Average review score:

Excellent text-book for teaching gynecological surgery
Outstanding and most complete description of most important subjects in relation with the teaching of gynecological surgery, ideal for medical students and residents. Specially important, there is a chapter on ethics and gynecological surgery.


Theory of Algebraic Integers
Published in Paperback by Cambridge Univ Pr (Pap Txt) (1996)
Authors: Richard Dedekind and John Stillwell
Amazon base price: $28.00
Average review score:

Emmy Noether called it a must-read
This is Dedekind's famous creation of the theory of (algebraic number) rings and modules, as an appendix to his edition of Dirichlet's LECTURES ON NUMBER THEORY. In fact it went through several editions, and Noether insisted that her students read every edition of it. Her watchword was "It is all in Dedekind", meaning largely this work. And she was right, in a very deep sense the whole modern approach to abstract algebra is in Dedekind, though it took her phenomenal genius to *find* it there. Anyone knowing the basic modern ideas of rings and modules can read this with pleasure, both as the origins of abstract algebra with many fine insights to offer, and as a connection to the concrete motives. Of course Dedekind wrote for people who did not know such things. But he assumed they would think very, very hard. He also assumed some arithmetic ideas not widely taught today, but nicely explained in Stillwell's preface. Dedekind is a wonderful writer, well served here by a clear translation. You are apt to fall in love with this book, and want to accompany it with Dirichlet's own LECTURES ON NUMBER THEORY, written up by Dedekind, and also translated to english by Stillwell.


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
Amazon base price: $150.00
Average review score:

contens of the I want to read
The main contents of the book,please


Tolkien Criticism: An Annotated Checklist (The Serif Series: Bibliographies and Checklists, No. 39)
Published in Hardcover by Kent State Univ Pr (1981)
Author: Richard C. West
Amazon base price: $27.50
Average review score:

Good descriptive bibliography
This is the 1981 2nd edition of Richard West's excellent descriptive bibliography of Tolkien criticism. While it's not as comprehensive as Judith Johnson's 1986 bibliography of the same, and while it lacks the useful year-by-year organization of the same, it is much more descriptive. The major works of criticized are summaried in substantial detail and the cross-references are particularly good. I'd consider both this and the Johnson bibliography to be essential for any Tolkien scholar-- it's only a shame that neither's been updated for over 15 years!


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