Used price: $1.00
Collectible price: $7.39
Buy one from zShops for: $1.00
"Cassandra's daughter" reads like a story with a beginning, middle & end, & not at all like a dry, boring history. From the beginnings of psychoanalysis with Sigmund Freud, to today's struggles & questions, Schwartz makes a good case of why psychoanalysis is important & interesting. He talks about what its contributions have been so far, & what kind of contributions it can make from now on. Sure, certain "schools" of psychoanalysis are given less space than others in the book. And it's also true that Schwartz has strong opinions & expresses them clearly, showing his own preferances, & using arguments to support his views: but I don't find this negative--on the contrary, it's refreshing to read a history written from a particular point of view. After all, histories are always written from a particular point of view, even when there's a big struggle towards a so-called "objectivity": Schwartz has no such illusions, & writes making his own voice very clear. It's much more 'fresh' & original this way, since it's one thing to simply & dryly describe the facts--& another thing to try to explain the facts, giving meaning to the story & the events.
Used price: $0.99
Collectible price: $9.59
Buy one from zShops for: $15.95
one-sided: Volkov keeps up with Brodsky just fine, so it's like listening in on a tete-a-tete between two brilliant minds. If you like Brodsky you will love this book.
Used price: $12.50
Buy one from zShops for: $24.28
List price: $16.98 (that's 30% off!)
Used price: $129.99
List price: $10.95 (that's 20% off!)
Used price: $4.74
Buy one from zShops for: $7.61
List price: $34.95 (that's 30% off!)
Used price: $17.08
Buy one from zShops for: $15.42
But this book, more than any other, helped turn me into an actual perl programmer. It covers the basics- things like 'use "$_" implcitly whenever possible, but don't refer to it explicitly if you don't have to'. There's a good description of slurp mode. And it covers those neat little tricks, like using:
($a,$b)[$a<$b]
to return the greater of two scalars.
It's not a book for the absolute beginner. But once you've written a few programs and start wondering why your perl doesn't look like that written by the perl gurus, this is the book to get.
I've been programming with Perl since 1992 and teach it at a community college. And yet with every turn of the page, I learned something new. Examples:
Making regular expressions more efficient
Using map() and grep()
How to call a subroutine from inside a string
Great stuff! The techniques I've learned from this book have been incorporated into my new Perl scripts and they are shorter and faster than ever before.
I can't lavish enough praise on this book. Authors Joseph Hall and Randal Schwartz should be commended. If you have been using Perl for some time and want to hone your skills, get this book now.
It is different from its closest counterpart, "Perl Cookbook", in the following aspects. "Effective Perl Programming" describes a smaller number of very highly versatile techniques. Also, the small format, modular structure and clear style of "Effective Perl Programming" allows one to read it anywhere, in addition to using it as a great desk book.
Buy one from zShops for: $82.47
Used price: $1.00
Collectible price: $8.95
Buy one from zShops for: $2.99
All in all, not a bad introduction to A.E. (In fact a damn good place to start discovering relativity). My grouse is that it does not cover all of A.E.'s works. The treatment of relativity touches the tip of the ice-berg only, so to speak.
Still, it really makes you want to read more about A.E.'s works, at least for this reader.
Used price: $7.53
Buy one from zShops for: $6.82
Paper stock is poor and some prints are a bit blurry.