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Book reviews for "Shirley,_Donna" sorted by average review score:

Winter Nights
Published in Hardcover by Kensington Pub Corp (1998)
Authors: Shirley Hailstock, Francis Until Christmas Ray, Donna Round Midnight Hill, and Ray Hill Hailstock
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Cold Nights, but warm hearts
Francis Ray's, "Until Christmas" is a touching novella about a young woman who not only touched the heart of the high school principal, Ethan Rawlings, but Samantha also won the hearts of Ethan's twins, Alan and Alex. Samantha, aka "Sam," was hired as a combination housekeeper, babysitter temporarily, but only until Christmas. At least, that is what Ethan told the twins and Sam, as well as himself. However, it was much too late for all of them to abide by this decision. Each was starved for the other's affections and each had become too attached to give up. The twins, not only saw Sam as their housekeeper/babysitter, but they saw her as a friend. She could play ball and was not afraid of their dog. The twins' affection went deeper still. Although they were in contact with their grandmother, they were still minus a mother figure. Sam with her winning ways, not only because she was a good cook and let them help her in the kitchen, but because it was who she was, had become special to them and they wanted her with them full time. Not only had Sam become special to them and the twins had become special to Sam, but Sam had also affected the twins' dad. Ethan's feelings for Sam were more than that of an employer, more than that of a friend. Somehow, in that short time, Sam had imbedded herself into Ethan's heart. Was he willing to allow a new love interest into his life or was he still shadowed by the deceit and experience of his ex-wife and the deceased mother of his twins. Ethan thought he had a solution to the problem when he reluctantly agreed to keep Sam, "but only until Christmas." However, love does not have a set time to go away. Therefore, until Christmas, turned out to a lifetime of love for Sam, Ethan, Alan and Alex. "Until Christmas" was the best. Way to go, Ms. Ray.

"Kwanzaa Angel" was a sweet remembrance into the past with a chance to correct the future. Erin had been hurt in the past by Raimi, who had reentered her life. Would Erin give in to her feelings that never dissolved for Raimi and become involved in a new relationship or would she revert back into the past? "Kwanzaa Angel" was about the Kwanzaa celebration, but with a twist of love for Erin and Raimi. Good story.

"'Round Midnight" was about the New Year's celebration. I loved the story of Dr. Summer Lane, the psychologist who now has a job at the radio station as a counselor on the air. Her show airs around midnight. It is at the radio station where Summer meets Tre Holland, one of the bosses. Everyone thinks Summer is a snow or ice maiden because Summer stays to herself and does not socialize with the others. However, Tre is attracted to Summer and sets out to melt the snow. Summer also has feelings for Tre and wants the ice to melt from around her heart. However, after getting together, somewhere while the ice is melting another freeze comes along and the ice around Summer's heart becomes another block of ice. Summer and Tre suffer heartship and are temporarily separated. Tre sets out to recapture Summer's love and to permanently melt the ice. He knows a new year will be approaching and is determined to be in Summer's life when the new year begins. So, he sets out around midnight to make it happen. Will Tre succeed in his endeavor? Read "'Round Midnight" and see what the New Year has in store for Summer and Tre. Great story with just the right amount of heat.

No one was cold on those "Winter Nights!"
Again my girl Ray out did herself with another great read! "Winter Nights" kept me up all night! I encourage everyone to go out and get a copy. They even have it in paperback now!

I loved it!
Winter Nights was a beautifully written book by three extremely talented authors. I really enjoyed reading the book. Ms Ray, Ms Hailstock, and Ms Hill are some of my favorite authors. They have brilliant writting styles that not just I enjoy! The novellas by the above authors are a must read. Much love to all three authors!


Managing Martians
Published in Paperback by Broadway Books (1999)
Authors: Donna Shirley and Danelle Morton
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Fascinating, although too broad, survey of JPL & Sojourner
Since she was a kid in flat Wynnewood, Okla., reading Arthur C. Clarke novels and staring at the sky, Donna Shirley dreamed of going to Mars. Her book chronicles her life from flight-obsessed preteen, to hometown beauty queen, to the realization of her dream as manager of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory's Mars Exploration Program. Her team sent Pathfinder and the rover Sojourner to the red planet in 1997, and rebuilt ways of managing spacecraft missions along the way.

As you might expect in a book with this title, covering all of the above, sometimes the subject matter is stretched very thin. This is in some parts a book that tries to do too much, and the autobiographical sections on Donna Shirley's childhood, her experiences becoming licensed as a pilot, seem somewhat out of place in a book such as this. Make no mistake, there are lessons here, about glass ceilings and reaching for childhood dreams, but they are never fully realized, or completely developed, in the text. I have heard many woman express an interest in reading this book for Shirley's opinions on how women should deal with male-dominated fields, and how, or even if, they should "prove" themselves in positions of power, but there is little that enlightens that aspect of the book. One of the best quotes, however, from Shirley, concerning her new found fame as a female role model, sums up part of the problem in one sentence: "Our culture is so starved for female role models, that a woman who simply shows up on TV becomes a hero." Unfortunately too obviously true, and a shame on our society.

However, Shirley's story is extraordinary, and compelling in her fervent chase of her goals. Shirley has had to work hard, sometimes at great sacrifice, for this business. Her interview with the California Institute of Technology is illustrative of this (during an airline strike, her interview was cancelled, so she arranged her own flight, against CalTech's orders, for the interview). She has had to struggle to maintain professional cool while under enormous stress. As a lesson to bureaucratic managers, the book works well, although probably won't be taken as a compliment to the NASA teams of old; Shirley has had to work with some temperamental folks in her lifetime of government work, and she's learned (the hard way) how to manage teams well.

I suspect that many men and women would be drawn to the line of work that Donna Shirley is in expecting smooth, intelligent teamwork -- everyone laboring under a common purpose or dream, planning and executing grandiose, flawless missions to the planets. Shirley's book destroys all of that. The NASA mandate to plan missions as "faster, cheaper, and more often"required, out of necessity, a complete restructuring of the way JPL did business. Of course, in doing so, no one wanted to throw out the best of the bureaucracy, which was responsible for highly successful missions in the past. The schedule of Shirley's team was so tight that not a day would go by without having accomplished something substantial towards the mission launch date. And her faithful descriptions of the committee work is enough to make you reach for the aspirin bottle. The harsh review boards that she was made to endure and the lack of a social life, adds to the sense of repulsion of what managing, or even participating, in a project such as this entails. Over the course of several chapters, she describes her constant conflicts with a Pathfinder supervisor, Tony, who was determined to sink the rover project, and she pulls no punches.

Of course, microwave sized Sojourner, the rover, eventually landed on Mars, landing on July 4, 1997, and capturing the world's imagination. Sojourner traversed 100 meters of Martian surface, returning 550 images and 15 chemical analyses of soil and rocks, far exceeding expectations, and certainly meeting all criteria for a successful mission. But that doesn't take away from the inherent tension of a project such as this. For all involved, having this expensive, delicate object they helped design strapped to a projectile hurtling toward a chunk of rock in space, made the stakes very high. Even those with a fair amount of knowledge about the project will find surprising details about slashed budgets, impossible deadlines, shouting matches with rival managers, and plenty of last minute solutions. She also mentions the competing goals (and budgets) of the manned spaceflight program, specifically the expensive International Space Station, but unfortunately never gives a personal opinion or resolution of how to handle both goals without compromising either.

Shirley is an aeronautical engineer of the pre-feminist generation, and brings both her lifelong dream of getting to Mars and sheer hard work, respect for talent, and well-honed management skills as her tools to get her there. She has many unique and clever ideas about managing people, which one suspects from reading the last few chapters is what she really wanted to write about, but was not allowed to delve into in this book, perhaps out of fear of losing readers. Pity, because the title, "Managing" Martians, should at least give her the latitude to go into her theories on effectiveness of management styles. Shirley has written another book, published for now only on the internet, about creative management. Perhaps she will use her $65,000 author fee for this book to have her other creation published at last.

However, this book, as written, is far from perfect. There exists much fascinating and exciting lore about the red planet: its ancient mythology, and its scientific speculations gone wild in the last century, even spawning science fiction terror in this century. However, this book does not delve, even once, into this area. Like Mars, the background of JPL, how it came to be, how planetary missions came to be a goal of our government, is likewise not discussed. Additionally, although The Planetary Society played a large rol e in planning for, and keeping public support high for, the Mars Rover project, it is only mentioned, very briefly, in a few pages.

Additionally, this is exactly the type of book that should have an index, which is a major flaw. Because of the constant references to previous Mars missions, including Mariner, Viking, and the unsuccessful Russian probes, a chronology of previous Mars missions would have been a plus in a book of this nature.

As a final note, in late August, 1998, Donna Shirley announced her retirement from JPL, after 30 years of participation of various projects of planetary exploration, culminating in her position as Mars Program Manager. I hope she continues to contribute to the areas she knows and loves the most: planetary exploration, and management methods for tapping the imagination's power to spawn boundless creativity.

Excellent example of life in space exploration
This book vividly tells the story of the intense and exhiliarating adventure scientists and engineers at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) experience at the cutting edge of the technological exploration of our solar system. In addition, it is a gripping and optomistic tale of the journey of one woman's success in a usually all male fraternity. It frankly portrays the difficulties and triumphs along the way. Ms. Shirley has broken ground for many young women in the future for careers in the area of science and engineering. In addition, it is a fun read for anyone interested in technology, management and the progress of women in our society. It also is a very accurate portrayal of life at JPL.

A unique insider's view of NASA's interplanetary missions
A century from now, when this year's Oscar-winning films, hit sitcoms, and top ten CDs are gathering dust in some media archive, and the feats of contemporary sports figures are known only to the most compulsive of trivia buffs, school children will be studying the pioneering missions of space exploration such as Mars Pathfinder-Sojourner. "Managing Martians" by Donna Shirley gives the reader a rare insight into the occupational culture that made these epic adventures possible.

Readers who are familiar with the "Mars and Venus" series of books on the psychological differences between men and women will no doubt catch the double meaning of the book's title. Much of Ms. Shirley's autobiographical narrative describes her struggle to reach her career goals in a historically male-dominated profession during the Sixties. It is a world in which pioneering women swim against the stream in a culture in which young women were (and to some extent, still are) taught that studying subjects such as science, math, and technical drawing was "unladylike", and the few women who did continue their education beyond high school were pressured to graduate with an "Mrs." degree and settle into the cozy, familiar role of middle class housewife-mother. Her interests in science fiction, flying, and a life of adventure set her apart from her peers, and she manages to avoid the cultural traps set for her and perseveres in her aim of becoming an aerospace engineer.

In the last part of the book, Shirley relates the challenges and frustrations of managing a space project against a background of tightfisted budgets. The NASA of the 1990's is no longer awash in cash, and a spirit of "make-do-or-do-without" pervades the organization. Competing groups fight over the dwindling pool of money, and rivalries can be fierce. Her team struggles not only with the technical problems of building their robot rover, but also the perception that it is an unnecessary frill that only adds weight and cost to a mission that is already stretched thin. Shirley herself is forced to defend her project in bitter confrontations that sometimes degenerate into shouting matches. Her account of the attempts to derail her rover are not only entertaining, but also uncover internal politics to which the lay person or the taxpayer seldom exposed. In the end, as we all know, the rover Sojourner is recognized as a technical triumph and captures the rapt attention of the world for weeks.

In conclusion, you don't have to be a techie or a woman to enjoy Shirley's narrative of growing up in pre-"Flower Power" America and becoming an aerospace engineer in the Golden Age of space exploration. Her book successfully conveys not only the incredible tension and exhilaration of participating in a planetary mission, but also the trials and frustration of achieving recognition in a traditionally male-dominated field.


Hbj Mathematics Grade 1
Published in Paperback by HBJ College & School Division (1981)
Authors: Lola J. May, Shirley M. Frye, and Donna Cyier Jacobs
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Hbj Mathematics Grade 2
Published in Paperback by HBJ College & School Division (1981)
Authors: Lola J. May, Shirley M. Frye, and Donna Cyier Jacobs
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Hbj Mathematics Grade K
Published in Paperback by HBJ College & School Division (1981)
Authors: Lola J. May, Shirley M. Frye, and Donna Cyier Jacobs
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A Heart Set Free: My Story for His Glory
Published in Paperback by Creation House (2002)
Authors: Donna St.-Rock, Donna St Rock, Donna St Rock, and Shirley Arnold
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Shazam Econometrics Computer Program: User's Reference Manual Version 6.1
Published in Paperback by McGraw Hill College Div (1989)
Authors: Kenneth J. White, Shirley A. Haun, Nancy G. Horsman, and S. Donna Wong
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Shirley Temple Black: Actress to Ambassador (Women of Our Time (Puffin Books).)
Published in Paperback by Penguin/Puffin Mass Market (1989)
Authors: James Haskins and Donna Ruff
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The Song of the Christmas Mouse
Published in Library Binding by HarperCollins Children's Books (1990)
Authors: Shirley Rousseau Murphy and Donna Diamond
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