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Book reviews for "Skinner,_Michael" sorted by average review score:

Dangerous Liasons (Audio CD)
Published in Audio CD by Naxos Audio Books (1995)
Authors: Choderlos De Laclos, Sheen Michael, Sarah Woodward, Polly Hayes, Estelle Kohler, Claire Skinner, Benjamin Soames, Freda Dowie, Pierre Ambroise Francois Choderl Laclos, and Various Artists
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Superb - absolutely so.
I loved the movie Dangerous Liasons with Glenn Close and John Malkovich and decided to try this audio version of the book. I can't say it was better than the movie, but the audio is superb. It is on 3 CDs and so is longer than the movie and supplies more detail. Since it is in letter form, its style more closely follows the book. The readers show incredible and intense emotion in their voices - you can almost see them in your mind. It made my commuting a joy for several days - I was almost sorry when I got to the office or arrived back home and had to quit listening. Such devious-ness! Who is the most wicked? Enjoy.

Info on the tapes
I must admit that I have not listened to the tapes. However, the new movie "Crule Intentions" is based on this book. I have seen the movie and if the two are anything alike, I would highly recommend ordering them.


Professional ColdFusion 5.0
Published in Paperback by Wrox Press Inc (15 June, 2001)
Authors: Simon Horwith, Paulo Rios, Sander Duivestein, Ryan O'Keefe, Nicole Ambrose-Haynes, Daniel Newsome, Robert Segal, Andrew Wintheiser, Karen Little, and Herb Guenther
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The downward spiral of WROX
WROX books used to be the only ones I'd buy; after having a grand ol' time with the ASP and ASP Databases series. The Professional series has been a real disappointment (and waste of money!). The books tend to be more wordy than necessary and spend too much time on the obvious and too little on the abstract. Cold Fusion is a fairly straight-forward programming language. WROX has somehow managed to make it much more. Perhaps too many cooks in the kitchen; looks like they had 18 authors put this beast together.
Look elsewhere...

A must have for all CF'ers...
Being a ColdFusion user group president, I give this book my seal of approval. This book is well written with easy to understand examples. It will help someone with no CF knowledge all the way to the experts. This book is well laid out and is enjoyable to read. I didn't know what to expect from Wrox on this. I have been a huge Ben Forta fan but this book is just as good as his (if not better)! If you want to learn CF, or just want to get better, buy this book. You will be very happy with it.

Very good book
This is a very good book!
Vale a pena galera!


Usareur: United States Army in Europe (Presidio Power Series. Landpower, No 3003)
Published in Paperback by Presidio Pr (1989)
Author: Michael Skinner
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Skinner and the US Army in Europe.
Michael Skinner's USAREUR published by Presidio Press in 1989, is fascinating reading. On one level it is a contemporary account of one of the most powerful armies in the world facing up to it's greatest adversary on the plains of Germany. Read today, with the unification of Germany, it still provides fascinating reading for military historians and modelling buffs alike! The rich text, wealth of photographs and the Central Front map showing peace time deployment areas are not to be missed. If you have this book in you're collection, re-visit it, if you don't, get it!


First Air
Published in Paperback by Avon (1991)
Author: Michael Skinner
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Incredibly uninspired technothriller
Fighter pilots from around the world, the best in each of their respective countries, are sent with their planes to shore up a middle estern country facing a soviet-backed invasion in "First Air". When Bagdad gets nuked, things are bad enough. When an inept Admiral (I guess the author was in the Air Force; like Dale Brown who navigated B-52's for SAC, Skinner's naval officers, fighter-drivers aside, are unsurprisingly dim) accidentally sinks a Russian cruiser (that supposed to be a warning shot!), a Russian reprisal further thins out the western presence in the Persian Gulf area. A shady civilian analyst convinces different countries' air forces to lend both planes and aircrews, forging a hybrid force that contains American F-15's, German Tornadoes and, forgetting that we're in a middle eastern country, Israeli fighters as well. Leading the pack is Bobby Dragon, a mythic fighter pilot last seen flying Phantoms in Vietnam. Having spent the years since the war flying black jets out of Dreamland, Dragon is the obvious choice to send in. On the other side, an obviously evil Russian ace with a vendetta against Dragon (facially disfigured after narrowly losing a dogfight against Dragon over Vietnam) engineers an ethnic uprising in Baluchistan that triggers the war. With his MiG-29 fighters, he more than matches the firepower arrayed against him.

This was a horrible book - the author spends so much time and crams in so many obscure and unnecessary details about military aviation, and wastes so much effort trying to convince his readers about what he knows that his writing never comes close to convincingly detail what it must be like to sit inside of a monster jet fighter. Instead of concentrating on one of the characters, the narrative meanders between different fliers - the mythic Dragon, the "Weasel Twins" (a pair of electronics geniuses who appear to be the Steve Jobbs and Steve Wozniak of the military aviation community), the aged aircrew of a grizzled F-4 Phantom (they refused to transition to the "hated F-16") and a younger American who's determined to learn form dragon. There is no plot development, and the characters are non-existent behind their facades as fighter pilots. You don't have to write like Henry James to turn out at least a very decent technothriller. Nothing else will grab you here - the war scenario in the mideast seems like the same thing you've seen in other books and countless flight simulator games. The enemy is too thin to even rate being called "cardboard" - physically and morally scarred, with an agenda, weapons of mass destruction and the ear of corrupt Soviets, he's closer in consistency to that thin sheet stuff they put on overhead projectors. Skinner took half of an interesting idea, and killed it. The idea of a story about mercenary fighter pilots is cool because it avoids the trap of letting or forcing the author to swap the action we want for tired demonstrations of his experience with the bureaucratic nuts and bolts of an established air force. However, the idea only works if the writer replaces the boring stuff with the action we want. Also, since the story puts the mercenary pilots essentially in charge of themselves, we would have a unique opportunity to see what an air force would look like if it were run by the people who do the flying. Skinner doesn't just flub on that score, he doesn't deal with it at all - the pilots never form a cohesive unit, they just fly. Skinner's idea essentially takes all the boring guts out of your standard military aviation novel, and doesn't put replace it with anything.

Pulp Fiction.
Could have been a script from Jerry Bruckheimer flick (although the only F18s that Bruckheimer has such a stock for get slaughtered here). It realy aught to be made into a summer movie, or better yet, sold to the Japanese and drawn up as an epic Anime movie, but as it is, its a good quick read for those stuck somewhere for a few hours, or just sick of reading "War and Peace" or "Homage to Catalonia" weighted novels.

I read this book back in 1992 when I was 14 and it gave me the idea to create online 'squadrons' on the Prodigy network's bulliten boards that drew up offline mission story lines for flight-sim nuts, and tied them into huge online storylines/campaigns, before the advent of good campaigning sims/online multiplayer play. As far as I know, my "First Air" or FAR was the first such organization in a catagory that has since boomed and become very involved now that people can fly and fight togather through the wonder of the Net.

Also gave me the pipe dream of buying my own F8 Crusaider and going off to fight as an aireal mercinary.

As another asside, it was also the inspiration for the 1993 release of Origin's "Strike Commander"

Stupendous Action-Thriller
First Air is a great book about war and gives a greatly detailed view on the persian gulf war, written around desert storm you won't regret picking this book up, I know I didn't; Some may find it a little weird but if you read through and use your imagination you'll have a great experience with this book.


Notes from Skinner's Elbow
Published in Paperback by Wolfsong Publications (06 June, 1999)
Author: Michael Koehler
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Carl Rogers: Dialogues: Conversations With Martin Buber, Paul Tillich, B.F. Skinner, Gregory Bateson, Michael Polanyi, Rollo May, and Others
Published in Paperback by Houghton Mifflin Co (Pap) (1989)
Authors: Howard Kirschenbaum, Valerie Land Henderson, and Carl R. Rogers
Amazon base price: $9.95
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Conversations With Chester Himes (Literary Conversations Series (Cloth))
Published in Hardcover by Univ Pr of Mississippi (1995)
Authors: Chester B. Himes, Robert E. Skinner, Michel Fabre, and Michael Fabre
Amazon base price: $46.00
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Dialogues: Conversations with Martin Buber, Paul Tillich, B.F. Skinner, Gregory Bateson, Michael Polanyi, Rollo May, and Others. (Psychology/self-help)
Published in Paperback by Constable Robinson (23 April, 1990)
Authors: Carl R. Rogers and Howard Kirschenbaum
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House groups
Published in Unknown Binding by Epworth P. ()
Author: Michael James Skinner
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How to disguise yourself
Published in Unknown Binding by Studio Vista ()
Author: Michael Kingsley Skinner
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