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

Complete English Poems: John Donne
Published in Paperback by Viking Press (August, 1977)
Authors: John Donne and A. J. Smith
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John Donne
John Donne's synthesis of the spiritual and the sensual makes for wonderful reading and study.


Congenital Anomalies of the Kidney, Urinary and Genital Tracts
Published in Hardcover by Martin Dunitz Ltd (15 January, 2002)
Authors: Husband, F. Douglas Stephens, E. Durham Smith, and John M. Hutson
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An Excellent Reference
This text is an excellent reference, even for non-radiologists. There are multiple pictures, high quality radiographs and details about etiology and the scientific basis of diseases illustrated by radiographic findings. Really a must have for any radiology resident.


Coyote Kills John Wayne: Postmodernism and Contemporary Fictions of the Transcultural Frontier (Recounters With Colonialism)
Published in Hardcover by University Press of New England (April, 2000)
Author: Carlton Smith
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hey prof. Smith
Not bad. Fours years? Looks like it was worth it. I'll see you around school. It's really good too by the way.


Creative Calligraphy
Published in Paperback by Lorenz Books (September, 1998)
Author: John Smith
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Excellant book
Creative calligraphy was just that . . . creative. The ideas are fresh and inviting. The photos in it are top quality. I really enjoyed this book! One of the best Calligraphy tools out there.


The death of classical paganism
Published in Unknown Binding by G. Chapman ()
Author: John Holland Smith
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A Wistful Paean to Paganism
While this book is aimed at acamedicians, it has a lyrical quality that appeals to the lay reader, too. It is a study of the Roman world in the first five centuries after Christ, and it tells the story of the historically improbable oddity of how a religious cult centered on an obscure carpenter living in the backwaters of a great Empire, supplants the sophisticated Classical European religious worldview that had been extant for thousands of years. Of particular interest to me was the story of Julian the Apostate, the last Roman emperor to openly embrace paganism. The author generously devotes an entire chapter to this remarkable personage. Although Julian was a nephew of Emperor Constantine and was raised as a Christian, he renounced the "new" religion when he became an adult and embraced the gods of his fathers. Because Julian ruled the Empire for a scant three years, he had insufficient time to turn back the tide of religious history, and we are left to wonder how things might have been different if he had ruled for 30 years instead. The author's sympathetic portrayal of this little-known Emperor lent a touching air of wistfulness to the sad story of the clash of Christianity with Paganism. This book is a fascinating read, for it reveals in an evenhanded way the pagan side of things and gives the reader a balanced perspective of an historical era that is generally not well understood.


The Desert (Peregrine Smith Literary Naturalists)
Published in Paperback by Gibbs Smith Publisher (September, 1991)
Authors: John C. Van Dyke and Richard Shelton
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Poetry in Prose
This book is a treasure. Mr. Van Dyke obviously has the soul of a poet, and within his graceful prose he paints vivid and soul-stirring pictures of some of the most beautiful places on earth. He describes in fine detail observations he made on a long trip, on horseback in 1898/99, over, around, and through the lower deserts of Arizona and California. He leaves no stone unturned as he describes the magnificence and beauty of each aspect of the desert, and pulls no punches in his criticism of man's destructive intrusions. To Van Dyke, the play of light and shadow, the star-pocked night skies, the ragged and jagged ranges of mountains, the perfectly adapted plants and animals, the sometimes shifting sands, and the silent river barrier known as the Colorado are each part of the unique sum which is, in its own harsh and angular way, a paradise of color, form, and life: "The Desert."

Speaking as one who has lived on and wandered through this same desert for nearly forty years, I can attest to the accuracy of Van Dyke's physical descriptions and, perhaps more importantly, I can note that I've found here both the magic and the majesty which he so ably describes. Still, this isn't a book for everyone. Those who prefer the gleam of glass towers and the roar of jet planes to flaming sunsets and yapping coyotes, save your money. Van Dyke wrote, "Not in the spots of earth where plenty breeds indolence do we meet with the perfected type. It is in the land of adversity ... that finally emerges the highest manifestation."

He was right, and he leaves us "The Desert" as evidence.


Diseases of the small intestine in childhood
Published in Unknown Binding by Pitman ()
Author: John A. Walker-Smith
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Excellent viewpoint on Pediatric Gastroenterology
This is an update book on diseases of the small intestine in children. It summarizes the most frequent problems in the small intestine and gives guidelines to diagnostic approach and treatment. Excellent photographs and well-designed graphics. An accurate book for the Pediatric Gastroenterologist.


Double Helix Omnibus
Published in Paperback by Star Trek (08 October, 2002)
Authors: Peter David, Diane Carey, John Vornholt, Dean Smith, Kristine Rusch, Christie Golden, John Betancourt, and Michael Friedman
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A great Omnibus for a great series!
"Infection" by John Gregory Betancourt

The Enterprise is called to Archaria III, a planet jointly colonized by humans and Peladians. A new disease has cropped up and is only treatable (the double helix), in a temporary fashion. The Enterprise supposed to deliver the drug, quarantine the planet and see what help they might render. What follows is an excellent story, primarily using Dr. Crusher in her quest to find the cure. The author set everything up very well and wrapped up his portion beautifully.

"Vectors" by Dean Wesley Smith & Kristin Kathryn Rusch

Finally we have a story using Dr. Pulaski, who was unceremoniously dumped from the show. Not that she was anywhere near a replacement for Dr. Crusher. It is particularly interesting to see "Terok Nor" during the occupation and have the interaction with Gul Dukat. I felt the character development was very good and the Ferengi portions were written very well. The only true complaint is that the author's seemed to have done a poor job of closing out Kira's story.

"Red Sector" by Diane Carey

Red Sector is a fantastic story. It's very refreshing having a book that concentrates almost primarily on a non main character in John Eric Stiles. The character is extremely well thought out and written. The author nailed Spock and a hundred and thirty something Dr. McCoy perfectly. I'm dying to find out who the voice is at this point. Hopefully the next three in the Double Helix series will be as good as this one and the other two were.

"Quarantine" by John Vornholt

John Vornholt kicks out another fantastic story. Quarantine gives us a good idea of how "Tom Riker" ends up joining the Maquis. As is par for the course with John Vornholt, he goes into great detail describing a beautiful planet and all of its surroundings. Not a lot of Trek authors do that. I thought Torres seemed a little soft, considering her personality, but that can be explained away.

"Double or Nothing" By Peter David

This is another great installment to the New Frontier and the Double Helix series. Not having read the last of the Double Helix books yet, it seems that this one pretty much finishes the Double Helix storyline???? A favorite quote from the book, Riker - "I've got to get off this ship." Peter David did an excellent job of integrating Picard and Riker into the New Frontier. It's really interesting and well done how he brought Riker and Shelby together again. That portion was done very well and even better than I'd expected in another meeting of those two.

"The First Virtue" by Michael Jan Friedman & Christie Golden

The First Virtue is an excellent conclusion. It pretty much wraps up the reasoning to everything we learned in "Double or Nothing." In the First Virtue, we learn why Gerrid Thul wanted to create the Double Helix virus and why he wanted so much revenge for the loss of his only child. Both authors did a great job with their portions. The plot is well thought out, especially the portions of the book with Commander Jack Crusher and Lieutenant Tuvok. I felt that they captured Tuvok's personality quite well and gave a precursor to some of the decisions and general personality we saw on screen in Voyager.

Overall, I would recommend this Omnibus to any fan of good Star Trek fiction.


Early Times in Texas or the Adventures of Jack Dobell
Published in Paperback by Univ of Nebraska Pr (May, 2001)
Authors: John C. Duval, Mabel Major, and Rebecca W. Smith
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A Must Read Texas Memoir
"The Robinson Crusoe of Texas." said J. Frank Dobie. "The most literate of all nineteenth-century Texas memoirs...authentic history." wrote John H. Jenkins in his "Basic Texas Books". In 1835, Texas offered young men like John C. Duval a chance for action and glory. That year he and his brother, Burr, the sons of a former governor of Florida, organized a volunteer company called the "Mustangs." Like Davy Crockett, they were fired up "to give the Texans a helping hand on the road to freedom" from Mexican rule. The first chapters of this book lead up to the Goliad Massacre, in which Burr was killed. John was luckier. After a hair-raising escape from Goliad, he wandered across the country-side, dodging the Mexicans and living by his wits. The diary that Duval kept during these exciting months was the basis for this book, which was published more than fifty years later, in 1892. In the intervening years he was a Texas Ranger known as "Texas John" and later was recognized as one of Texas's first men of letters as the author of "The Adventures of Big-Foot Wallace". A must for any Texas collector.


Evolutionary Genetics
Published in Paperback by Oxford University Press (June, 1989)
Authors: John Maynard Smith and John Maynard-Smith
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Evolutionary Genetics
I am a Physicist trying to learn a bit about Genetics. I take the book seriously and I solve the problems and the computer proyects that the author poses. The book is highly readable and interesting (just some few type mistakes). This I warranty since I have had not the need of much consulting outside the book and this is not my field of research!!. The author goes from the basics up to some remarks of unsolved problems and controversy.


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